Famous Scribes, for Fibbing Friday

The Assignment for Fibbing Friday today is: Below are 10 titles and authors, all of which are fictitious.  This week I’m asking you to do a cover blurb in a few sentences or perhaps have an idea for a sequel.

1. The Missing Tent by Seymour Skye: An expose of why touring circuses are a thing of the past.

2. Making the Most of Bread by Roland Pickles: A misprint of the actual book Making the Host of Bread, which is a guide for the preparation of Protestant holy communion.

3. Living on a Budget by M T Wallit: The author’s name is a pseudonym. This is actually the title of a tongue-in-cheek book by Donald Trump.

4. Wake me at Dawn by Misty Mawning: A book ghost-written by someone pretending to be the corpse at a funeral Wake. 

5. Sing me a Lullaby by Muse Ickles:  Advice for a new mother, written as though reading the mind of a screaming baby at 3 A.M.

6. Caught in the Act by Robin Banks: Pseudonym for the real author, Donald Trump, who will as usual escape unprosecuted and unpunished.

7. The Pensioner Chronicles by Jerry Attrick: Biography of Leonardo da Vinci, so named because  Leonardo’s journals contain drawings with cross-sections of what appears to be a reservoir pen that works by both gravity and capillary action. 

8. The Scapegoat’s Revenge by Carrie deCan: Leon Trotsky’s pseudonym for his autobiography that revealed Stalin’s vile scheme to blame him for soviet economic failures and military disasters,

9. Fields of Destiny by Krystal Ball: Biography of popular twenty-first century  singing group “Destiny’s Child.”

10. The Long and the Short of It by Cyn Opsiss. Again, a pseudonym used for a sex guide written by Donald Trump. Only half fiction.

Rewind: This Day 10 Years Ago and Today

On this day ten years ago, I was at a family gathering in Cheyenne, Wyoming. We had a wonderful time and although it was just coincidental that it coincided with my birthday, it was a great combination of celebrations. 

Gathering Family (Reblog from 10 years ago today)

Tonight marked the end of our two day family reunion with my mother’s side of the family. The matriarch is Jane, 90 years old, and the youngest was Maddie the miracle baby, age 9 months. I am somewhere in the middle, but closer to Jane by one year as of midnight.  I unfortunately don’t see these lovely people often enough, but every time I am around them I’m appreciative of their closeness and acceptance of either others’ differences.

I had a wonderful time, as you might be able to gather from these photos. (You might want to click on them to enlarge them.)  The statue of Lincoln marks the highest point on the Lincoln Highway. We passed it this morning as we drove from Cheyenne, Wyoming to Laramie to visit Jane in her daughter Sara’s house. In college, the art class I was in came up on a cold blustery day to scrub him down with acid. Yesterday, we just stopped to admire him in his new spot next to the new wider interstate road.  He’s been raised up a good deal on a very high pedestal, so I wouldn’t relish giving him a scrub now.

The other photos were taken in three different locations as different events were held in three different homes. Representing my mother’s branch of the family were my niece Cindy, my sister Patti and I.  All of the rest were descendants of my mother’s sister Peggy and their spouses.  Lots of laughter, fun, memories, discoveries and great food.

Pretty Bottles All Lined Up for Word of the Day


Pretty Bottles All Lined Up

How we love to line up bottles on tabletops or shelves.
What we collect in bottles tells us something of ourselves.
Be it pills or perfume or lotions for our skin,
be it liquor bottles or old bottles of our kin.
Be they for forgetting or remembering or curing,
the fact that we see into them is somehow reassuring.

Each bottle opened is no doubt considered well worth keeping,
as applied  or guzzled down, its contents we are reaping.
Hopes or dreams are bottled there––courage, allure or balm.
Their stoppers keep in secrets, unstopped they exude calm.
Pretty bottles on a shelf deserve felicitation
as they meet our eye to please us, or our lips for satiation.

The Word of the Day prompt is “Bottle Opener.”

Fallen Memories for FOWC

The prompt for FOWC is “energetic.”

Fallen Memories

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The monsoon rains come like a blessing, relieving the hot humidity, building the lushness of the rice terraces. Green everywhere. Energetic monkeys in the sacred monkey forest grab my postcards from my hands, leave teethmarks that will delight your children more than anything  I might say in the postcards I send as recompense for the father I have taken off with me to another part of the world.
We grow into these long hot humid afternoons that are washed away for a mere hour or so by the seasonal rains. Shedding clothes like years, we live naked underneath sarongs wrapped tightly for security. You sit on the porch, your soon-to-be-old man’s furry pot belly proudly obscuring the tightly wound tuck of your sarong. Thirty years later, it is that sarong made into a jalaba that I now wear almost daily,  hiding my soon-to-be-old lady’s pot as well.
How I cope with growing old without you is to sift through these memories like playing cards or photos fallen from old albums that have lost their ability to secure. As gullible as upon our first meeting, I wipe away your inadequacies as I’m sure you would have forgotten mine if you had been the one left sorting the fallen memories in the bottom of the album box.
Monsoons, I have been told, blow both moist and dry, as we did over those fifteen years. But we endured and built each other, coping as all of those in marriages judged successful by their lasting power do. Today you are the photo fallen from the album to the floor.  Quickly, as you fell from my life, I tuck you back securely into your correct place, placing on top new albums with new memories built on the foundation of you and all those memories a life, in the end, is made of.  You slip into that middle place old loved ones eventually  are relegated to. Our way to cope. Our way to live life instead of merely remembering it. Because that is what life is. We keep trying. We keep on.

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scan079Bali, 1996, Judy & Bob   

 

Signs of the Times for “Cracking Open the Time Capsule”

My July 1 post from 10 years ago, for Signs of the Times:

Cee’s challenge this week was for storefront signs.  Here are a few I’ve been saving for a special occasion that seem to fit as well as some I’ve very recently taken. Lately I’ve been lucking out on the prompts.  It seems as soon as I take a number of photos of a certain topic, the prompt the next day fits it to a “T.”  Thanks for reading my mind this time, Cee. These will look better if you click on them to enlarge them. The guy in the big snowdrift is my dad after the big snow of ’53.

https://ceenphotography.com/2016/06/30/cees-black-white-photo-challenge-store-front-signs/

Liam: For Last on the Card, June 30, 2026

I am enjoying a visit from my stepson Jayson, his wife joy and son Liam, who has captured the heart of all of the dogs, especially Zoe. Then he set out to invent new pool toys and games…using a noodle, two racquets and plastic water lilies.  Who needs a partner to play badminton? Later on, he substituted a plastic ball for the water lily and ditched one of the raquets and involved Morrie in his game. In the process, Morrie totally ruined 5 of the plastic balls. No problem. We’d bought a bag of 15 of them. A good time was had by all.––those playing and those of us observing.

I am absolutely loving this family visit. They’ll be here for 2 weeks but I’m sending them to Guanajuato for 4 of those days. I would just slow them down as my back has gotten too bad to allow for much walking. We’re spending tons of time in the pool and hot tub, some time at the table eating and playing games. Today we went to Walmart and I used the motorized cart for the first time. Only ran into one display, spinning it around without causing any damage and only terrorized one little girl and her grandmother who were good sports. Liam ran a message service between his folks with a pushcart and me in my motorcart and a good time was had by all.

For Bushboy’s Last on the Card Prompt. Thanks, Brian!

For “Blast from the Blog” Some Little Bug Inside Me–a Reblog of a post from June 30 in 2018

Ten Years Ago Today

My Life with Cats (For Today’s Throwback Edition)

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lifelessons – a blog by Judy Dykstra-Brown
catsimages of catsOne Word Photo Challengephotos of cats
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View original

I was walking by my friend Isidro’s studio/gallery one day when I saw these little paws sticking out from under his door.  Very shortly thereafter, this little boy came by and the rest of the story took place.  So touching.  He knew right where to stick his finger in the kitty’s underside of his paw to bring obvious pleasure to his friend.  Had to add a shot of my kitty Annie as well..waiting on the wall to be fed.  I think more photos will follow, but I have to catch a plane now..See you later.

 

Love Poem to Poets

Love Poem to Poets

Who am I to judge you as you tinker with words…
reveal their bounce and loop de loop
from Heaven to brutal Hell?
May your poetry never end,
but instead stream in strings of metaphors ,
down that track from up to down
from brain to welcoming heart,
driving the truth to every corner of the world.

For the Sunday Whirl, prompt words are: judge tinker bounce loop heaven brutal end stream string track welcome drive

And also, for dVerse Poets, because these prompt words seemed to lead me back to your prompt as well.

To Get a Poem for dVerse Poets

To Get a Poem

Leave the dirty dishes in the sink.
A dishwasher washes the poems away.
Allow cat hair to accumulate on the footstool.
Cat hair is a city for poems.
Let plants go another day before watering,
lest poems in the soil should be flushed away.

Let lie the crumpled sock a friend’s child
left in the sleeping loft.
Don’t destroy the poem of it.
Don’t bother to rake leaves.
Poems cannot live in neat piles.
Leave the soup stain on your shirt .
Tomato and basil are ingredients of poetry.

There is a poem in the confetti of paper on the bedroom carpet
and in the bread crumbs and the orphaned straight pins.
Bills in the “TO BE PAID” folder?
Each is the embryo of a poem.
Paying them now would be poetry murder.

In my living room, there is more poetry
in the blankets of dust on glass tables
than the burnished surface of the clay vase.
There is more poetry, more poetry, more poetry
than can ever be tidied up in this world or the next.

Falling poetry snarls in the weave of the hammock.
All of this raw poetry lies around us, primed for the collecting.
Messy poetry and dusty.
You won’t die from, but you could live on
poetry that’s hidden in the messy corners of your world.

And, since Mr. Linky shut down before I could post it, Here is another: https://judydykstrabrown.com/2026/06/28/love-poem-to-poets/

for dVerse Poets, the assignment is: The Prompt:   Write an Ars Poetica that reveals your writing process through imagery, symbolism, or personalization.