Monthly Archives: March 2015

Love Times Three

                                                                  Love Is

Letting go when you’d like to hold on because you know it would be better for them.
Overlooking hurt because you can see motives through their eyes as well as your own.
Validating their goals, desires, morals, taste, choices even if they are ones you don’t share.
Enabling their progress through the life they choose.

Learning who you need to be to further your relationship.
Opening your heart even when it frightens you.
Venting your anger in a way that will not destroy them or your love for each other.
Enduring the hard times your relationship will inevitably go through.

Letting it be sometimes.
Omitting parts of the truth that will hurt more than they will help.
Veering off the straight forward path of yourselves to create a mutal path somewhere between.
Earning their love by being that best person both of you want you to be.

                                                                    Love is Not:

Letting go of essential & important parts of yourself just to please them.
Overlooking harm they might bring to you or others.
Validating unacceptable behavior because you fear they will not love you if you tell the truth.
Eating the rest of the chocolate–including their share!!!
Looking away to avoid seeing the truth.
Existing in a world apart from your true self just to be with them.
Scheming to keep their love no matter what.
Setting a goal in life and expecting them to follow unresistingly because they love you.

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/dp_prompt/i-want-to-know-what-love-is/

The Prompt: I Want to know What Love Is–We each have many types of love relationships–parents, children, spouses, friends.  And they’re not always with people; you may love an animal, or a place. Is there a single idea or definition that runs through all the varieties of “love”?

 

A Photo a Week Challenge: Brighten Up Your Day

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https://nadiamerrillphotography.wordpress.com/2015/03/11/a-photo-a-week-challenge-brighten-up-your-day/

The Prompt:  SHARE PHOTOS OF BRIGHT IMAGES.

Whether your picture is naturally bright from the sun or other lighting, or you create the brightness with post-processing, have fun and get creative.

 

Fair or Fowl

Fair or Fowl

They probably think we can’t do it,
and they are right. Most will eschew it.
Tho I am going to get an “A”
for I have letters here to say,
even tho this prompt is fowl,
I don’t need that extra vowel.
Yes, it’s a fact that I can’t spell.
Otherwise, have I done well?

The prompt was to write a post that did not make use of one of the vowels in the alphabet.  I am rushing off to the Lake Chapala Writers’ Conference so only time for a quickie…Judy

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/dp_prompt/twenty-five/

Abroad in Retrospect

Three new friends came home with me from the Ajijic Writers’ Conference and we spent the late afternoon and evening drinking wine, eating potstickers and asparagus and having an even greater feast of words.  In the course of the evening’s conversation, someone asked why I had stayed for a year and a half in Ethiopia, and if you’ve read my earlier blog entries about my African experiences, you will know the tale I told.

They are all three successful and much-published writers and enthusiastically encouraged me to write a book about those years.  Everyone had organizational ideas and it got me to thinking again.  Could I do this?  It would mean much research, and so I think if I were offered a year abroad that I would choose Ethiopia so I could revisit old locales and do research in the place that would be the setting for the book.  Will I do it?  We’ll see.  (Write the book, I mean.  I fear the research will be conducted at my desk at home.)

The Prompt:  If you were asked to spend a year abroad, where would you choose?
https://dailypost.wordpress.com/dp_prompt/study-abroad/

Tax Time is Most Taxing

Tax Time is Most Taxing

I don’t like doing taxes. I’d rather eat a rat.
I saved all my receipts for sure but don’t know where they’re at.
I should have printed up reports and put them on a spindle,
for now I cannot find out what I’ve taken in from Kindle
or Amazon. Their tax sites are really just a maze.
After roaming them for hours, I fear I’m in a haze.
Money spent for doctors and dentists must be here.
I’ve even asked a Ouija Board that says I’m getting near
to where they remain hidden under piles of other papers.
If I lived in another age, I know I’d have the vapors.

The time that I have left is surely waning and not waxing.
And things just keep on getting worse–for tax time is most taxing.
Next year I will do better.  I’ll start out nice and early
and tax time will be easier and I will be less surly.
I’ll pat myself upon the back for files filled with slips
alphabetical and neat–no coffee spills or rips.
I will know to the penny what I spent on medicine.
I’ll save up all my dentist bills, fastened with a pin.
All my insurance payments and social security
will be neatly filed–correct from A to Z.

But as to this year’s taxes, I fear I’m out of luck.
I shake my head over the forms and murmur “What the – – – -?
I do not want to do this.  I fear I’m in a mess.
I want to write a letter to the I.R.S.
giving them my bank account and telling them my pin,
for I fear my patience is growing rather thin.
“Just take whatever cash you need and leave enough for me
to live upon ’til I expire in two thousand-five-three.”
Instead, I go back to my desk to sort another pile.
Please don’t e-mail, phone or text. I’m busy for awhile!!

The Prompt: Set It To Rights–Think of a time you let something slide, only for it to eat away at you later. Tell us how you’d fix it today.

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/dp_prompt/set-it-to-rights/

Catching People Unaware

DSC09912  DSC09262    DSC09766 - Version 4

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From the hilarity of a hole in the sock of a toe to various pensive moods, I think catching people unaware is the best way to capture a mood.
http://ceenphotography.com/2015/03/10/cees-fun-foto-challenge-catching-people-unaware/

Leave it to Beaver: One Word Photo Challenge–Beaver

                                                   Leave it to Beaver

The color challenge this week really is “Beaver!’–a light brown color shown below –no telling what viewers this tag will bring into my blog!!  Here goes:

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http://jennifernicholewells.com/2015/03/10/one-word-photo-challenge-beaver/

Most of the Time: A Serial Tale, Chapter 6

Most of the Time

Chapter 6
(A Ghost Story)

“Where shall we begin?” The fussy little man moved his little mustache back and forth like a typewriter carriage gone slightly out of control. We were off to solve a mystery, Hercule and I, and although I followed along without a clue as to where we were going or what the mystery was, I had faith that this friend I had followed through so many adventures would once again take me to a worthwhile  place.   I had caught up to him by quickening my step, but my legs were so much longer than his that doing so caused me to sprint out ahead a bit until I shortened my stride to match his.  The combined effect of walking faster but taking shorter steps gave me a prancing quality that I’m sure was humorous, but since no one was viewing this daydream but me, I had no sense of embarrassment.

It is only in retrospect that I gain a viewer, but since that viewer is me, I am perhaps harder on my protagonist than an impartial viewer might be.  What does one do when she is the narrator of her own life?  It is an exercise in schizophrenia.  You are you.  You are she.  You are you.  You are she.  When I see through the eyes of that woman, feeling the onset of middle age years before the appropriate time to do so, I understand the need for flight and escape.  What she needed to do was to leave her outgrown marriage, but how many women do?  Instead, they seek to alter a dress that no longer fits–to plump sofa cushions that have grown too matted to plump years ago.

They live in fantasy worlds of ladies luncheons or afternoon movies or midnight novels.  They simply neglect to fix the thing that needs fixing or to leave it behind for a new set of life problems. For it seems to me from the vantage point of my sixties that that is what life is–a series of puzzles that we can either confront and try to solve or merely overlook and seek distraction from.  Fold up the paper and use the puzzle to swat flies or form it into an origami bird  or party hat.  Use it to wrap up garbage and count on someone else to carry the problem away for you.  All the different solutions we invent in response to our problems is the point of life.  We are all our own choreographers, doing our version of the dance. So I try to be more patient with Susan than I want to be, calling forth more sympathetic narrators.  Susan at 40.  Susan at 35.  What would Susan at 20 have to say about me, I wonder?  Stretching my mind to this task sends me off in a different direction, to tell a different story.

A woman lies in bed in her short purple cotton spaghetti-strapped nightgown.  She shows upper arms too heavy for showing outside of her own room.  She lies typing, which is true in more ways than one.  For when she writes in the very early morning, as she has said countless times before, she writes from a different part of her brain than that which guides her actions during the day.  She writes more about the present, with spare bits of the past popping up as well, as they do in dreams.

That whole part about Peter is imaginary, but where did Peter come from? Is he a manifestation of something she really was trying to escape at the time–some dream lover she might have in fact married in her twenties if she had not in reality been off pursuing the life she described as a metaphor in her initial chapters?  This whole hierarchy of selves is getting so complicated that even I as the real person narrating this story cannot keep track.  How did Doris Lessing keep all those separate selves straight in The Golden Notebook?  By compartmentalizing. Other writers do it by splitting themselves into separate characters, but I’ve never been successful at that.  I write best as myself and somehow can’t make the jump into dividing myself into the parts of myself.

When I split here, it is my whole self being presented at  20, at 35, at 45 and at 67. It is so complicated that the plots become intertwined, but since this is what they want to do, I’m going to go along with them.  Like Alice down the rabbit’s burrow, I will swallow bitter pills and grow and shrink–but in my case it will be in age as well as size.  Let’s see where this acid trip of imagination takes me. No doubt some readers will drop away, but at this point I think this has become an exercise more for myself than for any viewers who are free to jump on and off this slow moving platform at will.

“We have arrived at our destination,” my twitching little companion tells me, his prissy voice cutting through my reverie.

“And what is our destination?” I ask him. “I’ve never known where we are going.  I’ve just been so busy trying to get in step that I never asked.”

“You don’t recognize this place?” he asks, as he swings open a wide door before us.

I step into the view on the other side.  It is a large golden yellow house with rose pink domes.  Two dogs rush up to greet us–obnoxious dogs that jump up and bark and then rush out the open door behind us into the street.  They vanish in seconds up the big hill that we, too, might have climbed if we had not taken this detour. The courtyard of the house is full of flowering trees and bushes and succulents and palm trees towering or contained within  pots.  As we walk, the door to the house opens.  Inside is a table and a computer, but we keep walking to another door, open it to see a woman in a purple nightgown lying on her back in bed. Typing on a laptop. Lying in two different ways.  I take off my coat and shoes.  Lie down next to her.  Roll over into her, and we are one.  And that is why, dear reader, when you ask me the question everyone inevitably asks, I admit that yes, “I believe in ghosts.”

The opening and closing lines today are from  “Orphan Train” by Christina Baker Kline. Thanks, Patti Arnieri, for furnishing me with your second prompt.

You may find Chapters 1-5 of this tale in postings made over that past 5 days.

 

 

Most of the Time: A Serial Tale, Chapter 5

Most of the Time

                                                                           Chapter 5

All she can hear are the sighs of cars and the rumble of trains and the sounds of everyone hurrying through the cold.  Peter calls out to her from his study, but she is immersed in her book–hurrying to keep step with Hercule Poirot.  His stumpy little legs move him curiously fast over the buckled pavement of a seedy street and she isn’t sure yet where they are going, but  she hurries after him, as much for a means of escape from Peter as curiosity over where he is going and what he will find once he gets there.  The lives depicted in the book she is reading are a way to avoid her everyday life with Peter as surely as hanging around bars where she would know, if she thought it out, that she will never really meet anyone to replace him with.

This man she chose for her husband calls out again, this time louder.  “Susan!  There’s a gun missing from your case.  Did you forget and leave it in the car?”

Damn.  She had forgotten to take it out of the tool box. Peter is in the doorway now.  No way can she get it out of the garden bin and back into its locked case in his den tonight without him seeing her.  Her mind spins as she tries to come up with a plausible excuse for the missing gun.

“The action jammed at the range today.  Luckily, Randy from the gun shop was there and he said he’d take it in for repairs for me.”

He didn’t answer, but she could hear him shuffling down the hall, rattling papers in front of his nose as he walked, again restored to his potential fortunes. As she returned to her book, she looked down and realized she was wearing her flouncy skirt.  Not appropriate.  Why hadn’t Peter mentioned it?  Her arms were bare, which meant she was in one of her tight spaghetti strap tops.  But actually, she didn’t have to worry on Peter’s account, because she realized now she wasn’t at home.  She was on a dance floor, dancing close with a man who was missing two teeth.  He dipped her, pulling her close against his chest and bending over with her as she bent back.  His breath was not unpleasant and with the exception of the missing front teeth, he was a handsome man.  But although the coloring and features were right and the body mass in all the right places, there was some lack–of intelligence, perhaps–in his face.  Or maybe what was missing was integrity–something that had to be there for her to be attracted to a man.  Peter had had it once.

Susan snapped to attention, aware that she’d nodded off.  She looked for the gap-grin man, confused for a few seconds between dreams and reality.  She missed him, a little, when she became fully awake.  She wondered how she would have gotten out of that last dip.  Would he have pulled her up again?  Surely he’d have to. What kind of dance partner drops his partner after the dip?  She laughed then, aware that she seemed to be caught up in her dreams more than reality.

Her few little adventures.  Where did they get her, really?  She recognized that most of it was revenge against Peter. But of what good was revenge that he did not know about and that did nothing to change her life in any meaningful manner?  She decided then and there that there would be changes. Her next sojourn would not be to any of the dives she had visited in the past.  Nor would she wear her usual tacky disguise.  From now on, at least for awhile, her  rare escapes would be conducted strictly in first class.  She’d go shopping tomorrow.  Drop her emergency clothes from the trunk off at some Goodwill store  and up her ante.

When she again picked up her book, she no longer felt the cold chill of London.  She strode arm and arm with Hercule, the shoreline exposed by half-moonlight.  The hydrofoil loomed up before them. They crossed the channel at midnight.

Beginning and final lines from Anthony Doerr, “All the Light We Cannot See.” Thanks to Candace Spence for furnishing the first and last lines in this chapter. 

Does someone have tomorrow’s lines for me?  Just choose a favorite book and tell me the title, author and first and last lines in a comment.  If I don’t receive one, the book is finished!!!!

One Four Challenge, Week 2

 

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Version 1: This is the picture as I first show it, with no edits. The sky is washed of its actual vivid colors.

Verwion 2

Version 2:  Hoping to recapture the actual colors of the sunset that were washed out in my original picture, I increased the saturation to 100.  This looks exaggerated, but it is much closer to the actual vibrancy of sunset than the original had captured. It has been suggested that I should have used a sunset setting, which I will try next time.

Version 3

Version 3: This version is just like version 2 except i increased the sharpness to 100 percent.

I didn’t realize until after I posted that week 1 was supposed to show the first edit of the photo, so I have shown both first and second edits in week 2.

To read about this photo challenge, go here:

https://robynsfineart.wordpress.com/2015/03/09/one-four-challenge-march-week-2/