Monthly Archives: January 2016

Blogomania

IMG_0441
Sun Goin’ Down on the Social Network!

Blogomania

Blog obsession? I tried to quit.
How did I get over it?
I psychoanalyzed myself,
then put my blog up on a shelf
and ventured out to have a life––
to be a girlfriend or a wife.
I went on social media,
put up with all its tedia
to try to find that special one
to have some extra-blogging fun.
I used my laptop not for blogging
but for romantic lollygogging.

And when I found a special one
who seemed intelligent and fun,
we wrote a bit and then, and then
I thought that I could blog again.
I confessed to him (with perfect diction)
my very slight blogging addiction.
He asked to read my blog and so
I told him just where he could go
to read me. Then I didn’t hear
from him again.  I thought it queer.

Finally, I asked him why
he’d let our conversation die.
He wrote back and that is when
he said I hadn’t time for men.
That if he wants more information,
he’ll simply get his daily ration
on my blog, then said good-bye.
And that is how I lost that guy.
Of future loves?  I had one fewer.
But at least I gained a viewer!!!

The Prompt: Happy Endings.  Tell us about something you tried to quit.  How did that turn out?
https://dailypost.wordpress.com/prompts/happy-endings/

Color Your World: Antique Brass

Antique BrassIMG_9899IMG_9551

 

 

Apricot: Color Your World

Apricot

IMG_9941

IMG_0206

The above image is a cropped photo of a photo by Jim Arnieri Version 2IMG_0190IMG_9575IMG_9551

 

To see other photos submitted for this challenge, look here: http://jennifernicholewells.com/2016/01/03/color-your-world-apricot/

Wound Around


daily life color111 (2).jpg
    (That’s a tiny banana he is holding up, by the way. Really. You can see the banana skin.)

Wound Around

Howe’er you wrap it––short or long,
it’s hard to beat a good sarong.
Easy to pack, easy to wear,
It hardly takes a bit of care.
If it;s been wound up in a wad,
just throw it o’er the curtain rod

and all the wrinkles will hang out.
Then when you wish to gad about,
just wind it tight around your frame.
Front and back are just the same;
so do not look to find a label,
just wind as well as you are able.

Women? Tuck your boobies in.
Going braless is no sin.
Slim or chunky, all will fit.
Just wind yourself inside of it.
Whether it’s two times around,
or only one, you’re tightly bound.

Then if as garment you abhor it,
there are other uses for it.
If decorating is your passion,
a sarong is much in fashion.
Just press it smooth as you are able
to cover up a chair or table.

At other times, it comes in handy
for it works just fine and dandy
as picnic cloth or bath towel or
mosquito shield over your door.
Use it to cover up your bed
or wind a turban ’round your head.

And when your head gear you unravel,
it serves as nightgown when you travel.
Swimsuit cover up or blanket,
however you may wind or yank it,
you simply cannot e’re go wrong
when you invest in a sarong!


The Prompt: New Sensation––Ah, sweet youth. No matter whether you grew up sporting a fedora, penny loafers, poodle skirts, bell-bottoms, leg-warmers, skinny jeans, Madonna-inspired net shirts and rosaries, goth garb, a spikey mohawk, or even a wave that would put the Bieber to shame, you made a fashion statement, unique to you. Describe your favorite fashions from days of yore or current trends you think are stylin’.
https://dailypost.wordpress.com/prompts/new-sensation/

Round Up (WordPress Challenge: Circles)

Round Up

IMG_0885IMG_0611IMG_0872IMG_0620IMG_0565IMG_0679IMG_0761IMG_0405IMG_0410

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/photo-challenges/circle/

Ceiba Speciosa–Silk Floss Tree

                                                        Ceiba Speciosa–Silk Floss Tree

When I first published pictures of the flowers of this tree, I didn’t know its name, so I identified it as a Mexican Orchid Tree.

IMG_3877 IMG_3864 IMG_3875 I later published pictures of its thorny trunk.  These photos of the trunk are new, as are all of these photos, except for the ones that show flowers, since the tree is no longer blooming. (An explanation of supposed reasons for the thorns is given below in the comments section.)IMG_1043 IMG_1047 IMG_3885
At first, when the fruit appeared, I thought it must be a breadfruit tree:

IMG_1027

but later, when its very large pods started to burst open, revealing huge clumps of what looked like kapok–the material that was once used for packing material and to pad envelopes–I told a friend that it was a kapok tree.

IMG_1034

IMG_1030

Today for some reason I was reminded that I’d meant to see if this was true and an hour’s research online finally earned me an answer.  Although it is not a kapok tree, it is related to it and the stuffing inside the large pods is often used as packing material as well as in the production of canoes, wood pulp and ropes.

IMG_1040 (1) IMG_1050

In addition, oil from its seeds may be used for both commercial and cooking purposes.

IMG_3889
All in all, a most intriguing tree.  I was so happy to have identified it that I drove through stop and go bumper-to-bumper weekend traffic to get these additional shots to thrill you all with my new knowledge.  You are thrilled, right???

What is the name of this tree and flower???? Ceiba Speciosa–Silk Floss Tree

To pingback your flower picture to the prompt or to see Cee’s or other flowers, go here: http://ceenphotography.com/2016/01/02/flower-of-the-day-january-3-2016-amaryllis-bud-flower-day-8/

Pointed Giants–For Olga

                                                   Pointed Giants–For Olga

IMG_1019

This is the art studio behind my house.  As you can see, it is rather overgrown with vines and other plants, despite the huge palm tree I just had cut down because they said it would interfere with the solar water heater coils soon to be installed.  So, that little scoop out of the roof overhang can be explained by the fact that I actually built my studio around the palm tree just to gain an extra foot of space without having to cut down a tree.  The trunk once occupied that scooped-out place.  If you look up by the electrical wires, though, you might notice a flash of red.  What is it?

IMG_1017

Here’s a closer view.  Almost smothered out by the thunbergia and other vines is this stubborn giant.  It was a small poinsettia houseplant given to me by a friend as a housewarming gift when I first moved to Mexico 14 years ago.  After Christmas that year, I planted it in the ground near my wall.  A few years later, I built the studio in front of it.  By then it was obscured by a large banana tree than afterwards died.  Hidden between my studio and the wall, it was long forgotten until  this year, when I suddenly noticed a flash of red peeking over the roof of my studio.

IMG_1025IMG_1018

It was my little poinsettia of 14 years ago, now grown into a very tall tree and surviving even though it has been practically choked out by thunbergia and the other hearty vine that grows over my wall.

See that wire running behind it?  that is a wire that either carries telephone messages or electricity to my house and beyond.  This pointed giant is in high company.

So that, Olga, is the story of how poinsettias are more that the symbol of Christmas that they are in El Norte.  Here in Mexico, they are just another subtropical plant that in this climate often grows into a tree–in spite of our best efforts to overlook them!

A New Year Poem Attributed to Khushwant Singh but Really Written by Charles Gavan Duffy

Khushwant Singh died at the young age of 95 years. He was a prolific Indian writer, famed journalist, well known author and acknowledged tippler!! A man who lived his life to the fullest.

Update: When I discovered this poem, it said it had been written by him at the age of 92, but I received the below message regarding it from Patrick Schiermeyer:
This site claims Khushwant Singh wrote poem: “The horse and mule….” at age 92. He died in 2014 so the poem was supposedly written in 2010-2011 timeframe. This cannot be true. I have a copy of this poem I received in 1978 while working in Saudi Arabia. He may have written it earlier or it may be incorrectly attributed to him.

I did some further research, and this is the comment I sent back to Patrick:
Patrick, I spent about a half hour trying to run this poem down after reading your comment. I can’t find it associated with anyone else’s name but his so I’m wondering if he sent it as a New Year’s greeting and people took it that he had written it. I saw one other person post it without attribution and the most posts saying he had written it. I agree now that you have pointed it out that he could not have written it at least at the time he is said to have written it. If you know when he did write it, or who else did, I’d appreciate the correction. Thanks.

So, if anyone has further information about the author of the below piece and when it was written, I would appreciate knowing the full story of its origin.

On July 17, 2021, I received this message from Shristi: “It was written by Charles Gavan Duffy, an Irish poet. Mr Khushwant Singh Sir had just quoted it.”

I checked this out and he is right. Thanks, Shristi, for finally solving this mystery!!!! This poem has been quoted so often and attributed to Khushwant Singh. Thanks for setting the record right. Below is the poem:

The horse and the mule live for 30 years,
And know nothing of wines and beers;
The goat and sheep at 20 die,
And never get a taste of Scotch and rye.
The cow drinks water by the tonne
And at 18 is mostly done
Without the aid of gin and rum.
The cat in milk and water soaks,
And then in 12 short years it croaks.
The modest, sober, bone-dry hen
Lays eggs for others, then dies at 10.
All animals are strictly dry,
They sinless live and swiftly die.
But sinful, ginful, rum-soaked men
Survive for three score years and ten,
And some of them, though very few,
Stay pickled till they’re 92!

My Life As A Dog

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA


My Life As A Dog

The time in the upper right corner of my computer screen blinks over to 8:30 a.m. and the dogs are still quiet.  But for some reason, whenever I think or type that thought first thing in the morning, Frida immediately whines at my door and then the other two stir in their cages. It happens as soon as I finish typing the sentence, reaffirming my belief that we are tied psychically. She has moved to just outside my door now, her heart broken by the fact that I have not immediately answered her demand to be let into my presence.

I roll out of bed, bemoaning the crick in my back that reminds me I have recently traveled–lugging the heavy cases down from the stoop outside my compound gate myself, knowing that if I let the taxi driver in that he will be rushed by the dogs who are half anxious to see me but even more anxious to escape the confines of their comfortable home to roam the wild mountain above in search of the scent messages left by generations of other dogs.

Now I open the door that leads from the hallway to my room and Frida rushes in to be let out to the lower garden from the sliding glass door in my bedroom.  I try to return to my bed, but Morrie moans his distinctive complaint that zooms from high register to low in a message that conveys impatience, heartbreak and demand all in his own particular language.

Diego simply claws at the latch to his cage.  I go out to the doggie domain––recently completed after two months of cement dust, sledgehammers, and concrete sponges chewed and distributed in tiny pieces over the entire yard and terrace by the dogs.  Peace once again reigns except for the demands of the pups, spread evenly over the day from mealtime to mealtime.

“Let me out to pee,” they say.  Then “Feed me.”  Later it will be, “Throw my toy one hundred times in a row for me to fetch,” or “Might you forget and give us another dog biscuit even though you gave us one two minutes ago?” or, more loudly–in fact as loudly as three dog voices could  possibly declare themselves––”Get those wayfarers out of our street!!!  Wayfarers–be off. Get away now.  Take your dogs with you!!!”

I carry on, knowing I can get away with a few more moments of blogging before it will be necessary to give them their morning kibble.  Diego and Morrie tussle outside my open (but screened) sliding glass doors.  Growling, leaping, rolling over in  doggie sideways double somersaults, they could go on like this for hours.  It irritates Frida, old girl like me, who, although she wants to be no part of it, still resents the extra attention given to the new dog, Morrie, by her former partner Diego.

For years Frida has been bothered by the attentions of the younger and more playful and active Diego, but now that he has a companion with equal if not more energy, she resents it and is permanently crabby towards the newest addition to our family.  After seven months, this has not changed.  When I arrive home and the garage door opens, There is the loud cacophony of Morrie barking to be noticed, Frida barking to tell him to get away from “her” mistress, Diego’s barking at Frida to tell her to let the smaller dog alone.  It is deafening, and I add my louder shouts for them all to be quiet.

Once, when a friend follows me home in his car, he announces that my cries are more disturbing to him and probably the entire neighborhood than the barks and growls of the dogs could ever be, and I realize that in this house of canines, I have probably reverted to my animal nature.  I growl.  I bark.  Do I tear at my food and secretly lust for bones to gnaw upon?  Probably not.  My behavior as influenced by my housemates is probably more metaphoric than actual.

I pull myself away from my compulsion.  As necessary as sealing Morrie’s throw toy away in the metal chest where I also lock away their extra dog food is my closing of the lid of my laptop.  It is time to be away to other things.  Feeding the dogs. Running errands in town.  I could throw sentence after sentence off into cyber space for as many hours as Morrie could fetch his toy, but there is more to life––a life that needs to be lived both for itself and the dogs’ hunger as for the necessity of having something to write about tomorrow, or this afternoon or evening–whenever I can find the time to throw my mind out to see what I will retrieve from my life to bring to you eagerly, seeing what you will throw back to me.

(My apologies to the excellent movie by the same name as this post.  If you haven’t seen it, you should.  It is in my list of ten favorite movies of all time.)

The Prompt:Write Here, Write Now–Write a post entirely in the present tense. https://dailypost.wordpress.com/prompts/write-here-write-now/

Zooming in: White Poinsettia–Flower of the Day, Jan 2, 2016

Zooming in: White Poinsettia

IMG_1012Version 3Version 2IMG_1013

http://ceenphotography.com/2016/01/01/flower-of-the-day-january-2-2016-amaryllis-bud-flower-day-7/