Monthly Archives: August 2020

Copa de Oro: Weekend Prompt Challenge, Sunshine Yellow

Click on flowers to enlarge. You can’t see the golden glow unless you do!!

Yesterday I  promised to show you what the Copa de Oro looked like once it opened up. The last photo is yesterday’s closed fist. Today they opened wide! Since nothing exemplifies sunshine yellow better than the sunshine bright color in the throat of this flower, I’m using it for the Weekend prompts challenge of sunshine yellow. That glow is real. It’s the sun shining through the flower!

 

For the Weekend Prompts Challenge: Sunshine Yellow.

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Who Are America’s Frontline Doctors?

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Open link below to read article:
https://www.snopes.com/news/2020/07/30/americas-frontline-doctors/

The Archbishop Gets Forgetful

The Archbishop Gets Forgetful

Priests in town know when the archbishop is about,
he’s bound to have a new batch of indulgences to tout.
And though he’s their head honcho so they must all be respectful,
when they see him coming they get super-genuflectful.
“Please dear Lord, don’t make us sell the pardons that he has!”
These days that sort of fund-raising carries no pizazz.
Paying their bills as he suggests has no appeal at all.
They’d really rather make do with St. Vincent de Paul.
Yet no one wants to tell him that selling the way to heaven
was outlawed by the church way back in fifteen sixty-seven!

Prompt words for today are honcho, pizzazz, respectful, tout and bill.

 

Copa de Oro: FOTD Aug 2, 2020

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For Cee’s FOTD 

Truth in Advertising

I Swear to God This Is A True Story!!!

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  • I have been working hard for the past two days transferring information, stories, poems and photos from a tall stack of storage disks from old computers. This story was found in a diary entry from 2006 when I was visiting friends on Baja California. I swear, none of this is made up or embellished!!! So, here we go. Please excuse my irreverence. As penance, I grant you permission to tell any story you wish about me once I depart this earth.

True Story

He is a very good-looking guy, younger than most at the party in this little ex-pat-swollen community on the coast of Baja California, and very tan from a recent fishing trip. As I join the group clustered around him, he has just started telling a story about that trip–an incredible story about  going to get ice to ice their bait, finding the bait shop man dead, and being asked by the police to take the body to the coroner in the next town. Since they have a pickup, after they’ve loaded the body, the police ask if they’d just pick up another body on their way. Seems the police chief’s brother from a neighboring town was playing around with his brother’s gun, shot himself in the head and died.

So they drive thirty miles or so with the one body to pick up the other body to drive to the coroner. When they arrive at the coroner’s office, he asks them to wait a minute and they can just drive the body back to their own village. With this said, he rips the body open groin to throat and starts removing organs. After pronouncing the cause of death as heart attack, he fills two buckets with the organs, sews up the corpse and puts all back in the bed of the pickup.

The drama continues at the funeral, when the casket won’t fit in the hole. When it gets wedged in at a slant, the lid pops open to release, in addition to the obvious odors, myriads of flies. They pry the casket back up, close the lid, and the grave digger gets down to remove the liners from the grave to make more room for the casket. When he does, the walls of the grave collapse and he is buried.

Frantically, all jump in and start removing dirt. Once the grave digger is extricated and the grave freed of sufficient dirt, they once more lower the body into the grave, but as they are shoveling dirt over the coffin, someone remembers that although the body is safely buried, that they have neglected to put the now neatly bagged parcels of organs back in the coffin. So the deceased is exhumed before ever being properly covered, someone is dispatched to fetch the organs, and he is finally intact this time as they shovel the dirt over.

After the dirt is brought up to almost ground level, boards are placed over the grave and it is cemented over. Puzzled, our narrator asks why this is done and is told that it is to keep animals from digging down to the body. Finally, the departed is laid to rest, but not so his ending tale, which has been making its round of cocktail parties ever since.

If Things Should Return to Normal

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If Things Should Return to Normal

Just in case the world we know ever returns to normal,
I feel we’ll need reminders for behavior less informal.
So, let me reacquaint you with the former art of dressing.
Introducing color-matching, underwear and pressing.
It’s been a number of months now—five, to be precise—
since there was the necessity to put on something nice
and face the maze of traffic to go to an event.
So before you visit places where you once often went,
you may require reminders, lest in trips to spots exalted
you could find your entry may otherwise be halted.
Entrance to most restaurants requires shirt and shoes,
along with all your other clothes. Forget this, and you’ll lose
precious hours driving home to remedy the fact
that you’ve forgotten basics of how you used to act.
Out there in the real world, genteel folks do not dare
to go about half-dressed and it’s good to cut your hair.
Put on a little lipstick and tweeze hairs from your chin.
Do not gobble down your food and do not slurp your gin.
When the world returns to normal and you go out once more,
just in case, please pin this little check-list to your door.
Though reminders may be premature, be glad that you have gotten them,

for by the time they’re needed, I’ll most likely have forgotten them.

Prompt words today are maze, precious, introducing, exalt and dress.