Monthly Archives: August 2023

Finally! My front door decorations almost restored!!! For Thursday Doors

 

The last major earthquake to be felt here on Lake Chapala (we were not at the epicenter) did in this arch over my door that leads onto the street from my front yard.  It had to be taken down and the painting around it done by master painter Jesus  Lopez Vega was lost as well. Here it is, rebuilt and restored.  He’s now painting my address with embellishment on the wall to the left and needs to paint the light cover. I’ll show more photos later. Wanted to show this for Thursday Doors, however, as I haven’t posted on it for some time.

 

HERE is a link that shows the door and arch before and during restoration.

For Thursday Doors

Travel Confusion for Cee’s WWC


 

 

I don’t know how this shot came about. I used no editing or tricks, but of the thousands of road shots I sifted through to find a photo for Cee’s reinaugural Which Way challenge, this was the most intriguing. A very good depiction of too many days on the road!  Even my camera seems to have been confused. Welcome back, Cee.

For Cee’s Which Way Challenge

Hibiscus, FOTD Aug 31, 2023

 

For Cee’s FOTD

Mutability: For W3 prompt

 

Mutability

It
is life.
We can’t fight
the truth that we
were born to those rules
that return us to soil
from whence we have been lifted 
time after time, metamorphosed
from light to shadow, from breath to wind,
to rise and fall in some eternal plan 
we have no chart for except for what we see
in ripening grain and bread upon the table,
oceans raised into the air to fall as springtime rain.
Why can’t we see
we can’t control
our universe
but instead fall
like autumn leaves
down to the earth?

 

The above  poem was written to this prompt: Write a poem in “Tree of Life” poetic form about changes, impermanence, and strength.
‘Tree of Life’ poetic form:

  • An uplifting poem in 19 lines;
  • Syllabic: 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-11-12-13-4-4-4-4-4-4;
  • Unrhymed;
  • Alignment: Centered

Things Money Can’t Buy? Friends!

For CFFC: There Are Some Things Money Can’t Buy

The Zen of Fear

The farther up the mountain we went, the smaller the road became. I was on the outside and for most of the way the drop was severe–with no siderails or walls or shoulders. Vertigo? Yes.

The Zen of Fear

I don’t know what’s in front of me,
can’t  recall what’s in the rear.
Don’t know if I should run full force
or if I should veer.

I guess I will just take what comes
and enjoy the ride.
Life is so much better spent
with fears all set aside.

The Pensivity Three Things Challenge prompt today is Front, Rear, Aside.

Postscript:

Forgottenman says I should include our Skype conversation that took place between my writing of this poem and its posting, so here goes:

Judy, 11:54 PM: what should I name the poem I’m about to post? Yeah I know yer drunk, but you do some of your best thinking in that condition!  ;o)
Forgottenman, 11:56 PM: Heh, yep. I’m thinking! My first drunken thought is The Zen of Fear.
Forgottenman: 12:01 AM: Wow – you actually titled it that!
Judy, 12:01 AM: Well I always do.  I used the title you suggested yesterday, too! It was a good title.  I could write poems all day long but I am usually stymied by the titles. I still don’t have a title for my Ethiopia book after twenty years!!!!! Can’t finish and publish it until I do.

Another Glorious Hibiscus: FOTD Aug 30, 2023

Yesterday this flower was a bud. Today, it has spread out in all its glory.  For those who asked how large the one the other day was, I promised to measure the next one. This one is about 7 1/2 inches wide. 

For Cee’s FOTD

The Look!!!

A friend sent me this. Thanks, Joan. Had to share it with you. Spooky!!!!

Sisters, for dVerse Poets

 

Noises in the Night

She was six years old and alone in a room that had noises in the wall. She would curl up into a tight little ball under the covers and concentrate on the friendly sounds––the tapping of the pendulum of the clock which hung on the wall beside her bed and the water gurgling through the heating pipes. The muffled voices of her parents down below in the living room. She liked these noises. They made her think that she wasn’t alone.

But she could hear other sounds of the summer night–– the sudden loud popping noise that she thought was a gun until daddy told her that it was only houses settling, or the sound of the elm tree outside her window scraping against the brick on the chimney or the wind as it whined through her screens, making the venetian blinds scrape against their wooden window frames. She could hear things in the walls, too––noises that sounded like people walking and high shrieking noises that daddy said were just mice and not robbers.

The sheet felt muggy on her bare legs and she kicked it off and rolled over. She lay on her stomach and slipped her hand beneath the pillow, sliding it back-and-forth against the trapped coolness of the percale. She glanced at the noisy pendulum clock Santa had brought her for Christmas to help her learn to tell the time. It was her first real clock and it was in the shape of a Shmoo.  She could just make out where its hands were from the light of the streetlamp shining through her window. It wasn’t very late.

She flipped over and slid her legs over the side of the bed, feeling the slight stickiness of the linoleum on her feet as she walked to the window. The air had cooled a bit and it had started to rain. A slight breeze tickled the hairs on her arm and sifted the rain onto her nose as she pressed it close to the screen to smell the mustiness of the wet night grass.

She wondered when her older sisters would get home and come up to bed. It was lonely in a room all alone in the upstairs of a house that had robbers in the walls.

 

Most of you have probably seen this next post about my sisters, but I had forgotten it so perhaps you have, too: https://judydykstrabrown.com/2021/11/06/my-sisters-camera/
This pictorial post from two years ago actually prompted a book which I am doing the final editing on. Hopefully it will be published in the next few months.

For the dVerse Poets prompt: Siblings

And you can read what others wrote in their response HERE.

Plumeria: FOTD Aug 29, 2023

For Cee’s FOTD