A brief respite from the rain that has been occurring pretty constantly for the past two days gave me a chance to photograph this hibiscus bush with 11 blooms and numerous buds. I cut some of them off to zoom in a bit on the photo.
For Cee’s FOTD
A brief respite from the rain that has been occurring pretty constantly for the past two days gave me a chance to photograph this hibiscus bush with 11 blooms and numerous buds. I cut some of them off to zoom in a bit on the photo.
For Cee’s FOTD
Vanished
The fresh bookstore smell of them,
bending the pages to crack the spine,
notes scribbled in the margins,
underlines,
hearts with initials on the flyleaf,
something to loan or to wrap for a gift,
something propped up on the bathtub edge,
its paper sprinkled with drops–
pages wrinkled into a Braille memory–
that rainstorm run through,
how he put it in his back pocket.
Poetry touched by fingers.
Single words met by lips.
Words pored over by candlelight or flashlight
in a sleeping bag or in a hut with no electricity.
Books pushed into backpacks
and under table legs for leveling.
Paper that soaked up
the oil from fingers
of the reader
consuming popcorn
or chocolate chip cookies
in lieu of the romance on the pages—
finger food served with brain food.
Passions wrapped in paper and ink—
the allure of a book and the tactile comfort.
The soul of a book you could touch, fold, bend.
Books are the gravestones of trees
but also the journals of our hearts.
Cities of words,
boards and bricks of letters,
insulated by hard covers or the curling skins
of paperbacks.
Something solid to transfer the dreams
of one person to another in a concrete telepathy
of fingers and eyes.
Books are the roads we build between us,
solid and substantial–
their paper the roadbed,
the words the center lines directing us.
What will fill the bookcases of a modern world?
Google replacing dictionaries,
Wikipedia already an invisible bank of Encyclopaedias Britannica.
What will we use our boards and bricks for,
if not to hold up whole tenements of books?
How will we furnish our walls?
What will boys carry to school for girls?
What will we balance on heads
to practice walking with perfect posture?
What will we throw in the direction of the horrible pun?
Will there be graveyards for books, or cities built of them?
Quaint materials for easy chairs or headboards for beds?
Will we hollow them out for cigar boxes
or grind them up for packing material?
Where do books belong in the era of Kindle and Audible?
These dinosaurs that soon will not produce more eggs.
Perhaps they’ll grow as precious as antiques.
Perhaps the grandchildren of our grandchildren
will ponder how to open them. Will wonder at their quaintness,
collecting them like mustache cups or carnival glass,
wondering about the use of them—as unfathomable as hieroglyphics.
That last book closing its pages–one more obsolete mystery
fueling the curiosity of a bygone era that has vanished
into a wireless universe.
For Stream of Consciousness Saturday Prompt: i before e.
Writer’s Block
While potters ponder truths of clay,
I often pass the day away
wandering to try to find
that perfect word within my mind.
For The Three Things Challenge, the words are: POTTER PONDER WANDER
For Fibbing Friday, the task is to define these terms:
1. Merry-go-sorry: It’s Xmas, and in the middle of wishing them season’s greetings, you realize someone is in great distress and so you apologize and let them skip ahead of you into the restroom. .
2. Momist: A momma’s boy
3. Obfuscate: What Prince William calls his wife when she is pregnant and in a bad mood.
4. Obnubilate: that affectionate gesture an expectant father makes when rubbing his wife’s baby bump.
5. Peacockize: To change the channel to NBC
6. Sillytonian: A musician who provides background music for cartoons.
7. Slug-a-bed: A sleeping worm
8. Snout-fair: A pig fest. (Or, a meeting of plastic surgeons.)
9. Teen: A suffix that adds angst to the numbers four, six, seven eight and nine.
10. Wasteheart: The organ of the body that is clothed by a waistcoat.
11. Whiffler: Someone who makes the final decision regarding fragrances in a perfume factory. (Or, alternatively, a farting baby.)
Some of us find the world
in the places where we were born.
Some of us can find no place there at all
except in retrospect.
We write books about these lost places
as though we knew what they were all about;
as though just by living there, we understood that place.
Actually, by writing about them we visit them again
and feel as much a stranger as we did before.
That is how we can stand to write about them.
They become the exotic other lands we’ve traveled to.
Misfortune becomes the best part of the story;
and we, at last, are grateful for it.
When it comes to Words and Photographs, I can’t pick just one!!! Here are my responses to the words: (Click on the photos to see their word prompt and to enlarge view.)
For Thursday’s Special Pick a Word prompt, the words are: ACCUMULATED DESCENDING FRAGMENT EXOTIC OBSERVING
For Cee’s FOTD
Poetic Reconstruction
I’m going to the hospital. I’ve made a reservation,
for I am much in need of a creative restoration.
I need an operation to regain my way of seeing.
I’m going to regain my glow–the fiber of my being.
I suffer from prosaism. Triteness clogs each vein.
My poetic diagnosis? Derivative. Inane.
The abundance of my poems does not refute the fact
of the originality that lately they have lacked.
So, take me to the hospital. I’m ready to be cut.
I’m ready to be lifted from my creative rut.
Unveil my eyes, unblock my brain. Clear pathways to my heart,
but as you improve parts of it, please leave the broken part.
For all the pleasures of the world do not make up a whole.
It also takes some sorrows to feed a poet’s soul.
For the Moonwashed Weekly Prompt: Poetic (I chose the word “poetic” as the prompt, not the raindrop photo.)
When it comes to aging, I’ve found a sense of humor becomes ever more important. Take the subject of wrinkles, for instance! I wrote this poem ten years ago and when I look in the mirror, I realize its truth has only become more obvious!!!
Wrinkles
Once when I was younger, poundage was the thing—
as I obsessed about the growth calories might bring.
Every morning on the scale, I checked for extra girth.
Any extra poundage was how I gauged my worth.
But now that I am older, I check the mirror first
before I stop to weigh myself or slake my morning thirst.
First thing on my agenda, if I have the chance,
is to approach my mirror to have a daily glance.
Now every little wrinkle, every little line
viewed within my mirror brings a little whine.
But when I step upon the scale, there’s less there to regret.
If I’ve gained a pound or two, I vow just to forget.
For if I’ve found new wrinkles, all that I can say
is every extra pound I gain just stretches them away.
For MVB the prompt is : humor