So fun to see how photos will turn out in black and white! Don’t know if that qualifies as monotone, but Brian did it, so I get to, too.
Brian (Bushboy) is the host for Monochrome Madness this week.
So fun to see how photos will turn out in black and white! Don’t know if that qualifies as monotone, but Brian did it, so I get to, too.
Brian (Bushboy) is the host for Monochrome Madness this week.
This is a Friday the 13th sort of flower. Definitely down on its luck but I still think it has a kind of beauty.
For Cee’s FOTD
The prompt for SOCS is “Food.”

Remembering Grandma at Christmas
The years have chosen to abrade
the paper angel Grandma made
that year when Christmas cheer was thin,
because for weeks we were snowed in.
Even Santa ceased his action
for his reindeer had no traction.
Weeks of snow and sleet and fog
even kept the catalogue
from providing a Christmas doll
when Santa couldn’t come at all.
And so the holidays that year
did not reflect our usual cheer.
No tree, no lights, no heavenly choir,
our only heat a roaring fire.
We kids complained to Mom and Dad
and by Christmas Eve, they’d had
as much of kids as they could stand
and that’s when Grandma took a hand.
Her silver scissors nipped and flew
creating something that was new—
a Christmas angel feathery light
that floated that December night
above our heads in fire glow,
hung by a string, rotating slow
around the room with wafting wings
descending from above on strings.
And from the dark a heavenly song
prompted us to sing along.
My Grandma led, with timorous voice
that song that always was her choice:
“Silent night, holy night!
All is calm, and all is bright.
Round yon Virgin, Mother and Child.
Holy infant so tender and mild.
Sleep in heavenly peace.
Sleep in heavenly peace.”
One by one, we entered in,
our voices first halting and thin,
but when my Grandma chimed a bell,
our family choir began to swell
up to the ceiling, throughout the room,
dispelling darkness, cold and gloom.
Mom made cocoa on the coals
while Dad made popcorn, filling bowls
we strung on thread to deck our halls
from curtain rods to lamps to walls,
along with paper snowflakes that
twirled on their strings to tease the cat.
In the firelight’s magic glow,
they made things magical and so
every normal Christmas since,
we love our turkey and pies of mince,
Christmas presents to poke and squeeze,
bubble lights and towering trees,
but what’s most special is when Pop
puts Grandma’s angel on the top
of the tree covered in flakes
and popcorn strings the family makes.
And when we sing her special song,
if angels sing, she’ll sing along.
For dVerse Poets, the last prompt of the year is “Holiday.”
I wrote this poem 6 years ago. It may not be Kosher to run it by again, but then Chritstmas isn’t a very Kosher holiday at all, is it? Happy Holidays to one and all..be it Hanukkah or Xmas
For Fibbing Friday, the challenges to lie about are:
1. Who invented Elf on the Shelf? That house-organizer lady you hired to come help you sort out your Xmas decorations.
2. Have you been naughty or nice? Yes.
3. Who or what is The Beast from the East? Can’t remember his name but I’m fairly sure Trump has appointed him to some crucial position.
4. Who was Santa’s Little Helper? Mrs. Santa, before she put on all that weight from taste-testing her Xmas cookies.
5. What is a Yule log? A to-do list. First, yule do this, then this and this and this.
6. What is marzipan? What happens when you gouge a stuck cherry pie out of the pan you baked it in.
7. What is Egg Nog? The condition of your head after drinking too much holiday cheer.
8. Why is there a fairy on the top of the Christmas Tree (be polite!) You are misinformed. That winged creature is an angel, not a fairy. I am “fairyly” sure of that fact.
9. What are baubles? Tongue-tied babblings.
10. What is a tree skirt? When you cut a wide swath around the Christmas tree, fearing you’ll collide with an ornament.
I had forgotten that this plant was a poinsettia until it surprised me by suddenly starting to turn red a month or so ago. Amazing how it is always in full coloration by December 25. I’ve had this plant for many years but just moved it to the front garden a few months ago and had forgotten what it was as it was totally green at that point. Now it greets me every time I leave my front door or enter by the street entrance. Come visit, and it will greet you, too!! Merry Xmas.
For Cee’s FOTD
For Cee’s FOTD
I hope this is the correct identification for this flower. I couldn’t find a common name for it. If you know, do tell!!
For Cee’s FOTD