Monthly Archives: January 2026

“Reconciliation,” Haiku for Tanka Tuesday, Jan 6, 2026

                           

  Reconciliation

I lift his picture
from the place I have pitched it.
Fortune cookie words:

~There is much of value in what you throw away.~

Remember once more
Joys he brought into my life,
as well as the pain.

 

The prompt for Tanka Tuesday is to write a Puente poem making use of any syllabic form. I choose Haiku. The quote in the middle stanza is from a fortune cookie. I know Haikus are not supposed to be named, but I couldn’t resist imparting a bit more information through a title.

Here is a link to more poems written to this prompt.

Image created with A.I.  after many failed attempts!!

Note: This is actually based on a true story, although what I found in my wastebasket after receiving that fortune in a fortune cookie was 1,000 pesos stapled to the inside of an envelope I’d crumpled up and thrown away.!!! And actually, the poem’s insight was one I achieved on my own, the wastebasket being a metaphor for a trial separation that ended in––you guessed it––a reconciliation.

“Poached Eggs and Other Verbal Sins,” For Fibbing Friday, Jan 9, 2026

For Fibbing Friday, the task at hand is:

1. What’s the difference between a bow and a curtsey? A “curt”sey is shorter.
2. What’s the difference between a bison and a basin? An a and an o.
3. What’s the difference between a pocket and a pouch? Wear one, carry the other.
4. How do you poach an egg? By removing it surreptitiously while both the hen and the hen’s owner are distracted.
5. What is smog? A tiny portion of og.
6. What is triage? Three years old or thirty years old.
7. What is a tripod? A vacation in a strange place.
8. How many legs does an octogenarian have? Same number as a septuagenarian, but they are less usable.
9. What is a buzz cut? A break in conversation.
10. What’s the difference between a baggie and a bagel? One carries edibles and the other is edible.

Mother Murdered by ICE After Dropping her Daughter Off At School

See the rest of the story here:

https://open.substack.com/pub/steady/p/murder-in-cold-blood?utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email

“Reflection” for the Three Things Challenge, Jan 8, 2026

 

I hope you have a friend to give you a hand to help you with your reflections on actions past and present.

This is a photo I took of my computer screen while watching “The Half of It.” An interesting film about friendship that is now on Netflix.

For the Three Things Challenge

The Words are Help.hand and hope.

For dVerse Poets, Jan 6, 2026

Down in Grandma’s Cellar

Sleeping over at Grandma’s, her rooms all stuffed with treasure
there for my explorations, their pillaging my pleasure.
The barn so full and shadowed with pigeons, mice and more,
I did not venture farther than to peek in through the door.
But the basement was forbidden, so I overcame my fear.
To test my new maturity, I had to venture near.

Down in Grandma’s cellar, I could not see the stars.
There weren’t any planets like Jupiter or Mars.
But still it was as dark as night. The light from one mere candle
seemed the only light the ghosts who lived down there could handle.
As I creaked down the ladder rungs, glass rattled on the shelves
as though the time-dulled canning jars told stories on themselves.

Rhubarb on the nearest shelves, peaches in the back.
Watermelon pickles seemed poised for the attack,
swaying on the upper shelves, dusted by the years.
I gathered up my courage, pushing down my fears.
So many eyes caught in the dark––glassy gleaming sprites
waiting there to satisfy the family’s appetites.

But no one came to gather them and spread them on a plate.
The waste of it was senseless—their empty, useless fate.
How many hours she’d labored to gather nature’s fruit.
How many other hours used up in the pursuit
of washing, peeling, cutting, and packing them in glass,
packing them in cauldrons and boiling them en masse.

Where did the hungry mouths go? Why did they go untasted?
What happened all those years ago that their richness was wasted?
Accustomed to the secrets kept hidden behind blinds,
we kids retained the questions that stirred our tiny minds.
So many of these mysteries lie hidden in my past.
Remarkable how long their spreading shadows seem to last.

 

For dVerse Poets  our prompt was to use 3 poems by Elizabeth Bishop as examples colored by our own poetic voice to take the reader to a place, a person and an occasion, incorporating  accuracy of detail, spontaneity, immediacy and mystery to write our own original poem. 

At a Distance for Word of the Day, Jan 6, 2026

IMG_2075

At a Distance

Although you may be absent, thoughts of you still linger.
I think you have my memory wound around your finger,
for though I find the lack of you totally endurable,
my memory suffers from a need that’s totally incurable.
Friends may think the distance between us is a pity,
and yet with one so erudite, so pithy, loyal and witty,
it seems you linger on even after you are bound
off to other regions—your presence a mere sound
heard over the telephone, imagined o’er the keys,
so I may have your company any time I please.
Relationships are more, my dear, than a simple presence.
Sometimes merely words suffice to conjure up your essence.

 

I am answering this challenge with a poem written in 2016–ten years ago. If you are still curious about this untypical relationship described in the poem above, read more about it HERE
and then HERE.

For Word of the Day Challenge, the word is Distance.

The Numbers Game #106. Please Play Along! Jan. 5, 2026

 

The Numbers Game #106. Please Play Along! Jan. 5, 2026

Welcome to “The Numbers Game #106”. Today’s number is 228 . To play along, go to your photos file folder and type that number into the search bar. Then post a selection of the photos you find that include that number and post a link to your blog in my Numbers Game blog of the day. If instead of numbers, you have changed the identifiers of all your photos into words, pick a word or words to use instead, and show us a variety of photos that contain that word in the titleThis prompt will repeat each Monday with a new number. If you want to play along, please put a link to your blog in comments below. Here are my contributions to the album.

**Click on  Photos to Enlarge and View as Gallery.**

 

Cock of the Walk for Cellpic Sunday

 

This fellow stood out from as well as above the flock in Quintana Roo!

For Cellpic Sunday

My New Book Fish Feet Now Available on Amazon!!

Wouldn’t it be neat if fish had feet? This is the question considered in this fourth humorous rhymed children’s storybook written by Judy Dykstra-Brown and charmingly illustrated by Isidro Xilonzóchitl. Kids from 2 to 8 and beyond will enjoy this book, but nonreaders need not wait to recruit a reader to enjoy the book, for the words to the story are also presented as the sung lyrics of a song either accessed by means of a QR code on the front of the book or by directly connecting to Youtube. Music by Christine Anfossie is arranged, sung and recorded by Becky McGuigan. (If you want to hear the book sung, enlarge the QR code above and click on it with your camera, click on Youtube and lend an ear!!!)

HERE is the Amazon link.

If you get the book, I would appreciate reviews here and on Amazon. If you just listen to it making use of the QR code, I’d appreciate knowing what you think as well.  

“The Green Moth” for the Poetry Challenge

The Green Moth

Note: The Poetry Challenge was to write 10-14 sentences of poetic prose about a defining moment that influenced a new direction . Wish I had more skill in formatting this so the words came right up to the moth, as they did when it flew onto my screen and then rested quietly as I arranged the words around it. This was the best I could do in recreating the experience.