The Prompt: 90 percent of each photo must be in one color.

http://ceenphotography.com/2015/03/31/cees-fun-foto-challenge-colorful-monotones/
The Prompt: 90 percent of each photo must be in one color.

http://ceenphotography.com/2015/03/31/cees-fun-foto-challenge-colorful-monotones/
Note: If you looked at my morning’s post and it was empty, please look again HERE.
In response to The Daily Post’s weekly photo challenge: “Ephemeral.”
https://dailypost.wordpress.com/dp_photo_challenge/ephemeral/
Disclaimer: Yesterday I suffered my first migraine in sixteen years or so. I had just been telling a friend how long it had been since I’d had my last one and the best way to overcome them when suddenly, a few days later, when I was standing on a ladder putting away material in my studio, I grew dizzy and would have fallen off the ladder if I hadn’t had a chair back and file cabinet to steady myself on. Soon after, the migraine descended, along with the nausea and this time with a shortness of breath that was probably psychosomatic but which made me feel as though I was going to suffocate.
What was worse is that there was no one around–no one in my neighborhood–no one I could think to call. When I tried to think of someone to email or Skype, my mind fogged and I couldn’t figure out how to type the letters or who exactly to call–just to have a sense of presence. I was too sick to talk and could barely even stand the distraction of calling on Skype. Nor could I figure out how to actually make the call. Luckily a friend who was about to leave on a trip to another town and who was already connected to me by Skype, contacted an old friend and she called me and talked me down a bit, poor thing, talking for ten minutes or so without relief. All I needed was some soft distraction so I did not think about not being able to breathe.
Today just the slight edge of a headache is there. Enough so I dare not bend down or chance seeing a bright light or smelling the odor of Jacaranda, which I am afraid is what caused the problem this time, but I have started thinking about old age and being alone and vulnerable and all of those things I’ve never really thought of seriously before. When I tried to write something else entirely, what got written was the rather self-indulgent piece below. My impulse is to put it away and to write something else, but I also have a curiosity about whether others might have the same feelings sometimes so I just might have another look at it and print it with the understanding that when such things are written, they sometimes serve as their own antidote.
Or, perhaps the extreme of what I wrote is simply priming the pump–a surge to get me going. Well, I’ll have another read and we shall see. If I do print it, I’d appreciate comments–lots of them–no matter how negative. My grandmother used to say a Dutch phrase when she was feeling sorry for herself, “Mama Miet mi Dote!” (Mama might be dead.) It became our family’s saying, only my mother (her daughter-in-law), who didn’t understand Dutch, said “Mama Milk My Goat.” My dad thought this was funny so never told us differently until I went to college and tried to use it and got blank stares from all those who didn’t know the phrase I thought everyone used. It was then my dad ‘fessed up. So, “Mama Milk My Goat.” Yes, I am feeling sorry for myself in the ditty below, but it helps to rave sometimes and tomorrow is another day. For now, I’m lying low for one more day.
Post-Migraine Depression
My life is growing narrower, the walls are closing in.
I don’t care where I’m going or care where I have been.
I never thought life would wear out or that I’d tire of it,
but suddenly the life around me does not seem to fit.
We’re schooled to be cheerful and to make the best of life–
to emphasize our happiness and overlook the strife,
but somehow everything has changed. Perhaps it is the weather,
for suddenly I feel my life is on too short a tether.
I think I’ve worn my old life out but cannot seek a new one.
I’ve simply not the energy to try again to do one.
So I shall lie abed today to contemplate my fate–
to have a look at what I do and what is on my plate.
I need to feed the dogs and then to feed my own self, too–
to dress myself and try to put each shoe in front of shoe.
My grandma was a martyr and perhaps I am the same,
but I don’t try to make this into any other’s blame.
I simply feel that I must stir the pot up once again–
take off on an adventure someplace I’ve never been.
Find a niche and fill it and live a simple life.
Try to find diversion without turmoil or strife.
To inspect the Caribbean or a tiny town in Spain.
Live alone in solitude with nothing to explain.
My family is scattered and has no need of me.
In terms of obligations, I am really fancy free.
So if you do not see me later on this blog,
just know that I have gone away and slipped my usual cog.
Perhaps I’ll be beach combing or traveling out to sea.
Perhaps I’ll be investigating what else I can be.
My life will soon be over and although I’ve had the best,
I feel that I need more of it before my final rest.
Or, I may not stir at all. I guess I must admit,
perhaps my need is satisfied by contemplating it.
https://dailypost.wordpress.com/dp_prompt/we-built-this-city/
Peek-a-boo Pinkies

I just couldn’t resist posting this picture. A visiting friend asked if it was okay if he removed his shoes and of course i said no problem. Imagine my surprise when these toes presented themselves to my view, just a foot or so from where I was sitting on a nearby stool. He nonchalantly twitched his toes as he told an engaging tale. They were sort of like a director’s baton, giving emphasis to certain emphatic points in the story.
If you know who this is, shhhhhh, don’t tell. I don’t want to embarrass anyone.
http://ceenphotography.com/2015/03/15/cees-odd-ball-photo-challenge-2015-week-11/
From the hilarity of a hole in the sock of a toe to various pensive moods, I think catching people unaware is the best way to capture a mood.
http://ceenphotography.com/2015/03/10/cees-fun-foto-challenge-catching-people-unaware/

It is also necessary to cross this scary suspension bridge to get further up the beach. I’ve tried wading the estuary, but crocs seem a bigger danger than the three cables that support this bridge.
For more fabulous pictures of bridges, go here:
I love prompts like this that force us to look at our photos in a different way. I’ve just been waiting to use the first one below, which seems perfect for this challenge. Thanks, WordPress, for pushing our minds as well as our eyes.

I arrived at a local coffee bar/gallery to find it closed. This didn’t deter two little boys outside or the inside kitten, from communing. Where there is a will, convergence will happen!

The woman, the children and each of the dogs each arrived separately to converge. There were three extra dogs as well, but I liked the composition of this cropping of the photo. The small dog jumping out from behind the umbrella pole is a picture by himself and seems to be gaining the attention of all except the children who are intent in their creative efforts in the sand.

This fish was alive and left upon the sand to die. I couldn’t help but identify with his efforts to draw air. This is the part of fishing that bothers me the most. The children saw little difference between the live fish and the dead one, wanting to touch every surface. When the bigger boy reached to touch the eye, I flinched, but luckily the fish was dead by then. Not my catch. Not my boys. If they were, all would have passed differently.
For more “Converge” photos, go here:
http://ceenphotography.com/2014/12/01/wp-weekly-photo-challenge-converge/
He handed it to me without ceremony—a small leather bag, awl-punched and stitched together by hand. Its flap was held together by a clasp made from a two fishing line sinkers and a piece of woven wax linen. I unwound the wax linen and found inside a tiny wooden heart with his initials on one side, mine on the other. A small hole in the heart had a braided cord of wax linen strung through that was attached to the bag so that the heart could not be lost. He had woven more waxed linen into a neck cord. I was 39 years old when he gave me that incredible thing I never thought I would receive: his heart—as much of it as he could give. Continue reading
I posted two of these recently in the WordPress Weekly Challenge: Refraction, so I apologize to those of you who have already seen them. On the other hand, I’ve looked at the below picture of the jellyfish a hundred times and never get tired of seeing it; and they are so perfect for this challenge that I just have to use them again.
One Word Photo Challenge: Clear

for more photos, go here: http://jennifernicholewells.com/2014/11/04/one-word-photo-challenge-clear/