My Neighbor’s Wall For FOTD July 31, 2023

For Cee’s FOTD

Turkey Full O’Spoons for Lou

When Lou showed a blog of his hand-formed wooden spoons, I had to brag about all of mine. Here they are in permanent display in my kitchen. I sometimes use 5 per recipe. Easier than rinsing and drying off the same spoon with each ingredient added. I purchased these during years of doing art and craft shows as well as on the street from vendors since I moved to Mexico. I hope Lou will put a link to the blog showing his spoons in comments…

Round and Round for One Word Sunday: Circle.

 

For Travel With Intent’s One Word Sunday: Circle

Flutter

Moths

They lift their wings
to float, then pump.
Slower than flit,
faster than slump.

Not content with loll and putter,
moths prefer to sail and flutter
through the air
from here to there.

The Weekend Writing Prompt is to write exactly 34 words making use of the word “flutter.” My word count includes the title.

 

Preserved Beauty: FOTD, July 30, 2023

For Cee’s FOTD

“Look Closer” for Lens Artists Challenge 260: Overlooked

Click on Photos to enlarge and read the captions.

This is the description of the last photo, which was cut off if you clicked on it to enlarge: This little guy rapped loudly on some tree in the neighborhood until I finally went out to see where he was. But, the minute I went out the door, he would freeze and become invisible. Finally, however, I caught him doing his business, whereupon he promptly flew away and has not returned. Here he is eighty feet up in the tree.

For Lens Artists Challenge 260: Overlooked.

Bougainvillea After Rain: For FOTD July 29, 2023

 

For Cee’s FOTD

Mmmmmm, Hammocks!!! for the M&M Challenge.

Click on Photos to Enlarge

For the CMMC Challenge: Two M’s

Barking up the Right Trees.

Click on Photos to Enlarge.

For the Nature Photo Challenge: Tree Bark

“A Year Ago Today,” For Flashback Friday

This was one of my posts made exactly one year ago today:

Anima/Animus

Click on photos to enlarge. Explanations of the sculpture are given below the poem.

Anima/Animus

The sword of guilt is something I continually hone,
and in this I feel that I am surely not alone.
Guile and temper are not exclusively my sin,
for animus is something that we all carry within.

In the early nineteenth century, animus was used to mean “temper” and was typically used in a hostile sense. In 1923, it began being used as a term in Jungian psychology to describe the masculine side of women. The anima as the unconscious feminine side of a man. (Excerpts from Wikipedia)

The photos are of my mixed media sculpture entitled Anima/Animus.  The detail in the second photo symbolizes the shattering of the male side of the ego by a feminine consciousness. The metal object in the glass case is a small replica of the instrument used to sever heads from bodies in sacrificial preHispanic temple ceremonies. The hammer shattering the glass is meant to symbolize the gentling effect of the feminine on the masculine.

 

Prompt words today are animusguilt, guileexclusive and alon

 

For Flashback Friday.