Tag Archives: new friends

For SOCS, “Journeys.”

“Everyone you meet knows something you don’t know but need to know” –C.G. Jung

Journeys

Every conversation is a quest two people enter
from opposite  directions to converge at its center.
The first part of the journey commences with their greeting—
an intricate endeavor completed with first meeting.

With each new associate, we visit a new land.
With each conversation, our horizons expand
into lands exotic, tragic or entertaining.
Perhaps enemy territory—often with no training.

Do we take umbrage with their words or enter, unprotesting,
the world that they offer—experimenting, testing
new mental mountains, jungles where vivid birds might call,
beckoning us onwards, or do we meet a wall

that offers us no access—sealed up, rigid, cold—
closed to all explorers, nearly obscured with mold?
What journeys do we offer ourselves to those we meet?
Do we offer easy access or promise sure defeat?

Life was designed for journeying. Daily, new vacations.
Some conversations novels and others mere quotations.
Even that experience you wouldn’t choose again
is just another whistle stop on life’s commuter train.

For SOCS the prompt is “A favorite saying.”

I’m a Fan of New Friends

Click on photos to enlarge.

Over the last year I have met so many new delightful friends. These are some, but not all of them. Some I have met only once but immediately felt we could be friends. Others I have met more than once but neglected to take photos, so these photos present both recent friendships made and potential ones. And, stay tuned, because I actually forgot to post this this morning and hours later, I found something else I am a fan of and I’m reblogging an old blog that explains all. So, two posts for this prompt today!! HERE is the other one.

For the “I’m A Fan Of” Challenge

Abroad in Retrospect

Three new friends came home with me from the Ajijic Writers’ Conference and we spent the late afternoon and evening drinking wine, eating potstickers and asparagus and having an even greater feast of words.  In the course of the evening’s conversation, someone asked why I had stayed for a year and a half in Ethiopia, and if you’ve read my earlier blog entries about my African experiences, you will know the tale I told.

They are all three successful and much-published writers and enthusiastically encouraged me to write a book about those years.  Everyone had organizational ideas and it got me to thinking again.  Could I do this?  It would mean much research, and so I think if I were offered a year abroad that I would choose Ethiopia so I could revisit old locales and do research in the place that would be the setting for the book.  Will I do it?  We’ll see.  (Write the book, I mean.  I fear the research will be conducted at my desk at home.)

The Prompt:  If you were asked to spend a year abroad, where would you choose?
https://dailypost.wordpress.com/dp_prompt/study-abroad/