Rabu, 29 Agustus 2007
13th Thursday 13
This is my 13th Thursday Thirteen post so I thought I try and list 13 good things about the number 13 in my life.
1. My lucky day seems to be Friday 13.
2. The last four digits of my phone number equal 13.
3. The letters in my first and last name equal 13.
4. My birthday month and day equal 13.
5. The letters in my cat's name equal 13.
6. The letters in my husband's name equal 13.
7. The first date I had with my husband was Friday 13.
8. The letters in my mother's name equal 13.
9. The letters of my first husband's name equaled 13.
10. I live in apartment number 13.
11. Number of years it's been since I left the Midwest has been 13.
12. My first real kiss from a boy was age 13.
13. My favorite hour the day is 13.
The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!
Selasa, 28 Agustus 2007
Cat's on Tuesday: In Search of Pussy Willows
In Search of Pussy Willows
an original short shotry by DBB
an original short shotry by DBB
Miezo reached into the pocket of her denim jacket for her branch cutters. Spring had been very late in coming this year and the sixty-five year old, olive skinned woman was finally able to locate a willow bush just showing the bits of creamy fuzz on its slender red branches. The ground around the pond was still soggy, sucking at every step of her irrigation boots as she made her way towards the stand of pussy willows.
In Miezo's eyes, the first buds of the pussy willow were a definite sign that the world was about to explode into a riot of spring flowers and yellow-green leaves. From across the pond on another stand of willows, a tiny, gray Titmouse sang out to the small, pudgy woman, her long gray-black hair thickly braided down her back. The irrigation boots she wore looked far too large and cumbersome for someone so small. Yet five-foot-two and half Miezo managed very well at gathering an armful of the soft fuzzy branches in them.
The clear, blue morning had been bright with sunshine. The barren branches of the oaks above her seemed to be stretching their gnarly fingers towards the sun. Soaking up as much as of the sun's energy has they could hold, storing it within the thin, seemingly, lifeless branches that would soon burst open with red-tinged catkins: precursors to tender pale, green leaves at least a month away. Shifting her load from one arm to the other, Miezo thought she could almost hear the old tree give a grateful sigh for the sun's gift. She stood gazing across the pond, listening to the morning chorus of small birds that filled the cool, still air.
Satisfied with her collection of the year's first fuzzy branches, Miezo shoved her clippers back into her pocket and headed back to her car. She had one more pond to investigate before heading back home. She had been up since before dawn, contemplating whether or not to fix breakfast at the usual hour her life had demanded for so many long years. Going through the motions of setting the dented, aluminum teakettle on the back burner, pulling out the coffee can, two cups…no wait. Miezo had done this in her sleep for more than forty-seven years. Again she had stumbled through the four a.m. routine to the point of the coffee cups, before realizing it was another lonely day without her treasured companion…Peter. Peter had died early last month. She seldom ate breakfast anymore. It was too lonely now to eat breakfast alone, without her husband.
Life on the prairie had never been lonely. Ever. She always had work to keep her busy. Her stubby little fingers kept busy weaving baskets. Peter called her beautiful willow and grass baskets, Prairie baskets. Peter had been her life. She didn't need anything else to fill the void. They were both eighteen when they married…way back then somewhere…they never had children. Peter worked in the local quarry until he was fifty, then he went to work in the textile factory on the river. He was about to retire in three months from today. Peter and Miezo were going to give up their little white house atop a small hill, surrounded by old oaks, ash and sycamore. They were going to move south. Where the winters would be kinder to their old bones. Peter had a heart attack at work and died the very same day. Now Miezo was lonely.
The oak above Miezo's head seemed to sigh again, bringing her thoughts back to the pussy willow gathering. She had always gathered the tender red willow shoots in the early part of spring for her prairie baskets, but she adored the fuzzy buds and took many home to place in canning jars about her small little house. It always cheered her after the long winter had finally released its icy grip. The first real blooms of spring.
Miezo's attention again turned to the sighing oak. It was singing? Miezo gazed upward, searching the thick bark for signs of movement. There was no breeze about. The air was cool and still. She smiled at the thought that the oak would be singing to her. Peter had a lovely tenor voice and often spent many summer nights on their little porch, singing love songs that he and his guitar composed for her. She missed his voice. Terribly.
She was staring up at a deep crotch in the massive branches when she heard the sigh again. Louder than before, in fact, a cry…not unlike a baby's cry. Her eyes eagerly searched the spot she'd heard the sound come from. "That is not the tree!" she cried out. "What the…"
Tiny blue eyes peered out at her in the deepest part of the crotch. Tiny, pale ears flicked in all directions, taking in the sounds of the pond, the birds, the human voice. The little creature gave one last, desperate utterance to the small woman on the ground below it. "eeeeeoooooow!"
It took Miezo a moment or two to recognize what the trembling, plaintiff creature was. "Kitten?" she called to it. "Are you lost? You are lost…there's no one but me living out here for miles. How did you get here?"
She held up her hand and called to it. The kitten didn't move, but complained even louder than before. "Are you stuck? You are stuck…" Miezo sighed. If Peter had been with her he would have shimmed up that old oak without a second thought. She was afraid to climb on a footstool in her kitchen to get stuff out of the cabinets, how was she going to climb a massive oak to get hold of tiny kitten stuck twenty feet off the ground.
Miezo's car was parked on the old wagon trail over the rise. If she hurried she could get to the car, there was a rope in the trunk. It had always been there. She'd get the rope and…then do what with it? Desperately, she looked about her for something, anything to help her get to this frightened little creature. The kitten's cries had turned into frightful wails.
Miezo dropped the bundle of pussy willows to the ground and circled the tree looking for an easy way up. A low limb, a broken branch, anything to help her reach the kitten. There was nothing. No branches of this tree touched the ground, or bent low. She stepped back shielding her eyes from the bright sun, and called to the kitten once more. With the sound of her voice the kitten's pleas increased. Miezo imagined tears were falling from its pale, fuzzy face. Finally out of frustration she threw her hands up in the air, "Kitten, if you've been stuck in that tree for this long, you'll have to wait until I can come back with help."
Tears gathering in her own eyes, Miezo collected her precious bundle of twigs and slogged back to her car, the irrigation boots hindering her flight. When she reached the car and opened her trunk she noticed the brown paper sack she had packed for her lunch. Fried fish sandwiches and a small bottle of milk. Miezo grabbed the sack, exchanged her boots for her loafers and ran back up the hill to the tree. "Just maybe," she hoped out loud, "you're not really stuck but just too terrified to move. Something must have frightened you up there and you're too afraid to climb down."
When Miezo got to the top of the rise, she could still hear the kitten's cries. Screams really. Lonely, mournful screams of abandonment. Once the kitten saw her approaching the tree again, he stopped. Looked down at her with enormous blue eyes and shuddered. Much like a child would shudder after having a good long cry. "Kitten, I'm back," Miezo said soothingly. "I'm not leaving you here, promise. If I have to stay here at the bottom of this tree with you all day and all night, you will not be alone."
Miezo held up the brown paper bag and shook it a little. She pulled off her denim jacket and spread it like a picnic cloth on the ground beneath the oak. The kitten watched as she opened up the waxed paper and broke apart the sandwich. She sat as if to eat the lunch entirely alone. She uncapped the milk bottle and took a sip. "Kitten," she said, holding up the bottle for him to get a good sniff, "maybe you're just scared, but I think that if you are hungry enough you'll figure out a way to come down. I have fish and milk. What more could a small thing like you want?"
Miezo poured a puddle of milk onto the piece of waxed paper she'd fashioned into a kind of bowl, then turned her back on the tree and the tiny creature, pulled her knees up under her chin and gazed out upon the pond. The birds still chattered excitedly, flitting from branch to branch of the trees and willows across the pond. Eager it seemed to renew old friendships. Find a mate and build a nest. Miezo's heart melted at the thought. Her nest was empty. Peter was gone. She pined for him with every chore. The things they did together, mater-of-fact, without thought. Side by side, working around the house, the garden. If he still lived he'd be with her now, gathering the first of the pussy willows. Rejoicing in the joy of spring with her.
While Miezo's thoughts went deep into remembering her life with Peter, she hadn't noticed the kitten scrabbling backwards down the rough bark of the old oak. She hadn't seen it dash from the roots of the tree in triumph, across the grass to her jacket. To the bits of fish, the puddle of milk. She only came back to the present when she felt a fuzzy face brush against her hand, a sandpaper tongue lick her fingers. Miezo reached out and pulled the pale, color of pussy willows, kitten into her lap. "I knew you could do it," she cooed. "Shall we go home now, you and me? Pussy Willow?" The kitten licked her face in response and began to purr. Miezo laughed and cried at the same time. "You and I will not be lonely anymore."
In Miezo's eyes, the first buds of the pussy willow were a definite sign that the world was about to explode into a riot of spring flowers and yellow-green leaves. From across the pond on another stand of willows, a tiny, gray Titmouse sang out to the small, pudgy woman, her long gray-black hair thickly braided down her back. The irrigation boots she wore looked far too large and cumbersome for someone so small. Yet five-foot-two and half Miezo managed very well at gathering an armful of the soft fuzzy branches in them.
The clear, blue morning had been bright with sunshine. The barren branches of the oaks above her seemed to be stretching their gnarly fingers towards the sun. Soaking up as much as of the sun's energy has they could hold, storing it within the thin, seemingly, lifeless branches that would soon burst open with red-tinged catkins: precursors to tender pale, green leaves at least a month away. Shifting her load from one arm to the other, Miezo thought she could almost hear the old tree give a grateful sigh for the sun's gift. She stood gazing across the pond, listening to the morning chorus of small birds that filled the cool, still air.
Satisfied with her collection of the year's first fuzzy branches, Miezo shoved her clippers back into her pocket and headed back to her car. She had one more pond to investigate before heading back home. She had been up since before dawn, contemplating whether or not to fix breakfast at the usual hour her life had demanded for so many long years. Going through the motions of setting the dented, aluminum teakettle on the back burner, pulling out the coffee can, two cups…no wait. Miezo had done this in her sleep for more than forty-seven years. Again she had stumbled through the four a.m. routine to the point of the coffee cups, before realizing it was another lonely day without her treasured companion…Peter. Peter had died early last month. She seldom ate breakfast anymore. It was too lonely now to eat breakfast alone, without her husband.
Life on the prairie had never been lonely. Ever. She always had work to keep her busy. Her stubby little fingers kept busy weaving baskets. Peter called her beautiful willow and grass baskets, Prairie baskets. Peter had been her life. She didn't need anything else to fill the void. They were both eighteen when they married…way back then somewhere…they never had children. Peter worked in the local quarry until he was fifty, then he went to work in the textile factory on the river. He was about to retire in three months from today. Peter and Miezo were going to give up their little white house atop a small hill, surrounded by old oaks, ash and sycamore. They were going to move south. Where the winters would be kinder to their old bones. Peter had a heart attack at work and died the very same day. Now Miezo was lonely.
The oak above Miezo's head seemed to sigh again, bringing her thoughts back to the pussy willow gathering. She had always gathered the tender red willow shoots in the early part of spring for her prairie baskets, but she adored the fuzzy buds and took many home to place in canning jars about her small little house. It always cheered her after the long winter had finally released its icy grip. The first real blooms of spring.
Miezo's attention again turned to the sighing oak. It was singing? Miezo gazed upward, searching the thick bark for signs of movement. There was no breeze about. The air was cool and still. She smiled at the thought that the oak would be singing to her. Peter had a lovely tenor voice and often spent many summer nights on their little porch, singing love songs that he and his guitar composed for her. She missed his voice. Terribly.
She was staring up at a deep crotch in the massive branches when she heard the sigh again. Louder than before, in fact, a cry…not unlike a baby's cry. Her eyes eagerly searched the spot she'd heard the sound come from. "That is not the tree!" she cried out. "What the…"
Tiny blue eyes peered out at her in the deepest part of the crotch. Tiny, pale ears flicked in all directions, taking in the sounds of the pond, the birds, the human voice. The little creature gave one last, desperate utterance to the small woman on the ground below it. "eeeeeoooooow!"
It took Miezo a moment or two to recognize what the trembling, plaintiff creature was. "Kitten?" she called to it. "Are you lost? You are lost…there's no one but me living out here for miles. How did you get here?"
She held up her hand and called to it. The kitten didn't move, but complained even louder than before. "Are you stuck? You are stuck…" Miezo sighed. If Peter had been with her he would have shimmed up that old oak without a second thought. She was afraid to climb on a footstool in her kitchen to get stuff out of the cabinets, how was she going to climb a massive oak to get hold of tiny kitten stuck twenty feet off the ground.
Miezo's car was parked on the old wagon trail over the rise. If she hurried she could get to the car, there was a rope in the trunk. It had always been there. She'd get the rope and…then do what with it? Desperately, she looked about her for something, anything to help her get to this frightened little creature. The kitten's cries had turned into frightful wails.
Miezo dropped the bundle of pussy willows to the ground and circled the tree looking for an easy way up. A low limb, a broken branch, anything to help her reach the kitten. There was nothing. No branches of this tree touched the ground, or bent low. She stepped back shielding her eyes from the bright sun, and called to the kitten once more. With the sound of her voice the kitten's pleas increased. Miezo imagined tears were falling from its pale, fuzzy face. Finally out of frustration she threw her hands up in the air, "Kitten, if you've been stuck in that tree for this long, you'll have to wait until I can come back with help."
Tears gathering in her own eyes, Miezo collected her precious bundle of twigs and slogged back to her car, the irrigation boots hindering her flight. When she reached the car and opened her trunk she noticed the brown paper sack she had packed for her lunch. Fried fish sandwiches and a small bottle of milk. Miezo grabbed the sack, exchanged her boots for her loafers and ran back up the hill to the tree. "Just maybe," she hoped out loud, "you're not really stuck but just too terrified to move. Something must have frightened you up there and you're too afraid to climb down."
When Miezo got to the top of the rise, she could still hear the kitten's cries. Screams really. Lonely, mournful screams of abandonment. Once the kitten saw her approaching the tree again, he stopped. Looked down at her with enormous blue eyes and shuddered. Much like a child would shudder after having a good long cry. "Kitten, I'm back," Miezo said soothingly. "I'm not leaving you here, promise. If I have to stay here at the bottom of this tree with you all day and all night, you will not be alone."
Miezo held up the brown paper bag and shook it a little. She pulled off her denim jacket and spread it like a picnic cloth on the ground beneath the oak. The kitten watched as she opened up the waxed paper and broke apart the sandwich. She sat as if to eat the lunch entirely alone. She uncapped the milk bottle and took a sip. "Kitten," she said, holding up the bottle for him to get a good sniff, "maybe you're just scared, but I think that if you are hungry enough you'll figure out a way to come down. I have fish and milk. What more could a small thing like you want?"
Miezo poured a puddle of milk onto the piece of waxed paper she'd fashioned into a kind of bowl, then turned her back on the tree and the tiny creature, pulled her knees up under her chin and gazed out upon the pond. The birds still chattered excitedly, flitting from branch to branch of the trees and willows across the pond. Eager it seemed to renew old friendships. Find a mate and build a nest. Miezo's heart melted at the thought. Her nest was empty. Peter was gone. She pined for him with every chore. The things they did together, mater-of-fact, without thought. Side by side, working around the house, the garden. If he still lived he'd be with her now, gathering the first of the pussy willows. Rejoicing in the joy of spring with her.
While Miezo's thoughts went deep into remembering her life with Peter, she hadn't noticed the kitten scrabbling backwards down the rough bark of the old oak. She hadn't seen it dash from the roots of the tree in triumph, across the grass to her jacket. To the bits of fish, the puddle of milk. She only came back to the present when she felt a fuzzy face brush against her hand, a sandpaper tongue lick her fingers. Miezo reached out and pulled the pale, color of pussy willows, kitten into her lap. "I knew you could do it," she cooed. "Shall we go home now, you and me? Pussy Willow?" The kitten licked her face in response and began to purr. Miezo laughed and cried at the same time. "You and I will not be lonely anymore."
The End
Sabtu, 25 Agustus 2007
Scattergories Meme
My daughter, Paula, bless her heart, tagged me for the 'Scattergories' meme.
Here are the rules:
Use the 1st letter of your name to answer each of the questions.They must be real places, names, things ... nothing made up!If you can't think of anything, skip it.You CAN'T use your name for the boy/girl name question.If your name happens to start with the same letter as mine, sorry, but you can't use my answers!
My name: Dorothy
1. Famous Singer: Donny Osmond
2. Four letter word: Dove
3. Street: Downing
4. Color: Dark Green
5. Gifts/Presents: Diamonds
6. Vehicle: Dodge Ram
7. Things in a Souvenir Shop: Dresser
8. Boy Name: David
9. Girl Name: Donna
10. Movie Title: Darkman
11. Drink: Dark Chocolate
12. Occupation: Doctor13. Celebrity: Doris Day
14. Magazine: Dazed & Confused Magazine
15. U.S. City: Dodge
16. Pro Sports: Dodgers
17. Fruit: Date
18. Reason for Being Late for Work: Dog ate my draft
19. Something You Throw Away: Dirty Diapers
20. Things You Shout: Drat
21. Cartoon Character: Dogwood
I am tagging: Thomma Lyn,Tinkerbell, Meeyauw,
Here are the rules:
Use the 1st letter of your name to answer each of the questions.They must be real places, names, things ... nothing made up!If you can't think of anything, skip it.You CAN'T use your name for the boy/girl name question.If your name happens to start with the same letter as mine, sorry, but you can't use my answers!
My name: Dorothy
1. Famous Singer: Donny Osmond
2. Four letter word: Dove
3. Street: Downing
4. Color: Dark Green
5. Gifts/Presents: Diamonds
6. Vehicle: Dodge Ram
7. Things in a Souvenir Shop: Dresser
8. Boy Name: David
9. Girl Name: Donna
10. Movie Title: Darkman
11. Drink: Dark Chocolate
12. Occupation: Doctor13. Celebrity: Doris Day
14. Magazine: Dazed & Confused Magazine
15. U.S. City: Dodge
16. Pro Sports: Dodgers
17. Fruit: Date
18. Reason for Being Late for Work: Dog ate my draft
19. Something You Throw Away: Dirty Diapers
20. Things You Shout: Drat
21. Cartoon Character: Dogwood
I am tagging: Thomma Lyn,Tinkerbell, Meeyauw,
Jumat, 24 Agustus 2007
I'm a Monster, too...
Your Monster Profile |
Twisted Beheader You Feast On: Lasanga You Lurk Around In: The Backseats of Cars You Especially Like to Torment: Groupies |
I Think Summer's Back For A Day!
"Life's challenges are not supposed to paralyze you;
they're supposed to help you discover who you are."
~Lewis Duncombe
It's warming up again. Yesterday was warm but pleasant...today is a bit warmer. I'm still grateful for the weather we're having, but waiting for the other shoe to drop! I really feel for my family and friends that are suffering through the prolonged and intense heat in their area.
The Short Story Writing Month site has put up a contest for the Best Opening Sentence. Check it out. I'm off now to work out the opening sentence to my short story. By the way--you're not limited to the number of short stories you want to submit for Short Story Writing Month...if you can do more than one...have at it!
Rabu, 22 Agustus 2007
Thursday Thirteen #12
This week I’d like to introduce the Short Story Writing Month that will begin September 1, 2007 and will be hosted by Paula, at Basset Knitter.
1. The purpose of this short Story Writing Group is to meet together for one month to have fun sharing, learning, inspiring and supporting each other in short story writing(s).
2. Many will be upcoming NaNoWriMo participants and this is a wonderful place to help condition our minds and fingers for that brain bending November event.
3. There will also be some fun contest and prizes awarded. Because we are only together for four short weeks, Paula will post the first contest this week in order to give everyone’s creative mind a jump start.
4. This group will run from September 1st to October 1st. Signups will end on September 1st at midnight central standard time (give or take an hour or a day.)
5. Paula will be adding helpful writing links to the sidebar for the rest of this week so please come back and visit often.
6. A special Participation Button has been created to place on your sidebar or blog.
7. The short stories entered need to be between 500 and 5,000 words.
8. Edgar Allan Poe said that a Short Story should: "Be complete by itself. Be able to be read in one sitting. Have every word used for important effect. Have a good opening sentence that is developed throughout the work. End at its climax. Have no more characters than those necessary for the action."
9. Kurt Vonnegut gives 8 tips on writing a short story: I like the last two the best: "Write to please just one person. If you open a window and make love to the world, so to speak, your story will get pneumonia."
10. And…"Give your readers as much information as possible as soon as possible. To heck with suspense. Readers should have such complete understanding of what is going on, where and why, that they could finish the story themselves, should cockroaches eat the last few pages."
11. hee,hee…"should cockroaches eat the last few pages" has special meaning to me. One of my daughters is and illustrator and she while was working on a project in a place that she had just moved into, the cockroaches came and ate the watercolor off of her painting at night.
12. Hope you come and join us for the Short Story Writing Month… After writing short stories for Cats on Tuesday, I've become a short story nut.
13. Please visit the Short Story Writing Month site to join and for the complete list of rules.
The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!
Selasa, 21 Agustus 2007
Cat Tuesday: Lazy Days
I'm sure Gattina's got lots more cat stories...go here to find out what the rest of the group is up too.
Sorry folks, I have no short story today. I know it's Tuesday and it's cat's day. So here's my lazy cat. She wouldn't get out of bed today...the roofers are back and doing more work on the roofs. For two days she's been under the covers. All the noise is too much for her...and me. I've just about got things settled down on my computer and should be back to normal next week. Just too much going on and only so much energy. I feel like a cat-nap myself. *yawn*
Have a good COT day, everybody.
Question: What's a cat's favorite color? Purr-ple!
Minggu, 19 Agustus 2007
Beautiful Sunday - All The Way Around
"To look backward for a while is to refresh the eye,
to restore it, and to render it more fit for its prime function of looking forward."
~Margaret Fairless Barber
After a wonderful night of gentle, but soaking rain, we have great puffy clouds with bits of brilliant, blue sky peaking through, with occasionally bits of sun beams. It's October weather here, in August. I'm not complaining--with the rest of the country in a horrible heat wave, I'm very grateful for the cooler air. Very! (our turn is coming, I just know it.)
My computer is up, files are loaded, and today I'm just kicking back, listening to my All Classical 89.9 FM out of Portland, while I play around on this thing. This dream has been full filled. Gretchen's not been happy with me over the past few days...but I'll make it to her when we go get in my big recliner and cozy up with a manuscript later today.
Jumat, 17 Agustus 2007
The Day Just Got Better! It's a Good Friday!
For real, Happy! Happy! Joy! Joy! all the parts of my computer came today. It's great, everything works and I can even listen to music and blog at the same time...
Just thought I'd relay that little message...no more feeling sorry for me. Now I've just got to clean up the huge mess I've created making room for this new system. No more hair pulling. No more tissy fits...my hubby can relax now. I about drove him nuts this week.
I've got a lot to learn and a lot stuff to load, but the hardest part is over....I think....I hope.
Just thought I'd relay that little message...no more feeling sorry for me. Now I've just got to clean up the huge mess I've created making room for this new system. No more hair pulling. No more tissy fits...my hubby can relax now. I about drove him nuts this week.
I've got a lot to learn and a lot stuff to load, but the hardest part is over....I think....I hope.
Frustrating Friday...Happy, Happy, Joy, Joy...
Today I had a nice surprise. My good friend and writing buddy, honored me with this very nice looking Thoughtful Blogger Award. Thank you, Thomma Lyn. You're very sweet and thoughtful to give it me. I will get to display it on my sidebar.
I'm still sitting here with two computers cluttering my desk, the old and the new. I'm still using the old one because the beautiful new one, with its flat panel monitor, is still waiting for the company to send the Internet card they forgot to load before they shipped it to me. It's depressing.
But....on the brighter side, I'm still connected and it's a nice, cool, Autumn-like day out with lots of huge clouds and bits of blue sky. We may even get a rain shower or two. So Happy, Happy, Joy, Joy everyone. Have a good weekend!
I'm still sitting here with two computers cluttering my desk, the old and the new. I'm still using the old one because the beautiful new one, with its flat panel monitor, is still waiting for the company to send the Internet card they forgot to load before they shipped it to me. It's depressing.
But....on the brighter side, I'm still connected and it's a nice, cool, Autumn-like day out with lots of huge clouds and bits of blue sky. We may even get a rain shower or two. So Happy, Happy, Joy, Joy everyone. Have a good weekend!
Selasa, 14 Agustus 2007
Thursday Thirteen # 11
From Fiddler on the Roof:
Sunrise, sunset - Sunrise, sunset, Swiftly flow the days, Seedlings turn overnight to sunflowers, Blossoming even as we gaze
Sunrise, sunset - Sunrise, sunset, Swiftly fly the years, One season following another, Laden with happiness and tears
Here are just thirteen of the sunrises and sunsets I have witnessed.
1. After an all night, frantic journey to reach the base in time, I've seen the sun rise up out the Atlantic Ocean while standing on the beach outside a little motel in Florida, with a two year old in hand and a baby in the warmer, a month away from birth, while my handsome, Navyman got assigned to his new boat.
2. Standing on end of Huntington Beach pier watching the sun dip into the Pacific Ocean while eating the biggest and best hamburger in the world, and fishing.
3. Standing on the mountaintop in the Sierra Nevada Mountain Range, the eastern sun casting long shadows through the cedars and redwoods while fixing trout for breakfast.
4.On the shores of Lake Michigan I've watched the sun rise up out of the lake after a night of camping with bears.
5. I've basked in the sands of the North Shore in Hawaii, as the great ball of fire touched the warm South Pacific waters turning the mountainous waves into pure gold.
6. I've watched the midnight sun in far away Alaska as it dipped every so briefly below the horizon and then rose up again. I've also seen it rise at nine in the morning and set at three in the afternoon.
7. I've stood breathless watching the sun come up out of the sea in Kailua, and Laie on the island of Oahu; atop the Pali where I could see both sunrise and sunset.
8. I've stood in the middle of windswept prairies seeing both sunrise and sunset unobstructed.
9. I've watched the famous sunsets while strolling hand and hand with my lover on Waikiki beach.
10. I've stood atop ridges in the Great Smokey Mountains and watched the lazy sun rise gently through a blue haze, turning it briefly golden.
11. I've witnessed sunrise after sunrise on the long car trips from west to east coast, and sunset after sunset on our trips from east coast to west, over two dozen times that I can remember. Yes, I've traveled Old Route 66 before it was old, many, many times.
12. I've seen the sunset over the Grand Cannon, The Great Salt Lake, Yellowstone and Yosemite.
13. I have stood on high cliffs on the Oregon coastline, watched the dazzling sun set as whales played in the cold waters off shore; and in the same place, watched the setting sun, at times consumed, eaten entirely by fog, as though it had never existed.
I've seen many more sunsets than sunrise only because I am not a morning person. But I love the earthly stillness as it rises above the ocean, lake, mountain or prairie, when all of nature holds it breath for one brief moment. What a joy to have eyes that see!
The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!
Senin, 13 Agustus 2007
Neighborhood Nightlife Episode 3: A Bit Of Jealousy
While you are sleeping, snug and comfy in your beds, dreams floating round in your heads, do you know what your cat is doing at that wee hour, when moon has risen high, wind has stilled, leaving the air thickly perfumed with night flowers?
Necco had spent the entire day in her guardians bedroom window staring through the shadowy trees at building one: more specifically at apartment sixteen. It was indeed a wasted vigil, because no matter how she strained her eyes, or squinted against the sun's brightness; she could not get a clear view of the only window of that apartment facing hers. But she could sense that there was a stranger there. Using the olfactory nerves in the roof of her mouth: tilting her nose upward, teeth bared, mouth apart, Necco tried to form a picture in her mind of this all white, fluffy queen that had just moved into the Rainbow Estates Senior Village.
She had seen a darker shadow under the shrub by the window for most of the morning. When the sun got too hot, the windows were closed and the air conditioner was turned on. The shadow she knew to be Thorny's, extracting information from the newcomer, had even taken off; back to his neighborhood of fancy houses, where he too, could doze away the hot afternoon in cool comfort.
Undaunted by the closed window and the heat of the blazing sun through the glass, Necco scrunched her body as far back onto the sill as she could go, into a tiny bit of shade the tree outside her window offered at that time of day, tucked her paws under chest and catnapped. Her ears turned forward, her eyes, only half closed, half dozing and half alert to any movement. A yellow butterfly flitted about from one flower to another, a spider that had completed a web from the edge of the widow sill to a nearby shrub, now sat in it's middle and waited for dinner guest. The hum of the air conditioner and the noise of the floor fans drowned out any other sound. But yet Necco stayed at her post. Determined.
Necco had not realized that this very obsessive behavior, to stay put, at all cost, just to get a glimpse of the new cat, would alarm her guardians, whom after a few hours of watching their little tortie suffering on the hot window sill, thought she was ill and phoned the vet's office.
Before Necco could blink twice she had been scooped from off the sill, placed into her cat carrier and shuffled out to the car. Hot at first, until the air-conditioner cooled the air, the backseat of the car was nearly unbearable. But off they went during rush hour traffic, three miles away to a pet clinic that specialized in cats. Within minutes Necco had been taken back to an examining room, extracted from her carrier with much protesting, and all four white paws thrust onto an icy-cold, metal table. Her male guardian was most distressed during the telling of his reason for bringing Necco to the doctor. "She's been sitting on that widow sill since before dawn just staring at nothing, hasn't eaten, drank any water or left to go to the litter box. She was very hot when we pulled her from the window sill." "We're very concerned," the female guardian broke in. "She's never behaved like this before…"
Humiliated, Necco crouched down upon her paws while the doctor gently ran his hands over her soft, pale fur, massaged her neck. Her fur was still warm from the heat of the window, despite the air-conditioned apartment and the ten-minute ride to the clinic. Before she could protest, a hard, cold instrument had been jammed into her bottom. She let her guardians know, in no uncertain terms that a probe was not necessary. Next a poke with another sharp instrument was thrust into her front leg, while her human guardians held her fast to the table. "Oh, for crying out loud!" Necco screamed again in protest over the unnecessary treatment. "I'm not sick…I'm not sick…there's nothing wrong with me!"
Oblivious to the message in Necco's cries, the veterinarian withdrew some blood from her leg, told her guardians she had no temperature and that she was probably just stressed out about something. She was a little dehydrated and if they could not get her to drink any water in the next hour or so, then they were to bring her back and they'd keep her overnight on a glucose IV. A bowl of water was immediately placed in front of her nose, and with some encouraging strokes down her back, she quickly lapped up enough water to make everyone in the room happy.
"That was the most humiliating experience ever!" she told Markus later that night, after the evening breezes had cooled the hot, humid air and the windows were once again open. "I had to spend the entire evening in the living room, stretched out across my female's lap. She thought I would like to be stroked with a damp washcloth. A bowl of water was shoved under my nose every ten minutes and I had to lap up a few drops each time just to keep my humans happy. I had to do it…I was so afraid they were going to rush me back to that icy-cold table again. Oh, how I hate that place!" Necco let go a tiny sneeze, "I think they've given me a chill."
Markus couldn’t contain his laughter. The image his little friend had given him would keep him amused for at least a week. "So, did you get to see her at all? The new cat, I mean. You had to go right passed her apartment on the way out of the parking lot. Was she sitting in the window?"
Necco let out a sigh, "No…I was too busy being humiliated…rushed to the clinic like that. I did have the perfect chance, didn't I?" Necco stamped her feet in her little frustrated fashion and whacked her tail against the glass. "Did you happened to see her today? You're much higher up than I am, surely you had a good view of her window."
"Necco, you know I can't see her window any better than you. You forget that your tree covers my window completely." Just then a familiar croak came from the window next to Necco, "I was looking over her way a few times today, Necco," the crackled voice commented. "All I could see was the tip end of a white tail thrashing about. Thorny was over there under the bush most of the morning, we'll just have to wait until midnight for him to come by. I think he likes her." Frog laughed, emitting a hoarse cough like sound. "Couldn't help but overhear your vet experience today, Necco. You should be more careful with your jealousy."
Necco spat back. "I'm not jealous! I'm just curious. Besides," she mewed softly, "Thorny is just being a good neighbor and he did promise to bring us information about her."
Markus and Frog both chuckled. "Hey Frog," Markus asked, changing the subject. "Have you heard anything about the old man upstairs, lately? How is he doing…and that dog?"
Frog hesitated to tell Necco and Markus what he had overheard from his guardians this morning at breakfast. From the little bit of human language he had interpreted, "the old man, having multiple bruises and a couple of cracked ribs, will be going into a nursing home for good. The little dog, having suffered no more than a cut on his snout, was taken to a foster home; he'll be adopted out. Hopefully. So it shouldn't be too long and we'll all have new neighbors again."
"I hope we don't get another dog up there," Markus sighed. "I could always hear that little rat of a dog whining and yapping through the common wall. It got very irritating at times. It's nice and quiet lately." Frog agreed.
Right then Thorny was spotted strutting across the parking lot from the direction of apartment sixteen. "Hey guys, he called out. How's things been for ya today?"
Of course Markus and Frog had to reveal Necco's obsession to catch a glimpse of the new cat, and how it nearly earned her a comfy, medicinal, overnight compartment at the clinic. Thorny, would have rolled over laughing but one look from Necco's squinted eyes, told him he'd better just get on with the news. "Sorry, you had such a bad day, Necco," he offered solemnly, "but I have good news about Princess Pricilla Prudence."
"Princess what?" Necco couldn't believe she had spent all those hours on that crummy, hot windowsill just to hear that the new, fluffy white cat in sixteen had a name that started with princess.
"Princess Pricilla," Thorny repeated. "She likes to be called Sissy…she's really sweet. She has a very soft voice," Thorny seemed to blush.
"So tell us more," Markus prodded, "What's her story? Nice and sweet with beautiful eyes and a soft voice doesn't tell us a whole lot."
As Thorny talked, Necco shifted on her windowsill several times, whacking her tail against the glass in frustration over the news that the new cat was a prima-donna, a princess no less, with papers and awards. A show cat. A cat that got bathed almost daily, and combed out. A cat that wore colored ribbons on the top of her head, had a real diamond collar, and ate expensive food off of genuine crystal and china. A cat that she was sure was not going to fit in at the lowly, Rainbow Estates Senior Village. A cat that very nearly caused her to have heat stroke.
Thorny didn't stay long, he had rounds to make. He'd be back again tomorrow maybe, after he had visited the new Princess Pricilla Prudence. "Humph!" Necco sneered, sounding a bit jealous even to herself, "Princess Prissy Prudy's…more like it."
Necco had spent the entire day in her guardians bedroom window staring through the shadowy trees at building one: more specifically at apartment sixteen. It was indeed a wasted vigil, because no matter how she strained her eyes, or squinted against the sun's brightness; she could not get a clear view of the only window of that apartment facing hers. But she could sense that there was a stranger there. Using the olfactory nerves in the roof of her mouth: tilting her nose upward, teeth bared, mouth apart, Necco tried to form a picture in her mind of this all white, fluffy queen that had just moved into the Rainbow Estates Senior Village.
She had seen a darker shadow under the shrub by the window for most of the morning. When the sun got too hot, the windows were closed and the air conditioner was turned on. The shadow she knew to be Thorny's, extracting information from the newcomer, had even taken off; back to his neighborhood of fancy houses, where he too, could doze away the hot afternoon in cool comfort.
Undaunted by the closed window and the heat of the blazing sun through the glass, Necco scrunched her body as far back onto the sill as she could go, into a tiny bit of shade the tree outside her window offered at that time of day, tucked her paws under chest and catnapped. Her ears turned forward, her eyes, only half closed, half dozing and half alert to any movement. A yellow butterfly flitted about from one flower to another, a spider that had completed a web from the edge of the widow sill to a nearby shrub, now sat in it's middle and waited for dinner guest. The hum of the air conditioner and the noise of the floor fans drowned out any other sound. But yet Necco stayed at her post. Determined.
Necco had not realized that this very obsessive behavior, to stay put, at all cost, just to get a glimpse of the new cat, would alarm her guardians, whom after a few hours of watching their little tortie suffering on the hot window sill, thought she was ill and phoned the vet's office.
Before Necco could blink twice she had been scooped from off the sill, placed into her cat carrier and shuffled out to the car. Hot at first, until the air-conditioner cooled the air, the backseat of the car was nearly unbearable. But off they went during rush hour traffic, three miles away to a pet clinic that specialized in cats. Within minutes Necco had been taken back to an examining room, extracted from her carrier with much protesting, and all four white paws thrust onto an icy-cold, metal table. Her male guardian was most distressed during the telling of his reason for bringing Necco to the doctor. "She's been sitting on that widow sill since before dawn just staring at nothing, hasn't eaten, drank any water or left to go to the litter box. She was very hot when we pulled her from the window sill." "We're very concerned," the female guardian broke in. "She's never behaved like this before…"
Humiliated, Necco crouched down upon her paws while the doctor gently ran his hands over her soft, pale fur, massaged her neck. Her fur was still warm from the heat of the window, despite the air-conditioned apartment and the ten-minute ride to the clinic. Before she could protest, a hard, cold instrument had been jammed into her bottom. She let her guardians know, in no uncertain terms that a probe was not necessary. Next a poke with another sharp instrument was thrust into her front leg, while her human guardians held her fast to the table. "Oh, for crying out loud!" Necco screamed again in protest over the unnecessary treatment. "I'm not sick…I'm not sick…there's nothing wrong with me!"
Oblivious to the message in Necco's cries, the veterinarian withdrew some blood from her leg, told her guardians she had no temperature and that she was probably just stressed out about something. She was a little dehydrated and if they could not get her to drink any water in the next hour or so, then they were to bring her back and they'd keep her overnight on a glucose IV. A bowl of water was immediately placed in front of her nose, and with some encouraging strokes down her back, she quickly lapped up enough water to make everyone in the room happy.
"That was the most humiliating experience ever!" she told Markus later that night, after the evening breezes had cooled the hot, humid air and the windows were once again open. "I had to spend the entire evening in the living room, stretched out across my female's lap. She thought I would like to be stroked with a damp washcloth. A bowl of water was shoved under my nose every ten minutes and I had to lap up a few drops each time just to keep my humans happy. I had to do it…I was so afraid they were going to rush me back to that icy-cold table again. Oh, how I hate that place!" Necco let go a tiny sneeze, "I think they've given me a chill."
Markus couldn’t contain his laughter. The image his little friend had given him would keep him amused for at least a week. "So, did you get to see her at all? The new cat, I mean. You had to go right passed her apartment on the way out of the parking lot. Was she sitting in the window?"
Necco let out a sigh, "No…I was too busy being humiliated…rushed to the clinic like that. I did have the perfect chance, didn't I?" Necco stamped her feet in her little frustrated fashion and whacked her tail against the glass. "Did you happened to see her today? You're much higher up than I am, surely you had a good view of her window."
"Necco, you know I can't see her window any better than you. You forget that your tree covers my window completely." Just then a familiar croak came from the window next to Necco, "I was looking over her way a few times today, Necco," the crackled voice commented. "All I could see was the tip end of a white tail thrashing about. Thorny was over there under the bush most of the morning, we'll just have to wait until midnight for him to come by. I think he likes her." Frog laughed, emitting a hoarse cough like sound. "Couldn't help but overhear your vet experience today, Necco. You should be more careful with your jealousy."
Necco spat back. "I'm not jealous! I'm just curious. Besides," she mewed softly, "Thorny is just being a good neighbor and he did promise to bring us information about her."
Markus and Frog both chuckled. "Hey Frog," Markus asked, changing the subject. "Have you heard anything about the old man upstairs, lately? How is he doing…and that dog?"
Frog hesitated to tell Necco and Markus what he had overheard from his guardians this morning at breakfast. From the little bit of human language he had interpreted, "the old man, having multiple bruises and a couple of cracked ribs, will be going into a nursing home for good. The little dog, having suffered no more than a cut on his snout, was taken to a foster home; he'll be adopted out. Hopefully. So it shouldn't be too long and we'll all have new neighbors again."
"I hope we don't get another dog up there," Markus sighed. "I could always hear that little rat of a dog whining and yapping through the common wall. It got very irritating at times. It's nice and quiet lately." Frog agreed.
Right then Thorny was spotted strutting across the parking lot from the direction of apartment sixteen. "Hey guys, he called out. How's things been for ya today?"
Of course Markus and Frog had to reveal Necco's obsession to catch a glimpse of the new cat, and how it nearly earned her a comfy, medicinal, overnight compartment at the clinic. Thorny, would have rolled over laughing but one look from Necco's squinted eyes, told him he'd better just get on with the news. "Sorry, you had such a bad day, Necco," he offered solemnly, "but I have good news about Princess Pricilla Prudence."
"Princess what?" Necco couldn't believe she had spent all those hours on that crummy, hot windowsill just to hear that the new, fluffy white cat in sixteen had a name that started with princess.
"Princess Pricilla," Thorny repeated. "She likes to be called Sissy…she's really sweet. She has a very soft voice," Thorny seemed to blush.
"So tell us more," Markus prodded, "What's her story? Nice and sweet with beautiful eyes and a soft voice doesn't tell us a whole lot."
As Thorny talked, Necco shifted on her windowsill several times, whacking her tail against the glass in frustration over the news that the new cat was a prima-donna, a princess no less, with papers and awards. A show cat. A cat that got bathed almost daily, and combed out. A cat that wore colored ribbons on the top of her head, had a real diamond collar, and ate expensive food off of genuine crystal and china. A cat that she was sure was not going to fit in at the lowly, Rainbow Estates Senior Village. A cat that very nearly caused her to have heat stroke.
Thorny didn't stay long, he had rounds to make. He'd be back again tomorrow maybe, after he had visited the new Princess Pricilla Prudence. "Humph!" Necco sneered, sounding a bit jealous even to herself, "Princess Prissy Prudy's…more like it."
Minggu, 12 Agustus 2007
All Done! The End! My Life Can Continue Now!
It took me until three a. m. this morning to finish the last quarter of the book, but at last I found out all I needed to know, and then some. I have no comment because I do not want to spoil it for anyone still reading Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. I was satisfied that my theories were mostly right. The hype that preceded this book spoils it for everyone, indeed, therefore leaving one quite disappointed. I'm not disappointed with the story...just the hype; it gave me a false since of anticipation. The book was good. I've added it to the rest of the collection on my very dusty bookshelf. I'll read them all again...someday.
I do have one comment to make, after all. Not about the story itself...but about the language in it. I know we live in a coarse world where street language and rude behavior is now the norm. But I do believe that authors of children's books (that includes young adults) do not have to succumb to coarse language. I was disappointed in that fact alone. It was not necessary for the story, or the characters. It just was not! I felt I was reading about alltogether, different characters from the ones I had come to know and love throughout this series. That was a huge spoiler for me.
The End
Sabtu, 11 Agustus 2007
Gretchen And I Are Still Reading... You-Know-Who...
Still reading...er...napping through HP. So much is going on at once around here, it's harder than I thought to get at it. Gretchen is helping. She stands guard...er...sits guard as I'm reading.
Wake up Gretchie...we're getting to an exciting part.
Yeah, yeah, I'm with you.
Rabu, 08 Agustus 2007
Thursday Thirteen #10
Does anyone know the name of this moth?
Thirteen Things About Growing Up
1. I was born during WWII in the Texas Panhandle at an Army Hospital. My dad was six feet four inches. My mom, five-nine. I have a grandmother that was six-two, and an aunt who was six feet.
2. I was five-eleven and three-quarter inches by the end of sixth grade with a size eleven shoe. Try getting ballet shoes in that size.
3. I was a head taller in every class throughout my entire school experience. Tall, skinny and freckled—tomboy type. Had many nicknames—you'd probably call them labels in today's times. I did make it to six foot by the time I graduated high school.
4. I never lived in any place longer than four years. I've lived in several towns in Texas, Oklahoma, Alaska, California, Florida and Georgia and Hawaii. I'm a southerner by choice and heart. I spent my teenage years in Georgia.
5. I climbed trees every chance I got, even in dresses. I loved to be in the tallest tree I could find on windy days.
6. I had a black pet rabbit that was housebroken. He did really well in the house until he discovered electric cords. I had to build a cage for him and put him outside so he wouldn't electrocute himself and burn down the house. He didn't last one night. Something, or someone, got him out in the middle of the night.
7. I hated spinach and when forced to eat it…you know, "you're not leaving this table until you eat your spinach!" I'd throw it back up. Not intentionally, of course. Now I love it.
8. As a tyke I pulled up the biggest onions out of my grandmothers garden and ate them. I also ate peanut butter and onion sandwiches growing up. Funny, my stomach can't handle raw onions anymore.
9. I didn't like to eat regular breakfasts. I liked left over pie, or cream of chicken soup for breakfast when I could talk my mom into it.
10. I had a fanciful mind. I was always getting into trouble for day-dreaming and drawing all over my papers and books in school, and at home. My grades weren't very good. One, for moving all the time, and the other being a daydreamer. Back then daydreamers didn't amount to very much in the teacher's eyes. I turned out to be a writer and artist.
11. I was a ballerina until I got too tall. I loved to dance and loved classical music as a child. I was also going to grow up and be an airline stewardess until I got too tall for that too.
12. My imagination always got me into trouble. If I didn't like my circumstance, which I often didn't, I'd invent tales. I loved it when we moved often. I'd usually gotten myself into so much trouble by the end of the school term that I was happy to start over someplace new. Preferably, clear across the country.
13. At sixteen I got my driver's license as a birthday gift from the Sheriff. He was a friend of the family. I never had to take a drivers test until I was in my thirties, and only then because I had let it expire.
The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!
Selasa, 07 Agustus 2007
Senin, 06 Agustus 2007
Kamis, 02 Agustus 2007
Taking a Reading and Writing Holiday...I'll Be Back on Tuesday
I was waiting for one my daughters to get her HP book to start reading it along with her. She got it, so I'm taking a sort of reading holiday. Plus I'm behind in my writing so I'll be busy writing, too. Have a good weekend everybody. I'll be back to post the Cats on Tuesday. Feel free to leave comments, I'll read them. Gretchen will be posting everyday. She's anxiously waiting for Yoggie's bean's to return so I said she could post.
Rabu, 01 Agustus 2007
Thursday Thirteen #9
Thirteen of my favorite things:
1. Raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens (the opening line from the Sound of Music-Favorite Things). I do love roses, raindrops and especially kittens.
2. Deep purple pansies. Their spice scent wafting in through open windows on a warm summers eve.
3. The windsong in the treetops; through hog wire fences; over fields of prairie grass.
4. The tinkling of windchines on a breezy day, or night.
5. Trees: Tall ones, scrubby ones on ocean cliffs, the smell of piney ones, giant magnolias, and large shady oak trees draped with graceful tendrils of Spanish moss.
6.Clouds: Large puffy ones, little wispy ones, monster thunderclouds, mist over a waterfall.
7. Birds. Small songbirds, humming birds…did you know they have a loud chirp? The Anna's that we have in the northwest do. Owls, parakeets, gold finches, Eastern blue jays, cardinals, robins, mocking birds and whippoorwills.
8. Snow flakes. The first snowfall of winter; being snowed in, snuggled up under blankets in front of a warm fire. Trouncing around in the snow after a heavy snowfall. Walks in snow covered woods.
9. The ocean. The beach. The sand. Waves crashing on breakers and cliffs in the Pacific North west. Waves crashing on beaches in the Pacific islands.
10. Mountains and waterfalls.
11. The smell of fresh cut grass. Or a freshly cut alfalfa field. The smell of earth in the early spring.
12. Rainbows and kisses.
13. The moon, planets and stars.
These are just a few of my favorite things.
The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!
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