“Quiet people have the loudest minds.” Stephen Hawking
There was a young woman at the writing conference I attended recently, and all I could do was stare at her with admiration (and yes, a touch of envy).
“Quiet people have the loudest minds.” Stephen Hawking
There was a young woman at the writing conference I attended recently, and all I could do was stare at her with admiration (and yes, a touch of envy).
I just returned from a writer’s conference, and something our presenter said has been running circles in my brain.
“The flowers of late winter and early spring occupy places in our hearts well out of proportion to their size.” — Gertrude Wister, horticulturist
Yes, the calendar still says Winter, but some of us (including me) are longing for Springtime. And despite Juno, Linus, and all those ridiculously-named winter storms, Mother Nature is preparing for a new season.
Here, take a look:
When I meet your stormy glare, I shudder.
Blue skies darkened by muddy cumulonimbus.
Was it something I said?
Regardless,
Who can be sunny forever?
That faint twitch in your lip,
Feet cemented to the floor.
Can’t you talk without your hands?
Clues.
Careless words better left unsaid.
A book takes flight,
A door slams tight.
Then, stony silence.
All right.
Good riddance.
One isn’t always the loneliest number, you know.
Dallas here.
I know you’ve missed me and all, so I figured you needed to know what I’ve been up to.
This:
“Genius is the ability to reduce the complicated to the simple.” — C.W. Ceram
Am I the only one who has trouble comprehending instructions for Do-it-Yourself projects?
Seize the moment. Remember all those women on the Titanic who waved off the dessert cart. ~Erma Bombeck
Nobody visits my blog for recipes.
That’s not a complaint — it’s just a statement. I’m a passable cook and have never poisoned anybody, but sharing recipes here just isn’t my thing.
Nevertheless….
You’re in pain,
And I’m sorry.
I didn’t cause it,
Can’t absolve it.
I hate seeing you hurting.
Hate watching, helpless,
as you close off from the world
and those who need you.
Hate seeing the spark he so loved
seep right out from your soul.
Just know that I’m here
When you’re ready to talk
Or need a shoulder to cry on.
To reminisce over happier times
And sunny days.
How his eyes crinkled
When he told a joke.
How safe you felt
Wrapped in his strong arms.
How right it seemed
Spooning together through the night.
I know your house cries empty tears now.
If it’s any comfort, I miss him, too.
Note: When I wrote this, I was thinking of an older lady/friend of mine, who lost her beloved husband to cancer last year. Sometimes even our best intentions fall short, and all we can do is be there, when of course we’d prefer making it all better!
I owe my success to having listened respectfully to the very best advice, and then going away and doing the exact opposite. — G. K. Chesterton, English author and mystery novelist
Wish I’d read that before asking my dear son to recommend a course of action on something we’d both been riding the Struggle Bus over.
It went down like this: