A new blog to contain answers to prompts |
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Since my old blog "Everyday Canvas " |
| Prompt: Quote Let this quote inspire your entry: “Home isn't where you're from, it's where you find light when all grows dark.”- Pierce Brown ------ I love this quote. Why I can't tell, immediately... not at first sight, now. Possibly only a shrink could figure this out...unless I think while writing. I have an inkling though, since I am starting to write. It must be all the friends I made from all over the world and all the places I've been to, but then, even in the worst conditions and in the darkest places, I always saw a glint of light. In the end, when all is said and done, feeling at home has to do more with people and their light than any place alone. Yes, home is a refuge more than a place or a house. It is when the world feels unsteady, someone lights it up for me, like a friend who listens to my woes without trying to fix me up or a gentle voice saying, "I'm here; don't worry!" It could even be my daily routine that steadies and calms me or the memory of a loved one that pops up just when I need it. Also, home may be a community, like my extended family or an online site like WdC, in the quiet corner of my life that catches me when I fall or feel down. It may not be where I began or what I expected, but it is where I might be able to see clearly again when and where the darkness stops being absolute. This is because something within that space insists to keep on shining. So, it has to be, in the end, home is less about anything else but more about friends, people, and illumination. Tangible or not, it is a place where I am reminded that I don't have to face my shadows alone. It is a place where I can discover my own strength in the beautiful glow of its comfort and light. And this has to be why I so liked this quote as soon as I read it. |
| Prompt: November 12 was Kindness Day. Did you show kindness to anyone? ======== I didn't know yesterday was Kindness Day. It is funny how we've gotten into the habit of naming calendar days for one thing or another. I try to be kind enough, mostly, because kindness matters when it is done subtly and with no fanfare. Then, I have been very lucky with all the kindness shown to me in my life, starting with my very young days. When my father passed away when I was seven, several of my uncles and my mother's uncle took it on themselves to fill the gap in my life. I'll never forget their kindnesses in all forms, which was also replicated by some of the women relatives in the family. Yet, it wasn't only the family, but other people everywhere who have shown kindness to me to this day that made me believe in the good of the humankind. As I mentioned in the first paragraph of this entry, kindness matters because it builds strong relationships and social connections. It also starts a chain reaction. This happens when people pay it forward, mostly, and create a ripple effect and encourage others. Not to mention that kindness also benefits the one who gives first. Did you ever hear of "feel good" chemicals (oxytocin) in the body? Such chemicals increase confidence and well-being. Best yet, kindness is a powerful way to teach the younger generations by being an example. The way I see it, kindness doesn't expect any reward or even an acknowledgement. This is because kindness has to do with the understanding of others' problems, and willingness to help in some way, be it a tiny gesture. Kindness is also intentional as a kind person tries to ease someone else's problems or make their day better, be it in small ways Those small ways can be saying, "Thank you!" and showing appreciation, helping someone with a task, checking in on a friend who may be alone or lonely, offering help to someone when we see that they need help. This kind of behavior that doesn't expect any gratitude or recognition shows a generous heart and a person who understands and shares others' feelings and burdens. I also have to add that animals, too, deserve our kindness, whether they are wild or domesticated ones. I am not saying that we should try to help a hurt wild animal alone without any know-how, as our so-called help could prove wrong and we can get hurt ourselves. Instead, trying to get in touch with an animal welfare group should be the way. After all, kindness takes practice to understand and feel it. Our kind acts such as a smile, a nice word, an unexpected deed, or a planned surprise can make people feel good. This way, we pass along hope. We promote peace. We show the power of kindness. In short, kindness is grace. |
| Prompt: Autumn is considered The Season Of The Witch. What are your thoughts on this? ------ Surely, there is Halloween, but I'm not going to touch that at this point because I yakked enough about Halloween in October. Actually, a witch is a very wise woman. Never mind the far-out stories of witches eating kids. True, the witch is connected to death in some way, but where would we be without the necessary ritual of death? How would we treat our loved ones' remains after they die? Which, I believe the witch, or the idea of her, has to do the with the concept of the thinning veil between life and death. But it isn't the macabre I'm trying to write in this entry. I'm trying to aim at a witch's know-how in handling change, especially when light turns into dark. This is where autumn comes in when daylight and darkness tip toward the night. Didn't we just have the daylight savings time reversed and the day gets darker an hour earlier? This increases the dusk and the shadows, as the borderline between the light airy seasons and cold darker ones. Therefore, the fading sun and the encroaching cold feel supernatural, suggesting that what holds reality together is somewhat loosened. Witches, as such, are the masters who walk the line between stuff , for example, between the wild and the civilized, the light and the dark, the known and the unknown, and life and death. Before modern medicine and the grocery chains we now cannot do without, the wise woman or witch played a central role in the survival of a village. Autumn, then, was a brutal time but also a necessary period of preparation for survival. It demanded the witch's know-how of nature's offerings and its decay. So the witch became a manager of the harvest with her knowledge of alchemy and preservation. Medicinal weeds, roots, and pulling them out of the earth just in time before the frost set in, and turning perishable food into edibles like jams, salted meats, preserved vegetables must have seemed like like a form of deep magic to those who enjoyed witches' efforts to keep villages and people alive. This must be why the scent of woodsmoke and fire became the witch's elements. That we humans have the knack of attaching the negative to anything positive must have also been applied to the well-meaning witches, as the result. So, haphazardly, we look inward, while blaming the witches for all the good they do, and attach a spiritual darkness to them. By the way, anytime, people look inward facing their own personal shadows, they end up blaming someone or something outside of them. So the poor, helpful witch becomes the scapegoat and is accused of performing dark magic. I, therefore, tend to believe that a witch's magic, no matter how dark or light, has served humankind for centuries. Especially in Autumn, a time defined by shadows, transitions, and most importantly, practical know-how. From my point of view, the witch does not only live through autumn but she is its most powerful priestess. I can vouch for that for some of the best people I like and admire are our very own |
| Prompt: Veterans and Heroism Today, November 11 is Veterans Day in the United States, the anniversary of the 1918 armistice that ended World War I. For the US writers, what is the best way to honor our veterans? Then, what can we, civilians, do to better understand the experience and challenges of the veterans? For WdC's writers not from the USA, what is heroism to you and who would you call a real hero? -------- First, I'd like to thank all my veteran friends and writers in Writing.com. I also wish to thank all the veterans everywhere for their work and unbelievably difficult sacrifices they made for our country. I can't even begin to imagine what they have gone through for this nation, leaving their families behind to protect the rest of us. Thank you, Veterans, again and again. Having said my peace, I also want to include a few facts in this entry. For those of us who may mix it, there's a difference between Veterans Day and Memorial Day. *Memorial Day specifically commemorates the men and women who died while serving their country, mostly on the battlefield. *Veterans Day is the day when we thank and honor all the people who have served, living or deceased, but especially the living veterans among us. Then, although most of us may know it, I would like to include a section from Almanac.com, as a short history for Veterans' Day: "A Short History of Veterans Day Veterans Day was originally called Armistice Day in the United States, commemorating the signing of the agreement that ended World War I at 11:00 A.M., November 11, 1918. President Woodrow Wilson celebrated the first Armistice Day in 1919. In 1938, November 11 became a legal holiday by an act of Congress. In 1954, this federal holiday was changed from “Armistice” to “Veterans” Day. " In addition, I wanted to write a poem for our veterans but I choked because whatever I could come up with, it would never be enough, even minimally. So instead, here's a link to a page with the poems that reflect some of my sentiments. https://www.veteransforamerica.us/page/poems-and-inspiration Happy Veterans Day! |
| Prompt: Winter What do you enjoy or dislike the most about winter's approaching and what do you look forward to when you think especially about the winter of this year? ------------- Enjoying winter or not depends on where you or I live and what our likes and dislikes are. When we lived up north, I didn't enjoy my car skidding on ice. Once, on a very cold day, I was giving a lift to a friend who lived far from us. We made it to her home just fine, and after saying our goodbyes, I left. On my way back, my car skidded 360 degrees on LI Expressway. Luckily, almost no other vehicle was around at that instant, and I could keep on driving, but it was a big scare. That, I didn't like...and never forgot! Still, in those days, there were many things I enjoyed about winter. Let me count the ways: *The smell from the wood-burning fireplaces or bonfires. *Hot coffee, hot cocoa, hot cider, and peppermint-spiced teas when enjoyed especially with family and friends * Cooking for family and friends * Sweaters and hooded coats and parkas * Popcorn and candy canes, which I don't touch anymore * All kinds of pies, comfort food, and carbohydrates * Our black dog making his way through the white snow * My whole family gathering around the fireplace * Roasting a huge fish over the fire in the fireplace * Telling my sons stories I mostly made up so they don't stay out too long and catch cold * As a whole family, us watching the same show on TV * The picturesque view of snow on the huge trees and the ground outside, and at night, the light from a full moon on the same landscape. This was then. As for now, here in Florida, winter is the tourist season. That means more difficult driving on the crowded streets and highways. And as for ice and snow, that would be something to see once in several years, if ever. On the other hand, especially here in south Florida, the weather is usually excellent with highs in temperature, mostly in the 70s and 80s, ideal for boating, golfing, and other fun things to do. Also, many towns hold local activities like dolphin spotting in Clearwater and the Holiday Boat Parade in Daytona Beach. For baseball fans, most good teams hold their spring training in Florida, with some starting in late winter--Mets near where I am, for example--and people can watch their favorite players as they train, sometimes free of charge. When all is said and done, I think, enjoying winter (or not), depends on the person. As for me, I feel endless gratitude for having experienced winter for so many years in several different places on the globe. This may only be because winter always has something eccentric and quirky to offer in any climate or place. |
| Prompt: Fortune Cookies Your fortune cookie says, "Love mankind, trust the majority, and never owe anyone." Would you eat that cookie or believe everything it says? ======== I'll certainly eat the cookie, since I do like cookies. As to what it says, I trust nothing. Case in point, six years ago, an old friend from NY came to visit us. I don't know where he got them, (I'm guessing possibly China Town), but he brought us a box of fortune cookies. My husband's cookie congratulated him for having at least fifty more years of life. Unfortunately, hubby passed away five months later. Well, so much for fortune cookies! Then, about what this prompt's fortune cookie says, I guess its possibility of truth is close to 50%. Love mankind? Sure. And why not, it is my kind. Trust the majority? I dare you! And never owe anyone? Now, that's the trick question. Never owe anyone what? If it is talking about money, well, maybe. But I may owe so much to so many people in my lifetime without even knowing about it. Even those people I've never met who had an effect on my present life, like George Washington, like the teachers of my teachers, like all the inventors, creators, explorers, in addition to Writing.com and other such avenues I dared to wander in. What I mean is this. My debt to life and the people I've met is not a ledger of transactions to be balanced. Instead it has to do with gratitude and an awareness of recognizing every smile, every nice encouraging word, every interaction, no matter how big or small. What I owe such people, ideas, and things has to be the continuation of their positive impact on me. In other words, the people I've met have shaped me, beginning with my mother, friends, and my extended family. They've planted seeds of ideas in me, nurtured my dreams, and challenged my decisions and my ways of looking at things. When and if I can embody the best of what they've taught me, when and if I can carry forward their kindness, their wisdom, or their courage into my own life, will I be able to repay such debts that transcend simple reciprocity. Is this ever possible? I guess not. So "never owe anyone" in this fortune cookie is a false positive. However, just maybe, I may be able to repay a tiny bit of it by working toward finding my best self. This doesn't mean a flawless performance, but rather an honest attempt to be kind, to be supportive, and to contribute positively to others' lives. This is because, possibly, when I interact with others, I may be able to uplift them or, at least, I can try. This is the choice I might make to pay forward what I owe. Still, even if I could do that, I don't think I can ever repay my real debt for what's come my way in my entire lifetime. Well, so much for this fortune cookie! |
| Prompt: On this day in 1731 Benjamin Franklin opened the first library in the North American colonies, the Library Company of Philadelphia. Are libraries important? What other services do the libraries in your area offer? --------- Libraries were always very important to me. I visited our local library three to four times a week. Lately though, since I don't want to drive unless extremely necessary, and also, because there's a very long walk between the library's front door and the parking lot, I have avoided going there too often. I used to be such a library buff in the much earlier days that two of the local libraries offered me a job. This was a few decades ago. I didn't take those jobs but I'm still grateful for the offers. Those offers came as the result of making friends with the librarians and maybe mentioning that I used to work part time in our high-school's library when I was in my teens. In those teen days of mine, I knew the Dewey-decimal system really well and where anything was in that extensive library. Also, the students related better to me, knowing I was one of them. Surely, now, those systems and huge catalogues are relics of the past, but the libraries still serve as pillars of the community and reader-friendly organizations. Nowadays, libraries offer free internet, printers, and help with accessing government services for those who need them, despite the fact that, for most of us, such services and access to e-books is just a click away. Libraries also provide safe spaces for people of all ages, incomes, or backgrounds to take a break and sit at a cozy chair or desk and browse through a magazine of a book. They host community meetings, offer a quiet refuge for studying, reflection, or a moment of peace, and come up with programs for adult literacy, coding, and creative writing. They have tech support, too. Sometimes, a librarian will help a klutzy cell-phone or a similar device user by trouble-shooting what isn't working and offering valuable advice. In our local library, summer reading, story times for tiny tots, and every now and then, a craft workshop is held. There is also a separate meeting room on the side of the building with a separate door, which can be rented at a low-cost for community or group meetings. Then, our local library is next to the junior high school and the students come into the library to do their homework while waiting for their parents to pick them up. This is because most parents are working until later in the day and the school is closed around two or three in the afternoon. In essence, today, despite the digital age, with an endurance for learning and evolving, is the remarkable local library and I truly wish it stays and prospers forever, as ours and other local libraries anywhere are profoundly irreplaceable. |
| Prompt: Have fun with these quotes: "November’s dress code: sweater in the morning, regret by noon, blanket burrito by night." — Unknown "This month I’m thankful for elastic waistbands and friends who understand second helpings are non-negotiable." — Unknown ------------- Two playful quotes about November, one about the fashion chaos, the other about its sweet and starchy food and what it does to waists. All this mayhem and commotion for an in-between month, too! In-between because its air still remembers summer, but the trees up north insist it's time for winter. Even, here, in Florida, the weather goes berserk in November. As the weather report indicated last night, a cold front is on the way with those Northern 40s to arrive two days later, this Monday, while just yesterday, I had the AC on, even if for a couple of hours. Since very few homes in this area have fireplaces, I guess I'll have to miss the faint smell of wood smoke in the air; however, you can bet I'll reach for a cozy sweater or two and add an extra blanket on the bed. Then, with warm drink in hand, I'll feel autumnal, as if I were back in NY state again. I only wish any sweater I am going to wear on Monday and/or Tuesday doesn't quickly turn into a portable sauna, making me realize nothing much had changed about the weird Florida weather. And after this cold front exits, I hope, Florida's November doesn't go full blast into the summer again when even the thinnest tee-shirt feels too much, unless I turn on the AC again. But then, doesn't the comfort of any weather a fleeting thing with a false-friend personality? False friend though it is, November suffers from mood swings. Yet, it teaches me flexibility, humor, and the art of sudden switching when it comes to what I might wear. |
| Prompt: "You can't backspace your life but you can start a new chapter." Write about this in your Blog entry today. --------- Doesn't this quote mean, "You can't go back, so go ahead"? My question to this quote is: "Do we really have a choice, here?" I mean if mistakes or closed doors and the ends of relationships were written in stone, none of us would be surviving this life in the first place, would we? Mistakes and what has come to past are not written as the end of our story--in unerasable ink. I know some of us have trouble with letting go, for one reason or another. Still, those who kept staying in failed relationships and wallowed in grief over things that have come to past do exist. So sad! Our lives don't need to look like polished best-sellers, but they are our very own stories that we have to keep writing. Some pages may still feel unfinished, but that’s okay. As long as we keep on writing and we keep on editing...with love. Yes, love...for ourselves and for those around us who care for us. In the first place, new beginnings have the power to put the past behind us. That past could be losing someone to death, surviving a divorce, moving to a new city or country, making a career change, or letting our children live their own lives once they've grown up. I have to admit, letting go of the past is a huge job, a very difficult one, as I have personally experienced during the last several years. Yet, how do we start? I'd say let's start by reevaluating our routine and maybe come up with a new routine, or do something we always wanted to do but couldn't earlier, or do something out of the ordinary, such as learning something new or polishing up something we have put aside due to the old ways and their restrictions. This means rediscovering what we really enjoy. There are many various ways to rewrite our stories, I am sure, especially when we need to. Rather than look back and miss what has changed, we may need to think about what we can do now that we couldn’t before. In whichever way we handle our lives, the years go by, anyhow, so we might as well be where we would like to be. Granted, a new start can be scary, sad, and exciting, or all those feelings rolled into one. I don't think we have a choice but go ahead in the best way and fashion to make ourselves feel alive again, no matter how old or young we are. Who knows, we might find out that change in itself can be exciting, too. |
| Prompt: What is your favorite November tradition? Write about this in your Blog entry today. ------- No wonder some call November the season of nesting! Romantic wording though this might be, the month isn't only putting on a sweater and feeling warm. It is a time for celebrating life, what was and what is, and feeling grateful for everything. When my family was intact, that is my husband was still alive and kids hadn't flown the coop yet, I used to light candles, every now and then during this month, not just for their scent, but for the flickering, motion-filled ambiance they offered against the grayness of the November sky. Another thing we did in November, way back when, when we lived up north, was the raking of the fall leaves. At the time, we had a two-acre yard, with tall oak, elm, red maple, and eastern pine trees. plus a small apple orchard. This meant bags and bags of dead leaves needing to be raked. I think I got my best exercise raking those leaves during those days, despite the fact that our New-Foundland Joe would jump into the piles, scatter them frolicking, and give us a hard time. But he was really so cute, and despite our weariness, we enjoyed his antics. That is...until Thanksgiving, the USA tradition that placed gratitude in the center of our lives. So, we started getting ready for Thanksgiving, several days earlier. During those pre-Thanksgiving days, something always simmered on the stove, beef and bone stock, chili, and even apple cider to be offered--warm with spices--to our sons when they came home from school. Then, afterwards, came the cooking marathon of the Thanksgiving day for my family and guests, too, if we got lucky to have guests. Later on, when we moved down south, we celebrated Thanksgiving with some friends, especially a friend who insisted to host us because she just couldn't not-see her many friends as well as us during the holiday. Luckily, she had a very big house with very big dining room, and I still contributed what I could, although she didn't ask me or her other guests for contributions. A few years ago, she passed away from cancer and her whole family scattered all over the continent. But I still recall her hospitality and her lavish Thanksgiving dinners. My family, my late husband, and our friends who are no more made November a month of foundation with a cozy reminder to be grateful for all the people who came and went out of my life. So, November with its deep shadows and bursts of sunlight, every now and then, is still a month to savor. This is because, sometimes, the greatest joys are found in my memories and the stillness and gratitude in me that they inspire. |
| Prompt: Coffee "Why, yes, I could start my day without coffee. But I like being able to remember things like how to say words and put on pants." Nanea Hoffman How important is coffee in your daily life? --------- Coffee isn't supposed to be important at all in my daily life because my doctors have cruelly banned it. Banned or not, I like coffee. There is no denying that. I found out, however, despite the ban, I can put on my pants just fine. I don't know about words, though. That question is for the people who hear me talk. On the other hand, after the ban, I tend to forget the names of a few things, like places and people that I haven't made contact for some time. It isn't only me missing the coffee, however. It may just be that coffee is missing me, too. It must be missing my deep dive into geography and flavor. After all, during the times when I was allowed to drink coffee, I knew the taste difference between the naturally processed coffee from Brazil and the washed out Ethiopian one. Instead of my friendly interest, nowadays, the baristas have elevated making coffee to an art form, as if the coffee-drinkers are seeing beauty instead of comfort and taste when they are stressed. These new methods of making coffee, even in the middle of our local mall, suggest an new layer of importance: identity formation, turning coffee into a social lubricant. But I mustn't blame the new methods. Originally, the coffee houses were the places for social gatherings, too, and there is no denying that. It was where writers, inventors, and adventurers shared their ideas and stories. A coffee house, then, was something like a pub, but without the booze. Even today, nobody ever says to an old friend they meet on the street, "Let's grab a glass of water. " They say, "Let's grab a cup of coffee and talk." In short, coffee is not just a beverage; it is a catalyst, an anchor, and a daily benediction, and I miss it. And between us, I cheat the doctors once in a while, like right now, while I sip from my cup. |
| Prompt: Write about a place or places, real or imagined, that are or were significant to you. ------------- So many places, in my life, that mean a lot to me...I can't even count them. I'll, therefore, make do with whichever place comes to my mind. But first, this: A place, any place, merely sets the stage. The significance of it is in the event and the people in it. The earliest place I can think of is the "Cat Room." My aunt who lived with us until she married was a real cat lady. She'd feed many cats and take the sickly or pregnant ones into the cat room and care for them until they were well enough and would want to go out on their own. Some of those cats stayed, some inside the house, others in the backyard. As to the cat-room, it was an extra room, not too big, which nobody had any use for, since at that time we were living in the biggest house that my family had ever occupied earlier. At least, it looked big to the three to four-year-old me. I'll never forget that cat-room and the love I received from those cats. The second place that comes to mind is the huge kitchen in another, later house. This house was three stories high and on the first floor, after the entrance and a hallway, was the entire kitchen. By this time, I was in my teens, a stage in life when kitchens mean nothing to most, but ours did to me. This is because our kitchen was more than a kitchen. For being huge, not only it had cooking and storage areas, but also, in the middle of those an empty space which had a dining table that could easily seat 12 people. Although we had a dining room on the side of the first floor, everyone loved this kitchen, beginning with yours truly. That kitchen was our anchor with a sacred value. It was a place where, visitors and family alike, wanted to eat in. I recall several guests telling my mother, "Don't bother with the dining room. Let's just eat in the kitchen." So that kitchen became holy, sort of. It was a place where everyone felt comfortable enough to tell and say anything, even their most private matters. I loved that kitchen. It was where we argued, loved, learned, and dreamt. These two places are my biographical landmarks. When I recall them I hear the echo of me, the very young person that I once was. If the walls of these places can speak, they would speak of a history only I, and maybe some others, too, can understand. Later on, I also loved lots of places, mostly vacation seasides, rocky shores, seas in action against the wind and the storms, and those lovely little towns my husband and I kept visiting because we both loved the aura and personality of small towns and their many varied ways of life with internal meanings. The memory of all these places, even today, bind me to their unique universes as if they are still sacred, divine, and lovable, and with great depth. |
| Prompt: AI in human brain If it were possible to insert an AI capacity in a human brain without messing up the human brain's natural abilities, would you approve it and would you have AI inserted in your own brain? ---------------- This is a hypothetical question, but I feel it needed to be asked. To start from the bottom, no, I would not have AI inserted in my brain. Imagine a weirdo getting hold of a special way of influencing all the AI'ed brains and making them do weird things, worse yet terrible things, to other humans. Besides, I'm too old to deal with much smartness, but not that I don't need at least a bit of it. I asked this question online and this is what I got as response: "In theory, yes — it might one day be possible to integrate an artificial intelligence system with a human brain, in a way that doesn’t harm its natural functioning. Scientists are already working on brain–computer interfaces (BCIs), like those developed by Neuralink or university research labs, that can read neural signals and even stimulate certain brain areas to restore function or aid communication." Come to think of it, if it were possible, this would take care of many ailments, such as strokes, paralysis, memory-loss and such. Yet, this has to be precise and not harm the personality of the human who is being helped. Then, I don't think we can upgrade a brain as if a computer because, when its emotional and dynamic ways of working are messed with, it may just collapse. I certainly don't want to live with a collapsed brain, as much as I envy the quickness and thoroughness of AI. Still. if it were possible, its consequences would be revolutionary. Imagine this: perfect memory recall, faster problem-solving, instant language learning, new forms of creativity, a much better understanding of others. On the negative side, we'd end up with a whole new class system: Augmented humans vs the natural ones. That certainly would end up in an identity crises. This all comes down to another question: Will humans be more like machines or machines be more like humans? This chain of thought makes me worry about us humans. I mean, what if we loose our human center in the process? It would mean knowledge without meaning. I'm not so sure I'd be comfortable with that. |
| Prompt: “In November, the smell of food is different. It is an orange smell. A squash and pumpkin smell. It tastes like cinnamon and can fill up a house in the morning, can pull everyone from bed in a fog. Food is better in November than any other time of the year.” Cynthia Rylant, Do you agree with her assessment food tastes better? What's your favorite autumn dish? -------- I don't know if food tasted better for some in November, but food tastes from good to great to me, any time during the year. As a popular myth, Autumn's food is usually thought of as being earthy, sweet, and warmly spiced. That it is; however, it is no better or worse than the food during any other month. I think we focus on the food in autumn more because we don't want to face the winter's chill too early. Isn't November the time, in most places, when the air grows crisp, sweaters come out of hiding, and ACs stop working...even in my case at down south, here? Also, autumn is the harvest season when the starchy and the sweet stuff are in season, such as apples, pumpkins, squash, and sweet potatoes. This means more roasting or baking. Plus. autumn with its cozy drinks is comforting, too. Aren't steaming mugs of hot cider, spiced lattes, or dark hot chocolate topped with whipped cream perfect companions to us on a cool afternoon? Then, at any time, I like playing with food, anyway. Isn't this a lot of fun? Such fun reminds me of my mother's correcting me when I was little, "Don't play with your food. Eat it!" Her admonitions alone may still be urging me to do exactly the opposite now, to play with food in my kitchen. Autumn season makes us play with food, too. Pumpkin carving turns into a snack session when the seeds are roasted with salt. Farmers’ markets become treasure hunts for colorful gourds, freshly pressed cider, and pies of every kind. That is pecan, apple, and pumpkin pies. Yummm! So autumn food turns out to be more than nourishment. It turns meals into celebrations, like Thanksgiving and family gatherings. Best yet, it becomes nature's and our most, and in some instances last, offering of comfort and sweetness before the slowing down time during the winter months. |
| Prompt: Have fun with these words: ghosts, spiders, pumpkins, scarecrows. children, moon, vegetation and confrontation. Just when I thought I had written what little I could come up about Halloween... On the Night of Halloween Under the pale *moon's deception I stand with hesitation, as *ghosts drift past candle-eyed *pumpkins; yet, I grin at *scarecrows standing, arms spread wide, as I notice the *spiders, in silent motion, weaving in devotion, for *confrontation with the flies and *children, wilder now, acting in elation over the hushed creation and the *vegetation on the dying fields sway, bend, and hum an eerie incantation, making me feel a vague trepidation for this crazy world haunted by its own narration. |
| Prompt: Halloween. Write about Halloween for your Blog entry today. ---------- Halloween is fun, as most everyone must think. Although I am not sure I personally like it all that much. I mean I like the part when little ghosts, witches, and goblins ring my door for candy, but I didn't like it, years ago, when some teenagers ran around making a mess and causing damage to properties. Leaving my personal likes and dislikes alone, it seems Halloween goes back to an ancient Celtic festival, Samhein. Over the centuries, how it turned into candy consumption, dress-up fun, mischief making, and dark-side dabbling should be a study only for Halloween enthusiasts. That innocent Samhein marked the transition of seasons, from summer to winter, and the fear of winter, I think, brought in the darker vibes of Halloween in our day. Then, some people believed that on the night of October 31, the portal between the realm of the living and the dead opened, allowing lost souls to return to the human-occupied earth. Eerie and weird, if you ask me. Still, it is the celebration of the occult and longevity with obscure ideas about folklore and community. Yet, who am I to know about Halloween thoroughly in the first place! Just maybe, an 18th century poet, Robert Burns knows a lot more about it. So here it goes, Robert Burns' Halloween poem. I found it on the internet. Good luck deciphering it! Halloween by Robert Burns Upon that night, when fairies light On Cassilis Downans dance, Or owre the lays, in splendid blaze, On sprightly coursers prance; Or for Colean the route is ta'en, Beneath the moon's pale beams; There, up the cove, to stray and rove, Among the rocks and streams To sport that night. Among the bonny winding banks, Where Doon rins, wimplin' clear, Where Bruce ance ruled the martial ranks, And shook his Carrick spear, Some merry, friendly, country-folks, Together did convene, To burn their nits, and pou their stocks, And haud their Halloween Fu' blithe that night. The lasses feat, and cleanly neat, Mair braw than when they're fine; Their faces blithe, fu' sweetly kythe, Hearts leal, and warm, and kin'; The lads sae trig, wi' wooer-babs, Weel knotted on their garten, Some unco blate, and some wi' gabs, Gar lasses' hearts gang startin' Whiles fast at night. Then, first and foremost, through the kail, Their stocks maun a' be sought ance; They steek their een, and graip and wale, For muckle anes and straught anes. Poor hav'rel Will fell aff the drift, And wander'd through the bow-kail, And pou't, for want o' better shift, A runt was like a sow-tail, Sae bow't that night. Then, staught or crooked, yird or nane, They roar and cry a' throu'ther; The very wee things, todlin', rin, Wi' stocks out owre their shouther; And gif the custoc's sweet or sour. Wi' joctelegs they taste them; Syne cozily, aboon the door, Wi cannie care, they've placed them To lie that night. The lasses staw frae 'mang them a' To pou their stalks of corn: But Rab slips out, and jinks about, Behint the muckle thorn: He grippet Nelly hard and fast; Loud skirl'd a' the lasses; But her tap-pickle maist was lost, When kitlin' in the fause-house Wi' him that night. The auld guidwife's well-hoordit nits, Are round and round divided, And monie lads' and lasses' fates Are there that night decided: Some kindle coothie, side by side, And burn thegither trimly; Some start awa, wi' saucy pride, And jump out-owre the chimlie Fu' high that night. Jean slips in twa wi' tentie ee; Wha 'twas she wadna tell; But this is Jock, and this is me, She says in to hersel: He bleezed owre her, and she owre him, As they wad never mair part; Till, fuff! he started up the lum, And Jean had e'en a sair heart To see't that night. Poor Willie, wi' his bow-kail runt, Was brunt wi' primsie Mallie; And Mallie, nae doubt, took the drunt, To be compared to Willie; Mall's nit lap out wi' pridefu' fling, And her ain fit it brunt it; While Willie lap, and swore by jing, 'Twas just the way he wanted To be that night. Nell had the fause-house in her min', She pits hersel and Rob in; In loving bleeze they sweetly join, Till white in ase they're sobbin'; Nell's heart was dancin' at the view, She whisper'd Rob to leuk for't: Rob, stowlins, prie'd her bonny mou', Fu' cozie in the neuk for't, Unseen that night. But Merran sat behint their backs, Her thoughts on Andrew Bell; She lea'es them gashin' at their cracks, And slips out by hersel: She through the yard the nearest taks, And to the kiln goes then, And darklins graipit for the bauks, And in the blue-clue throws then, Right fear't that night. And aye she win't, and aye she swat, I wat she made nae jaukin', Till something held within the pat, Guid Lord! but she was quakin'! But whether 'was the deil himsel, Or whether 'twas a bauk-en', Or whether it was Andrew Bell, She didna wait on talkin' To spier that night. Wee Jennie to her grannie says, "Will ye go wi' me, grannie? I'll eat the apple at the glass I gat frae Uncle Johnnie:" She fuff't her pipe wi' sic a lunt, In wrath she was sae vap'rin', She notice't na, an aizle brunt Her braw new worset apron Out through that night. "Ye little skelpie-limmer's face! I daur you try sic sportin', As seek the foul thief ony place, For him to spae your fortune. Nae doubt but ye may get a sight! Great cause ye hae to fear it; For mony a ane has gotten a fright, And lived and died deleeret On sic a night. "Ae hairst afore the Sherramoor, — I mind't as weel's yestreen, I was a gilpey then, I'm sure I wasna past fifteen; The simmer had been cauld and wat, And stuff was unco green; And aye a rantin' kirn we gat, And just on Halloween It fell that night. "Our stibble-rig was Rab M'Graen, A clever sturdy fallow: His son gat Eppie Sim wi' wean, That lived in Achmacalla: He gat hemp-seed, I mind it weel, And he made unco light o't; But mony a day was by himsel, He was sae sairly frighted That very night." Then up gat fechtin' Jamie Fleck, And he swore by his conscience, That he could saw hemp-seed a peck; For it was a' but nonsense. The auld guidman raught down the pock, And out a hanfu' gied him; Syne bade him slip frae 'mang the folk, Some time when nae ane see'd him, And try't that night. He marches through amang the stacks, Though he was something sturtin; The graip he for a harrow taks. And haurls it at his curpin; And every now and then he says, "Hemp-seed, I saw thee, And her that is to be my lass, Come after me, and draw thee As fast this night." He whistled up Lord Lennox' march To keep his courage cheery; Although his hair began to arch, He was say fley'd and eerie: Till presently he hears a squeak, And then a grane and gruntle; He by his shouther gae a keek, And tumbled wi' a wintle Out-owre that night. He roar'd a horrid murder-shout, In dreadfu' desperation! And young and auld came runnin' out To hear the sad narration; He swore 'twas hilchin Jean M'Craw, Or crouchie Merran Humphie, Till, stop! she trotted through them And wha was it but grumphie Asteer that night! Meg fain wad to the barn hae gaen, To win three wechts o' naething; But for to meet the deil her lane, She pat but little faith in: She gies the herd a pickle nits, And two red-cheekit apples, To watch, while for the barn she sets, In hopes to see Tam Kipples That very nicht. She turns the key wi cannie thraw, And owre the threshold ventures; But first on Sawnie gies a ca' Syne bauldly in she enters: A ratton rattled up the wa', And she cried, Lord, preserve her! And ran through midden-hole and a', And pray'd wi' zeal and fervour, Fu' fast that night; They hoy't out Will wi' sair advice; They hecht him some fine braw ane; It chanced the stack he faddom'd thrice Was timmer-propt for thrawin'; He taks a swirlie, auld moss-oak, For some black grousome carlin; And loot a winze, and drew a stroke, Till skin in blypes cam haurlin' Aff's nieves that night. A wanton widow Leezie was, As canty as a kittlin; But, och! that night amang the shaws, She got a fearfu' settlin'! She through the whins, and by the cairn, And owre the hill gaed scrievin, Whare three lairds' lands met at a burn To dip her left sark-sleeve in, Was bent that night. Whyles owre a linn the burnie plays, As through the glen it wimpl't; Whyles round a rocky scaur it strays; Whyles in a wiel it dimpl't; Whyles glitter'd to the nightly rays, Wi' bickering, dancing dazzle; Whyles cookit underneath the braes, Below the spreading hazel, Unseen that night. Among the brackens, on the brae, Between her and the moon, The deil, or else an outler quey, Gat up and gae a croon: Poor Leezie's heart maist lap the hool! Near lav'rock-height she jumpit; but mist a fit, and in the pool Out-owre the lugs she plumpit, Wi' a plunge that night. In order, on the clean hearth-stane, The luggies three are ranged, And every time great care is ta'en', To see them duly changed: Auld Uncle John, wha wedlock joys Sin' Mar's year did desire, Because he gat the toom dish thrice, He heaved them on the fire In wrath that night. Wi' merry sangs, and friendly cracks, I wat they didna weary; And unco tales, and funny jokes, Their sports were cheap and cheery; Till butter'd so'ns, wi' fragrant lunt, Set a' their gabs a-steerin'; Syne, wi' a social glass o' strunt, They parted aff careerin' Fu' blythe that night. |
| Prompt: "Give everyday the chance to become the most beautiful day of your life. " Mark Twain Write about this quote in your Blog entry today. ----------- Ahha! Mark Twain! Someone who knows what he's saying and says it, so well! So the first word in the quote has my attention right away; "Give!" This is an active offering. It isn't "hope that" or "wait for." It is the door that opens instantly. Then "everyday"...another potential door. The power to hold the door knob and look out has nothing to do with fate or anything else. The day is ours, all twenty-four hours of it. Best yet, for any day to be the most beautiful day, it doesn't need a permit, a passport, or a parachute. I can find it in the steam rising from my morning tea. I can find it in the bird songs sneaking in from the open window. I can find it in the music coming from the tap when I do the breakfast dishes. This is because I think happiness may be conditional for some, and at times, for me too, unfortunately. This has to do with the thinking of "I'll be happy if..." or "I'll be happy when..." But whatever we place after those three dots may never happen. So, I think a rebellion against any conditional happiness is in order, here. For it is the declaration that beauty is not the prize at the end of any race or day, but the very air I decide to choose to breathe along the way. Giving the day its chance means listening, truly listening, to the same old story a friend tells me for the umpteenth time. It also means hearing not the repetition but the comforting rhythm of her voice. It means tasting anything I eat, say an apple, as if I'm eating it for the first time and savoring it. It means appreciating people and gestures and telling them that. It means seeing the colors in shades and shadows in anything, as if for the first time. It means choosing silence instead of complaints. As such, some days might greet me with open arms and dazzle me with connections, synchronicity, and anything beautiful. Yet, what about gray days and minor disappointments? This is where Mark Twain is challenging me and all of us. To give a chance to that gray day, which may be full of grief and stress, is certainly an act of creative courage. It is to find beauty, not in spite of the gray, but within its subtle textures. This is because I'd feel the beauty of warmth more deeply after coming in from a storm. It is always my flawed, soft heart that endures. It is the sigh I share with others and sometimes only with myself. It is resilience, I think. The most beautiful day, therefore, isn't necessarily the easiest or the happiest, but it is the one I am most present for, the one I paid attention to, the one I chose to experience rather than find fault with my humdrum circumstances. After all, if I'm dancing in my kitchen while the soup boils over or calling my cousins just to hear their voices or writing in my blog this entry, so I can search my own psyche, I'm giving today its chance, offering my attention, my gratitude, and my willingness to be amazed. May our todays and every days always turn out to be the most beautiful days for all of us. |
| Prompt: Busy on Halloween Can you think of a person or business whose busiest night of the year is Halloween? Who do you think will be the busiest this Halloween in your family or in your area? -------------- Halloween! The night kids count candy and call it, "my loot," and teenagers seek shivers and fear, Halloween is a harvest. This night, in most places, arrives with the rustle of fallen leaves and crisp autumn air, plus anticipation. For such fancy-seekers and dreamers, Halloween means the thinning of the veil. It becomes something way beyond folklore. It is the opening and, at the same time, the closing shift for some businesses. By that I mean those shops selling costumes, candy, and fear. Halloween is their Christmas, New Year's Eve, and the tax season rolled into one, as if a huge applause when the curtain closes. Also, the week ending in the 31st of the month, like this week now, turns into a blur of last-minute panic, plus a desperate parent or two searching frantically for the specific costume their children had been yearning for. For those parents and other frantic customers, the shop or store owners and workers--now fueled with extra caffeine--move or rush with the grace of the battlefield surgeons if only to mend seams on costumes and morale. How do I know this? Way back when, when we lived on LI, NY, we knew a couple like that; They were our store-owner friends. During the last Halloween nights, he and his wife kept running amok inside their store, muttering, "It'll be over soon! It'll be over soon!" It was as if the Halloween night and the few previous ones were their last breaths before their quiet and peace, with their harvest over and their fields of crop becoming empty. This adrenaline is not only for the store owners, though. It is for the parents lugging boxes and bags of candy and teens wearing masks under which they can barely breathe; and for the real enthusiasts, the make-up artists who spend hours painting wounds on smooth skins of people. Then, there are the serious businesses, commercial buildings, stores, and private residences that are the real targets of Halloween tricks. For them, Halloween is the one night every minor spirit, forgotten phantom, and amateur poltergeist is granted a temporary permit to manifest by making a mess. For these places and their owners, Halloween means a frantic effort to manage the chaos and to make sure, while the mortal world gets enough of the spooky, the entire system doesn't get messed up too much. I now live in a state where Halloween is not as much of a deal as I had experienced in the other parts of the country. Still, even here, as the sun sets on October 31st, it is not just the beginning of the witching hour, but it is the harvest of fear, of fun, of sugar, and imagination. And I'm ready with my bags of candy, mostly chocolate, for the cute trick-or-treaters in costumes to ring my door. |
| Prompt: Irrational fears Do you have “irrational” fears, and have you ever had a nightmare about them? ---------- I did have nightmares every now and then, way back when, but not anymore...I think not, or maybe now, I don't recall them afterwards. I'm sure at least some of those nightmares were based on some irrational fears, detected by me or not. But then, sometimes, when I wake up, most of my dream memory just evaporates in that instant. So, I can't tell exactly if I had a nightmare or not. As to fears and nightmares, they creep from the corners of my mind where logic doesn't linger much. Like shadows in a well-lit room, so to speak. All those implied fears! Something unseen waits just beyond the edge of reason. A creak in the floor becomes a warning or my fleeting image in the mirror breathes on its own and sticks out its tongue at me. I bet my such fears have no basis and no wound from my past can justify their existence. They pop up due to my imagination that has turned against itself. Furthermore, my nightmares just may be those fears' midnight offspring, as if they are dreams that slipped away from my consciousness and ran amok. Possibly, they echo my anxieties in grotesque forms, turn the familiar faces, things, and events into distorted shapes, and bend time to such a degree that I feel I can't escape, but still, escape I do, only to wake up to what is real. This makes me question the presence of the nightmares. Why are they there? Maybe they have a purpose, strange though it may be. Is it because they mean to force me to face the daily chaos I try to contain or are they rehearsals for my fears? Or else, they may have to do with my psyche, the weird one who might be testing its resilience in the safety of my sleep. Whatever the answer or the reason, there seems to be a terrible kind of beauty in those fears and nightmares, as they are also the products of my same mind, which mostly dreams of love, wonder, beauty, and hope. Is it because this mind is also trying to conjure up its own undoing? But no, most possibly, it may only be my imagination, creating its own worlds, just to haunt them. |
| Prompt: Horror Genre Do you like the horror genre, and what was the first scary movie you saw or the scary book you read if you remember it? ----------- I do appreciate the horror genre since a writer or a movie-maker can use horror to say difficult things very efficiently. But like it, no. I don't like it as a genre. Anything nasty, if and when used only to scare people out of their wits, feels unpleasant to me. During my earliest of years, my mother, who was a big storyteller, used giants as her horror elements when she told me her stories. My first scary story, therefore, was Jack and the Beanstalk, if I'm remembering correctly. Then, later, when an aunt took me to the movies to watch Snow White, later Cinderella and others, I remember hating Snow White's witch stepmother and the same happened with other story characters. Then, when I read a few ghost stories and hauntings and such, later on, I developed a phobia against the dark. Luckily, it didn't last very long. In spite of that, at times, I watched horror films with tales of creatures stalking humans or serial killers with traps of horror or spirits haunting a home and such. I never understood the internal or central idea in some of them, maybe because they didn't have a decent lesson or an understandable motive in the first place. Except, maybe, scaring people for no reason is a motive. I guess where horror goes, my favorite has to be the Phantom of the Opera. I took the story as a tale of love, despite the scary Phantom. But is it really a tale of love? The Phantom, as a character, might say he was deeply in love with Christine; however, he loves his obsession, not the girl. Maybe the Phantom doesn't really know what a really healthy relationship is like. So, in general, horror, is not my usual pick, as I don't normally volunteer to read a book or see a movie within the horror genre because I believe even the worst things can be said in a much nicer way. Still, chills or thrills, horror films and books have drawn many people into the genre. With that fact in mind, who am I to put a whole genre down! |