Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Why? (A poem I wrote a few years ago)

Why do I believe, even when I know he lies?
Why do I surrender, when I hear his tearless cries?


Why do I understand, even though he makes no sense?
Why do I groom, since he wastes not a glance?

Why do I envy, when he owns no soul?
Why do I tell, since my secrets he told?

Why do I kiss, even when he doesn't kiss back?
Why do I give, when a pure heart he lacks?

Why do I stay, since he wants me to go?
Why do I love? Even I do not know...

Heaven (A poem I wrote a few years ago)

Is Heaven my destiny? Is it destiny for you?
Is it the reward we receive for all the good deeds we do?


Is Heaven full of angels, perched on clouds with harps in hand?
Do they strum an enchanting melody until summoned by mortal man?

Is Heaven a gathering place for departed souls?
Do we meet up with them again once we accomplish our own life's goals?

Is Heaven beauty & splendor at its best?
Will we fill with God's holy light & blend in with the rest?

Is Heaven peaceful serenity? Is it love & good health too?
Will we think & feel through open hearts in all we say and do?

Is Heaven my destiny? Is it destiny for you?
I pray for all our souls it is, if all of this is true.

Simple Madness (A poem I wrote a few years ago)

Simple madness - let me be!
Simple madness - you are to me.


Release my heart - let it recover.
Release my heart - to give another.

Set forth my soul - long may it live.
Set forth my soul - freedom to give.

Return my love - if it's a bother.
Return my love - I owe another.

Suspend my thoughts - on you they dwell.
Suspend my thoughts - their torment's my Hell.

Remove my eyes - they seek you out.
Remove my eyes - they find you about.

Silence my voice - it speaks your name.
Silence my voice - it offers no blame.

Leave me a kiss - the last 'til I die.
Leave me a kiss - one final goodbye.

Charmer (A poem I wrote a few years ago)

Controlled by fear, we carry shields & armor.
Though, our most dangerous foe - the seductive charmer.


Quick-silver words and elegant speech
Hide a venomous predator - a lecherous leech!

Spinning a web of chaos & lies.
Catching it's prey, as a spider will flies.

Walking among mortals, it blends in well.
Hidden the horns & it's pointed red tail.

All have been touched for it has crossed our paths.
Painful suffering and tears - it's aftermath.

God bless our souls & guard us well.
'Til the seductive charmer - returns to Hell!

Moon Watch (A poem I wrote a few years ago)

The night moves softly into the dawn.
The stars disappear, yet the moon still wans.


I gaze at the orb as I lay awake lonely.
Wishing it could speak to me--if only!

Would it say that it feels as lost as I do now?
Or would it laugh at me madly with a wink and a bow?

Thinking my troubles are simple indeed.
For it sees many far worse--many in need.

Like the baby and mother without any home.
The unloved old man that shuffles the streets all alone.

A child that is suffering from abuse and neglect.
The wife being beaten for lack of respect.

The crippled young athlete with a blank stare in his eyes.
An unwanted newborn a child molester buys.

A grandmother strapped to a chair and left hungry.
The teenager being coaxed to deal drugs by a junkie.

The moon sees it all and it taught me a lesson.
If your troubles are small--better count your dear blessings!

Warrior (A poem I wrote a few years ago)

His moccasin foot treads softly on the unbeaten ground.
The man, overcome by the surrounding beauty his People had found.


To live off the land his People do treasure.
Careful not to disturb the universe at measure.

Upon a snow-capped mountain, they do reside.
Closer to God--their spirits' guide.

They watch in confusion as others kill and waste for pleasure.
Any hope for a peaceful friendship between, long severed.

Others mock his People and call them savage.
Yet, it was the "civilized" that reeked the damage.

The only true Natives, to this Holy land.
Pushed out by the new-coming, greedy man!

Starved, murdered, raped and plundered.
His People lost all for which they lumbered.

He stands tall upon the mountain, a tear in his eye.
Watching all he and his People love--slowly die.

Escape (A poem I wrote a few years ago)

My soul's energy knows no bounds.
Escapes from me to dance around.


Tear open the door to race outside!
Never ceasing--never denied!

My spirit soars above the clouds.
Higher the flight--more the proud!

With tender wings beating air I cannot see.
Never to return to me.

My life a sad melodrama.
Mostly alone--fighting karma.

The world--it should belong to me!
A social butterfly I long to be.

Childhood (A poem I wrote a few years ago)

Do our childhoods determine the adults we become?
Is where we are headed related to where we came from?


Do our actions as children predict the actions when grown?
Are our fates predestined? Our life's choices gone?

Do our parents still control our comings and goings?
Do they begrudge us our dreams, our hopes or our yearnings?

Do we still answer to them, their approval we seek?
Do we follow without question, our own minds too weak?

Do the old wounds of childhood still linger on?
Does the pain and resentment still seem as strong?

Do we wonder and dream of how things should have been?
Do we let it consume us as we let it back then?

Do we realize we're letting our old demons win?
Let's turn to a new page and begin again.

Storm (A poem I wrote a few years ago)


Lightening vapors shadow my face as I peer out from behind the curtain.
The impending storm draws closer by moments, of this I am most certain.



I open the pane, breathe deeply in the delicious rain scent on the breeze.
I begin to envy the soon soaking of the grass, flowers and leaves.


A slow smile dances upon my lips as I hear the thunderous bang.
I wonder why I get a thrill from such a fearful thing?


The wind whips about me now, its presence growing bolder.
A robin darts noiselessly past as the tree bends to enfold her.


A resounding crack splits the air, the storm unleash its fury!
Madness sweeps across my mind as I tear out the door in a hurry!


The first raindrops tag me as I step upon the earth.
My bare feet sink softly into the wet grass--I laugh aloud in mirth!


Storm! Storm! Send down the Heavens and bathe me all anew!
For soon the storm will be no more--the sky return an azure blue.

Saturday, March 26, 2016

Familiarity (Written several years ago)

The sun settles in for the night behind me as I listen to the silence. Before, the surroundings were full of light, life and sound. The voice in my head is mute. My soul still, my heart quiet. The bubbling brook's roaring flow has dimmed to a rumble as if to ready for the night. I look calm, placid, you'd never guess the rolling emotion I feel inside me. I wish I were at peace, that's always seemed to elude me. I've never decided if I seek peace because I've never had it or if the peace is seeking me because it senses it's need in me. As the day pushes on, I fear it shall escape me again.

I don't like losing. I can't remember a time that I have been defeated, yet, I feel like I'm losing something important in my life. I wish I could put a finger on it. Somehow pinpoint the exact thing I'm letting slip away from me. I know what mourning feels like and that is how this seems. Like something is dying and I can't revive it. A need, a desire, a want I will miss so terribly it is even hard to put it to word. It's as though my heart is melting and in it's place dwells a deep, sullen pool of sunken memories.

A broken bridge is all that's available to leave the pain behind. Does it lead to the peace that I seek or is it another dead-end to a sadness that seems to overwhelm me of late. Is this the crossroads I've heard about? The turning point that you either take the left or the right, one leading to bliss and the other to isolation? Is it the stillness that wraps around me now? Perhaps I've already taken the path and this is the result.

Braving the darkness around me, I take a peek off the bridge into the churning, cool waters below. The stones challenging the smooth flow of the current as it bends and rolls it's way home, instinctively knowing the way to it's destination. Maybe we are like the waters that flow over the river bottoms, smoothing the rocks by day after day after day of doing what we were intended to do until we mold the world around us to fit. What is to "fit" me? Will I know it when I see it? Do I already have it? Is that what I'm losing now? The peace I'm lacking, is it in my grasp?

Saturday, March 19, 2016

Story of Reincarnaton...Maybe? (Written several years ago)

Do you believe in reincarnation? I've always been sorta wishy-washy about it because I just wasn't sure if some of the things I was seeing in my "dreams" were only dreams or visions from a past I lived before. I have early memories of "remembering" little clips and fragments of another time, places I've been, yet never been in this life and seeing "me" as a totally different person all together.

I can remember when I was a child, I asked my mom if she remembered the time the boy "rang" the neck of a chicken while I was sweeping a cabin out in a blue and white checkered gingham dress, I'd even threatened his life if he got chicken blood in the house, since I'd spent most of the morning cleaning up. I, of course, was met with a blank stare and later told I never owned a gingham dress and that I must have been dreaming. So, I learned quickly that odd little questions like that would only land me a fast ticket to the looney bin, so I tried not to mention too many "visions" to anyone that would have full authority to admit me into Eastern State Sanitarium. Still, for the record, the full vision was this...

I was wearing a blue and white checkered gingham dress that came down to my odd slipper type shoes. My hair was long and black because I can see it as I look down at the broom sweeping the bare, plank floor below me. This cabin was small, yet, had more than one room and a loft above. The planked floor ran the length of the cabin and straight out onto the porch as if the house was just plopped down onto a large wooden base and the small porch area was the same flooring as the inside of the cabin, it just continued out the door. There was a large, rectangle table in the center of the room where I'm sweeping, which I know to be the main room. I have a wooden chair propping open the front door because I'm sweeping the dirt out onto the porch and off. Looking at the door, I see a yard that is mostly dirt, but there are places of grass, but you can tell it has definitely been worn down.

In the dirt, a barefooted little boy with bowl-cut hair is standing there with a chicken in his hands and he is, literally, holding the chicken by the neck and swinging the bird in circles waiting for it's head to pop off. I'm assuming the meal that night was going to be poultry. This little boy is handsome (much like my son) with deep brown hair and large brown eyes that are shining with happiness because, I have no idea why I know this, but this is the first chicken this little boy had prepared for a meal. His pants were a rough brown fabric that he'd rolled up to just below the knees and his shirt was a creamy beige, long sleeved shirt that he'd rolled the sleeves up to mid-arm, also, he was wearing brownish looking suspenders that looked as though they were made into the waistband of the pants.

As I'm sweeping the floor, I look out to him and I yell "Don't get blood in the house!" because I felt that he was ringing the chicken's neck too close to the front door and I'm not sure if you know this or why I know this, but a chicken will run around with it's head cut off until it bleeds to death and I was concerned the bird would make a hasty trip into my, recently cleaned, cabin.

That is the entire vision and I've had it since as early back as I can remember. I tried to play it off as a visit to my Great Aunt Myrtle's farm up in the mountains of Kentucky when I would go with my Mamow to visit her sister, yet, that theory was shot down as well. So, it wasn't a memory of this life, so, was it a memory of another? I do know it happened to me because I have strong feelings for this little boy. It isn't like watching a dream play out that is just what you see is what you get. I felt love for this little boy. The memory of looking out at him and the smile on his face filled me with love because I knew he was feeling pride for being "old enough" to be asked to kill our dinner for the table.

I can remember the room smelling of sunshine, like fresh laundry being hung outside - that type of sunshine fresh. The other three chairs in the room matched the one propping the front door open, but in order to have the floor clear to sweep, the chairs were hung upon large pegs that jutted out from the wall about 3 or 4 foot up from the floor. There is a lamp in the center of the table, an oil lamp I would imagine because there are no wires or cords running from it and a huge, creek rock stone, unlit fireplace was to the left of the table.

Tumbling Down... (Written several years ago)


There's this place that I love and although I'd never been there (at least not in this lifetime), it gives me such a wonderful feeling when I see it. Down in Valley View, across from a big stream, there was a large, two-story, creek rock house. I have a book that celebrates all the old homes, buildings and land in this area and they have an actual picture of this home..back in it's day. Breathtaking! I love it, but before I'd seen this photo, I was in love with this property.

When I first came across the land, the first thing that drew me to it was the small family cemetery behind it. The fields were overgrown with wild flowers and brambles, but you could still see the beauty of it all. To the left of the property is a large creek rock chimney and one wall of what used to be the main house, a far cry from the photo, but a glimmer of it's former grander is still recognizable. In the front of the property is a narrow, broken down, country road that I always felt was misplaced. I can close my eyes and picture this home in my head, but the road is never there, just a large front lawn that leads straight to the large creek in front of it. I always want to "gather water" when I see it. Another reason I, sometimes, have to question the existence of reincarnation because in this life, I've never gathered anything, including water.

The land was vacant, I'm sure someone owned it, but you couldn't tell. Nothing was up-kept. Even the cemetery was overgrown, but it didn't keep me out of it. I've strolled through it several times. The markers are just so aged, you can't really read anything. It's times like that, I wish I had my Mamow here because she always had a story about all the older homes, the lands, the buildings, she just knew many things about the region we live in. I do know that I had much family that came from that little community. Mamow told me many times about the characters that came out of Valley View. Apparently, the ones she knew were pretty wild. Unfortunately, all the family that would know about this subject, are all gone now. Well, back to the story...

I would pull into the old weed infested driveway and just sit there, listening to music, taking the familiar atmosphere in. Many lazy spring and summer afternoons were spent there, looking over the property, taking in the sweet jasmine and honeysuckle scent carrying through the breeze. To, there was this old creek rock well that looked as though it had been added to the land after several years of "creek" living. I'm sure that was a blessing to whomever resided in the home. It must have been back-breaking work carrying water across the fields daily for use of washing, cleaning, drinking, cooking and bathing. I could only imagine the troubles of that time. Funny how, even though that was some hard living back in the days, there are still many things from that time that would be lovely if they'd carried over to now. It just seems to have been a much slower paced lifestyle. People were friendlier too. Now, everyone is so busy, so stressed, so stuck in their own troubles and issues that they don't really have the time or patience to worry about someone else's needs.

I haven't been there for awhile because I've been fairly busy the last few months and also, I don't drive around that much in the country anymore, again with the "things to do". I decided the other day, to take a quick peek at it - I've been missing it. I go by and the sole creek rock wall and chimney have been torn down! The land has been cleared and the well, filled in, fitted with plants and was rewalled with red brick!! I swear, I just couldn't believe my eyes!

After the initial shock and horror, I began looking around & the creek-bed rocks from the remains of the house have been stacked into two entrance posts and a mailbox slot. A house is being built on the land, a red brick one, standard Ranch style, nothing fancy, nothing like what formerly stood in it's place years earlier. My heart ached. Literally ached for what used to be. Even the hills behind the home had been touched. Mowed, a few less attractive trees, bushes and flower shrubs torn down and discarded. The cemetery was mowed, weeded, an old wreath tossed away and several old flower pots disposed of. Granted, it did look better, but the land had been violated, touched by someone that seemed to not have cared that at one time, these things meant something to the person that placed it on the grave of a loved one.

I know that once I pulled over and got out of my car, I just stood there in agony and took in all the destruction. I swear, if I'd known the land was purchasable, I would have tried to buy it in an instant. Sure, I would have cleaned the place up, but not taken that wall and chimney down! Why? It wasn't appealing? Come on! Turns out, the new inhabitance of the property are distant relatives of the people that had the land previously. Obviously, their love of history is non-existent.

I turned my back to the house and took in the familiar creek that was bubbling and flowing. At least they couldn't harm it, but for the first time, I noticed that broken down road. The one you have to cross from the house to get to the creek. The one I always thought was out of place and was never meant to be there. It was there! It was ugly and it was in the way and it wasn't apart of what this land was at all. Now, the land was nothing more than a commercial property - red brick, asphalt, metal, lumber and polish. Nothing really was the same. I wanted to walk over to the creek, take my shoes off, roll up my pant legs and wade in the cold clear waters like I had so many times before, but I just couldn't. None of it felt like it was mine anymore. I felt like I'd lost something, although, technically, I'd never had it to begin with, but, oh, how it felt like it had been mine. For years. I actually mourned the land.

I took one last look around and got back into my car, cranked up my music and left it all behind. I felt sad. Moody. Cranky. Even when I think of it now, I can only sigh and shake my head. I can't see how anyone can disregard such beauty and blow it off as a "fixer-upper" when so much of a former time had been laid bare there, just waiting and hoping for someone to come along and see it, protect it. I feel like I let something down, but, I can't dwell on it because nothing can be changed now. Even if I could purchase the land, the damage has been done. The wall had already came tumbling down and not even Humpty Dumpty could put it back together again.

The Tale of Bloody Mary

She lived deep in the forest in a tiny cottage and sold herbal remedies for a living. Folks living in the town nearby called her Bloody Mary, and said she was a witch. None dared cross the old crone for fear that their cows would go dry, their food-stores rot away before winter, their children take sick of fever, or any number of terrible things that an angry witch could do to her neighbors.
Then the little girls in the village began to disappear, one by one. No one could find out where they had gone. Grief-stricken families searched the woods, the local buildings, and all the houses and barns, but there was no sign of the missing girls. A few brave souls even went to Bloody Mary's home in the woods to see if the witch had taken the girls, but she denied any knowledge of the disappearances. Still, it was noted that her haggard appearance had changed. She looked younger, more attractive. The neighbors were suspicious, but they could find no proof that the witch had taken their young ones.
Then came the night when the daughter of the miller rose from her bed and walked outside, following an enchanted sound no one else could hear. The miller's wife had a toothache and was sitting up in the kitchen treating the tooth with an herbal remedy when her daughter left the house. She screamed for her husband and followed the girl out of the door. The miller came running in his nightshirt. Together, they tried to restrain the girl, but she kept breaking away from them and heading out of town.
The desperate cries of the miller and his wife woke the neighbors. They came to assist the frantic couple. Suddenly, a sharp-eyed farmer gave a shout and pointed towards a strange light at the edge of the woods. A few townsmen followed him out into the field and saw Bloody Mary standing beside a large oak tree, holding a magic wand that was pointed towards the miller's house. She was glowing with an unearthly light as she set her evil spell upon the miller's daughter.

The townsmen grabbed their guns and their pitchforks and ran toward the witch. When she heard the commotion, Bloody Mary broke off her spell and fled back into the woods. The far-sighted farmer had loaded his gun with silver bullets in case the witch ever came after his daughter. Now he took aim and shot at her. The bullet hit Bloody Mary in the hip and she fell to the ground. The angry townsmen leapt upon her and carried her back into the field, where they built a huge bonfire and burned her at the stake.

As she burned, Bloody Mary screamed a curse at the villagers. If anyone mentioned her name aloud before a mirror, she would send her spirit to revenge herself upon them for her terrible death. When she was dead, the villagers went to the house in the wood and found the unmarked graves of the little girls the evil witch had murdered. She had used their blood to make her young again.

From that day to this, anyone foolish enough to chant Bloody Mary's name three times before a darkened mirror will summon the vengeful spirit of the witch. It is said that she will tear their bodies to pieces and rip their souls from their mutilated bodies. The souls of these unfortunate ones will burn in torment as Bloody Mary once was burned, and they will be trapped forever in the mirror.

Inspirational Author's Quotes

"There's nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at the typewriter and open a vein." - Walter Wellesley Smith

"You must stay drunk on writing so reality cannot destroy you." - Ray Bradbury

"So often is the virgin sheet of paper more real than what one has to say and so often, one regrets having marred it." - Harold Acton

"The role of the writer is not to say what we all can say, but what we are unable to say." - Anais Nin

"The act of putting pen to paper encourages pause for thought, this in turn makes us think more deeply about life, which helps us regain our eqilibrium." - Norbet Platt

"It is necessary to write, if the days are not to slip emtily by. How else, indeed, to clap the net over the butterfly of the moment? For the moment passes, it is forgotten; the mood is gone; life itself is gone. that is where the writer scores over his fellows: he catches the changes of his mind on the hop." - Vita Sackville

"Writing became such a process of discovery that I couldn't wait to get to work in the morning: I wanted to know what I was going to say." - Sharon O'Brien

"Substitute 'damn' every time you're inclined to write 'very'; your editor will delete it and the writing will be as it should be." - Mark Twain

"I'm not a very good writer, but I'm a very good rewriter." - James Michener

"The wastebasket is the writer's best friend." - Isaac Bashevis Singer

"Don't be too harsh to these poems until their typed. I always think typescript lends some sort of certainty: at least, if the things are bad then, they appear to be bad with conviction." - Dylan Thomas

"Fill your paper with the breathings of your heart." - William Wordsworth

"The pages are still blank, but there is a miraculous feeling of the words being there, written in invisible ink and clamoring to become visible." - Vladimir Nabakov

"Don't tell me the moon is shining; show me the glint of light on broken glass." - Anton Chekhov
"Easy reading is damn hard writing." - Nathaniel Hawthorne

"Ink and paper are sometimes passionate lovers, oftentimes brother and sister and occasionally mortal enemies." - Emme Woodhull-Bache

"Metaphors have a way of holding the most truth in the least space." - Orson Scott Card

"The difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference between lightening and a lightening bug." - Mark Twain

"The story I am writing exists, written an absolutely perfect fashion, some place in the air. All I must do is find it and copy it." - Jules Renard

"A writer is someone who can make a riddle out of an answer." - Karl Kraus

"A prose writer gets tired of writing prose and wants to be a poet. So he begins every line with a capital letter and keeps on writing prose." - Samuel McChord

"I love writing. I love the swirl and swing of words as they tangle with human emotions." - James Michener

"Writing is my time machine, takes me to the precise time and place I belong." - Jeb Dickerson

"If my doctor told me I had only six minutes to live, I wouldn't brood. I'd type a little faster." - Isaac Asimov

"I love being a writer. What I can't stand is the paperwork." - Peter De Vries
"Words - so innocent and powerless as they are, as standing in a dictionary, how potent for good and evil they become in the hands of one who knows how to combine them." - Nathaniel Hawthorne

"A critic can only review the book he has read, not the one which the writer wrote." - Mignon McLaughlin

"Writing, I think, is not apart from living. Writing is a kind of double living. The writer experiences everything twice. Once in reality and once in the mirror which waits always before or behind." - Catherine Drinker Bowen

"To me, the greatest pleasure of writing is now what it's about, but the inner music the words make." - Truman Capote

"Being an author is like being in charge of your own personal insane asylum." - Graycie Harmon

"The time to begin writing an article is when you have finished it to your satisfaction. By the time you begin to clearly and logically perceive what it is you really want to say." - Mark Twain

"A word is not the same with one writer as with another. One tears it from his guts. The other pulls it out of his overcoat pocket." - Charles Peguy

"And by the way, everything in life is writable about if you have the outgoing guts to do it and the imagination to improvise. The worst enemy to creativity is self-doubt." - Sylvia Plath

"I would hurl into this darkness and wait for an echo and if an echo sounded, no matter how faintly, I would send other words to tell, to march, to fight, to create a sense of hunger for life that gnaws in us all." - Richard Wright

"I try to leave out the parts that people skip." - Elmore Leonard

"If there's a book you really want to read, but it hasn't been written yet, then you must write it." - Toni Morrison

"What I like in a good author is not what he says, but what he whispers." - Logan Pearsall Smith

"I put all my genius into my life; I put only my talent into my works." - Oscar Wilde

"Write to be understood, speak to be heard, read to grow..." - Lawrence Clark Powell

"The difficulty of literature is not to write, but to write what you mean." - Robert Louis Stevenson

"I love talking about nothing. It's the only thing I know anything about. - Oscar Wilde

"Be yourself. Above all, let who you are, what you are, what you believe, shine through every sentence you write, every piece you finish. - John Jakes

"Writing is an exploration. You start from nothing and learn as you go. - E. L. Doctorow
"Write without pay until someone offers to pay." - Mark Twain

"Most of us can read the writing on the wall; we just assume it's addressed to someone else." - Ivern Ball

"Writing is making sense of life. You work your whole life and perhaps you've made sense of one small area." - Nadine Gordimer

"Writing is a form of personal freedom. It frees us from the mass identity we see in the making all around us. In the end, writers will write not to be outlaw heroes of some under-culture but mainly to save themselves, to survive as individuals. - Don Delillo

"I lived to write and wrote to live." - Samuel Rogers

"I don't like to write, but I love to have written." - Michael Kanin

"Writing eases my suffering...writing is my way of reaffirming my own existence." - Gao Xingjian

"I write entirely to find out what I'm thinking, what I'm looking at, what I see and what it means. What I want and what I fear." - Joan Didion

"What a lot we lost when we stopped writing letters. You can't reread a phone call." - Liz Carpenter

"Writing a book is an adventure. To begin with, it is a toy and an amusement; then it becomes a mistress, and then it becomes a master, and then a tyrant. The last phase is that just as you are about to be reconciled to your servitude, you kill the monster and fling him out to the public." - Winston Churchill

"Writing is a socially acceptable form of schizophrenia." - E.L. Doctorow

"I write down everything I want to remember. That way, instead of spending a lot of time trying to remember what it is I wrote down, I spend time looking for the paper I wrote it down on." - Beryl Pfizer

"The important thing in writing is the capacity to astonish. Not shock - shock is a worn out word - but astonish." - Terry Southern

"Writing is one of the few professions in which you can psychoanalyse yourself, get rid of hostilities and frustrations in public and get paid for it." - Octavia Butler

"Writing is thinking on paper." - William Zinsser

"If you know what you are going to write when writing a poem, then it is going to be average." - Derek Walcott
"Write your injuries in dust, your benefits in marble." - Benjamin Franklin

"Writing is easy; all you have to do is sit and staring at a blank sheet of paper until drops of blood form on your forehead." - Gene Fowler

"Writing only leads to more writing." - Sidonie Gabrielle

"The act of writing requires a constant plunging back into the shadows of the past where time hovers ghostlike." - Ralph Emerson

"The problem with writing about religion is that you run the risk of offending sincerely religious people and they come after you with machettes." - Dave Barry

"Writing is a prostitution. First you do it for love and then for a few close friends and then for money." - Moliere

"Don't get it right, just get it written." - James Thurber

"If I don't write to empty my mind, I go mad." - Lord Byron

"I have always believed that writing advertisements is the second most profitable form of writing. The first, of course, is ransom notes..." - Philip Dusenberry

"Whether or not you write well, write bravely." - Bill Stout

"One writes to make a home for oneself on paper, in time and in others' minds." - Alfred Kazin

"The good writing of any age has always been the product of someone's neurosis." - William Styron

"Writing is the hardest way of earning a living, with the possible exception of wrestling alligators." - Olin Miller

"Writing is a form of therapy; sometimes I wonder how all those, who do not write, compose or paint can manage to escape the madness, the melanchoolia, the panic fear, which is inherit of human condition." - Graham Greene

"Most people are unable to write because they are unable to think and they are unable to think because they congenitally lack the equipment to do so, just as they congenitally lack the equipment to fly over the moon." - Henry Louis Mencken

"I must write it all out, at any cost. Writing is thinking. It is more than living, for it is being conscious of living." - Anne Morrow Lindgergh

"Writing is not a profession, but a vocation of unhappiness." - Georges Simenon

"You write in your letter something which I sometimes feel also; Sometimes I do not know how I shall pull through." - Vincent van Gogh

Monday, January 25, 2016

Passion's Creature

She carries herself with precise grace and stead.
Not knowing direction, where the path may lead.


A force to be reckoned with, she is indeed.
She'll seduce for control, then leave you to bleed.


Quick to anger, her temper explosive.
She gets all she wants, her fits are productive.


Ruled by self-doubt, yet knows whom she is.
Charming to know, yet rules with closed fists.


With a quiet dignity, she's boisterous and loud.
The weight of the world, her life's death shroud.


All that know her, wish her to speak.
To say what she knows, less havoc would reek.


Sensitive by nature, yet never meek.
Wonderfully ordinary, yet mostly unique.


Casually adorned, most call her flamboyant.
A lily among roses, yet just as sweet fragrant.


Some call her secluded, most think her reclusive.
She's welcomed by masses, though she finds them intrusive.


Respected by many for her values and opinion.
She stands for fairness and honesty, all that is genuine.


Yet once provoked, she is most cunning and clever.
Revenge for a slight, her most pressing endeavor.


She is but a lady, a queen among maids.
Dutifully helpful, her desires obeyed.
Her beauty may pass, though her passion shall never fade.

Daddy

I went to see him last-
Still he slept on.
I touched his sad hand.
Oh, how it troubles me he's gone.


Silence filled the room--as he lay upon his bed.
It was bittersweet for my brother and me
To have seen him before he was dead.


All the things I wish I'd told him.
As he lay so still that day.
That even though I barely knew him-
He'd touched my life in every way.


I remember many moments-
Although few there may be.
His voice can still fill my head
If I let it take control of me.


His face I can still picture-
Dark and brooding were his eyes.
Yet they shined of merriment-
Much like my brother's and mine.


Many things have changed now-
Since that moment inside his room.
I've grown into a woman-
My brother, a father and groom.


The days have passed us quickly.
Many years now since we've mourned!
I pray he knows how much I loved-
And that I am grateful for being born.

...And Then, There's Death (Written 2008)


I'm laying here on the couch listening to my hippie music and contemplating life. Well, to be more accurate, death. I have no idea why 60's - 70's music makes me delve into the darker side of life, it just does. I think the music of Jim Croce, Dan Fogelberg, Cat Stevens, Bob Seger, The Eagles, The Hollies, Bread, ect... does something lethargic to my brain waves.

I've always known I wouldn't live to be old. I'm not sure if I ever told the story, but I can remember being a little girl and being with my mother in a department store watching an old lady ahead of us. Mom must have noticed my studying the woman because she commented that one day, I would be just like that old woman. I calmly turned to my mother, promptly informing her how wrong she was because I'd never live to be that old. I wasn't trying to freak her out (although I did) and I wasn't being pessamistic, I just simply knew in my heart I would never reach that age and I wasn't afraid of it. It wasn't much later after that that I did get afraid of death. Actually, traumatized was more like it. I thought about it, lived it, breathed it, dwell on it to a point that I believe my mom was about to get me mental therapy, but suddenly, I was over it and all was back to normal.

During that traumatic stage, I went through a fear of burning to death and so, every night, without fail, I would make a sweep through the house, unplugging everything I could find, including my mom's coffee pot that she had set to automatically brew her coffee the next morning. I can definitely remember getting talked to over that. You don't mess with some people and their coffee. I also went through the coming home and checking every nook and cranny in the house to make sure that, while we were away, some killer hadn't crept into the house to do us off, one by one, while we slept at night.

I still, sometimes make the "search for the killer" sweep through my home. I guess it is just a fear I can't get rid of. Same as checking my vehicle from back to front and below before I climb into it whether it is daylight or dark. You never know who may be waiting for you to return, right? Does all this make me neurotic?? It may, but at least I won't be surprised.

I've decided I want to be cremated. I don't want to be placed in a box and put underground to rot. It doesn't appeal to me. Just burn me and get it over with. I can see the irony of the cremation thing and the fear of burning I had as a child. Yes, it is odd I would chose that same method to exit this Earth, but then again, I am odd. Still, I want to be placed in an urn, but not just any urn, I want a big, yellow, smiley face urn so that when people see it, they'll smile. Well, at least for a little while until they remember a corpse is in it. Seriously, I like to make people laugh, so this urn is perfect for me. I like it.

I don't want visitations or a funeral either, I want a wake. A fun one. I want a black spiritual choir to sing loud praises, clapping, stomping their feet, enjoying life - why mourn me? I'm in Heaven. Actually, I am probably going to be right there clapping, stomping and singing right along with the lot of you. I love a party! My mom is doubtful a person's passing can be joyous, but I told her she's wrong and to prove it, just invite all my enemies, I'm sure they'll lead the choir in joyful noises! I don't care, fly paper airplanes and eat Pringles & pop open a beer -- live dang it! You need to smile and I'll be right there with you, so make it a celebration. I want it that way.

I also want a Memory Book passed around and I'd love to have the people attending my wake to write down a little memory of us together, just so my family can read it. They could use a good laugh afterward. It all should be memorable.


This is my Obituary I received from the website: http://www.crucifictiongames.com/rogd.html (Don't bother, the site is no longer there. *Sigh*)

We regret to announce the untimely passing of Victoria, who on the 3rd of July of this year was callously crushed like a grape by an angry old woman. This unfortunate incident occurred in an anthill in Las Calamas, CA. The deceased was reported to have shouted "Not my new shirt!" just before expiring. Victoria is survived by several houseplants. Funeral services will be held the 4th of next month.

RIP D. (Written 2011)

It's been years since I've seen you last. I can still feel your brown eyes gazing into mine as I bent to kiss your frail cheek. Still, even though you were at your sickest, I never knew that would be the last time I would see you alive. I guess I never really wanted to think about it. I didn't want to know. Looking back, I think I knew you were far worse off than I gave it credit. You were always so full of life, so carefree and bright. I assumed you would beat it. After all, you were the strongest man I knew. You reached up and touched her little hand, even after you asked us not to get to close. You thought perhaps you may have a cold with your fever, but you still couldn't resist one last touch. One last feeling of warmth before you left us here to mourn.

I know you would hate the tears I've shed for you. The last thing you ever wanted to do was cause any pain while you were here. You were so giving that way - so humble and so full of pride. To say I miss you would be the understatement of the year, but, I do. Deeply. Sometimes, I can close my eyes and still hear your voice. The one thing you and only you called me. I can't believe it's been so long since I've heard that nickname. I've never let that be uttered by another soul. It is for your lips only. I know, one day, I will hear you say it again. Until that day, I'll keep it in my heart, along with the few memories that tow along with them.

I visited your grave today. I read your name, felt the cool marble stone it's etched upon. I cried. To be honest, I wept. So many times I've needed you - needed your touch, your hug, your smile, that laugh, your sense of humor that could dig me out of the worse trenches of depression. You always said I worry too much and I guess I do, much like you. Every day, as I grow older, I see more of you in me.

I won't run or turn from it. I can only embrace it and know that with some of the best traits you've given me, you slipped in a few that were maybe not so fair, but such as life. We all have weaknesses. Thank you for showing me mine before I took the wrong road. You may not have lived your life to the fullest, but your life wasn't in vain. Your blood runs warm through me like the deepest river splitting wide an undisturbed forest. If anything, your decisions have made me a stronger woman, so I owe you much - as I always have. I've never cared what people say. I never have given much credence to gossip or idle chatter...to me, people with that much time on their hands need to acquire a life and fast.

You mattered to many. You mattered to me. I love you, Daddy. I always will.

"Little Egypt", A Local Ghost Tale

In Richmond, Kentucky, on Four Mile Road, there is a bridge that, as rumor has it, a 16 year old girl was raped, murdered and tossed off that bridge many years ago. They called her "Little Egypt" because, back then, farms and homes with a lot of land were named (house numbers were mostly in towns with larger populations) and her family's home was called "Egypt". Still, on that road, if you come around a corner and look straight ahead in the brambles and tall grass, you will see a large concrete entrance arch to a property and above it is chiseled "EGYPT". Very cool and I've seen it myself, so I know that is fact.

Still, the ghost story is as follows, during rainy nights (since this is the type of weather they say she was murdered in), if you drive across Four Mile Bridge and stop at any point on the bridge, you are suppose to crack your window and say "Little Egypt, would you like a ride?" and I hear, if a mist rises around you vehicle, it is suppose to be her "getting in" your car. Now, there is another version of this and once again, it involves a rainy night and asking her if she wants a ride, but what is different is the fact that some will put a stick of gum on the dashboard in case her breath is bad from being dead and she needs to chew it to refresh herself. If the stick of gum is missing, then it is suppose to be proof she was in your car. Crazy, eh?

Now, the negative about inviting her into your vehicle is that once you are a mile away, you are suppose to stop your car and allow Little Egypt to get out because if you don't, it's been rumored that she will pull your hair, grab the steering wheel, ect... until she succeeds in causing you to crash your car. So, if you ever decide to do this, remember to stop and let her out or you may wind up with a towing bill.

(Author's note: Since writing this, a new, wider road has been constructed and the concrete entrance has been removed. I was so heartbroken to learn this.)

Beauty Tips

I posted this a few years ago, but, it's still rings true today.

I've seen so many no no's about makeup, tanning, ect... I just have to share a few things that are my pet peeves!

1. Do NOT use a darker lip liner than your skin tone!! If you do, you have a nasty ring around you mouth when your lipstick wears away. You don't match the lip liner to your lipstick, you match it to your natural lip color.

2. Spray perfume in front of you and walk through it so that it is evenly distributed over your body. Please, stop spraying it on your pressure points or on your clothes because A. It stains your clothes yellow & B. You stink if you have too much perfume on. It isn't pleasant for anyone - especially the people downwind of you!

3. Stop wearing liquid makeup, especially in humid weather! It, literally, melts and makes you look like a poorly constructed wax museum corpse. It gets all over your clothes, your jewelry, anyone that touches you - it is seriously bad!

4. Your face will look more "balanced" if the tones of your blusher match those of your lipstick. I hate when women are wearing red lipstick, bronze blush and pink eyeshadow. You are not a rainbow! If you go with pink lipstick, wear pinkish blush and natural tones for eye shadows. Always natural tones on your eyes! It looks natural, plus - you look younger.

5. I hate cracked, dry lips and I see it all the time in the Summer. Put a thin coat of Vaseline (petroleum jelly) onto your lips, blot with a tissue then apply your usual lipstick over the top and blot with tissue again. You will be left with a sheer, natural version of your favorite lip color and moisturized lips.

6. If you have straight eyelashes that need a bit of a curve, heat your eyelash curler with a hairdryer for a few seconds before using to curl your lashes. Do not overheat!

7. After applying nail polish, rinse in cold water to harden and dry the polish. You look ridiculous waving your arms around like you are trying to fly.

8. Wash you face before and after you exercise, otherwise the pores will get clogged. Wash face = No pimples

9. Freeze lip liner and eyeliner pencils in the fridge for 15 minutes before you sharpen them, otherwise, you have a stub and a colorful mess! Another, tip related to this one is to keep your makeup in the fridge - it lasts longer.

10. Many natural exfoliators on sale feature sea salt, great for some but not for those with sensitive skin like mine. I take a handful of brown sugar in to the shower with me and massage it into my face. You can also mix it with baby oil. The sugar won't sting like sea salt and it doesn't feel sticky and your skin will feel so smooth and not irritated.

11. Do not use long lasting lipsticks because it actually dries out and damages your lips. Toss them!

12. Lighter colors of lipstick make your lips look plumper and darker colors, of course, make them appear thin and aged.

13. Pearlized lipsticks show imperfections in your lips, so avoid them if you are older or have dry or cracked lips. The shimmer actually settles into the cracks and highlights them.

14. If your nail polish dries out, try adding a few drops of nail polish remover to thin it down. I have had to do this a couple of times when I fell in love with the shade and couldn't find it again, so I kept it 'alive" until I found it. Another trick to try for this: Stand the bottle in a bowl of hot water for five minutes before you do your nails, the heat thins the polish making it easier to apply.

15. When applying mascara, lay your mirror flat on a table. This give the right angle for application. Nothing worse than seeing "spider eyes" or black clumps on the ends of your lashes. Eek!

16. Keep eye and facial creams in the fridge and it will be really cooling when applied and it will help to reduce puffiness and make you feel instantly energized.

17. Natural beauty supplies can keep your skin healthy by keeping you away from harmful products. One good rule for buying cosmetics is to buy only cosmetics with ingredients you recognize. Many women are allergic to the artificial colors, scents and flavors in everything from moisturizer to lipstick, and sometimes skin problems will just disappear once the offending chemical is removed from your makeup kit. Many companies specialize in making cosmetics out of natural ingredients like almond oil, beeswax, natural colors and essential oils. In general the simpler and shorter the ingredient list, the less likely it will be to contain inorganic chemicals. If you're looking for makeup without artificial colors, scents, added chemicals and who knows what, buy mineral make-up.

18. Self tanners can be good IF the product is good! Don't buy a cheap kit and expect a nice, natural tan, it won't happen. There are air-brush tanning booth, but those that want to do it the hard way, do yourself a favor & use disposable gloves when applying the tanner. You do not want orange palms and wrists! Never do this without gloves on. PERIOD.

19. To moisturize your skin and keep it pimple-free: Blend a cucumber and apply it as a mask for 15 to 20 minutes. It's natural, so it won't break you out or clog your skin, plus, the scent is very refreshing! People with sensitive skin swear by this because most everything will break me out, but this won't.

20. If you do get a pimple or "blemish", apply either egg white or a fresh garlic paste (if you can handle the smell!) to the effected area only. Do NOT use toothpaste because it will dry your skin out. You can also dab fresh lemon or lime juice on the spot, but some find that a little irritating to their skin.

The Paperboy (Short story I wrote 2013)

The old woman's sneakers squeaked as she shuffled slowly across her freshly mopped kitchen floor, the sound stopping momentarily as she bent to lift the pan of meatballs from the heat of the oven. Taking a sniff of the air, she smiled pleasingly, enjoying the sweet aroma coming from the dish and just as suddenly frowned, remembering why she'd made the meatballs and sighed to herself. The little Parker girl had been missing for a couple of days with no sign of her where-a-bouts and her parents were frantic with worry. A Missing Person's Report had been issued and the neighborhood had been turned upside down with no luck in finding sweet little Amanda.

The girl had grown rather attached to Mrs. Patterson and the old woman had allowed Amanda to come over, keeping her company out on the front porch where she sat in the evenings watching the neighbors mill about. She knew everything and everyone knew her, but it was her locally famous meatless meatballs that she was the most known for. Her family had owned and operated a small, yet very busy diner for most of her life and now that she was retired, it had closed down and sold to a gentleman that turned the building into an ice cream shop. She'd always loved the diner and prided herself on preparing the best dishes in town and all admired her for it. Sometimes she missed it, but at least she could still cook and share her best selling dish for the few friends that she would call upon when she was feeling lonely.

Turning the oven off, Mrs. Patterson left the meatballs to cool as she made her way to the front door. The smile returned when she spotted the newspaper in the porch mailbox where the paperboy would place it as he went about his bike deliveries though the tight-knit subdivision. Jimmy was a responsible twelve year old and she was happy to have him back on the paper route, even though the only reason for his return was the absence of the new papergirl......the missing Amanda.

"Tisk, tisk!" she mumbled to herself as she stepped out to sit in the porch swing, ready to enjoy the paper. Her faded blue eyes dropped to the bold headline on the front page, LOCAL PAPERGIRL STILL MISSING. "No new leads..." her voice trailed off as she read further on, nodding in agreement with the police that Amanda Parker's disappearance could, somehow, be linked to her paper route. After all, she'd went out to make the deliveries on her bike and hadn't been seen since.

It appeared no one knew what to think since nothing had been found, not a clue as to exactly what had happened to the girl. "Perhaps a neighbor had something to do with the child's disappearance." the newspaper suggested, "Had it been an abduction? A kidnapping? A murder? Nobody knows for sure."

She shook the horrible image from her head and went about skimming the rest of the newspaper before she stood and made her way carefully back to the kitchen and began placing the cooled meatballs into a covered dish. She'd decided to make a visit to the Parker house that evening to bring them something wholesome to eat. She wouldn't be surprised if the young couple hadn't eaten a bite since Amanda went missing, being so distraught over their daughter's absence.

'It's a shame,' she thought to herself, 'such fine parents they are too!' Placing the last meatball into the dish, she sealed the lid and made her way over to the neighbor's house with the container in hand. She was greeted at the door by Mr. Parker and once inside, Amanda's mother, Ruth, welcomed the older lady in with a hug. Mrs. Patterson softly pat the sniffling young mother's back, insisting everything was going to be alright in a soft, soothing voice until Mrs. Parker pulled back and gave an attempt of a smile to her kind, grandmotherly neighbor.

"Thank you, Mrs. Patterson." Her voice was small and wavering, but her sweet smile was genuine as she took the dish from the old woman's wrinkled hands. "Your meatless meatballs?" Ruth asked and was rewarded with a comforting smile and a nod.

Andy Parker, took the dish from his wife's hands and carried it to the kitchen. He went about absentmindedly setting the table for three and stopped after a few moments, finally realizing that his Amanda wouldn't be home for dinner again tonight....maybe never again! The thought pierced his heart, but he knew he had to be strong for his wife and right now, setting the table was a much needed distraction for him as he waited for his daughter's return. He knew the police were doing all they could and he just had to have faith that they would bring his little girl home safely.

While her husband was warming their dinner, Ruth hugged her little girl's sweater to her chest as she spoke to Mrs. Patterson. "We don't know what to do. I feel so helpless sitting here when others are out looking for Amanda, but the police told us we are needed at the house in case she comes home or if someone calls..." she choked on a sob and looked pleadingly to the old woman seated beside her on the sofa. "I just want my baby back."

"Shhh, child, the police are doing all that can be done." Mrs. Patterson's voice was firm and then softened as she pulled Ruth against her for a hug, "You and Andrew must be strong for one another."

"Dinner's on the table." Andy announced from the dining room. The ladies stood and Mrs. Patterson shuffled ahead of Ruth, but turned in time to see the child's mother wad Amanda's sweater up, carelessly pitching it behind the sofa before strolling past the old woman to the awaiting meal.

Now that Mrs. Patterson was back home, she sat reflecting over her dinner with the Parkers. The conversation was strained, almost non-existent and she blamed herself, but she just couldn't get the image of Ruth tossing away Amanda's sweater away so callously. She'd been hugging it prior to that, so why the sudden change? Had it all been an act for sympathy? She sat rocking in her chair for quite some time before she stood to go to bed.

The next morning, the old woman was up early and anticipating Saturday's newspaper and again, it was tucked into her porch mailbox, just as she instructed Jimmy, the paperboy to do. She smiled to herself as she shuffled over to her porch swing and sat down ready to enjoy a quiet read. Again, the front page was covered with articles of the missing girl, but none offered any more information than the previous ones. She sighed and went about skimming the rest of the paper, only reading the bits and pieces that drew her interest. Once finished, she folded it carefully, laying it down so she could began her daily observation of the neighbors milling about.

Just as with every Saturday, most all fathers in the subdivision were out mowing their lawns, even Andy Parker. Mrs. Patterson was very relieved to see him moving on with his life even though his daughter was still missing. After all, he was still a young man and he needed to keep himself busy, so he wouldn't drive himself frantic with worry. She still wasn't quite sure what to make of Ruth's behavior from last night, but decided to let it go. Who was she to question how a distraught mother should react under the horrible condition of losing a child?

Laughter drew her attention away from the Parkers lawn and over to several boys playing football in the front yard across the street. She recognized her paperboy among the crowd and smiled as she watched him catch the football and run between a couple of boys to an imaginary line in the grass before tossing the ball to the ground and yelling 'Touchdown!' as he did a little dance. A few of the boys ran up to cheer alongside him before they all made a small circle to discuss the next game strategy.

Jimmy was a good boy and did as he was told. He always put her newspaper where she'd instructed him to. Everyday without fail, when he was the paperboy, her newspaper was always in the porch mailbox and she didn't have to risk the steps to find it. Many children didn't realize how important it was for an elderly person to be able to get to their paper, tossing it wherever it happened to land and just going on about their paper route, not caring that an old person like herself could get hurt searching through the bushes for it.

Amanda wasn't like Jimmy at all. When she'd taken over the paper deliveries, she would just throw the papers into the yard, not bothering to take the time to see if the older neighbors could reach or even find their newspapers. Mrs. Patterson couldn't begin to count all the times she'd told the little girl, while she was over visiting, to put the newspaper in the porch mailbox. The woman let her know how important the news was to the older generation, sometimes, it's the only thing still linking them to the outside world. Didn't she see what that meant to her?

Well, Jimmy understood that and Mrs. Patterson was happy to have him back as her paperboy. Sometimes, a person has to make changes themselves to get things done right and if Amanda had to be taught a lesson then that was what had to be done. After all, the results were well worth it. Of course, Mrs. Patterson's famous "meatless meatballs" were a lie now, but something had to be done with all that young, tender meat in her freezer....

Advice For Girls (Written 2013)

1.Get your life and priorities in order BEFORE you start looking for "Mr. Right". A life in chaos shows and there are too many Mr. Wrongs out there just waiting for the opportunity to use another lady and toss her out like trash. Don't be that victim. Remember, negativity only attracts negativity! Btw, having a positive outlook on life is wonderful, but it does not apply with what I stated above. You must get your life in order first and then find love. It's a disservice to everyone involved if you don't.

2.If the only way you feel you can get a man's attention is by using your body, posing for sexy/sexual photos, flashing, sleeping around and/or all the above, then you need to work on yourself and your low self-esteem before you worry about looking for a man. Disrespecting one's self is just that - disrespecting YOU and no one, not even the guy you're crushing on finds it sexy. You know what he sees when a female is do these things? An easy lay, as does the rest of the guys you share those photos with. I don't say this to be cruel, I say it to be kind. Those types of photos should only be in the hands of the couple that are in the photos (couple or individual shots) or your boyfriend/spouse and not blasted over the internet, to be placed in the hands of some very unsavory characters. Maybe right now, you might, possibly, find it funny, but, believe me, you'll regret it one day.

3. Since the subject of sexy photos is still fresh on my mind, allow me to add a little side note here for the ladies that do have a man they want to keep. If you have the guy you feel is your "Mr. Right" or as close to perfect for you as you can get, please, stop posting sexy/sexual, tasteless photos of yourself on Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, ect... Do you realize how disrespecting that is to your boyfriend? Husband? True, he doesn't "own" you, but for goodness sake, if you can't respect the man you claim to love, then RESPECT YOURSELF and/or any children you have or may have in the future. Your man doesn't want to see your bits hanging out for all gawking eyes to see, so, don't do it.

4. The "duckface" photos....JUST STOP IT!! You look like a freaking duck! Now, ask ALL the men you know how many of them have ever wanted to date, kiss, make out with and/or make love to a duck. Not as many as you thought, eh? Yeah, it's because they're NOT ducks. Stop looking stupid.

5. YOU teach men how to treat you. I'm sorry if that's hard to hear, but it's true. If you allow yourself to get walked on, you'll be a doormat. If you allow yourself to be a push-over, you'll be knocked down. If you allow yourself to be called names, screamed at, hit, kicked and mentally abused, you will remain a victim for as long as you are in that relationship and 9 times out of 10, if you manage to, somehow, escape alive out of that one, the chances of you finding yourself in a new relationship with the same type of man are extremely high. Want to know why? Scroll back up and read #1. You have to love YOU more than anyone else loves you because you make all your decisions. If you love the person you're making them for, you'll make good decisions.

6. Did he cheat on you? Did he come back crying, begging, pleading, saying he'll never hurt you again? Did you believe him and take him back? And did he cheat on you and hurt you again? Did you take him back? Do you see the pattern here? Think of it this way, you are the human and he is the puppy (Btw, by saying the guy is "the puppy", I am in no means saying "Men are dogs", so, please, no taking this out of context). Now, the puppy knows he isn't to wet on the carpet, but to go to the door and he's already achieved this several times, so you KNOW he knows this, but, instead, he wets the carpet. You show the puppy the mess, place him on a leash and take him outside to demonstrate the correct behavior. Once back inside, you give him a treat and all is well with the world. The next day, the puppy, again, wets the carpet. You show the puppy the mess, place him on the leash, take him outside to demonstrate the correct behavior and then it's back inside and you feed him a treat and so, the next time the puppy has to go, where is he going to wet at? Yeah, on the carpet because he knows he may get a little scorn, but he's going to get that treat and it's the same thing for cheaters. They like having their cake and eating it too and he will always cheat on you because you've allowed him to and to get away with it as before. There's a doghouse in someone else's backyard with his name on it...Set him free, sister. "Ruff ruff"

7. Never, never, never allow physical, mental and/or verbal abuse from anyone, not only your significant other! No matter what anyone has ever told you before, you are beautiful and you are loved by, at least, one person out there in this big world. Don't let people beat you down and make you feel worthless. YOU ARE SOMEBODY AND YOU ARE STRONG ENOUGH TO WALK AWAY FROM THE ABUSE! Just get out, even if it is only with the clothes on your back, ladies, get out! Domestic violence is an epidemic, so you're not alone. There are people, good people, out there that will and want to help you - don't be too proud to get yourself out of danger. If you have children, please, think of them and get you and your babies to a safe place. I know there's horror stories about men stalking their women down, ect...but, listen, if you leave, you have a very good chance (and so do your children) at a normal, happy future and believe me, you won't have that chance if you stay...you may be saving your life. I haven't heard of an abuser yet that was abusive to only their women. Children, whether being beaten or not are still being verbally and mentally abused.

8. When you're in a relationship, don't change yourself to be his "type". Too many times, I've seen women change into someone I don't recognize, merely, because she's dating someone new. She suddenly disappears, has no time for friends, doesn't return phone calls nor does she call you or other friends, it can even go as far as self-seclusion! When she's not with him, she's waiting by the phone in her footy pajamas for him to call because "he likes it when I'm home". Wow, he has you trained pretty well. Maybe you could use a leash like the puppy, above, in #6? Umm, btw, I'm sure that's not called love, that is called control and if it's the guy causing the woman to change all these things about herself, then she needs to get rid of him quick, but, if it's the girl, thinking she's becoming the lady he wants, she needs to check herself because she couldn't be more wrong. Men want you to be you, that's the one he began falling in love with and now, you're trying to change it up? Why? Obviously, you already was his type or he wouldn't have been interested in you to begin with. Duh! I'm telling you, women, and I know it to be true...once YOU LOSE YOU, he no longer sees you either and before long, he'll move on to another lady, one very similar to the girl you were before you wrecked yourself.

9. Every couple needs a little time away from one another, no matter how in love they are. Ladies, allow your men to breathe air.......away from you, at least, a couple of hours a week. No reason to tether him to your wrist. If a man's going to cheat, he'll cheat whether he has a whole night to do so or the 20 minutes it takes him to run down to the local market for some milk and eggs for tomorrow's breakfast. If he's going to do it, he will and no amount of hovering, nagging, stalking, crying or begging him to stay home and/or keep it in his pants is going to keep him faithful. Some men are loyal and some are scum, it's that simple and yes, this is also true for women.

10. In finishing, I'm going to bring it back to a little thing I like to call "girl2girl" and by that, I do not mean anything of a lesbian nature. I mean that I'm a firm believer in women building up other women, not tearing them down. Don't females have enough judgment and hate leveled at them without us casting it upon each other? We need to defend one another, form a "sisterhood" and unite to better this world. A woman transforms everything she touches and it can be for the good or it can be for the bad. The choice is yours. If you'd like to begin to make changes to honor that goal, then all the backstabbing, lying, cheating, stealing, gossiping, ect...it all needs to end and we need to be there for one another, as a true friend.

*BONUS ADVICE*

11. Don't be a gold-digger!!! Respect yourself and make your own dang money!!

Thoughts on Paper (Written 11/16/2008)


There are people, places, situations and ideas in your life that change you and/or the way you feel about certain things or problems. I have to admit, for such a broad-minded person, even I, at times, can be severely narrow-minded. I think it's the control thing. I like being in control, yet, who doesn't? I believe my control issues goes a lot deeper than merely an "I'd like to be in control"...more like an "I WILL be in control!" I've been that way my whole life. I get it from my mom, but I think I even surpassed her in this one. When your own stubborn mother tells you that you're being stubborn, then you're probably being stubborn.

Again, been doing a lot of internal thinking of late and I've been able to sorta step back from myself and take a look at the big picture. Doing a little "revising of the soul". Everyone needs to do that every so often to get back on course. My birthday is tomorrow and I'm not so young anymore. I should have it all together by now, right?

Anyway, I'll admit, I've been wrong a few times in my life. I sometimes blow up and get ticked off, taking things personally when there was no intention of offense. I'm human, but I've held grudges in the past and I've finally let them all go. I sometimes try to chalk it up to being a Scorpio. You know how we are...easily offended, sharp tongued, crass, sarcastic... Geez, I'm surprised I haven't been killed by now. I take a problem & I brood on it forever, twisting it, bending it, flipping it over and over until I either forget what the initial problem was in the first place or get so frustrated that I just cut it out of my life all together. Probably a pretty extreme way to be, but then, I am extreme.

I was watching a show the other night and this woman's entire life was turned upside down and she just very calmly went through her day, fixing things as she went. I was pissed at her, the show, the idiot that wrote the show and then I thought, why do I care? It isn't even real! That is a problem I hope to correct, (No, not talking to the television. I happen to enjoy that!), I'm talking about my insane ability to worry and care so much that I make the other person's problems my own. I'm a product of my environment whether I like it or not. I'm an emotional sponge that just sucks in all the positive or negative energy, digests it and normally, my mood changes right along with it - good or bad. I've noticed it's lessened over the years, but I need it to end now. I'm tired of it. I have my own life to worry over..I don't need anyone else's life to screw up along with.

Ever tried to be conscious of your thoughts? Like every single thought? It can't be done. I'm not sure if it's a woman thing or what, but I swear, I have a billion things going through my mind at once. Observe a guy watching a game and ask him what's on his mind and he simply have nothing on his mind!! What?? You can sit there and not be bombarded by a trillion little stupid tidbits of info, names, faces, ideas, whether you turned off the car lights or locked the doors? Are you serious? No, I'm not saying guys are simple-minded, I'm just saying that as the sexes go, why are we wired so differently inside?

For example, as soon as I woke up this morning, right out of the blue, I thought about a girl that used to be one of my best friends growing up. We were always together. Her mom remarried and they moved to Florida and after about a year or so, we sort of drifted apart and haven't talked since. I actually caught myself thinking about how to go about finding her in Florida. She's probably married with children by now and had forgotten all about that little pigtailed girl up the road that she used to eat orange Push-Ups with on her backyard swing-set.

If I could track her down, what would I even have to say to her after all these years?? "Hey, JoJo, wanna go to the clubhouse and talk about boys?" Hardly! She'd run, no doubt and I wouldn't blame her, scream stalker and have me arrested. Why can't women be like men and just sit there and have nothing on our minds at all?? We're cursed!

Well, I just reread this whole blog and I can't even remember what I was going to write about. See? I had too many ideas at once and you all had to suffer. I'm sorry. If I remember the idea behind this blog, I'll finish it.

The Line (Written 4/9/2014)

Truly, there's a thin line between love and hate and you know it when you've crossed it. Your soul turns bitter, your heart hardens. The same heart that was so full of love and adoration for that one person, yet, over time, it petrifies, especially if that person keeps pushing you away. What was expected? You can't continue to hold on and to love someone that doesn't love or want you in return. A person would go mad doing such things. You have to let go, even if your soul is screaming no.

Pick up every piece of your heart and move on.

Both Sides of the Dime (Written 4/2/14)

If I could tweak some things about me, it would be my temper, pride and moments of hard-headed stubbornness that I, sometimes, let define me. Do we change...really? Maybe we just shut down parts of ourselves that hurt until a good amount of healing takes place. Your mind is efficient at protecting itself, even though, your soul never let's it go. Still, your mind never forgets. I wonder how we can function from day to day, especially after a life shattering moment. Those times that it even hurts to breathe. When no amount of caring words or even the most tender of touches can make it go away. Do we need that to become whom we are meant to be? To ascend to a higher level or will the pain find you there?

I feel as though I have two halves, two thoughts, two souls. One is the dominate - the one that is strong and takes control. The one without fear. The one that will challenge you, out-wit you, manipulate you until things are exactly as she want them. This one gets all she wants with her charisma, her charm, her grace and laughter. She's the pretty one. The one that gets everything handed to her on the, proverbial, "silver platter" we are all waiting for. She's class, sass, the thinker, the poet, the one all are drawn to. She's loved.

The other half - the weaker piece. The one that catches all the blame, the sorrow and the confusion. She is lonely, though, she hides it much too well. She is always seeking peace and I know, unlike her, she will never find it. She's too busy searching for it. You only lose more that way, you tread less ground. She's the one that presses her hands flat against the cool surface of the mirror that she can't see herself in. She's become someone that isn't her anymore. She's always needing an escape, but, none is to be had. I think it's lost to her now. Desperately, she reaches out into the darkness - grabbing for something just out of reach. If she can put her hands on it, she'll own it. She'll deserve it too.

What a pity she stopped reaching.

Yet each man kills the thing he loves
The coward does it with a kiss
The brave man with a sword.
-Oscar Wilde
.

Sunday, January 24, 2016

"Home Burial" by Robert Frost (1914)

One of my favorite works of writing. So sad and beautiful.

Home Burial

He saw her from the bottom of the stairs
Before she saw him. She was starting down,
Looking back over her shoulder at some fear.
She took a doubtful step and then undid it
To raise herself and look again. He spoke
Advancing toward her: ‘What is it you see
From up there always—for I want to know.’
She turned and sank upon her skirts at that,
And her face changed from terrified to dull.
He said to gain time: ‘What is it you see,’
Mounting until she cowered under him.
‘I will find out now—you must tell me, dear.’
She, in her place, refused him any help
With the least stiffening of her neck and silence.
She let him look, sure that he wouldn’t see,
Blind creature; and awhile he didn’t see.
But at last he murmured, ‘Oh,’ and again, ‘Oh.’

‘What is it—what?’ she said.

‘Just that I see.’

‘You don’t,’ she challenged. ‘Tell me what it is.’

‘The wonder is I didn’t see at once.
I never noticed it from here before.
I must be wonted to it—that’s the reason.
The little graveyard where my people are!
So small the window frames the whole of it.
Not so much larger than a bedroom, is it?
There are three stones of slate and one of marble,
Broad-shouldered little slabs there in the sunlight
On the sidehill. We haven’t to mind those.
But I understand: it is not the stones,
But the child’s mound—’

‘Don’t, don’t, don’t, don’t,’ she cried.

She withdrew shrinking from beneath his arm
That rested on the banister, and slid downstairs;
And turned on him with such a daunting look,
He said twice over before he knew himself:
‘Can’t a man speak of his own child he’s lost?’

‘Not you! Oh, where’s my hat? Oh, I don’t need it!
I must get out of here. I must get air.
I don’t know rightly whether any man can.’

‘Amy! Don’t go to someone else this time.
Listen to me. I won’t come down the stairs.’
He sat and fixed his chin between his fists.
‘There’s something I should like to ask you, dear.’

‘You don’t know how to ask it.’

‘Help me, then.’

Her fingers moved the latch for all reply.

‘My words are nearly always an offense.
I don’t know how to speak of anything
So as to please you. But I might be taught
I should suppose. I can’t say I see how.
A man must partly give up being a man
With women-folk. We could have some arrangement
By which I’d bind myself to keep hands off
Anything special you’re a-mind to name.
Though I don’t like such things ’twixt those that love.
Two that don’t love can’t live together without them.
But two that do can’t live together with them.’
She moved the latch a little. ‘Don’t—don’t go.
Don’t carry it to someone else this time.
Tell me about it if it’s something human.
Let me into your grief. I’m not so much
Unlike other folks as your standing there
Apart would make me out. Give me my chance.
I do think, though, you overdo it a little.
What was it brought you up to think it the thing
To take your mother-loss of a first child
So inconsolably—in the face of love.
You’d think his memory might be satisfied—’

‘There you go sneering now!’

‘I’m not, I’m not!
You make me angry. I’ll come down to you.
God, what a woman! And it’s come to this,
A man can’t speak of his own child that’s dead.’

‘You can’t because you don't know how to speak.
If you had any feelings, you that dug
With your own hand—how could you?—his little grave;
I saw you from that very window there,
Making the gravel leap and leap in air,
Leap up, like that, like that, and land so lightly
And roll back down the mound beside the hole.
I thought, Who is that man? I didn’t know you.
And I crept down the stairs and up the stairs
To look again, and still your spade kept lifting.
Then you came in. I heard your rumbling voice
Out in the kitchen, and I don’t know why,
But I went near to see with my own eyes.
You could sit there with the stains on your shoes
Of the fresh earth from your own baby’s grave
And talk about your everyday concerns.
You had stood the spade up against the wall
Outside there in the entry, for I saw it.’

‘I shall laugh the worst laugh I ever laughed.
I’m cursed. God, if I don’t believe I’m cursed.’

‘I can repeat the very words you were saying:
“Three foggy mornings and one rainy day
Will rot the best birch fence a man can build.”
Think of it, talk like that at such a time!
What had how long it takes a birch to rot
To do with what was in the darkened parlor?
You couldn’t care! The nearest friends can go
With anyone to death, comes so far short
They might as well not try to go at all.
No, from the time when one is sick to death,
One is alone, and he dies more alone.
Friends make pretense of following to the grave,
But before one is in it, their minds are turned
And making the best of their way back to life
And living people, and things they understand.
But the world’s evil. I won’t have grief so
If I can change it. Oh, I won’t, I won’t!’

‘There, you have said it all and you feel better.
You won’t go now. You’re crying. Close the door.
The heart’s gone out of it: why keep it up.
Amy! There’s someone coming down the road!’

‘You—oh, you think the talk is all. I must go—
Somewhere out of this house. How can I make you—’

‘If—you—do!’ She was opening the door wider.
‘Where do you mean to go? First tell me that.
I’ll follow and bring you back by force. I will!—’

Friday, January 22, 2016

Five Ways To Write Better Poems

Poetry is a strange medium. It’s both heavily critiqued and profoundly subjective. A poem can be as timeless as the best classical literature or it might only ever move one reader. When a format is so artistic and personal, it seems absurd to impose rules or suggest ways in which one poem is objectively better than another. Nonetheless, there are certain ways in which a poet can make her own work the best it can be, regardless of how it compares to the mainstream.


WRITE WHEN YOU'RE READY.
This advice may seem obvious, but too many poets worry first about writing a poem—any poem—rather than deciding on what they really want to say. Others may have a great central idea, but nothing else to follow it, so they end up filling in the gaps with stuffing. When inspiration is lacking, don’t try to force creativity. Work on peripheral things, expand your vocabulary, research something that interests you, and examine those old ideas you put aside. When the time is right to put pen to paper, you’ll know. By exercising patience, your work will come from inspiration rather than obligation.


WRITE WHAT YOU KNOW.
This is just as true for poets as it is for novel writers. The best poetry comes from the heart and soul, so examine what lies within your own. Experiences, both good and bad, are ideal fodder for inspiration and will give your words the ring of truth. Look through old photographs or diary entries and ask your friends and family about past events. Compare their perspectives or recollections to your own. Remember that nobody else has had a life quite like yours; what better subject matter for a unique poem?


BORROW FROM KNOWN TECHNIQUES.
Poetry is personal and expressive, so you shouldn’t feel obliged to follow the classic literary techniques, no matter how boldly academics tout their importance. Having said that, they are useful as tools to help you develop your own style. Try a simple device like alliteration, wherein words are grouped together by their first letter to create a sound pattern, as in “The train tore along the track at a terrifying speed.” When read aloud, the consonant sound mirrors the clacking of the tracks, and the motion of the train becomes a little more real. There are plenty of classic poetic forms you can try, such as elegies and ballads, but never let them hem you in. The key is to consider how these techniques can help you, not to blindly follow them.


REMEMBER THE POWER OF WORDS.
Poetry tends toward the short form, especially when following a rhythm or meter that requires a set number of syllables. Expanding your vocabulary will make it easier to find one word that can do the job of three. Similarly, you can use literary devices to layer on additional meanings; with the right expression you can make your words say more than one thing. For example, hyperbole involves making outlandish exaggerations that paint a bold picture. Instead of “My father was very strong and supported the household,” try “My father could lift the whole house with one hand.”


WRITE FOR YOURSELF.
You are not writing for the critics, or a publisher, or your readers. Poetry is written for the poet. Even when you do have adoring readers, or you choose to craft a piece as a gift or homage to another person, the spark that makes your poetry special is you! Readers follow writers because something about their talent appeals to them. Publishers look for unique points of view. Switch off the inner voice that tells you to follow certain rules or avoid certain subjects. There will always be people who don’t like your poems, but your poems can only be considered art if they remain true to your vision.

www.grammarly.com