Congratulations to Jeannine Hall Gailey - her book She Returns to the Floating World won a Silver Medal in the 2011 Florida
Publishers Association Book Awards. A very well deserved accolade.
Monday, November 07, 2011
Sunday, November 06, 2011
Saturday, November 05, 2011
Saturday Morning
the bed amiss
sheet and covers at oddsthe morning smug
coffee half gone and cold
to-do list full
neglect
Friday, November 04, 2011
On Happiness~
"THE ONLY TRUE HAPPINESS COMES FROM SQUANDERING OURSELVES FOR A PURPOSE." ~ William Cowper
Got this from Gretchen Rubin's daily e-mail this morning & thought I'd share.
Got this from Gretchen Rubin's daily e-mail this morning & thought I'd share.
Wednesday, November 02, 2011
Confession Tuesday on Wednesday...
Dear Reader:
I missed Confession Tuesday. If you are a regular reader you've perhaps realized this already. I confess I have no excuse.
It's raining and dreary here, perhaps it is in your neighborhood as well. I actually think it is quite November. November I think is perhaps the dreariest of the months. Baseball season is over. The diamonds go dormant for the winter. The sun seem to be creeping out of sight and then weather like today's just adds to the general melancholy. I confess that I'm not much of a November fan.
November is also the month that you write a poem a day. Okay, some people do. I've done it before successfully. I've also started to do it and failed - falling off the wagon two or three weeks down the road. Today is the second day of the month and I don't have two poems. I don't even have the first. But I will write here in a short while and see what I can do. But let me confess right now, I'm not going to adhere to a poem-a-day routine this month. I'll do my best to pull together 30 poems or drafts - but what I am not going to do is stress over having a new one come the end of each day. I have more then enough stress in my life currently and I refuse to turn this already downer of a month into something even more dreary.
I confess that I fell over the weekend and I believe I hyper-extended my left knee. It was about a 9.8 on a scale of 10 in terms of pain. I'm doing better but it man did it hurt during the weekend.
If I get one more solicitation cold call on my cell phone someone is seriously going to have to restrain me. This is both a warning and a confession combined.
I'm trying to cut out as many distractions as I can during my writing time. I downloaded a trial copy of a program called Freedom. They make it for both Mac and Windows. You set a predetermined number of minutes you want to work Internet free and it blocks it. If you have the discipline to just not go there - great! Many of us don't. I confess that while I need at times to research something in conjunction with a particular write, I can schedule to do that during off writing time. I confess I should have started this long ago.
That's it for this week. I hope you can all absolve me of my tardiness. Have a great week ahead. See you Tuesday!
I missed Confession Tuesday. If you are a regular reader you've perhaps realized this already. I confess I have no excuse.
It's raining and dreary here, perhaps it is in your neighborhood as well. I actually think it is quite November. November I think is perhaps the dreariest of the months. Baseball season is over. The diamonds go dormant for the winter. The sun seem to be creeping out of sight and then weather like today's just adds to the general melancholy. I confess that I'm not much of a November fan.
November is also the month that you write a poem a day. Okay, some people do. I've done it before successfully. I've also started to do it and failed - falling off the wagon two or three weeks down the road. Today is the second day of the month and I don't have two poems. I don't even have the first. But I will write here in a short while and see what I can do. But let me confess right now, I'm not going to adhere to a poem-a-day routine this month. I'll do my best to pull together 30 poems or drafts - but what I am not going to do is stress over having a new one come the end of each day. I have more then enough stress in my life currently and I refuse to turn this already downer of a month into something even more dreary.
I confess that I fell over the weekend and I believe I hyper-extended my left knee. It was about a 9.8 on a scale of 10 in terms of pain. I'm doing better but it man did it hurt during the weekend.
If I get one more solicitation cold call on my cell phone someone is seriously going to have to restrain me. This is both a warning and a confession combined.
I'm trying to cut out as many distractions as I can during my writing time. I downloaded a trial copy of a program called Freedom. They make it for both Mac and Windows. You set a predetermined number of minutes you want to work Internet free and it blocks it. If you have the discipline to just not go there - great! Many of us don't. I confess that while I need at times to research something in conjunction with a particular write, I can schedule to do that during off writing time. I confess I should have started this long ago.
That's it for this week. I hope you can all absolve me of my tardiness. Have a great week ahead. See you Tuesday!
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Magpie Tales 89 / Poem: The Gritty Facts
The Gritty Facts
There are vague memories
some fond some not
so. Much has changed.
The delete key absolves
a multitude of sins and wasted
paper. I don't miss
purple hands from carbon paper
if you know what I mean.
My youngest daughter doesn't.
When you were wired (old use of the word)
your hands would light up the keyboard.
The sound had its own poetry.
When you were stumped
the silence was killing.
No music to stream in
the background and shores to surf
at your fingertips. Your world cloistered
It was hard work. Dirty work.
Michael A. Wells
Magpie
Saturday, October 29, 2011
Magpie Tales 88 / Poem: Espresso Spoiled
Espresso Spoiled
So many angles to consider.
Some within others
and building blocks
to something
bigger down the way
something maybe broken
or maybe just a portion
what we have discovered
of ourselves;
windows to see
what is real
what is fantasy
but the lines
blurred.
Einstein said— "Reality
is merely an illusion,
just a very persistent one."
If the linear stuff is raised
or lowered on one end
what is the story line then?
You drove me into the city
today for something daring—
my two shots of espresso spoiled
with talk of your stained childhood
even if it wasn't so
I wanted to hear crisp clean lines.
Michael A. Wells
magpie88
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