Sunday Post : Expression

If your blog is about photography, videography, Graphic Artwork Or Writing – Join in the Sunday Competition:

Here’s how the weekly photo Competition  works:

1. Each week, Jake will provide a theme for creative inspiration. Show the world  based on your interpretation what you have in mind for the theme, and post them on your blog anytimebefore the following Sunday when the next photo theme will be announced.

2. Subscribe to jakesprinter so that you don’t miss out on weekly challenge announcements. Sign up via the email subscription link in the sidebar or RSS.

GET THE BADGE FOR YOUR IMAGE WIDGET….

Make sure to have the image link to http://jakesprinters.wordpress.com/ so that others can learn about the challenge, too.

So here is my entry for the theme ‘Expression’

Do I look a bit of a goof in this?

No, no, you look very handsome, you must buy!

Weekly Photo Challenge: Regret

This photo is about much more than regret but I won’t intrude on any feelings you may have. I felt it appropriate especially as many of my blogging friends are from Australia and New Zealand. It was taken at Anzac Cove, Gallipoli.

and this is to show a little more for those who may never have the opportunity to visit.

Last year, soon after I began blogging, I wrote this poem and posted it with another photo. https://lucidgypsy.wordpress.com/2011/06/21/anzac-cove/

Confusion is the Child of Assumption

I don’t usually say this but for once if anyone has any feedback I would really appreciate it 😉

Confusion is the child of assumption

Stalk me and question

Ask if I have no shame

Is there nothing sacred

Nothing to be withheld

In this virtual world

 

Ask if I have no shame

When I share and bare my spirit

I have none I am raw

I have no need to conceal

I am more than half way healed

 

Ask if I have no shame

And then project your own

Ignore the tribute made

Do I have to shout it loud

To save the virtual stalk

 

No shame in fact I’m proud

For navigating a wonky journey

So often on my own

Fulfilling a role too early

But now well prepared and grown

 

Save your stalking energy

For shame unbinding threads

That never served you honestly

Just blanked it from your head

Where still it festers now

The Write Stuff

I found this at http://www.theadventuresofwembolina.wordpress.com and it made me laugh because I know you will all laugh at me!

If you want to give it a go here’s the plan:-

  1. What is your name?
  2. Blog URL?
  3. Write: The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.
  4. Favourite quote?
  5. Favourite song? (at the mome)
  6. Favourite band/musician/singer? (at the mome)
  7. Say anything you want
  8. Tag 3-5 bloggers

Let me know if you do this! Hurrah!!

and I’m tagging

http://ayearinmyshoes.wordpress.com/

http://2e0mca.wordpress.com/

http://smallhousebiggarden.wordpress.com/

 

2012 Water Dragon Weekly Sunday Post: LOVE

If your blog is about photography, videography, Graphic Artwork Or Writing – Join in the Sunday Competition:

Here’s how the weekly photo Competition  works:

1. Each week, we’ll provide a theme for creative inspiration. Show the world  based on your interpretation what you have in mind for the theme, and post them on your blog anytimebefore the following Sunday when the next photo theme will be announced.

2. Subscribe to jakesprinter so that you don’t miss out on weekly challenge announcements. Sign up via the email subscription link in the sidebar or RSS.

GET THE BADGE FOR YOUR IMAGE WIDGET….

Make sure to have the image link to http://jakesprinters.wordpress.com/ so that others can learn about the challenge, too.

So here is my first post for Jake’s new challenge, Love.

My son and his new born daughter, perfect love.

Flight to Krakow (part one)

A lofty bay with a shaft of sunlight peeping through the leaded windows but outside the garden had rampaged to obscure the view. The chairs in the bay were rigid and upright, but she chose to sit where she could see more than just decay. Eight years. That’s how long it had taken to keep the promise she made as her grandmother lay dying.

‘Go to Krasne, take my diaries . . . in the bureau, and all of the photos’

‘Where is Cratchnuh Gran? I’ve never heard of it’

‘In Podkar, find your aunties and uncles, you have seven.’

‘What?’

‘I am Polish Anna and you must go, there is a home for you there.’

She turned away and closed her eyes.

Anna married, and lived her life in a small Devon town but she often wondered who might be out there and why her grandmother had left them behind. She found herself alone after an amicable divorce and decided now was the time. Researching on the internet she tried every possible spelling of the place names and got nowhere. The language was difficult with its alien sounds but she tried to learn a few words and when a Polish grocery shop opened, she became a regular customer, just so that she could listen. Of course the people there were bemused by this local woman, picking up tins to read the labels, but they would smile benignly and practise their English on her. Anna told them that her grandmother had been Polish and from Cratchnuh or Podca ‘Have you ever heard of it?’ They were delighted but frowned and shook their heads. ‘Podcarpahtzee’, another shopper said smiling, I have heard of this place’, it is spelt like this, and wrote it down for Anna, Podkarpackie. Anna booked a flight to Krakow that evening.

Travelling alone held no fear for her. Her grandmother had brought her up after her parents died and money had never been a problem, she had used part of her inheritance to backpack around Australia. Arriving at Krakow her first thought was to get to Krasne as quickly as she could, but negotiating the language was a lot harder than trying to buy bread in the Polish shop at home. She would see what she thought must be a post office, and it would turn out to be a Vets surgery instead. She decided to settle in for a couple of weeks and enjoy Krakow, getting on and off of bus’s, finding out how they worked and each day going a little further. In her hotel, her patience paid off when she became a familiar face and people began to talk to her.

Of course they would help her get to Krasne, ‘Why hadn’t she said before?’ The manager helped her find the bus, buy tickets and wrote detailed instructions for her journey. The hundred miles of countryside were stunning but her nervousness spoilt her ride. She had no idea what she would find at her destination, a small town with barely any internet information where no-one knew her. Would they remember her grandmother? By all accounts she had left there at least fifty years ago and never returned. Her hotel there was not the cosmopolitan experience she’s had in Krakow and she thanked Bazyli silently for his notes in Polish.

The taxi driver waited until the studded wooden door opened to her and then gestured that he would return in two hours. She smiled down at the woman who looked puzzled at first, but then spoke, ‘Bo . . . Bozena?’

Inspired by this photo by Barbara Fritze (Beelitz Heilstaetten), courtesy of Frizz text http://flickrcomments.wordpress.com/2012/02/04/looking-back-christopher-hall/
more of Barbara Fritze’s work can be seen here

http://flickrcomments.wordpress.com/2011/04/08/barbara-fritze/#comment-12369

 

Weekly Photo Challenges : Random and Alone

So far this week The Daily Post at WordPress hasn’t published it’s Weekly Photo Challenge and so two of my blogging friends have decided to post their own. I have decided to join them with a photo for ‘Random’, based on Maggie’s blog

http://maggiephotgraphy.wordpress.com/2012/02/04/weekly-photo-challenge-random/

Jumping for joy at being in Cappadocia!

and this one ‘Alone’ as prompted by Margie at

http://latebloomerbuds.wordpress.com/2012/02/03/got-tired-of-waiting-for-wordpress/

Alone, and happily guarding his shrine

Thanks to both of you for providing this weeks inspiration!

100 Word Challenge : Week # 29

Wednesday, Best Knee Forward

She stared at the entrance from the bottom of the steps, thinking about her knees. Every Wednesday for three years she had knelt at his grave, weeding, clipping, polishing the granite stone and now her knees were done for. She carried her guilt in her knees and they wouldn’t let her move on.

One Wednesday, just one, she left him to join the Bridge Club and that was the day his heart gave out. If she had been there . . .

She sat on the bottom step massaging her joints, ‘Hello, Sandra isn’t it?’, he offered his arm. She let go, of a sigh. Onwards.

http://jfb57.wordpress.com/2012/01/30/100-word-challenge-for-grown-ups-week-29/