The Beginning of My Story

While visiting my mom in Oregon, I met another writer and we set up a blog together. I am going to enjoy reading her posts!

mosaically18's avatarMosaically

I was born at Stanford University where IQ’s come out ahead of the babies. As a child I was bright, both in temperament and in intelligence. I had a high IQ. I was the second of two girls born into a family with many issues it wished to hide. A psychologist by nature, I investigated my family from the inside out.
My mother was an innocent who was afraid of her mother-in-law, my Grandma Ethe. This was no accident. My father had suffered at his mother’s overly-assertive hands and was naturally drawn toward a sweet, naive woman to be his bride. Ethel, on the other hand, was a loud, outspoken woman with opinions. She had large hips, a large bust, and she swaggered when she walked, especially if she was upset about something. She was up-to-date on political affairs, had published a book at the age of 40, and had…

View original post 62 more words

Posted in Family, History, Nostalgia, Slice of life, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

3, 2, 1…lift-off!

3, 2, 1…lift-off!.   Way to go, Char!

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Gators and Butterflies: Flight or Bite

"Calico" (Artwork © 2013 by Joseph Rintoul)

“Calico” (Artwork © 2013 by Joseph Rintoul)

By Raji Singh

To celebrate National Poetry Month, Raji Singh of Fiction House Publishing takes us to two extremes…the sublime and the slime.

  I am James Thaddeus Fiction, the Fifth – a true Fiction.  Typhoon tears me from my parents.  I alone survive.  I become an orphan foundling, taken in by new loving parents Dr. Ben and Indira Singh.  Now I am Raji.  These are my found and foundling tales.

*           *           *            *

THE BUTTERFLIES

In royal raiment we come to you Carper, and you James.

Our flutters say, ‘We are here for you foundlings.

We light by – fly by you.

(Maybe, one day, you too.)

What can we do for you?

Quietly bring pleasure and peace.

Protect you, in this world of ugly, of beast,

That, the gentleness of our beauty may,

For a moment, help you subdue.

  *        *        *

 

 Their nemesis, the gators…

*     *     *

See purty buttahfly – see dem flits.

Onst our snouts by mistakes, they sits.

Gulp, yum! Ah so coloricious we would glow;

Me ‘n gatorhoodhood frien’ Thibidioux-

As dey twitter downst into our belly pits

*     *     *

(Join me every Sunday night at my blog, your place for short story, lark, whimsy, and merriment.  Meet the many residents as I archive their lives and centuries of adventures.  You can read of their origins in my novel TALES OF THE FICTION HOUSE.   My novel is available at Amazon, (Kindle and Trade Paperback) and Barnes and Noble.)

©2013 Raji Singh

©2014 Raji Singh (New material)

 

Posted in Satire, Uncategorized, Writing | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Smoke Rings

This young woman’s old spirit vibrates through her words.  Amazing, Julsey! Smoke

Rings.

Posted in Short story, Slice of life, Writing | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Travels with Mary, Part 2

Travels with Mary, Part 2.

Posted in Humor, Slice of life | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Hearts Aren’t Crystal (repost)

Hearts Aren’t Crystal (repost).

Posted in inspiration, Slice of life, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Travels with Mary, Part 2

By Catherine Hedge

My mother is on a grand new adventure.  Despite health struggles that have her zipping down the hospital hall in  a four-wheeler, we can’t stop her from trying something new.  This very morning, she and her sweetheart exchanged rings.  Though all the furies of old age might flutter about her head, she refuses to let them in.  In her honor, I wanted to share an older piece about a grand trip we took together.  Wherever Mary goes, the joy of life goes with her.

Mary Hedge: Looking forward to her next adventure

(From 7/9/2012)

Anyone who believes that a good road trip needs to be finely scripted to be successful has never traveled with my mother.  She and her patron Saint Christopher have the ability to take a lump of chaos and turn it into magic.

My mother loves to travel.  I do believe her internal calendar is determined by the trips she has planned.  My mom, two cousins, and I just finished a seven day journey to Montana and back.  On the day we returned, she was on the phone arranging to go to Los Angeles in two weeks.  My dad, Joseph Hedge used to say that he had to be careful to park the family car with the nose pointed toward the garage.  If it was pointed toward the road, she’d ask, “Where are we going?”  Then, within 48 hours, they’d be on their way to somewhere…usually at an incredibly discounted price and with four or five other relatives woven into the plan.

Case in point:  My Canadian cousins spent a summer with us when I was twelve.  When it was time for them to head home, they planned to go by way of Colorado where other family lived.  My mom sighed, “For fifty cents, I’d go along with you!”  Once the fateful words were uttered, we knew we were on our way.  A day and a half later, Mom kissed Dad goodbye and packed the five of us in the Rambler along with borrowed sleeping bags and a cooler full of bologna sandwiches.  She gave us each a Red Chief tablet and a box of crayons.  I still have mine somewhere, a journal of the trip inscribed with her favorite saying, “Just imagine you were in a covered wagon crossing this desert! (or river, or mountain, or the great salt flats)  I rolled my eyes at her, but now I must admit I say exactly the same to my children.  I’m sure they will say it to theirs.  Immortality in ten words or less.

When I travel, I order AAA maps in advance, reserve my hotel rooms, peruse city websites, and get time schedules for mass transit.  My mom does none of this.  She doesn’t need to.  She’ll just point the car in some cardinal direction with the destination vaguely in mind, asks St. Christopher to protect us, and turn on the engine.  Then, like tumbling dominoes, the world falls down in perfect order before her.

Case in Point:  On our recent road trip to Montana, my mom insisted we stop at Thunder Mountain, a fascinating monument of folk art sculpture.  As we approached it, she said, “Joe and I have some wonderful pictures of this from the Seventies.  I wish I could find someone who might know something about this place so I could donate them.”  The site had suffered serious neglect and vandalism over the years and is now being preserved, but much of the art was destroyed.  We stopped for a short break and brief glimpse as it was almost closing time.  Within five minutes, we found the caretaker, a close friend of the artist’s son.  He met my mom, gave her his card, and they arranged the donation.  Not only that, but he told us the history of one of the artist’s daughters who had formed a bond with my grandmother forty years earlier.

She found us some great pie, too!

If we need a parking space, there will be one three stalls or less from the front door.   If there is rain, it will last only long enough to clean the windshield.  Wherever we land, people will say, “This is the nicest weather we’ve had all year!”  If we get lost, which we did twice, the route we end up traveling will be gaspingly beautiful and end up where we intended to go anyway.   We walked into a casino and Mom put $20 into the nearest machine.  Immediately the bells and lights went crazy and she won thirty free spins and $8.  Once she rented a motor home for another family trip to Colorado.  It was beyond their means, but she was determined. And there is no refusing my mother.  At their lunch stop in Reno, she made three quick bets and won $1000, enough to buy gas for the whole trip.

Marysville, Montana

We visited the tiny hamlet where my grandmother was born.  The local history museum, where Grandma went to school, was closed.   Mom was disappointed.  She turned around, saw a man peeling bark from a log pole in his yard, and approached him.  His wife was the keeper of the keys.  He opened the museum and showed us the blacksmith’s tools that used to be my great-grandfather’s.

She stopped by unannounced to visit a reclusive relative.  Not only was her cousin ecstatic to see her, but her whole family, whom Mom hadn’t seen in twenty years, was there as well.  When we went to swim at a hot springs, Mom sat next to a couple from Dad’s home town.  They knew him as a child.  We celebrated the Fourth in Mom’s birthplace. The parade strolled by less than half a block from our hotel room.  There was a Walgreen’s across the street where we bought folding chairs on sale for $7.00.   The fireworks were incredible.  They celebrated the centennial of the state, an extravaganza the community had been saving for for years.  We found a perfect, sparsely populated viewing site that highlighted the very spot where my dad proposed to my mom over six decades ago.

This is how life goes for Mom and why she is one of my favorite traveling companions.  I’m not too sure about the Hereafter.  All I know that is when my time comes, I want my mom to lead me there. Wherever it is, she’ll take me to someplace wonderful.

Thanks, Mom!

Posted in Family, Humor, Slice of life, travel, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Hearts Aren’t Crystal (repost)

By Catherine Hedge

SANYO DIGITAL CAMERA Kansas is beautiful today.  The sun is brilliant.  Birds who have survived our bitter winter sing sweetly.  We have a fresh start!  Sometimes our hearts need the same thing.  Whether one is in the first stages of heartbreak or at the healing end, we need to know that our emotional spring is around the corner.  Just a reminder from a post 2 years ago!

****

Hearts Aren’t Crystal

Posted on April 22, 2012 by Catherine Hedge

By Catherine Hedge

I once read a old fairy tale about an innocent girl who met with tragedy.  The Ice Queen broke a magic crystal.  A shard flew through the air, piercing the child’s heart.  Originally sweet and loving, she became increasingly cruel and rigid while her brother tried to save her.  I wonder if that’s what happens when our hearts are broken. Sharp fragments bury themselves into our psyches  and dare us to pry them out.

I’ve never met anyone over fifteen who hasn’t had a broken heart at least once.   Sadly, most of us experience it multiple times and know all the platitudes people use to make us feel better:

“Just keep yourself busy.  You’ll get over him/her soon enough!”

“No one ever died of a broken heart.” (Are they so sure?)

“If it were real love, none of this would have ever happened.”

“Just wait.  Someone better will come along.”

You know they mean well, but all you really need is someone to wrap both arms around you, to say, “I am so very sorry….”, and to listen. Sometimes it seems you’re asking them to listen forever.  You tell the same story so often your sister, brother, mother, friend could say the next line, but still the spinning of it is healing.

You need someone to say, “It really wasn’t your fault.” Even if it was.  You need to talk about little moments, insignificant before the break-up, that become magnified into monumental foretellings.  (Why didn’t I see it coming?  How could I have been so naive?  Why wouldn’t he/she change when he/she knew I needed him/her so much?) Characteristics that were once endearing when you loved the person become traits that drive you crazy.   Places you adored, holidays you cherished,  friends you shared, you avoid in the aching, dulling  aftermath of a soured romance. That shard of heartbreak can keep digging deeper, shredding your spirit until it seems there is nothing left.

Some creatures really are made to love only once.  My daughter told me a story of a friend who used to hunt wild geese.  He was very proud of bagging a large goose until he saw the gander circling, landing, and calling out for hours for his lost love.  The sound was so mournful, he never hunted geese again.  That goose may have returned to search for years.  They mate for life.

But humans are lucky.  We do have the capacity to love again, if given the chance.  Perhaps a dear friend, a new lover, or our child reaches inside us and finds that old injury.  Somehow, with patience and hope, they tweeze out the slivers of glass.   That makes us love them even more.

©2o12 Catherine Hedge

Posted in Family, Nostalgia, Slice of life, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Life

by John Borel

Thunder Mountain sculpture

The passage of time (Thunder Mountain)

We spend most of these few years we have

Collecting things, screening them, selecting

Our friends, skills, and tools,

Houses, cars, furniture , books and magazines

Our ideas, songs, values and favorite phrases.

And then one day, Whamo! Out of the blue

All of these material and spiritual collections

Suddenly become irrelevant.

As friends and family come close,

We pull back slowly, or quickly,

Our energy depleted, our earthly longings dispersed.

Ignored  or avoided for most of our lives,

It’s a normal cycle that we should expect,

Since all fires burn out in time.

Astounding how our species has evolved

So that we think  ourselves immortal

Even in the face of evidence in abundance,

Evidence of our insignificance and mortality.

©2014 John Borel

Posted in Family, History, Nostalgia, Slice of life | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Let A Child Know: You are Limitless!

Let A Child Know: You are Limitless!.

Posted in Inspiration, parenting, Slice of life, Teaching | Leave a comment