Showing posts with label Description. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Description. Show all posts

14/12/21

Day 348 - Night Owl

 NIGHT OWL


Prompt - Night Owl : Write about staying up late at night


My teenage years.  Twenties.  Even thirties.  Perhaps, occasionally, forties.  Late nights weren't a problem.  Get up late the next day and I was fine.  But then age starts to have it's impact.  In part that's the obvious gradual physical decline, and consequent loss of recovery powers.  Or indeed staying power, for the simple keeping awake bit becomes harder too.  But also because the idea no longer holds the sense of pleasure it once did.  There needs to be a recovery, and why not spend more time in daylight anyway?  Responsibilities beckon, life is that bit more serious.

So late nights become more infrequent, the body becomes less and less able to adapt to the ones you do have, and whole notion spirals away.  Friends come to dinner and the party breaks up well before one am.  The prospect of a late night show is less the draw that it might once have been.  

I have never really been that much of a morning person.  It's true that I used to get us to the gym for seven in the morning on a regular basis, but that was almost twenty years ago.  We've changed, our lives have changed.  Very much the opposite of early risers, I am rarely in bed before midnight, with the light going out around twelve thirty, and very rarely after twelve.

So I am something of a night owl these days, for the mornings tend to be short, but that still doesn't mean that very late nights, the early hours sort, are on the schedule.  Except for one reason nowadays.  Occasionally I get the chance to watch 'my' NHL team playing live.  But the face off is usually at midnight, or even half past.  Which means, if I'm to watch the whole game, staying up to three and beyond.  That's not all that many hours after my regular bedtime, and way earlier than many of the late nights of my younger days.  But the impact on my body is far greater.  It seems to take about two or three days before I feel totally back to normal again.  

This is odd, for I am not always a great sleeper, and there are still plenty nights when insomnia gets a hold of me.  So my body should be used to going through the day with less sleep than usual.  But the impact of those hockey games goes beyond what you might expect.  So maybe it's about the time you get to bed?  Or the quality of the sleep, for I will either be feeling despondent or euphoric when I get under the duvet.  Watching sport, where the result matters to do, has it's impact on the body too.

I'll still watch the odd game when I can.  But I have to accept that doing so on a regular basis would be a disaster for me.  I really am too old for this kind of thing...

27/11/21

Day 331 - What's Cooking

 WHAT'S COOKING


Prompt - What's Cooking : Write something inspired by a favourite food or recipe


Sprouts have always had a bad press.  Often once of the most loathed foods of childhood, frequently the only part of a xmas dinner left aside.  Lots of work to prepare, with so little benefit it seems.  And, in the past few years, a certain kind of right wing nutjob has even sworn against them because of the 'brussel' appellation.   Crazies, but it does nothing to further these mini-cabbages' reputation.

But how many were turned off sprouts in their early years by simple bad cooking.  The overcooked pale green mush of the sprout that has been boiled to death is a food to avoid.  For this wee emerald gem to be fully appreciated for its worth it needs to retain it's shape and some notion of 'bite' when your teeth do their job.  (With one exception, which I will come to later.)  In my experience there are two ways of achieving this, although the best of these I have. sadly, only learned in the past few years, with the realisation that I have been missing out on one of life's great culinary experiences.

The best way to enjoy the more traditional sprout is steamed.  There is less risk of overcooking, and the flavour is more effectively retained.  For perfection they should be removed from the steam whilst still al dente, and tossed in a pot of melted butter and grated nutmeg.  With a little black pepper if you like a bit of heat, as I do.  Gorgeous.

And yet still a poor relation to the glorious discovery I made a few years ago.  I had a few left over sprouts in the fridge when I was preparing a tray of vegetables to be roasted.  Out of curiosity, for it's good to expand the variety in the dish, I added half a dozen sprouts.  Prepared as they would be for steaming or boiling, with the other leaves removed and their bottoms crossed.  They emerged slightly charred, well cooked, and spectacular to the mouth.  These were sprouts as I had never known them before.

So I Googles roast sprouts to discover they were very much a thing, and well recognised as a source of delight.  So what else could be done with them?  Risotto was the answer, and provided the exception I mentioned above.  Sprout and Stilton Risotto to be more specific.  Around sixty per cent of the sprouts are to be prepared as usual, except sliced into halves and then roasted until caramelising.  They get stirred into the near finished potage towards the end of cooking. 

 The remainder are finely chopped, and added to the mix shortly after the rice has been coated in the oils and flavoured with wine.  These add to the depth of flavour, while largely disappearing into the mix as the cooking progresses.  With the addition of a good blue cheese the end result is wonderful, creamy and full of flavours, with the charred demi sprouts the little nuggets of gold to be sought out.

Of course cooking risotto takes time, and isn't something I'd want to have to do every night.  So I tried to think of a way to get that sprout and stilton combo, but with a lot less effort.  Which led to me inventing the sprout and stilton pizza.  Not something that's commonplace in the wider world, as far as I can tell (although I have since blogged about it, so I hope it's something others have tired since...).  Purchase a ready made, good quality, margarita pizza.  I often use a sourdough base with tomato and mozzarella topping.  Prepare the sprouts as you would for the risotto, halved and roasted, but this time not to the point of being ready.  Cover the top of the pizza with crumbled stilton.  Dot the near-ready sprouts across the surface, and cook as usual.  The end result isn't as spectacular as the risotto, but it does have it's own charms, one of those being simplicity and speed.  

I now look forward to winter arriving and first bags of sprouts appearing.  So much deliciousness to look forward to...

18/11/21

Day 322 - Personality Type

 PERSONALITY TYPE


Prompt - Personality Type : Do you know your personality type?  Write about what type of personality traits you have


Introvert?  Yes, definitely.  Albeit with complications, as most of us are.  Reluctantly sociable, scared of initiating conversations, prefer to crack a joke than be serious.

But also a performer, at least I was, abe to get up on stage and act, or deliver a long talk about my job.  In both cases, where I was not being me, but acting a part.  One scripted by a writer, the other created by myself to firt the label I carried.  Project Manager or whatever.  I used to hide behind my professional persona.  As I do when volunteering for Advocard.

Beyond that I can be quick to anger, too long in holding a grudge, even if I have mellowed with age.  I am often good at being dispassionate, analytical, but also get emotionally involved quite easily, as my recent love for Edinburgh Rugby, and the New York Islanders, has shown.  

That can also show up in obsessiveness, such as my daily insistence on writing 750 words, and walking eleven thousand steps.

A strange mix of traits that meld into me.  Whatever that is.  Far from perfect, but not too inhuman.

09/11/21

Day 313 - Playground

 PLAYGROUND


Prompt - Playground : Whether it is the swings or the sandbox or the sliding boards, write about your memories of being on a playground


I do not know if I am odd or not, but my memories of my childhood seem to be far less clear than many other people I've talked to about the subject.  Or less clear than they claim their recollections to be.  For we all know memory is fallible.  We are able to recall particular highs and lows, but the daily habits of existence become strangers to us, to be replaced by new habits, and replaced again, as our lives change.  So I feel I am unclear about my earliest memory, and some of the contenders only really exist in my consciousness because of photos I've seen.   All of which is by way of saying that what I am about to relate comes through rose tinted vision and is both selective and unreliable.

The word playground primarily conjures up images of hard concrete and tarmac expanses at school, either kicking a small ball around, or playing the sort of games children played in the sixties.  But a playground with swings and slides and the like?  There would have been plenty around, yet none stick in my mind, bar one.  And that one carries with it the (imagined?) golden magic of summers outside the city.

Each year the family would take a cottage in the small village of Stow, which sits on the A7 a few miles to the north of Galashiels, and I would spend a good part of my summer holidays there.  Sometimes with my parents, mostly with a grandmother and great aunt.  There may have been others who came to stay for a time, but I don't remember other kids being among them.

So I'd explore the village, go for walks, make my own entertainment.  There was a burn in the woods, down in the valley (probably only a slight dip in the landscape, but to a small boy...) where I wasn't supposed to go, but still managed to fall in a couple of times.  The graveyard, which dated back many centuries, became a place of fascination.  But the one place that was both a parentally approved destination, and somewhere I wanted to be, was the playground in the public park.  

It's a few years since I drove down the A7, but the last time I did I saw there was a still a play facility there.  Easy to see as it's on the right , in open space, a bit before the village proper starts.  It didn't look much like the playground of my memories, for it had been updated, and made a lot safer.  No more falling onto the solid concrete of my day.  

I remember a slide, a roundabout and some swings.  If there was more then it's been consigned to my mental dustbin.  I remember lots and lots of sunny days, but this was Scotland so even I'm suspicious of that one.  Mostly I went there accompanied by elderly relatives, who would sit on a bench and watch me entertain myself.  It's strange, but I don't recall there ever being any other kids there at the same time as me.  Where were the locals?  Maybe they were all holidaying in Edinburgh!  There must have been some, but not a single one has lasted in my mind over the decades.

It's the roundabout I remember best.  Especially for the days when my dad came down, for then it would move much faster and for longer that I was capable of managing on my own.  Plus he was the only one of the family up for that bit extra speed.  But mostly I still see myself propelling it round and round on my own, until I was too tired or dizzy, or was called home for my tea.  I have no recall of what I was thinking, other than 'faster, faster', or sense of whether I felt privileged or lonely or excited.  It was what we did, it was what it was, and I was a child used to spending time on his own and in my own head.  

My playground is not a sociable place.


05/11/21

Day 309 - Cute as a Button

 CUTE AS A BUTTON


Prompt - Cute as a Button : Write about something you think is adorable


The noise upsets her, as it does so many pets.  Fireworks nights are bad nights for cats and she is no exception.  Even though she's one of the lucky ones.  It's all happening at a distance for her.  Up here, on the sixth floor, with an outlook into the darkness of the cemetery, the flashes and bangs are far off, removed.  In here, up here, they can cause no alarms for humans, excepting those with autism etc.  But they can still upset a cat for whom the nature and origins of the sights and sounds outside are beyond their comprehension.  

And so she withdraws, to her safe space.  The place of retreat when threats enter her domain, the one she's used to being able to dominate, with the fellow residents she can manipulate with ease.  Threats like small children, any bearer of loud noises and sudden movements, anyone who threatens her live-in companions.  Under our bed, among the storage boxes, she feels she is away from it all, that nothing can touch her.  Not even me.  I can elicit a response if I lie down and stretch out my arm to be sniffed.  But if she doesn't want to come out, she doesn't.

Stay there for now little one.  You must do what's right for you.  Whatever that is, whenever you choose to join us again, you remain the cutest of the cute, the adorable centre of life in this flat.  You are Zoe.




31/10/21

Day 304 - On the TV

 ON THE TV


Prompt - On the TV.  Flip to a random TV channel and write about the first thing that comes on, even if it is an infomercial!


I didn't even know there was a channel called 'Forces TV'.  Presumably aimed at the British military?  I'd just missed their version of the News, which might have been interesting, in time for a double bill rerun of a very old American TV series.  One I'd never seen before, although I'd heard the name, and which I've been told was largely aimed at children.  What this says about the UK's service personnel I'm not too sure...

The programme was ChiPs, which I understand is an acronym for California Highway Patrol.  From the cars I saw I'd reckon it was made in the late seventies or early eighties.  I'd also guess that a lot of these programmes were made, as the production values looked to be on the cheap side.

What I saw of this episode (only about ten minutes, as I had to make the dinner, but I doubt I could have stood much more anyway) showed a very conventional, very 'safe' US drama-entertainment.  One of the first shots, an ariel view, showed an ocean liner firmly docked to the sun drenched quay, which tod me this was Long Beach and the boat the Queen Mary.  They seemed to be very proud of having it as a backdrop because I lost count of the number of times it cropped up in that short period of time.

One thing was quickly evident.  The cast, or at least the 'good guys' were all conventionally pretty, all slim and athletic and tanned, all as bland as the beige they were clad in.  I didn't recognise any of them, but that could be because they didn't get a lot of work after this.  They were awful, although trying to make anything of the stilted dialogue might have given Olivier problems too.  

The plot seemed to centre on a visiting Hungarian delegation, and a minor robbery that took place at the same time.  Within five minutes we had something vaguely resembling a car chase, with the blue car of the robbers being pursued by the huge motorbike of one of the policemen.  Despite the car proceeding at what looked a fairly sedate pace, judging from the vehicle's body language, the powerful bike couldn't catch them and gave up the pursuit when they went into a car park and 'disappeared'.  The bike rider didn't move with much urgency either, but too great a speed might have messed up his hair...

As well as the dreadful script, the backing music was dire - formulaic and distracting - while the sets looked on the shoddy side.  Although I did notice that following ChiPs came Blake's 7 - vastly superior acting and plots, but even worse sets!)

I guess squaddies aren't renowned for their critical faculties...


29/10/21

Day 302 - Clutter

 CLUTTER


Prompt - Clutter : Is there a cluttered spot in your home?  Go through some of that clutter today and write about what you find or the process of organising


I have piles.  Piles of paper mostly, but sometimes the piles will contain bits of IT kit, or envelopes, or plastic, or surprising rubbish.  Most of it is my room, my study, so that it is at least contained.  But there's always a pile of papers on the kitchen table, and there will be some detritus on my bedside cabinet (and, to be fair, on top of the cabinet on the other side of the bed, albeit, to less messy ends).  And my desk... is a mess.  At present it, and floor of this room, are both considerably better than they were a few weeks ago, before I installed the new desktop PC, a process that forced me into having a tidy up.  At last.

So I looked at the remaining piles of paper on the floor, for the purposes of this exercise.  That means ignoring, for now, the other piles in this place.  Which includes an ancient hard drive of no further possible use; a couple of cardboard boxes awaiting some of the many CDs and books I have found the resolve to throw out (and donate to a wonderful second-hand shop on Leith Walk); tow old briefcases that contain I know not what, although I think one is music related; a couple of boxes that I don't really need any more; and, worst of all, a big spread of jars and paints and files (the rasping kind) and books and tape and the box and the 2CV model kit that was in the box, partially completed for months and now very dusty...

Which is why it was easier to opt for the paper on the floor.  Only two small piles.  The first contained some banking documents.  A couple relating to an old account which I think is now closed (but I should make sure...), the rest to signing up to manage some financial investments online.  I did try before, but the website was Byzantine, and ended up defeating me.  I should try again.

The second pile was much easier to deal with.  Most of it was papers relating to a class I helped run for new volunteers at Advocard.  By the time I do it again (if I do it again) it will be out of date.  that will go into the recycling when I go downstairs in a few minutes.  The only other item in the pile was an old A4 notebook, partly filled with notes for minutes when I was on the AdvoCard board - a long time ago.  It did see some use recently, when I was working through the Kickstarter projects I've backed for a piece I was writing, and also some basic notes for a poem I wrote several weeks ago.  I have found a novel place for the book now, fitting perfectly into the gap between the box on the wall to my right, which I use as a device charging station, and the bookcase beside it.  So the room is a little tidier as a result of having to do this exercise.  Now I should do something similar to the rubbish on the desk....

26/10/21

Day 299 - Concrete

 CONCRETE


Prompt - Concrete : Write about walking down a sidewalk and what you see and experience


It's a warm day for late October, and yet another minor piece of evidence towards the impending disasters of climate change.  But it's cloudy too, a bit breezy, and there's a hint of moisture in the air that suggests rain isn't too far off.  I've left the green expanse of the Links, which now spreads out to my right, and walk along a tree lined stretch that offers many parked cars, imposing old terraced housing on the other side, and a pathway which requires careful observation, for I know from past experience that there are many cracks and uneven surfaces due to tree roots breaking through.

There's a small group of people, of mixed ages, stood by the bus shelter across the road.  They look upwards to smile, not at me, but into the phone camera one of them holds in her hand.  A selfie?  Here?  Must be tourists.  Perhaps that's their guest house behind, for there are many such along this road.

I move on, the grass either side laced with the fallen brown leaves of Autumn.  A few cars go by in either direction.  I look for a gap, and make my way across to the other side, the residential side, squeezing past a baby blue Fiat 500.  On this side the pavement is more even, a little wider, making it easier to keep a decent distance from oncomers in these covidy times.  Street furniture provides the signage of urban environments, a traffic sign informs drivers of revised traffic lights ahead, a school nearby.  Low on the wall to my left a street name - Hermitage Place - sits beneath railing on which the residents have displayed No Parking In Front Of Gates.  Maintaining access to a drive must be difficult in a street that sees so many residents, holidaymakers and commuters parking nose to tail.  

I'm approaching the junction now, where the road I'm on meets three others, but in a pattern that renders traffic management more complex than at a simple crossroads.  The end of the Links, the green, to my left is coming, just past that bus stop across the road, and I can see, ahead and to the right, the imposing red brick structure that is now flats, but was once Leith Academy school, where my mother attended way back in the thirties and forties.  Awaiting the buses two women sit in the shelter, one at each end, both intently looking at their phone screens.  A sign of the times.

The lights are at red, but the crossing indicator is green so I speed up to get across before the change, carefully avoiding the path of a man pushing a baby buggy, clearly on a mission to get wherever he's going as soon as possible.  There are more people here, mostly in something a bit waterproof, for the threat of rain is increasing.  Two teenage boys, in the curious black tracksuity outfits that are some kind of age-denoted uniform, cross in front of me.  Once on the other pavement I pause to look along Duke Street, an electric car crossing my field of view, looking incongruous against the old world of the old school.  A bus turns the corner, almost empty of passengers, while two lines of car wait their turn to cross the junction.  I continue up Easter Road, the wind feeling stronger in my face, but still with that mildness to it.  A blonde woman in a green coat stands to the side, in conversation with the phone held to her right ear.  Ahead of me a woman keeps stopping to check on her dog, which is reluctant for keep up with her, tugging against the lead.  On the street to my right the traffic has begun queuing at the red light, including another near-empty double decker.  Past them I look on the entrance to the Tesco car park.  It doesn't look too busy in there.

Past the pub with the hanging basket, I look for a way past between the woman with the recalcitrant dog, and a stolid hooded walker in grey.  The dog forces her to stop once again and I go out into the street to pass, but she reasserts her authority over the pooch so that we are no moving in parallel.  I speed up, slow briefly to check that the side street is clear, then move on.  The woman/dog combo is held up by two big women with prams blocking the pavement, but I stay in the gutter to get past the bus stop, where there are several people hanging around.  A move not quite without danger, for one of those electric scooters whizzes past close to my right elbow, with no sign of respect for people or the law.

But I'm back on the pavement again, and there are few others walking this way.  Past blocks of flats, with a solitary sign showing that one has been sold, past the roadworks on the opposite side.  Ahead there's a tall man in black clothes, grey beanie, sitting astride a bike while he checks something on his phone.  His sunglasses incongruous on this greyest of days.  He doesn't look up as I pass.  Seconds later another man walks towards me wearing, yes, sunglasses.  What's going on here?

At least the DPD delivery driver, now walking across to his double-parked van, looks more sutied to the day.  He drives past me soon after.  The flats on either side are older tenements now, solid and reassuring.  A man in a parka goes past with arms swinging military style.  On the other side I young man is hanging out of a first floor window.  He shakes something - I can't make out what it is - then puts both hands akimbo on the sill and looks up and down the street.  Does he know I'm recording him?  The window to his left is wide open too.  Has somebody burned the toast?

I walk on.  A man approaches holding his phone horizontally to his face, in conversation.  I have never understood the fashion for using a phone this way, when it's so much easier held up to the ear.  I am old school.  I've caught up the the DPD van, parked little more than a hundred meters from where I saw it before, and the driver comes round to open the rear door as I pass, checking his device for whatever it is he is to deliver.  Just then a siren sounds.  I'd seen the flashing blue lights approaching in the distance, and here's the ambulance that owns them, threading through cars that have stopped to make way.  I hope that whoever they are going to, or carrying, will be OK.

The traffic resumes, so do I.  Past a corner shop, past another dog walker, the wind getting stronger.  A woman comes towards me, head down and serious of expression, wearing a green hoodie.  Spread out across her enormous chest are the words Staley Falcons, which later research tells me is a US baseball team.  She certainly doesn't look the athletic type...

My boots keep me going onwards.  I pass a young woman, masked, trying to get key into the lock of a red tenement door.  She isn't having much luck, but when I look back seconds later she's gone.  In presumably.

More flashing lights ahead, yellow this time, as a Highways truck pulls up by the kerb to my right, and men in high vis clothing emerge to do whatever their task is.  Now the rain has come though, and I quicken my step, seeking shelter.  A woman comes around the corner, pulling a fur lined hood tight about her head.  One more side road to cross, between two red cars waiting to turn, past the bus shelter, past two women who shout unintelligible farewells, one to head down the hill from whence I came, the other returning to the warmth of her flat.  The rain gets heavier and now getting to my destination is all that matters.  There's traffic, there's road signs, there's people, but all I can see now is the car park of Lidl and a place out of the sudden downpour.  Time to go shopping.



12/09/21

Day 255 - Dance

 DANCE


Prompt - Dance : Write about a dancer or a time you remember dancing


I hate dancing.  Not that I've got anything against other people doing it.  And there are often times when watching dance can be entertaining.  It's me doing it I can't abide.  Self consciousness.  Awkward of movement.  Lacking grace.  Easily embarrassed (by myself).  Even more so nowadays when I can no longer get pished enough not too care too much.

So any exceptions to that basic rule stand out in my memory.  There are two that live on in my head.

The first was when I went to a ceilidh with a pal, neither of us having been before.  We'd been invited by another friend who was playing fiddle in the dance band.  Our first half hour was spent sitting on the distant fringes of the hall, pints being downed, a well placed table cutting us off from any possible involvement with the rest of humanity.  Then a guy took to the floor in his kilt.  Not just a kilt, but the full formal outfit, right down to the sgian dubh.  "He'll be good" we thought, probably worth watching.  Well he wasn't good, and he was definitely worth watching.  He inspired up.  If somebody that crap at it could get up there and not bother then why not us?

So, come the next dance, we tentatively lined up, found ourselves allocated partners, and listened to the caller's instructions.  I remember her well.  Her name was Sheila Kidney, and she was short and round.  She was also, when she demonstrated what we were to do, incredibly light on her feet.  More importantly she was a good caller - clear, able to demonstrate, patient and funny.  So we walked through the movements, had one trial run, and realised that if there was chaos it wasn't always down to us.  Maybe fear made us listen more closely.

The dance began, we both got through it without major cockups, and returned to our table.  Puffing slightly, grinning a lot.  This was more fun to do that it had looked.  I don't think we sat one out for the next hour or more.  A couple of women friends arrived and we soon tired them out, had to move on.  We had a great night, and would go to several more.  The memories of those times also took me along to a couple of barn dances when I was living in the south of England.  Just as much fun, despite, having driven, being pretty sober.  So when I say I don't like dancing it's the kind where you have to make stuff up that's the problem.  If I'm told clearly exactly what to do, and realise I can run through it rather than actually dance, I'm in my element apparently.  (Except that nowadays I'd be out of breath too quickly!)

So there's one further exception to my original rule, and it also breaks the second one, for I had to improvise my movements.  Fortunately my dance partner, when she wasn't laughing at me too much, was helpful with advice and guidance. 

It was my best friend's wedding, we'd travelled down to York for it, and there was a big party afterwards.  With dancing.  We knew hardly anyone, other than bride and groom, but a few introductions were made, alcohol was consumed, and Barbara was insistent.  This was an opportunity she wasn't going to miss, no matter how awful I was at it.  So I found myself on the dance floor.

I must have had just the right amount of booze in my system, for I found myself, shockingly, having fun.  It was a cheerful occasion, I was happy for my oldest pal, and I was with the woman I loved.  Circumstances.  Context.  The one dance I can really recall was after all the quicker, shaking about (!) stuff, we held each other close and danced to The Bangles' Eternal Flame.  Not the greatest of songs, but it became ours in that moment.  We were in love, really deeply in love at that moment, intensely connected, and is that something dance can do?  It never has again, probably never will, but that moment is seared across my memory filaments.

I still don't like dancing though.

05/09/21

Day 248 - At the Park

 AT THE PARK


Prompt - At the Park : Take some time to sit on a park bench and write about the sights, scenes and senses and emotions you experience


Take some time to sit in the park they tell me.  And today is both a good and a bad day to choose.  The bad is the lack of time to really immerse myself in the experience, as it's a very busy day in other ways.  But the good outweigh this.  After several days of thick cloud and cooler temperatures we are back to twenty degree and a blue sky.  The feathertrail clouds do little to block out the sun and it feels like the beginning of the end of summer.  People want to be out in this weather, more so as it could be the last such weekend day this year.  And, for Scotland, this is hot in September.

Yet the park isn't as busy as I expected.  I reject the notion of a bench, and head for 'our' log, a think length of tree trunk that has served a seat many a time over the lockdowns, when a turn around the park might be our only exercise for the day.  It is by one of the eastern entrances, and offers a decent view of many of the activities, and inactivities, taking place.  

I take my place shortly after midday, the heat still rising.  It will be cloudy in a few hours, bringing a return of the cool, so this i one of the best times I could have picked.  There plenty of people to observe, but not so many that the space feels in any way crowded.  Everyone has plenty of room in which to do their thing.

Dog walkers walk their dogs and throw balls for chasing.  Walking walkers may stride purposefully, or amble casually, as suits their mood and needs.  Bikes go by, teens too fast for this little universe of dogs and children, a man with child behind proceeding with caution through the trees.  A man plays badminton with his small daughter (who invariably misses the shuttlecock, but shows determination to get it right eventually.)  A woman spreads out a blanker, brings out edibles, chats to her friend who is doing her best to give her terrier a workout.  They will sit and eat soon.  A few lads kick a ball about lackadaisically, laughing too much to have any commitment to accuracy or style.  A woman sits on the grass, engrossed in her paperback.  While another sits on a bench, tying the long dog lead to the arm, to allow her pooch some latitude while she sits and chats to a friend.  

In the distance there are goalposts, complete with netting, and beyond that some boys practicing.  By the time I move from my spot the match has begun, the reds against the black and whites, the kids around thirteen or fourteen.  A few parents hug the touchline, with occasional bursts of applause.  Perhaps out of gratitude for it being arm and dry, knowing there will be far worse to come.

With the end of summer now approaching, the trees and vegetation are still full, but leaves have begun to fall from some.  The wild meadow area continues to provide some additional colour and textures to the sheets of green.  Fertility is still the theme, decay still tucked away.  We are half a mile from the city centre, but this is a different place, one of peace and fun and laughter.  I am lucky to have it so near by.  City life, with nature on tap.  Civilised.

26/08/21

Day 238 - Pocket

 POCKET


Prompt - Pocket : Rummage through your pockets and write about what you keep or find in your pockets


Pockets.  Pre or post pandemic?  Summer or Winter?  Wet or dry?  The contents of my pockets vary, albeit to a fairly limited degree.  Take away the hot weather and there are more little pouches within which to carry objects, as jackets and coats are donned to cope with cool, cold, wet.  So I'll go with the simplest - now.  A hot day, but one where we are still entered closed buildings with our face masks on, where we keep our distances.  just jeans and tee, few pockets.  Enough for the essentials.  

Front left.  Wallet, container of the various cards that get frequent use (the list topped by the debit card used to buy food, and my buss pass), with today's face mask of choice.  Front right contains my phone, a handkerchief (I'm old fashioned that way), and my keys once I leave home.  Rear left has a small pouch, containing a decent sized shopping bag, for those moments when you suddenly find yourself given, or purchasing, an item that won't fit into your restricted spaces.  And rear right, the most covid related of all the pockets, for it contains a spare face mask.  And has done since the day last summer when I ran for a bus, pulled on my mask as I ran, and the elastic broke.  It's not easy to use your card and hang on to the rails as the bus moves, because you've got one hand up to the side of your face holding the offending mask in place...  

Beyond those basics it all depends on where I'm going, what I'm planning to do, who I'm going with or meeting.  If I have a bag, usually a backpack, with me it takes in most of the extra items.  But without one my jackets might accommodate a book or ereader, maybe my Gemini if I plan on writing, maybe a notebook if I'm going to be reviewing, perhaps tickets to an event or a snack for later.  Pockets are amazing, and I'm not surprised that women feel delighted when their dresses have a couple.  I'm a big fan of pockets...

23/08/21

Day 235 - Breathing

 BREATHING


Prompt - Breathing : Take a few minutes to do some deep breathing relaxation techniques.  Once your mind is clear, just write the first few things that you think of.


I'm lucky to have kept awake during that exercise, as I had little more than three hours sleep last night.


I stayed awake large because I'm so bad at trying to do the whole mind-emptying thing, and always have been.  Shutting down my thoughts seems impossible, so that's mostly what I thought about as I lay back and closed my eyes.


I also thought about my new desk PC arriving later this week, and the need to spend the weekend not just setting it up, but cleaning and tidying the whole study environment, which has got into such a mess.  NOt just the desk, but the floor, the shelves, every little space.  Clutter, awaiting some sort of attention, but some of it now so old I will have forgotten what it's there for.  Of course this plan clashes with my need to walk every day (and Saturday is now my designated 'boots on' walking day where possible) and to write.  So I need a working keyboard on each and every day, but a laptop could provide the necessary if required.  I want this setting up process to be right.


Last night my mind was the problem when I tried to get back to sleep.  I recall one sequence that seemed to began with being a Caps supporter, then making the xmas song video and having to hold it back due to Kristich suddenly vanishing back to Russia, then recalling the choir friends who came here to help make it, followed by all the videos I recorded of Barbara's choir performing - and if they never get back together, and she doesn't join another, is there any point to my camcorder?  And if not now, can I create one?  I did think about vlogging, even came up with a rough initial script in my head.  But then remembered how bad I am at keeping my ordinary blog going!


No mind-emptying going on here...

10/08/21

Day 222 - Fashion

 FASHION 


Prompt - Fashion : Go through a fashion magazine or browse fashion websites online and write about a style you love.


A style I love?  Is there such a thing?  I've looked through so many photos, so many looks, today, without finding one that really shouted "wear ME" to my desires.  But I did notice a strong theme running through all those that drew my eye in a positive manner, and equally a thread to the ones I immediately rebelled against.

Many years of wearing suit, collar and tie turned me against that formal form of dress as soon as I retired.  In the eleven years since I have worn that same outfit about four times, for weddings and funerals.  Plus once I wore a tie to a formal party, with a tartan jacket.  Finally, the cream coloured suit has come out a few times in summer with tee and sneakers, a take on formality I find acceptable.  Maybe I should wear it again soon.  But most telling has been the steady reduction in the formal part of my wardrobe.  From thirteen suits on the day I left work, to two now (1 funeral, 1 wedding!).  My tie rack was thinned out, and still has far too many.  And the formal shirts are down to about five or six - why, I do not know.  My substantial collection of cufflinks sits there neglected.

For I liked making my suited look a bit distinctive.  I shied away from the plain blacks and greys and blues of most cloth, and tried to find things that were a little different.  My socks would flash a bit of colour, my ties some pattern, and my links some individuality.  And there is still a hankering in my system to wear things that show some small spark of difference.  But with a far greater emphasis on simplicity.  Tee shirt and jeans was the mantra all that time ago, and it's one I have, by and large, stuck to.  But there are so many possible variations and embellishments, especially once the weather is a bit cooler than it is now.

And there was one outfit I came across, on a blog, that seemed to embrace that philosophy.  The model was young, of course, so the outfit itself probably wouldn't work for me.  A grey and white striped, long sleeved tee worn with white deck trousers, white socks and sneakers, and topped with a pale jade zip up up jacket.  Not a lot of colour in that look, yet the combination of the simple blocks of colour with the stripes is one that appeals.  And reminded me of a look I'm trying to create.

Summer here has either been hot and sunny, meaning no need for a top beyond the tee, or cool and damp, or even soaking, requiring something at least shower proof be worn on top.  But there were days in Spring, and I hope there will be again as Summer ends, where it has been perfectly clear and dry, but with a cool breeze that mitigates against bare arms, needs another lightweight layer on the body.  To that end I received a Breton cotton jacket, by Armor Lux, in a darkish orange colour, which perfect when the temperature drops a few degrees.  It is clearly more jacket than short though.  I have since added two other pieces to that section of my wardrobe, both with a foot on each side of the jacket/overshirt border (and no, I will NOT be using the hideous portmanteau word invented to cover this type of garment...).  In doing so I found myself doing some research into the background of these items, and much leads back to the simple French workman's jacket - the chore jacket, usually in blue with three patch pockets and roomy enough to be used with layers.  That led me to a modern interpretation from Uskees, in that same jade I mentioned from the photo, and an original, vintage, but unworn, French jacket from the sixties or thereabout.  Both perfect for the days where the temperature is around fifteen or so.  

I do not have a striped shirt to wear with them, but I was already contemplating getting some, and this photo has convinced me to do so.  Red and white to go with the blue, black and white for the jade, and blue and white for the orange.  There may or may not be light coloured jeans worn with them (I don't have white, but cream is available...).  And the sneakers and socks with bring further colour (although I was looking at some white sneakers in TK Maxx today, and could be tempted back, and if there were any white jeans...).

There was no photo of this style I (hope I will) love, but the one I found was close enough to provide the inspiration to chase the look I'd already envisaged, perhaps with that snowy addition...

05/08/21

Day 217 - Waterfall

 WATERFALL


Prompt - Waterfall : Think of a waterfall you've seen in person or spend some time browsing photos of waterfalls online.  Write about the movement, flow, and energy.


The word waterfall conjures a huge variety of images, from the little weirs we have nearby on the Water of Leith, to the power and majesty of Niagara, Victoria, Angel.  Both have much in common, and much that is different.

Waterfalls are sections of rivers that drop from one level to another in a (near enough) sheer face, so that the current forces the water over the edge and down to join the lower downstream section.  They all create some noise, they all refract light in fascinating patters, they are all worth watching .  Some, artificially created by dams, generate power.  They are in almost every country in the world, wherever there is high ground and a water source there is a chance that a waterfall, of some degree or other, will appear somewhere along the course of the river.

The smaller waterfalls are pretty, especially on a sunny day, often a feeding ground for birds, and an indication of the volume of water coming through on a daily basis.  As the size increases so does the ability to impress, to create a sense of awe at the power and art of nature.  To the light dancing across the surface of the falling water, highlighting the disturbed and swirling recipient it dives into, is the refractions from clouds of spray, the sheer weight and volume too much for the water below and sending some of what it has taken back into the air in droplets that can soak the onlooker, obscure the view, and create an atmospheric curtain that adds mystery to the excitement.

Clearly there are huge differences between the tiny and the huge, but the most notable is probably the noise.  A big waterfall is not only visually impressive, but audibly as well.  A shooshing roar that never lets up, never need pause for breath, never hesitates or changes.  Even the winds cannot drown it out, it a voice across the ages.  The water falls at increasing pace from a great height, crashing into the seething maelstrom below, whether or not anyone comes to see it, or hear, whatever the weather, whatever the time of year.  It is one of the wonders of the world.


(Written on the day of my first root canal treatment, so I wasn't feeling very coherent...)

15/07/21

Day 196 - Neighbourhood

 NEIGHBOURHOOD


Prompt - Neighbourhood : Write about your favourite place in your neighbourhood to visit and hang out at.


There are no doubts in my mind if asked to name my favourite spot in the locality.  Indeed my favourite place in all of the city.  The doubts arise when I consider why it should be so.  I think there are three main reasons.

The place itself is Newhaven Harbour.  Once a busy fishing port, and home to a big fish market, there's little gets landed any more.  Instead it's home to a substantial number of leisure boats, the Port O'Leith Motor Boat Club, and a jetty installed to take passengers from cruise liners to and from their 'home' on shuttle craft.  The structure of the old fish market remains, but is now home to a few restaurants, one of which has a thriving chippie takeaway section, and an excellent fishmonger.  There's an old lighthouse, some interesting old buildings on the other side of the road, but most of the other architecture is modern brutal or boring, notably the hideously bland Premier Inn.

I went down there today, to give me a reminder of some of the details of the place.  One of the hottest days of the year, so it was shimmering in sunshine under blue sky.  The coast of Fife was clear despite some haze, the Ochil Hills rolling behind.  To the west the spires of all three Forth Bridges made their importance known.  Benches were mostly taken, people sitting talking, eating, admiring, or just sun soaking.  Under the lighthouse a bunch of kids had been in swimming - a risky but exhilarating experience.  Tables outside the restaurants were full - it's a fabulous place to sit and have a meal.

All of which goes some way to explaining the attractions of the spot.  But not why I should consider it preferable to Queens Park or Blackford Hill or the Castle or Cramond.  There are so many spots of beauty and fascination across the city.  Yet this fairly unremarkable old harbour tops my chart.  In part that may be down to proximity.  When I first began my return to Edinburgh we had bought a small flat in Leith, down near the old docks.  Although there were many, many short visits over the decades, it had been almost thirty years since I'd last lived here, and back then I was out on the west side.  We had had family in Leith, and I went to primary school not far from Newhaven, but it wasn't an are I knew intimately.  I was certainly aware of the harbour, and can recall visiting the fish market more than once, but it wasn't a place I knew well.  By the time we had our new accommodation here I had discovered a personal reason to take an interest into the area, more of which in a moment.

Having our holiday flat in Leith meant a lot of exploring, both to ascertain where the best local places to shop and eat, but also simply to see.  We were very near to The Shore, so that was pleasant in itself.  But with close walking distances the most attractive places to have a sit down in the sun were leith Links to the east, and the harbour to the west.  It became a favourite spot to walk to, to take photos of, and to eat in, for by then the fish market element had been reduced to  a preparation plant for the fish shop, and a restaurant in the south end of the long, low red building.  Even though we now live a bit further away, it's still an easy enough walk, or a short bus hop away.

I mentioned taking lots of photos there, and that's another reason why I love the place.  Today was bright and sunny.  Tonight there might well be one of those gorgeous red-gold sunsets that light up the surface of the Firth and make the world feel special.  But those days are rare.  As are all the others, for the harbour has many faces.  Light, wind and, frequently, precipitation levels make this a place that changes daily, and still remains beautiful.  It might be a wave-lashed, salt bearing storm from Norway, but there's a still a beauty to it.  As there is when the haar descends and it's hard to even make out the lighthouse from the main road.  When the whole scene is soft and muffled and ghostly.  The photographic possibilities are endless.  That's also why you do see artists rendering the scene quite often.  

I said there were three reasons and my last is the personal one I mentioned earlier.  In the late nineties the old fish market building housed a small Newhaven Museum.  We went there with my parents one day, having eaten looking out across the harbour, over past Granton, to those bridges I talked about (except they were just a duo in those days).  Many of the photos showed Newhaven fishwives in their traditional striped and weirdly voluminous outfits, and my father surprised me by knowing who some of them were.  With even a distant relative in one.  Yet he said little about his connection to the area.  It was only after he died I found out that he'd been born on Main Street, the one that runs parallel to the main road the fronts to the harbour.  And that both his parents has worked in the fish market, his mother one of those who wore that stripey outfit.  

So when we first had a base here there was already a familial link in my mind to the harbour area.  I love being there because of all I've written about already.  But there's an emotional connection too.  Artificial in many ways, but that doesn't make it less real.  Time at the harbour brings many satisfactions.  And lovely fresh fish...

06/06/21

Day 157 - What Time is It?

 WHAT TIME IS IT?


Prompt - What Time is It? : Write about the time of day it is right now.  What are people doing?  What do you usually do at this time each day?


The clock in the corner of my PC says it's 18.14.  The daft bit of my brain is going "one year before Waterloo", but that's irrelevant.  A quarter past six is, in this home, approaching dinner time.  Most nights I would be in the kitchen, making a meal.  I suspect a lot of other people would be too, although this is a Sunday, so habits vary at weekends.  Is it still a thing in some homes to have Sunday lunch?  The main meal mid afternoon?  It has never been a custom I've shared, except in the houses of others.  (My one time mother in law was the only person I really knew who was keen on the whole Sunday lunch thing - most people of my acquaintance tend to eat their main meal in the evening.)  

But on this occasion I have the day off.  (As I did yesterday, but that was because we had a takeaway.)   Dinner is being provided by my wife.  A goats cheese and caramelised onion tart she's made, and a bit of salad.  It's nice to have a meal made for me, something that used to happen a lot, but is less frequent nowadays, as standing in the kitchen for too long is hard on her knees and dodgy hip.  

I suppose, once upon a time, and not at weekends of course, 18.15 was often getting home time, from the office where I worked.  Which meant I'd only just be starting out on knocking up whatever we might be eating that night.  Now there is more flexibility in our schedule, but we do find that it's a good thing to keep to regular (ish) meal times.  Maybe it's an old person thing!

Tomorrow at 18.15 I will be in the kitchen preparing whatever is going to be on the menu.  For now I can sit at my desk and type away.  Enjoy the moment.

04/06/21

Day 155 - Aromatherapy

 AROMATHERAPY


Prompt - Aromatherapy : Write about scents you just absolutely love


I do not have a strong sense of smell.  Or so my wife always tells me, and it's true that she often picks up scents that I haven't even noticed.  Which means that when I do enjoy a particular smell it has to be one with a bit of oomph, that throws out a full nasal assault.  And which, ideally, engages other senses as well.  

Nature throws up a range of evocative aromas, and I can find pleasure in the heady freshness of a forest or the salty addictiveness of the sea.  But most of my life is lived in the city, and it's the smells which cut through the general fug of the urban atmosphere that most excite.  Some repel strongly - I quicken my pace when passing one of those Lush shops, the carbolic undertones bringing stinging reinders of school toilets.  But the best smells are the ones that make me hungry, and two dominate my desires.

There's no aroma like a chippie aroma.  Warm, greasy, with a hint of vinegar acidity and the background layer of fried fish and potato.  Hard to resist, generating an immediate reaction of desire and memory and fingers to be licked.  At it's very best when mingled with the aforementioned sea air. 

But my ultimate perfume comes from a different kind of culinary establishment.  For want of a better word I will use the blanket term Indian Restaurant.  What I mean is any kitchen sending out, and drawing me in with, spices.  Eastern spices, in many, many combination.  My blanket takes in every kind of cuisine from the sub continent, and is, for the purposes of this essay, flexible enough to encompass the likes of Thai, Malayan and Vietnamese cooking, although there is nothing quite like the scent of fenugreek to bring on salivation.  

You can have all the flowers and perfumes and air fresheners and scented soaps.  Just give me the smell of a good curry...

29/05/21

Day 149 - Colour Palette

 COLOUR PALETTE 


Prompt - Colour Palette : Search online for colour palettes and be inspired by one you resonate with


Link to colour palette chosen


So so close to the selection of hues that has already brought inspiration, and now causes eager anticipation.

Our living room furniture is raspberry.  A quality suede in a pleasant shade, tough, heard wearing, surprisingly cat resistant.  All good qualities.  But.  The weight suggests over engineering, the size leads to a lack of flexibility in the seating area, and... it really isn't all that comfy.  And that's the killer fact.

There are two big sofas, easy three seaters, four without too much squeeze.  They're the heavy ones.  There's also a matching chair, low slung, metal arms, which, with the right cushion in place, makes for a good place in which to read (an essential spot in any home, surely?).  But the sofas have hard squabs, albeit of a good depth, and overly upright backs, leading to a lack of support.  My lower back aches from too long spent TV watching.  (This is why I prefer channels with ad breaks - they provide valuable stretching time!)

So they have to go.  In the other half of the room sits a dining table, all glass and wood, and six chairs that have the same raspberry fabric.  We would never find a match for that, so the best solution is to break out into a totally different palette, the better to distinguish between the purposes of the two areas.   So we set off in search of the blues.

We now await August for the results, with the various new pieces all due to be delivered by and during that month.  One sofa gets a direct replacement, a three seater, but this time in a velour and a colour not far off the teal in my chosen palette.  Not, most definitely not, a heavyweight monster, but a lighter structure, on light coloured wooden legs, with a soft and welcoming set of cushions (and, crucially, a one piece squab, so that the poor sod sat in the middle doesn't fall into the gap!).  There is already a small two seater sofa in the entrance hall, where us oldies can sit to put on and take off footwear.  It too is in velour, a golden yellow, and the car can be found sleeping there on many evenings.  No claw induced damage has resulted, so we have hopes for this fabric!

The low slung chair, the reading place, is to be replaced by something more upright, but lighter to move around, lighter to look at, with the same wooden legs as the sofa.  It too will be in a velour, but this time much like the yellow on the palette, albeit a touch more mustardy.  The bright counterpoint to the blues of it's companions.

There's a break in the pattern when we come to the other sofa replacement, for it is far from being a like for like.  One becomes two, with a pair of armchairs filling the space, lined up to be the principal TV viewing points.  They rotate on their spindly aluminium base, recline and support rthe legs at the touch of a few buttons, and give all the support an ageing body could want.  They are the pale blue element of the colour chart, although the reality will be a slightly deeper shade.  In leather.  A risk, with those claws about the place, but we'll take the chance for the prospect of such comfort.

There's just the navy blue left, and we already have that one here, ready to fit into it's allotted space once all the rest have come home and changed the look.  It's a small storage footstool, again in velour, with a metallic band on it which will match with the armchair bases.  And that's the palette.  That's the colour scheme I wait upon, with some excitement.  Not just for the new look, although the greater sense of space will be welcome, but for the sake of my poor old back!

22/05/21

Day 142 - Furniture

 FURNITURE


Prompt - Furniture : Write about a piece of furniture in your home


It was a bit of junk really.  A charity shop find, that I took on as, pretentiously, an 'art project'.  The arty bit proved beyond my limited capabilities, but the result was, and remains, pleasing, and one of the best and most satisfying DIY projects I've undertaken.

A five drawer chest, with a slim vanity compartment on top, where the lid lifted to reveal a mirror.  There was very little damage, but the hinges on the lid looked to be nearing the end of their life, the handles were hideous twisted brass that belong in the thirties, and the varnish was thin to non existent in places.  But I saw potential in it, and decided to drag it off to the garage and set about giving it new life.

That meant ditching the old handles, taking out the cracked mirror, and removing the remaining varnish.  A bit of sanding, quite a lot of sanding really, and it was ready for undercoating.  I decided to give it as full body paint job.  Meaning anything that might be seen would get painted and varnished.  That included the interiors of the drawers, and of the lidded compartment.  For a relatively small household item that translates into a surprising amount of surface area to be covered.  But I was in no hurry and worked at it whenever I could, taking time to get the job right. 

 Once everything had been undercoated I set about applying the gloss.  There six different colours of paint (it was going to be seven, but I chickened out on that one, but more of that in a moment), which meant drawing up a plan before I started.  I had a clear vision of what I wanted to end up with.  The carcass was in a mid-blue shade.  That meant the sides, all the bars at the front, the stubby legs, and the interior of the top compartment.  It would be the most prevalent colour, and yet, in some ways, the least noticeable.

The five drawers were each in a different colour.  There was a pale blue and a navy, a pale green and a forest green, and a stand out fire engine red.  From top to bottom the drawers were navy, pale green, red, pale blue, and dark green.  Plus the liftable lid was to be in the same red, both inside and out, with a new mirror and hinges.  I had bought some simple wooden knobs for handles and the same five colours adorned them, two knobs to each shade.  They would be distributed such that each drawer had knobs of two different colours.  For instance, the red knobs were on each of the darker drawers, while the red drawer had pale green and blue knobs.

Two, sometimes three coats, were applied, then everything got two coats of clear varnish for protection.  This chest was for use, not just show.  The end result looks bright, primary, a cross between a children's nursery item and statement piece.  I was especially pleased with the lidded compartment - which, sadly, has never really had any use.

I mentioned a seventh colour and a bit of artiness.  My original plan had been to add a finishing touch of thin wavy yellow lines, reaching across and around the variously coloured sections.  I made some trial strokes on old bits of wood and convinced myself that my limited artistic talents meant there was greater risk of ruining than enhancing, so I gave that not-so-smart idea a miss.

That must have been about ten years ago, and the chest remains in service and looking striking.  I am still proud of what I achieved.  

12/05/21

Day 132 - Transportation

 TRANSPORTATION 


Prompt - Transportation : Write about taking your favourite (or least favourite) form of transportation


Once upon a time I'd have been tempted to look to the air for my favoured mode of transport.  Flying took one to more distant places, in a short time, and airports were interesting places.  That latter statement has altered drastically in the past two decades.  Airports are to be endured, and for spending as little time in as possible.  Flying has become a (sometimes) necessary evil.

I used to love driving too, and recall being sat at the wheel for nigh on twelve hours to traverse much of Spain, and thoroughly enjoying it.  Perhaps I still might on those quiet roads, but I suspect not.  My concentration is not what it was thirty plus years ago, and I become stiff and sore after a much shorter distance sat in one place.  I prefer somebody else to be doing all the work.  In Edinburgh I rarely drive, not when I enjoy waking and the bus and tram service is so good.

I might make an exception for cycling, which I always used to enjoy, and am looking forward to trying again.  But that will be locally, for fun and fun only, and is not really 'proper' transport in consequence.

So my favourite nowadays has to be on rails.  Able to sit and look out at the changing scenery, read or listen to music, get up and have a walk up and down, and with end points that still retain some of their glamour.  Railway stations are far more pleasant places to be than airports, and you don't have to spend so long in them either!

And out of the forms of train travel I've experienced by far the most memorable (if not the most relaxing...) is the sleeper train.  I guess if it's a service you use regularly you can get into a routine and a rhythm that allows to you to really sleep.  So far I've only made three sleeper journeys.  (At least as an adult -  I can vaguely recall going on one from Ostend to Austria, and back again, as a schoolboy.  The magic somewhat diluted by having to share a cabin with five other farty kids...)  On none did I get a good night's sleep.  But all three provided memorable moments and images in my mind which will always remain.  

This is making me want to book a sleeper to somewhere, just for the sake of it...

Day 365 - Congratulations

 CONGRATULATIONS Prompt - Congratulations : Did you write a poem, short story, or journal entry every day for a whole year?  Write about wha...