Ahhhh. Can you smell that? There is a very distinct smell that comes with autumn in my neck of the woods. Not the first few weeks of September, but late into the season, when the mornings are frosty and the days are noticeably short–right about now. I love the unique smell of piles and piles of fallen leaves, love it more when I can trample through the piles and release a burst of fall fragrance. I am grateful to be back in Virginia this autumn, for autumns in Japan and England just didn’t have quite the same aroma.
Category Archives: Challenges
Gratitude Photo Day 19: Knowledge
All genuine knowledge originates in direct experience.
~Mao Zedong
I am grateful for a life rich in experiences, and the knowledge that results. Why, just this morning, I witnessed that very process. While I was blow-drying my hair after my swim, I had the experience of watching in the mirror as traffic flowed into and out of the toilet area of the women’s locker room. My newfound knowledge? Women don’t wash their hands after using the toilet. How will I apply this knowledge? I will now wipe down every piece of gym equipment BEFORE I use it, not just after. Ick, ick, ick.
Unplugged
NaBloPoMo Tuesday, November 19, 2013
How much of the day are you plugged in? Do you consciously set aside offline time, or does it happen whenever it happens?
I’m plugged in about five and a half hours on an average day, including my work-from-home tutoring job, blogging, catching up with friends, and generally goofing off. Some days I may not even log 30 minutes online, but others I’m in front of some kind of screen from the time my eyes open in the morning until I crawl in bed at night. Except for tutoring, I don’t schedule my online time. Instead I let the demands of the day (and my mood) dictate how long I spend in the virtual world.
Gratitude Photo Day 18: Change
In the small blessings category: I am grateful for the website where I discovered how to use a coffee mug to change A into B in less than 90 seconds. Makes breakfast (or dinner) a much less harried undertaking! (And clean-up is SO much easier than using a skillet.)
Self-censorship
NaBloPoMo Monday, November 18, 2013
Tell us about a blog post that you didn’t publish.
I wish I had a juicy story to tell here. I don’t.
Sure, I’ve started some flash fiction pieces that fell short of my expectations and never saw the light of day. But I’ve never drafted a personal memoir or a soap-box rant then refrained from releasing it into the wild because in the narrative I may have stepped on toes or crossed some line of privacy/courtesy/respect. It’s never happened because I am so concerned with what other people think and feel that I shy away from certain topics altogether.
As a wanna-be writer, it makes me uncomfortable to know that I am censoring my thoughts, words, and ideas before they even hit the screen. I struggle between needing the freedom to tell my story, whether it be fact or fiction, in any way I choose, with respecting the feelings of those who might read my words, be they family, friends, or strangers.
Will a family member be embarrassed if I recount a funny incident from childhood?
Will friends question my morals and my sanity if I dream up a gruesome murder or a racy tryst in next week’s flash fiction piece?
Will I incite a venomous riot of hateful comments if I share my views on gun ownership or Obamacare or animal cruelty?
Will the drunken rednecks who nearly incinerated my entire street last week with their gasoline-fueled idiocy vandalize my house in retaliation if I tell the story?
Questions like these make me wonder if I wouldn’t have done better writing in a personal journal rather than publishing on a public blog. And they make me doubt my ability to ever churn out a novel.
You writers out there, how do I get to a place where I don’t give a rip about anyone else’s opinion and can just set my story free?
Gratitude Photo Day 16: Weather
This was a crazy weather moment we encountered a year ago in Ireland as we drove around the Ring of Kerry. The skies darkened, rain poured from the heavens, and a beautiful rainbow appeared right in front of us. We were able to pull over, but I couldn’t get out of the car for fear the wind would rip the door off its hinges. While I was snapping pictures through the windshield, sideways hail began pelting the car. I’m so grateful we weren’t out hiking when the squall blew through!







