Wednesday, November 6, 2013
When I'm 25
When I'm 25 or older and see a young girl in high school. Who is tired, distracted, worried and stressed. I'm going to buy her a milkshake. I nice big milkshake or tea latte. Because she will need encouragement; someone to tell her that life is always good and school stress will pass.
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
...
Some of you may be thinking that I haven't been keeping up with my poetry sharing schedule. Wrong! I am keeping up with it, just on my other blog...by new blog solely for publishing my writing and keeping up with the poetry sharing schedule.
This new blog is:
Notability (click on Notability to go there)
Let me know what you think!
This new blog is:
Notability (click on Notability to go there)
Let me know what you think!
making something
Last night it'd been a long day of classes but I still had school work to do. I continued to work on the school and realized I was just making myself miserable. So I made myself some butterscotch brownies which I was suddenly craving.
I found the recipe, found the ingredients, mixed everything, squished it all into a pan and placed the pan of not yet perfect brownies into the oven. During the 20 minutes of baking I washed all the dishes in hot soapy water, and then placed them on the towel to dry.
Once the brownies were golden around the edges, I didn't want them anymore. I had literally no desire to eat the brownies.
it was the action. The familiar action of mixing and baking and cleaning that I needed. Something to clear my mind of the 'things to do' weight and the "looming schoolwork" as I like to call it. I'm grateful for the process of baking and the knowledge of how to bake that was given to me.
I found the recipe, found the ingredients, mixed everything, squished it all into a pan and placed the pan of not yet perfect brownies into the oven. During the 20 minutes of baking I washed all the dishes in hot soapy water, and then placed them on the towel to dry.
Once the brownies were golden around the edges, I didn't want them anymore. I had literally no desire to eat the brownies.
it was the action. The familiar action of mixing and baking and cleaning that I needed. Something to clear my mind of the 'things to do' weight and the "looming schoolwork" as I like to call it. I'm grateful for the process of baking and the knowledge of how to bake that was given to me.
Sunday, August 25, 2013
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Thursday Poem
Tonight
The fan blows
stiring up silent air,
I drift here before I dream those dreams which glow
and soon my mind will roam.
Through, over and in
the present, absent and future
I fly. Wandering, ceasellessly in
the nights lustrous, steady force.
-Written August 10th
The fan blows
stiring up silent air,
I drift here before I dream those dreams which glow
and soon my mind will roam.
Through, over and in
the present, absent and future
I fly. Wandering, ceasellessly in
the nights lustrous, steady force.
-Written August 10th
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Monday, August 19, 2013
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Saturday, August 17, 2013
Saturday Poem
"In dreams begin responsibilities"
she'd write, quoting
the singer quoting
the story quoting
the poet quoting
an old play.
She would only warn me once.
- David Stankiewicz 'My First Beatrice'
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Poetry and other writing musings
My dear friends. I have a new and exciting project idea.
As my senior year begins, I want to continue writing and updating my blog. I've found that poetry writing is very excellent and I enjoy it quiet a lot. So I created this publishing schedule for the publication of poetry and other writing musings (thus the birth of this blog post title):
Sunday - a Haiku poem
Monday - a pun
Wednesday - a simile or metaphor
Thursday - a poem
Saturday - another author's poem is posted
And I will try my very best to post according to this schedule regularly, starting this Sunday, the 18th.
Thursday, July 18, 2013
Mountain Climbing
My Crew on the summit of Mt. Elbert
and our whole group on the summit of Mt. Elbert
Last week with the help of the Lord and my wonderful youth group of encouragers I climbed a mountain. Mt. Elbert, the tallest mountain in Colorado 14,433 feet. It was the most physically demanding and all-around difficult thing I have ever done. But once we all reached the top, the hardest part was over and the view, as well as the feeling of accomplishment were enough to make us forget the difficulty and realize the beauty of it all. I will never forget what the Lord taught me in the process of climbing that mountain.
"Climb every mountain! Ford ever stream! Follow every rainbow 'till you find your dream!"
-Sound of Music
"if you climb a mountain and you turn around...and if you see my reflection in a snow-covered hill well the landslide will bring you down." -Landslide
"Can you sing with all the voices of the mountains? Can you paint with all the colors of the wind?"
-Pocahontas
Friday, June 28, 2013
Opportunities to Grasp
After hearing a speech along with Q&A time this afternoon given by the former Senator Olympia Snowe I am inspired by the vast amount of opportunity and action that can and is taken by people to change what they find troublesome and/or wrong on this earth.
Olympia Snowe is taking a stand against the stale and almost non-existent efforts of the U.S Congress to change the path of our countries government issues, as well as her efforts to standing up to Partisanship of members in Congress and Committees. Her plans to increase congressional activity for the betterment of the country and lessen or ideally eliminate partisanship are as follows:
Olympia Snowe's stand against Congressional stalemate and her fight against it, paralleled in my mind to the work done by Katie Davis in Africa through her Amazima Ministries. Katie also found a need and troublesome event that occurred in the world, thus she went out to change it and do what she could. I also recommend Katie Davis' book 'Kisses From Katie.'
Opportunities are everywhere in the world, be a person who is brave enough to get up and do what they can. It will be worthwhile.
Olympia Snowe is taking a stand against the stale and almost non-existent efforts of the U.S Congress to change the path of our countries government issues, as well as her efforts to standing up to Partisanship of members in Congress and Committees. Her plans to increase congressional activity for the betterment of the country and lessen or ideally eliminate partisanship are as follows:
- To reward those who are working in their congress positions through various forms
- Send messages to Congress individuals encouraging them in their work, and imputing your opinions to them on how the laws will affect yourself and the public
- And lastly ruin partisanship incentives
Olympia Snowe's stand against Congressional stalemate and her fight against it, paralleled in my mind to the work done by Katie Davis in Africa through her Amazima Ministries. Katie also found a need and troublesome event that occurred in the world, thus she went out to change it and do what she could. I also recommend Katie Davis' book 'Kisses From Katie.'
Opportunities are everywhere in the world, be a person who is brave enough to get up and do what they can. It will be worthwhile.
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
To the person who is reading this:
You are a kind soul and a dear friend to me, thank you for being a faithful blog friend of mine.
You are a kind soul and a dear friend to me, thank you for being a faithful blog friend of mine.
I could go on now about why I haven't been posting and apologize for my non blog faithfulness. But I'm really not feeling that kind of post. Life happens and I want to chose to have no regrets, guilts, or 'should haves'. Its summertime now and I've been enjoying it to the fullest that I possibly can. I really hope you are too.
Take time to watch the stars. Take time to wonder about one of the great mysteries in life on this earth. Write a letter to someone. Look back on your past, fit together the pieces of your life events and be in awe of the person you are today because of God's extreme faithfulness and plan for you. Do what makes you Oh-so-happy.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
No Saturday mail? Sign me, heart broken.
This article projects my feelings exactly toward the recent cut in Saturday mail. I parallel quite a bit to Natalie DiBilaso's writing and experience with mail. Please ready this and leave a comment displying your feelings on this subject .
- Hunter
A 22-year-old who writes letters every day says goodbye to Saturday mail
Every day I write at least two letters, usually more.
The first goes to my grandmother. I have found it's the best way to connect with this incredible woman in my life. She has dementia and is hard of hearing. Phone calls are a struggle and now that I've moved away, visits are infrequent. But for a little while every day, when I am sitting with a card and my pen, I get to focus on her. And for a little while, every day, she reads my card for the first time. She keeps a large stack of them and reads them over and over – it's how we stay connected.
The second letter goes to someone I don't know. Usually a thank you, although occasionally -- rarely -- it's a complaint. I write to businesses whose products have served me well. I write to restaurants and companies whose employees have treated me exceptionally or have gone above and beyond -- a waitress who reread me the specials a half-dozen times, a young worker at an ice cream shop who didn't mind letting my father try all the flavors, the company that makes my awesome toothbrush, the gas station attendant who helped me work a confusing machine, the friendliest cashier at the grocery store down the road.
It gives me time to reflect on the kindness and goodness in my day, and it gives me the chance to give someone the recognition they deserve for trying to spread some good.
Sunday is my least favorite day. Although it's a day off from work and usually quite leisurely, nothing makes up for that moment in my day when I pick up the mail and sort through to see what gems have come to my house. Although I know no mail will come, I still peek into the mailbox "just in case," I tell my roommate. Now there will be two days that I won't get to eagerly pull letters from our little gold mailbox. And worse – two days that my grandmother won't hear from me. Two days we won't be connected.
I have a beautiful address book, and it's filling up quickly. Loved ones from my little hometown, college friends, mentors, family, community members -- I've got all their addresses (in pencil of course -- things change) etched into my book. Since I made this promise to myself to write letters every day about a year ago, my cursive has gotten quite good, although I needed to revisit the capital Qs and Zs.
After I've written my first two letters, I go through my book and alternate keeping in touch with other people I care about from all aspects of my life. One day I wrote to 19 of them. Some write back, others complain that they can't afford stamps --those are my college friends -- but I love writing to them all the same.
My mail hobby is expensive. I can't pass up a fitting pack of cards to send out – "What's shakin' bacon" from Target was my most recent purchase -- and I spend at least $60 a month on stamps. But it's worth it.
To some, letter-writing is dead. Not to me. I am sad to see even one day of mail delivery going away, and worried it might prevent others from discovering the beauty in writing a letter – and hearing that someone was overjoyed to have heard from you. A gift that's becoming harder and harder to give in an increasingly digital world.
- Natalie DiBilaso USA Today reporter
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Blog love.
With my busy schedule I have not been keeping up with my regular blog checking routine. I forgot how much I loved checking the pictures and musings on Pleasant View Schoolhouse. It is oh so very vintage and beautiful.
Happy February!
Happy February!
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
growing space
There is a lovely little patch of landscaping chaos along our little city driveway against the house. It really is chaos. At least five different plants of all types, sizes and colors is growing in this one mass unit. I love it. Its a very beautiful chaos. Red azaleas, along side white azaleas. A baby oak tree with a total of three leaves of variegated green and red colors towering above it all, some beautiful little pink flowers (I have yet to learn the name of) which hang high above the foliage displayed against the blue sky as dainty pink bells which swing low during the rain. A layer of thick airplane plants covers the ground beneath this array. Can you see it?
This is what gardening is for me. A beautiful array of colors, textures, types and heights. A painting. Painted through the growth and bloom of plants doing exactly what they were created to be and do. I'm apprehensive to post a picture of this scene because I believe my written illustration would create a perfect illusion that would over-do a picture of the actual thing in someone else's eyes. But in my eyes, the written perfect illusion is exactly what is real and what it there.
Simple pleasures.
Maybe I will post a picture someday.
This is what gardening is for me. A beautiful array of colors, textures, types and heights. A painting. Painted through the growth and bloom of plants doing exactly what they were created to be and do. I'm apprehensive to post a picture of this scene because I believe my written illustration would create a perfect illusion that would over-do a picture of the actual thing in someone else's eyes. But in my eyes, the written perfect illusion is exactly what is real and what it there.
Simple pleasures.
Maybe I will post a picture someday.
Saturday, January 26, 2013
I am not neglecting my blog.
Its hard to keep up with my blog during the hectic school days. My mind is so occupied with other thoughts that I have to purposely think about a blog post. Which is abnormal. Blog posts and words to almost everything always just come or are given to me. But for now I must have a separate brain folder for blogging.
My point is I have not neglected my blog. I still think about it and do want to keep it updated. :) That is all I have to say today. Have a wonderful weekend.
My point is I have not neglected my blog. I still think about it and do want to keep it updated. :) That is all I have to say today. Have a wonderful weekend.
Sunday, January 20, 2013
book recommendation
Please read this book.
'An Elephant in the Garden' by Michael Morpurgo
It is truly wonderful. Its a simple tale, yet very profound. This line was profound to me, "In these terrible times I think it is only music that can bring us some joy and peace of mind." I just finished it, and I read a bulk of it in four days. Its only 196 pages, a good weekend read.
Here is a piece of the book description:"The bombing of Dresden looms ahead and Lizzie's mother, a zookeeper, persuades the zoo director to allow Marlene, a young elephant that has bonded with Lizzie and her younger brother, Karl, to be kept safe in their garden."
And this book is inspired by a combination of two true stories.
Enjoy!just alittle writing..
Living in the past is like
laying on a swing
face down,
peering at the ground passing
to and fro
beneath you.
Your sights never change.
The ground is the only scene you see
the only scene you participate in.
Look up!
Live in the present!
Be absorbed in the sights passing in front of you now.
Friday, January 11, 2013
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
reading about writing
I could read articles like this-The New Yorker-On Writing in the Morning all day. In fact, I kind of have.
This article rings true with me in quite a few different ways. Not in the way of, "In the morning, I don't talk to anyone," that's not me. But I love the way the writer talks about waking up in the morning in a different place than she was overnight:
"The reason the morning is so important is that I’ve spent the night somewhere else.
This is nowhere I can describe exactly, only that it’s mysterious and limitless, a place where the mind expands. Deep, slow currents, far below the surface, shift me in ways I needn’t understand. There is no sound, no scrutiny. Waking, I’m still close to that silent, preconscious, penumbral state, still focussed inward. I’m still in that deep, noiseless place, listening to its voices, very different from those of the outside world."
Oh my, Yes! I adore that state of being with a passion.
The article gets better! At the very end, in the "This is the moment. On a good day,..." the rest of the article from there is super fantastic.
Thank you New Yorker, and Roxana Robinson for this beautiful inspirational article.
This article rings true with me in quite a few different ways. Not in the way of, "In the morning, I don't talk to anyone," that's not me. But I love the way the writer talks about waking up in the morning in a different place than she was overnight:
"The reason the morning is so important is that I’ve spent the night somewhere else.
This is nowhere I can describe exactly, only that it’s mysterious and limitless, a place where the mind expands. Deep, slow currents, far below the surface, shift me in ways I needn’t understand. There is no sound, no scrutiny. Waking, I’m still close to that silent, preconscious, penumbral state, still focussed inward. I’m still in that deep, noiseless place, listening to its voices, very different from those of the outside world."
Oh my, Yes! I adore that state of being with a passion.
The article gets better! At the very end, in the "This is the moment. On a good day,..." the rest of the article from there is super fantastic.
Thank you New Yorker, and Roxana Robinson for this beautiful inspirational article.
On more week of normal-ness, my friends, before second semester is full-blown for me. Wish me luck and think of me as I cross the tumultuous sea of high school :) Happy January 8th.
Sunday, January 6, 2013
Done!
That feeling of finally finishing something you've been procrastinating and completing something which you've never done before after a long hard toil. I am so feeling that right now...in fact I could probably jump over the moon!
Thursday, January 3, 2013
The stars. I love the stars (I could say that 100+ times and I would mean it every bit as fervently, each time.) They're beautiful, mysterious, happy and so distantly far away but genuinely near at the same time.
"Stars, In your multitudes, Scarce to be counted, Filling the darkness, With order and light"
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Mom and Dad
Happy Anniversary Mom and Dad. Today you two have been married for 14 years. Congratulations! Love you both so much and not a day goes by that I am not grateful for you. Thank you for being Elliot and I's super amazing, caring parents. You're the best. Love you very much.
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