Memory Stones đ
In the dead of night I ponder
all my stones of awkward weight
Mentally skipping them oâr the water
of my mind’s achromatic lake.
Casting stones of dreams and wishes
skimming hopes and fears obscure
Tossing far across the tide line
stones Iâve gathered on the shore.
Sweet release I feel unburdened
As they sink down into the calm arcane
Yesterdayâs stones are now a memory
I stoop and gather an untouched day .
Šď¸vcl
Find Your Tribe
Find Your Tribe
Find Your Tribe
â Read on jamesedgarskye.com/2018/08/19/find-your-tribe/
Celebrate cloudy days?â ď¸
If at the end of the day
If there was a magical way,Â
That clouds could suck up the fear,
All pain, bloodshed, the tears,
Angry words people say
And carry it on red wings of wind
Beyond the abyss of time
Never to return again
We would celebrate cloudy days.
Photo:Evening Sky~Šď¸Val Letkeman
Thereâs a little butterfly in all of us đŚ
Happiness is a butterfly, which when pursued, is always just beyond your grasp, but which, if you will sit down quietly, may alight upon you.    Â
Nathaniel Hawthorne
I was working in my garden today (actually I was playing) Â when I noticed this butterfly alight on a leaf near me. It looked so pretty, sunlight bouncing off its wings that I stooped in for a closer look and a picture to show others. Truthfully it made me feel happy. How could that be? It wasnât doing anything special. Â But itâs very existence was special to me. Butterflies speak of peace and good will. They speak of change, rebirth and happy endings. Â I had one of those mindful moments. Questions fluttered through my mind.
What has this little butterfly seen of the world in its journeys? Does it think about how important it is to the flowers as it flutters along , pollinating the natural kingdom? I picture it singing a happy tune, and even though itâs life is short I doubt Iâd hear a mumbling word of complaint. What would that song sound like? Does it know itâs creator? Could it lead me there? Â Or do butterflies just soar? Â Some questions donât get answered do they? I weave these thoughts, coccooned around my heart as the butterfly flies away.
The day has been long. Night has drawn its shuttered eyes, and I will do likewise. But before I go I leave you with this little Cinquain to ponderâ¤ď¸ VclŠď¸
  Butterfly
  Tissue white, graceful
   Chasing the wind, laughing
    Happy little thing
   Wings
Oatmeal raisin cookies~ The great divide
Yaâll remember the lines spoken by the minister at a wedding ceremony that go like this. Â âIf there is anyone here today, who knows of any reason why this couple should not be joined together in Holy Matrimony, speak now or forever hold your peace.â?
45 Years later I now daydream through that scenario…picturing someone, a sister, mother or even one of the church potluck team ladies jumping up and waving from the back of the church, âRaisins, he hates raisins, your marriage is doomed!â Then they exit  with maniacal laughter. (Itâs my daydream đ)
We thought we had covered all the important stuff, like children, money, pets and whoâs family to visit on each holiday, but like so many couples we felt completely blindsided by seemingly trivial preferences that can change the relationship landscape forever.đ¤
Like raisins. Â âI thought raisin pie was your favourite?â piped up my husbandâs mother after he refused a slice at a Sunday meal visit soon after our marriage. Â âNo,âsaid Ken emphatically. I dislike cooked raisins actually. I prefer pumpkin. I hate how cooked raisins squish in my mouth. Like polyps I imagine.â
I wondered how many raisin pies he had choked down through the years and now, as a grown man at last he was taking a stand. No more cooked raisins for him! Free at Last!
Well it actually turns out that there have been very few cooked raisins for anyone in our family. You can pretty well say it has been a raisin free environment. Thank God(truly) for cranberries. Life has been tolerable. I must admit though it has made me a bit of a raisin warrior. Today, while travelling, we stopped at Timâs for a coffee and donuts treat. There in the case before me I spied the most amazing oatmeal cookies with raisin deliciousness.
I ordered one and my husband ordered a luscious peanut butter.  The clerk accidentally placed two raisin cookies in the bag. My heart stopped…for just the soupçon of a second…waving frantically I alerted her to her error. âSorry, she said. âNow you have 2 raisin cookies because once out of the case I canât put it back.  Do you want both? I indicated that while I was excited about the prospect of  TWO raisin cookies….but my husband was not. She added the peanut butter one. Phew, crisis averted! My husbands eye rolls were hard to miss. He whispered that I could enjoy twice the punishment.
So today I am mindful that We need not think alike to love alike.â ~Ferenc David
In fact for me in that moment, while I recognized my raisin cookie need, and fulfilled it, I was entirely conscious that my husband wouldnât  feel the same bliss. And then I realized I cared.  Somewhere, all wrapped up in our childhood memory of the seemingly miles and miles of raisins, we had reached two different conclusions. And that is ok. Because we love each other in spite of our differences.
Me: I hate guacamole.  Ken: What?How can you hate guacamole? đ
Sunflowers ~Tâis the seasoning
I read that the sunflowerâs name comes from its tendency to reposition itself to face the sun. Itâs genus, Helianthus, is rooted in two Greek words â âheliosâ meaning sun and âanthosâ meaning flower.
The ancient Greek myth of Apollo and Clytie is one explanation of why  sunflowers turn towards the sun. In this story Clytie, a nymph, adored Apollo. At first, he loved her back, but soon he fell in love with Leucothoe. Because of her jealousy, Clytie told Leucothoeâs father of the relationship and he punished her by burying her alive.
In anger, Apollo turned her into a flower, but even in flower form she still loved him and would spend her days watching him as he moved the sun across the sky in his chariot, just like sunflowers move to face the sun. đť
In 2013 my husband and I visited the Rikkmuseum in Amsterdam. We were excited to view amazing art and I particularly liked Van Goghâs Sunflowers.
I share his enthusiasm evidently…..â¤ď¸ I wonder if he would prefer regular seasoning or all dressed?
âThe sunflower is mine, in a way.â
â Vincent van Gogh

The earth weeps~What listening ears?
The Earth weeps
And the sound of her sobs
Has fallen upon deaf ears
Or met with a look of scorn
How dare she wallow
In loud suffering
Is she not bedrock
solid foundation
to our future generations?
Is she not blessed
We have come and gone
Are not our footprints eternal?
Do we brazenly shout
Into the abyss
Scream at the unknown
Rip out tree and root
Poison our affections
Abuse our children
Or despite our insistence
That we slough off
Old wives tales
Are our ears perked
Listening for the voice
Of absolution ?
Listen deeply
for it may only come
Once..  vclŠď¸
Unsettled ~ As the wind
I make things complicated for myself and chaotic, so I feel unsettled, and then the challenge is to make something structured and complete emerge from that.
â¤ď¸Jessica Stockholder
I am packing for a trip. A short jaunt. But packing unsettles me. Do I really need 3 pairs of shoes? What if it rains? Where are my sunglasses?….and the beat goes on, la dee dah. Experience has shown that I overpack. If Iâm not careful I will let my joy get stolen. And the ransom may be  more than I want to pay.
So Iâve taken a breather. My packing will be complete. It always does. I  am writing a poem to celebrate my freedom from packing blues, spilling chaotic thoughts, into a summer night wind thatâs reflecting summerâs heat. â¤ď¸
As the wind
my mind is wafting
in and out
of conscious thought
whirling in a sea
of mysteries
Stirring up what
they aught not
Breathing in
unsettling whispers
knocking down
old barriers worn
Ancient beliefs
toppled
scattered
scorned
anticipating
wintry storms
mulling
oâr what really matters
life
       Unsettled as the wind.   vclŠď¸
Where old flowers never die đ
“The Louvre is a good book to consult, but it must only be an intermediary. The real and immense study that must be taken up is the manifold picture of nature.” – Paul Cezanne
I was perusing old photos today and amongst the pile, this one kinda stood out. There is an old saying by Osho that sums up my thoughts.. He says….
âIf you love a flower, donât pick it up. Because if you pick it up it dies and it ceases to be what you love.
So if you love a flower, let it be. Love is not about possession. Love is about appreciation.â
I was mindful. I didnât pick it up with my hands. I did snap a picture though and take it home with me. Â I now can pick up this flower whenever I choose and it still gives me joy. The same joy that I felt when I first saw it. See the lush tones? The pinks and greens, each petal and flower a masterpiece? The open invitation to smell its nectar? If only it was scratch and sniff…if only to share with you dear reader…for my memory can conjure its perfume even now. Â đśIâve got the joy, joy, joy, joy, down in my heart …where? …down in my heart to stay. Â đś