Other Wordless Friends—
Cheryl Andrews
Allison Howard
Barbara Lambert
Allyson Latta
Elizabeth Yeoman
Other Wordless Friends—
Cheryl Andrews
Allison Howard
Barbara Lambert
Allyson Latta
Elizabeth Yeoman
While Wordless Wednesday is generally without words… I’m making an exception in honour of poetry month. Yes, I know, every month is poetry month, but let’s not quibble; it’s a good opportunity to share the love even more. Am inspired to this merry lark by an invitation to join the poetry party over at Commatologist, a new-to-me blog, which I have taken an immediate shine to.
Please feel free to share a few inspired words, inspired by this photo… and please pop over to the fun at Commatologist… where there are prizes from Brick Books. So… Roses are red, books are good, let’s get poetry—ING; you know you should…
◊♦◊
Other Wordless Friends—
Cheryl Andrews
Allison Howard
Barbara Lambert
Allyson Latta
Elizabeth Yeoman
Taking a walk well before sunrise with pyjamas under my jeans.
Discovering that the distant roar I think is rush hour 401 hum is actually a train.
Train whistle.
A white dog.
Cardinal and robin duet.
Rain just starting as I get back home.
Yogurt and chocolate for breakfast.
A birthday call during which is discussed the usefulness of Pomeranians named Betsy that don’t actually exist.
Envelopes to open.
New yoga mat being rinsed in the rain.
Raisins I forgot I had. So much better when they’ve firmed up a titch.
Lunch at The Table, where…

not only do I dine scrumptiously but,

because I’m on my own and have forgotten to bring anything to read and the only thing in the car is an old copy of Jonathan Livingston Seagull, which I’ve been meaning to read for three decades—but why??—there’s a lovely little non-stop wackadoo conversation going on just to my right between two friends who rarely see one another but as one of them is moving to Victoria in a few days they made a special effort to get together. One is an artist, the other a former real estate agent whose husband plays golf but she’s not interested in the game in the slightest so when they go on holiday, to Fort Myers, for instance, and he plays golf morning, noon and night, well, there’s only so much sitting by the pool you can do. And he always takes the car of course. And, yes, she likes to read. But enough is enough. The artist chose Victoria by looking at a map of Canada and just deciding after it dawned on her that she didn’t need to live here [implying one horse town] to do her art.
There are many reasons to love The Table.

Then there’s the sign outside a nursery that says: Come in and find out what spring smells like.
A basket of English ivy.
A white cat.
New Birkenstocks. [Even splashed out for a jar of the cork preserver.]
Bad Boy’s mascot who alternates between shouting WhooooHoooo!!!! and watching his reflection as he dances disco style.

Painting by niece from her art classes at RMG.
Birthday songs in wonderful wonky voices on my message machine.
Deadline’s been extended!
Selection of beef jerky from The Great Canadian Meat Company…
… to give a friend.
Not everything’s about me you know.
**
And now to gather the evening’s gifts.
There will be wine,
◊♦◊
Other Wordless Friends—
Cheryl Andrews
Allison Howard
Barbara Lambert
Allyson Latta
Elizabeth Yeoman
On my way to the library I see a man pacing in his garage, smoking. I’ve seen him there before. He pretends he doesn’t notice me as I pass and I sense I’m meant to do the same. I feel sorry for those who like to indulge in a cigarette. They’re always huddled outside but no one waves, no one says Hello, fine weather, isn’t it! the way you might to someone raking a lawn. I may have to change this pattern next time I go by.

Further along the same street, a boy, playing hockey on his own,

and the blueprints for a house interior sketched onto several squares of sidewalk.
This is the kitchen. The living room is to the left; bedrooms to the right.

Around the corner, a man in a green ski jacket cleans a ski-doo the exact same shade as his coat. When I stop a few houses down to make some notes, I look back and notice the man staring at me. He’s actually stopped cleaning the ski-doo and looks concerned about me jotting things on a notepad with a pencil. It occurs to me that if I’d stopped to look at my BlackBerry or equivalent [which I don’t own] he’d be feeling much calmer. It reminds me of my experiment at the casino, and the unexpected things that frighten people.
At the library, a woman comes up to me, says, quite out of the blue, “You must be an artist,” and I assume she means because of the hat but I ask whatever makes her think so. She says she was driving by and saw me walking, saw me stop on the sidewalk and go back and take a picture of something on the ground. “Only someone with a certain kind of eye would do that,” she says. I tell her she must have a pretty good eye herself and we laugh the laugh of strangers.
This is the picture she saw me take.
Tell me this doesn’t look like a monkey spitting out an apricot.
Back outside a black pick-up truck goes through a red light and from the other end of the street, totally unrelated but at the same moment, tires squeal.
A woman in white plays drums on her steering wheel and sings while waiting for the light to change.
I take a different route home and find a nest of feathers. Not a good kind of nest.

And in a nearby window, what appears to be a rather self-satisfied expression…
Close to home I find a bag crackling in the wind and so I detach it with the idea of collecting a few bits of the always-debris that is everywhere.

Less than ten minutes later, I’m out of bag.

◊♦◊
Other Wordless Friends—
Cheryl Andrews
Allison Howard
Barbara Lambert
Allyson Latta
Elizabeth Yeoman