Tuesday, April 21, 2026

1884 - The Meeting

 


The Sunday Whirl presented these twelve words for us to use in a creative writing piece.  
rifle grass flush steam radiance beetle perfume drifted swaying hypnotic hiss skin
Didn't use steam but it was steamy enough.
Poets and Storyteller's prompt was 'desserts'.  Getting them?


The Meeting 

“He’s away.
On a business trip.”

Their eyes ask,
their eyes answer.
The bodies concur.

They walk to the beach,
a rug on the grass.

She undoes
his shirt,
slowly—
fabric loosening,
intent made clear.

He turns her,
breathes her in—
perfume,
hypnotic,
entrancing.

The hiss of satin
sliding over skin.
Iridescent fabric,
a green beetle,
falls to the ground.

She turns to face him—
unabashed,
natural radiance.

Skin on skin.
No questions.
Only answers.

Swaying together,
the rhythm of waves
drifting in
from the beach.

Time loosens.
Breath deepens.
A faint flush,
warmth rising,
then quiet.

He kneels up,
looking down at her
lying before him.

Behind him,
nearby,
very close—

the unmistakable sound
of a rifle
being cocked.


Thursday, April 16, 2026

1883 - Times Three

 


Photo: from our garden, with watercolour filter overlay.

What's Going On has the prompt: Write a poem of THREE stanzas only.  
Begin the first stanza with the word "Yesterday".  
Begin the second stanza with the word "Today".  
And begin the third stanza with the word "Tomorrow".


Times Three

Yesterday is golden,
Viewed through gauze.
It can be perfectly good—
Or irretrievably bad.
Or sometimes a mixture of the two.
Defying change or correction.
It is nuggets of memory,
Sifted from the mud 
Of day-to-day life.
Snippets.  Snapshots.
Usually wrong.
Today is blunt.
Stuff to do.
Wash.  Clean.
Mow the grass.
Empty the bins.
Chop wood.
Water seedlings.
Hang stuff.
Fold stuff.
Cook meals.
The tyranny of now.
Tomorrow is uncertain.
Dreams. Wishes. Aspirations.
These are the seed trays
Of the days to come—
The perennial plants 
In the garden of hope.
But it is by no means
A certain harvest:
Weeds. Drought. Pests—
Birds poo on your crop.
Tomorrow’s tomorrow?
Plant again.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

1883 - The Table

 The Table

I'm sitting here, at the head of the table.
A table of memories, past and present—
Its origins long ago, as tall timber,
The meals shared with family and friends.
I made the table and, loyally, it has followed me.
Tonight, as head of the table,
At the head of the table,
I look at it and cherish the story 
It is telling me tonight.
Four pomegranates, the fruit of love,
From my love, sit before me.
A vase of tall, yellow...yes, yellow,
Rebellious flowers, not destined to see
The light of Thursday.
There is artwork in progress.
This table is not a decoration,
It is a meeting place.
Serviettes, pens, placemats, napkins, scissors,
The paperwork for a future audit.
The remnants of a meal.
A printout of John O'Donahue's
Grace for Meals, read not memorised
But digested before the meal,
Reflecting the gratitude for the meal to come
And gratitude to the lady 
Who introduced me to it.

1882 - A Party on the Beach

 


MLMM Monday Wordle invites us to write a piece using the following words:
share, clock, hand, party, warm, fried, crisp, cold, hard, enough, brown, safe.


A Party on the Beach

Hard.  Cold.  Utilitarian.
Municipal concrete seats,
Painted brown.
The lap of the waves,
Regular as clockwork.
The steely eyes of the gulls,
Wanting their share—
Wanting it all really.
A hand delves inside 
The warm newspaper parcel.
Old school.  No boxes here.
Inside, fried, crisp, warming—
Chips and battered fish.
Man eating shark.
The gulls fidget, edge closer.
Wings give them courage,
Make them feel safe enough
To gate crash.  
A flourish of unwanted chips—
A melee of beaks and wings.
Then… gone. 

Sunday, April 12, 2026

1881 - He Said No.


   Image: ChatGPT 
The Sunday Whirl presented these twelve words for us to use in a creative writing piece.  
stalk sky luck harness pepper jewel ribbon splash layers set light face

Poets & Storytellers posed the question: 
'The world feels completely meaningless. Why f**king bother?' 
My answer?  Because you can.


He said No.

Luck was not involved.
Consciously…
He had shed his harness.
Consciously…
He had cut the ties,
The cords, the sashes, the ribbons—
The golden chains
Of social expectations
That stalked his daily life.
Consciously…
He turned his back on his old life
And set his face to the wind.
Consciously…
He let layers of social obligations
Fall away unwanted.
But here’s the thing—
Did this cause a splash?
Did people try to change his mind,
Pepper him with fears and doubts?
To see the light and return
To the jewelled cage of… 
Of what?
Of course they did.
The lead sheep is always trouble, they say.
He looked them in the eye
Consciously…
He looked to the sky.
Consciously…
He said No.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

1880 - This poem...

 

What's going on suggested we write a poem that starts with the words:


This poem…

“What a strange way to start” he thought.
This poem… and now what?
It has no objective, no destination.
How do you write to something like that?
Well, this poem makes no sense.
Perhaps it is not meant to?
Is it meant to be a limerick?
Perhaps.
There was a old poet of Oz
Who rambled rather lost becoz
The topic prescribed
Was poorly described
And he had no idea where he woz.
No, this poem isn’t a limerick.
And too long to be a haiku.  Or is it?
No topic to use—
The Keyboard rattles about
Producing some words.
Hmmm…technical rather than emotional.
Or a villanelle perhaps?
Please God, no, not  a villanelle.
There is nothing for it.
This poem is over.




1879 - Scuttle Rebuttal

 


Scuttle Rebuttal

Clouds don’t scuttle across the sky.
I just fail to understand why
Some poets insist that they do.
These are adept wordsmiths who
Should know better than to try
To take a fluffy cloud and apply
Words that sit awkwardly awry,
Totally ignoring the truth that’s due—
Clouds don’t scuttle.

Crabs will scuttle, if you drop by.
Cockroaches too, but late at night.
People at airports scuttle too.
But clouds just drift across the blue—
Putting paid to that poetic lie.
Clouds don’t scuttle.






Tuesday, April 07, 2026

1878 - Moving Out

 

  Image: ChatGPT 

The Sunday Whirl presented these twelve words for us to use in a creative writing piece.  
ravenous lurked shame space found glass hollow flicker rattled slip red crash

Poets & Storytellers suggested Legacy
dVerse Poets also have an Open Link night.


Moving Out

I
My mother chose to move out.
When I found her, strangely trussed,
The note said “Do not resuscitate”.
A second note, reflecting her shame,
Apologised for the mess.
But there was none.
Just a hollowness.  Gone.

II
I opened her wooden dresser.
Things rattled strangely in the void:
Glasses, crystal, treasured items
From a long and eventful life.
Now just things.  Mum’s things.
Slips, her red cardigan, coats,
Woolly hats—they all smelled of her.

III
Three stuffed fabric hearts beside the bed,
Spaced out evenly and labelled:
Dad. Me. Her.  And her watch.
Did ghosts lurk in the house?
No.  No ghosts.  Just memories.
Are memories ghosts?  Maybe.
Pieces of her life flicker and shine,
But they are Mum’s sparkle, not mine.
I pack them carefully.
Outside, the birds sing.

◊ 

Friday, April 03, 2026

1877 - Mind Games


   Image: ChatGPT 


The Sunday Whirl presented these twelve words for us to use in a creative writing piece.  
mind visit thinking creature exists criminal know dirt walk head writer rumbles

Poets & Storytellers offered us some quotes to use.  I chose:
“It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen.” ~ George Orwell 



Mind Games

Writer: OK, time to write something. (Stares at blank page…)

Writer’s Mind: It’s April you could write Aprilly is that word things I wonder showers April has showers is that a northern hemisphere thing didn’t Orwell write something about April clocks that’s it clocks in April striking thirteen unlucky for some why only somewhat unclear overcast showers mud dirt take your shoes off before coming in to what eat maybe rumbling tummy ordered breakfast where is it thunder rumbles rain forecast should I walk home is where the heart is hearth too shouldn’t worry wrinkles and ulcers op soon write while in post op don’t know probably whacked who’s to know no to know no-know words exist meaning is optional subjective no use if meaning not understood cool isn’t necessarily cool Granny said things were criminal but they broke no laws are made to be broken records repeat repeat repeat like my thinking doesn’t make it so what Shakespeare I think or not to be sure what now where was I for an eye seems harsh I’m sure creatures don’t do that clash horns then graze side by side calmer life brutal too at times are a changing what does that mean where are they going who knows chop it off to spite yourself visit clinic here sew it back to the future do I want to go there sorry I wandered off where were we trying to find a writing topic to meet the prompt hardly.

Writer: (still looking at the blank page) *sigh*