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Hope is fierce and loving and wears purple boots with a red sweater

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December’s darkness brings the return of the light in many ways, and light brings hope. Literally, a new beginning in the new year ahead. But hope is not some flimsy notion laid over the mess we’ve made of things. Hope is a fierce clinging to what we know in our heart: Things can be different, better, more loving  —  but only if we fight for it to be so. This week’s post is about hope — or maybe Hope, as I spell it in my story below. The three quotes I open with make clear just how active hope/Hope must be for it to lead to something new and better … -------------------------------- “People speak of hope as if it is this delicate, ephemeral thing made of whispers and spider’s webs. It’s not. Hope has dirt on her face, blood on her knuckles, the grit of the cobblestones in her hair, and just spat out a tooth as she rises for another go.”   Source: Twitter/“Mathew” @CrowsFault   “To be truly radical is to make hope possible rather than despair convincing.”   Sourc...

An object is just a thing -- until animated by its owner. What story do the things around you tell?

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Just four of my recently purchased gold-rimmed "things" that, to my eye, are lovely. I wonder what their story is... We are in the season of many things. Some things are wrapped up and exchanged as gifts. Some things are welcome, come with a story, and are cherished. Other things...well, not so much.  We are in the season of many things, so I have been thinking about things...  Inanimate objects. Maybe a hair ribbon, a hubcap, a diary, or a notebook.  Each inanimate, until we do something with it — the hair ribbon that holds together the silky golden hair of the first grader; a diary filled with appointments and names and to do lists. A notebook with scraps of writing that amount to something, maybe. A hubcap that protects the lug bolts on the wheel until the car hits a rut and the hubcap bounces off — left to rust in the ditch. Then, if you’re in a crime story, that hub cap holds the key to the murder case because it pinpoints the location of the one crucial detail that ...

Note to the Season: Please do NOT disturb

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I am retreating. Between mid-December and early January, I shall be tending to the important mat ters of solitude, sleep and self-care (a term I find somewhat nauseating even while valuing the action itself). Though retired from full-time work and deeply privileged with my home & hearth and general well being, I am sick and tired of the state of the world beyond my own four walls. I am sick of politicians and billionaires yammering about one thing while delivering another; sick of commercial enterprises inundating me with ads exhorting me to spend in order to save, to give in order to redeem, and to shop local — but shop nonetheless; and so sick and tired of both real and metaphorical murder & mayhem all around. I want out and away from all that — for a while, at least. I want peace and quiet. Paper and pen. Laptop and tea. Ideas that transform to story. And I want time without obligation and expectation. I no longer work full time, so, of course, I have time. But it’s a matter...

Sometimes, good enough is...perfect: A caution for the holiday season

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When my older sister was just a young girl, she asked the assembled adults this riddle-question:   “When is a door not a door?” The adults knew the answer, When it’s ajar , but my sister didn’t get it quite right.   “When it is a jam pot!”, she offered in reply to her own question, then, I’m sure, giggled madly. Such fun to have outwitted the grownups!   I don’t remember this directly, but I recall with fondness my mother’s retelling of this tale, which inspired me recently to invent the character in the short story below. Poor Clemmy, such a good heart, such a lot of not-quite-right in her life.   *** Getting it right, but not exactly right was one of her specialities.   When asked to contribute a salad to the potluck, she would bring a jello mould with fruit cocktail and tiny marshmallows, not the leafy greens dressed delicately with a homemade vinaigrette that was wanted.   She adopted a cat from the local humane society but it was a sickly thing with on...

Beauty and utility in the everyday: A conversation with my iPhone (and praise for beautiful mugs, too)

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William Morris design on a magnet There is nothing ‘designer’ about me or my home. I like what I like, things don't need to match, and labels don't impress me. But I do  appreciate the quote from British designer William Morris: “Own nothing … not useful or beautiful.”  Now, we could debate long and hard what ‘useful’ and ‘beautiful’ means to each of us, but when the Morris quote was the prompt in a writing group  recently , it got me thinking about my iPhone — a thing of both beauty and usefulness, in my view.  I was out for a walk one afternoon, my phone tucked into my back left pocket, and before I knew it my mind went down a creative rabbit hole: I would have a conversation with (not on) my iPhone! This is what I said.  ——————— You are so beautiful. Sleek, elegant, slim.  You are so useful — ever-present though easily muted, an easy fit in my back pocket, so handy, so wide reaching. And yet  — I don’t think William Morris would approve of you despi...

On November 11, remembering for a just peace...

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MONTREAL, Canada, Fall 1967: I remember the feel of the cool fall air on my bare knees, as I walked to school in my pinafore-dress-white-blouse uniform. The nip of the wind against my skin got me moving fast towards the warmth of the building and my classroom that held a desk of my very own. BANBURY, England, Fall 1973: I remember the creamy custard poured by the school-lunch ladies, out of white enamel jugs — large, the ladies (from my perspective, as a short 13-year-old) and the jugs (never holding enough). The custard, sweet, warm, the flavour of comfort to make the pudding (think Bake-Off sponge) taste delicious. And I remember the fact of learning, the fun of my friends, and the frantic pace of the field hockey games that left my fingers so cold I could barely unbutton my skirt-and-Airtex-blouse Phys Ed uniform. I want to remember that I loved those games. I shall remember that I did. What I cannot remember is any fear, any frights, any famine. My childhood and young adulthood w...