The Broken Pieces of Yesterday

It was the first calm day in weeks and he couldn't resist taking his book down to the dock to read. It wasn't warm enough for swimming and the slight wind was cool enough that he was grateful for his windbreaker.

The calm was disrupted by a footfall on the dock which sent the dock bobbing on the water.

He looked up and sighed. "What are you doing here?" he asked, not looking at her but returning to his book.

"I wanted to talk."

He didn't respond, but continued to look at his book but he wasn't reading it anymore.

She sat down and stuck her bare feet into the water, seemingly oblivious to the cold.

"What are you doing here?" he asked again.

"I wanted to talk," she repeated. Not looking around.

"What's the point?" he asked, closing his book and getting to his feet. "The wound was healing! You coming here today is just ripping the scab off. Why do you insist on picking at it? This will only make it bleed more."

"I like blood," she said quietly. "It's clean."

He stared at her. "Clean?"

She shrugged. "Some things need to bleed."

"Most things need to heal." He didn't really want to listen to this anymore. He took one step toward the shore then called over his shoulder. "Stop picking at it and it will."

"Are you closing the door on me?" she asked, pulling her feet out of the cold.

"No, you closed the door on me," he said. "Let's not pretend it was any different." He gave her one last look and strode from the dock, but she followed.

"Well, you know what they say about closing doors and opening windows," she said, catching up to him and matching his stride.

He kept walking. "That windows aren't nearly as helpful as doors when it comes to moving forward?"

She laughed. "Maybe the smaller gap is so that you'll try harder!"

But he was not amused. He stopped and turned back to her.

"Are you saying you want me to try harder?" he asked. She saw the pain behind the question and hesitated.

"No," she said slowly. "I didn't mean that."

"Look, I'm not trying to force anything," he said. "I won't close you out or close any doors, but I'm not gonna stand waiting and weeping either."

"Weeping?" she asked. A shadow crossed her face. "I'm sorry," she said softly as she stared at the ground.

But he wasn't interested in an apology. "Why are you following me? Are you unhappy?"

She stopped, a little surprised. "I'm not unhappy," she said. "Do I have to be unhappy to talk to you?"

"Yes!" he said angrily. "I don't understand you! You made your decision. You chose him. What are you doing here now?"

"I miss you," she said in a small voice.

"You aren't allowed to miss me if you're with him. It has to be a choice. You can't have it both ways."

She nodded, biting her lip. "I'm sorry you think that," she said. And she turned to go.

"I don't understand you, Meg!"

"Why can't I be with him and still be friends with you?" 

"Because that's bloody weird! I'm sorry, but you just can't keep things the way they were. It doesn't work. When you walked away, that was the end. You can change your mind, but you can't keep us both in your life. It's that simple."

"I wish it were," she said. "But I will go. And I won't bother you anymore."

He watched her. "But do you understand?" he asked.

"I think so."

"I'm sorry. I never wanted to shut you out, but you see why it has to be this way, don't you?"

She bit her lip. "I wish I did."

"I don't understand you," he said again.

"That's part of it, isn't it?" she said sadly. "It turns out we were never on the same page."

"Then why do you insist on keeping me in your life?" he asked wildly.

"Because you had something that I wanted," she admitted.

"Are you talking about that scotch?"

"No," she wanted to laugh, but her heart was hurting too much. "It wasn't anything like that. You're just a person I wanted to be around. You meant something to me."

He shook his head. "Stop picking at the scab, Megan."

"I like blood," she repeated.

Writer's Block

And again words are escaping me. Why? Why am I afflicted with writer's block. I understand not knowing what comes next in the story and being stuck on a plot point or how to write it or resolve it. I haven't touched any of my stories in months. One story died when I went off the outline. I need to take it back to where it diverged and just try to write from there, like nothing else had happened. Just try a different path to the fountain. Throw out the blockage. Well, I can keep it in my deleted scenes folder. But write I must.

Can writers block be the inability to put pen to paper? Anyone could write something. Why is a blank page so daunting? I fear the first page in an empty book. I psych myself out that I can't mark up a book with such potential. But once the book has its first page written in then it isn't intimidating. So why the block? It's an empty page. Literally anything could be written on it. Feather, blue, ground, elevator, bucket, quicksotic. Haha! That's definitely not how you spell that, but that's the point. Anything. Words. Feelings. Colors. Bandaids. Pandas. I could write about anything. That should be freeing, but it's limiting. Everyone needs perimeters. Having no boundary creates too much to figure out. Limit the choices. Writer's block springs then from there being too much a character could do, not too little. 

Something Is Missing

I feel like my poetic writing is dead. I used to be able to wax poetic about my surroundings and the smell of the air and... I'm stuck looking around for the right word but nothing follows that 'and'.

It is like the words have gone away. There are no words to grasp. They have run away from me and then won't let themselves be captured by my pen. The words are free. But not freely flowing on to my paper. Free to run away. Free to roam the world, not confined to the page anymore. But because of this flight my pages remain blank and unloved.

What remains is an empty sorrow. It is hollow and alone. Colors. Colors might still present themselves to me in a vivid array of madness.

The words contain no order. No sense rests within them unless it be a sense of unease.

Something is missing. It's not just the words that have run away. Something is missing.

Do you hear the silence? Birds are chirping, the wind is stirring the trees, a mechanical whirring sound. But the silence is profound. Months of death. The words aren't escaping into their ownness. They are dying. They are dying from their lack. They have no where to go and no one to walk beside. They sit in the land of no use awaiting the return. But they sit in solitude not knowing their neighbors. Not knowing what to do, because a word alone can't make sense without the other pieces around it. It might have the best location of all but with no neighbors to love, it lives a meaningless life of solitude. But alone it sits. Waiting for the life to breathe into it.

Waiting for the breath of lives.

I Don't Write As Much As I Used To.

I usually default to iced coffee. I drink much too much of it. And it's not really hydrating, but it must be somewhat hydrating or I'd be dead, cause I can go several days drinking only coffee.

But today I am drinking iced green tea. I seldom drink iced tea, but I did last summer. Taste is a funny, evocative thing. I used to eat these little lavender or violet flavored candies and it always reminded me of England because it's the first place I got them.

Last summer was a summer of writing and drinking iced tea. And so one sip of iced tea reminded me that I don't write as much as I used to. And just like that a year slipped by and I missed the anniversary of starting my blog. Of course, I've been writing since forever, but my blog has reached its one year mark this month. I feel sad that I don't write as much. I need that reminder that I can write anything on here. And I need to. It doesn't matter if it is magical and poetic. It can, and needs to be, outright crap sometimes. Because I need to write in order to write. It makes sense, I know it does.



My brain has shifted toward painting and I don't regret it. Painting is a different kind of catharsis, but I still need to write. I process things by writing. Sadly my little writers guild died months ago. But part of my lack of posting on my blog is because I write in a handwritten journal every day so some thoughts get dumped there but they're very mundane, and I often resent my journal because I will get to the end of the day and still have to write so I will write gibberish just to get done with it. But it's not furthering my writing. I don't want to treat writing like a chore or something I have to get through.

In other news I have a new job! In other news I have a new instagram account. Well, a few months old. I decided to create an instagram for my art. Not because I think I'm so great that my art needs its own account, but mostly because I wanted to follow a ton of artists for inspiration. I love painting and I'm getting better. I love writing but I've plateaued.

Such is life. I feel busy. Mostly in a good way, but also in an I-haven't-cleaned-my-room-in-far-too long kind of way. I have laundry to fold, paints to clean up and so many surfaces to dust and yet, I'm going to play boardgames with my brother and sister-in-law because they're cute.

Tasting the Air

There are few things more thrilling than a thunderstorm at the beach! It was so lovely to wake up this morning in one of my favorite places on earth. It was gray and a little humid this morning, but cooler than yesterday. And now I sit inside looking out at the windows at the pouring rain. It's beautiful!

I love thunderstorms, but being here makes it even better. That's beach life for you! Dishes are fun at home (well, I think so) but much better at the shore. Cooking is fun, but much better at the shore!

A few years ago I read an Onion article about a mom on vacation and how she pretty much does all the things she does at home just several miles closer to the ocean. It's true. Homemakers make homes wherever they are. It's not something you vacation from. But homemaking at the shore is different than elsewhere. I love being here.

It's rainy and gray, but it's beautiful. The air is thick with salty moisture. I know it doesn't sound lovely, but it is.

Just glorious!

Mask Thoughts

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