This post inspired by V.J.’s Weekly Challenge #54: Subtle

Sun slipping
colors reflecting
shifting
softening
Nature’s
subtle metamorphosis
of day into night
begins
stories, photographs, adventures…the next chapter
This post inspired by V.J.’s Weekly Challenge #54: Subtle

Sun slipping
colors reflecting
shifting
softening
Nature’s
subtle metamorphosis
of day into night
begins
Post inspired by Lens-Artists Challenge #51 The prompt: Unique
My friend AR came into my life when we were 15 or 16. I met her when I joined “PF” (aka “Pilgrim Fellowship”) – a Congregational Church youth group. Basically a group of high school kids who met on Sunday nights. We formed committees. We planned activities, trips, coffee houses and spaghetti dinners. It was a friendly and welcoming group.
AR and I attended the same high school – a regional school drawing students from 4 towns – so we may not have ever crossed paths if not for the church connection. She was quiet, shy and…I was to find out…brilliant. And talented. Some may have added…eccentric.
We were both the oldest in a large family. She was the oldest of 6. I was the oldest of 5. We both had difficult childhoods; although at the time we didn’t openly discuss the darker places we later found out were eerily similar.
The summer we were 18, she embroidered a swatch of denim (~14″x18″) with words from one of our favorite songs by The Rolling Stones. I don’t remember what the occasion was – or if there was even a specific occasion that sparked her creativity – but I still treasure this unique piece of art. It is framed and hangs on the wall over my desk.
You can’t always get what you want…
Now isn’t that the truth.

AR and I went our separate ways to college. We kept in touch with frequent letter writing. Letters I still have – with her tiny perfect script – detailing her struggles with making ends meet, making friends, experimenting…and…charting an uncertain future. Always signed: Your loving and sincere well-wisher.…
Shortly after we graduated from college, I lost track of her for a few years. Until her letter arrived telling me she was now Sister M.
My Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan loving friend had converted to Catholicism and joined a cloistered community of nuns. Beginning her new life in a monastery.
I have visited her off and on over the past few decades. We chat as if we were still those two goofy teenagers at PF meetings. Her eyes are bright as they look back at me from beneath the white habit she now wears. Denim a long forgotten thing of the past.
Once I showed her a photo of the beautiful detailed embroidery she made for me.
She was incredulous.
You still have that?
Of course I do!
She smiled…Oh my!…that was such a long time ago.
Nancy Merrill is hosting a photo challenge. The theme this week: Flower
IN A NEW POST CREATED FOR THIS CHALLENGE, SHARE A PHOTO OR TWO FEATURING FLOWERS OF ANY KIND.

As anyone who lives in a condominium may know, there are rules. So many rules. As a former homeowner they have sometimes been difficult to accept.
However, I knew going into this new lifestyle what was expected. I signed the papers. By-laws. Rules and regulations. Blah blah blah.
I don’t regret the move, but sometimes I do let my mind wander to what was….
And one of those mind wandering destinations is flowers.
As anyone who reads my blog knows, I loved the flowers and flowering shrubs & trees at my former home. Where I could plant whatever I wanted. Whenever I wanted. Anyplace I wanted.
I could also shovel snow. Snow blow the driveway. Hack ice off the eaves. Rake leaves. Fertilize the lawn. Chase down wasp nests. And so on.
But I digress.
One of our new condo friends had the foresight to save a collection of iris bulbs from his former home. Where his gardens were spectacular – as he showed us in photograph after photograph.
One day in the fall of 2017, he stealthily planted several of these bulbs amongst the legal bushes around our building. They popped up the following spring.
As iris do, they spread…this past spring there were a few more.
They are…almost…an exact match to the ones I left behind.
Cee’s challenge topic this week: 2 Items or the Number Two

On a recent trip to visit with two dear friends, I spent the better part of a bright sunny day at the Shelburne Museum in Shelburne, Vermont.
I highly recommend it.
The museum is actually a collection of close to 40 buildings. Filled with unique exhibits of America’s past. Plus the permanent home on land for the Ticonderoga – a 220-foot sidewheel steamboat.
Many photos were taken! I could have easily returned for another full day and still have more left to see.
Twenty-two gardens are planted on the 45 acre site. These antique chairs were shaded from the sun under one of the many trees…an open invitation to sit for a moment. And rest.
This post inspired by V.J.’s Weekly Challenge #53: Lottery
Life is a lottery that we’ve already won. But most people have not cashed in their tickets.

Have I won some kind of life lottery?
Unknowingly playing the right numbers at the right time?
What are the chances I would live as long as I have?
What are the chances I would give birth to two healthy babies?
What are the chances I would be born healthy for that matter?
I am convinced…life is not random.
Everything does happen for a reason…
What about that split second miss at the stoplight
Or…
When the accelerating lumber truck nearly T-boned my car
Or…
The hitchhiking car ride…locked doors, high speed, narrow road…when I was 17
Or…
Was it chance or divine design or perseverance…or a lucky combination…that made it possible to emerge from a dark childhood hell. Finding peace…blinking in the brightness.
I am eternally grateful and thankful I beat the odds…whatever they were.
Whatever the reason.
So far.

This post inspired by Frank at Dutch goes the Photo
The prompt: Trail
One year ago, my daughter, son-in-law and 2 year old grandson came to visit. Grampa and I babysat for two days while his parents went to a wedding.
Perhaps babysat is not the most accurate term. Very little sitting took place.
A walking trail encircles our condo building. The builder never finished grading it properly…forcing us over-55s to step carefully along the uneven gravel surface.
However…the two year old dynamo in the Washington Nationals baseball cap had no trouble at all. With only one year of walking experience under his non-existent belt, he was fearless.
And fast.

Grampa, on the other hand, had to pick up the pace to keep up.

This post inspired by Lens-Artists Challenge #50
The prompt – Trees
I enjoyed trees all around me at my former home. In the quiet neighborhood where we raised our two children. Surrounded by…red maple, white birch, oak, dogwood, hemlocks, peach and apple trees.
We discovered some were hardier than others.
A favorite survivor was the white dogwood.

It was framed by a red maple and an oak tree that we planted as a baby in the ’90’s. Tucked in the backyard. Birches and hemlocks peeking out from behind.
The maple tree planted by the town stood curbside and center in the front yard. It transformed to white after a late winter snowstorm during our final year there.

It lasted over 30 years…
Still standing the day we moved out.
This post inspired by Cee’s Black & White Photo Challenge: Open Topic

On a college visit with my son in 2006…checking out a school in North Carolina.
Trees in bloom everywhere.
Nancy Merrill is hosting a photo challenge. The theme this week: Urban

One small boy
Not yet two
Pondering a chance
To make a basket
At his favorite playtime
City park
A few blocks from home
A ten minute walk
Over bumpy sidewalks
On tree-lined streets
Past parked cars
Row house porches
Tiny front yards
Stop for the lights!
One last crosswalk.
Look Both Ways!
Finally there…
Run. Jump. Climb. Slide.
Kick the ball. Take a shot.
Taylor Park!