About This Author
My name is Joy, and I love to write.
Why poetry, here? Because poetry uplifts its writer, and if she is lucky enough, her readers, too. Around us, so many objects abound to write about. Once a poet starts with a smallest, most trivial object, he shall discover that his pen will spill out what is most delicate or most majestic hidden inside him. Since the classics sometimes dealt with lofty subjects with a lofty language, a person with poetry in his soul may incline to emulate that. That is understandable. Poetry does that to a person: it enlarges the soul and gives it wings. Yet, to really soar, a poet needs to take off from the ground.
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Everyday Canvas
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"Failure is unimportant. It takes courage to make a fool of yourself."
CHARLIE CHAPLIN
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Sometimes it takes darkness and the sweet
confinement of your aloneness
to learn
anything or anyone
that does not bring you alive
is too small for you.
David Whyte
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This is my supplementary blog in which I will post entries written for prompts.
March 30, 2019 at 11:19am March 30, 2019 at 11:19am
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Everyone's addicted to something in some shape or form. What are the things you can't go without?
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Aside from the basic needs, reading, books, music (but only the kind that I like because some kinds of music hurt my ears), full moon, sunsets, ocean, trees…well, my list is endless. This is because sometime in my life--it might have been my middle years--I fell in love with our planet and what humanity can do, though what it does is another story.
Since I started rambling, I’ll go back and pick reading to write about, which at the moment, is my most favorite thing to do. As to the why of it, some of my reasons are in the open while others might be hidden, even from me.
I read because I am curious just about everything, and curiosity didn’t kill this kitten yet as I might really have nine lives or more. Then, what is wrong with gaining information, enhancing one’s worldview, and learning just about anything from the crib to the grave?
Second is the entertainment value, the drama of the story, watching the plot take shape, and feeling amazed at or finding fault with (internally and once in a while) an author’s art or know-how. I may also discover a powerful author’s hidden or obvious technique of writing and pat myself on the back when I feel I have done so.
Then, while I read, I relax and enjoy my quiet time because I am a sucker for solitude.
The other things I am attached to deserve their own pages, so for now, I am taking time off on them.
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March 29, 2019 at 11:48am March 29, 2019 at 11:48am
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Prompt: "I kept always two books in my pocket, one to read, one to write in." --Robert Louis Stevenson
As writers, our craft is always with us. What do you carry? Me, I always have a notebook and a couple of pencils with me And fortunately with modern technology, Kindle on my phone when I'm stuck longer than I anticipated. I also take tones of pictures for later writing stimulation.
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I am more of a reader than a writer, although I write quite a bit. Way back when, I used to carry a print book, and later, an e-reader in my bag.
Now that I can read on my cell, the e-readers have been demoted to several places in the house with my favorite one taking on the night duty. This is because I am usually reading several books at the same general time, but I pick books with varying genres and settings and alternate fiction and non-fiction of different subjects since I don’t want to mix up the characters, plots, and information with one another.
As to writing, Robert L Stevenson must have been more organized than me for I carry in my purse several pens and loose papers, actually scraps, and a couple of tiny pads that charities hand out. I also take notes on my cell or the e-readers. It would be better practice if I were to write my notes in one notebook or keep them in just one place.
I tried to carry a notebook with me but it was too bulky for my purse. That’s when I got used to cut-up papers. Now, I am so conditioned to them that I even use them when I am at home. Still, I do have half-filled notebooks, hordes of them, because I like free-flow.
Fact is, I tried to wean myself off those pieces of paper, but it didn’t go very well because a pen and those folded cut-ups in my shirt pocket are very handy and they feel like family.
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March 27, 2019 at 10:30pm March 27, 2019 at 10:30pm
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Prompt: "Saying nothing sometimes says the most." Emily Dickinson Do you agree with Emily?
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I certainly do.
Sometimes, the meaning is within us, and the words and all that we say are only there to support that meaning. If we can’t find the proper words or even if we come up with a few phrases and they somehow fall short of expressing our meaning, it may be a better idea to say nothing.
At times, silence also points to internal peace. It gives off, with immense power, vibes of acceptance, tolerance, and harmony.
Some believe being the loudest is being the strongest, but then, don’t we all dislike or even hate loudmouths in the public arena? On this topic, note that I am refraining here from making a statement about the current political scene.
Then, to train myself, I have a personal sticky note on my laptop’s screen that says, “When you are angry, be silent.” Of course, this doesn’t mean that when I am silent, I am angry. It is only there, so I don’t lose my head when things don’t go my way. Thus, I hope to sustain or bring internal peace by just reminding myself of silence.
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Prompt: True Crowning Moments: Character, Choices, Courage, Compassion. Do you think the world will remember you by these crowning moments in your life?
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Possibly, none of the above since consciously, I never was single-mindedly obsessed to attain any one of those virtues mentioned. I rather worked toward an overall vision for myself. Have I made a difference? Maybe so, maybe not. This unknowing is because our planet is a crowded place and what one can do, even at her utmost, is only a drop in the ocean, and also, after me, I want the world to go on without looking back at what was.
There are some moments in my life, however, that have been important to me, and they include some fantastic people I have admired and the wonderful personal relationships or work affiliations I have had with them. Those moments are mine and they’ll stay mine. Only a few people are aware of some of them, and from where I stand, that’s a few people too many. What I have achieved, if those were an achievement, I like to keep them unseen and unmentioned.
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March 24, 2019 at 12:15am March 24, 2019 at 12:15am
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Prompt:
Creation Saturday. A twinkling eye can mean many things. Write a poem about a twinkle in someone’s eye.
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no shadows on your face
but twinkles in the eyes
a smile wide
on your six-year-old self
you hold your head to the side
your gaze finds my face
is it because
you loved me more, then?
still, so becoming your smile is
and your eyes twinkle
when they find mine,
just like in that old photo,
Son!
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Prompt: "If everybody minded their own business, the world would go around a great deal faster then it does." Lewis Carroll, Alice In Wonderland What are your views on this quote?
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I do agree with the quote to some degree.
On the plus side, your life can become surprisingly easier because then, you can attend your own business with full concentration, since the drama that comes from others is usually nil.
On the other hand, how can you, unless you are totally detached from society and your loved ones, keep away from helping others, encourage them, and give them advice that is asked for, emphasizing the words “advice that is asked for” because unasked advice is meddling.
On still a larger scale, it is impossible to only mind your own business and work for your own welfare when you know for certain in your country or state of systemic injustices; that is, rotten things being done to people or groups of people. Then, it is important to speak up and even take arms (metaphorically speaking) to right the wrongs, or else, you can be condemned by history for ineptitude, dereliction, or lack of concern for one’s civic duties.
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Prompt: Are you participating/ hosting/ or preparing something on March 17th aka St. Paddy's Day? If you share your plans; if not, maybe discuss something you may not have known from the links.
http://www.gpb.org/education/origins-of-st-patricks-day
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Saint-Patricks-Day
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We are not attending a dinner that we were invited to on St. Paddy’s, but I have been celebrating Ireland in my own way.
Fact is, I am now reading The Great Book of Ireland, by Bill O’Neill, an author who has many other trivia books, but this book is more than trivia. It has excellent facts in it, some of which I had no idea.
I can’t give away everything in the book, but I’ll talk about one that may be entertaining. The Blarney Stone, which I bet anyone who’s been to Ireland and isn’t afraid of heights must have tried to kiss it.
There are many stories or legends about how the stone ended up where it is, in a wall in The Blarney Castle, which is located just outside of Cork, Ireland. One of the legends is that it was brought there during the Crusades; another is, it is of the same rock in Stonehenge.
The legend I like the most dates back to 1440s when the Blarney castle’s builder Cormac Laidir MacCarthy was involved in a lawsuit. For good luck, he asked the Irish goddess of love and beauty Cliodhna, who told Cormac to kiss the stone before heading out to court. After winning the case, Cormac installed the stone into a wall in the castle.
I like this story the best because of the fantasy in it.
Yet, there’s another story about Cormac when Queen Elizabeth I wanted to strip him of his land rights. Cormac wasn’t an eloquent speaker. During his travels, a woman told him to kiss the stone. Cormac did that and was able to persuade the queen to let him keep his land.
The second story about the same man has probably more truth to it, but I still like the one with the love goddess.
By the way, “Kiss me, I’m Irish” comes from the Blarney Stone. 
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Prompt: Discuss one of the quotes about the Ides of March.
https://www.ibtimes.com/ides-march-12-quotes-about-loyalty-celebrate-march-15-18...
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“Is loyalty still a commendable quality when it is misdirected?” – Cassandra Clare, “Clockwork Princess”
I have to answer no because this quote made me recall of the followers of Adolf Hitler, but I don’t need to take it that far. Misdirected loyalty first begins in the family or the parental home. Children who have been brought up by overly disciplinarian parents tend to develop similar loyalties toward their parents and family members. Surely, not every strictly disciplined child shows such behavior as most stay away from abusive or extremely disciplinarian parents once they mature.
Among other people, misdirected loyalty happens when a person finds it difficult to stand up against someone because doing that might feel like they are betraying their relationship with that person. This type of sick loyalty may happen not only between people but also between persons and institutions, such as political parties, workplaces, or religious affiliations.
Then, sometimes, people are threatened to be loyal to something or someone, and that may be an inescapable situation, but misdirected loyalty happens even without a threat or any such force. This type of loyalty arises from personal feelings having to do with guilt, morality, or social pressure.
In any case, misdirected loyalty is a dangerous thing because it threatens a person’s integrity, self-respect, and sanity. And if left to fester, it can lead to emotional complications of varying degrees such as codependency, snobbery, tyranny, and code of silence as with the Omerta of Mafia. Under these conditions, a person can at best lose his self-confidence and then, other more important things like his health, his financial well-being, and his life.
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Prompt: "The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even felt with the heart." Helen Keller-Annie Sullivan
Write anything you want about this quote.
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What cannot be seen or felt by the heart are the tiny things that hold the promise or beginnings of wonderful, unimaginable, and sometimes larger things. Case in point, a tiny seed, the acorn from which the noble oak grows or the aliveness of nature in general.
Within the same thought are those beginnings or seeds unseen or felt by us that grant us those things we so cherish like the moon, the sun, the cosmos, our dreams, the sights and sounds of waterfalls or rain, a mother’s smiling welcome of her newborn baby, a lover's kiss, the kind of music that talks and inspires a person, all arts, poetry, books, writing, kind words, helping hands, the company of friends and other people, the flag, the nation, and our global connectedness.
In addition, we can experience and appreciate all those things and then some if we learn to live in the present moment. If we can manage to achieve focusing our attention on the present moment, we may be able to enjoy even the most insignificant, gloomy, or dull tasks and events because in every single thing is a kernel of life.
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Prompt: Write about something that happened when you were eight years old.
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It’s been so many years since I was eight, decades actually. I don’t really remember much, except for a few personal family matters, but one national incident that created huge noise at the time stands out in my memory.
1951 was when Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were accused of being Russian spies who passed on secret information to Russians about nuclear technology. I recall my mother talking to other women about it.
“But how could they? They wouldn’t dare. Maybe there’s a mistake.”
Somehow, she found it hard to believe that anyone could do anything so terrible. She kept hoping they would be exonerated since they had kids. She might have been alone in that because everyone else was deadly afraid of communism at the time.
The couple’s older son was about my age and he was listening to The Lone Ranger on the radio when the agents barged in their apartment and took away his father, later on, his mother. I remember feeling very bad for him, maybe because he was my age.
I remember the news of the two kids being taken to Sing Sing to visit their parents. They probably never saw their parents again, and I really felt bad for them.
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Prompt: A Bird's Eye-- write your entry about the view a bird has flying over the mundane things you see every day, give us a new perspective on the repetitive places and tasks most days bring you.
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My house: From above, the roof would be L-shaped with gray shingles. The palm trees would look like green flowers with thin petals opening. Our street would look like a long curvy river with greens on both sides and the tops of the boxes (houses) along the two sides of that river.
I used to watch the ground from the windows of the airplanes during the time when we traveled a lot. The ground looked very much like Gulliver’s Lilliput.
Prompt: Discuss something that appeals to you from the link or something that happened to you personally on this day in history.
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March 9, 1936 - The German press warned that all Jews who vote in the upcoming elections would be arrested.
It was the notice of the end, I think. Although this wasn’t really the beginning of the end as the many other incidents pointed to what would happen many years earlier.
At the moment, I am reading William Russell’s Berlin Embassy. William Russell (1915-2000) was a diplomat in the American Embassy in Berlin. This book was first published in 1941. Its e-book version was out last year, and I grabbed it.
It is probably the most important and most telling book I came across about the start of the Holocaust. The book covers the time from 1939 to 1941. It has in it, the author’s observations, his newspaper clippings, the plight of the masses, especially that of the Jewish, and the overall atmosphere Hitler’s regime had created in Germany and in the world.
He says, “If the United States goes into this war, there is one thing I do not want to forget. There are millions of people in Germany who do not agree with the policies of their leaders. And there are other millions, simple people, who believe exactly what their leaders tell them — especially when they tell them the same thing day after day.”
He says the regime, just to confuse everybody, didn't let the real news out but created rumors. The people in Germany never knew of the news and their listening to the foreign news on the radio was prohibited. ~As an aside, there is a lesson here to be learned for our day with all the fake-news business going on.~
He also talks about how the people who wanted to leave Germany went from embassy to embassy to get a visa to get out. It is absolutely heart-rending and nerve-wrenching.
This also involves me to some degree as my parents were in Munich in 1939 but they got out.
Prompt: What books are on your Spring Reading List?
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I don’t have a Spring Reading list, necessarily, because I have more than 6000 books on my Kindle, which I probably read about a 1000+ so far since I read all the time.
I read on the Kindle, Nook, and Book Bazaar reading apps on my laptop, or on my Kindle e-readers, or on my Cellphone. I usually have close to ten books going at the same time with one of them a print book. I also have at least ten print books waiting for me to get to them, I hope by the summer's end.
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Prompt: "I keep my heart and soul open to miracles." Patrick Swayze
What is your take on miracles?
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The word miracle may mean different things to different people. From its religious or supernatural perspective, it means an unexplainable happening that takes place against the rules of nature; for example, a person suddenly taking flight with no appendage, vehicle, or tool or a seriously sick person suddenly being healed by the chanting of a shaman.
To me, every day is a miracle as the workings of a human body or the birth of a child. Sometimes, wild animals are not afraid of me even if they are much smaller than me while grasping that I could hurt them if I wanted to. Some days I suddenly recall some old information that has been buried in the depths of my mind, and just my recalling ability of such a far-away thing feels like a miracle to me. Then, there’s such a thing as telepathy when I am thinking of a person, they either show up or call, or the phone rings and I suddenly know for certain who it is at the other end.
I don’t know what Patrick Swayze means by being open to miracles. To me, life is a miracle, and therefore, everything in it is.
Prompt: “Every time you learn something new, you’re expanding your creative potential,” says Yonatan Levy in his book, The Other Ideas: Art, Digital Products, and the Creative Mind.
What do you think is the relationship between learning and creative potential?
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I think not just any learning but learning with understanding helps a person to be creative. When we learn without understanding, that doesn’t help us with our creative undertakings; for example, memorizing material in school just to get a passing grade.
Inside every creative project, there lies a kernel of understanding the idea that may inspire a project. Whether writing fiction and poetry or painting a picture or creating a solution for a scientific problem, the creative process is the same because the creative process involves learning or preparation plus imagination, then letting the ideas incubate, then letting an a-ha! moment surface just like the sudden light bulbs in cartoons, and finally, the last step of making sure the idea will work.
With that process in mind, the most creative ideas are born to people who are physically, socially, emotionally and intellectually devoted and involved with their missions. This may sound a bit materialistic, but in essence, it is just the opposite. It has to do with following one’s heart and devoting oneself to a venture.
Prompt: In what ways can you expose yourself to outside ideas, interests, and viewpoints to use in your writing, aside from your reading and the internet?
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I like people and mostly write about people and living things; therefore. where people congregate and interact are the most important places for me, such as airports, waiting rooms, hospitals, police stations, train stations, parties, debates, meetings or all kinds, school playgrounds, libraries, stores, malls etc. I may be involved with the people in such places or I may just be an observer. The latter, however, is what I prefer the most.
I also like nature. Thus, I like sitting quietly in one place in a park, a beach, the woods, and the nature preserves. For this, my mind always requires some stillness.
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