HorrorsCope
Friday, October 31, 2014
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
October Birds
The birds gather in flocks of hundreds along the ocean shore on our barrier beaches now. They practice their maneuvers back and forth, up and down, along the tide line inches above the sand and waves. Spinning, darting, turning, they resemble a squirrel pursued by a hungry dog. But the birds move as a group, sometimes intercepting, and then joining, their cousins flying nearby. The flocks rest on the sand between drills and this activity extends for miles. An air of anticipation and fear permeates the searing, austere gale visiting from the dark, wide ocean. They are about to accept an annual challenge and they choose to face it together. I admire their courage.
Thursday, October 2, 2014
Good Health
There is a station on the Dowling College health path called "Body Raising" and the illustration shows what appears to be Igor and Dr Frankenstein with lanterns and shovels peering into a deep hole.
(Okay, I lied about that last part. It's an icon of a guy doing a pushup...)
Wednesday, October 1, 2014
Local Hero
Today's HorrorsCope:
Local Hero
Met a neighbor on our walk today. Elderly gent, widowed, lives alone. Sandy wrecked the home he had lived in for over 50 years. He had feet, not inches of water in the house. Another neighbor sent him off to Florida, cleaned up his house and supervised repairs; all while doing the same to his own home. The first neighbor wanted us to know that there’s a hero nearby.
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
Morning Fun
Whiskey chased every vehicle, her unleashed passion
This morning the air was thick and sound muffling
I secretly raced every car, old friend
Monday, September 29, 2014
Success
Failure is underrated. There is no quicker path to success than through our failures. My flowchart to success has failure as the first option; do it, fail, learn, move on. I wish I understood this earlier...
Saturday, September 27, 2014
Question
Question authority, question tradition, question the message, question yourself. Retain your fascination with “why?”. It's troubling to think that our congressional representatives have lost their curiosity.
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