Showing posts with label dreams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dreams. Show all posts

Monday, February 28, 2011

Microfiction Monday: A Fairy Tale








Clever Susan at Microfiction Monday asks us to elucidate on the photo she provides in 140 characters or less.



 

With 120 characters, here is my take on this week's prompt.... 
 
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Part fairy dust and angel dreams,
                 our nights are wrapped in elfin schemes.
Come sunrise and the break of day,
                like fairy dust, they've blown away...
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For more of Microfiction Monday, do visit the link below...there is much good reading to be found there!
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Friday, October 29, 2010

A Halloween Haiku


We fear nothing so

much as fear to which we have

not yet put a name...
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I have dreams in which I frantically check every locked door and window, only to discover that one has been silently breached. I don't know what I fear will get in if I'm not vigilant, but the worry continues to plague me!
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The photo above was taken at the prison in Lincoln Castle, England
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I am linking this to Poetry United's, Thursday Think Tank Prompt. For more works about the things we fear, do click on the link below:
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Saturday, April 10, 2010

Dreams of Africa

What do you want most in the world? What dream sustains you through the everyday, and promises so much joy and satisfaction that you quiver just at the notion of this possibility coming to pass?


As a child growing up in post-war Belfast, my dreams were of Africa. The drab, sparse streets of industrial Northern Ireland were so far removed from the endless sky and rolling grasslands of Kenya to be found in books that my soul was captivated from the start. Eventually, my family emigrated to the West Coast of Canada, putting even more space between me and my heart’s desire.
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But the dream to see Africa stayed with me. When a chance came in 2006 to make the trip of nine thousand miles to Nairobi, I was warned by well-meaning friends that the reality of the continent could not possibly live up to my decades of anticipation. How wrong they were...

Africa was every bit as magnificent as I knew it would be. I embraced it eagerly...the boundless savannah...the spacious skies...and, of course, the beautiful, glowing children. The shy smiles of youngsters we met in a Masai village is something I call to mind often. It is a memory that never fails to fill me with joy and wonderment.












I have a new dream now...to return to Africa,
this time not to take
but to give back. The chasm between the 'haves' and
'have-nots' looms large in that continent ravaged by AIDS.
mismanagement and corruption. I have taken Africa to my heart,
now I must act on my heart's desire to help. It will not be
this year...it may not be next..but I will return one day to
the Africa of my dreams...