Showing posts with label anxiety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anxiety. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

April PAD Challenge + NaPoWriMo 2024 Day 17

 


Hello, Poetry People. Today, I went for brevity and wrote a Haiku for my April PAD Challenge/NaPoWriMo poem.


The April PAD Challenge prompt asked participants to write a Not Blank poem. I gave my Haiku the title Not In the Mainstream.


The NaPoWriMo prompt suggests that participants create a poem inspired by a piece of music. For my own part, I chose a timeless classic: the music of nature in the form of the sound of falling rain. 

It's not mainstream pop, to be sure. The unspoken portion of the poem is the fact that it's being written by someone who will never be in the mainstream.

I've learned something about myself that doesn't surprise me in the least. In fact, it explains a lot about my hypersensitivity and how frazzled I feel when my routine is disrupted. It also reinforces my anger and sadness over the way I've been treated like I'm a bad person and/or weak for something that's part of my neurological makeup. I will spend the rest of my life trying to learn not to hate myself and to try and get along in a world that hates people like me. 

Nobody is going to try to understand people like me. I'm used to that. It would be nice, however, if medical professionals were taught to treat all their patients with common decency rather than disdain, even the "difficult" ones. 

I'm not trying to be difficult. It's not like I intentionally decided to have this shit show of a body. Who the hell would choose that? The truth is, I'm fucking terrified of you. I don't want to be here. I can smell the disdain coming off you. You don't try to hide it at all. 

To condense all that, the unspoken message in the Haiku is this:

Working through this shit show of a body and this weirdly wired brain is a soul who loves the sound of rain, just wishes everyone could be happy and live peacefully, and will never be part of the mainstream in any way. I don't want pills, injections, and surgery to force my disobedient body to look like what you have deemed it should look like. (I swear to whatever gods there may be if I type "whould" one more time, I'm gonna cut off my fingers!) 

I don't want pills or shock therapy or surgery to rearrange my brain till I fit into your definition of sane. 

I don't want injections or surgeries or other expensive treatments in a desperate attempt to make myself look younger or closer to what you deem attractive. 

It shouldn't matter if I don't conform to your idea of what the perfect woman looks like or acts like. You should treat me with respect and kindness all the same. You have no idea what I've been through or what it's like to be me.

I'll probably go back to being stoic tomorrow. Today, I felt like this needed to be said. I'm sure all five or six people who read this blog really give a shit anyway.

This was the first day in many months that I woke up without feeling like I was on the verge of a panic attack. Learning what I did recently makes certain things finally make sense.

~Ornery Owl Has Spoken~

Image by c from Pixabay


I could literally listen to this sort of thing all day.

Thursday, October 19, 2023

Hidden

 



taught from a young age
that I was wrong
and stupid
ridiculous
the butt
of the joke
throat clenching
trying to keep from screaming
shame on everyone
who made me
what I am
ashamed
to be
me

notes

I added effects to the base image using Pixlr.

https://experiencewriting.com/2023/10/19/oct-19-prompts-screams-in-the-night/

Body Horror: Write a poem about the thing or things that scare you about the human body.

This could be a fun day to do a spoken poem. 

Hahahaha! Fun, you say? I think fucking not.

It's very rare for me to do a spoken poem. I don't like my voice, which has been ridiculed for most of my life.

I'm currently doing speech therapy. Not to change the sound of my voice but to correct vocal cord dysfunction. With vocal cord dysfunction, the vocal cords close on inspiration rather than opening. It's often misdiagnosed as asthma. Trust me, it makes having dental procedures a lot of fun--so not.

One of the primary causes of vocal cord dysfunction is anxiety. Like in people with complex PTSD. In other words, people with a history of relentless abuse.

I learned at a young age that I needed to keep quiet lest I be smacked for saying something stupid or ridiculed for having a peculiar voice. 

The knot of tears around my throat crystallized into my design. 

~Ornery Owl Has Spoken~

Image by Beate from Pixabay




Thursday, October 12, 2023

Odontophobia

 

Base image by Umanoide on Unsplash

Click to enlarge

Oh, how dearly I fear 

Dental appointment day.

Only I don't overly mind

Needing my teeth cleaned.

The thing that unsettles me most is sitting

Open-mouthed for long

Periods of time.

Having my face numb,

Orifice probed with a drill,

Being unable to leave

If I choose,

And feeling like I'm choking to death.

notes

Buckle up, Bitches, it's gonna be a rough ride! If you're sensitive about swearing, it's best that you hit the back button on your browser and go bye-bye now.

The beautiful picture poem was inspired by this beautiful prompt, asking participants to prettily share a phobia via an acrostic poem.

https://experiencewriting.com/2023/10/12/oct-12-prompts-pulling-back-the-veil/

Poem, not phorm. What the phucque is a phorm?

I added text art and effects to the image using Pixlr. You're welcome to share the poem with all your dentist friends or anyone else, but please credit Cara Hartley/Ornery Owl and maybe leave a link back to this blog. Thanks in advance.

I have fairly severe odontophobia. I'm not afraid of my dentist. He's a decent guy, unlike the first dentist I saw at ten years old, who told me to shut up and enjoy having my teeth pulled. Not to put too fine a point on it, but he was a cunt.

My history of sexual trauma and instances of dental shaming, including from my father who said that the only people who get cavities are those who eat too much sugar and don't brush properly all contribute to my aversion to dental procedures. The garbage icing on this raw sewage cake is my delightful case of vocal cord dysfunction. 

What the hell is vocal cord dysfunction, you wish to know?

Glad you asked! Also called paradoxical vocal fold motion, this means that instead of opening when I inhale, my vocal cords close. Because of course they do. Heaven forfend anything should work properly in this shit show of a body. 

Physicians frequently misdiagnose vocal cord dysfunction as asthma because the person dealing with it feels like they are unable to breathe deeply. I was misdiagnosed with asthma for decades. If I have asthma at all, it's mild and allergy-related. One of the tells is the fact that I never found much relief from using an inhaler. I do have allergies. I take Singulair and Zyrtec, which mostly make it so I can breathe through my nose.

A laryngospasm can be triggered by various stimuli, such as cold air, GERD, post-nasal drip, and your friend and mine, 

When I'm at the dentist, I jump on a vicious cycle driven by this guy. You might correctly surmise that he doesn't give a fuck about comfort or safety.

Image by Alexa from Pixabay

The vicious cycle process goes a little bit something like this.

I get anxious, in this case about having dental work done.

Instead of opening when I inhale, my vocal cords close.

Feeling like I can't take a good breath makes me feel more anxious.

The more anxious I feel, the more intense the focus on my breath becomes.

I start to feel like I'm choking, which makes me feel even more anxious.

The anxiety builds to the point where I have a panic attack.

Benzodiazepines (I swear I will never be able to spell this word properly), which are what dentists typically prescribe for anxiety, either work paradoxically on my contrary nervous system, elevating my heart rate and causing panic attacks (most benzos) or the amount of adrenaline coursing through my body overwhelms them and they don't work at all (diazepam). 

I certainly have a restful sleep if I take diazepam, but it doesn't do jack shit to counteract my dental anxiety.

Nitrous oxide helps a little bit sort of, unless the claustrophobia prompted by the mask triggers a panic attack, which is what happened the last time I tried it.

IV sedation for dental procedures really should be covered by Medicare and Medicaid. Severe dental anxiety isn't uncommon, and it prevents people from getting the care they need. Dental health impacts the rest of the body. If people knew they could sleep through the procedure, they would be less likely to put off getting dental work done. 

I always opt for IV sedation where possible for medical procedures. Going under anesthesia scares me shitless, which is a poem for another time. Also, intubation could exacerbate my vocal cord dysfunction, and I sure as hell don't need that.


Dee Snider wrote Under the Blade because being anesthetized and having surgery sucks. The clowns of the PMRC decided the song was about bondage and rape, but at the end of the day, that's all right. The Parental Advisory stickers ended up being a joke, increasing the sales of "naughty" albums. This is exactly what John Denver predicted would happen.

"That which is denied becomes that which is most desired, and that which is hidden becomes that which is most interesting. Consequently, a great deal of time and energy is spent trying to get at what is being kept from you." --John Denver

Like John Denver, I am vehemently opposed to censorship.

I'm feeling mighty generous today, Folks. Here's the 2002 VH1 docudrama depicting the PMRC hearings.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZRS6Avu0cg

~Ornery Owl Has Freely Spoken~


Free use image from Open Clipart Vectors

“It's a beautiful thing, the destruction of words.”
― George Orwell, 1984







Friday, October 6, 2023

Scary Lights

 

1950 Chevrolet
This kind of headlight: a-ok.

1950 Mercury Monterey Coupe
This kind of headlight:
Scary because reasons.

as a child
for reasons I can't explain
I found headlights with hoods over them benevolent,
while headlights without hoods were terrifying;
not in the same way as large insects or death
but still sinister.

~for reasons unexplainable~

I refuse to allow the adult I am now
to become snarky and sanctimonious
about childhood fears
which may seem ridiculous in retrospect.
the anxious girl I was had her reasons for being afraid
of the scary lights.

notes
Prompt provided by Experience Writing.

Poem form: Puente

http://www.shadowpoetry.com/resources/wip/puente.html

The form has three stanzas with the first and third having an equal number of lines and the middle stanza having only one line which acts as a bridge (puente) between the first and third stanza. The first and third stanzas convey a related but different element or feeling, as though they were two adjacent territories. The number of lines in the first and third stanza is the writer’s choice as is the choice of whether to write it in free verse or rhyme.

The center line is delineated by a tilde (~) and has ‘double duty’. It functions as the ending for the last line of the first stanza AND as the beginning for the first line of the third stanza. It shares ownership with these two lines and consequently bridges the first and third stanzas.

In the puente you have overlapping couplets. I refer to these couplets as the processional couplet and the recessional couplet taken from the same words used in the wedding ceremony.

I hadn't previously heard of the Puente, but here we are.

I've been a nervous wreck for most of my life and I still don't know why. I'm no longer unsettled by cars with round headlights, though. The ones with the blinding blue headlights are much worse. Fortunately, I don't see them very often anymore as I avoid driving at night.

~Ornery Owl Has Spoken~

Image by Kevin Sanderson from Pixabay

That owl has the classic Ornery expression giving the cauldron the side-eye.
"Aren't you done yet?"



Sunday, October 1, 2023

Spooky Me

 

Spooky by Rinck Content Studios on Unsplash


my thoughts at three a.m.

burrowing into my brain

me spooking myself

notes

Can't stop the flow when the prompt is practically begging to be immortalized in Haiga glory!

https://experiencewriting.com/2023/10/01/in-a-spooky-mood/

You're welcome to share the Haiga, but please credit Cara Hartley/Ornery Owl. A link back to this blog would also be nice.

You're welcome to use this banner.

Sharing with:





Monday, May 1, 2023

Our Responsibility

 

Photo by Cara Hartley/Ornery Owl

Taken at the Denver Aquarium on May 7, 2017


Text art and design elements added by the photographer (me) using pixlr.com
You are welcome to use either image, but please credit me.

compassion, respect

our responsibility

to nature's creatures

Notes

Today's prompt word: Responsibility

https://chevrefeuillescarpediem.blogspot.com/2012/10/carpe-diem-3-responsibility.html

Now that April, AKA Hell Month is over, one of my goals is to get back to sharing weekly Haigas. I finally have a cohesive idea about the project I want to create using the photos I took on my son's 27th birthday and Mother's Day 2017.

My son will be 33 in 7 days.

Time management is something I've always struggled with. Time management can be difficult for anyone, but I think it is a particularly difficult skill for people with ADHD. 

I'm a prime example of what happens when you have a kid with ADHD who, rather than being taught skills for dealing with the way their brain works, is constantly scolded and admonished to "do better." What you end up with is an adult with ADHD who is filled with anxiety and self-loathing and who has a pattern of taking on too much, then crashing from exhaustion. Rinse and repeat.

I learned some hard lessons in April about taking on too many projects, an issue about which you'd think I'd know better by now, considering the fact that I'm almost 60 years old. I have problems with trying to do five times as much as other people to prove that I'm half as good.

The good news is, I had twenty-five poems and a novelette accepted for inclusion in two forthcoming anthologies from Dragon Soul Press. The poems will appear in Soul Ink and the novelette will be published in Pirate's Gold.

https://dragonsoulpress.com/

The bad part is there were literally times I thought I was dying because my anxiety was so pronounced. If I'd only been working on the two aforementioned projects, it wouldn't have been that bad. However, I was also working on two others. I ended up shelving one of these early on and I found out the deadline on the other one was June 1 rather than May 1. Plus I waited till the last minute to finish my taxes like an idiot and I had a selective laser trabeculoplasty procedure done on my left eye. Note to self, do not schedule elective procedures in April.

Despite being approximately as popular as trouser crabs, I do serve several necessary functions for my household, so while most people would likely cheer upon learning of my demise, it would be best for the person I care most about in the world if I remained active for a while longer. I have several serious health issues, so I have to take care of my fool self even if I'm not particularly fond of myself.

~Ornery Owl is Outstanding in Her Field~

Image by Pexels from Pixabay

Sharing With:








Friday, April 21, 2023

Poetry Prompts and Inspiration April PAD Challenge and NaPoWriMo Day 21




Today's prompt from NaPoWriMo asks participants to read Sarah Gambito’s poem “Grace," then choose a word from their list of abstract nouns to use as their poem's title. They also suggest including at least one invented word. I invented two words, because I'm an overachiever like that.

I chose one of the nouns for the title, then used all of them in my short, sharp, choppy poem about, you guessed it, anxiety. Because my anxiety has damn near done me in this month. 

I opted to leave the April PAD Challenge prompt for another day because it asks participants to write a six-word poem. The NaPoWriMo list by itself contained more than six words.

~Ornery Owl Has Spoken~

Image by Kevin from Pixabay


I hope you enjoy this German prog rock from 1977. I also find it makes a great soundtrack for writing my epic novella about Captain Sammy's treasure.

Thursday, April 20, 2023

Poetry Prompts and Inspiration Day 20 April PAD Challenge and NaPoWriMo 2023

 


Good day or whatever. Let's jump right into it. 

Today's April PAD Challenge prompt asks participants to write an animal poem.

Today's NaPoWriMo prompt is an interesting one.

Have you ever heard someone wonder what future archaeologists, whether human or from alien civilization, will make of us? Today, I’d like to challenge you to answer that question in poetic form, exploring a particular object or place from the point of view of some far-off, future scientist.

I didn't write a poem about a literal animal. I postulated about what scientists from a far-off world who come to study the dying Earth might think about all the pills we took to combat our mental health problems. The title of my poem is A Beast Called Anxiety.

For the record, I don't take any psych meds. Not because I don't have psychological issues. I clearly have those aplenty. Not because I think myself superior to people who do take psych meds. I don't take them for one simple reason. For me, the "cure" is worse than the problem. My body doesn't tolerate them.

Here is a nifty resource that I use to come up with things like alien scientist and fantasy planet names. It's a real lifesaver.


That's about all for now. I'm still dealing with a mess surrounding my thyroid medication and miscommunication. The guy that's potentially supposed to replace our furnace hasn't called me back either. I'm trying not to let the beast Anxiety defeat me. 

From my current vantage point, I think Anxiety is probably the worst of my psychological problems. It fuels Depression because it makes me feel like a fuckup. I wonder what I could have been without anxiety, but sometimes I fear I might have been really shallow and vain because of my insecurity about my physical appearance. It's pretty much a no-win situation.

~Ornery Owl Has Spoken~

Image by Loyloy Thal from Pixabay



I was listening to this hard-hitting Krautrock by Gomorrha while creating this post.

Saturday, October 9, 2021

Helloween 2021 Day 9: Never Again

 

Image by Ulrike Mai from Pixabay

never again to laugh or sing
never again to hear bells ring
never again to hear drums roll
I'm not dead in life but dead in soul

cie, age 12

new notes now
This poem is a cheat. I didn't write it today. In fact, I have never written it down until now, although I composed it some 44 years ago.

The incident sparking the poem was me seeing the boy I was obsessively in love with walking along holding another girl's hand. This girl didn't know it, but she became my sworn enemy on that day. I hated her worse than every awful dictator who had ever fucked up millions of people's lives. I hated her worse than Satan himself, which is saying something because I was a devout Catholic at the time.

The moment when I saw "Jay" with "Abby," it was like a dark shroud descended over my life. I realize that this sounds melodramatic, and people have an awful habit of pooh-poohing the sometimes extreme emotions that teenagers display. My perspective of the situation may have been disproportionate, but the emotion I felt was very real, and it was indicative of something far deeper and more destructive than the loss of an unrequited crush to an imagined rival.

I first felt the black dog nipping at my heels in earnest when I was ten years old. When my birthday cake collapsed, I laughed hysterically. Later, I went to my room and burst into tears. I told myself that I was stupid for crying over a stupid collapsed cake and I needed to grow up. 

When my father came in to say good night, he could see that I was upset. I tried to explain why, but I didn't have the words for what I was feeling. I hated growing up. I didn't want to grow up because somehow I knew that it meant that everything was going to fall apart. I hated the changes in my body. I hated the way men and boys leered at women and teenage girls and shouted obscene things at them. I didn't want to be looked at or treated in that way.

I was always a sensitive and anxious kid. The bullying that I endured in elementary school increased exponentially in junior high, and now there was a sexual component to it. Boys grabbed girls' breasts and behinds and never received more than mild admonishment. Walking to school now meant having construction workers and randos in cars holler obscenities at me. When I tried to tell my father that it made me feel disgusted and victimized, he told me that I should take it as a compliment.

There are some who may feel that I am being melodramatic again when I say that the day that dark shroud descended over my life I knew it was the beginning of the end. It was the beginning of lifelong "medication resistant" depression. 

I put "medication resistant" in quotes because even though the medications in question help some people, the mind fuck that they do to others was swept under the rug for years. The documentary film Letters to Generation RX reveals the dark side of these medications. 

I expressed concerns about these medications back when they first became popular and was sneered at for my thoughts. I felt vindicated after watching Letters to Generation RX, but I didn't feel smug or satisfied. I was horrified by the ways in which these "wonder drugs" destroyed the lives of the people featured in the documentary.

For my own part, the drugs I tried made me manic and psychotic, two things that I normally am not. I took a low dose of OTC Lithium for a number of years, and it was helpful in controlling the high end of what I thought were hypomanic episodes. In retrospect, what I was experiencing were effects of untreated complex PTSD, severe anxiety, and unmanaged ADHD. 

I discovered that bipolar II was a misdiagnosis when I was unable to afford the Lithium for several months before I qualified for disability and experienced no "hypomanic" episodes. The fact that I was no longer working a J.O.B. (stands for Just Over Broke) and thus no longer forcing myself to do something that I really didn't want to do multiple days a week led to a lessening of my anxiety even though my financial situation was awful. I was also now living in a remote rural location as opposed to a townhouse in a busy suburb.

I do not take medications for any of my actual mental health conditions, and nor will I. I accept the fact that my baseline mood is moderately depressed. I was able to make some headway with the C-PTSD when I was finally able to examine certain incidents in my life and realize how they had impacted my thoughts and behavior. 

I have also started learning strategies for understanding and managing my ADHD, which was the actual impetus behind my impulsiveness rather than an apparent "hypomanic" state. The fact that I was so badly misunderstood throughout school and admonished for being "lazy" and "flaky" still affects me, and I tend to take criticisms deeply and very personally. 

I may never be one of those writers who "develops a thick skin" and "learns from their critics." Besides, would-be critics need to learn that there is a difference between critiquing someone's work and just being an asshole. 

As a book reviewer, I find that most of the books I end up scoring low aren't bad in theory but the execution could use work and sometimes a lot of it. I try to express this kindly because the last thing that I want to do is discourage anyone from pursuing their dreams. I know how that feels and it doesn't feel good.

There was one book that literally gave me a headache while trying to read it. My theory is that it was the author's NaNoWriMo project and they published it without editing it. The manuscript was cover-to-cover dialogue with very little world-building or character expansion. 

I stated that while the idea was compelling, the author needed to take some time to flesh out the characters and scenes and that the project could benefit from an editor. What I kept to myself was the fact that said editor would definitely have their work cut out for them. 

Then there have been books that were technically proficient but contained severely problematic material, and I have said that very thing in my reasoning for giving the book a low rating. This is not to say that authors can't create horrible characters. In fact, I say the opposite of that in the following post.


The main point that I wish to reference is this one:

I don’t draw the line at any topic because I think it’s necessary to be able to talk about any topic. For instance, I had a story rejected because the main antagonist was a horrible racist. I personally don’t think it’s sufficient to just say “Mr. Smurkwhittle was a horrible racist who chased jailbait.”

The character was horrible, and the story is more effective if I can allow him to be despicable and offensive. The jailbait he was chasing turned out to be an ancient vampire from beyond the stars.

The technically proficient books that I've given one-star ratings include:

A detective story rife with sexist tropes and some good old-fashioned size shaming thrown in like bad icing on a lousy cake.

A "self-help" book with an entire chapter of size-shaming rhetoric including an insulting picture of a large gentleman licking a plate because fatties gonna fat, geddit?

A Catholic sci-fi thriller rife with homophobia.

A techno-thriller chock-a-block with xenophobic anti-Arab tropes with a side order of size shaming.

There was another "self-help" book for women that was filled with appearance shaming and size shaming, but it wasn't even technically proficient. It was difficult for me not to say "so you decided to publish this. Here's why you shouldn't have."

I've gotten a bit off track from my original subject. My own writing is a big reason why I'm still alive. I don't read reviews of my work because no matter how many good ones I get, the bad ones always throw me into a tailspin. For me, writing isn't just a hobby or even a craft. It is mental health therapy and life support.

There are those who have said that "turning to God" would help with my depression. As I mentioned previously, I was a devout Catholic into my teens. I prayed faithfully and studied the Bible obsessively. 

I never received any reprieve from the bullying that my schoolmates heaped on me. I never received any reprieve from the constant criticism that the adults in my life heaped on me. 

Along the way I started to see the cracks in the church's dogma, and by the time I turned eighteen, I was done. Either God hated me, God just wasn't very nice, or God didn't exist. 

Unfortunately, this was not the end to my approval-seeking behavior or of falling victim to dogma and its adherents. I ended up seeking salvation in neopaganism and New Age doctrine for the next 30 years only to discover that the preachers, teachers, and devotees of these paths are just as judgmental, sanctimonious, and full of "my way or the highway" thinking as any conventional religious sect.

Despite being a spiritual agnostic, the philosophy I adhere to is Gnosis. This means that wisdom can spring from surprising sources and surprising people, not just decorated scholars or ordained priests. Thus, I wish to end this chapter with a morsel of wisdom from an unexpected source.

"God is not in some building. God is in nature, and God is in each of us."
--Gaahl, Gorgorath

Ornery Owl Has Been Prolific


prompt



The Icky, Sticky, Nit-Picky Legalese If You Please (Or Don't Please)


Creative Commons License


This work is the intellectual property of Naughty Netherworld Press/Poetry of the Netherworld.

Reblogging is acceptable on platforms that allow it. Odysee’s reblog function is called repost, which makes things confusing since reposting is considered a no-no on most platforms. It’s fine to share the post using the repost function on Odysee. It is not okay to copy-paste the material into a new post.

Sharing a link to the post is acceptable.

Quoting portions of the post for educational or review purposes is acceptable if proper credit is given.

Want more poetry?
Get it here!

Buy me a coffee

Or buy me a coffee here

Join me on Odysee

Join me on Patreon!
Subscribe for as little as $1 per month.

Get the latest literary happenings and slices of life in your inbox!


Sunday, February 23, 2020

Come As You Are Party: Wired Differently or Just a Flake?

Image by Wolfgang Eckert from Pixabay


It is my hope to back away from apologizing for who I am and instead explain about myself so that those I interact with might develop an understanding of those of us who are wired differently.

I have type 2 bipolar disorder and ADD as well as complex PTSD and OCD. I wasn't properly diagnosed with bipolar disorder or OCD until I was almost 40. I didn't know I had ADD until I was in my 50s. I was just always scolded for being forgetful and distracted. I have always vacillated between being Ms. Wonderful and being that flakey a-hole that everyone hates. I understand why it happens now, but I can't change the past. I wish people would try to understand me a little better, but I'm not going to hold my breath.

My son will be 30 this year. He is high-functioning autistic and has ADHD as well as anxiety issues and major depression. He is very intelligent and has read the entire Amber series (Roger Zelazny), much of Tolkien's writing, The Count of Monte Cristo, the works of C.S. Lewis, and the list goes on, but he can't learn from a textbook to save his life. I think the current educational system does a very poor job of addressing the needs of those who are not neurotypical. 

I technically also have a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder, but it is my opinion that borderline personality disorder is actually a form of complex PTSD and is an outdated and sexist diagnosis. It is almost exclusively applied to girls and women. Everyone who has it has endured some form of trauma, whether physical, psychological, sexual or a combination thereof. 

~Cie the Ornery Old Lady~



Image copyright Open Clipart Vectors

Tuesday, June 18, 2019

Troiku Challenge 2019: Day 12: White Valley Clouds


after the rain
breathing deeply
white valley clouds

after the rain
not so much rain as spatters
it's still much too hot

breathing deeply
inhale the worry and fear
future uncertain

white valley clouds
seem to smirk at each other
telling lies of rain

Jane & Cie



Notes:
The "sleigh" of this Troiku was created by Jane Reichhold (1937 - 2016). The Three Horses of the Apocalypse are my doing--or possibly undoing.