Journal Camp, day nine

Stories I Tell Myself

  1. One more cup of coffee won’ hurt
  2. But I need these shoes
  3. That spider could bit me
  4. Once bitten, twice shy
  5. My roommate is an absent minded genius
  6. I will drink more water
  7. I will relax in traffic
  8. Traffic isn’t so bad
  9. I have the best commute in the world
  10. Other people do more
  11. She makes it look easy
  12. The world is falling apart
  13. The world is a shared hallucination
  14. Quantum physics
  15. My chakras need clearing
  16. I love it when it rains
  17. If I eat the tomatoes now, I can save the artichoke for later
  18. Its hot enough to go to the pool
  19. Ninety degrees is the minimum to make the pool a good idea
  20. Check windspeed
  21. Journal Camp is awesome
  22. Here I grow again
  23. This is my favorite summer in years
  24. Its never too late for a happy ending
  25. I am a creative genius
  26. We are all creative geniuses
  27. Hooray for creative geeks!
  28. I am grateful
  29. I could be more grateful, more often
  30. Wahoo!

Journal Camp: Day 7

My Mother’s Scent

She wore Chanel No. 5. On nights my parents went out, she drifted out the door on a cloud of deep musky-floral pheromones, an  accommodation of the sophistication she yearned for. Periodically, when we were old enough for them to leave the brood with a reliable steel-belted sitter for the weekend, they journeyed north to the Banff Springs Resort in British Columbia. There are photographs of them from one trip, souvenirs from a night club they had attended. My mother appears to be in her thirties, young, pretty, wearing a classic kind of Jackie O sheath dress. The photographer caught her smile and a sparkle in her eyes. She seemed happy then, and glamorous. I imagine that in that dress, in that club, she was enveloped in a cloud of Chanel No. 5. She later switched to a fragrance called Interlude – with the same base notes, a similar mysterious, musky presence. Other scents of my mother that I recall: Breck hair spray, spray starch, despair.

six word story no. 187

 

Like love, the archers are blind*

*excerpted from the poetry of Federico Garcia Lorca and brought to you with a  steady heart by Journaling as Sacred Practice: An Act of Extreme Bravery, available in print or e-book. April is National Poetry Month! Treat your inner poet to a new book.

six word story no. 169

Teach your children well, they said.

Brought to you with a mad genius harmonies by Journaling as Sacred Practice: An Act of Extreme Bravery. Available now on Amazon.

six word story no. 165

Suddenly, old school was new again.

Brought to you like a rock star by Journaling as Sacred Practice: An Act of Extreme Bravery. Available now on Amazon.

six word story no. 164

She was warned and she persisted.

joan_of_arc_by_dashinvaine-d4nvcoz

Brought to you like a grrrl by Journaling as Sacred Practice: An Act of Extreme Bravery. Available now on Amazon.

with thanks for orignal art by Ngan Nguye

six word story no. 159

They discovered #rogue wasn’t just beer.

francois_louis_jaques_paysans_fribourgeois_au_bistrot

Brought to you with courage, freedom, and suds by Journaling as Sacred Practice: An Act of Extreme Bravery. Available now on Amazon.

six word story no. 111

In her free time she forraged.

pioneer

Brought to you with steadfast creative power by Journaling as Sacred Practice. Support the Arts. Buy the Book. Wait . . .the holidays are coming. . .and books make great stocking stuffers.