AprPAD Day 17


 

It was shortly after I broke my bedroom window with a baseball, which by the way wasn’t my fault, my little sister threw like a girl and I swung a bat like a boy, and it wasn’t my fault that she didn’t catch the ball when I threw it back a tiny bit too hard when that ball nearly hit me in the head. I mean it wasn’t my fault that she threw like a girl and couldn’t catch. Mum took our ball and bat away, and told us to find a more girlie game to play, which is what you were expected to do in the 1950s, so we said Yes, Mum, and then rode our bikes to the woods about 5 miles away, and caught crayfish with our bare hands. Bagged them up for the neighbour’s cat to eat. We loitered around the creek, splashed about, and ate blackberries and stained our fingers with their ripeness. In no rush to do anything, until the sun started to set. And then we slowly headed back home. Those were the days, when Khrushchev banged his shoes on the table, the telly was never turned on until after dinner, and we kids played outside, pushed our limits, fell out of trees and broke bits of ourselves – but we always healed, that’s what we learned. Get up. Dust yourself off. You’ll always heal.

Blue dragonflies float
On the breath of simple sheep.
I wrote a letter home

AprPAD Day 16 and 17

It’s National Poetry Writing Month, which explains the surge in activity. I’m following three different sites generating daily prompts. Writers’ Digest Poetic Asides, the National Poetry Writing Month website (NaPoWriMo) and my old friend, Walt, over at Gnomes. All of these pieces are drafts.



9 responses to “AprPAD Day 17”

  1. Catching crayfish sounds like more fun.

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  2. love this – and the blue dragonflies…

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  3. Misky, we grew up in the same era and wasn’t it wonderful? We didn’t need to be entertained–we knew how to entertain ourselves. I guess that’s why I still cherish those outdoor moments.

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  4. Lovely reminiscence – so good how it moves out into the afternoon and the world. The fantastic haiku takes it to another level, so I have to read it all one more time – the breath of simple sheep – indeed.

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  5. Those were the days when kids roamed free. Sounds wonderful and such fun. Love the way you started this. You had me laughing. A good write😊.

    Pat

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  6. Ah Misky….you’ve got me nostalgic this morning and smiling remembering spending hours up in a favorite neighbor’s tree…and riding my way too big 24 inch bike through backyard alleys with my best friend Junie…because in those days there weren’t all these tiny bikes to safely learn on. Love that your girlie thing was catching crayfish😊 Those were dragonfly magical days and we all lived through them looking out and up and able to talk to people instead of with sore thumbs and necks that will be malformed from looking down at devices! LOL!

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    1. Good old days those!

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