Write and Change the World ~ D. Wallace Peach

Reblogged from Myths of the Mirror:

A replay of a post from 2015. Amidst all the unpredictability today, a few things are entirely within our control, and one of them is kindness. ❤
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JeffersonMost of us have days filled with small acts of kindness. We smile, kiss hurt elbows, throw tennis balls for our dogs. We pay for a coworker’s coffee and leave a big tip. We call a friend in need, chauffeur teenagers, cook a favorite meal, or pick up ice cream on the way home. These small invisible acts often go unacknowledged, but they travel around in overlapping circles, keep our lives balanced and relationships healthy. We see the results in strengthened bonds, deeper commitment, and abiding love.

Continue reading at Myths of the Mirror

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Wistful Hope ~ Alethea Kehas #writephoto

Hope took a deep breath and inhaled the sky. Fear slid behind her into the recesses of Night as New Day slipped over the land. A land long-troubled by the burden of Misuse and Misunderstanding.

As she stood atop the hill, Hope thought about the green spreading over the barren patches of earth. A sense of wistful longing took hold of her heart and she smiled. It had been a long time since she had smiled. Even longer since she had laughed. Yet, beneath her feet, Hope now felt a tingling. The Earth was waking her children. It was subtle, but Hope knew it to be Life stirring through the Long Darkness.

Continue reading at  The Light Behind the Story

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One Last Wistful Look ~ Iain Kelly #writephoto

One last wistful look at the mist on the hillside before I go.

A deep breath in, filling my lungs with the fresh air. It is quiet, only the birdsong breaks the silence.

No one else is around this early in the morning. Others will come later for their turn.

Continue reading at Iain Kelly

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Where power lies ~ Reena Saxena #writephoto

it’s not just the rocks
worlds look desolate today
hiding somewhere there

the Sun is up
but carries no cheer
from previous sojourns

Continue reading at Reena Saxena

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Spotted #midnighthaiku

Miniature marvels

Unseen through cold winter’s night

Take flight in the sun

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Juliet Greenwood Interviews Judith Barrow, author of The Memory

Reblogged from Juliet Greenwood:. You can also read a review of Judith‘s new book, The Memory, from Sally Cronin at Smorgasbord.

Today I’d like to welcome to the blog Judith Barrow, whose new novel ‘The Memory’ is published by Honno Press on Thursday March 19th 2020. I’ve loved Judith’s Howarth trilogy of historical family sagas, so I wanted to ask her about this new departure in her writing.


Many people have asked what was the inspiration for The Memory and my answer is always memories: memories of being a carer for two of my aunts who lived with us, memories of losing a friend in my childhood; a friend who, although at the time I didn’t realise, was a Downs’ Syndrome child. But why I actually started to write the story; a story so different from my other four books, I can’t remember. Because it was something I’d begun years ago and was based around the journal I’d kept during that decade of looking after my relatives.

But what did begin to evolve when I settled down to writing The Memory was the realisation of why I’d been so reluctant to delve too far into the manuscript. The isolation, the loneliness, that Irene Hargreaves, the protagonist, endures; despite being married to Sam, her loving husband, dragged up my own feelings of being alone so much as a child. That awareness of always being on the outside; looking in on other families, relationships and friendships had followed me; had hidden deep inside my subconscious. And, as a contented wife and mother, with steady enduring friendships, it unsettled me.

Continue reading at Juliet Greenwood

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Wistful ~ Sadje #writephoto


The morning run had become a barometer for her days. If this went well, the day usually followed the pattern.

With the necessity of staying and working from home, it was essential to follow a routine. And starting the day with a run, preferably early enough to avoid meeting a lot of people, was the way to do it.

Continue reading at Keep it Alive

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Several shades of grey…

One from the archives… as the poem seems to be running though my mind a lot at the moment…

It is one of those soggy, nondescript days that England is so good at. Chilly, but not cold for the time of year, drizzling miserably rather than raining. A uniformly grey day where all colour seems leeched away by the minimal light.  The dog took one look at it from the door and with a glance that plainly said, “Yeah, right…” retreated under the table and left me to walk to the village shop alone.

I can’t say I blame her. The damp pervades everything. The trees seem to claw at the clouds with skeletal fingers seeking the hidden sun. Even the birds are quiet this morning and the only sound is the distant roar of traffic dully queuing to take people to work in jobs most of them would probably rather not be doing.

And yet….

As I walked through the morning gloom, I wondered just how many shades of grey there are? The soft silver of the mist in the trees, the bright argent of the regiment of raindrops on the washing line, the cold steel of wet bitumen…

And then there are the primroses raising hopes of spring, nestling in tiny oases of emerald. Geranium leaves that flame scarlet and gold with tenacious glory. Bright berries punctuate the evergreens and the sky comes down to play, mirrored in the puddles.

Looking up the roiling clouds paint a shifting landscape, another country where one could wander amid the mountains and lakes in search of the sun. Bark and branch take on colours never seen in the dry days of summer, rich in texture, sparkling with reflected glimmers, capturing the light and letting it illuminate the shadows.

promise of springWinter is a breaking time, a time when all that has served its purpose withers and dies, but even in this catabolic orgy there is strength and beauty, purpose and perfection. Lost leaves blanket the ground, protecting the burgeoning seed, feeding the earth that feeds the bare-handed trees above. It is in this apparent decay and destruction that spring is born, growing silently and softly, unseen…hinting at glories soon to come.

The contrast reminds me of when I was a little girl, growing up in a city where the ‘dark, satanic mills’ stood in stark contrast to the wide empty moors I love. My mother taught me a poem. I have never known its author, but the words have remained with me.

Man’s life is laid in the Loom of Time

To a pattern he does not see,

While the Weaver works and the shuttles fly

Till the dawn of eternity.

Some shuttles are filled with silver threads

And some with threads of gold,

While often but the darker hues

Are all that they may hold.

But the Weaver watches with skillful eye

Each shuttle fly to and fro,

And sees the pattern so deftly wrought

As the loom moves sure and slow.

God surely planned the pattern:

Each thread, the dark and fair,

Is chosen by His master skill

And placed in the web with care.

He only knows its beauty

And guides the shuttles which hold

The threads so unattractive,

As well as the threads of gold.

Not till each loom is silent,

And the shuttles cease to fly,

Shall God reveal the pattern

And explain the reason why

The dark threads were as needful

In the Weaver’s skillful hand

As the threads of gold and silver

For the pattern which He planned.

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Thursday photo prompt: Wistful #writephoto

First in this week…

pensitivity101's avatarpensitivity101

For visually challenged writers, Sue’simage shows the early morning mists rising over an empty moorland scene beneath a soft pink sky.
The moors give up her morning tears,
Wistful in their promise of a new day,
Lilacs and pinks blend in the sky,
The sun will soon show a tentative ray.
What lies in store for those who wait,
Some still sleepy in their beds,
Spring is blooming bright and pure
As flowers raise their tender heads.
Birds herald the dawning light
Their song pure and crystal clear,
Wistful in the promise of a new day,
The moors give up her morning tears.

Written for Sue Vincent’s Write Photo challenge

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Thursday photo prompt: Wistful #writephoto

writephoto-logoWelcome to this week’s writephoto prompt.

You can find all last week’s entries in the weekly round-up, which was published earlier today.

Throughout the week, I will feature as many of the responses here on the Daily Echo as time and space allows, usually in the order in which they are submitted.

Please be aware that I may be away from the computer for a few days, so responses may not be immediate this time.

All posts will be featured in the weekly round-up on Thursday 2nd April, linking back to the original posts of contributors.

Use the image below as inspiration to create a post on your own blog… poetry, prose, humour… light or dark, whatever you choose, as long as it is fairly family-friendly.

Submit your link by noon (GMT)  Wednesday 1st April.

Link back to this post with a pingback (Hugh has an excellent tutorial here)  and/or leave a link in the comments below, to be included in the round-up.

Use the #writephoto hashtag in your title so your posts can be found.

There is no word limit and no style requirements, except that your post must take inspiration from the image and/or the prompt word in the title of the post.

Feel free to use #writephoto logo or include the prompt photo in your post if you wish, or you may replace it with one of your own to illustrate your work.

By participating in the #writephoto challenge, please be aware that your post may be featured as a reblog on this blog and I will link to your post for the round-up each week.

Regular contributors are also welcome to come over as my guest and introduce themselves (click here for details).

Please note: As I do not share my political opinions on this blog, please do not use the challenge as a platform from which to share yours. Party political or racially offensive posts will not be reblogged.

This week’s prompt ~ Wistful

For visually challenged writers, the image shows the early morning mists rising over an empty moorland scene beneath a soft pink sky.

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