For one minute, walk outside, stand there, in silence, look up at the sky and contemplate how amazing life is.
Friends
28 December 2014
27 December 2014
Random shots taken at Christmas
As always we went out for Christmas dinner. This year there were six of us, too many for the usual, more sedate dining room that we usually go to. We were in the same hotel, though, and it was excellent ... from food to atmosphere.
It was brilliant getting together with our family.
It was brilliant getting together with our family.
A bit of a fuzzy picture but you can see how crowded it was! |
This little tot just had to bring his new aeroplane. |
Santa popped in at high speed. I was lucky to get a shot of his back! |
Table decoration ... very decorative, and high enough not to obscure people as they talked |
The food was excellent! |
Two days earlier it was our Wedding Anniversary. This is what I found when I woke
Joe had arranged the card and picture ready for me to see when I got up |
25 December 2014
MERRY CHRISTMAS ONE AND ALL
The scene
beyond the rustic garden gate was like a Christmas card. Outside the ivy laden
cottage a robin was perched in a holly bush. A recent snowfall covered the
thatched roof like oddly shaped clumps of cotton wool. Leaded light windows
reflected the orange flames from the fire. Beneath those windows, a wooden
wheelbarrow filled with logs. The bare
beech tree looked strangely out of place, dull brown when everything else was
highly coloured. The cottage door, as red as the holly berries, was adorned by
a festive wreath. The door was ajar and inside could be seen a Swedish Pine of
mammoth proportions ablaze with twinkling lights. And the aroma that emanated
from within was of turkey, slowly roasting.
In the
snow-packed lane, an elderly itinerant peered over the boundary hedge, white
unkempt hair wafting skywards in the biting wind. With ice-cold fingers he
smoothed it over his crown then pulled his shabby grey coat closer to his
chest. The motions were entirely mechanical for he was truly not conscious of
the cold. He had no need of fires or Christmas fare, for his soul was warmed through
with love for Jesus, who kept him safe and whose birthday they shared.
Merry Christmas to all my blogging friends
23 December 2014
IN HIS IGNORANCE (repeat)
St Paul's Cathedral, Birmingham |
IN HIS
IGNORANCE
Written by Valerie Daggatt for the Christmas Carol Service 2000
Copyright
2000
The sun shone on the frozen town, but it yielded no warmth to the boy
whose occupation was to construct a cave. Diligently, in the quiet churchyard,
he chiseled impacted snow with his boot, squatting occasionally to scoop
chippings with his bare hands. He could hear the choristers singing: Oh Come
All Ye Faithful. His favourite. Humming as he worked, he felt strangely
ashamed that he did not know the words, but then he had never been encouraged
to learn religious songs.
The Boy in his ignorance did not understand
Tiring of the pointless exercise, the boy adjusted his baseball cap.
Hungry and cold, he shoved his numb hands into his pockets and considered going
home, but the idea was discounted as quickly as it occurred. His Dad would be
on the Internet and he hated to be disturbed when he was surfing. It was all he
thought of, except when Sky Sport was on the telly. Christmas meant nothing to
him; there were too many mysteries for his liking.
The Boy, in his ignorance, did not understand
Nor did he understand his mother, who sang so joyfully before she
discovered drugs, and who believed the Millennium would be her salvation.
The boy, in his ignorance, did not understand.
A new carol began: We Three Kings of Orient Are. Leaning against
the edifice, the boy banged his heel and bounced his head in rhythm.
Suddenly, a shadow fell before him and he stiffened, fearful lest he was doing
wrong.
The man whose shadow the boy had seen, a bearded man in a grey robe,
came to stand in front of him. 'I am the Custodian,' he said in a gentle voice.
'Would you like to see our Christmas tableau?'
The boy remembered his father deriding the church's endeavours to
recreate the nativity. This was the modern age, how could they reproduce what
never existed?
The boy, in his ignorance, did not understand.
Feeling the first stirrings of inquisitiveness, a yearning suddenly to
see inside, the boy took the stranger's hand and allowed himself to be led
away.
Festooned with berry-laden holly, the church was alive with Christmas
atmosphere. There was a sweet smelling pine tree, shining with baubles and a
silver cross, but it was the nativity display that caught the boy's attention.
Viewed by hushed, reverent children, each one pointing to a thing of note, it
was as wondrous as fairyland. The wide-eyed boy crept nearer, wanting to touch
the blue-eyed baby in the straw-filled stall.
Without warning, from the depths of the church there came great crashes
of reverberating chords, followed by a more peaceful air.
And the congregation sang: Once in Royal David's City.
The boy, in his ignorance, did not understand the passion he felt or
the coursing tears as he joined in, humming when the lyrics eluded him.
Unwittingly, he stepped back, not wanting to disturb the sleeping babe, and
when the carol ended he turned and fled and did not halt until he reached the
outside.
The Custodian advanced towards him, smiling, gliding almost through
fresh snow. Not wanting to show his tears, the boy made off. It wasn't proper
to cry, his Dad said.
'Peace be with you, the man called.
'Thanks,' hurled back the boy, and he sprinted away leaving a trail of
footprints in his wake.
As he sped along, he reflected on the pleasant experience. He could
hardly wait to tell his Dad.
Peace be with you, the man had said, and the boy, in his wisdom,
understood.
20 December 2014
AWAY AT CHRISTMAS (repeat)
The magnolia-painted window-sill in the hotel bedroom was wide enough
for Hilary Barnes to sit with her legs drawn to her
chest, arms encircling her knees in a pose reminiscent of dreamy childhood
days. The room itself possessed a charm that reminded her of the house she grew
up in, but the view through the window was as bleak as her state of mind. It
was Ted's idea to come away for Christmas, declaring that their house would be
lonely and far too depressing. She was equally depressed here, even the virgin
snow shrouding the fields and hanging from the branches of an elderly oak did
nothing to cheer her. It only served to remind her of Greg 's
childhood love of coasting down the road on a makeshift sledge, annoying
neighbours with his spirited yells of pure joy.
‘I'll be home before you know it,’ he said when he rang to break the
news.
Would he? Or would he be maimed or killed.
She stared through the window, looking beyond her own reflection at the
white hedgerow where houses now glowed, transformed by fairy lights twinkling
in the descending gloom.
Christmas Eve. It wasn't a time for sadness, but how could she not be
sad when Greg's regiment was this very day flying to war zones, where God only knew
what might transpire. She ran a finger over a slat in the wooden shutter,
suddenly driven to check the whole thing for dust as though some sort of action
would make things right.
Then, for the first time, anger swelled within her and she pounded the
shutter with her fist. How dare they whisk a young man into danger without any
regard for his tender age. She sucked her knuckle, grateful for the hurt yet
moderately stronger for having released some of her fury. In the corridor, the
maid loaded her trolley with discarded glasses; remnants of celebrations. Hilary wiped her hand on her plaid skirt. Maybe
tomorrow would be better, by then Greg would be installed in new barracks.
However, no matter how long he was to serve there, she would never become
accustomed to her teenage son being in the firing line.
The snow fell steadily during the night and by morning the landscape was
an unsullied wonderland. Christmas Day. A day of celebration. A day to give
thanks for life's blessings.
Outside the hotel, Ted took her
arm, guided her down the drive, circling the frozen fish pond and passing
between barricades of newly-cleared snow until they reached a pair of wrought-iron
gates. Five minutes later they walked into the ancient parish church. It was alive
with the atmosphere of Christmas. The grey stone walls were festooned with
holly, an elaborately-carved pulpit decorated with berry-laden foliage. A
colossal Christmas tree dominated one corner, adorned with gold and silver
baubles, shimmering tinsel, and a gold star at the top. Hilary
could smell the pine even from where she stood. To the right of the tree,
reverent children viewed a glorious nativity display, quietly uttering ooh's
and ah's as each one pointed to something of note.
During the ceremony she joined in the carols and intently listened to
sermons and messages. She prayed with others for compassion, for liberation,
and good will, as well as for Greg and
his colleagues somewhere in a distant war-torn country.
With the closing carol sung, she felt in her pocket for her sheepskin
gloves. A few couples rose to depart, but the minister held up his hand and
they sat down again.
A small group advanced towards the altar as the minister announced that
a christening was to take place; he invited the congregation to attend. Hilary nudged Ted
and looked at him enquiringly. He nodded and smiled, and squeezed her hand.
The christening was soon over, a quiet service which could barely be
heard at the back. After a final hymn, the minister toured the entire church
with the child in his arms, her fingers clutching the stole around his neck,
her shawl draping the front of his surplice, her residence in his arms making
him beam with pride as he introduced her to everyone as Christine Beverley
Anne .
'How do you do,' Hilary said,
when it was her turn to be presented, automatically reaching out to move the
dribble-damp shawl from the baby's chin. Christine Beverley Anne transferred
her grip to the minister's immaculate surplice and, as the baby gurgled, Hilary
began privately to celebrate Christ's birth, as they were glorying in the birth
of this baby, as she and Ted did at the christening of their only child. In
that instant she knew that Greg would return unharmed. Through this small being
Jesus had decreed that it would be so.
Blindly, as the baby was carried away, charged with a sense of supreme
well-being Hilary groped for Ted's hand. 'All will be well,' she whispered as a
quivering smile crept over her face.
For the first time since Greg 's
worrying phone call, she felt happy. Not only that, she was suddenly hungry for
the Christmas festivities, the repast which the hotel predicted would be the
best ever tasted, the Queen's speech, a quiz before tea, and, later on, a
fancy-dress ball. Leaning sideways, she kissed Ted 's
cheek. 'Merry Christmas, my dear. And to Greg, too.'
18 December 2014
16 December 2014
Shopping at Christmas
I can’t go into a
store lately without buying something,
and by something I mean items of clothing. Blame it on the fact that I feel the
cold now and my normal winter woollies irritate the skin something awful.
Because of this I am looking round for tops that won’t cause great
uncontrollable itches. I’m now into long sleeved SILK vests which are not only
warm but comfortable too. I’m wondering why I didn’t think of them before.
Our tiny mall looks
very festive. There is music in most of the stores but outside musicians play for
money. Years ago they played for a penny-in-the-hat but we have to remember
inflation! Today there was a young man playing an accordion, Christmassy stuff
that had some passers-by dancing. Not me, these days I don’t dance in streets (or
anywhere else, for that matter) but I did do a sort of on-the-spot jig as I
approached him. He grinned when I dropped some coins in the hat and upped the
tempo so that a few younger folk joined in. It was nice to think I’d started
something. They all yelled Merry Christmas as I walked away, including the accordionist.
The grotto was less 'babyish' this year. Not sure I liked it! |
Would you believe the
only pictures I got were of the children’s grotto. Well, can you blame me when
I was loaded up with parcels? But I did get two new tops which is what I went
shopping for.
To make up for the
lack of personally taken pictures, I’ve included a selection taken by news
reporters when the area had a ‘switching on’ ceremony.
Why walk through the mall when you can grab a train ride? |
13 December 2014
THE ANNUAL CHECK-UP (repeat)
‘Have
you ever had an operation, dearie?’ croaked the old woman, her wizened fingers
meddling with a black chiffon scarf.
Annabel
looked at her in astonishment, more for her boldness in speaking to a stranger
than the question itself.
The
woman inched along the green bench until Annabel felt her bony elbows touching
hers. She could smell her age, that fusty smell of old bones and looming death.
The colourless, egg-shaped face, framed by silver-white hair, was strangely
familiar.
‘I’d
like to hear about your operation,’ the woman said.
Had
she to have one herself? wondered Annabel. Was she het up because of it? Idly,
she surveyed her surroundings. Two bowler-hatted men strode towards the
reception desk. A nurse with a clipboard escorted a man on crutches. On the
benches, injured toddlers whimpered into the comforting breasts of anxious
mothers, and not much braver adults sat in stony silence, waiting. The woman’s
question was probably fairly normal, considering where they were.
It
would be something to do while she waited and it might be amusing to humour her
and list her medical experiences. Like the one where that brute of a doctor dug
out an ingrowing toenail, or the harrowing extraction of her third wisdom tooth
which had wrapped its roots around its neighbouring molar, necessitating a
drilling process guaranteed to put her off dentists for life. Then there was
that glorious out-of-body experience when she gave birth to Kim , whose foot was wedged in her ribcage and caused
such excruciating pain that she fled her physical form entirely unaided for
half an hour.
Annabel
studied the old woman sitting beside her. A harridan of minute proportions,
craggy chin, heavily lined brow, and intensely blue eyes which seemed capable
of scanning a body like an X-ray machine. Perhaps she was an x-ray machine.
Perhaps she had grown a heart overnight and been cast out of the department as
useless. Given the sack, so to speak. Whatever she was, she was uncannily
familiar.
A
man in a white coat pushed an empty gurney through the rubber flaps which
served as doors. A stethoscope hung from his top pocket. Annabel ’s
nose wrinkled as the smell of ether wafted in her direction. Quite like old
times, she thought, evoking the event which had the most impact on her life.
*****
Now
that she had decided to relate her story, Annabel was tempted to ask the
woman’s name, but in the end she felt perhaps it was better not to know.
Examining
her fingernails, she speculated about where to begin. Her tale could be classed
as an accidental incident rather than one of a medical nature, although a
surgical procedure might well have been carried out had there been enough time.
The action took place this very day, long ago. It was enough to say it occurred
on her fortieth birthday. The year was irrelevant.
Andrew
had taken her to a bell-ringing contest to celebrate. Celebrate! There was
nothing to celebrate in that dismal hall with those disgracefully ragged drapes
covering the windows and teams of bell-ringers incessantly brandishing brassy
bells by their wooden handles, coloured streamers fluttering in their wake. Up
and down, up and tediously down.
Annabel
shuddered as she remembered the rancour which flooded through her and the
accusation she was tempted to fling at him: If you thought this was my idea of
fun, you were sadly mistaken. Fortunately, Andrew
sensed her disquiet and suggested they leave. Thank God, she mutely cried, not
really wanting to upset he who had not yet produced her birthday present and
who must, for the time being be kept sweet.
Kim
was waiting outside, leaning against the wooden panels from which the cheerless
hut was constructed. Annabel had been
surprised to see her daughter dressed in her best blue trouser-suit, wearing the
lovely perfume Andrew bought at
Christmas. Gardenia, she thought. These days Annabel
had difficulty remembering precise details like which scent it was, though she
did recall that Kim ’s blonde hair was
swept into a French pleat with not a single securing pin in sight. Kim was very clever at disguising things. Even her
love was hard to find. Annabel sniffed
and swallowed hard, knowing she would never find it now.
Kim
was idly swinging a set of keys which glinted in the light of the hut’s swaying
lantern. Annabel briefly wondered why
her daughter was dangling them in front of her when they were not her keys.
‘Your
car, Madam,’ Andrew proudly announced.
Annabel
remembered those words as if they had been uttered only yesterday and she
recollected the joy she felt when she saw the bright orange Beetle parked at
the kerb. Beetles were her favourite cars in all the world, prompting thoughts
of Howard, that wonderful man who took her virginity on the leather-covered
back seat.
‘It’s
yours,’ Andrew said, tossing back a wayward lock of mousy-brown hair. Taking
the keys from Kim , he placed them in Annabel ’s hand and curled her fingers over them.
‘Happy birthday, darling.’
*****
She
vowed the driving seat had been moulded especially for her, though the pedals
were a distance away. She strained her slender ankles to reach them, smiling at
Andrew who sat in the passenger seat. Kim had by that time gone home.
Pausing
briefly to brush her dark fringe from her brow, Annabel imperceptibly shook her
head at the crystal-clear image of that night. She moistened her dry lips so
that she could continue.
She
had driven Andrew to the restaurant where they were to have dinner and where
they imbibed much champagne. It was, after all, a celebration of her forthieth
birthday. Afterwards she drove home in the rain, the pair of them singing
country and western songs as loudly as they could. Annabel
got so carried away she let go the wheel and waved her arms above her head.
The
car skidded on the greasy road and careered into a telegraph pole. Momentarily,
she saw a woman’s face through the window, timeworn and ashen with fear, her
mouth widening into a scream. Her black scarf fluttered as the screen abruptly
shattered into a fog of tiny fractures. The image had tormented her ever since.
It
took two hours to release her broken body from the tangled wreck. Andrew was lucky to have been thrown clear. Long
after he and the elderly victim had been carted off to hospital, firemen worked
steadily and untiringly to free her from what remained of the birthday gift,
operating their cutting equipment proficiently and with no time to lose. Even
in her distressing incapacitation she could not help being impressed by their
strength. She felt comforted by the efficient way they worked and watched trance-like
as they carefully removed the metal covering and exposed her body to the rain.
*****
‘A disastrous
end to your birthday, ‘ observed the old woman.
‘It
certainly was,’ replied Annabel, looking round on the off-chance she might see
Andrew or Kim.
‘I
imagine you were glad when it was all over.’
Annabel
laughed. ‘You could say that.’
The
woman knowingly nodded. She adjusted the bag on her lap and hooked a hand
through the strap. Then her brow puckered and she inclined her head to one
side. ‘But wasn’t there an operation?’ she asked.
Annabel’s
reply was gruff. ‘It wasn’t necessary.’
‘As
with me.’ Easing herself to the edge of the bench, the woman struggled to her
feet. tottering slightly with the exertion.
Annabel
shot up in order to steady her, cautioning her to be careful not to fall. An
appreciative expression was etched on the pallid, elliptical face.
Flattening
her copious grey skirts to her side, the woman gave Annabel a toothy grin. ‘I’m
glad you told me ,’ she said, and went on to ask if Annabel was waiting for
someone.
‘Not
really,’ Annabel remarked. ‘I come once a year to make sure nothing was
overlooked. An annual check-up, you might say.’
Livid
weals appeared on the woman’s face as she scratched the diaphanous skin with grimy
nails, giving the appearance of having been slashed by something sharp, like a
knife or a piece of glass. ‘Strange I haven’t seen you before,’ she said. She
began to fidget, her arms restless at her side, fingers meddling with her
skirt. An agonised frown etched her forehead,
yet when she spoke again her voice was calm. ‘My mission has long been
the search for truth.’ Laying a gnarled hand on Annabel ’s
shoulder, she added, ‘Now that I have it I am grateful, though gratitude is
perhaps an ill-suited sentiment in view of that you did.’
So
it was her, thought Annabel, the unknown casualty. All these years being
haunted by that anaemic countenance, yet she failed to recognise it when they
met. What on earth could she say? Was an apology enough? Indeed would an
apology be accepted? She was about to attempt some kind of justification for
what happened that night when the old woman spoke again.
‘Don’t
fret about the accident. You did me a great service, as it transpired, since
the cancer would have been a sight more painful.’ Fiddling with the ragged
scarf, she peered at the clock on the magnolia painted wall. Bustling clerks
and nurses tidied the place ready for the next day’s batch of emergency
patients. Gripping her capacious black bag, the old lady stepped away from the
hospital bench.
Annabel
queried if she was leaving.
‘As
soon as my hearse arrives. It’s late, as usual.’
‘You
can share mine,’ offered Annabel. ‘Mine’s invariably early.’
THE END
11 December 2014
A smile, a moan, and a groan
09 December 2014
Red sky in the morning...
Red sky at night, shepherds delight
Red sky in the morning, shepherds warning
At least that's the version of the old rhyme that I know best.
There is another one about sailors taking a red morning sky as a warning
I found the following on here
The saying is very old and quite likely to have been passed on by word of mouth for some time before it was ever written down. There is a written version in Matthew XVIin the Wyclif Bible, from as early as 1395:
"The eeuenynge maad, ye seien, It shal be cleer, for the heuene is lijk to reed; and the morwe, To day tempest, for heuen shyneth heuy, or sorwful."
The Authorised Version gives that in a more familiar form:
"When it is evening, ye say, It will be fair weather: for the sky is red. And in the morning, It will be foul weather to day: for the sky is red and louring."
There are many later citations of the saying in literature, including this from Shakespeare, in Venus & Adonis, 1593:
"Like a red morn, that ever yet betoken'd wreck to the seaman - sorrow to shepherds."
So, that's where it originated, but why?
As a matter of interest I ventured forth in nightdress and dressing gown just to capture these pictures. The temperatures were low enough for me to think it was freezing ... it certainly felt like it.
Oh the things I do to get blogging material!
06 December 2014
Cones for Christmas
I am useless at identifying certain trees. Even internet searches don't help. There are so many varieties plus the fact that female trees often differ to males. A bit like humans, when you think about it! The above picture is a Fir ... although (apparently) that name covers all sorts of pine and other varieties. It is a dominant tree at the end of my garden ... I just call it the Christmas tree for I feel sure it was planted after a festive season of years gone by. It is huge and appears to be trying hard to reach the heavens. The cones are lovely (see next picture) and the squirrel only wrecks an occasional one when he needs to sharpen his teeth. They are quite decorative (the cones, not the Squirrel's teeth) round about Christmas time.
The next picture shows a tree that is one of many lining one side of the garden. They belong to our neighbour but we get the benefit on our side of the fence. The birds hang out in these trees because of their close proximity to their feeding station. Anything to oblige! The name of this tree is also a mystery. For years I thought it was a white cedar but when I checked on the internet I couldn't find a white cedar that looked like ours.
As you can see this also has cones. Tiny ones that turn brown in winter. I have in the past decorated the house with sprays of greenery while the cones are fresh. They make the house smell wonderful and very Christmassy. I might fill a few vases this year since it's a lot easier than hanging Christmas decorations.
04 December 2014
SKY SHOTS
Autumn Scene These pictures are mine... the info is from the Met Office In the days before weather forecasts, people often turned to sayings and proverbs to provide an indication of what tomorrow's weather might bring. |
"Red sky at night, shepherd's delight. Red sky in the morning, shepherd's warning" first appeared in the bible in the Gospel of Matthew. It is an old weather saying often used at sunrise and sunset to signify the changing sky and originally known to help the shepherds prepare for the next day's weather. Despite there being global variations in this saying such as "Red sky at night, sailors delight. Red sky in morning, sailors warning", the scientific understanding behind such occurrences remain the same.
A red sky appears when dust and small particles are trapped in the atmosphere by high pressure. This scatters blue light and leaving only red light to give the sky its notable appearance.
A red sky at sunset means high pressure is moving in from the west so therefore the next day will usually be dry and pleasant. "Red sky in the morning, shepherds warning" means a red sky appears due to the high pressure weather system having already moved east meaning the good weather has passed, most likely making way for a wet A red sky at sunset means high pressure is moving in from the west so therefore the next day will usually be dry and pleasant. "Red sky in the morning, shepherds warning" means a red sky appears due to the high pressure weather system having already moved east meaning the good weather has passed, most likely making way for a wet and windy low pressure system.windy low pressure system.
There will be frost in the morning
I'll worry about that then...
...in the meantime, let me enjoy this wonderful sky!
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