Once
There was nothing more.
It built into nothing more
Than astonishing.
© Nadia Brown
Once
There was nothing more.
It built into nothing more
Than astonishing.
© Nadia Brown
Well, this is cool. The Yellow Chair Review is a lovely online literary journal that publishes poetry, fiction, and nonfiction on a quarterly basis. Check it out! I am absolutely honoured to have one of my stories included in their latest Issue. You can read it here, if you like.
Here’s to a positive, creative, and productive day!
Words, unspoken,
Stain these hours
With a faintly marbled hue.
© Nadia Brown
Photo from Wallpaperfolder.com
The strangest of days
Emit a light
Not soon forgotten.
Hanging in the air
The sweet, raw smells of harvest
Fading in the sun
© Nadia Brown
Farm and country – and all the smells, textures, sounds that go along with them – are my happy place. Born and raised in the city, the constrained bustle of it has always felt confining; it’s never been ‘home’.
Thank you, Sonya, for this 3 Line Tales weekly photo prompt!
Photo by Emiel Molenaar, who has some gorgeous photos on his website!!
Fractured cowardice
Frayed edges of inertia
Dangling in the wind.
© Nadia Brown
There was always such exquisiteness in leaving; an aching tug that rose from the depths and made her smile against her will. She hesitated on the dock, boarding pass in hand, discerning the clinking buoys beneath the pier from the steady hum of the ferry’s engine. If she closed her eyes, she could feel the water tugging against the pier from below. The gentleness of wave against wood belied the force with which it would spit the dock from its moorings and send it ass over tea kettle into the Pacific. If it wanted to. For a moment, she stood in awe at the raw power she rarely questioned. The ocean that could silence a pier, a vessel, a life – lapped with a calm indifference at her feet. It was the indifference, she decided, that kept her coming back. Not this time. This time, she’d brought her things -and left him sleeping in a cloud of his own stupor.
Without a word, she settled her bag around her shoulders and headed to the ramp to board. Soon, the clinking of the buoys would fade amidst the chatter of morning commuters, disappearing completely as she waited in line to purchase her return.
© Nadia Brown
Check out 100 words or less‘s weekly “3 Line Tales” weekly photo prompt. Join in the fun!
Photo by Charlie Hang
Yay! Thank you, Dutch goes the photo! for this great photo challenge. Let’s live it up with some colour! Living in a part of the world where the seasons change in dramatic and extreme fashion, we in Ontario are very attuned to and appreciative of the swings of colour in our environment. So, of course, I had to throw in a couple of my favourite Autumn pictures. Fall in this part of the world is spectacular. It is like walking through a dreamscape; one can’t quite believe it’s real. And, just to support that theory, it is gone before we know it, replaced by greys and browns, and sprinkled with white. Sometimes, if we’re lucky, a few flurries fall while the colours are still vibrant, and it is absolutely incredible to see. I don’t have a good camera, but I did capture one of those moments this past fall, and have included it here…Enjoy!
Layers of colour
Patterns folded in the past –
Unsettled echoes.
© Nadia Brown
All these things I haven’t done, packed neatly into their dark, square drawers. Cramped and contained, awaiting their turn. One thing at a time, my teachers always said. Patience! Gently! Too many at once and the whole system topples. Follow the system; follow the priorities.
I tap tap tap the little squares. Gently, in rhythm. Like a metronome. Tap tap tap, as though they were piano keys. Softly, my piano teacher used to say. Gently – imagine you have boneless hands. And my boneless heels tap tap the rhythm – until all the things I haven’t done are flying wild and free. Staccato! The music said. Presto agitato! Which I do think means a good swift kick.
© Nadia Brown
Check out 3 Lines Tales weekly photo challenge , hosted by Sonya at 100 Words or Less. Join in!!
Photo by Rosan Harmens