Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Happy Days, Part Two

In honour of the month November
Photography and Poetry
&
Ordinary Days, Life in Suburbia
&
Posted in response to The Clinic-Photo Rehab hosted by Lucile De Godoy

tue-1

“The dog doesn’t know the difference between Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, so I have to walk the dog early those days too” Donna Shalala

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Happy Days, Part Two

Tired Tuesday?
Keeping darkness at bay

Light snow in the early morning hours
Maybe later some hail and rain showers

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday

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tue-3    tue-4

tue-5    tue-7

tue-8    tue-6

tue-9    tue-10

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Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Happy Days, Part One

In honour of the month November
Photography and Poetry
&
Ordinary Days, Life in Suburbia
&
Posted in response to The Clinic-Photo Rehab hosted by Lucile De Godoy
1

“The dog doesn’t know the difference between Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, so I have to walk the dog early those days too” Donna Shalala

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Happy Days, Part One

Mundane Monday?
No, not today

Snow, snow and then some
What more is yet to come?

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday

3

2     5    8

4    9

7

Writing 101, Day Fourteen: Recreate a single day

In honour of the month November
&
Ordinary Days: A one week series with ordinary day photos and happenings (if any 😉 )
&
Photography and Poetry

&

Writing 101, Day Fourteen: Recreate a single day

Setting limits on your writing can be both liberating and productive, as you may have noticed in Day 1’s timed free-write and yesterday’s word count exercise. Let’s incorporate a different restriction: write a post that takes place during one single day.

It might seem hard, at first, to tell a compelling story with such a limited temporal horizon: you have no recourse to flashbacks, backstory, or foreshadowing (unless it’s in reference to something about to take place that same day). But the narrow confines of one single day will encourage you to zoom in on rich, telling details.

But remember: recreating a single day doesn’t automatically mean describing every detail. This assignment is very much about editing — and focusing on the right details.

How will you use 24 hours as your story’s canvas? Here are examples:

* Start in the middle of the action, then zig and zag through time, from the moment you woke up to the last thing that happened before you retired for the night.

* Structure your story as a play-by-play (or hour-by-hour) account, complete with precise time markers.

* Zoom in even further, limiting yourself to just one hour of your chosen day.

* Ignore these instructions and reveal one day’s significance indirectly, through focusing on its aftermath

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“Heroes are ordinary people who make themselves extraordinary” Gerard Way

Writing 101, Day Fourteen: Recreate a single day

For this particular assingment, I decided to go with a completely different approach. I have kind of had a head start for the overall idea of “recreating a single day” since Monday.

I am running a trial of posts this under the theme of “Ordinary Days”, where I am capturing the events of the day in few simple sentences accompanied by daily photos taken during each day. The trial itself was a good idea, unfortunately my life, as it turns out is filled with more work than ever! But still, well worth the while the effort 😉

Maybe Friday will bring a change, since it is after, fabulous!

Please find related posts of the same:
Monday, 16th of November
Tuesday, 17th of November
Wednesday, 18th of November, Part One
Wednesday, 18th of November, Part Two
Thursday, 19th of November, Part One
Thursday, 19th of November, Red

And watch out for today’s post for Fabulous Friday

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Tuesday, 17th of November

In honour of the month November
&
Ordinary Days: A one week series with ordinary day photos and happenings (if any 😉 )
&
Photography and Poetry
&
Posted in response to The Clinic-Photo Rehab hosted by Lucile De Godoy

really-early-morning

“Why does February feel like one big Tuesday?” Todd Stocker

Tuesday, 17th of November

Today, Tuesday

Really early morning
I woke up
Showered
Today, home office day
Looked out the window
It was pouring and dark
Snapped a few pics

Worked some more
Had a snack break
It was still raining
Snapped a few pics

Worked some more
Had a coffee break
The weather cleared
Snapped a few pics

Working day ended
Drove to water aerobics
The sun was setting
Painting the sky red
Odd, it would show up
A little before disappearing
Snapped a few pics

Drove back home
Posted some blogs
Went to sleep
Dreaming of tomorrow

It will be Wednesday…

early-morning-1

daytime-2    daytime

morning    really-early-morning-2    after-sunset

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Just another Tuesday

Poetry and Photography

keilasatama

“I don’t want it good. I want it Tuesday” Jack Warner

Just another Tuesday

Early wake up call
Sets the rolling of the ball
Day is about to begin
Also for this Finn
Driving into traffic
Nothing too terrific
Reaching the office
Exchanging a little gossip
And having a mild smirk
Before diving into work

When the lunch bell tolls
It is time to haul
That rigid body for a break
And knock out the aches
Leave that work console
Go on a little stroll
Down by the pier
The sunlight revere
Survey your surroundings
Before returning to the boundaries
Of the office

the-harbour-2

waters-surface-2    dream-view    waters-surface-1

lift-house-reflections

motor-vehicle       shadow-selfie-duo

end-of-the-day

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