Night [Free Verse]

DAILY PHOTO: 85 Sky Tower from Singuang Riverside Park

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Photograph of Kaohsiung, Taiwan's 85 Sky Tower, taken from Singuang Riverside Park.

PROMPT: Best Excuse

Daily writing prompt
What is the best excuse you have heard lately?

“I was tossed by a bison.”

Steam City [Haiku]

the city steams
after Summer rains
sweep through.

Relentless [Free Verse]

DAILY PHOTO: Waterfall & Mossy Rock

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Photograph of water falling around mossy rocks. Taken on Seoul's Namsan greenspace.

PROMPT: Who We Are?

Daily writing prompt
Do you think we’re shaped more by our experiences or by who we are?

Is a salad lettuce or is it tomato? [It’s both, yet it’s neither. It’s an amalgam that cannot be spun out into component parts any more than one can pluck a solitary fart out of a football stadium — i.e. the fart, the whole fart, and nothing but the fart.]

It sounds like this is meant to be a restatement of the nature versus nurture question, though I’m not sure I understand the question. I would argue that it presents a false dichotomy. Who is one (if not an experience-having machine?) I can’t answer because I think the question assumes a simplification that doesn’t exist in the real world.

I’ve just been reading David Brooks’ book, How to Know a Person, in which he offers a relevant quote from Aldous Huxley: “Experience is not what happens to you, it’s what you do with what happens to you.” I can’t say whether Huxley was entirely correct, but I believe that how one experiences what happens to one is inseparable from who one is. (Also instructive is Brooks’ definition of a person as a point of view.)

Reading Clouds [Haiku]

at rest on a hill,
clouds form & shift shapes;
i read their story.

Hoosier Discovers the Deluge at a Distance [Free Verse]

I’ve been caught in
many a sudden downpour.

And I’ve been warned by
the sweet scent of corn,
swept in though a
screen door,
or over the pasture.

But nothing in my flatland youth
prepared me to look down upon
the underside of a cloud —
to see its neatly-edged opaque
wall, defining the area
of deluge.

It wasn’t until much later that I’d
see the massive cloud columns
rising above the base layer
of a cloud floor —
warmly lit as seen from a
jetliner, though I knew it must
be brutally gray to
ground-dwellers.

The deluge closes slowly,
and yet I can’t escape it.

Know the Weather [Free Verse]