After every hateful instance, every hair-ripping dose of fury, there are those quiet moments; ones that remind us that underneath it all, there’s some deep fantastical melody; some deep, benevolent wellspring.

After all the horror and strife is said and done, we’ll be okay.  I know it.  🙂


Comments

17 responses to “Musings”

  1. Hey, are you ok? Are you writing for a well of fire and fury or is this based on the past? I hope the quiet moments for all, are long and extended.

    1. Wherever my mind goes! Sorry if it gets dark, but know that I’m a sucker and firm believer in They (Lived?) Happily Ever After. In contrast, I confess to liking those dark middles that make the ends shine brighter.

      1. Phew! There is no light without darkness – carry on. You write emotively and I can feel
        Pain and heat… You got me…haha…seriously try poetry…you can pack
        A punch with just a few
        Choice words…my imagination went on overdrive. We writers do
        Have to take care of our own though…so I don’t apologise.

      2. Poetry would drive me craaaAAAAZZZY!!! Haha! The thing is, when I write stories, I can get away with mistakes here and there, but poetry (because of the length) I feel like each word has to be perfectly fitted. So as much as editing story drives me nuts, I think poetry would drive me nuts-er!

      3. lol – so the crusader refuses the challenge… Only
        Kidding… Your writing is colourful and energetic that is more
        Exciting than ‘overthought’ words. I haven’t read Echo yet…I’m
        Saving that honour for a day when I don’t feel insecure about my own writing. It’s your own fault the blogs of your book are written so well that I feel I need a little courage and need to
        Finish my stuff first. I
        Never said I wasn’t a coward.

      4. If procrastination on reading Echo drives you to refine the spirit of your own writing then I hope you never read my work! 🙂

      5. That’s generous of you…
        I intend to read the two books in May…I’m I tri

      6. Ok, thanks Ameeta! Fair warning-they have the same themes as my musings, but they are pretty dark and violent. Fair warning, haha! 🙂

      7. May might have turned to April because I’m tired of my characters skirting the use of them because they don’t always have human limbs.

  2. Ooooooh…I love that fantasy! Would that it were so.

    1. Who’s to say what’s fantasy and what’s simply a false conclusion based on a shortened perspective? 🙂

  3. I believe that a fantasy can be erroneous. Santa Claus?

    1. Perhaps, but the very definition of “fantasy” is a logical extension of accepting commonly believed premises. Now whose to say that the premise is true or false? Science is still unsure, and is working to prove what root premises give cause to reality. Indeed, the Universe could have just been created. I understand that as a matter of practicality, we must accept certain premises as true, but really at their heart, whose to say that the logical extension of fantasy is erroneous or not?

  4. Hmmmmmn…

  5. Surely not me!

    1. And me neither, haha! I think the art of living comes from acting with the conviction of certainty, yet being adaptable with the fluidity of uncertainty.

  6. Right!

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