1. Do you have a favorite quote from a book, poem, movie, or other source?
    1. What is the quote and why is it your favorite?
    2. Like Margaret Roxby, write an imagined conversation with the person/character who produced the quote.
  2. Do you have a favorite food memory from childhood?
    1. Why was it your favorite? Is it still?
    2. Maybe your memory is a hated food. Why? Do you still hate it?
  3. The Holocaust is remembered this month. Prejudices seem to abound in this world.
    1. Have you ever encountered prejudice, either personally or as a witness? Tell us about the experience.
    2. What are your thoughts about the holocaust or perhaps a holocaust museum?

 

A hummingbird flits about

In my head.

The whirr of its flight disturbs

My lazy thoughts.

 

Get going. The day is already waning.

Says the bird.

 

The breeze from its busy wings

Tries in vain to shuffle

My riff-raff out,

Cleaning house, as it were.

I open my eye to see the sun

just beginning

Its rise in the east.

 

Hurry, hurry, there’s no time to waste.

The day is already waning.

 

“Quiet, little bird,” I answer in return.

“There is nothing that needs doing

That I want to do.

Be quiet, little bird.”

 

Rush, rush. There’s so little time.

Get going.

The day is already waning.

 

There will be no quieting

This fervent worker

Busy from dawn to night,

No relief from its urgency.

 

Get going.

The day is already waning.

 

With lumbering limbs, I rise,

Beginning my list of things to do.

“Quiet, little bird.

Sing your song somewhere else.

Let me do my work

Without your noise.”

 

Get going.

The day is already waning.

 

#JustDoItDay

#January24

 

Through fifty years

Of joys and sorrows

Of happy days

And promising tomorrows

Through many hours

Of sweetness calm and peace

And many other with surcease

Of frustration and stress

The story of your marriage

Is truly God blessed

For “working together

Is the true success”!

 

#WorldNationalSpousesDay

#January26

 

My cousin came to stay because she had no choice. Child of divorce she came to us when her father’s job took him to far away Arabia, and her mother had no home yet to offer. She came with anger and frustrated dreams. But because of her coming I learned about the wonder of cocoa in the middle of the night.

Cocoa, made with sugar and Hershey powder, milk simmering on the stove; brown seal skimmed off the top; and a large marshmallow floating, melting like a soft warm lollipop slippery on the tongue, savored between sips of sweet, sweet cocoa. Cocoa with a sharp tang that does not come with the quick spoon-in mixes.

Cocoa and sitting at the kitchen table long after we should be asleep. Sitting together while everyone else is probably sound asleep. Sitting in the chilly cocoa-warm kitchen: Mommy, my cousin/for-always-sister, and me. Sitting while my mommy talked to my cousin/sister and helped her with her rage.

I had so much. To her, it was not fair, and in the middle of the night she would kick. Kick her sister that was not, kick at what she did not understand, and could not have, would never have. If she kicked hard enough, or long enough, I got mad because she would not let me sleep. Getting up, I stumbled down the hall into my parents’ room to complain. Then Mommy would come and take us to the kitchen and fix that cocoa.

Cocoa never meant so much when made at other times. Middle of the night cocoa always tasted richer, somehow sweeter when we sat around the kitchen table with the blank dark night looking in, and quiet stealing with creaks and whispery drafts through the house.

Curled on the hard kitchen chair, I sipped and relished that special cocoa and felt the love that made us warm and chased away the fear that night-time brings to children alone in the middle of the night. And then, with our cups reluctantly left in the sink behind, my cousin and I would snuggle down and be tucked in again.

I knew my cousin could not help it. The rage, the kicking in the night was not her fault. Mommy tried to explain, I think, either to me or her, or both. I did not mind very much, except I liked to sleep—I was rather hoggish about my sleep.

But if Mommy got up and made us cocoa and sat talking with us until it was finished, and sometimes, even after—on the edge of our shared bed until we started drifting off—then I did not really mind.  And my cousin always said she was sorry, and I said it was okay (secretly rather glad because I got to have that special cocoa once again), and we would go to sleep.

My cousin only stayed with us for a year or two, and after she left, I never had that special cocoa again.  She came to stay because she had no choice. But because of her coming, I had had my cocoa and the magic warm circle around the kitchen table in the middle of the night. I learned about the wonder of cocoa in the middle of the night, old-fashioned cocoa in the middle of the night with a fat fresh marshmallow melting was being loved, and that after all was all that really mattered.

 

 

#MentalWellnessMonth

#ARoomOfOne’sOwnDay

#January25

GLASS RAIN—the poetry by Margaret Roxby

“DEAR FRIENDS,” found among the poet’s papers, is included this week for World National Spouses Day, January 26. The author knew the woman Regina when they were both still young. Regina briefly dated the author’s younger brother, Bill. Along came college and then WW2 and the two lost contact. Regina contacted the author upon learning they both now lived in California. They renewed their friendship, visiting each other for several years. Note: the author left a notation on the poem which read: for the years ahead and now we think that’s ’nuff from your friends of long ago and now.

REFRACTIONS—a memory from Kathleen Roxby

“COCOA.” Many years after this piece many years was written, the author presented a copy to the cousin who appears in the story. The gift was made when the cousin complained of having no memories of her childhood. She did not remember cocoa nights, but loved the story and shared it with her own children. It is included for January 25, A Room Of One’s Own Day and also for Mental Wellness Month.

THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS—the poetry of Kathleen Roxby

“THE HUMMINGBIRD,” appears this week for January 24, Just Do It Day.

Readers who write in response to one of the prompts listed each month in Splintered Glass, may see their work presented here on the last week of that month. Though poems are preferred, short prose work will also be considered for publication.

Guidelines for submission:

  1. List Splintered Glass prompt which inspired the work in the text of your email.
  2. Submit material to be published as Microsoft Word document. Submission should not be longer than one page. Editing will not be provided, please be careful.
  3. Include two brief sentences about the author. Example: Michael Whozits is the author of A Book and The Curl, a blog. He is a retired pilot and avid surfer.
  4. Submission must arrive no later than the 3rd Wednesday of the month in which the Splintered Glass prompt appeared. Only one reader’s submission will be selected for any given month.
  5. Send submission to karoxby@gmail.com.

 

  1. Do you have a favorite quote from a book, poem, movie, or other source?
    1. What is the quote and why is it your favorite?
    2. Like Margaret Roxby, write an imagined conversation with the person/character who produced the quote.
  2. Do you have a favorite food memory from childhood?
    1. Why was it your favorite? Is it still?
    2. Maybe your memory is a hated food. Why? Do you still hate it?
  3. The Holocaust is remembered this month. Prejudices seem to abound in this world.
    1. Have you ever encountered prejudice, either personally or as a witness? Tell us about the experience.
    2. What are your thoughts about the holocaust or perhaps a holocaust museum?

 

Like an otter

Slipping so easily

So naturally

Beneath the water surface

To slither amid summer

Warmed river deeps,

I slide into sleep

Couched in warmth

Of quilt and coverlet.

 

Then waking to the day

Sounds–ice shivered

Wind tosses

From frosted trees

The air twitters

Brittle with rude

Coughing mufflers

Newspaper slapping onto

Nearby doorstep

Chill nipping my nose

Sneaks tip toe across my lashes

Teasing me at last

To surface into morning

 

#WorldBlueMonday

#January15

 

 

 

I

cry over a man

that doesn’t love me

 

I

cry over the parents

that didn’t want me

 

I

cry over the mental pain

that has totally wrecked my mind

 

I

cry over the freedom

I’ve prayed for time after time.

 

But

Despite the sorrowful blues I express

The rattled nerves and body unrest

The tears have never fallen

And they shall not begin

For I cry the internal cry

And suffer pain within.

 

#WorldBlueMonday

#January15

Sheer utter helplessness

Of just standing by

Unable to help

My loved one struggles mightily

Against a dreaded illness

Watching the ebb and flow

Of life as battle is waged

A glow of resurgence fading

Into a paleness to my own despair

One hundred times my heart flipped

A fear grips my very soul

It feels as if immobilized

And squeezes dry my hopes

I pray, knowing not why, or

If any prayers will be answered

So I pray again, then hope

Tomorrow, tomorrow, tomorrow