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Showing posts with label mountains. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mountains. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

 A Time To Write   -  Ruben D. Gonzales

It came as a surprise to me, the solitariness of writing. Long hours alone. Cooped up with only my thoughts on the created fictional world. I now understand the draw a fictional world holds over troubled souls. A world of your own making where outside stresses may be left behind. Where worries of a Corona virus need not be carried. Our shoulders, bent under the pressure of every day life, suddenly relieved by the trip into another domain, created just as you want, filled with whimsical characters or dreadful spirits, happy children, or assassins bent on death.

Of course my wife dislikes that world. The world where I appear to lose myself – away from the immediacy of the household world. Both retired now from working beneath others, on others schedules, from others expectations, I think she thought the hard earned free time would be our time. Time to spend visiting grand children. Time for household chores and renovations. Instead she discovered a writing hermit had been sharing her bed all these years.

Not that I entirely withdraw from the world around. There are still meals to contemplate, trash to take out, occasional long delayed home repairs. But at the slightest pause in the everyday I can dash to the computer to write. To retreat into the world of my current story, treasure hunt or mystery. 

As writing has become the must do – other once cherished past times have indeed passed. The guitar in its case remains silent. The twang of the banjo leaning against the wall next to my desk remains strangely quiet. The piano in the den, even at this holiday time of year, has lost its merriment. All replaced by solitary writing where the words on the page take the primary position over all else.

Is this why the literary world is filled with the scared souls of our greatest writers? Or have I not just found the balance between what is expected and what is needed - to write.

So I steal time in the early morning hours, waking at 4:00 AM - sometimes earlier. Stealing time from sleep. A double edged sword. To find time to write but with the loss of sleep the dreams that come are also lost. 

www.rubendgonzales.com


Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Life in the Slow Lane



I believe we all have that one special place that soothes our soul and fills us with peace. For me, it's the mountains. I've been to the mountains, in various locations, on countless occasions. On each trip, I eagerly await the appearance of the first peaks in the distance. As soon as they come into view, I sigh and peace flows through me, any worry and stress falling away.

My husband is a beach guy. His family spent a week at the same beach every summer. He's natural for the beach - he loves the water and tans easily. We've made several trips to the beach of his childhood many times since our marriage but it was always a bit of a struggle for me. I'm both a non-swimmer and a fair-skinned redhead. I practically burst into flames in direct sunlight, even when coated in SPF 50+ sunscreen. I also suffer from an irrational fear of sharks. Three days at the beach was about all I could handle. At that point, I was ready to go home even if it meant leaving the rest of the family behind, LOL.

 There is SO much truth in this image courtesy of How to be a Redhead

However, over the years, things have changed. My husband has learned to enjoy the peace and quiet of the mountains as much as I do. As for me, I have learned to enjoy the beach. I still can't swim and have to take extreme measures to avoid blistering sunburn. What changed? I discovered the joy of fossil hunting. The first shark's tooth I found ignited something in me. I guesstimate that I've found a few hundred shark's teeth over the years. I've found other items that I knew must be some sort of fossil but never knew what they were. On our last trip to the beach, one of our fellow campers was also a fossil enthusiast; he was able to identify a couple of my mystery fossils: puffer fish plates and pieces of a sting ray barb. I also found some sort of vertebrae that had him stumped. My biggest find (literally), was the large tooth in the picture below.

Fossilized Great White tooth

So, while you are reading this post, I will be scouring the waterline in search of more fossilized finds. I can't wait!

What is your favorite vacation location?


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