Daily Quote

when-life-gives-you-monday-dip-it-in-glitter-and-sparkle-all-day.-ella-woodward

Raise your hand if you like Mondays. What no takers? Can I offer you a glitter pill? Mondays are a drag if your unfulfilling day job sucks your soul, drains your energy and leaves you lacking any will to live by day’s end. Few day jobs are amazing. If you love your day job count yourself lucky. The rest of us need every trick available to find Friday.

One trick is changing your mindset. Consider the job a means to an end. The job gives you the freedom to pursue your dream, develop your platform and move towards being a better you. Take your anger and your frustrations and let them fuel your resolve to succeed. Remember, you have a secret, and your secret should allow you to sparkle all day.

Can you add sparkle to your day?

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

2019 Daily Writing Challenge February 4

2019-daily-writing-challenge-day-34.

Today Is Day 35 of the 2019 Daily Writing Challenge.

Did you write yesterday? Let us know your Day 34 word count in the comments.

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What is the 2019 Daily Writing Challenge? It is simple: Write something every day.

Write a little, write a lot. Just write. You have all day.

It doesn’t matter if you write 5 words, 5,000 words or something in between. The idea is to establish a daily writing habit. If you miss a day, don’t worry. Write today and report tomorrow on your success.

A great journey begins with one step. A great writing habit begins with one word. Go!

Check back tomorrow for the Day 35 Report and let us know how you did.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Daily Quote

the-height-of-my-goals-will-not-hold-me-in-awe-though-i-may-stumble-often-before-they-are-reached.-og-mandino

It is easy to get discouraged.  We make plans to improve our lives, to change our trajectory and help others. The moment we set our intention to change, the universe takes notice. The universe believes it knows best, and everything is running fine. Who are we to step out of line and mess with perfection?

Overcoming pushback is difficult. It requires concentration and determination, regardless of the goal’s size and complexity. Whatever the goal’s size, the energy to beat inertia into submission is similar. With that in mind, I plan to beat the universe, tricking it into submission if I must. I won’t be wasting my time and energy on small goals, I am reaching for the stars.

Have you set high goals?

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

2019 Daily Writing Challenge February 3

2019-daily-writing-challenge-day-33

02-03-19

Today Is Day 34 of the 2019 Daily Writing Challenge.

Did you write yesterday? Let us know your Day 33 word count in the comments.

———————

What is the 2019 Daily Writing Challenge? It is simple: Write something every day.

Write a little, write a lot. Just write. You have all day.

It doesn’t matter if you write 5 words, 5,000 words or something in between. The idea is to establish a daily writing habit. If you miss a day, don’t worry. Write today and report tomorrow on your success.

A great journey begins with one step. A great writing habit begins with one word. Go!

Check back tomorrow for the Day 34 Report and let us know how you did.

_________________________________________

Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Another Way – Flash Fiction Challenge

Title: Another Way
Source: Flash Fiction Challenge
Prompt: Write a story about sea mist.
Word count:  99 words

Photo by Jakob Stenqvist on Unsplash

I’ve seen them walk into the sea. You know the ones, plagued by constant misery. Their eyes cast down, always looking at the ground. The sea mists rise, reaching for cloudy skies. All around, the grey days bring despair, and in the mist, I could surely drown.

I want something else as I stand here with the sand between my toes, struggling to survive. I’m amazed I’m still alive. But I won’t say goodbye.

They say there is another way. So even on the cloudy day, even in the misty grey, I keep my eyes looking for the sun.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Daily Quote

my-goal-is-to-strip-things-down-so-that-you-need-just-the-right-amount-of-words-or-shape-to-convey-what-you-need-to-convey.-i-like-editing.-i-like-it-very-tight.-maya-lin

Editing is an arduous process and reading the draft I wonder who wrote the words. It makes my headache and my stomach churn. Each occupation has a process which is unpleasant or uncomfortable and oh so very un-glamorous, and I consider editing to be a nasty piece of business. I push forward, deleting, rearranging and tweaking the piece.

Editing, I realize is an integral part of the writer’s job. It makes the words shine and flow. Done well, editing renders the words a secondary consideration. They become the tools used to tell the story. It is the story which moves the reader, transporting them to the world of the writer’s imagination.

How do you know when your editing work is complete?

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

2019 Daily Writing Challenge February 2

2019-daily-writing-challenge-day-32Today Is Day 33 of the 2019 Daily Writing Challenge.

Did you write yesterday? Let us know your Day 32 word count in the comments.

———————

What is the 2019 Daily Writing Challenge? It is simple: Write something every day.

Write a little, write a lot. Just write. You have all day.

It doesn’t matter if you write 5 words, 5,000 words or something in between. The idea is to establish a daily writing habit. If you miss a day, don’t worry. Write today and report tomorrow on your success.

A great journey begins with one step. A great writing habit begins with one word. Go!

Check back tomorrow for the Day 33 Report and let us know how you did.

_________________________________________

Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Daily Quote

i-have-drawn-my-whole-life.-my-parents-were-in-the-tapestry-restoration-business-and-as-a-young-girl-i-would-draw-in-the-missing-parts-of-the-tapestry-that-needed-to-be-rewoven.-louise-

I love restoring old items, furniture, tapestries, wooden floors, first drafts. What? Back up the bus, you say? Restoring first drafts? Yep. First drafts can be messy and rarely do they accurately reflect the vision of the amazing story we hold in our head. First drafts get words on the page, they are a passion dump, a dictation of the party in our head. Laying exposed, the black and white rendition, uncovers missing parts, plot holes, flat character arcs, grammar errors and a host of other issues.

Like Louise, the restoration process allows us to draw in missing parts, fix plot holes, intensify character arcs and correct grammar. With the pattern completed, we can reweave the story. The amazing effect is a bionic restoration. The story is better, stronger, faster than the original.

Can you rescue a piece and give it new life?

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

Never-Ending Patterns – Thursday photo prompt

Title: Never-Ending Patterns
Source:  Thursday photo prompt: Fragrant #writephoto
Inspiration: Patterns by Amy Lowell
Word count: 405 words

the image shows a formal English rose garden in bloom. Four paths, bordered with lavender, lead to the center of the garden, where a weeping standard rose cascades over a seat that is built around its trunk.

I walk the garden paths, remembering the lady who walked the paths one fateful day. Resplendent patterns, engraved upon my mind, recall the blowing daffodils and bright blue squills. I see her stiff brocaded gown, her powdered hair, her jeweled fan and I yearn to touch her sweet cheek, caress her trembling hand.

Her patterned dress, a fashion plate of pink and silver pain, floated along the gravel path buoyed by high-heeled ribboned shoes, sustained by whalebone and the stiff brocade. Daffodils and squills danced a merry allemande with the wind and she sinks to the seat beneath the lime tree. Fragrant lime where passion bloomed, now stands gnarled with age. And I weep as she once did.

Water-drops echo and splash along the garden paths, endlessly flowing in the marble fountain. Hidden in the hedges the marble basin reflects images of a woman’s softness bathing, waiting for her love. Sweet water evokes the ecstasy of the once dear hand and the desire for freedom from fine brocade. The stained pink and silver gown now lies crumpled in a long-forgotten heap upon the ground.

Vestiges of pink and silver flash between the hedges followed by ephemeral laughter while glimmers of sunlight sparkle on his sword-hilt and black buckled boot. Willingly captured in the shadows, waistcoat buttons press upon soft flesh, while hedgerow dappled sunlight bears testimony to the aching, unafraid adore of young lovers. Whispers of longing, remain crushed by stiff brocade and the Duke’s letter hidden there.

While the pages have grown soft with time, the words of regret, the news of Lord Hartwell’s death in action, cut with the same disregard. Thursdays, like the patterned paths and the faceless messenger, required no answers today.

Never my husband, no matter how many months and years have passed. Never to break the pattern. Denied the rank of Cornel, I will ever be his Lady. The lingering sunlight can hold no blessing for one long dead.

The patterns endure as I walk the paths in Winter and in Summer. Patterned garden paths, stiff brocade, squills and daffodils followed by roses, asters, and snow. Day follows day, and months give way to years. I walk immersed in memory and shield a too soft body with stays and buttons and lace.  The paths define the life denied by patterns called a war. My release lives in death, so much death. Will it alter nothing as the pattern marches on?

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer

The Ace – Thursday Threads

Photo by kychan on Unsplash

Her eyes never stopped moving. He watched them roam the room, looking at the rows of filing cabinets and the papers piled on every horizontal surface. The office was dark the way he liked it. The only illumination was a small green-shaded lamp on his desk. He waited until her eyes rested on him.

“Do you know him?” she repeated.

“He is your husband?” he countered, lighting a cigarette as he contemplated her.

Elsa looked at the paper clenched in her hand.

“That doesn’t matter. They said you were good at this. The best.”

“I am.” He leaned back and inhaled turning the end of his cigarette cherry red. “Can I help you…”

“Catch him?” Elsa interrupted and shifted in her chair. Perched on the edge, she leaned forward, gripping the desk’s curved contours, her dark eyes bore into his soul. He wasn’t sure what she hoped to find. Seconds passed like hours. He let the time tick away until she finally spoke. Her voice was soft, but her words cut him like a rapier.

“Yes, and when you catch him, you will kill him.” She swallowed, breathing rapidly as she thrust the crumpled paper across the desk towards him. She unfurled her fist, releasing the death sentence.

He could feel her watching as he carefully opened the paper, watched his face turn ashen as he read it, watched him process the words.

He lifted his head, his eyes locking with Elsa’s.

“I will kill him for you,” he said.

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Keep on writing.

Jo Hawk The Writer