BERJAYA
Challenges by Sarah, Mindlovemisery's Menagerie - Saturday Mix

Saturday Mix – Opposing Forces, 31 March 2018

Antithesis at play

Sarah W's avatarMindlovemisery's Menagerie

Welcome to the Saturday Mix, 31 March 2018!

This week we are dipping our toes into the pool of OPPOSITES. Our challenge is all about “opposing forces” and the use of antithesis in our writing. You will need to use the two opposing words in your response – which can be poetry or prose.

Our words this week are:

– guest and host

– liquid and solid

You may be asking yourself, How can I use antithetical statements in my writing?

Luckily, Kat from Literary Devices has some examples for you.

Common Antithesis Examples
Some famous antithetical statements have become part of our everyday speech and are frequently used in arguments and discussions. Below is the list of some antithetical statements:

You are easy on the eyes, but hard on the heart.
Give every man thy ear, but few thy voice.
Love is an ideal thing, marriage a real thing.

View original post 235 more words

Stories by Sarah

Piano

I lifted the lid of the piano, running my fingers over the keys, tinkling a jumble of notes. It had been ages since I’d practiced and I was filled with trepidation as I sat down to play.

I leafed through sheet music, and found Beethoven’s ‘Moonlight Sonata’. Resting my gaze upon the familiar notes, I poised my hands and began, cringing as I stumbled over the notes. My fingers clumsy; getting it all wrong.

I stopped, took a deep breath and tried again.

Giving over to muscle memory, I smiled as my fingers started to fly over the keys.

By Sarah ©2018

Prompt: Carrot Ranch, Flash Fiction Challenge – March 29, 2018. Task: In 99 words (no more, no less) write a story about fingers that fly. Think about the different ways we use our fingers and what happens when we add speed. Go where the prompt leads.

Poetry by Sarah, Tanka

Easter Eggs

I was doing well
resisting temptations to
indulge my sweet tooth.
Then along came Easter eggs…
Chocoholic in relapse.

By Sarah ©2018

img_3510
Image credit Alexas_Fotos via Pixabay

Prompt: Ramblings Of A Writer, Weekly Tanka Prompt Poetry Challenge, Week 90 – temptations and relapse

Challenges by Sarah, Kiwi Capers

Introducing The Clam

I thought I would write a pre-trip post and introduce you to my sister Claudia – my travelling companion on our upcoming holiday to New Zealand. Claudia is the youngest of my three sisters (we have six kids altogether in our family – 2 boys and 4 girls).

Despite a ten year age gap, we have always been close. We shared a room growing up – even though I was a teenager and she was a toddler and we enjoy spending time with one another.

The thing I love best about my sister is her laid back and relaxed attitude. I have a tendency to be a little “highly strung” at times and suffer periodically from anxiety and depression. Her no-nonsense, ‘whatever’ approach always puts thing into perspective for me, and reminds me not to take things too seriously.

Now, you may be wondering, If her name is Claudia why is this post entitled Introducing The Clam?

Well, I promise. There is a reason.

Two years ago today, my husband and I were visiting my mum and dad in Canberra. My sister lives with them as she helps care for my mum after her stroke in 2015. We all decided to go ten pin bowling and the bowling alley was very ‘old-school’. We had to write our names on a slip of paper and hand it to the young man attending the shoe counter. He then entered the details into the computer for our lane, on our behalf.

Claudia and I were challenging each other and as we commenced the bowling, we soon realised the hilarity that confronted us on the screen. Instead of entering ‘Claud’ the young man had inadvertently entered the name ‘Clam’. (I have always told her her handwriting was messy!)

You can imagine every spare, every strike and every miss, our guffawing laughter as we received encouraging messages for the ‘clam’.

The nickname has certainly stuck and two years on, ‘The Clam’ is still going strong. Although her game has not improved much…

I am certainly looking forward to some good times and laughter with my sis.

BERJAYA

Photos by Sarah, Thursday Doors

Holy Trinity Cathedral

It is fitting that with Easter this weekend, my Thursday Doors for today come from the Holy Trinity Cathedral in Wangaratta. I have included photos of both the exterior and interior, which you can see is set up from Palm Sunday. The beautiful stone of this cathedral comes from a local quarry that is now disused, but is incorporated into one of my favourite local bush walks, The Sunrise Track.

Enjoy and Happy Easter!

BERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYABERJAYA

Prompt: Norm 2.0, Thursday Doors – March 29, 2018

A-Z Challenge

Blogging From A-Z Challenge, April 2018

This year I am attempting the Blogging From A-Z Challenge, April 2018. Last year my blog was just a fledgling, but I saw this around on other people’s sites and thought it was an interesting challenge I would like to try.

So, now a year on, By Sarah is up for it! Looking forward to 1st April for “A” good start!

BERJAYA

Kiwi Capers

Kiwi Capers

This Easter school break, I am heading back to the South Island of New Zealand for a holiday. Only seven more sleeps and I will be setting off on a seven day adventure to the Marlborough region with my youngest sister.

During this time, I anticipate I will have limited wifi availability, as well as time to participate in my regular challenges, therefore will not be posting as often.

So, I am setting myself a mini writing challenge for each day while I am away: “To write 50 words about the day’s activities and upload my favourite photo, capturing this”.

Some of you will remember me completing this challenge for my Hawaii vacation earlier in the year, and it was a great way to record my holiday and share snippets of it with you…so stay tuned for some Kiwi Capers soon.

BERJAYA

Photos by Sarah, Tuesday Photo Challenge

Merry-Go-Round

This merry-go-round is one of my earliest childhood memories. Growing up in Canberra, this was the highlight of my shopping trips with Mum. If I was good, at the end, I would get a ride.

Originally, the merry-go-round started operating in 1914 at the St Kilda Esplanade in Melbourne.  It was designed and built by Herbert Thomson of Armadale, Victoria, for German showman Anton Weniger.

The merry-go-round and organ were later purchased for the people of Canberra. After extensive restoration work, the merry-go-round began operating in a colourfully painted pavilion in Petrie Plaza in the centre of Civic during Canberra Day celebrations on 13 March 1974. The horses are four abreast in 14 rows. There are also two hand carved wooden elephant carriages.  One elephant is white the other is grey. My favourite horse was always Pharlap and I never rode the elephants (they didn’t move up and down and were for babies!)

On a recent visit home to Canberra, my sister and I decided to take a ride…for old time’s sake!

BERJAYA

BERJAYABERJAYA

Prompt: Dutch Goes The Photo, Tuesday Photo Challenge, Week 102 – Memories

Haiku / Senryu, Poetry by Sarah

Worshipping Hearts

 

In worshipping hearts,
goddess of love manifests
in strangest of ways.

 

By Sarah ©2018

img_3494
Image credit Alpha Coders

Prompt: Mindlovemisery’s Menagerie, Photo Challenge #207; and also, Ronovan Writes, Weekly Haiku Poetry Prompt, Challenge #194 – worship and goddess

Scribblings by Sarah

Helminth

Oh what misery
The inchoate* cause.
Orbiting with malice,
thinking they have
the imperative.

Wearing a mask,
she truly is my torture.
Finding a lens to skew
things her way, gliding off
to join the hardhearted.

Go to hell,
you helminth^.

By Sarah ©2018

BERJAYA

Prompt: Mindlovemisery’s Menagerie, Wordle #189; Words: malice, gangly, find, misery, hardhearted, lens, imperative, orbit, inchoate*, helminth^, mask, glide

* (adj.) not yet fully developed, rudimentary, lacking order
^ (n.) a parasitic worm

Free Verse, Poetry by Sarah

Faceless

BERJAYA

They saturate the corners;
those whose souls hurt just
like the rest of us.
Their life’s dished
out sharp lessons,
and opportunities have slipped
through fingers like silk.
They are judged by others as
deserving of their fate but
the truth lies hidden
in the shadows.
Broken rain veils the music
of their hearts breaking,
these faceless people
of the streets.

By Sarah ©2018

Prompt: Daily Post Daily Prompt – faceless; Sunday Photo Fiction – March 25th, 2018; and also, The Sunday Whirl, Wordle 344

BERJAYA

Fibonacci, Poetry by Sarah

Vibrant

The
most
vibrant
of colours
still can not conceal
the shadows that lie beneath them.

By Sarah ©2018

BERJAYA

Prompt: Sammi Scribbles, Weekend Writing Prompt, #47 – Vibrant. Poetry Challenge – Write a non-rhyming poem in no more than 10 lines, that is inspired by the word and photo prompt.

Stories by Sarah

Conception

It had been the perfect honeymoon. We enjoyed endless days swimming, relaxing and drinking cocktails. Barry announced that for our last morning, my dream of diving the reef, would finally be actualised. We were going scuba diving!

———

I plunged into the water, closely following the directions from our devastatingly gorgeous instructor.

I became lost in the magic of the world underwater when I suddenly found myself alone and my tank empty. Barry and the instructor had disappeared!

As I succumbed to the lack of oxygen, my puce coloured face realised the fiction on which our marriage was truly conceived.

By Sarah ©2018

BERJAYA

Prompt: Daily Post Daily Prompt – disappear;  Mindlovemisery’s Menagerie, Saturday Mix – Same Same But Different, 24 March 2018, Synonyms – lie (fiction), dive (plunged), realise (conceive), pass (succumb), red (puce); and also, Carrot Ranch, Flash Fiction Challenge – March 22, 2018. Task: In 99 words (no more, no less) write a story using the theme “follow your dreams.” Bonus points for throwing a badge into the tale. Go where the prompt leads.

BERJAYA
Challenges by Sarah, Mindlovemisery's Menagerie - Saturday Mix

Saturday Mix – Same Same But Different, 24 March 2018

Same same but different challenge

Sarah W's avatarMindlovemisery's Menagerie

Welcome to the Saturday Mix, 24 March 2018!

This week we are diving into the depths of our thesaurus and exploring the world of synonyms.

Same Same But Different
Your ‘Same Same But Different’ task is to take the five challenge words and NOT use them in your writing. That’s right, you need to dig out your thesaurus and find a synonym for each word instead.

Your words this week are:

  1. lie
  2. dive
  3. realise
  4. pass
  5. red

Your writing form is either poetry or prose.

Synonym Searching
Synonyms are words that are similar, or have a related meaning, to another word. They can be lifesavers when you want to avoid repeating the same word or if your word might not be the most appropriate. You can search for synonyms online at: http://www.thesaurus.com/

You may be asking yourself, What are some examples of synonyms?
Luckily, the nice folks at YourDictionary have some…

View original post 136 more words