Home and Travel to Come.

Last week we received news that a good friend had passed away. She had been fighting cancer for over a year. Sometimes, when you meet someone you find easy friendship, quickly. It was this way with our friend and her husband. Our regret is not having the chance to know them as a couple longer.

We travelled North to the funeral, the service was simple and all about her and afterwards we had the chance to catch up with M. her husband, sad, lost in the crowd of it all. We were the friends who knew them from France, so knew no-one there but were made very welcome. Her personality shone through with the number of people she touched who came out to wish her safe journey.


An odd time as we settle back in at home, and in a week will be heading back to France for a short visit. We stopped off to visit family on our way home. A nice big family Easter Sunday lunch to help chase the blues away.

See you all soon, there are lots I need to write about so I’ll meet you on the road for the next part of the journey.

Valentines Love Poem

Here for Valentines A Poem titled “This Year…” For Jane, my wife.

I will go where the snow is,
where the wind rises and pulls at the trees,
where sunrise and the sunset are filled by the day we have together.

I will speak to you, of all I see.
I will speak out loud all the things I love,
about the world and about you.

I will dream of everything to come,
and I will dream of nothing while we are silent in the dark
where the closeness of breathing means we are together,
even in our dreams.

I will walk with you when the rain begins to fall,
I will cover you to keep you warm,
I will be your tree, bending in the wind,
where the sound of raindrops on my leaves will lull you to sleep.

I will start each day with an idea of love,
and make each one real.
So you know how real each beginning is.

I will leave behind the old year,
all of its triumphs and failures to live now,
only now.

I will follow you while the world turns,
while the sun shows the way,
while we smile as we walk through the park,
while we live.

A look Across the Year.

This may end up being the longest post of the year. This year has been pretty good, we sold a house and finished renovating another one. Next year we will be gardening, and trying to sell another house in France. All part of the grand consolidation plan we are working to. We have travelled a lot, both between England and France. Plus our road trip to Hungary, which was a great experience. We have managed to see the family more. Next year, I hope for more of the same. I hope that the illness of close friends and family is healed. I hope that we all stay safe and healthy.

I want, a different category. I want to climb more mountains, to write more, to see more. I want a good year, better than the last but with room for improvement in 2013.

Looking out on 2012

Looking forward to 2012

For now, remember the journey is more than the destination. Enjoy the trip. I’ve taken the hint from the Dailypost and answered the questions this time. I’ll see you all next year.

Why did you start the Post a Week Challenge?
To give myself impetus to write more. Both Poetry and Prose. I think I have succeeded in this, and hope my writing has improved as a result. I have to thank everyone who has read and liked my work. Especially those of you who took the time to comment.

Describe the state of your blog at the time you started the challenge.
Lacking focus, apart from my starting premise of Poetry and Travel there was not much to hang it on. But this year has been good for inspiration from others around me, and from the places I have visited. Mostly from the support of people around me.

How did your blog evolve over the course of the challenge?
It surprised me how much I enjoyed writing about the places I have visited.

Did you post as often as you had hoped? Why or why not?
I think I have posted more than I expected to. And pushed through writing during busy times. A big achievement for me.

What type of blogging strategy works best for you?
Write as often as possible, and try to write work of a good standard.

If you could go back to the beginning, what would you do differently?
Don’t know, looking back is never good. Look forward and try to know what you want to do differently

What are you most proud of accomplishing this year?
consistency?

Name 3 great blogs you discovered through the challenge.
Pat Beans Blog
Starbear
Gillian Holding

How can I stop there I have found so many interesting places and people. I’ve put some more in later.

What surprised you about the challenge?
How it made a community of many different people.

What advice would you give to others who want to blog regularly?
Write.

What are your blogging goals for 2012?
To post more in 2012 than I did in 2011. To improve my grammar and punctuation.



Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to everyone, Here’s some more people I have met this year, metaphorically speaking. It’s been a fun ride. No order or priority to this list, just saying hello.

Zendicative
Lesley Carter, travel and adventure
Joybound
C B Wentworth
May Days Are Swell
Broadside
Words vs Pictures
Claire Wade
Planaquarium
Sue Healy

I should probably stop now, there might be a rule against to many links. Anyway, all these and many more. Good luck and happy posting for next year.

Last but most, my wife. She has to live with me while everything happens, thanks and lots of love for everything.

Coffee Shop Lovers

We have for many years partaken of coffee, it is our vice. Together we sit, sip and watch the world pass by. Thanks to Gillian Holding for giving me the idea.

Here are just some of the coffee shops we have visited together, there are many I have forgotten, but so many we have enjoyed. Full of people and interest at all times.

Coffee shop Lovers

It could have started in that Parisian backstreet, behind the Champs Elysee, after the early morning train ride when we saw the sanglier crossing the road. We didn’t know any French but sat with the locals drinking and watching. What about St Germain? Outside in the rain, eating the chocolate we bought from the chocolatiers on the wide christmas boulevard, a tiny bag that cost so much, decadence. There is Rege’s on Tihany, high up on the side of the hill looking over the lake, with ice cream and cakes and the storm brewing. Where the menu says ‘if you’ve been once, you’ll come again to bring the family or a lover.’ it’s that good. The cafe on the Seine near Notre Dame, after visiting Shakespeare and Co, the bookshop. Drifting around with the smell of old and new books, taking just a couple, to tantalize. Then sliding our fingers through the pages, with coffee and the Paris world around us.

Home, we sit outside Cardigans in Brioude while the market runs past us or maybe a weekday trip with the business of business carried on around us and where the coffee smell drifts across the square as we approach, knowing that we can soon take part. Weston-super-Mare, Costa in the bookshop, a good chance of meeting a passing friend, crowded by the books around us and the people we watch as they shop, with a new place now, at the end of the high street, with such windows as dreams are made of, the world outside is ours to see. Gerbaud in Budapest, we found it late the first night, walking back from the river, closed but so full of the promise of coffee that we made our plan to be there before we left. It was everything the old-fashioned chairs promised from inside the windows, white shirted waiters and polite, quick and full of the best.

On Ocean Drive, Big old USA, where else but Starbucks, the most American of coffee, with the beach and the parade of big cars, people looking to be seen, and us tourists in a rapture of Art Deco buildings. Back to Paris of course, the city of romance and Vincennes in the rain, The Café with oyster sellers outside the window. All the customers buying fresh from the sea of the south. That time we met the kids, at Le Fumoir, outside the Louvre, old-fashioned French waiters, cocktails and coffee on sofas in a darkened salon. Let the rain fall, what do we care while we have ourselves for company? The Cannes seafront, hot warm Mediterranean air with the red hills across the bay, the Regatta Royale brings schooners and racing yachts to the port while we sit reading and watching.

London, a different city at a different time, when we still knew little of the future and each other. We fell into Fortnum and Mason, dripping wet in an English winter rainstorm, we shopped for Christmas then, waited at the top of the stairs to be taken to a table. So out-of-place we seemed normal for a while. Before we took to the streets again to watch a play and head back home full of the joys of discovering adventure together.

We have sat in supermarkets, on the side of mountains and by the sea, alone on a beach. In an Italian motorway services we drank ice-cream coffee, because we got it so badly wrong. We make coffee during our day, and sit in the garden, silent or not. Drinking coffee together, a theme developing all the while that passes through a life. To take the time to stop while the world carries on without us. To drink coffee and hold hands.

Heart Hospital III

This is now third revision of this poem, any thoughts always welcome. It still niggles so I have put all three versions in here now and will probably put this away for a month, to see how it reads with a bit of distance.

Heart Hospital III

A collection of broken-hearted lovers
walking slowly round the square.
They carry isolation on sagging shoulders,
silent downcast eyes seeking a trail to follow.
They have become random particles,
waiting for collision to free them.

Later, from our room across the square,
through the trees and the glow of street-lights,
there are backlit faces at the windows
looking out across the space,
until you switch on the light
and there is only my face in the dark glass.

Heart Hospital II

A collection of broken-hearted lovers
walking slowly round the square.
Silent downcast eyes,
carrying isolation on sagging shoulders.
Random particles,
looking for collision to free them.
Later, from our room across the square,
looking through trees and the street-lights glow.
There are faces at the windows looking out.
You switch on the light, and there is only
my face in the dark glass.

Heart Hospital I

A collection of broken-hearted lovers,
walking slowly with downcast eyes.
Carrying isolation on sagging shoulders.
Random particles
looking for collision to free them from time.