It's that time of year once again. Colored lights adorn houses, pine trees are affixed to the car roofs, little kids are drooling over the contents of toy departments. Our Jewish friends have completed the Hanukkah celebrations, while our Christian friends look forward to Christmas. The Holiday season is in full swing. Be Hanukkah, Christmas, Quanza, or any other holiday. We wish you the best.
Our little group met at the firehouse as usual for an annual
holiday gathering. Goodies of all sorts arrived with the members. Cookies,
Candy, Sweetbreads, and Casseroles filled the table. As per our usual Holiday
Custom, we took up a collection for the Fire Department as they allow us to use
the meeting room at no charge. This year we $255 and turned it over to the LT
on duty. It will find its way to the Chief and Board.
Our little band of writers could not eat all the goodies. As
usual, the remaining food was left for the firefighters to feast on for the rest
of their shift. Thank You, Nokomis Volunteer Fire Department!
Even with our mouths stuffed with delectables, we managed to
work in some readings. Rod DiGruttolo started by reading a piece he'd
received in an email. Entitled Christmas 1942, he felt it was
appropriate for the occasion. A fifteen-year-old boy discovers the meaning of
Christmas when his father takes him to help a neighboring widow with small
children.
When Ernie Ovitz took the floor, he read a piece from
his new collection recalling a Christmas Past upon which he and Linda found Bones
Under the Tree. It seems a lovable canine was in the Christmas spirit
as he deposited his most prized possessions under the tree time and time again.
Visiting the group for the first time this year, Ian Schagen
brought one of his out-worldly stories to share. When the FSM (Flying Spaghetti
Monster) called an emergency meeting in the Grand Hall, all the Super Heros and
deities were shocked to hear how, within a few moments, they could all be deemed
irrelevant. Upon hearing a report presented as a law-giving document by an
earthly Cleric, despair and melancholy descended upon the group. The FSM
ordered a word-by-word review of the paper. As the deadline for a decision approached,
The least of the clan's heroes, The Tooth Fairy, found a flaw in the reasoning
behind the Cleric's hypothesis. Valhalla was saved.
Undercover Angel is Tish Mcauley's
working title for a fictionalized story based on her life as an Empath, recovering
alcoholic, and drug addict. In this chapter, realization dawns on Angel as to
what a gift she was born with. Is it a gift or a curse? Dealing with an abusive
husband who turns their daughter against her, Angel finds herself living a life
of pain and suffering, not her own. Even the anguish of insects intrudes on
Angel's mind as she lives in a termite-infested house.
A piece of advice comes to us from Dennis Cathcart. Dennis
enjoys delicacies as Tuna Heads, Roasted Parrot, and an exceptionally tasteful
dish, eating with the local population in the Philippine Island Chain. Upon
finishing the meal, Dennis inquires about the tasty course. When advised, the plate
included Goat Lungs. He realized he'd violated his rule, "IF YOU
LIKE IT, DON'T ASK WHAT'S IN IT."
Taken back in time to the late 1800s in Fort Laramie,
Wyoming, James Kelly tells of a Calvery Officer preparing to go on patrol
in the Indian Territory of Wyoming and the Dakota's. His son prepares to travel
east for training and schooling at West Point. Young children and wives of the
departing Calvery troop say their goodbyes with the unspoken fear of never
seeing their loved ones again.
Have you ever heard of Bean County, Tennessee? Probably not;
it's a fictional county from the mind of Richard Cope. A hound named
Toby is the star of Toby and the Christmas Pagent from Richard
this week. It seems the hound was not always welcomed at social gatherings in
Bean County. But, due to the season, an attitude of forbearance was exercised. It
was a fortuitous event that Santa arrived at the Baptist Church riding on the
county's fire truck. It seems, being a rural community, Bean County used live
animals in their Manger Scene awaiting the arrival of Baby Jesus. Well, lighted
candles, a wailing siren, and a bolting hound dog led to a conflagration requiring
the full use of the fire truck. In the end, Toby helped round up the livestock
and watched over the Baby Jesus.
The Circus is Coming to Town is a product of Susan
Haley's fervent mind. An avid environmentalist, Susan wrote about the
encroachment of urbanization on the wildlife in a peaceful meadow. "Run,
hide, find a new home," the animals cry as the rumble of machines and people
come closer. Susan says, "this wrote itself." Words kept coming as she could
see the world through the eyes of those unable to protect themselves from the
encroaching thunder of so-called progress.
Closing the show this meeting was Peter Frickel. Africa
is Peter's homeland. Its vastness and beauty guide Peter in much of his
writing. The shadow of memory creates hunger. A writer must write just as they
eat or drink to sate that hunger. They must taste the beauty and partake of the
world's mysteries to create a story.
From all of us in the group,
HAVE A HAPPY AND SAFE HOLIDAY SEASON.
and
No matter what else, please, KEEP ON WRITING.
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