turn your back on me look away and ignore me I’ll admire your tail

turn your back on me look away and ignore me I’ll admire your tail


noxious plants invade neighbor calls them weeds from hell but they’re so pretty

Taking part in The Daily Post’s weekly photo challenge. This week’s theme: Grid.
This optical illusion is an oldie but a goodie… how many cubes are there? Is it the tops of the cubes that are purple, or the bottoms?
A fun and simple stained glass panel.
I am literally challenged by this week’s Daily Press photo challenge. I am challenged by literalness.

I grow uncomfortable around ambiguous phrases or terms, like questions that begin with “How do you like…” As in “How do you like your job?”
What is the actual question here? Is it like the phrase “How do you take your coffee?” I like my coffee with cream and sugar. I like my job with very little supervision and an extremely high salary. I seem to drink a lot of black coffee. Guess we don’t always get how we like.
But maybe the question simply means “Do you like your job?” In which case, the answer might be “yes” or “no.” But when “how” is tacked on at the beginning of the question, single-syllabic answers seem no longer appropriate.
In a question format, “how” becomes an adverb (I think; don’t quote me on that), which suddenly makes it all complicated with the need for nouns and adjectives and such.
“How do you like your job?”
“Yes.”
It just doesn’t work that way.
The Daily Post’s photo challenge theme this week is Grid. “We often superimpose a mental grid over things we photograph to help with composition,” the post begins. “This week, let’s go literal.” Michelle the Daily Post person suggests, “This week, let’s take the humble grid out of the shadows, and make it the star.”
Go literal? Suddenly I am compulsively pulling up dictionary.com to look up the literal meaning of “grid.” And since a “grid” is defined as a “grating,” I have to look up “grating,” as well.
This whole thing is, indeed, grating. On my nerves. Guess I’ll have to just grid and bear it. (Ahhhh, she breaks under pressure…)
Definition of “grating” and hence, by inference, also the definition of “grid” ~
a framework of parallel or crossed bars, used as a partition, guard, cover, or the like.*
*Emphasis mine. Mostly because I’ve always wanted to say “Emphasis mine.” **
** And also because I like to use asterisks.
After all this grate research, I have determined that my photos this week are in fact literal depictions of “or the like.”
How do you like them?

Always on the go, never home. Let me off this rollercoaster ride.



In response to Cee’s Black & White Photo Challenge: Public Transportation

When you’ve got an outdated iPhone (first world problem, I know), and a dog on a leash tugging at your arm, and you’re trying to zoom in to get a shot in the split second between the time when the camera focuses and when the dog lunges after a leaf that just blew by… well, the results aren’t always stellar.
So… when life gives you blurred photos, make lemonade. And then play with your photo editing program.
I play with my food, too, despite my mother’s admonishments, but I’ll save that for another post.
Find any of the photos compelling? Like to drink lemonade? Play with your food? Share your thoughts in the comments section.