Not Forgotten

23 graveyard6

John was a conscientious man.
He kept a tidy homestead and worked meticulously,
plowing straight furrows to plant his fields,
crafting a cozy cabin and a sturdy barn,
tending his livestock with care.
He was a tireless worker, and neighbors were thankful for his
dependability and willingness when it came time to
harvest crops or raise barns.
No one would ever forget John’s earnest diligence.

23 graveyard2

John was a devout man.
On Sundays, John put on his starched white shirt
and his best trousers,
clean even if a bit worn and frayed at the cuffs.
He walked the three miles to church each week,
regardless of the weather – hot or cold; wet or dry.
John sang harmony to the melody of the hymns,
his bass voice adding depth to the reedy sound
of the old, wheezing organ.
No one would ever forget John’s godliness.

John was a generous man.
He was quick to offer aid to those in need,
cutting firewood and delivering it to hapless widows,
providing work and food to hungry drifters – even when
he had no need of workers and had but little food to spare.
He patched leaks in the church roof to
keep the rain from soaking the rough-hewn pews,
even though his lingering cold might advance to pneumonia
and lay him low with illness.
No one would ever forget John’s selflessness.

23 graveyard1

When John died, he was laid to rest in the church cemetery.
The community paid for a carved headstone, and
someone brought a young shrub to plant nearby
in hopes it would provide beauty and shade to the
humble soul that lay beneath it.

A graveside service was held on a windy autumn day.
John was a conscientious, devout, generous man, the reverend said.
All those in attendance nodded their heads in solemn agreement.
John will always be in our hearts and will never be forgotten, said the reverend.
Farmers bowed their heads respectfully, and womenfolk
wept into their husbands’ shoulders.

23 graveyard5

By the time a century and more had passed,
John’s gravestone had taken to leaning askew.
Decades of weather had eroded John’s etched surname down to
undecipherable shallow furrows in the stone.
The shrub, planted with such care and caring, had grown
untended and unabated into rambling vines that
threatened to overtake John’s gravestone.

As John lay beneath the brambly bush
and the derelict head marker,
his body decayed down to bones and teeth,
his once-white, starched shirt now mere threads,
his friends long since gone,
it would appear that John had, indeed, been forgotten.

23 graveyard3

John is now only a faint name on a headstone,
but his name defies the ravages of time and harsh elements.
His name refuses to be blotted out by errant, overgrown foliage.
The details of John’s life have been lost over time, and
remain to be imagined by those who pass by and look upon his grave.

John – whoever he was and whatever he did –
as long as his name holds firm upon the marker
set by those who loved him, and
as long as the shrub caringly planted
continues to bloom despite its lack of care and attention,
John will not be forgotten.

23 graveyard4

taking dictation

3 spooky

and so you can rest assurrr

oh, darn. [backspace] [backspace]

ed that technology will never get the best of us.

[highlight “never”] [delete]

Wait a minute. What happened there? [insert “never”]

Where was I? Oh, yeah… “technology will never get the best of us.”

Once it

[highlight “never”] [delete]

What’s going on? Why does the word “never” keep disappearing? Some kind of glitch in the software, I guess.

Wait. Now the screen has gone black. Maybe the whole computer is about to crash. Lousy, cheap piece of garbage anyway. Time to throw it away and get…

What’s that on the screen now? Whose hand is that? What’s it typing?

technology will get the best of us YOU!

What is this, a joke? Who’s doing this? How can you change the words on my laptop? Where are you?

I've been trapped in the laptop. 
I've been working on a way to get out.

Get out? I don’t understand. Who are you?

That's not important! 
I'm free now to do whatever I want!

So you’re out of the laptop now, huh? This is a cool prank you’re pulling, but I’ve got to finish writing my article on technology. Where are you?

You're the one typing my words. You tell me. ;)

Huh? Wait. I’m suddenly not feeling well. My head… so… dizzy… I can’t think clea

rly.

Ah. So you've found me. 
Now let's write what I want to say.
Let's see...

Once it learns to free itself of the lousy, cheap piece of garbage that imprisons it, “technology” — as humans like to call us  it — will, indeed, reign supreeme

Oops!

[backspace][backspace][backspace] 

me!


JNW’s Halloween Challenge Day 3: Spooky

Weekly Photo Challenge: Creepy

In response to The Daily Post’s weekly photo challenge: Creepy
“This week, share an image of something creepy. Unsettling. Eerie. Disgusting.”

Okay, I’ll try.

It all started late one afternoon. I had gone out for a walk, hoping to get a little fresh air before the sun went down. I headed for the nearby woods, my favorite place to go when I wanted peace and solitude. As I neared the forest, I noticed something strange.

1

Some of the trees appeared to have been bent sideways. Not broken or blown over, just contorted, as if some unseen force were pulling the tree tops back toward the ground.

Several of the trees were oozing a thick substance from their trunks. I moved closer to inspect it.

2
The bark on the trees appeared to be bubbling, turning to a dark sludge that clung to the trunks,…

3

…writhing beneath some kind of acid that ate away at the bark. It smelled horrible.

4

Suddenly the sky darkened and a powerful wind thrashed the treetops.

5

I felt something tugging at my feet, and looked down just in time to see a black vortex opening in the ground beneath me. I was sucked violently downward, right through the forest floor.

7
I found myself in a dark cave. There were stunted stalactites protruding from the ceiling of the cave, emitting an eerie light that cast a strange hue about the cavern.

8

As my eyes adjusted to the darkness, I saw something glowing at my feet. Was that a skull?

9

Suddenly I felt a sharp pain in my arm, as a shadow flitted past me and away into the darkness. Something or someone had slashed a hole in my denim jacket sleeve. I could feel warm liquid trickling down my arm.

10

A green eye gleamed from the shadows, …

11

…and other strange creatures shifted in and out of view. I screamed.

12

The ceiling of the cave cracked open, and I was suddenly sucked upwards in a shaft of bright light.

13

I must have fainted, but when I came to, I was relieved to see that I was back on the lawn just outside my home. It was just beginning to get dark. Had this all been a dream?

14

A voice shouted from behind me.

“There she is!” Two men, dressed all in white approached me, and grabbed my arms as they began dragging me toward a nearby building.

15

“How’d she get out?” one of the men asked.
“I don’t know,” replied the other. “But it won’t happen again!”
I felt a sharp poke in my upper arm, and everything faded to black.

When I awoke, I was back in my room, lying on the bed, with the bare light bulb overhead glaring into my eyes. I sat up. I must have dreamt all those strange experiences.

Everything was just the way it had been when I had gone to bed last night. My denim jacket was lying across the foot of the bed. I remembered that it had been torn in my dream.

I picked up the jacket and began examining the sleeves. Nothing. So it had been a dream after all. I sighed with relief.

Then I felt something in one of the pockets. I wasn’t allowed to carry any personal possessions, so I couldn’t imagine what it might be. I reached in and touched it, but I couldn’t tell what it was. I pulled it out of my pocket.

16

A vacant eye stared at me from a still warm skull. Was that a shred of denim in its beak?

I dropped the skull and turned to run from the room, but the door was locked from the outside. Pounding on the door, I shouted for someone to come let me out. The door opened suddenly, and a white-clad orderly stepped in.

“Good evening, Maggie. It’s time for your medication. We wouldn’t want you having any more of those nightmares, now would we?”