Thursday, October 12, 2017

Jape – Wordplay Wednesday™ 10/11/17



All of our slightly skewed and odd October words will relate to the fine line that fascinates, titillates, and may terrorize our consciousness—that which we call Life. And pretend this one published yesterday, please.

Trick or Treat! Emphasis on Trick … 
 
It’s difficult to be lighthearted and think cheerfully of the upcoming Holidays, when Mother Nature is intent on playing cruel tricks.

First, the destructive hurricanes in the Caribbean and along the lower U.S. Eastern Seaboard; then a couple of devastating earthquakes in Mexico, followed by current wildfires blazing ferociously through Northern (and some Southern) California cities. It hasn’t left much energy or desire for a …

JAPE (jāp) n. – 1) a joke or jest; 2) a trick.  [WW #133]

Perhaps we need the Holidays right about now. We are reminded of the charity of the Season … to give and donate generously at this time, to those whose Holiday spirit is understandably low.

Those affected by recent adversity still need a gentle smile, a sweet jape and a welcome treat, to let them know you’ll help them find the light in life again.

October and especially Halloween, is a wonderful time to celebrate what we have, as opposed to what we don’t … to cherish the children and their costumed antics, or don our own to escape, even for a short time, into another realm … as we revel in the warmth of family and friends.

Word Challenge: JAPE. Make a tender jape part of your world this week as you fit its humor and joy of life into your week of tricky writings.

Write first for yourself … only then can you write for others. (L.Rochelle) 

Wordy Witch of the West 
                       






E-N-D

Wednesday, October 4, 2017

Telesthesia – Wordplay Wednesday™ 10/04/17



Working Magic with Words 

October is of course, a month of a different color. While pumpkin prevails, and black rules, words of magic—and in my humble opinion, they’re all magical—appear and disappear in many colors of meaning and power.

This week’s Wordplay Wednesday finds us wishing for crystal balls and fortune tellers that give us unwavering faith in …

TELESTHESIA (tel’es thēʹzhɘ) n. – (Parapsychology) extrasensory perception of distant objects, events, etc. [telesthetic]  [WW #132]

We’ve often heard someone lament that we weren’t born with an instruction manual. At the very least, it would be nice to have the power of telesthesia to sense our expiration date—that which would tell us how much time we are allowed, as we make our way through this convoluted realm we call Life.

While telesthesia fits right in with the celebration of witches, warlocks, ghosts, Ouija boards and Halloween, today’s elders may recall the 1960s and ‘70s, which were rife with psychic visions and predictions.

As we lift the veil between life and death, we hear the musical warning of an oft-repeated phrase floating through consciousness … Live for Today. Was it an inspired time of telesthesia?

The era has been vilified as the “Me Generation” for believing “self” matters. *“(Let’s) Live for Today | And don't worry 'bout tomorrow,” personified the war-time attitude. Oh, sorry, not “war”—back then, Vietnam was only a military presence or “conflict.” (*1967, The Grass Roots sang of our desire for love, not war.)

By promoting the #LiveForToday attitude, perhaps we exercised our innate telesthesia of the future and its growing menaces, designed to ensure we don’t Live for Today.

This week, especially, we’ve been reminded that self—to include your loved ones—is not a bad reason to live … Every day counts. Every hour counts. Every minute counts. Because we just don’t know how many we have to work with … make them all count. You count.

Enjoy memories of yesterday. Cast a telesthetic eye on tomorrow. But … Live for Today.

All our slightly skewed and odd October words will relate to the fine line that fascinates, titillates, and may terrorize our consciousness—that which we call Life.

Word Challenge: TELESTHESIA. Do you believe in instinct? Intuition? ESP? Think about it as you fit telesthesia into your week of perceptive writings.

Write first for yourself … only then can you write for others. (L.Rochelle) 
aka The Wordy Witch of the West                      








E-N-D