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I’ve started talking to myself. When I can’t find my phone I’ll roam the house bemoaning and retracing my steps saying, “I washed my face, perhaps I left it the bathroom.” Or, “I sat outside doing Wordle, maybe the phone is on the patio coffee table.”
Eventually I find the damn thing!
I talk to myself about writing a sequel to Morningside Drive and ask, “Why are you doing this?
Writing is not easy and I sing Kermit’s song. I’m retired and should be sitting at the beach reading or lying on the couch watching movies. But I’m not. I’m either working on the sequel, Middle Seat Passenger, or promoting Morningside Drive. Why? I love it and events like the one below are fun.
On November 6th we will discuss the writing process, publishing, where plots originate and more.
Claudia . . . just saying


Zoom (Video Communications or Conferencing) was founded in 2011 by Eric Yucan in San Jose, California, and was popular during Covid. At that time I belonged to a critique group that Zoomed instead of meeting in public.
Now I only Zoom a loved one on my phone, if I tap the right green button in time.
I’d forgotten about video conferencing, until Diana, a dear friend, texted me to say how much she enjoyed Morningside Drive. We meet in Florida but she had gone back-up north. We had a lengthy conversation in which she asked if I would have a Meet the Author Zoom Conference Call for her book club.
I said, “I’d be delighted.”
I have often said, “Technology promises everything and deliveries little.” You may share my frustration! When Morningside Drive was published I had decided to get on board or not.
Thank you Diana, and if your book club would like to meet the author of Morningside Drive in a Zoom Book Discussion please email me at claudiajustsaying@gmail.com
Claudia. . . Just Saying
P.S. I’m getting on board and it’s fun!

I is for Impossible in the Alphabet Series. There are many fabulous words beginning with the letter I. Words like; impromptu, improvise, improbable, and imply to name a few and therefore it was difficult to choose.
Then I woke-up today and have a crazy habit of reminding myself of the date, day of the week, and how many days are left in the year. Well, there are only 113 days before we say goodbye to 2023, and hello to 2024. And that’s where impossible became first and foremost in my mind. Impossible, as in never or slim to none chance of happening.

Yet it did happen! How could I possibly be seventy-five years old? It’s not my birthday, or even my birthday week. My birthday is in June. But every day since then I’ve lamented the impossibility of being this age.
I could approach this impossibility with an attitude adjustment. Is the glass have full, and I’m lucky to be alive, or half empty, and holy crap; I’m done with the good years?
Since I work well towards a goal, I’ve decided to reach 80 (that’s only 5 years away), so let’s make it 90 which is fifteen years away and not be wearing diapers. It’s not impossible
. . . just saying
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TEACHER WELL WORN SONG BIRD
Metaphor Dice is a game by Taylor Mali to help students and writers be creative. It is reasonably priced so I bought a set, one for myself and one for my college bound granddaughter. You can play as an individual or as a group. Toss the dice and build a metaphor, or rearrange for something more.

For example:
Now write a story.
Ms. Feathers was my seventh-grade music teacher. Her face was well worn by years of students who called her catbird, not behind her back.
Or a poem:
SONGBIRD
A songbird is a teacher
Well worn by its flight
Singing of travels
A musical delight
Taught life lessons during solo flights
Stopping here and there to spend the night
It’s a journey
Never finding the meaning of life
. . . just saying
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Nothing! I did absolutely nothing. Well, nothing of consequence. That’s retirement.
I didn’t sleep in, although according to my husband, I got up late, 7:30 am.
Late, because he rises at 4am and that makes me three plus hours tardy.
Then my morning routine; coffee and the newspaper and watching CBS Morning. (I’m in love with Tony Dokoupil, Nate Burleson, and Gale King.) Followed by breakfast and exercise; by the time I showered and flossed it’s was 10:30 and my husband was sitting down to lunch.
Usually writing is next on my agenda; however, since my brain was stolen in the middle of the night, my attention was drawn to Easter decorating and the task of disposing of unwanted items.
You know what I’m talking about. Those plastic bins, packed, labeled and stored in your garage or attic. Ceramic eggs and bunnies you’re emotionally attached and refuse to send to a landfill.

It was exhausting and it isn’t time for bed.
. . . just saying
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The promise of a beautiful day after last night’s blizzard woke me early. I stood inside the glass storm door in the early sunlight, enjoying the view and a cup of coffee.
Yesterday, a gentle snow started falling in the morning and continued as though a baker was sprinkling confectioners’ sugar on a cake throughout the day. Around midnight the precipitation slowed and transformed into large snowflakes. The kind kindergartners cut from paper and their teacher hung on the classroom bulletin board.
Footprints in the snow told me he had been here during the night. The boot marks were deep, and I imagined it would have taken great effort to reach the doorbell or trudge around the back; where his key no longer fit, but the door might have been left unlocked.
Stopping by was what he called it.
I remembered yanking those boots off and landing on the floor. When I suggested he loosen the laces first to make the task easier, he said, “You look so cute scolding me.” And joined me on the floor. But my looking so cute did not last during a long winter of frequent storms.
This morning the sun reflected on the ice crystals creating a mysterious pattern and I remembered his smell. The music, laughter, and wearing my best dress. The red one with a side zipper. I closed my eyes and recalled his moist lips on my neck.
“He’s not marriage material,” said my sister, Shirley.
I thought of Annie Oakley dressed in burlap, holding a rifle in her hand, and wanted to respond, “he’s great in bed,” but didn’t.
She hugged me. “He calls you Laverne. That’s not your name.”
“It’s a joke! You love the Laverne and Shirley show. I’m Laverne because you’re Shirley,” I blurted, too loudly.
“Did you laugh?” she asked.
He and I broke up not long after.
That spring I watched him throw a Frisbee to his dog in Washington Park but kept driving. What would be the point? He named the dog Max III and had explained his pet didn’t know there had been others.
I pulled over after a few blocks to do the math. Our relationship had lasted two years. If the ratio of dog life to human was seven to one, and Max was the third . . . Multiply the denominators, divided by the numerator . . . Well, it was highly probable I was Laverne #8.
I called my sister. She was snowed in too and suggested the footprints may not be his. “Remember phoning 911 because that man down the street pounded on your front door?”
The neighbor had come home drunk; the brick houses with chain-link fences looked the same and he assumed his wife locked him out.. When police asked for identification, he pulled out his license cursing. They walked him home.
Today, the fences were invisible under the snowfall. By noon the crunch of shovels piercing the hardened snow replaced the quiet, as the wind began to blow. I dressed in heavy clothing and inspected the footprints to determine if the outside heels were worn. They weren’t. The snow glare was unbearably bright and I walked to the store wearing sunglasses.
When I returned, the landlord was shoveling the footprints off the front steps. He stopped and called to me. “Hey Laverne,” leaning on his shovel he asked, “How’s what’s his face?”
I smiled, waved, and went into the house. Reminding him my name wasn’t Laverne and what’s his face and I had broken up one more time seemed silly.
I had a bowl of soup, washed the dishes, hung the kitchen towel, and looked around the apartment. The sofa pillows had been plumped and the crochet afghan folded, the way I liked it. There was nothing on the bedroom floor, the way I liked it.
I thought about getting a dog.
Later that evening, the phone rang. When I said, “hello,” the caller hung up.
Outside a full moon highlighted the piles of crisp white snow and the footprints were gone. But my sister’s words lingered.
I picked up the phone, pressed caller ID, and then dial. When he answered I said, “Jason, it’s Laverne.”
. . . just saying
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Lynn stood on the sidewalk and could not remember who she used to be.
It was a horrible feeling.
She strolled casually to a nearby bench and sat to quiet the feeling.
The weather was mild. The sun strong.
It was not the present that disturbed her.
Having silly thoughts, she hummed an old Peggy Lee song, “Is That All There Is?”
She came to buy Christmas gifts, or so she thought.
Instead, she window shopped and tried on clothes in an upscale woman’s store; attempting to find a new identity.
Norman Rockwell’s picture of the golden-brown turkey on a large platter surrounded by family flashed across her mind.
Her romanticized past was painful to watch.
She had been the women wearing the plaid apron, trying to fulfill other people’s dreams. Okay, perhaps they’d been her dreams too.
It was hard to remember, things were different.
. . . just saying
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(I write poetry for people to enjoy. In other words, I haven’t a clue where the periods, commas or semicolons belong.
A Pity Party
Come to the party.
We’ll stand on the chairs.
We’ll dance in the garden.
Dig our toes in the sand.
Forget yesterday and tomorrow.
Just soak up the sun.
Come without clothes, if you like.
We’ll blow out the candles and talk about life.
We’ll share party platters filled with mistakes.
Eat casseroles from left over dreams and sour grapes.
Dessert will be whipped jealousy, smothered in envy.
Come to the party, we’ll commiserate.
* * * just saying
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A Chirping Bird Pandemic
My neighbor phoned to ask if she could borrow two rolls of toilet paper. Her TP order on Amazon was back ordered. The delay? It was coming from China.
I was face timing with my doctor when I overheard the request and my husband announcing he would leave the items outside our front door. Afterwards, I expressed my concern, and he reminded me. “She made us face masks,” he sighed and said, “relax I gave her the smaller rolls I bought at Walgreens.”
Life is certainly different.
I have stepped away from posting due to several life altering events and my attempt to write a novel. Writing a novel, for me, has been like saying I was going to build a cabin in the woods and waking up to discover I constructed a lean to. No worries, I am not giving up. Writing is my pass-time.
Oprah Winfrey said, “If the Pandemic hasn’t affected you something is wrong.” I never thought I would face time a doctor. The session required a how-to discussion with a staff member who was working from home and unable to put me on hold. Long pauses filled with silence occurred during our conversation until she said, “I hear birds chirping.” I was sitting outside as I have been for most of the Pandemic. It was sweet and we savored the moment.
I count my blessings, thankful we have not been affected greatly.
Mornings, I enjoy a cup of coffee surrounded by quiet. Slowly the sun creeps up to announce its presence through the mist. Then tangles in the trees. The leaves create a mosaic on the grass while the birds sing. In the background a motorcycle’s dual pipes crescendo in a drum roll. I imagine Leonard Bernstein conducting nature and hear a rhythm band triangle chime. It is a horn honking.
How has the Coronavirus affected you?
Oh, by the way, my novel will have a happy ending.
. . . . just saying
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