Public Posts Bellevue, WA Bellevue, WA (zoom)
May You Soon Find
• 03/19/24 at 05:30PM •May you soon find,
your happiness,
away from,
all your loneliness.
May all the joy,
you feel in your heart,
provide the courage for,
your new life to start.
It's Time
• 03/19/24 at 05:30PM •It's time, for me,
to stumble and fall,
with a love
of anyone at all.
It will be pleasant,
of that, I am sure.
How long will it last?
How long will it endure?
No one knows,
at least not me,
for it depends upon,
the mysterious she,
who is willing to take
a risk with this old man,
to enjoy a life,
as long as we can.
Life's Travesty
• 03/19/24 at 05:29PM •Life's travesty,
not a place to go,
for the wishes we have,
may never show.
Desire to be happy,
at this time in life.
How can it be?
You lost your wife.
No Longer
• 03/19/24 at 05:29PM •No longer the memories.
No longer the cries.
No longer the goodbyes.
No longer the sighs.
How does one cope,
when memories die.
What must you do,
to hurt with the cries..
Lost love, no matter
how long it has been,
grieve you must, to make,
your memories whole again.
A Picturesque Equinox Sunset • 03/19/24
• 03/19/24 at 12:16PM •NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day:
What's that at the end of the road? The Sun. Many towns have roads that run east-west, and on two days each year, the Sun rises and sets right down the middle. Today, in some parts of the world (tomorrow in others), is one of those days: an equinox. Not only is this a day of equal night ("aequus"-"nox") and day time, but also a day when the sun rises precisely to the east and sets due west. Displayed here is a picturesque rural road in Alberta, Canada that runs approximately east-west. The featured image was taken during the September Equinox of 2021, but the geometry remains the same every year. In many cultures, this March equinox is taken to be the first day of a season, typically spring in Earth's northern hemisphere, and autumn in the south. Does your favorite street run east-west? Tonight, at sunset, you can find out with a quick glance.
Photo by Alan Dyer, Amazingsky.com, TWAN
"Organized crime is mining sand from rivers and coasts to feed demand worldwide, ruining ecosystems and communities. Can it be stopped? ....... Every year the world uses up to 50 billion metric tons of sand, according to a United Nations Environment Program report. The only natural resource more widely consumed is water. " More at Scientific American ➜
The increase number of challenges targeted 65% more books titles for Censorship over The Previous Year. More at The American Library Association ➜
Word of the Day 03/19/24: Unbosom
• 03/19/24 at 02:26AM •Ready for Spring || Photo by Calob Photography
• 03/18/24 at 11:06PM •Island County, WA
What Stream
• 03/18/24 at 03:24PM •What stream, wanders down,
a hillside, green?
What is wrong,
with a fernlike dream?
I don't know, here in my darkness
I may now cry,
for a love,
gone bye.
There Isn't a Queue
• 03/18/24 at 03:23PM •There isn't a queue,
for a broken heart,
except to realize,
I've done my part.