• bruise

    Bruised but not broken

    Cuts bleed and sometimes require formal medical attention. Scrapes are inconsiderate, making the patch-up process unnecessarily difficult. Sprains and broken bones simply cause suffering. But bruises, these are the wounds that tell stories.

    Bruises are chameleons. They begin as pink or red, don a bluish tinge, shift into purple then transform into various shades of yellow and green before finally fading away.

    Bruises generally only hurt when pressed, but they remain a visible memory of pain. If you experience something traumatic, say a beating or a car accident, a bruise will show the world how you’ve suffered. Consider it the ultimate witness; a bruise cannot lie and may even help you obtain justice.

    Best of all, bruises make great writing prompts. Where did you get that bruise? Oh, that came from smashing my knee into the coffee table while hurrying to answer the door for the UPS guy. What? I didn’t want him leaving my new computer in the rain.

    This one? This bruise I picked up when the power went out, and the cat stepped right beneath my feet as I was walking down the stairs. Instead of stepping on her, I let gravity guide me. Right into the banister.

    The bruise on my shoulder? That appeared while rappelling down a well to save a little boy. The rope swayed with our combined weight and I hit the wall with my side. Kid’s fine though.

    To be honest, I have no idea where this bruise came from. It’s possible I’ve started sleepwalking again, and dreamed I was a vigilante or superhero. I imagine the fighting was pretty intense. You should see the other guy.

    (Note: A writing prompt on The 10th Muse inspired this post.)

    –Photo by Mensatic

  • Introducing The 10th Muse

    Typewriter “Be thou the tenth muse ten times more in worth
    Than those old nine which rhymers invocate
    And he that calls on thee let him bring forth
    Eternal numbers to outlive long date
    If my slight muse do please these curious days
    The pain be mine but thine shall be the praise.”
    –William Shakespeare, Sonnet 38

    We all get stuck for writing ideas sometimes. Light knows I do. So, as a way to encourage more blogging (for myself and others), I’ve created a mailing list that will present one or two writing prompts a week. On Mondays, an email will be sent to the list highlighting everyone’s prompt-related blog posts.

    If you’re interested in joining, know this: You are not required to blog about every prompt. And there is no set word limit, topic, genre or style. The mailing list is simply a way to kickstart your muse every once in a while.

    To subscribe send an e-mail to 10thmuse-subscribe@yahoogroups.com.