Colleen’s tanka challenge, as always includes the premise that only synonyms for the prompt words must be used…
This week, the words were;
Poets choice of words

A celebration
When good wins over evil
Happy Diwali!Ritu 2018

06 Nov 2018 31 Comments
in #ColleensWeeklyPoetryChallenge, Challenges, Thoughts Opinions & Memories Tags: #ColleensWeeklyPoetryChallenge, Blog, Blog Post, Blogger, Poet's Choice, Senryu
Colleen’s tanka challenge, as always includes the premise that only synonyms for the prompt words must be used…
This week, the words were;

A celebration
When good wins over evil
Happy Diwali!Ritu 2018

05 Nov 2018 20 Comments
in #ronovansweeklyhaikuchallenge, Blogging 101, Poems, Thoughts Opinions & Memories Tags: #MicroPoetry, #ronovansweeklyhaikuchallenge, Blog, Blog Post, Blogger, Blogging, Challenge, Haiku, Question & Resolve, Senryu
Lovely Ron with his Haiku Challenge prompt words this week:
More of a senryu this week, rather than a haiku. The words didn’t lend themselves to nature!

Pixabay Image
I ask a question
Do you resolve to answer
Or taunt with silenceRitu 2018

04 Nov 2018 20 Comments
in #LornasGinspiringPrompt, Thoughts Opinions & Memories Tags: #Ginspired, Blog, Blog Post, Blogger, Blogging, Home, Lorna's Ginspiring Prompt, Writing Prompt

Home.
That’s where the heart is, isn’t it?
Where is my heart?
A huge part of it is here, where I am right now, sitting in the first home we bought together as a couple. The first home for our family.
But then, when I go to visit my parents, I always say I am going home for the weekend, or however long.
Because home isn’t a specific place.
It’s a thought.
it’s a feeling.
It’s love.

https://ginlemonade.com/2018/11/04/if-we-were-having-coffee-during-nanowrimo-with-a-writing-prompt/
03 Nov 2018 57 Comments
in #SoCS, Poems, Thoughts Opinions & Memories Tags: #StreamofConsciousnessSaturday, Blog, Blog Post, Blogger, Blogging, Fresh Off The Boat, Point, Socs
Linda’s prompt for SoCS this week…
Your Friday prompt for Stream of Consciousness Saturday is “point.” Open a book on your lap, close your eyes, and put your finger on the page. Whatever you land on, whether it be a word, a phrase, or a sentence, write about it. Enjoy!
Book – Fresh Off The Boat by Eddie Huang
Word pointed at – Money

Oh, this makes me think back a couple of weeks to a story I touched upon in one of my Chai and a Chat posts…
A little while back, I was perusing my bank statement online, as you do, lamenting on the lack of money in my account.
I noticed an entry signalling a top up on my son’s mobile account for ÂŁ15.
Fair enough, I usually do that every couple of months.
Then I noticed the entry below, for the date previous to the first. This time for ÂŁ35.
Hmm…
Scrolling down, I realised that a total of ÂŁ125 had been taken from my account over five weeks!
ÂŁ125!!!
I had been wondering why my account seemed a little lighter than it usually did…
After blowing a gasket at him, (fully entitled to, I was) and hearing his answer, I realised that kids nowadays, especially those in middle and upper-class families really have no idea of the value of money.
He just saw a button on his app that said Top Up. So he clicked it, and it worked. So he did it again. And again. And again…
“I’m sorry, mummy, I just thought the money was there for me and I just had to press the button to get more credit!”
“No son, top up means something is empty, and you have to fill it up again! Where did you think the money came from?”
Of course, I’m made of money, aren’t I? Especially on a teachers salary!

Online payments, bank cards, touch and pay cards, they are all so convenient, but they also make you forget that you actually need money in the accounts before spending.
I think my generation may be one of the last to really understand cash. We used it a lot. We held it. We may have been paid it.
But now it’s all electronic, its value isn’t really concrete anymore. It’s just a vague idea. Because all you have to do is tap a button and things arrive. From shopping to food to a film, it’s all available to purchase.
One time, when he was a mere tot, he was obsessed, and I mean really obsessed, with Spiderman. He would spend ages playing with figures and watching videos online. He would browse all sorts. It was only when I received a notification from Ebay that I had successfully bid ÂŁ250 for a lifesize bust sculpture of dear old Spidey, and I was required to pay it, did I realise that my account had been left logged in on my iPad!
Thankfully the seller saw the funny side and reversed the sale!
Money… Can’t live with it, can’t live without it!

Catch ya later Peeps! Happy Saturday!
https://lindaghill.com/2018/11/02/the-friday-reminder-and-prompt-for-socs-nov-3-18/
02 Nov 2018 55 Comments
in #CarrotRanch, Fiction, Thoughts Opinions & Memories Tags: #CarrotRanch, Bandi Chorr Diwas, Blog, Blog Post, Blogger, Blogging, Charli Mills, Diwali, Festival Of Lights, Flash Fiction
Charli’s https://carrotranch.com/2018/11/01/flash-fiction-challenge-november-1/prompt this week:

November 1, 2018, prompt: In 99 words (no more, no less) write a story about a festival of lights. It can be any holiday, event or moment. Express the hope of light over darkness. Or use it to highlight injustice. Go where the prompt leads.
Seeing as Diwali is on its way, I thought I would write a brief version about why we Sikhs celebrate on that day. Our festival of light is commonly called Diwali by others usually, but in Sikhism, it is actually referred to as Band Chorr Diwas
Bandi Chorr Diwas
Emperor Jehangir found no reason to keep Guru Hargobind imprisoned anymore, for he had shown no danger towards the leader.
The Guru insisted upon the release of fifty-two innocent Hindu kings imprisoned alongside him.
Whoever was able to hold onto the cloth of his gown would be free.
He had a special cloak stitched with enough tassels so they could all hold on.
The day Guru Hargobind arrived back in Amritsar happened to be Diwali where the whole city was flooded with the light from candles, lit in joy at his return back to the holiest of Sikh cities.
https://carrotranch.com/2018/11/01/flash-fiction-challenge-november-1/