This was the sunrise a few days ago.
This was taken just as the sun was setting on the same day.
Yesterday we had thunder clouds.
It’s so vexing that the blossoming tree is out-of-focus, and there’s nothing one can do about that after the fact.

I wish I had taken a second photo! I couldn’t really tell in the sunlight. Note to self: Take more than one shot.
The reason I posted this was that I really liked the composition. Really it was composed by the garden designer. Japanese gardens are amazing.
Anyway, if you don’t look too closely this will hopefully look nice for you.
Taking a page out of Leanne Cole’s book, I took myself on a photography outing today. Being a photographer is a great way to get out and enjoy beautiful places.
My Photoshop teacher said last week that Hakone Gardens in Saratoga was looking really good right now.
The wisteria is in bloom.
Other things are in bloom, too, so this will be continued…
I am taking a Photoshop class and had my second class tonight. I am learning things that are freeing me to do things I have craved doing. I am a writer, but I don’t have words for how good it feels to start to get my hands on tools that will let me create the pictures I have in my head, or, more accurately, to pursue the visual feeling until I stumble upon something that approaches satisfaction of that feeling. But again, since I am a writer, I have to try to find words for the feeling. I feel fulfilled and freed.
This is a photo you may have seen before since I posted it on my Amsterdam series. This is just a dried flower arrangement in Cafe Rembrandt. I keep revisiting it. I have no idea why I am drawn to it. That is the mystery of art! Art is an expression of our unconscious aesthetic. I know these are not very good; even I can see the stamp of an amateur just discovering the tools.
But I am overjoyed with my little creations.
Happy Monday! Or Tuesday, as the case may be. Time for links to things online that I enjoyed this week.
I was intrigued by this article, which I found while looking for something else. I was looking for info on weird feelings in the stomach after food poisoning, another bout of which I just endured. This article is not about that at all but is much more interesting! I’m always writing about my characters’ gut clenching (male) or butterflies (female). It’s hard to come up with other ways to describe characters’ physical reactions to situations, so I’m always looking for other ways to do so and then going back and revising my manuscripts so they don’t say these things the same way all the time.
I recommend this article for writers, especially the list of physical reactions at the end, but this article is of general interest as well.
5 Gut Instincts You Shouldn’t Ignore.
The author (Courtney Helgoe) talks about the enteric nervous system, also referred to as “the second brain,” which is an interesting and new-to-me phenomenon.
In addition to warning you about danger and helping you recognize when someone needs sympathy, your instincts can help your achieve peak performance once you have mastered a skill. Here is the quote for you:
“Once you’ve developed expertise in a particular area — once you’ve made the requisite mistakes — it’s important to trust your emotions when making decisions in that domain,” [Jonah] Lehrer insists. If you know you can do it, trust your gut — not your head.
Next time you’re tempted to think too much about something you know how to do, try a little therapeutic distraction. Say the alphabet backward when your yoga teacher orders you into the dreaded handstand, or sing a favorite song to yourself at the free-throw line. Briefly engaging your conscious mind with something other than the task at hand can leave your instincts free to do their job — and free you to enjoy the satisfaction all that practice has made possible.
I’ve been trying this a bit with my writing, by closing my eyes and just writing what I’m seeing, hearing, smelling, feeling, and tasting in the scene.
I also like what the article said about your first impressions of meeting a new person. I have tried to override negative first impressions, and I’m not talking about danger here, just incompatibility for a friendship, and it never really works out. It’s best just to go with gut feel, I think.
The article also talks about inner conflict versus knowing when something is right.
When your intuition signals that you’ve found something or someone truly right for you, the choice often becomes strangely easy. “It feels healthy; it feels good; it doesn’t feel like you’re forcing it, there’s not a lot of conflict,” [Judith Orloff PhD] says.
Lehrer agrees that when you’re poised to make a big decision with lasting repercussions, like choosing your life partner, you’re best off deciding from the gut. Based on the bulk of his research into the cognitive mechanisms of decision-making, he actually recommends that you “think less about those choices that you care a lot about.”
My other favorite article of the week comes with beautiful pictures. This is a very richly contented blog post about black and white photography with contributions from several experts. This article is on Leanne Cole’s site. I’ve met Leanne, and gone on photo shoots with her. It was interesting to me to see how natural she is at taking great photos. She definitely has that muscle memory, or in the case of art, the eye, for composing beautiful photographs.
Up for Discussion: Images in Monochrome
Enjoy.
A week or so ago, a friend and I went to the Saratoga library for an event. There was no parking there, so we parked at the post office and walked from there past this historic house and orchard.

I love this little garden in front of the house.
I am so glad they preserved some of the orchards that once filled this valley.
This pathway allows pedestrians to walk through the orchard instead of the long way around on an extremely busy four lane road. Good planning!