Sometimes all I want to do is say "Look at that!"
And then he was gone. Possums don't move that fast, do they? I peered out the window, hoping he hadn't lost his grip and plummeted to the ground. No sign of a possum anywhere.
The mystery was solved when I downloaded the picture and cropped it.
A very big hawk -- probably keeping an eye on the
And speaking of being fooled by what you see . . .
There's this sign in a nearby town that always makes me do a double take.
The first time I saw it, my mind went crazy -- "What? How can they possibly ..."
And I had to turn around and go back and read the sign again.
Because what my eyes see is "Adultery Retreat."
I am reminded of James Thurber's wonderful piece, "The Admiral on the Bicycle." Thurber, at this time, was almost blind without his glasses and he writes of a day when his glasses were being mended. He was being driven somewhere by a friend and, with his impaired vision, he kept seeing strange things - a small striped cat rolling like a barrel across the street, an old lady with a parasol walking through a bus, an admiral in full dress uniform riding on a bicycle.
Thurber concludes: " With perfect vision, one is inextricably trapped in the workaday world, a prisoner of reality. . . For the hawk-eyed person life has none of those soft edges which for me blur into fantasy. The kingdom of the blind is a little like Oz, a little like Wonderland, a little like Poictesme. Anything you can think of, and a lot you would never think of, can happen there."
Like a roadside Adultery Retreat.
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