Friday, 20 September 2013

Write-Edit-Publish Challenge for September - 'Moving On'
















Welcome to WEP's Blogfest SEPTEMBER [=Write-Edit-Publish, formerly 'Romantic Friday Writers'] Challenge for Friday 20 September 2013 - 'Moving On...'

Here's my text:

Moving on...

Melissa Hart woke up one morning to find that her bed had grown during the night. It was huge. She walked around on the soft down coverlet that seemed to be three or fours times the size that it was the night before. Yes, the bed had grown in width, breadth and height. She looked down at her slippers on the floor beside the bed and tried to guess the distance. Then she noticed her hands: Instead of fingers, she had small appendages with retractable claws. Her arms were covered with hair! Fur! What had she become?

Looking out from the edge of the bed, Melissa searched for a mirror or a glass table with a cake that says "Eat me!" on it. She hopped off the bed with ease and landed on all fours. Then she found a full length mirror on the inside of an open closet door: There was a cat looking back at her from the other side of the glass. A small tortoise-shell cat or kitten, is what she had become!

How did this happen? Am I dreaming? wondered Melissa as she wandered about the room trying to discern where she was. She was not, as she first thought, at home in her own bedroom. But the room seemed familiar. Then she heard a voice: "Come Kitties! Time for breakfast!" 

Oh no! thought Melissa as she arched her back and her fur stood on end, It's Catrina, my former sister-in-law! Catrina has at least five cats! But I still don't understand, why I am a cat! Have I died during the night and returned as a cat? But how could I remember my life as a human being?

Melissa leaped up onto a chest of drawers, thinking there may be a purse or a wallet with some identification. Where's my handbag?! 


On the nightstand by the bed she spotted a leather shoulder bag. There it is! Melissa jumped up on the bed again and pulled the handbag to the middle of the bed. Using her front paws and face she found her cellphone in its own case with shoulder strap and her wallet with identification and credit cards. She removed her driver's license and debit-card from her wallet and squeezed them into her cellphone bag. Then she tied a knot on the strap to shorten it and put her head through the loop so that she could carry the bag as a cat-size shoulder bag. It hung in front of her like a bib.

Where do I go now? she wondered looking for an open door or window. The door to the hall was ajar, but she was ready to hop up and open a door if needed. Luckily, she was still in Europe. It would be harder to open a door with a spherical American door knob!

No one in the hall. But which way? Melissa followed the light from a room that had a washer and dryer. She leaped atop the dryer and escaped through an open window. She was outside now. Free at last! 

Stick to the woods, Melissa! said an inner voice. And she did. She ran until she was out of breath. I should be able to climb trees, she thought and climbed a medium sized birch that swayed in the wind at the top. But what a view! Now all she has to do is decide where to go. It was a rural area; there were fields and meadows and farm houses. It was autumn, too. She still had time to find order in her life before winter, if this was to be a permanent condition. Or maybe it was only temporary and she could return to her life as a human being. She had her driving license and bankcard with her, in case. But could she just walk into a bank and ask for help? Could she still talk? She could at least still think. And as long as you can think, there is hope.

Melissa looked hard at the landscape beneath her and spied a children's tree house built solidly up in an old oak. She scurried down the ever-swaying birch and ran toward the oak. Would there be children using it? She would have to take that chance. Maybe they were at school. When Melissa had climbed up to the tiny room built between ancient boughs, she felt safe. She could rest here and think about what to do next. She put down her cellphone bag and remembered with horror that she did not bring the battery-charger. She could perhaps make one or two phone calls. Try to speak, Melissa! But she could not form the words. She sounded like a cat! But she could send a text message! But to whom? Perhaps to Olof, her former friend and love?

Pressing the phone buttons was not easy. She ended up holding the cellphone between her hind-legs and pressing the buttons with the unsure digits of her forepaws:

Dear Olof,
Forgive me. Please help me. Could you rescue a kitten hiding up in a play house in an oak tree behind the Nilssons barn? I will explain everything if you do me this one favour. 

I still love you. 
Melissa

P.S. 
Send a text message to my cell phone if you cannot do this.  I seem to have lost my voice and cannot speak on the phone.

Melissa waited.  Nothing happened right away, so she curled up beside the phone and lay her head on the bag as a pillow.

Finally, she heard a signal for an incoming text-message.

Dear Melissa,
I'll take care of the kitty. I'm on my way now! But when will I see you?  And I still love you!  
Olof

Melissa  punched the words: 'You'll see me soon', but she had no idea how she was going to explain all of this to Olof. She would just have to take one thing at a time. Melissa fell happily asleep.


Word count: 997 (NCCO)

Kitten Elsa held by my daughter, Elisabet
 



















This story is completely fictional. Any similarity to events or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. But for those who follow my blog, it is clear that my cats have inspired me!

Copyright 2013 Anna Christina Wigren Nordeman












Best wishes,
Anna










First Commenter:
Yolanda Renée
of
Defending the Pen







Wednesday, 4 September 2013

Insecure Writer's Support Group for September 2013




Anna Nordeman







 

Thanks to Alex J Cavanaugh for starting Insecure Writer's Support Group.


This is my seventh post for IWSG.


For those who would like to see my list of how-to-write-books, please go here
[If what I write here is difficult to understand, go back to my IWSG for August here.]

For my September edition of IWSG I would first like to thank everyone who stopped to read and comment on my dilemma with suddenly living in a four-room apartment with eleven cats as well as my two school-aged children. Thank you, Lin of Duck and Wheel with String for sharing your understanding of cat-psychology. Thank you to Roland of In the Cross Hairs for your clear thoughts about how to tackle big problems. Thank you Yolanda for your good wishes. Thanks also to M Pax, Huntress, Denise Covey and Tanya Walton of Alotments4you for your kind thoughts.

Having faith in yourself and others is important. Thank you for having faith in me.

I haven't found new homes for the kitties yet, but I'm advertising. 


 




































A small and unexpected windfall enabled me to pay bills and hire a carpenter to install a door to the living room. This seeming simple piece of architecture allows me to hide valuable possessions, such as books, from the claws of six kittens.




 


































I am still knee-deep in problems to solve; but they seem to be solvable problems; not like all of the unsolvable problems we sooner or later face, like broken hearts, incurable illness and death. And I did squeeze out a little story for the WEP-challenge, 'Vacation'! [If you've missed it, you can read it here.]

I am applying for jobs too. I'll let you know if I land one.

Please take care, all of you wonderful, creative people. Sorry, that this post is so thin. It is seven am on Monday, September 2nd, when I am writing this. I probably won't have time to add anything more sparkling than this.








































Best wishes,
Anna











P.S.
Yesterday, Tuesday September 3rd, a family came to look at the cats and decided to buy Lill-Kajsa. She moves to her new home on Friday September 13th. Elisabet is sad, but has nine days to get used to the idea and say good-bye. This family is willing to keep in touch with us and let us know how it works out.
 

Lill-Kajsa and her daughter Elsa







Lill-Kajsa together with her sister Kalle-Mathilda

















First Commenter:
Joylene Nowell Butler
of


Joylene Nowell Butler, author









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