Dear Thursday,
I was just thinking that ‘may you live in interesting times’ is no longer much of a curse…
Love,
Kevin
(26 May 2016)
Dear Thursday,
I was just thinking that ‘may you live in interesting times’ is no longer much of a curse…
Love,
Kevin
(26 May 2016)
…in one week, I can resume using verbs in my poems.
(25 May 2016)
I spent yesterday updating my blog and finishing the preliminary layout for a section of the next book, so I didn’t write yesterday. I was at it first thing this morning, though…
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Dear Wednesday,
What would you suggest?
Love,
Kevin
(25 May 2016)
Dear Tuesday,
Cats. How would I ever wake up in the middle of the night without them?
Love,
Kevin
(24 May 2016)
Cool and cloudy this Monday morning…
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Dear Monday,
You are off to a mysterious start. I can’t tell what you have in mind.
Love,
Kevin
(23 May 2016)
Every time I see somebody advocating voting for ‘the lesser of two evils’—especially when it is followed by a statement of helplessness—I get angry. Regardless of which candidate you like in this (or any other) election, the whole point of voting is to elect the best person for the job. If you think Candidate A is the best person, you vote for Candidate A. If you think it’s Candidate B, C, or D, you vote for that person. Or maybe you write in the name of someone you think is qualified, but is not otherwise on the ballot—that’s why that space is there.
Instead, what keeps happening is that people figuratively hold their noses and literally vote for Candidate A because Candidate A is not Candidate B. ‘The lesser of two evils is still less evil’, they say. Guess what? If that is the rationale, then evil has already won, even if Candidate A wins. And this keeps happening because The Establishment, let’s call them, have, through faulty logic and sheer repetition, convinced people that things cannot work any other way, that voting their conscience will result in the ‘more evil’ candidate winning—thereby ending democracy as we know it.
The problem with this is that we are not going to get the government we want if we keep compromising this way. It doesn’t work well in everyday life (I’m living proof of this)—so how can it work when it comes to voting?
My two bits: vote your conscience.
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Dear Sunday,
When will we get to record our dreams at night? That last one was kind of entertaining…
Love,
Kevin
(22 May 2016)
Written after seeing a painting of baby shoes on a pink background. Unfortunately, I know neither the title nor the name of the artist…
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