Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta fluff. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta fluff. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 28 de octubre de 2025

GAVEN TIL MOR - dansk vise

https://youtu.be/leF_04bYsbk?si=2arMi4Wii8fJiK2a  

GAVEN TIL MOR - dansk vise


Hun havde sparet månedsvis, ja meget, meget længe

til hendes sparegris var blevet fuld af kobberpenge

og alle sparepengene, dem skulle pigen bruge,

for mor har jo fødselsdag engang i næste uge.

Det er så dyrt at kør' med bus, så hun må altid trave

hun går til juvelerbutikken for at købe gave.

Den gamle guldsmed smiler lidt, mens pigen står og nejer

hun knuger om sin sparegris, der rummer, hvad hun ejer.

Hun står og ser sig om med øjne, der er fyldt med lykke,

så spø'r hun: "Undskyld, men hvad koster såd'n et perlesmykke?"

Den gamle guldsmed svarer: "Jo, nu skal jeg si'e dig prisen

det koster nøjagtig det, du har i sparegrisen".

Den lille pige takker ham, og grisen skifter ejer,

så ta'r hun smykket, går mod døren, vender sig og nejer.

Den rige juveler må stå lidt fattig i butikken

da pigen med et glædessmil forsvinder i trafikken.

En uge gik, og så en da', kom mo'ren lidt bedrøvet

til disken med sit smykke og der stod hun lidt og tøved'.

"Min datter si'r, hun købte det, men jeg kan ikke nægte,

at jeg har vær't betænkelig for smykket er jo ægte.

"Hun har vel ikke stjålet", hvisker mo'ren ganske stille.

I juvelerens blik begynder nu et smil at spille.

"Den lille pige stjal mit hjerte, da hun stod og nejed'

og takked' mig så høfligt, mens hun gav mig alt, hun ejed".

https://youtu.be/leF_04bYsbk?si=2arMi4Wii8fJiK2a

domingo, 17 de agosto de 2025

THE FAIRY SWING

Down in the apple orchard,

where petals fell like rain

round little Mary Catherine

as she made a daisy chain

---------------------

She used a lot of daisies,

she fashioned it with care...

heard her mother calling her

and left it hanging there.

-------------------------------------

When later she went back again

she heard a wee voice singing,

and in her daisy chain she saw

a lovely fairy swinging!

-------------------------

Now Mary Catherine always leaves

her daisy chains behind.

If fairies use them for their swings,

she says she doesn't mind.


martes, 5 de agosto de 2025

DELILAH, BY QUEEN (Freddie Mercury's Calico cat)

This was one of Freddie Mercury's last songs before he passed away. Relatable to any cat mum or cat dad, because our whiskered friends sometimes make us furious when they pee on our furniture (or on our laptop), but they look so cute and so innocent and then make our worries melt away... 







Delilah, Delilah

Oh, my, oh, my, oh, my, you're irresistible
You make me smile when I'm just about to cry
You bring me hope you make me laugh and I like it
You get away with murder so innocent
But when you throw a moody you're all claws and you bite
That's all right

Delilah, Delilah
Oh, my, oh my, oh my, you're unpredictable
You make me so very happy
When you cuddle up and go to sleep beside me
And then you make me slightly mad
When you pee all over my Chippendale suite

Delilah, Delilah
Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh

You take over my house and home
You even try to answer my telephone
Delilah, you're the apple of my eye

Meow, meow, meow
Delilah, I love you, Delilah
Oh, you make me so very happy
You give me kisses and I go out of my mind, ooh
Meow, meow, meow
You're irresistible, I love you, Delilah
Delilah, I love you

Hah, hah
You make me very happy
Oh, yeah, I love your kisses
I love your kisses
I love your kisses
I love your kisses
I love your, your, your kisses
I love your kisses


THE SEVEN AGES OF CHILDHOOD

 Recently while looking for lost Victorian gems, I found this little interpretation of Jacques' Seven Ages speech in As You Like It, but adapted to Victorian childhood (instead of Renaissance adulthood). Shakespeare, Victorian childhoood, and a style that reflects each stage of life (the toddler's lisp, the schoolgirl's curiosity, the teenage maiden's dreams of princes and princesses...). Seven Ages of Childhood has many things that I adore <3 ...



Verses by Carolyn Wells, illustrations by Jessie Wilcox-Smith

******************************






 First the Infant in Its Mother's Arms 


 Baby, of all mysterious things, 
You're stranger far than stars or kings. 
You stare superbly day by day, 
Nor let your large reserve give way. 
Unfathomable mysteries 
Lurk in your big, unseeing eyes, 
Making brave memories, and yet, 
Making them only to forget. 
But though reflectively you blink, 
Trying to make us think you think, 
We know you cannot think or talk, 
You cannot run, you cannot walk; 
You little human mystery, 
You can't do anything but be. 
 You small, content, safe-guarded thing, 
Nestling beneath your mother's wing. 
You're all so new; your roseleaf skin, 
Your dewy eyes and dimpled chin, 
Your pinch of hair and pound of flesh 
Are all so delicate and fresh. 
Then, Baby, every little while 
You cry. And then perhaps you smile. 
You cry without a bit of reason, 
You laugh both in and out of season; 
A wise proceeding, I suppose, 
If that is all the speech one knows. 
 But sometimes do the dull hours drag? 
And sometimes does your patience flag? 
Long days and nights you must get through,
 Without a single thing to do. 
And though perhaps you see and hear, 
It means naught to your eye and ear. 
But, Baby, you don't seem to care, 
You hark at silence,—look at air! 
 And in the stillness, or the dark, 
Absorbedly you look and hark. 
So, then, what difference can it make, 
Whether you are asleep or 'wake? 
You cannot think, and it would seem 
You do not know enough to dream. 
How can you dream, not knowing words? 
Or is it like the song of birds, 
Or scent of flowers, or sunshine bright, 
Or South breeze on a summer's night? 
 Perhaps your thoughts just flounder 'round 
In seas of color, waves of sound; 
In notions vague of shape or form. 
As,—Life is something soft and warm. 
Mother is just a happy place; 
Nurse is a sort of vacant space. 
And father is a kind of stuff, 
That's woolly, black and rather rough. 
 And then some day into your eyes 
There comes a look exceeding wise. 
And then your brain begins to grow; 
You learn "How does the Kitty go?" 
You learn to "Love the Lambie Baa," 
And "Make a Face at Grandmamma!" 
And then upon your own account 
You seem to learn a large amount, 
As you laboriously prove 
That your own fingers really move! 
And if you have accomplished this, 
And if you've learned "a Spanish kiss;" 
And if three times you've said "Goo—goo!" 
Why, that's a busy day for you! 






****************************** 
 II 
Then the Toddling Baby Boy, 
With shining morning face, 
Creeping like a snail. 



 Queer, drifting fancies, vague and dim, 
'Neath his gold curls are hid. 
The kitchen steps appear to him 
Those of a pyramid. 
 With mighty purpose in his mind, 
He clambers up. And then, 
With purpose quite as well defined, 
He scrambles down again. 
 Then, of all busy ones of earth,— 
Toilers beneath the sun, 
Working away for all they're worth, 
He is the busiest one! 
 Down in the sand he has to dig 
A hole, exceeding deep; 
And by its side, all smooth and big,
He piles a lovely heap. 
 With both hands then he scatters it 
Round the verandah floor; 
And when he's scattered every bit, 
He scoops it up once more.
 He has to watch the rainy drops 
Drip, dripping from the wall; 
Then, quick as anything, he stops 
To go and roll his ball. 
 Across the lawn he seems to see 
A funny little stick; 
So he must needs go hastily 
And give the thing a kick.
 The laughing sunshine sifts right through 
His mop of tangled curls; 
Turning it to a golden hue, 
And kinking it in twirls. 
 And then he hums with all his might 
A funny little song;
 Some of the notes are almost right, 
And some are sort of wrong. 
 Then he must watch a ladybird 
That crawls across the floor; 
Then listen! for he thinks he heard 
An awful lion roar! 
 He has to stop and 'member things; 
"Once out at Gran'ma's house 
They was a birdy wiv red wings! 
And kitty caught a mouse! 
 "And then in Sunday-school one day, 
The children all stood 'round, 
And sang a song 'bout why—delay,— 
It had a lovely sound." 
 Whatever can, or can't be known, 
He much desires to know; 
For suddenly his wonder-bone 
Has just begun to grow. 
 "I wonder what that birdy's at 
Over to Gran'ma's house. 
I wonder why a kitty cat 
Is 'llowed to catch a mouse. 
 "I wonder why the doggie whines,
 I wonder why he does; 
I wonder why the dandylines 
All turns to fuzzy-fuzz. 
 "I wonder why my shadow-boy 
Hops fast along as me; 
I wonder why my newest toy 
So broken seems to be. 
 "I wonder why they disappear 
That sharp and shiny tool; 
I wonder why my muvver dear 
Won't let me go to school. 
 "I wonder why a deaded fly 
Won't ever come alive; 
I wonder why I'm only free, 
An Dorofy is five!" 
 Each hour with wonder new is fraught; 
Until he thinks so fast, 
He wonders what it was he thought 
When he was thinking last. 
 Wondering, singing, 'membering,— 
He learns anew each day, 
The world is but a bouncing ball 
For him to kick in play. 




 ****************************************** 
 III 
Then the Epicure 
With fine and greedy taste for porridge. 




 Next to the Epicure we turn, 
With a discerning taste in porridge; 
Yet careful, lest her mouth she burn,
 Like the o'er hasty man from Norwich, 
For now, her judging powers have grown; 
She thinks with wisdom all her own. 
 In tones that leave no room for doubt 
She intimates she is unable 
To eat her bread and milk without 
Her bear and dolly on the table. 
And nurse, because of her insistence, 
Follows the line of least resistance. 
 She does not want a nice clean dress; 
She's very, very sure she doesn't! 
She wants to go to Grandma's,—yes! 
She wasn't naughty,—no, she wasn't! 
And knows with wilful, shaking head, 
She does not want to go to bed! 
 She doesn't want to speak her piece; 
She doesn't want her hair all curly; 
She isn't Auntie's pressus niece! 
She isn't mother's darling girlie! 
Then suddenly, a change pacific,—
 And her new mood is beatific! 
 Cherubic smiles drive frowns away, 
She vows that she loves evvybuddy! 
She will be goody-girl all day; 
Nor get her shoes and stockings muddy. 
She will not go outside the yard; 
And she "loves muvver awful hard!"
 Sometimes the martyr mood appears, 
She's good in meek, submissive fashion; 
Reproachful eyes show signs of tears, 
And red cheeks hint a stifled passion. 
She wonders, "when she gets to heaven, 
If children go to bed at seven!" 
 She favors games of "let's p'tend," 
And with an energy unfailing, 
She plays the role of calling friend, 
Dressed up in anything that's trailing. 
From, "Ding-a-ling!" "Come in"; a bow,— 
To, "Well, I must be going now." 
 Her reasoning powers have come alive, 
Her mind is rapidly awaking. 
The sharpest bargains she can drive, 
Conditions she is ever making. 
"I'll sing my song for uncle,—yes, 
If you will make my doll a dress." 
 Her mind, obeying nature's law, 
Like morning-glory's soft unfolding, 
Fills with a deep, enchanting awe 
Those who are breathlessly beholding; 
And they exclaim, "Well, did you ever!"
"She's surely going to grow up clever!" 
 She dances down Life's primrose way 
Unconscious of her faults and merits; 
The grown-ups watch her at her play, 
And they opine that "she inherits 
Her mother's gentleness; but still 
She seems to have her father's will."







 *********************************** 


 IV 
Then the Lover, 
sighing like a furnace. 



 In the soft soil of little lives 
Affection quickly springs and thrives 
And grows like anything; 
Its tiny tendrils Love puts out, 
Not knowing what it's all about, 
But glad to smile and sing. 
 Perhaps it is a favorite doll, 
Often the raggedest of all, 
That bids affection start. 
Unstinted love is gladly poured 
Upon the dolly so adored 
By little Tenderheart. 
 Now love grows very fast, and so 
The little heart will overflow, 
And love will run to waste; 
It must needs fall on this or that,— 
The dog, the baby or the cat; 
Quite Catholic its taste. 
 Perhaps a schoolmate gets a share; 
The little girl with braided hair, 
That sits next in the class; 
The one with wide, pathetic eyes, 
Blue as the warm midsummer skies, 
A timid little lass. 
 A bashful glance,—a furtive look,— 
Some words about a lesson book;
 And then a smile or two. 
Then,—"You're the nicest girl I know!"
 And, "So are you!" "I love you so."
 And, "So do I love you!" 
 Together arm in arm they walk, 
They do not care for others' talk, 
Nor with the others play;
In softest whispers they impart 
The secrets of each little heart, 
Intimate friends are they. 
 And yet, though fair and sweet the fruits, 
So fragile are affection's roots, 
A trifle works them ill; 
A single hasty word, or curt, 
The little tendrils oft will hurt;
 A frown perhaps may kill. 
 "She told me what you said 'bout me!"
 "I think she's mean as she can be!"
 "I'm mad at you! So there!"
 "I'll never speak to you again!" 
"All right, Miss Meany, don't you then!
You needn't think I care!" 
 And then, just as the big tears start, 
Homeward runs little Broken-heart, 
And to her own room flies; 
"Dolly, my darling dolly, pet, 
You love me, dear, you love me yet!" 
She whispers with wet eyes. 
 Ah, human love brings but unrest, 
Once more she catches to her breast 
The love that cannot fail; 
The love that makes her heartache cease, 
The love that brings a soothing peace, 
No other can avail. 
Instinctive love, that can't be taught, 
That giveth all and asketh naught, 
Reigns in one heart alone. 
Its own reward it can create, 
It makes the heart inanimate 
Responsive to her own. 








 ***************************** 



Then the Scholar; 
With eyes severe, and hair of formal cut. 



 Nothing is quite so hard, I think, 
As drawing maps with pen and ink. 
You dot the cities, every one, 
And make long lines where rivers run. 
 And every single coasting line 
Must wave in curves as fine as fine. 
The rivers wriggle up and down 
Across the green and through the brown; 
 You have to measure all the while,— 
A half an inch is 'most a mile. 
I do think maps are awful queer, 
They seem to bring the whole world here. 
 Why, as I sit here in my chair, 
I see the countries everywhere. 
I see across to far Japan, 
With funny people, like a fan. 
 All red and purple clothes they wear, 
And knobby hatpins in their hair, 
And flowers and trees of simple kind, 
And that big mountain far behind. 
 Then, in the class, we have to give
 Description where the natives live. 
The countries that are coloured pink 
Are where the natives live, I think. 
 The people that live there, I'm sure 
Must be extremely sad and poor, 
With only rice and fish to eat, 
And not a single shady street. 
 I wonder if they ever think 
They live in countries coloured pink. 
 But drawing maps,—that isn't all; 
I was promoted in the Fall, 
And now I've lots of bigger books. 
Reading is harder than it looks. 
 You have to say your words just so,
 You mustn't read too fast or slow. 
It 'stracts you so, you can't find out, 
Sometimes, what stories are about. 
 But reader stories, anyway, 
Are never very glad or gay; 
They're mostly 'bout some noble deed, 
With fine, high-sounding words to read. 
 And though it sounds quite loud and grand, 
It's pretty hard to understand. 
But Friday afternoon's the time! 
We all speak pieces made of rhyme. 
 Next week, mine is the loveliest one, 
About "The South Wind and the Sun." 
It has such soft and singing words, 
Like "lily-bells," and "hummingbirds." 
 The south wind and the sun, you see, 
Were comrades, just like May and me. 
And they went wandering all about, 
Just full of laugh, and gleeful shout. 
 Dancing all springy on their toes; 
Wait! This is the way it goes: 
"Arm in arm they went together, 
Over heights of morning haze. "
Over slanting slopes of lawn, 
They went on and on and on, 
Where the daisies looked like star-tracks, 
Trailing up and down the dawn." 
 Don't you think that is nice to say 
Upon a breezy, shiny day? 
Some poets just know how to write, 
The loveliest pieces to recite; 
 So many that I'd love to speak,
 And just one Friday in each week! 
But then I study other things,— 
The Civil War, and Saturn's rings,— 
 I have to study hard, for, oh! 
There is so much I want to know. 
There's lots of knowledge, I suppose, 
More even than my Grandpa knows. 
 I look ahead, and seem to see 
That knowledge waiting there for me. 
I think, when I grow big and tall,
 I prob'ly shall have learned it all.




 ************************************* 
 VI 
The Sixth Age shifts 
To lean and slender maidenhood, 
With thoughtful eyes and quiet mien. 




 When all the others are at play, 
Sometimes I like to go away 
And sit beneath the willow tree, 
And wait for thought to come to me. 
 It's just the dearest quiet spot, 
Where I can think as well as not; 
And little breezes softly blow, 
That seem to make my feelings grow. 
 And all the sunny, golden air 
Is full of living, everywhere. 
Then, with a happy little sound, 
The branches murmur all around, 
 So close, I scarcely can see through 
The willow leaves against the blue. 
Yet far less clearly can I see 
Through tangled thoughts that come to me. 
 There seem to be, on every side, 
Doors suddenly flung open wide; 
Leading to places strange and fair; 
I want to go,—yet don't quite dare. 
 I've been a little girl so long, 
That, somehow, it seems almost wrong
 To think how grown-up I shall be 
In days that have to come to me. 
 Then, with my mind, I seem to look 
At life, spread open as a book; 
And I am almost glad, at last, 
That I am growing old so fast. 
 Cornelia,—she just wants to be 
A lady, and have friends to tea. 
But I should like,—I'm sure I should,— 
To be more nobly great and good. 
 Some one like Joan of Arc, you know;
 Saint Katharine, or Mrs. Stowe; 
And do brave deeds as they have done. 
I wouldn't marry any one; 
 Unless,—well, maybe, if there came 
A noble knight of doughty fame, 
Or else an Emperor or King 
Who wanted me like anything, 
 Maybe,—perhaps,—I might say yes,— 
But likely I'd say no, I guess, 
Well, as to that, some thought I'd give; 
But of one thing I'm positive, 
 I'll have a softly trailing gown,— 
Blue velvet edged with snow-white down. 
But, such a robe as that to wear, 
I'd have to be a Princess Fair. 
 And I'm quite sure I'd rather be 
Nothing but just a grown-up me, 
And have the wonders all come true 
That through those opening doors I view. 



 ************************************ 



VII 
Last scene of all that ends
 This strange eventful History— 
Is First Love and mere enchantment— 
Sans mother, sans father, sans brothers —sans everything. 




The year was at its very Spring, 
A dawning glory filled the air; 
So marvelous, it seemed to bring 
A sense of something strange and fair. 
 Slowly along the blossomed lane, 
Strolled, wondering, a girl and boy, 
Happy,—yet powerless to explain 
Whence came this new and mystic joy. 
 The pinky blooms upon the trees 
Swam in a fragrant, rosy blur; 
And suddenly he knew that these 
Had not the loveliness of her. 
 The knowledge made his heart stand still; 
Exquisite fancies filled his mind; 
He felt a power to voice at will 
Speech of the most exalted kind. 
 Poetic lines sang in his ears,
 Strophes ran riot in his head; 
And, almost with a thrill of tears,
 "It—it's a lovely day!" he said. 
 Unconsciously her hand met his; 
His simple nearness seemed to bless; 
She only murmured, "Yes, it is!" 
But all the world breathed tenderness. 
 Again the raptured silence fell; 
There was no need of spoken word;
 For each was conscious of the spell, 
And each the silent music heard. 
 From heart to heart the glad thoughts flew, 
Such sympathy the clasped hands gave, 
Her shyness made him timid, too,— 
His daring made her also brave. 
 Joy's cup seemed suddenly to brim, 
With magic nectar, sweet and rare. 
He was so glad she walked by him; 
She was so glad that he was there. 
 With silent lips and hearts aglow, 
They entered on life's Primrose way. 
Then, moved to speech, he cried out, "Oh! 
I think it's beautiful today!" 
 She looked, unheeding, at the skies, 
She gazed, unseeing, at the blue; 
Then glancing straight into his eyes, 
She softly said, "Oh, I do, too!" 
 A glory fell on each young brow, 
As, through an ever-widening rift 
Between the days of Then and Now, 
Shone promise of Life's fairest gift.






jueves, 29 de mayo de 2025

CARTA DE AMOR DE TU GATO

 


**"Si tan solo supieras – Una carta de amor de tu gato"**

Nunca me escuchaste hablar, pero te conté mil historias, con cada parpadeo lento, cada roce suave de mi cuerpo contra tus piernas, cada ronroneo escondido entre silencios.

Yo estaba allí cuando el mundo se sentía pesado, acurrucándome a tu lado como un hechizo silencioso: *"No estás solo."* Memoricé el ritmo de tu respiración, la melodía de tu risa, cómo cambiaban tus pasos cuando tu alma se aligeraba. Y cuando el dolor te pesaba, me tendí contigo, dejando que el calor de mi cuerpo dijera lo que las palabras no podían: *"Estoy aquí."*

Tú y yo teníamos nuestro propio idioma. Mi cola enrollada a tu brazo decía: *"Confío en ti."* El leve maullido al verte volver susurraba: *"Te extrañé."* Y por las noches, cuando mis patas temblaban en sueños, recorría mundos infinitos contigo a mi lado.

El tiempo es un enigma. Me dio lo justo para enseñarte sobre un amor silencioso, paciente, el que no pide nada y permanece. Pero si pudiera detenerlo, elegiría cada maullido viejo, cada salto que me cuesta, solo por quedarme contigo un día más.

Así que cuando mi pelaje se torne plateado y mis pasos se vuelvan más lentos que tu tristeza, recuerda esto: el amor no se va. Se esconde en el rincón donde dormía, en la manta que aún guarda mi olor, en el sonido suave de las patas que ya no pisan el suelo, pero aún caminan por tu corazón.

¿Y si alguna vez dudas? Cierra los ojos. Siente la caricia invisible de mi cabeza buscando tu mano, el ronroneo que aún vibra en el aire. Te amé profundamente. No porque fueras perfecto, sino porque eras mío.

P.D. Si algún día otro par de ojos felinos te observa desde una esquina, no apartes la mirada. No te sientas culpable. El amor verdadero no compite, se multiplica. Y yo te enseñé a recibirlo con el alma abierta.

*"Los gatos dejan huellas suaves en nuestras vidas. Pero los humanos… ustedes dejan constelaciones enteras en las nuestras."*

(Anda, abre esa lata de atún. Prometo no decírselo a nadie.)

martes, 6 de mayo de 2025

EMMA AND WHISPER

 


She entered the world as quietly as she rests now—no loud cries, no grand announcements. Just a small bundle of fur, born on a rainy night, hidden away in a cardboard box behind an old bakery. The world didn't take notice… but one person did.


Emma had always been overwhelmed by noise—the noise of the world, her own thoughts, and the grief that weighed heavy on her heart. After losing her father, even the simplest days felt like a cacophony. The silence in their home, once comforting, now felt like an empty echo. Until one afternoon, while taking out the trash behind her shop, she heard the faintest mew.


That’s when she found her: a tiny, snow-white kitten with weary eyes and a soul that seemed to hum with quiet.


Emma named her "Whisper"—because that was all she was. Soft paws. Gentle purrs. A heartbeat so fragile, you had to listen closely to catch it.


Now, Whisper lies beside Emma each night, curled in a cozy gray blanket, as if she were woven into the very comfort Emma had been longing for. Her small body curled like a comma in a story that had paused in sorrow—but now continues, word by word, in healing.


She doesn’t perform tricks. She doesn’t chase after toys. But her mere presence speaks something Emma could never find the words for:


“You’re not alone anymore.”


Sometimes, the deepest love doesn’t shout. It rests, breathes gently… and just stays.

miércoles, 23 de abril de 2025

ELEANOR AND MARBLE

  A very touching cat story .. <3 



In the spring of 1910, in a quiet English village lined with cobblestone streets and ivy-covered walls, there lived a young lady named Eleanor. She was known for her kindness, her delicate lace dresses, and the way she always had ink on her fingers from writing poetry no one ever read.


But more than anything, people knew Eleanor for her constant companion — a snow-white cat named Marble.


Marble had come into Eleanor’s life on a rainy October evening, just a tiny kitten with wide, frightened eyes, left in a wicker basket on the doorstep of the old manor house where she lived alone after her parents had passed. Eleanor had taken one look at the tiny creature and whispered, “Well then, I guess you and I will keep each other from getting too lonely.”


And they did.


Each morning, Marble would sit by Eleanor’s writing desk as she scribbled poems into her worn leather journal. He would bat at her quill with his paw, and she would pretend to scold him, but she always smiled. Every afternoon, the two could be found in the garden — Eleanor with her parasol, Marble chasing bees and tumbling through patches of lavender.


The villagers spoke of them fondly. “The lady and her cat,” they’d say. “Two hearts, one soul.”


But Eleanor held a sadness that she never shared. At 23, she had once been promised to a young man named Thomas. War took him away before he could return with a ring. Letters stopped coming. And though Eleanor never wore black, her eyes sometimes did.


Marble became her lighthouse through grief.


He would sleep on her chest when she cried, blink at her softly when she stared too long at the sea, and curl up by her journal when she couldn’t find the words. For years, it was just the two of them — quiet, steady, healing.


One morning in early winter, Eleanor didn’t rise.


The maid found her still, her hand resting gently on Marble’s back, a notebook on her lap, the final page filled.


"To the one who stayed,

who asked for nothing but gave me everything,

you are my dearest love,

in fur and silence."


Marble sat by her side for days. He ate nothing. He made no sound.


The villagers buried Eleanor beneath the cherry tree in her garden, the same one Marble always climbed to catch butterflies. They let Marble say goodbye.


But he never truly left her.


Every year, for nearly a decade, Marble would disappear from whichever home had taken him in, only to be found curled at the foot of Eleanor’s grave — rain or shine, season after season. Waiting. Remembering.


Until one spring morning, he too did not return.


They buried him beside her.


And for those who passed by the cherry tree each year, they swore they could sometimes hear a soft purr in the breeze and catch the faint scent of lavender.


Two hearts.

One soul.

Together once more and forever ... 🐈❤️

jueves, 17 de abril de 2025

Catkins: an Easter Legend

 


Ever hear of the lovely Polish legend about how weeping willow trees saved some drowning kittens who were chasing butterflies and fell into the river? The trees reacted to the mother cat’s cries for help by sweeping their limbs down into the water where the kittens clung to the ends of the branches and were saved. Each spring since then the willow branches sprout catkins, tiny fur-like buds, at their tips where the kittens once clung.

lunes, 24 de marzo de 2025

Legend of the Willow Catkins

 



The Legend of the Willow Catkins


According to an old Polish legend, many springtimes ago a mother cat was crying at the bank of the river in which her kittens were drowning. The willows at the river’s edge longed to help her, so they swept their long graceful branches into the waters to rescue the tiny kittens who had fallen into the river while chasing butterflies. The kittens gripped on tightly to their branches and were safely brought to shore. Each springtime since, goes the legend, the willow branches sprout tiny fur-like buds, called catkins, at their tips where the tiny kittens once clung.



domingo, 23 de marzo de 2025

ELOGIO DE LA TERNURA

 


ELOGIO DE LA TERNURA 

La ternura es un refugio silencioso en el tumulto de la vida, un lenguaje sin palabras que trasciende fronteras y barreras. Es la capacidad de ver con los ojos del alma y tocar con las manos del corazón, un acto de profunda empatía y compasión que florece en lo simple: un abrazo inesperado, una mirada que comprende, un gesto que cuida.


Es fuerza en la suavidad, valentía en la vulnerabilidad. La ternura no busca conquistar, sino conectar; no exige, sino entrega. Surge en la delicadeza de un susurro, en el cuidado con que se sostiene una flor, en la paciencia infinita hacia los errores propios y ajenos.


En un mundo que a menudo valora lo ruidoso y lo rápido, la ternura invita a la pausa, a la contemplación. Nos recuerda que no somos islas, que nuestra humanidad se refleja en el otro. Es, en esencia, la promesa de que, incluso en la adversidad, siempre habrá un rincón donde reine la bondad.


Cultivar la ternura es, quizás, el mayor acto de rebeldía, evolución y fe, porque en ella yace la semilla de una humanidad más justa y amorosa...


-Créditos al Autor-

miércoles, 19 de marzo de 2025

Lily y su gato

 Lily y su gato 



HERMOSA HISTORIA.🫶💖

Lily siempre había creído que el amor venía con pelaje y un suave ronroneo.😻


Cuando tenía siete años, encontró un gatito pequeño y desaliñado acurrucado en una caja de cartón afuera de su casa. Su pelaje era una mezcla de naranja y blanco, con los ojos abiertos por el miedo, pero cuando ella extendió la mano, él apretó su cabecita contra la palma de su mano, eligiéndola al instante.


Lo llamó Oliver.


Desde ese día, fueron inseparables. La seguía por toda la casa, se acurrucaba en su almohada por la noche y la esperaba junto a la puerta cuando volvía del colegio. A medida que crecía, Oliver siguió siendo la única constante en su vida: en amistades que se desvanecían, en desamores, en momentos en que se sentía perdida. Siempre estuvo ahí, con su mirada sabia y su amor tranquilo y firme.


Pero el tiempo era cruel, y el amor, por fuerte que fuera, no podía detener el paso de los años. Oliver creció más lento, sus patas, antes juguetonas, ahora cansadas, sus ronroneos más suaves.


 Una noche, mientras Lily yacía a su lado, acariciando su pelaje, le susurró: «Ojalá pudieras quedarte para siempre».


Él parpadeó, como si comprendiera, y le acarició la mano con ternura por última vez.


La casa se sentía increíblemente vacía después de su partida. Sus rincones favoritos permanecieron intactos: el alféizar de la ventana donde observaba el mundo, la silla donde se acurrucaba, esperándola. Juraría que aún podía oír su ronroneo en la quietud de la noche.


Pasaron las semanas, luego los meses. Una noche, en lo que habría sido el cumpleaños de Oliver, Lily se sentó en el porche, mirando al cielo. Una estrella fugaz cruzó la oscuridad.


Cerró los ojos, susurrando el mismo deseo de antaño.


Y entonces, justo al abrirlos, lo oyó: un ronroneo suave y familiar.


Girándose lentamente, vio un pequeño gatito naranja sentado al pie del porche, con los ojos abiertos y esperando.


Lily sonrió entre lágrimas.


 Porque el amor, el que está destinado a ser, siempre encuentra el camino de regreso a casa ♥️


RESCATEMOS!