When you're trying to map out a new business plan and the pup insists on "helping." #DobbytheDog #dogsofinstagram

titsay
ojovivo
$LAYYYTER
Today's Document
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
sheepfilms

Product Placement
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todays bird
we're not kids anymore.
hello vonnie
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
Peter Solarz
NASA
will byers stan first human second

romaâ
Sweet Seals For You, Always

izzy's playlists!
Keni
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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@katebitters
When you're trying to map out a new business plan and the pup insists on "helping." #DobbytheDog #dogsofinstagram
COMING SOON: A brand new CCW website!
COMING SOON: A brand new CCWÂ website!
Thank you for bearing with us while we complete construction on our brand new website.
We promise the wait will be worth it!
-Kate & the Click Clack Team
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What I Learned From NOT Writing
What I Learned From NOTÂ Writing
[Originally written for and published on the Myrddin Publishing blog. Content written by Kate Leibfried, president of CCW] Sometimes life happens and finding time to write becomes challenging.
Maybe youâre struck with a personal tragedy OR work ramps up OR you welcome a child or grandchild into your life. Maybe youâre mentally in a poor place and find it difficult to summon even an ounce ofâŚ
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Ahhhh, it feels good to be surrounded by literature! Stop by the TC Book Festival. #books #amreading #bookstagram @raintaxi (at Minnesota State Fair)
Line for the TC Book Festival. Stop by and say hello! #amwriting #amreading (at Minnesota State Fair)
No Mom, I don't feel like getting out of the strawberry patch #dobbythedog #dogsofinstagram #strawberries (at Minneapolis, Minnesota)
Just had a blast speaking to 90 children at a local Spanish Immersion school! So many thoughtful and entertaining questions. My fav: "How did you decide the words?" That is THE question, isn't it? I face that question every single day. #childrensbook #Spanish #libro #amwriting #amreading #author
I get a little suspicious when "friendly" is in quotes #unnecessaryquotationmarks #grammar
A staycation in the Twin Cities. Keeping warm in the Como Conservatory (at Como Park Zoo & Conservatory)
Aaand, I'm out on a 24 point hand! Nothing like a little early morning #cribbage to start the weekend :)
Making Grammy proud! #Polish cabbage rolls (golumpkis). #nom
Monday night dinner club: cast iron night. #nom #mn
Last week someone asked, "is he a puppy?" Happy that my 8 year old buddy can still pass as a pup. Happy (designated) birthday, Dobby! #dogsofinstagram #DobbytheDog #nofilter #birthday
A friendly reminder from Dobby to everyone in MN (and several other states): don't forget to caucus on Tuesday! If you're not engaged, you can't complain. #dobbythedog #dogsofinstagram #onlyonebernie #berniesanders #supertuesday
Eliza [Short Story #13]
Iâm writing a short story a week for 52 weeks. Itâs getting harder, but Iâm hanging in there. This one fly out of my head and onto my laptop. I wish I had more self-propelled stories...
Eliza was a starer. She scrutinized the world from under a home-hewn haircut, spending minutes at a time taking in a feature on someoneâs face or looking at a crushed insect on the sidewalk or examining the mud-splattered shell of an empty cigarette pack.
âStop staring,â her mother would scold. âIt isnât polite.â
Eliza sometimes nodded, sometimes said, âyes mother,â and let her eyes rove somewhere else. More often than not, however, Elizaâs mother startled her so much that she jumped, yelped, jolted from her trance. It was never pleasant breaking eye contact. It felt like the plucking of several strands of hair that ran between Eliza and the thing she was watching. Pop-pop-pop-pop-pop, the roots.
Elizaâs eye contact became stealthier. She took to wearing sunglasses, even in church. Her mother would cuff her on the back of the head. âTake those ridiculous things off.â
She always obeyed her mother, but not without silently questioning the obedience. One day, Eliza would say to herself,Iâll be a grownup and I can look at whatever I want to look at. No more screams or slaps. One dayâŚ
Todayâs object of study was a dead toad. It lay party shriveled on the sidewalk, legs stuck out at odd angles, tongue lolling out of its mouth. A few black flies bobbed up and down around its body. Eliza dropped to the ground, got so close her eyelashes nearly touched the jutting leg. She looked at the texture of the dried skin, noticed the glassiness of the toadâs eye. She mentally measured the length of the little corpse from jaw to tailbone and from outstretched limb to outstretched limb. The black flies dove and soared, landed and took off again and Eliza watched for patterns in their flight.
For nearly half an hour, little Eliza squatted on the sidewalk. She wanted to know everything about this dead toad. She wanted to understand what it would have been like to live inside its animate body. To hop, to crouch in the grass, to fling out the now-hanging tongue and snap up a fly. When Elizaâs mother finally discovered her, Eliza was kneeling over the toad, her straight, dark hair touching the sidewalk on either side of it like curtains.
âEliza!â her mother screeched. âGet up off the sidewalk this minute, young lady. Do you hear me? Back away from that ghastly toad!â
âHeâs not ghastly,â Eliza protested, leaping to her feet. She faced her mother. âHeâs beautiful.â
âHe isnât. And weâre starting therapy for you tomorrow, young lady. Thereâs something wrong with you, you know that? Something off. I knew it ever since you were a little girlâŚâ
The therapy started the next day, as promised. It kicked off a decade of treatment in which Eliza bounced from therapist to therapist, talking little, staring much. Her unblinking eyes unnerved the therapists. They all conceded eventually, dismissed Eliza after a matter of months with a âSo sorry, Ms. Thompson. Thereâs nothing I can do for your daughter. Sheâs justâŚhow she is. Try Dr. Breunheimer. Iâve heard nothing but good things about him. Yes, he should be able to deal with herâŚabnormalities.â
Elizaâs mother always stormed around the house for days after another therapist threw in the towel. She wrung her hands and paced, muttering about no good quack doctors, canât even deal with a simple little girl, where did they get their degrees anyway?
Sometimes, Elizaâs mother steered clear of therapists for a month or two, but she always went back. The eyesâthose x-ray vision, saucer-large, ocean bluesâwould always get her in the end. Those eyes could start a bonfire, she thought. Or read her thoughts.
The years, the decade passed. In the early years, Eliza got very good at concealing her inquisitiveness. Sheâd glance at a room and pretend there was nothing to see within it. No cracks along the base of the window, no cobwebs in the left hand corner, no roughly textured chair with streak marks under its wheels. Sheâd do her best to ignore the details of a placeâall the interesting bits.
Eventually, it became second-nature to take in her world with only the briefest of glances. She could do it without thinking much about it.
And then. Then, she didnât think about it at all. A room was just a room. A piece of rotting fruit was not an object to examine and turn over in her hand; it was fodder for the trash bin. A dead animal on the sidewalk was just a dead animal. The last therapist was scarcely needed. She talked at Eliza and sometimes Eliza talked back. The therapist wore her hair in a tight bun with a few gray wisps poking out from behind her ears; she wore turtlenecks with pendant necklaces; she often donned the same pair of gray, slip-on loafers. Eliza didnât notice any of these things. Curiosity had been drubbed out of her.
On a September day of her senior year in high school, Elizaâs mother fell to the kitchen floor. The brain aneurism killed her instantly; a crooked scowl hung on her face. Eliza ran from the next room when she heard the clatter of a broken dish, the thud of a body. She saw her lifeless mother and froze. Her eyes could go nowhere but downâdown to the rigid form with its glazed, bulging eyes and lopsided mouth. Eliza bent her knees and lowered herself to the floor. With every inch she descended, years of training shed away. The forest fell away and she began to count the trees, then the branches. She began to see rough patterns in the bark.
Eliza knelt over her motherâs frozen eyes and saw the dead sidewalk toad from her youth. Her brain did a snap-twist. She looked around. The roomâs colors swirled in front of her eyes. The shapes, the textures. Had that bowl always been yellow? She stood and backed away.
She grabbed a stool from the kitchen counter and perched upon it. The lifeless form sprawled in front of her and Eliza looked at it unabashedly. No one told her to look away; no one struck her cheek. She would call, eventually. Of course she would. An ambulance would screech into the driveway and paramedics would haul the body away on a stretcher, pretending there was something they could do to save her. But for now, Eliza wanted to look. To notice. She had years of seeing to catch up on.
5 Basics for Fresh Content
5 Basics for Fresh Content from Click Clack Writing #contentcreation #business
Feel like your content is stale? Having trouble keeping your website or social media up-to-date? Here are 5 handy tips that will boost you above the competition:
1. Develop a schedule
Okay, okay. This sounds totally boring and tedious, but it is THE number one thing you can do when it comes to creating fresh content. Set aside a chunk of time every day (whether itâs a half hour in the morning, aâŚ
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Quite possibly the creepiest snow thing ever made... #onlyinmn #snow