Silent Sunday
Can You See This?

My previous post The Last Days of Van Gogh (poem) has less than half the views and likes I was expecting and I’m considering trashing the post, also the last couple of weeks there’s been a falling away of views on all my posts.
I’m wondering why this is happening…

Are you seeing my posts?
Is there something I’m doing you’re not liking?


Just thought I would liven up this post with some pics.
Please donate! 🙂

Angel Messages October 27 2019
The Pheasant Inn, Highclere, Hampshire
Location
This picturesque 17th century inn is located in the village of Highclere, Hampshire close to the Berkshire border. Highclere Castle, where most of the filming for Downton Abbey took place, is just up the road and the attractive market town of Newbury a fifteen minute drive away. The Pheasant has ample parking and for guests arriving by public transport, Newbury station is a short taxi ride away.
Arriving at the Pheasant Inn, Highclere
Arrival and Check-in
Guests are able to check in from 3.00 p.m. and on the chilly October afternoon of our visit, we felt warm and cosy as soon as we stepped inside the door with two wood burning stoves set in large fireplaces casting a welcoming glow. Our first impressions were good with the inn’s old world charm of low beamed ceilings and stone flagged floors contrasting beautifully with its stylish, contemporary furnishings.
Inside the attractive…
View original post 2,148 more words
Today’s Quote
FOTD – October 26, 2019 – Maple Leaves
Feel free to post every day or when you you feel like it. Please continue to post your entries on my daily post. Here is a link to my FOTD page. Thanks.
Don’t forget that my FOTD challenge accepts leaves and berries as well as flowers.
Maple leaves from my yard.


I’ve gathered a list of challenges and their hosts. So if you know a challenge host, please direct them to my blog. Feel free to contact me anytime. I hope everyone will be able to use my lists.
Qi (energy) hugs
Cee
Favorite Horror Films: Part 12 — Psycho
charles french words reading and writing

It is time to move forward with my series on horror films. Psycho (1960) is a Paramount Film that was both produced and directed by Alfred Hitchcock and was based on the novel Psycho by Robert Bloch. This movie stands as one of the best, not only horror but American, films as a whole. Hitchcock is, without a doubt, an auteur, one of the great Masters of American cinema, and this film had huge influence on the creation of slasher films and psychopathic villains in films.
The film revolutionized the way the public viewed evil; it did not have to be supernaturally based nor a radiation caused event; rather, Hitchcock established that the human mind and life experience could create more frightening monsters than vampires and werewolves. These are people who suffered horror, and their creators were other people, at least in most cases of psychopathology.

(
View original post 425 more words

