This week, Charli Mills challenged the Carrot Ranch Literary Community to In 99 words (no more, no less) write a story that includes self-care. Does the character need it? What does the character do? Think about how you can use this action to deepen a character or move a story. Go where the prompt leads. She talks about being easy on ourselves and taking time to celebrate our progress and avoid being shackled by the imposter syndrome that masquerades as our harshest critic.
Dr. Andrea Dinardo is also talking about self-care this week on her blog Thriving Under Pressure. Her post urges us to Work hard. Rest. Repeat, and recommends
“If you get tired, learn to rest not quit.”
Resting can be difficult when there is much we want to do and achieve, both personally and professionally; but sometimes, if we donโt rest by choice, we have it thrust upon us.
This week, when Iโm already masquerading as an overposter, as a mini-rest, an exercise in self-care, and care for you too, Iโm presenting my flash response without the padding of a post. Here it is. I hope you like it.
Rest. In. Peace.
โYou really should take a break,โ they suggested.
โI canโt. Too much to do.โ
โYou need time off,โ they said.
โI know. Soon.โ
โฆ
Eventually, โIโm taking a break,โ she said.
The afternoon sun warmed as the sand caressed her aching body. Her eyes closed. Only an occasional seagullโs squawk interrupted the repetitive swoo-oosh of the waves that jumbled with the office cacophony looping incessantly.
โฆ
โWhat? What happened?โ they asked.
He scrolled quickly, searching for details.
โSleeping. On beach. Seagull โ ha!โ dropped a baby turtle โ landed on her head โ died instantly.โ
โAnd we thought work would kill her!โ

Thank you for reading. I appreciate your feedback. Please share your thoughts.


Leave a reply to D. Avery @shiftnshake Cancel reply