Today’s small victory: I remembered to eat lunch before 3 PM. Today’s small failure: I said “I’m fine” when I meant “I’m tired of explaining.”
There’s a difference between being lost and being misplaced. The first suggests you had a destination. The second implies someone else put you somewhere and forgot. I’ve decided, after the second entry’s chaos, that I am not lost. I am misplaced. in blume third entry
It’s unclear whether “In Blume Third Entry” refers to a specific literary reference, a journal entry from a character named Blume, or a personal log entry. Since no direct known work matches that exact title, I’ve drafted a few possible interpretations based on the phrasing. Please choose the one that fits your context, or let me know if you meant something else (e.g., a Judy Blume novel, a diary entry #3, or an art piece). In Blume, Third Entry Today’s small victory: I remembered to eat lunch
Third entry rule broken already: wrote four sentences before getting honest. The second implies someone else put you somewhere and forgot
In the third entry of In Blume , the narrator’s voice sharpens into something less reflective and more confrontational. Unlike the first entry’s nostalgia and the second’s ambivalence, Entry Three introduces rupture: a letter left unopened, a phone call answered too late.
Third entry rule: write only what you would say out loud to a stranger. That means no apologies for the silence between sentences.
The garden behind the old ceramics studio is overgrown now, but the kiln still holds heat if you press your palm to its side. Yesterday I found a fired clay cup, half-broken, with a word etched underneath: keep . Not “beautiful” or “fragile.” Just keep.