Windows vs. Mac

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Daily writing prompt
Beach or mountains? Which do you prefer? Why?

Hmm. Why not the desert? Every corner of the Earth features unique landscapes, and to pose a simple one or the other lacks imagination by the prompt generator, but I’ll bite.

The Mountains

Crawford Path, New Hampshire, USA

Ahh, to be in the mountains. I came to them late in life. Majestic and beautiful, dangerous and challenging.

Bigelows, Maine, USA

Some I have climbed alone, or shared experiences with others.

Camel’s Hump, Vermont, USA

For more than a decade I have climbed them. Not the tallest mountains in the world, but high places that quicken the pulse and inspire nonetheless. Why go up? I can’t answer, but man has always aspired to reach the heavens, or be closer to the places that touch the sky.

The Sea

The prompt asks of the beach, but the beach is simply the doorstep to the sea. I have lived all my life at the edge of the ocean. There is a pull to it, that draws us back to our place of origin.

It is no small secret that when scientists examine far away worlds, they search for water. It is the special ingredient needed to create and support life. Life on our world crawled from the primordial soup, and perhaps we are permanently linked to our birthplace.

A white granit lighthouse nestled in shore ledge by a blue sea. The red warning beacon can be seen in the lighthouse tower. waves crash on the rocks below the lighthouse with white spray.
Castle Hill Lighthouse, Newport, Rhode Island, USA

We wade in the waters of the oceans, and go down to the sea in ships.

Sailboats on Narragansett Bay, Newport, Rhode Island, USA

I know when I’m close. The land flattens out, the trees falling away behind in the rear view mirror. The wind freshens, and I can smell the sea, a taste of salt in the air.

A glimpse of the horizon beyond the dunes, a thin flat line, as far as the eye can see, or pitch dark on a moonless night, the sound of the waves rolling ashore, steady as the beating heart of the world.

Higgins Beach, Maine, USA

Someday I may leave the sea behind, but it shall never leave me.