Written for Sadje’s What Do You See
and for Fandango’s Story Starter.
Here’s where the prompts took me.

Steven had a bad day and just needed something to make him feel better.
This was not, to be fair, an unusual situation. Steven had bad days the way other people had lunch …. regularly, predictably …. and with very little prompting. The particular shade of bad that colored his days didn’t come from a dramatic event but from something quieter and somehow worse: the steady soaking sensation of being completely, utterly, cosmically ignored.
At work, people talked through him. At the coffee shop, baristas spelled his name wrong on the cup. His neighbor’s dog, who barked ferociously at squirrels, mail carriers, and floating leaves, regarded Steven with a yawn of massive indifference.
So one morning, in a gesture of frustration, Steven placed a brown paper bag over his head.
“If no one sees me anyway,” he reasoned, adjusting it around his ears, “I might as well be comfortable about it.”
He kept the straw hole for his iced latte; he wasn’t unreasonable.
The odd thing was that the world looked much the same through the bag’s tiny imperfections and soft brown glow. People still rushed past. Coffee was still iced. The sun was still indecisive about whether to shine or hide.
But Steven found, to his surprise, that he looked differently.
When you cannot be easily seen, you begin, strangely, to see.

He had been walking for some time with no destination in mind, when he turned down a narrow lane he had never noticed before…. which was remarkable, because Steven had walked this neighborhood for a dozen years.
The lane was cobblestone, winding between two rows of brick buildings. And there, at the wall of the last building at the lane’s end, Steven stopped.
On the wall were wooden shoes.
Not just any wooden shoes …. clogs, the old Dutch kind, painted in blazing orange-red and sunshine yellow, mounted right there on the brick wall as casually as picture frames in a living room.
And the three yellow ones, lower down, cradled bouquets of flowers …. pink lilies spilling from one, purple geraniums tumbling from another. A little spray of joyfully chaotic wild flowers in the third, like a happy surprise.
On the ground below sat a wide basin brimming with pink tulips and yellow daffodils, stems comfortably leaning against each other like old friends.
Steven stood very still.
He had walked past hundreds of flower shops. He had seen gardens and parks and elaborately landscaped homes. None of it had ever made him feel anything in particular.
But this? This was different.
Someone …. some actual human person who had to buy groceries and pay bills and deal with the neighbor’s dog …. had taken a perfectly ordinary brick wall and decided, for no practical reason whatsoever, to hang wooden shoes on it and fill them with flowers. Not in a museum. Not in a catalog. Just here, on a Tuesday, on a cobblestone lane, for anyone or no one.
Steven reached up and touched the rim of his paper bag. He didn’t take it off, not yet. He wasn’t quite ready for that.
But he pulled the straw from his latte and poked a slightly larger hole, just enough to press his nose through and smell the tulips properly. They smelled, he thought, like the color pink …. like something that gently persists and exists despite the general indifference of the universe.
He sat down on the cobblestones and looked at the wall for a long time. A brass key hung between the two orange clogs and he wondered what it opened. He decided, for the first time in a long time, that he wanted to find out.
Maybe tomorrow the bag will come off. Steven decided to give it some thought.
NAR©2026
#WDYS
#FSS
This is “Wildflowers” by Tom Petty
Everything on The Elephant’s Trunk was created by me, unless otherwise indicated. Thanks for your consideration. NAR©2017-present.

This is so good, Nancy, that I’m tempted to try it myself!
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Thanks, my friend. I hope it goes well for you!
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I loved the profound paradox that you used to describe the phenomenon of heightened inner awareness that arrives, “When you cannot be easily seen, you begin, strangely, to see.”
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Thank you for your deep analysis and thoughtful comment, Jim. You are right on!
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Very cool! The invisible man finds an alley that wasn’t there before. Perhaps it leads to platform 9 3/4?
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Now that would be a very cool and challenging story, indeed! ⚡️
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A very ponderous bag of intrigue my dear friend, and I wonder, maybe he is about to discover himself, and the universe is not such an place after all … (oh, I love Rufus Wainwright’s version of this song) …
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I love this version also and your hunch about the story is right on! Thank you, my dear friend. 🎶💙
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My absolute pleasure my friend 🥰🌏🎶
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Nancy- you’ve combined both the images so well in this story. I loved it. Thanks for joining in.
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Something clicked when I looked at these two images and I just had to go for it. It was a fun challenge and I appreciate the great images, Sadje. Thank you; it’s always a pleasure. 💕
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You’re most welcome and very supportive dear sis
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💕
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♥️
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yes indeed a lovely story 💜💜
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Thanks, sis! 💜
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What a fabulous story Nance and great use of all the prompts 👏
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So glad you enjoyed my story, Ange. 😌
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💞
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Great use of the prompts ❤️😘
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Wonderful read Nancy 😀 Can’t rush important things
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Exactly, and thank you. We must make time to stop and smell the tulips. 🌷
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A thoughtful read and finding the gifts of life unexpectedly.. great song pairing, Nancy❣️
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That’s it in a nutshell, my dear friend❣️ Thanks so much, Cindy 😌
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Life delivers as it does.. you’re so welcome, dear Nancy❣️
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