Windows – Friday Fictioneers

Friday Fictioneers is hosted by the wonderful Rochelle, the undisputed master of what I call Sound Bite Fiction.
She sets the weekly challenge, and the standard.
And the prompt
photo, which this week is very American.
The idea, as always, is to write a story of around 100 words based on this picture, below.

© J Hardy Carroll


Click here to hear the writer read his words:

Windows

Windows are just glass.
In reality, they have no inside, and no outside.
If we turn them the other way they are exactly the same.
And yet looking out of a window is a totally different experience from looking in through one.
In the first instance, generally speaking, we see a world populated by many others, perhaps known, perhaps not.
In the second case, all too often, we are intruding, perhaps uninvited, into the privacy of a person, a couple, a family.
At night, on the outside, we can be almost invisible.
Why do we relish this so much more?

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57 Responses to Windows – Friday Fictioneers

  1. Love the introspection here without the feel of darkness.

    Like

  2. Dale says:

    Excellent reflection, c.e. I did not feel the menace at all in this well-written piece.

    Like

  3. kzmcb says:

    I quite agree. You’ve made some good points about the similarities and differences between inside and outside, gently moving the reader with you as you look. Loved it, and your recital of it as well.

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    • ceayr says:

      Thank you, Karen (no more Sheila, okay!) for your kind words.
      I am glad you enjoyed the reading too.
      I am not always sure it is worthwhile, but you made it so this week.

      Like

  4. plaridel says:

    why does it remind me of a besieged castle? those who are in wants to get out and those who are out wants to get in. 🙂

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  5. James McEwan says:

    Interesting, that some people are trapped inside glass bubbles.

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  6. Tessa says:

    Definitely, something to think about.

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  7. msjadeli says:

    I think any gossip magazine is the equivalent of looking in someone’s window. It’s ironic that celebrities love to be on the big screen, with all eyes on them, but off-screen would be prefer to be left alone. What they don’t want to realize is with celebrities it is open season on snooping. It’s the price they have to pay. For the rest of us non-celebrities we are entitled to whatever privacy we choose, with few exceptions.

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  8. Very thought-provoking piece.

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  9. I love the way you have described the different ways you can view a window… reminds me a little bit of Jung, and the way you cannot really see the inside of anyone…. we do have our own windows don’t we?

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  10. Loved it, thought provoking stuff and you absolutely nailed it!

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  11. I really enjoyed your description of the window, very philosophical. It’s true, we are all drawn to watching through the window; inside to outside, outside to inside. Anonymity is appealing.

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  12. draliman says:

    Nice observation of the human condition. Remind me to get some of that reflective sticky stuff…

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  13. Hey mankind is so cursed to be an incurable voyeur

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  14. I’ll never see in or out of a window in the same way again!

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  15. Laurie Bell says:

    Oooo I really like this. What you’ve done here is very clever. Makes one think

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  16. Abhijit Ray says:

    Looking into someone else life from a distance unnoticed has its fun. We enjoy the drama without getting affected. Kind of like a silent movie. Till we get caught.

    Liked by 1 person

  17. DB McNicol says:

    At night, some of us black out the windows in an attempt to maintain our privacy while others leave their open for viewing.

    I definitely enjoyed “your” view into windows.

    Like

  18. Iain Kelly says:

    I’m sure I’ve bumped in to him while out ‘walking’ late at night…

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  19. AH! An unexpected and fabulous viewing angle (pun and all …) 😉
    Nice!

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  20. Dear CE,

    A peeping Tom perhaps? Nice take.

    Shalom,

    Rochelle

    Like

    • ceayr says:

      That was not my intention, m’lady, but seems to have been interpreted that way by several readers.
      I meant the story to be somewhat more philosophical and seem to have missed the mark.

      Like

  21. granonine says:

    A voyeur lives to observe, but not to BE observed. Some weird kink in all the little convolutions of the brain 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  22. pennygadd51 says:

    I certainly relished your story! That last line is such a witty conclusion to your description.

    Like

  23. Creepy. I think most of us hate the idea of someone going around peeking in windows. A good story, C.E. I’m sometimes glad I live a few stories up. Now if we only had a lift. —-Suzanne

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  24. Varad says:

    The subtlety of the character description is sublime. Very well done, CE.

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  25. Sandra says:

    Acutely observed, beautifully executed. The menace is wonderfully understated. Well done. Says so much in so few words. (As a mundane aside, I have to dispute the bit about them having no inside and outside. Our double glazing contractor has managed to lay two conservatory ceiling panels the wrong way up – and after almost 12 months we’re still waiting for the second one to be replaced.) I’m thinking of contracting Portuguese Tony to deal with them.

    Like

    • ceayr says:

      Thank you, Sandra. Praise from Caesar…
      And I laughed aloud at your ‘mundane aside’.
      I am no expert on double glazing, but I am probably less of a threat to your home and happiness than Tony Casquette!

      Liked by 2 people

  26. Let’s hope he doesn’t graduate from windows to doors

    Liked by 1 person

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