Something Good

1. Poetry: Bright Bindings by Countee Cullen and Dissonance by Wana Udobang shared on Poet.org’s “poem-a-day,” Everywhere and Acceptance and Every fortress I have ever built and Today’s Headline and The Spreading and New Soundtrack by Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, Pause and Sonic and Stone and Some Days by Julie Barton, The Presence of Everything by James Crews, Family Album by William Trowbridge and After a Winter of Grieving by Sam Hamill and January Report from the Food Pantry Coordinator by Jeff Sypeck and What Is My Life About? by Julie Price Pinkerton on The Daily Rattle, Liminal by Maya Stein, and Katherine with the Lazy Eye. Short. And Not a Good Poet by francine j. harris and Historical Site by Tommye Blount on the Slowdown.

2. The Sound of the Genuine, “from Howard Thurman’s 1980 commencement address at Spelman College.”

3. This Will Change How You See Your Life (The Beauty of the Ordinary) on Reflections of Life. (video) “Even in life’s most challenging moments, beauty quietly waits to offer us comfort. In times of pain or loss, noticing the small things around us — the warmth of sunlight, the comfort of a friend — can remind us of life’s gentle grace. These seemingly ordinary experiences, so easily overlooked, become subtle guides back toward hope and healing…Resilience doesn’t mean ignoring hardship; it means facing it with courage, allowing ourselves time to process and grow. Gratitude can be a lifeline, a way to hold onto the blessings that remain, no matter how difficult things may seem. Though the journey may be marked by grief, embracing the beauty in each day can help us move forward. In this way, the smallest moments of light can offer strength when darkness surrounds us.”

4. Lunch with a Jumping Spider by Betsy Mason.

5. Good stuff from Jamie Attenberg on Craft Talk: How to Stay Creative (“Even when the world sucks”), and How to Get Your Engine Going (“Getting back into the work after some time away”), and Why Not Now? (“The question I’m always asking myself”).

6. Who Wins The Race? “The enchantment, complexity and challenge of storytelling” by Josie George on bimblings.

7. editing is a form of love, “and other lessons from writing” on Poetry Unbound.

8. On Quitting, and What Remains. “The afterlife of a former self, revisited” on The Isolation Journals with Suleika Jaouad.

9. Good stuff on The Beautiful Mess by John Pavlovitz: America’s Boys Deserve Better Than MAGA Masculinity and MAGAs Hate Bad Bunny Because He Reminds Them That They’re Losing.

10. Joyful artwork from around the world! “Images to brighten your day (and the world)” from Brad Montague on The Enthusiast.

11. The treatment failed but I got what I needed. “Ketamine didn’t cure my pain, but it let me relive a perfect October afternoon with my dead husband” by Elizabeth Kleinfeld.

12. Not Talking by Gail Folkins on Short Reads. “Weighing silence.”

13. We will be talking about the bravery and love of Minnesotans for decades. “But the good people of that state still need your help right now” by Garrett Bucks on The White Pages.

14. Terms and conditions of being alive. “You agreed to be human, that was always enough” by Jasmine on The Tiny Joy Project. I didn’t put this with the Poetry item at the beginning of this list, but I could have.

15. Identity is not a fixed sentence but a living draft by Patti Digh. “Aging does not require erasure, dignity can coexist with absurdity, and reinvention is not only possible but necessary.”

16. Compassion as Protection: Practicing with Those Who Cause Harm, Kaira Jewel’s February 2026 Newsletter. “In the Plum Village tradition, we are taught that compassion is the best protection. This teaching does not ask us to be passive, naïve, or self-sacrificing. It asks us to be wise, embodied, and rooted in reality.”

17. Feel it all by Amy Marie Turner.

18. Home by Marji Macy on Writing at Red Lights. “Can we welcome those who are unalike us into our home?”

19. Tip for tap by Seth Godin.

20. The Surprising History of Tarot Cards.

21. The troubling rise of longevity fixation syndrome: ‘I was crushed by the pressure I put on myself’ on The Guardian. “This unofficial diagnosis describes the anxiety-driven, compulsive obsession with living as long as possible. While it might seem healthy to monitor your diet, exercise and biomarkers, it can come at a huge emotional cost.”

22. Given the toxicity of social media, a moral question now faces all of us: is it still ethical to use it? on The Guardian.

23. I grew up with Alex Pretti. “The kind-hearted ICU nurse shot by federal agents was my childhood best friend.” In related news, The Woman Alex Pretti Was Killed Trying to Defend Is an EMT. Federal Agents Stopped Her From Giving First Aid.

24. 6 Mindset Shifts That Have Changed My Life for the Better.

25. How to nurture deeper friendships without going out or spending a dime.

26. Sarah McLachlan: Tiny Desk Concert. (video) “During a Sarah McLachlan performance, the chills come when you least expect them. One of the most expressive singer-songwriters of her generation, McLachlan makes the goosebumps happen with her gloriously gentle, iridescent voice — particularly through her negotiation of the break between its registers. She does just that in the first song of this Tiny Desk, an almost country-fied version of her 1997 hit ‘Building a Mystery.’ With Luke Doucet’s impossibly delicate guitar arpeggios as her guide, McLachlan takes the song beyond its edge at the very last minute, gliding into a high note that remains unresolved. It’s one of several moments here that feel miraculous.

McLachlan has long been a purveyor of such small graces. Despite her renown as founder of the Lilith Fair tour, she has been underestimated as a major player in the reinvention of pop balladry, when she updated a folk-based sound with modern-rock flourishes and a fresh, feminist perspective. Here, playing alongside her longtime collaborators Doucet and Melissa McClelland — a husband-wife duo who’ve made many beautiful albums under the name Whitehorse — she highlights the side of her art that’s grounded in deep feeling and unassuming virtuosity. At one point, she apologizes to those watching because her back is to them while she’s at the piano. But from whatever angle experienced, this is one of the Tiny Desk’s warmest and most poignant sets.”

27. And this new comic from The Awkward Yeti.

Gratitude

1. Morning walks. We are going on shorter ones now, down to two miles. After a week or so of not taking him as far to allow him a bit of rest after spraining his back leg, Ringo seems to have settled on being happy going not quite so far. It makes sense with his arthritis and being twelve that he’s slowing down. He still gets to smell stuff and I still get to see the sun rise, so we both continue to get what we want, are both happy.

We had a close call on one walk this week. I somehow forgot my headlamp, but we’d driven to the ponds so I decided rather than driving all the way back home I’d just walk in the dark, trust Ringo’s nose to alert me to anything I needed to know about. Everything was fine, until… We were almost to the end of the loop, and the sky was lighting up pink over the river so I started to get closer to take a picture. Just in time, I looked down in front of me and saw a skunk waddling towards us on the trail. Ringo didn’t actually see it because he was busy smelling something else, so it was pretty easy to change direction and giddy up out of there. He did catch its scent a bit further up the trail where it must have crossed over to get closer to the river. We’ve gotten close to skunks before, but that was the closest.

2. Practice. Not enough people for yoga this week and I’ve really been struggling to get back on a regular schedule of meditating, but my Friday morning writing group was lovely. I wrote a bit during that session about my morning writing practice:

“Write as if you never talk to yourself. I was surprised at my recent book club meeting, discussing Ian McEwen’s What We Can’t Know, a book that considers what we can know about people from the data they leave behind, including emails, social media posts, shopping preferences, browsing habits, etc, along with paperbased data collected in diaries and journals and letters. I was surprised to find myself an outlier in the group, not just in my daily journaling practice but in my perspective about it.

I am a writer and have journaled daily for close to 15 years, and not so regularly but often before that. I started with the morning pages of Julia Cameron and the free writing of Natalie Goldberg, and because of my growing interest in Buddhist philosophy and practice, I began to view my daily morning writing in part as a way of understanding patterns, a place to consider my habitual ways of reacting and responding, taking a closer look at how I think and why, looking for the origins of these ways I generated suffering. As an introvert who has difficulty in responding quickly, in the moment, who needed more time to process things, my journals also served as a space to consider and get clear about what I think, what I might have to say about important things and how I might turn that into something meaningful or helpful. I also allow myself to write through my initial reactivity rather than possibly speaking without thinking or responding from a less considered place in the moment. It’s the place I can complain and rage, throw a tantrum, say things I might mean but don’t actually mean — if you know what I mean. Now, later, after so many years of reading poetry and wild writing, it’s a place to begin, to discover things worth sharing.

I was surprised that many in my book group thought the only reasons to keep a journal were to have a place to safely be awful, nasty, or petty, or to have a place to brag. Not wanting to waste the paper or the time, the others didn’t get the value of the practice. When they described someone writing all the things they wouldn’t say otherwise, they implied this was a sign of poor character, bad judgment to write down those thoughts, that the better bigger person would leave no record, wouldn’t risk that someone might find and read them, that this omission was a sort of alchemy or magic that erased such things from existence. They couldn’t see any value in writing them down, in considering them — ‘I mean who are you writing that for, who is the audience?’

The alternative reason to keep a diary, from their perspective, seemed to be to leave a record of how awesome you are or were, that there was a sort of arrogance or even narcissism required, that you must in this case also be imagining an audience who would read it and care. Neither of those approaches is true for me, and the discussion missed the point that a journal or diary is a process, a practice, and that you yourself might be the only intended audience, or even something deeper, more magical, like God or your own soul, your both darker and lighter selves. I certainly didn’t share with them that I start each entry (after writing the date and time, marking that with a purple highlighter to make my entries more searchable), that I begin with ‘Dear one’ and I end with ‘Thank you,’ which from time to time accidentally comes out ‘I love you,’ which sometimes means the same as thank you.

I did concede that I wouldn’t be able to write as freely as I do if I had a partner I thought might read them, and even though he doesn’t, I make sure he knows there are things I write in the heat of the moment or when I’m having a bad day or when I’m confused by big emotions that aren’t necessarily true, but they arise like that and I don’t edit as I write and those thoughts need to be acknowledged and then given a place to go, like a compost pile or trash can. Before you do anything, breathe.

Is there more to say about this practice of mine, the scratch of pen against paper as I follow it where it leads, as I consider what matters, remember who I am and what I used to know? It’s like the thing Buddhists say, that enlightenment isn’t so much about becoming as it is remembering who you already are, that it is our fundamental basic state, that our primordial mind is clear and sane, both empty and luminous, and through practice we recover our natural state as we allow everything else to arise and fall away, all the distraction, the confusion, the reactivity and habitual patterns. Practice allows me to be honest, not deny or ignore any part of myself, really know who I am and all the ways I generate suffering and am my own obstacle, all the ways I try to fool myself.”

3. Family. The “kids” are doing well. Lia got her basketball picture and is excited to put it up on Papa’s wall next to her mom and aunt’s team pictures. Warren is taking his job as a big brother very seriously and Hallie gained some weight and is eight pounds! Mom is holding steady, still comfortable, being well cared for and having good company, doing all her favorite things — eating, watching the Hallmark channel, organizing her overbed lap table, holding and chatting with the baby.

Some sad family news: my Uncle Bruce died. He had Lewy’s Body Dementia, most likely caused by chemical exposure during his military service, so it’s a mix of feeling glad that he’s no longer suffering but also, dang it, my heart is broken. If he could, he’d tell you his favorite story about me, the first time he met me. He’d driven through the night from California, so was napping on the couch in my Grandparents’ basement. At five years old, I went down, having never met him before but I suspect I knew who he was, hopped up on his belly and started to bounce up and down until he woke up. When he did, I told him, “you’re fat,” not intended as a criticism but rather more a compliment for having such a bounceable belly. He loved telling that story. He was one of the good ones, and I also can’t help but be aware that Mom will most likely go next, and I’ll feel the same mix of relief and grief.

4. I finally unpacked my suitcases. It was hard because there were things I brought home from Mom’s and it was the last trip I’d be spending at “her house” but it also meant I cleaned up a bunch of piles around my own house and found places for things I’d brought home and that felt good.

5. My tiny family, small house, little life. It’s good to be home. We spent yesterday deciding on a new mattress, trying out a few in the store and looking online, researching and considering. After much thought and discussion, we are going back to our roots and ordered a nice futon and wool topper. When we were first together, our bed was a cotton futon on a pallet on the floor, then we later “upgraded” to a “real” bed frame but still a futon mattress just a bit nicer with a wool core. When we bought our first place, we upsized to a king and it seemed the right thing to do to also get an actual traditional Western mattress. That first one was good, but the two we’ve had since then have been progressively worse, and we both hate the new trend towards memory foam, so we decided to go back to where we started. I was teasing Eric that while a new mattress might not seem to be a romantic Valentine’s Day present, it’s actually perfect, when you think of all the things that happen in our bed and all the time we spend together there. We also made a reservation for a house on the coast in Waldport for a few weeks in June, the same one we’ve stayed in the past few trips.

We got the tiniest hint of snow

Bonus joy: the kid in the pool this morning who was having the time of their life making waves, the hydromassage chair, getting in the pool, sitting in the sauna, pickled red onions, onion buns, the laundry being done, a warm shower, napping with Ringo, texting with Chris and Chloe’, other people’s kids and dogs, poetry and poets, libraries and librarians, good TV and movies, listening to podcasts, Teddy Swims and the mix Spotify makes based on his “style,” a big glass of clean cold water, neighbors, the field at the end of our block that people use as an unofficial dog park, flowers blooming (even though it is WAY too friggin early), bird song, our hardwood floors, down blankets and pillows, making each other laugh, when one of “the girls” texts me back, a warm mug of tea and a hot cup of coffee, clean sheets, reading in bed while Eric and Ringo sleep.