Gratitude

“If the only prayer you ever say in your entire life is thank you, it will be enough.” ~Meister Eckhart

1. Morning walks. They were shorter but we got to take them this week, and it made me so happy. There was only one morning we only went around the block, but that was because it was snowing (yay!) and it was the kind that spring brings, heavy and wet.

2. Ringo’s “care team.” In particular, Dr. Gaffney at Mulnix Animal Clinic, Dr. Foster at Animal Elevation, and Dr. Rychel and Teri at Red Sage Integrative Veterinary Partners. The past couple of weeks have been rough and having them available, so smart and caring, has been so good. Ringo has arthritis, this is nothing new, but there is a spot on his back that has been particularly uncomfortable and a bit of a mystery the past few weeks, but we are hoping we’ve got it properly located, identified, figured out, and our plan will bring us all some relief. Let’s not talk about how much money has been spent — too bad “working breed” doesn’t mean they have a job and get paid for it. 

3. Two of my favorite boys share a birthday. They turned five this week. Happy Birthday!!!!!

4. Practice. Thursday morning yoga and Friday morning wild-ish writing along with the tender big hearted humans who practice with me kept me alive this week.

5. My tiny family, small house, little life. Like I said, the past few weeks have been tough, but no matter how hard things get, there’s nowhere I’d rather be, no one (two) I’d rather be there with. No matter what happens, we’ll just keep trying, keep taking care of each other the best we can.

Dreaming

Bonus joy: Olly stress gummies, strawberries and raspberries, cinnamon swirl bread from The Bread Chic, good TV, listening to podcasts, comedy and comedians, getting the laundry done, poetry and poets, lowering the bar, eating whatever sounds good regardless of its nutritional value because sometimes you just need to eat something, crying, a hot cup of coffee and warm mug of tea, massage, getting in the pool and the sauna (they are going to be closed for about two weeks for repairs, *sob*), libraries and librarians, a warm shower, clean sheets, down blankets and pillows, staying in bed in the morning even though you are awake because it’s just so cozy, giving away things that are precious to people who are the same, hugs, birds, other people’s pets, Eric coming back to tell me Ringo had moved to that spot on Sam’s couch where the sun hits this time of the morning and the deep sigh he did when he laid down, this poem Michelle shared yesterday and in particular this line: “a wild place, toothed and flowering,” reading in bed at night while Eric and Ringo sleep, and these two pictures, one of my aunt Monica at her husband Bruce’s celebration of life service holding baby Hallie for the first time and another of the way the light hits the glass in my front door some mornings and reflects onto the wall.

P. S. Kind and gentle reader, I feel this week in particular that I want to honor how hard, how much effort it can take sometimes to be grateful. We can be so desperate to grasp at some sort of comfort, we say dumb things like “it could be worse” to try and cheer ourselves up. The world is heavy and even our domesticity, as the poet above says, can be “unnavigable, and not for the tenderhearted.” In these moments, all I can do is remind myself what Jeff Foster said, “Impermanence has already rendered everything and everyone around you so deeply holy and significant and worthy of your heartbreaking gratitude. Loss has already transfigured your life into an altar,” and keep making this list every week, keep saying “thank you.” If you are finding it hard to be grateful, to keep going, I see you, and I’m right there with you. Stay tender. Keep your heart open. Don’t give up. And thank you, thank you for still being here. ❤

Something Good

1. Poetry: What Every Woman Should Carry and After Turning Off the News and Knowing This Place by Julie Barton, After Bad News and Sacred by James Crews, Geranium by Karen Solie and Poem about everything except— by Amy Lemmon and Or am I a room with a roof taken off, still holding onto my idea of ceiling by Kelly Hoffer and Somewhere Else by Adam J. Gellings on The Slowdown with Maggie Smith, A Sign? and After by Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, This human life by Maggie Smith and Interior: The Suburbs by Horace Gregory shared on Poets.org, Inheritance by DeMarcus Burke and Four Years Later by Julia Kolchinsky and Confrontation by Drew Rollins shared on Rattle, “Love / is paying attention” from Pádraig Ó Tuama, A Scrap of Blue from Alison Luterman in her recent newsletter, If this is all we get then maybe it’s okay that it’s messy from Jasmine on The Tiny Joy Project, It looks like the sky is coming apart and together at the same time by Maya Stein shared on Heart Poems, and What Every Woman Should Carry by Maura Dooley shared by Patti Digh. In related news, “This world is full of everything good, everything beautiful,” a new episode of On Being with Joy Harjo and Tracy K. Smith.

2. A Year of Kō on The Dewdrop. “We invite haiku poets to incorporate the kō phrases for the micro-season as prompts or inspirations into their haiku submissions. Please refer to our kō calendar, (below) which can serve as a guide for haiku poets to read, ruminate, reflect, and then write their own response in sync with the appropriate kō micro-season and publishing time frames.”

3. The Path, “a daily ritual on foot” by Danusha Laméris.

4. a mountain of clutter and chaos. “Is it my surroundings, or is it my brain?” by Elissa Altman.

5. Good stuff on The Beautiful Mess by John Pavlovitz: He is Not Worth This, America and America Has Already Lost the War in Iran and Hey, Don’t Forget to Be Happy and Good People Have Had it With Faux Patriotism and Phony Faith and Lessons Trump Supporters Are Teaching Their Children (Whether They Know It or Not).

6. What Happens When a Neighborhood Is Built Around a Farm? “Agrihoods reimagine urban living by putting food, not cars, at the center of the community.”

7. You Can’t Give 100% to Everything All the Time. “On choosing what matters most, putting good things on the back burner, and why it’s okay to be sad about it” by Elizabeth Kleinfeld.

8. An Existential Guide to: Growing Old. “Old wood best to burn, old wine to drink, old friends to trust, and old authors to read” on The Shadowed Archive.

9. The Habitual Disregard for Creative and Intellectual Work as Labor. “And why do we tangle up our self worth with work anyway?” by Ravynn K. Stringfield.

10. Years ago, novelist Tayari Jones snuck into a writing class. It changed her life.

11. Kristin Neff & Caverly Morgan: Self-Compassion as a Lifeboat. (podcast) “Can the simple act of being kind to yourself actually be a doorway to awakening? In this special episode of Insights at the Edge, Tami Simon brings together two remarkable teachers whose friendship has sparked a revolutionary approach to inner transformation. Kristin Neff—the researcher who first measured self-compassion and author of Fierce Self-Compassion—joins Caverly Morgan, a meditation teacher and former Zen monk, to explore how self-compassion practices can become what they call ‘a lifeboat’ to our deepest nature. Together, they reveal why self-compassion isn’t just a psychological tool for feeling better—it’s a direct path to recognizing who we really are beyond our limited sense of self.”

12. How To Weave Friendship Into Everyday Life on Culture Study.

13. One Good Small Thing. “Take it when you can get it” by Jami Attenberg. Such a sweet story.

14. The Texture of Wartime Monet by Summer Brennan.

15. What Lurks Beneath and What Love Reveals, “& Lucy Kalanithi on a different way of loving” on The Isolation Journals with Suleika Jaouad.

16. The late-winter urge to flee my life and the subtle reinvention on Earth & Verse.

17. Seals, shipwrecks and a screaming swallower: Underwater Photographer of the Year 2026 – in pictures.

18. Recipes I want to try: Perfect Mexican Rice Every Single Time and How to Make Mexican Corn Hotcakes.

19. Her husband wanted to use ChatGPT to create sustainable housing. Then it took over his life. “Kate Fox says Joe Ceccanti was the ‘most hopeful person’ before he started spending 12 hours a day with a chatbot.”

20. A CBS News personality is starting his own media company – but keeping his day job. “David Begnaud is launching an independent media company using the beehiiv platform while remaining a contributor at the network.”

21. Love Stories on 1440. “Below are more than 100 love stories submitted by our over 4.7M readers. Whenever you need a little lift, scroll through and let your fellow readers warm your heart, coax a chuckle, give you a lesson to ponder, and maybe even bring a tear to your eye.”

22. Feeling lonely? Six ways to connect with friends – even when busy.

23. Object-ives #24: The Brown Wall-to-Wall Carpet of My Childhood Home. “Many secrets were hidden in its mottled earth” by Sumitra Mattai.

24. The winter alters what is possible. “Don’t mistake dormancy for failure” by Patti Digh.

25. LISTERS: A Glimpse Into Extreme Birdwatching. (video) “Two brothers learn about competitive birdwatching by becoming birdwatchers—spending a year living in a used minivan, traveling the country to compete in a ‘Big Year’.”

26. Lost Words, a Rhinoceros and Soul Connections by Laura Lentz on Writing at Red Lights.

27. Lauren Groff answers the Orion Questionnaire. “In which we get to know our favorite writers better by exploring the sacred and mundane.”

28. ‘Truly accessible to everyone’: how to start yoga. “Some think yoga isn’t for them – but there’s ‘something for everybody’. Experts share what to know about the mindful practice that can improve strength and sleep.”

29. Watched by Millions, ‘People’s State of the Union’ Counters Unhinged Trump. “‘We live in a country where we have one reality for everyday people and another for the rich and the well-connected and the well-protected,’ said Rep. Summer Lee.” In related news, in her rebuttal to the president’s State of the Union speech, Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger questions whether Americans feel the ‘golden age’ Trump describes.

30. Scams, hustles and false idols that were supposed to save us, “a partial accounting” by Garrett Bucks on The White Pages.

31. What If Your Sanctuary Gets Destroyed? “When our place changes, even overnight, our stories stop making sense—until we redraw the world around us” by Janisse Ray on Trackless Wild.

32. The Sunday Letter Project. “The Sunday Letter Project is a weekly invitation to balance. To recalibrate, reconnect, and return home. We believe that letter-writing is the perfect antidote to this generation’s dependence on technology – it allows you to slip back into a time where the world felt less frantic and more spacious. By signing up for the project, you will be invited to take a pledge: a pledge to take a pocket of time each Sunday and dedicate it to yourself and your loved ones. To write, to ponder, to savour. To regenerate a practice that has connected humans for generations and is starting to be lost. We believe letter writing is a unique way that we can find our way home as humans, and we invite you to join us.”

33. Eight Tenets by Elizabeth Hawes on The Sun.

34. If I want to ever be okay — “on living this life, when there is no easier world” from Britchida.

35. And finally, this meme. Because it made me giggle.