Gratitude

1. Morning walks. Taking it slow, even though if Ringo had his way I think we’d be back up to 2-2.5 miles. We’ve been leaving a bit later so that we can still see the sunrise, but we’ll only have to make that adjustment for another week or so before things “even out.”

2. New bed. Our new futon mattress got delivered this week, and we already had the wool topper and “bunkie board” so after some wrangling we got things all set up. So far, we are loving it. And seeing our old mattress leaned up against the house, the way it looks like it’s melting and has to be braced by our grill to keep it semi-upright, it’s clear that it was past time to replace it.

3. Anti-anxiety support. In particular, my Friday morning writing group (and their suggestion I stop waiting to watch “Come See Me In The Good Light“), Marth Beck’s new book Beyond Anxiety: Curiosity, Creativity, and Finding Your Life’s Purpose, poetry, listening to music and podcasts, watching movies 20 minutes at a time, therapy, naps, crying, yoga with Red Sage, texting with Chloe’ and Chris, letting myself eat what I want, drinking lots of water, talking to Eric, sitting in the backyard with him and Ringo, making each other laugh, and working with my anxiety like it’s my new full-time job (because it sort of is).

4. Lowering the bar. I’d initially added this to the above list, but the more I think about it, it deserves its own spot. I typically push myself really hard to do all the things and do them “right” and it’s a standard I can’t possibly live up to so it doesn’t lead to any sort of satisfaction but more than likely adds to my anxiety, so whenever I can consider my “to-do” list and ask myself “does this really need done right now, or at all?” and give an honest and loving answer and follow that with wise and compassionate action, it’s a good thing.

5. My tiny family, small house, little life. Eric is on spring break next week, and I’m looking forward to spending more time with him. He’s been helping me so much lately to cope with the shift in my energy and I am so grateful for that. I’m also so happy that Ringo is feeling himself again and we have a solid plan going forward.

Bonus joy: oranges (although, I wish they were more predictable, because some look SO good from the outside and seem like they are going to be tasty when you cut them open but end up being not at all what you were hoping for), gummy vitamins, that Ringo is so good about taking supplements and meds (just put the pills in with his food and he eats them without even noticing), that after teaching yoga for almost 15 years I can put together a class plan that is as simple as thinking the morning of “start on our bellies and do lots of shoulder stretching as in ‘thread the needle'” and it totally turns out and magically is just what someone in class needed, anticipating the pool and sauna tile work being done and being able to use them again, grapefruit Bubly, grocery shopping, indoor plumbing, white noise machine, pizza for dinner — and being able to order online and having a coupon code, my mom’s scratch paper pads, pens with ink refills, stickers, reading, libraries and librarians, poetry and poets, comedy and comedians, reading in bed at night while Eric and Ringo sleep.  

Something Good

1. Poetry: Upon Meeting My Biological Father at the Age of 23 by Michelle Meyer and La Gioconda by Martha Silano and Gated Community by Alexandra Oliver and War Begins Again by Tishani Doshi and Why We Climb Mountains by Marti Noel on The Daily Rattle, Going Somewhere by Genevieve Taggard and Peace Treaty by AE Hines on Poets.org, It Was Like This: You Were Happy by Jane Hirshfield and Pardon My Heart by Marcus Jackson and Five Paragraph Essay on Time by Kathleen Flenniken on The Slowdown, Holding the Door and Small But Fierce by James Crews, Sometimes a Wild God by Tom Hirons shared by Patti Digh, the deepest well by Maya Stein, Revised by Paula Gordon Lepp shared on Heart Poems, The Single Instant and Orbit and Formative and The Last Parent Teacher Conferences by Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, and If I Were to Ask My Body and Welcome to the First Gathering of the “I Don’t Know What I’m Doing With My Life” Club by Julie Barton.

2. Being a Regular by Hugh Hollowell. “If I were to move tomorrow to some place where I didn’t know anyone, I would immediately begin looking for places where I could be a regular. I don’t know of any activity that so quickly makes you feel you belong to a place and its people.”

3. The Real Secret to Reducing Screen Time by Courtney Carver on Be More With Less. **Spoiler Alert**: “The real secret to reducing screen time is to shift your focus from controlling your phone to forgetting all about it.”

4. Molly Was My Gateway Drug to Meditation on Open Secrets Magazine. “How taking the illicit 1990s psychedelic pill paved the way for me to get Zen.”

5. Pink Pony Club by Chappell Roan, a cello and piano cover by Brooklyn Duo. (video)

6. The Grief No One Recognizes by Elizabeth Kleinfeld. “On recognizing loss when everyone around you is glad it happened.”

7. What Am I Gonna Do, Take Them With Me? by Andrea Scher. “On giving it away before you go.”

8. The Many Versions of Me from Kari on A Grace Full Life.

9. Threshold by Jo on The House of First Light.

10. He Wrote Judy Blume’s Life Story. She Won’t Talk About It on The New York Times. (gift link) “Mark Oppenheimer had many conversations with his subject for his new book. Then the relationship took a turn.”

11. Finding the green shoots by Gretchen Schmelzer. I read this with my hand over my heart and tears in my eyes, “my heart hurts—but it is also full. Life is both so courageous and fragile.”

12. Good stuff from Jamie Attenberg on Craft Talk: A Visit from Lauren Groff (“Walking and talking with the best”), Today’s Writing Pick-Me-Up (“The good one sentence can do”), and A Key to the Lock of the Book (“Thinking about tone this morning”).

13. When You’re Not Sure Where You Belong in the Writing World, “reflections after my first AWP conference” on Earth & Verse.

14. 2,200 Lists Later, “& Beth Kephart on the literary list and the art of transcendence” on The Isolation Journals with Suleika Jaouad.

15. What technology takes from us – and how to take it back by Rebecca Solnit on The Guardian. “Decisions outsourced, chatbots for friends, the natural world an afterthought: Silicon Valley is giving us life void of connection. There is a way out – but it’s going to take collective effort.”

16. Mysterious ‘Hero’ Dog Leads Police Straight to Missing 3-year-old Officer Says in Body Cam Video.

17. Good stuff on Poor Man’s Feast by Elissa Altman: remembering a favorite Italian soup on a chilly, not-yet-spring day (“On the Perils of Cooking From Memory”) and Women and Medical Gaslighting (Part 2: More on the dangerous truth).

18. Badger signs: An essay from Terry Tempest Williams’ new book ‘The Glorians’ on High Country News, (“Thoughts on an elusive animal and the afterlife”). In related news, Terry Tempest Williams Answers the Orion Questionnaire, (“In which we get to know our favorite writers better by exploring the sacred and mundane”).

19. Guest Pep Talk: Perspective from Eric Zimmer on For Dear Life with Maggie Smith.

20. The other stack of evidence, “There’s more than one pile of proof in the world” by Jasmine on The Tiny Joy Project.

21. My Mom by Summer Brennan. “This is impossible. Utterly impossible. And yet here I am.” Summer recently lost both her parents, and while my mom still lingers and that’s another kind of loss, I feel this in my bones.

22. The Art of Not Looking Where You’re Told. “A walking exercise that turned Lisbon’s sidewalks into a wilderness.”

23. GLP‑1 drugs may fight addiction across every major substance, according to a study of 600,000 people.

24. How Creativity Helps the Brain Make Meaning After Disruption on Psychology Today. “Neuroscience explains why art helps people heal.”

25. ‘All you need is a chair and a view’: could daily ‘dusking’ make us healthier and happier? on The Guardian. “An old Dutch ritual of going outside to watch the coming of night – or dusking – is having a revival across Europe. Fans of the practice say it’s a great way to disconnect from screens and find peace.”

26. A Blessing For The End of a Sh*tty Day on The Beautiful Mess by John Pavlovitz.

27. And finally, a few random things I saved to my phone.