Monthly Archives: April 2022

Gratitude

1. Morning walks. Yesterday in my Wild Writing group, I wrote: “It’s an everyday kind of grace, the morning walk.” I won’t share more of that particular entry because it went to a darker place and is something I’m writing about in the book I’m working on, so want to save it back, see where else it might go. In another section, I said: “This morning I noticed now that the grass is getting green, everything else, all the lingering variations of winter, suddenly just looked brown.” Winter started late here so it’s been shorter than usual, milder, and yet like a flower seeking the light, I feel myself turning towards spring, longing for the leaves and blooms to come back. One of the things I love the most is what we started calling “yard time” during the first year of the pandemic. It simply is sitting in the backyard together doing nothing, so when it gets warmer and we can comfortably, it makes me so happy.

2. Practice. The implosion of my Buddhist sangha and the interruption of my teaching  efforts due to COVID, burnout, and grief have made the last few years of my practice a little lonely, a bit confusing, and sometimes pretty frustrating. The only thing to do has been to be still, pause, rest, and reconsider just about everything I thought I knew — to wait. This doesn’t come easily to me as I am impatient. My previous (unworkable and unsustainable) strategy was to keep pushing through until I got where I wanted to go or collapsed. That’s the thing about practice, it allows you to meet the current moment just as you are and stay open to it, to let go of the outcome and be present, to trust that if action is warranted your innate wisdom and compassion will guide you. In the book I’m reading by Kaira Jewel Lingo (We Were Made for These Times: 10 Lessons for Moving Through Change, Loss, and Disruption), she says, “I have found the practice of staying present, openhearted, and accepting of changing life circumstances to be incredibly helpful through my own major life transitions and challenges.” Ditto.

3. The support of good friends and good food. Those with whom I make art, write, text, workout, and laugh. All the new recipes I’ve tried and how yummy and satisfying most of them have been. Both elements nourishing and sustaining me.

4. Books and the ability to read. This has always been one of my greatest joys and also one of the primary ways I make sense of the world and my place in it.

5. My tiny family, tiny home, tiny life. This space and these connections keep me going while also allowing me to rest.

Bonus joy: The hydromassage chair, the pool, the sauna, flowers blooming, that spot on the couch, being able to recognize that something is no longer working for me and let it go, paint, berries, new underwear, watching old movies with Eric (this week we rewatched The Money Pit, Mr. Mom, and the original Dune — which to be honest was pretty awful), good TV (Sort Of and Julia on HBO are really good), listening to podcasts, cleaning out closets and cabinets, making space and clearing the way for something new, the trail system in Fort Collins, hot coffee with cocoa and tiny marshmallows, socks, a warm shower, a glass of clean cold water, smoked paprika, garlic, the smell of basil, limes, pain meds, gummy supplements, dental floss picks, paper, house plants, flowers in the bathroom, pictures of other people’s babies and dogs, the way Ringo loves to roll in the grass, that guy on his bike who was nice enough to wait for Ringo and I to get off the bridge before he rode by, the way Ringo comes to check in with me throughout the day, vaccines and masks, reading in bed at night while Ringo and Eric sleep.

Something Good

1. These second-graders helped shelter pups find their fur-ever homes. “Ordinarily, people might walk past these animals without taking a second look, but the letters and matching illustrations encouraged people to slow down, Peters said.”

2. “It’s just food,” a really great Instagram video from Elyse Myers, one of my current favorite content creators.

3. The oldest park ranger, who told the stories of Black women in WWII, retires at 100.

4. Grieving His Mother’s Death, Ocean Vuong Learned to Write for Himself.

5. Want to Write A Book? Here’s How I Did It Without Driving Myself Insane.

6. Recipe I want to try: Fresh Strawberry Cobbler.

7. Megan Falley’s gives writing tips on Instagram.

8. 5 tips for starting a healthy garden.

9. Vivid Environments by Yellena James Pause Natural Processes to Capture Life in Flux.

10. Cecile Davidovici on Instagram, a thread visual artist from Paris.

11. In COVID news: A New Wave of Covid-19 Is Coming. Here’s How to Prepare. on The New York Times, and I’m Tired of Judging Other People’s Covid Choices on The New York Times, and Do I really need another booster? The answer depends on age, risk and timing.

12. How to Meditate with Ease. “21 tips for a more relaxed yet alert mindfulness meditation.”

13. Women Are Calling Out ‘Medical Gaslighting’. “Studies show female patients and people of color are more likely to have their symptoms dismissed by medical providers. Experts say: Keep asking questions.”

14. To be in love with the world. “We are in relationship with the world; this is a two-way street. If we want to show up fully as our flawed, easily-rattled, sometimes-annoying selves, we should probably lend some grace toward the very inconvenient, always-changing, often-flaky, disappointing world.

15. I Hired a Real-Life Pet Detective. “I never knew there were actual Ace Venturas until my dog went missing. But with scent-trackers and canine psychological analysis in her arsenal, this pet rescuer is no joke.”

16. 42,000 Bamboo Shoots Construct an Illuminated, Latticed Welcome Center in Vietnam.

17. Clenching and opening one small hand on Rita’s Notebook, because this: “We stay because we see how it might be, how it could be, how, for brief moments, it is, and we let ourselves believe that–if only we love it carefully enough–it can be (it will be) like this all the time. That we are wrong doesn’t make the moments any less beautiful or true.”

18. I Overstressed My Body Until It Shut Me Down. “As an ultramarathon runner and a driven person, I was used to pushing my body to its limits. But then it revolted.” My burnout story is different, and yet her story felt so familiar to me.

19. How Two Best Friends Beat Amazon on The New York Times. “The company’s crackdown on a worker protest in New York backfired and led to a historic labor victory.”

20. The Burnt Toast Podcast: The Myth of Visible Abs, “Reclaiming the deep core and the pelvic floor with Anna Malty.”

21. Good stuff from Creative Nonfiction: In Lieu of Flowers and Balancing Art & Activism: An interview with Dave Eggers.

22. The Ezra Klein Show: Margaret Atwood on Stories, Deception and the Bible on The New York Times. “The acclaimed author explains how stories shape our worlds — by telling me many stories.”

23. Prompt 188 from The Isolation Journals with Suleika Jaouad. “The Creative Contract: On discipline & a prompt to make it stick.”

24. I Spent A Year Researching The Best Option For Our Bodies After We Die. Here’s What I Found. “We have more sustainable choices for our bodies after death than just burial or cremation, and we have power to advocate for these options in our communities.”

25. Interview with Delana Close: Published at 95 Years Old. Her writing advice? “Perseverance and overcoming obstacles is my story as well as Abby’s [the main character in her first novel] story. Don’t give up, if you have a story to tell find a way to tell it.”

26. He’s walking every D.C. street while wearing a ‘Black and Brown Lives Matter’ sign. He’s also White and voted for Trump. “So far, Ken Woodward has walked more than 1,900 miles and spoken with more than 1,220 people. He’s also been thanked, ignored and threatened.”

27. Dharma for Times of Global Trauma on Lion’s Roar. “Psychologist and Buddhist teacher Tara Brach shares the importance of training mindfulness teachers and practitioners to nourish a sense of our collective belonging in our increasingly traumatized world.”

28. The physical therapy metaphor from Seth Godin.

29. Why People Are Acting So Weird? “Crime, ‘unruly passenger’ incidents, and other types of strange behavior have all soared recently. Why?”

30. Drawing a path to action: Finding your place in the fight against the climate crisis.

31. Book I want to read: American Detox: The Myth of Wellness and How We Can Truly Heal. “We are an America obsessed with self-seeking and self-perfection, driving a wellness industry that reaches more than 80 million people and fuels a market worth more than 650 billion dollars. An industry that promises to make you better, stronger, healthier and whole and meets an ever-increasing demand amongst Americans to ‘feel good’ and find meaning in a cruel and confusing world. But while wellness soars so does inequality, insecurity and isolation. We don’t need more juice fasts and yoga fads–we need to detox from the ideologies of separation, supremacy and scarcity that are holding us back from our best selves.”

32. Anaïs Nin’s Los Angeles Hideaway Still Keeps Her Secrets on The New York Times. “Shrouded by the pines of Silver Lake, the erotic writer’s minimalist, midcentury residence is a lasting monument to her life and legacy.”

33. It’s not too late to stave off the climate crisis, U.N. report finds. Here’s how. “The technology and solutions are available to rein in emissions, but the world is rapidly running out of time to deploy them, the report notes.”

34. Montydon.com “My website has been revamped and will now carry pictures of me and the garden by the great marsha_arnold as well as my own snaps. It is, of course, still packed with tips, advice and inspiration for your own April garden.” Something you may not know about me: I have a huge crush on Monty.

35. The Problem with Pema Chödrön. “‘Leaning in’ to vulnerability, or coping with abuse?” *sigh*

36. Julian Gaines Has a Question: ‘How Do I Paint Oregon Black?’ on The New York Times. “A love for Nike led him away from his home in Chicagoland to a grand artist’s studio on a weed farm outside Portland.”

37. Film Of Prince At Age 11 Discovered In Archival Footage Of 1970 Mpls. Teachers Strike.