Monthly Archives: November 2022

Something Good

1. America has seen at least 601 mass shootings so far in 2022In related news, “I Can’t Stop Hearing the Shots,” Mass Shooting at Colorado Gay Club Leaves 5 Dead, 18 Wounded, and Colorado Springs Club Q shooting: Where to find resources and how to help, and How to help Colorado’s queer community right now. Which all makes me need to share this video again, Andrea Gibson performs “Orlando” featuring Mary Lambert.

Rebecca Solnit said of the recent shooting in Colorado Springs that it was “both the act of an individual and the culmination of a broad campaign of hate, lies, and othering.” 

And also worth considering, from Rabbi Abraham Heschel: “there is no limit to the concern one must feel for the suffering of human beings, that indifference to evil is worse than evil itself, that in a free society, some are guilty, but all are responsible.” 

2. Quitting Can Be Fun“I’m still on social media. But years ago, before I was sober or had an idea that alcohol was bad for me, I realized Facebook was bad for me. So I stopped. And today I stopped being on Twitter, too.”

3. Yung Pueblo: Becoming Lighter Through a Strong Determination to Heal on the Sounds True podcast.

4. If You’re Worried About Which Vegetables Are ‘Healthier,’ You’re Overthinking It“88% of us don’t get enough fruits and veggies in the first place.” I found this to be a super helpful perspective shift.

5. How to Save Your Knees Without Giving Up Your Workout on The New York Times. In related news, How to get stronger only using your own body weight.

6. Recipes I want to try: Green Goddess Salad, and Cranberry Walnut Kale Salad with Fresh Cranberry Vinaigrette, and slow-roasted sweet potatoes, and Raspberry Cranberry Sauce, and Fontina + Blackberry Basil Smash Grilled Cheese Sandwich.

7. Linda Ronstadt: A taste of home on CBS Sunday Morning.

8. Atelier Naco on Instagrama Japanese eraser stamp artist.

9. Reading lists: 15 Beloved Black Banned Books You Must Read Now, and All of the 2022 National Book Award finalists, read and reviewed, and The 100 Must-Read Books Of 2022.

10. 30 Outstanding Podcasts for Writers.

11. Soil: The Story of a Black Mother’s Garden“Poet and scholar Camille T. Dungy recounts the seven-year odyssey to diversify her garden in the predominantly white community of Fort Collins, Colorado.”

12. Joyce Carol Oates Thinks You Should Write Your Heart Outan interview with the author.

13. Heartstopper author Alice Oseman: ‘If you don’t have sex and romance, you feel like you haven’t achieved’“The writer and illustrator on turning her ‘weird hobby’ into a bestselling YA series and Netflix hit, the importance of asexual representation and lessons from her fans on love bites.”

14. What Does Rest Look Like in a Climate Crisis? “Minimum Viable Planet is a weeklyish newsletter about climateish stuff, and how to keep it together in a world gone mad. This week, we look into the restless mind, kept awake by the climate crisis.”

15. Healing, Then Writing: Confronting Writer’s Block in the Early Years of Sobriety.

16. You’re Allowed To Be Ready To Heal And Rest from Morgan Harper Nichols. “In whatever way you have had to learn to be resilient in your life, I hope that you can find room to also nurture the parts of you that need care. You are not frail for needing rest, and you are not selfish for taking time to fill yourself up. There is nothing wrong with craving a steady pace that doesn’t call for constant resilience.”

17. Speckled, Crackled, and Kintsugi Sheets of Ceramic Cloak Lisa Agnetun’s Tiny Spirited Ghosts.

18. 11-Year-Old Buys an Old Van, Transforms It Into Ultimate SpaceI wish more kids had this sort of access, resources, and parenting.

19. Lost in Translation: Is the Bible Wrong That Homosexuality Is a Sin? I say Amen.

20. Abstract, Textured Patterns Woven With Natural Fibers Compose Massive Wall Hangings by Tammy Kanat.

21. What To Know if You’ve Applied for Student Loan Forgiveness“Biden’s plan to provide federal student loan forgiveness has been blocked by two federal courts, leaving borrowers wondering what happens next.”

22. The Visions of Octavia Butler on The New York Times. “As a science fiction writer, Butler forged a new path and envisioned bold possibilities. On the eve of a major revival of her work, this is the story of how she came to see a future that is now our present.” Seriously, go now and read everything she’s ever written — so good.

23. Audrey Assad’s new cover of Joni Mitchell’s River. (video)  

24. Healing Hurts, a new EP from BLÜ EYES. You can also listen to most of the tracks and her other music on her YouTube channel.

25. Listen to Maya Stein’s latest 10-Line Tuesday poem, in praise of i don’t knowI love the final lines: “But look how, against the late season light, a filmy beauty descends, nearly silencing the clamor of what pulls at our sleeves to solve. What if we could let ourselves rest for a little while in this halo of I don’t know, feel its soft touch against our urgent skin. What if the thing in our hands, and every fractured remainder, is its own answer. What if leaning into the wobbly shapes of our lives is another kind of sweetness and gold.”

26. Wisdom from L.R. Knost: “Do not be dismayed by the brokenness of the world. All things break. And all things can be mended. Not with time, as they say, but with intention. So go. Love intentionally, extravagantly, unconditionally. The broken world waits in darkness for the light that is you.”

27. Want To Evolve Quickly? Try Vulnerabilityfrom Andrea Gibson.

28. #46. Tomato plant (after Ross Gay)“On some recommended essays, and on emptiness and reaching to fill it” from Jonny Sun.

29. Weight Watchers – Up To Their Old Tricks from Ragen Chastain.

30. How to Be Bored, and What You Can Learn From It on The New York Times. “Figuring out the root cause of our lack of inspiration can help us make better choices in how we spend our time, experts say.”

31. How to kick your habit of assuming the worst

32. Are You Actually ‘So Busy,’ or Is It ‘Toxic Productivity’?

33. The Comprehensive Guide to Customizing Daily Wellness Rituals.

34. 5 Ideas For Creating A Spiritual Practice—Whether You’re Religious Or Not.

35. A Slamdunk Conversation Starter at Big Dinners.

36. Two Artists Turn One Tree Into a Different Installation Every Season.

37. Baby elephant tickling a local news reporter(video)

38. Observing Thanksgiving? Consider making this part of your day: 9 Best Charities for Native Americans (Complete 2022 List).

39. 4 levels of Fat LiberationIn related news, Weight Science: Evaluating the Evidence for a Paradigm Shift, and F*ck Health, and Social Justice, Fatphobia, and Eating Disorders.

40. In Praise of the Glorious Deliverance of Swimming: Michael Parker on Worshipping Water, in Life and Fiction.

41. Scientists can’t contain joy after finding bird they thought went extinct: ‘Like finding a unicorn’.

Gratitude

1. Ringo Blue. It’s his ninth birthday today. He and I have a deal that he’ll stick around for at least another four years, (and that still wouldn’t be enough). He is all the way recovered from being sick and it’s such a relief to see him happily being himself, even (or especially?) when he’s being a jerk.

Flowers from Mikalina

2. Birthday love. My 55th birthday was yesterday. It’s so nice to be reminded in one big wave of all the people who love me, even though they are all really good at letting me know all the time.

Birthday socks from my brother
My heart is a tender magnet (and I miss my dogs — Sam, Dexter, and Obi)

3. Practice, which this week included making art with Janice, meditating with bilateral sound tracks, and Wild Writing with my Friday morning writing sangha led by Laurie.

4. Morning walks. We had a snow storm and frigid temperatures roll in towards the end of the week, so I didn’t get as many pictures — we walked early in the dark so we could beat the storm one morning, and the next morning it was only 7 degrees with fresh snow on the ground.

5. My tiny family, tiny house, tiny life. Eric doesn’t have to work next week because his campus is on fall break. I just remembered that this morning after we got back from the gym, (weekends are my favorite because it means hydromassage chair, hop around in the pool for a bit, then sit in the sauna). He is my absolute favorite person. He and Ringo are out napping on the couch together right now and that makes me so happy. Ringo is so cuddly when it gets cold, makes himself a pile out of blankets and pillows and it’s so cute!

Bonus joy: the cake Eric made me, birds at the feeder, white chrysanthemums — especially the fat full ones with spiky edges like you see in Japanese art and that are wrapped in plastic netting at the grocery store to protect the petals, my general practitioner — her skill and kindness and sense of humor, books, new music, the fancy headphones I got Eric for Christmas that he doesn’t really use so now I do, gingerbread muffins, vaccines, clean sheets, true crime, listening to podcasts, that corner of the couch, twinkle lights, texting with my neighbor, texting with Chloe’ and Chris, YouTube, a new blank notebook, my HappyLight, the sound of the furnace, snow, raspberries, bananas, toast, marionberry jam from Auntie T, the sound of Hendrix in the background during our Wild Writing and what Laurie said about that and how Chloe’ smiled, other people’s dogs — in particular Diego who we see at the cement ponds, all the great places we have to walk so close to our house, being able to use the internet and apps for things I used to have to use the phone or my whole person out in public to accomplish, the pool, prescription glasses, Dana from Scotland who I make talk extra by peppering her with questions because she’s so friendly but I also love her accent, the front desk staff at the gym, training with Shelby and the gang, snow tires, good toothpaste, peanut sauce, the Vietnamese spring rolls from Chili House, being retired, canceled plans, good TV, graphic novels, reading in bed at night while Eric and Ringo sleep.