Monthly Archives: December 2022

Gratitude

Eric as a little man

1. It was Eric’s birthday this week. He is my absolute favorite human. I’m grateful he was born, grateful we are here at the same time and got to meet each other, grateful he picked me to be his life partner, grateful that he’s healthy and happy, grateful that he has a job he loves and they love him there, grateful that we share the same values and some of the same interests, grateful for the way he makes me laugh, grateful for his kindness, grateful for the way he takes care of me, grateful that after 30 years he likes being with me as much as I like being with him.

2. We got our tree, decorated it and lit it up. For the longest time we didn’t have a tree. With dogs we just thought it would be too much of a hassle, didn’t know if they’d try and wreck it, but then the winter of 2016, after the election that year, we needed some joy, some light, a bit of a celebration, so we finally got one and loved it so much we’ve had one every year since. I also spent this past weekend wrapping and getting some presents under the tree and some packed up to ship to Oregon. Turns out it’s a really good thing I got all that done last week…

3. I was in the hospital this week. I certainly hadn’t planned it. I’d been having gut trouble for about seven months, attributed it to a couple of new medications the first two times, then the third time I got better over the weekend and by Monday got busy and neglected to make an appointment to see my doctor about it. In fact, when I went for my yearly annual exam a few weeks ago, I forgot to even mention it. Then Sunday night, I got another flair but this time much worse. Nothing I was throwing at it was making it any better and I was in a lot of pain. After a visit to urgent care, then my regular doctor, and a CT scan, I was sent to the emergency room and admitted to the hospital, where I stayed until Thursday afternoon. My diagnosis is: diverticular abscess, essentially a bad infection trapped in a bubble somewhere in my large intestine. I’m home and healing now. The bummer is as soon as I’m enough better, I’ll have a colonoscopy so they can get a really good look at it and then surgery to remove it, so this isn’t over.

That said, because of my stay, I’m extra grateful for accessible to me healthcare, urgent care centers, emergency rooms, hospitals, all the people who keep those places running and patients cared for, general practitioners and specialists, science and medicine, masks and vaccines, masks comfortable enough to sleep in, all the various prescriptions supporting my healing process, IVs, CT scans, adjustable hospital beds, a comfortable pillow, good socks, my Universal Standard Hathaway Jersey Joggers that I wore for three days straight at the hospital and they were super comfortable and no worse for the wear, my Manta Sleep Mask that also got a workout while I was there, headphones and earplugs, smartphones and wifi, streaming content apps and podcast & music apps, YouTube, Instagram and Facebook, texting, cameras on phones, my healthcare app, all the people who sent me love and checked in and offered support, soft toilet paper, finally getting to take a shower, my roommate and her parents (we all sort of agreed to give each other our privacy, that we weren’t there to make friends or enemies, and that was nice, and at night when it was just the two of us, she was so quiet and I had the bathroom all to myself because she had a catheter and hadn’t eaten for days), that I was able to get well enough to come home before needing surgery (this particular surgery done as an emergency is a whole other thing), getting to sleep in my own bed, the grilled cheese & banana and mashed potatoes and chicken breast that were my first solid food, that Eric had a light work week as it was the last before winter break so he could visit and take care of Ringo and do errands and be my driver and cook and advocate.

4. The gym. I went in today and did the hydromassage chair (twice), got in the pool and stretched, and sat in the sauna with Eric. I felt almost like a normal person.

5. My tiny family, tiny home, tiny life. Like Jeff Foster says in that post I love so much, “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.”

Something Good

1. Wisdom from Tulku Thondup“Loving-kindness is the essence and nature of the whole world and of every being. To see and experience this is to realize who we are. We can all observe that, if someone is in a quiet, undisturbed place for example, in nature he or she will become more peaceful. The more peaceful that person becomes, the more joyful, wise, and helpful they will be to others. That is a clue that our human nature in its normal, undisturbed state is not violent or harmful, but loving.”

2. Dharma for a Traumatized World on Lion’s Roar. “The cause of our global suffering is forgetting that we belong to one another and to the earth. Tara Brach recommends four practices to nourish a sense of collective belonging.”

3. A Simple Pie“Gratitude washed over me: for modern medicine that shrinks tumors and gives back possibility; for my amazing body that keeps on going, that can start over from such weakness to strengthen again bit by bit; for this tradition and practice of baking for another holiday season; for my place in it all.”

4. Unravel Your Year workbook and Find Your Word ebook from Susannah Conway, (free!). “Filled with questions, insightful prompts, calendar pages and so much more, it’ll help you take stock of the year that’s ending and prepare you for a new ride around the sun. PLUS! You’ll also get the Find Your Word ebook to help you uncover your power word for 2023!”

5. One Idea Books & GiftsAlexandra Franzen’s new store. “We specialize in books—written by women, BIPOC, and LGBTQIA+ authors—and unique, memorable, hand-crafted gifts.”

6. #50. English ivy, and a goodbye: On endingsa final post on Bulletin from Jonny Sun.

7. The 10 Best Books of 2022 on The New York Times. In related news, The Non-Comprehensive Non-Exhaustive List Of Cool Stuff I Liked In The Year 2022 from Chuck Wendig on Terrible Minds, and Favorite Books of 2022 from Maria Popova on The Marginalian, and Books for Everyone on Your List, and 14th Annual Goodreads Choice Awards.

8. The Chills at Will Podcast with Robert Jones Jr. (video version) in which podcast host Pete discusses with Robert about “the festive national Book Awards 2022, his early reading of comic books, his life-changing exposure to James Baldwin’s work, his incredible Son of Baldwin platform, a dearth of representation for Black queer people that led him to write the book he wanted to read, the wonderful literary community and its inspiration for his work, and the work of art that is The Prophets, with its myriad standout lines, memorable characters, and structure that makes it a true classic and work of art.”

9. The Creativity Talks Podcast Episode 18: Coherence and Creativity (video version). “Crystal chats with Fabeku Fatunmise, artist, writer, author, spiritual practitioner, community builder, and business consultant focusing on building businesses that work and feel like home. They discuss the idea of “cohering” and how it applies to the creative process and life.”

10. Good stuff from Seth Godin: “You’re right” and Don’t let a story get in the way.

11. Modern Love: ‘How Much Was That?’ on The New York Times. “A family obsessed with the cost of things learns a stark lesson in what’s priceless.”

12. Why I’m Done Using And Boosting AI Art from Chuck Wendig on Terrible Minds.

13. 11 things with cognitive dissonance making an appearance at the 3.5 mark from Jena Schwartz.

14. 7 Things You Definitely Won’t Need This Year (or ever again) from Courtney Carver on Be More With Less.

15. The Secret to Happiness, According to This Harvard Professor: A Reverse Bucket List“If you want to be truly happy, don’t just think about what to add to your life, but about what to take away.”

16. The ‘Limbo Box’ Method Helped Me Get Rid of Stuff Without Regrets.

17. Good stuff from Austin Kleon: The bookends approach to reading and The art of imperfection.

18. On Witness and Respair: A Personal Tragedy Followed by Pandemic by Jesmyn Ward. “The acclaimed novelist lost her beloved husband—the father of her children—as COVID-19 swept across the country. She writes through their story, and her grief.” I probably shared this when it was published two years ago, but it’s worth reading again.

19. 16 Signs You Were Raised by a Highly Critical Parent. First on the list? “Frequent criticism early in life can make it hard to trust yourself.” *sigh*

20. Understanding Fight, Flight, Freeze, and the Feign Response: A Reframe of Fawn to Feign.

21. The Cruel Spectacle of ‘The Whale’ from Roxane Gay on The New York Times.

22. A 28-year-old woman who’s lived in LA and Hong Kong gave up city life to renovate a cottage in the forest alone.

23. Georgian Culture and Ukrainian Pride Highlight the 2022 Tbilisi Mural Fest.

24. 25-year-old Arkansas woman is spreading kindness to strangers one hand-written letter at a time.