Monthly Archives: September 2025

Something Good

1. Poetry: Gloria Mundi written by Michael Kleber-Diggs and read by Pádraig Ó Tuama, No Small Thing from The Weekly Pause from James Crews, American Spin and She Wanted To See The Good and Becoming Light and Where I Am from Julie Barton, The Negative by newly appointed U.S. poet laureate Arthur Sze shared by Patti Digh and Back-Lit by Arthur Sze, Because the World Is in Need of Mercy by M.K.Creel, We could say it took me my whole life and At last and Hope from Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, Thruway by Gretchen Schmelzer, Ode to a Good Pen: Or, How to Write the Book of Love by Maria Popova, Migration by Plane Wings and Migrator, Back Again by Michelle Latvala, and Yes, We Can Talk by Mark Nepo.

2. I’m exhausted but am surviving. How can I heal from burnout without expensive time off? “Lots of us are desperate to come off the watch, advice columnist Eleanor Gordon-Smith writes. One strategy might be to cut the corners you can.”

3. How to train your dog – and not lose your mind. “It doesn’t have to be miserable. We asked experts how best to start training your new (or old) best friend.”

4. Field Note: Those Aren’t Pine Siskins They’re House Sparrows by Michael Kleber-Diggs.

5. ‘The Christian Left’ Conversation With Anti-MAGA Comedian Cliff Cash(video)

6. Wanted: An All-American Family. “I thought I had found the picture-perfect family that I so desperately craved but never had.”

7. I already don’t care by Patti Digh.

8. A Back-to-School Crisis. “Last year we gave book bags, this year the urgent need is food,” a request from Frederick Joseph.

9. California bans most law enforcement officers from wearing masks during operations. I wish more of those in positions of political power would resist in similar ways.

10. From The Beautiful Mess by John Pavlovitz: Conservative White Christians Will Worship Anyone But Jesus and The Christians Who Live By The Sword.

11. It will be okay, a doodle from Jenny Lawson.

12. The Brilliant Agony of Almost: Letter One of Falling Gently “6 weeks of creative prompts, seasonal rituals, and warm community” from Alix Klingenberg.

13. Why I Refuse to Panic (and what I’m choosing to do instead) from Gina Luker.

14. The Heart of the Andes and the Invention of Virtual Reality: Frederic Edwin Church’s Immersive 19th-century Paintings of Natural Wonders. The light! *swoon*

15. Stay in It, Always. “On the Elizabeth Catlett show and restoration for my nervous system” from Jami Attenberg.

16. What the season of fall – and science – teaches us about life and death by Samer Zaky.

17. The language of care (and open-faced quesadillas) & Samin Nosrat on recipes, love, and the magic of improvising on The Isolation Journals with Suleika Jaouad.

18. Whatever you can still do, you can still do. “On what despots want you to forget” by Garrett Bucks on The White Pages. Also from Garrett, The Internet is killing us, “But the bigger problem isn’t what we (and our kids) are doing on our screens, it’s what we’re not doing off of them.”

19. You Don’t Need Closure, You Need Space from Nikki the Death Doula.

20. Harmen Hoek on YouTube, “an adventurous YouTube filmmaker, known for silent hiking films that transport viewers into nature through stunning visuals, ambient sounds, and evocative music.”

21. Questions to ask yourself this fall, “For a better winter and spring ahead” from Kelton Wright.

22. I Used the 90/90 Rule to Declutter My Sentimental Items, and It Was Surprisingly Liberating.

23. How to Set Boundaries With Your Smartphone. “Excess screen time can negatively impact your mood, memory, and overall health.”

24. A beautiful and annoying thing about being a person, “a true story” from Brad Montague.

25. Israel has committed genocide in the Gaza Strip, UN Commission finds. And no one who cares, who has been paying attention is surprised.

26. Blowing on the Embers of What Matters, “Deep inside you there is…” from Erin Geesaman Rabke.

27. How I Got Better. “A comic about healing over time” from Connie Sun.

28. It’s Time To Stop Fighting For Your Rights: Individual Rights vs. Collective Liberation from Ijeoma Oluo.

29. A string of beads on The Imperfectionist. “What is within our power is to thread beads, one after the other, and gradually to develop the internal trust that we’ll be able to thread the beads that need adding in the future, too. (The opposite of anxiety, I’ve seen it said, isn’t calm, but trust in your capacity to handle what happens later on.) All you need to do, to paraphrase Carl Jung and also Anna from Frozen, is the next right thing. Indeed, when you think about it, that’s the only thing you ever could do: select the next bead and add it to the string, then choose and add the next, and the next, through apocalyptic times and happier ones, for as many years as you’re lucky to get to do it.”

30. Sort as you go and don’t rush: six steps to clearing out a loved one’s home when they die. “From telling the insurers to accepting you may need to get the experts in, tips on dealing with the deceased’s property.” I am not looking forward to this, at all.

31. Roxane Gay on Memoir as Manifesto. “From the Memoir Nation Podcast, Hosted by Brooke Warner and Grant Faulkner.” P.S. LitHub, stop asking me to become a supporting member of your publication, to give you money, when you run SO MANY ads.

32. Artisan Apple Bread recipe from I Am Baker. This looks so good. I would destroy a fresh warm loaf of this right about now.

33. I do like dogs, clips from SNL skit. (Facebook reel) Oh, Molly Shannon.

34. You didn’t do anything wrong, this is just too much from AK Przy. (Facebook reel)

35. “Magic” word to stop overthinking from Dan Harris. (Facebook reel)

36. Golden retriever and his dolphin buddies(Facebook reel)

37. Every elected official is compromised, all of them are to blame. Wisdom from Pete Souvall. (Instagram reel) Also from Pete:

38. And finally, this random collection of things I saved to my phone this week.

Gratitude

At the top of the tree to the right is a Great Horned Owl, hooting at the moon and stars

1. Morning walks. We went around the ponds and by the river on Friday because I expected there to be some peak fall color, to find that it’s only just starting — which is okay with me because that means there is still more to come. I know you’ve heard me say it a zillion times: fall in Colorado is my favorite season.

2. Long term relationships. In particular, shared experiences and inside jokes. For example, today we went to lunch at Mt. Everest Café and as we were getting up to leave, a rowdy group arrived, which reminded me of something that had happened probably 15 years ago, so I told Eric, even though he’d been there. We were at Woody’s Woodfired Pizza, which is no longer there, was replaced by an apartment complex. At Woody’s, you could order off the menu exactly what you wanted, or you could get the all-you-can-eat pizza and salad bar buffet. With the buffet, you could go up to where the pizza was being made and request just about any sort of pizza combination you could dream of and they’d make it. One time we were there, about half way through our meal, and I was up getting another few slices when a whole soccer team of boys about ten years old arrived for lunch after a game. A few were up checking out the pizzas already on the buffet, and I heard one say to the other, “Dude, let’s have an eating contest!” I went back to out table and told Eric what they’d said and that he’d better go get whatever else he wanted to eat because it was about to get wild. That’s one of the things I love about being together for so long — not only do we know how to make each other laugh, we have inside jokes, and there are funny stories we retell each other to make each other laugh again about something we already laughed about and told each other multiple times.

3. Ringo. I am so glad he’s finally feeling better. Eric just called out from the living room, “is he in there with you?” and he is, so close behind my chair, I’m afraid to move. He’s started this thing this summer where when it’s time for bed and I take him to the backyard to have him go potty one last time before we “get in” and instead of doing what he needs to do and coming right back in, he flops down in the grass and starts sniffing the air. I could get annoyed because I’m ready to go to bed and want to get this part over with, but instead, I remember that in just two months he’ll be 12 years old, and I have no idea how long we have left together, and someday I’m going to wish, be willing to give anything to just sit in the backyard with him as the sun is going down.

4. Practice. I felt I had nothing left to offer this week for yoga, but I went because I always feel better once I’m there, and this week was no different — I adore the crew at Red Sage. They light me up. As usual, my Friday morning writing sangha was magical, full of laughter and tears, gorgeous phrases and strange facts. And my meditation practice continues to keep me sane.

5. My tiny family, small house, little life. I made this, and it’s exactly what I always wanted.

Bonus joy: cooking with Eric, good TV, listening to podcasts, aqua aerobics, the hydromassage chair, sitting in the sauna, finally getting in to see a PT about my hips and back (turns out my core really never recovered after two abdominal surgeries in one year), an “emergency” massage at the gym since my person was booked up all of September, fry sauce, comedy and comedians, libraries and librarians, that sweet pittie named Oakley who was saved from a house fire after running past the open front door through the smoke and scream of the fire detector into the kitchen to show the police officer where his leash was so he could put it on before they left the house, listening to Wendy talk about butterflies, seeing Michelle’s dog and kitty on Zoom, texting with Chloe’ and Chris, sharing reels and memes with Shellie and Kari and Carrie, other people’s kids and pets and gardens, gold in the trees, the rabbitbrush so yellow it looks like it’s glowing in the dark, the moon, stickers, online ordering and scheduling, streaming content, those willing to speak sass to power, those who speak up even as they put themselves at risk, those who call a lie what it is, poets and poetry, clean sheets, muffins, gummies, naps, reading in bed at night while Eric and Ringo sleep.