Monthly Archives: September 2025

Something Good

1. Poetry: The Brown Bird and On the Phone With Carolina from the Pharmacy Help Desk and Dear Summer and Upon My Release by Julie Barton, Just One Scene in One Movie and Those of Us Who Choose to Turn Toward Grief and A Scrap in Time by Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, Not the Only Thing from James Crews on The Weekly Pause, Otherwise by Jane Kenyon shared by Patti Digh, and Long Summer by Barbara Crooker on Heart Poems.

2. From Seth Godin: False scarcity, The hustle loop, Under the circumstances, and Bringing goodwill to the conversation.

3. the length of her nails, “It is Not Normal to Cling This Tightly” from Elissa Altman.

4. Why I choose to live a “boring” life, a video from Sarah M. “In this video, I talk about why I choose to live what many would call a ‘boring’ life — a slow, intentional, quiet existence that prioritizes peace over pressure, simplicity over chaos, and inner fulfillment over external validation. There are no wild nights or packed calendars here. Just cozy mornings, quiet routines, and the everyday beauty of slow living. From embracing my introversion to reclaiming my time, I share the journey that led me to redefine what it means to live a meaningful life. Whether you’re feeling burnt out by hustle culture, overwhelmed by social expectations, or just curious about the joy of slow living — this video is for you.”

5. How to Break Free From Your Phone on The New York Times. (gift link)

6. How (and why) you should embrace the “art of doing nothing”.

7. 99 Alternatives To Scrolling On Your Phone.

8. The pleasures of reading. “Jancee Dunn, author of the NYT’s Well newsletter, asked me a while back to answer some questions about reading. Just a couple of items from my reply made their way into her column — she had plenty of other people to interview! — so I thought I would post my whole email to her here.”

9. I know you’re tired but come, this is the way, “naming our sacred gifts” from Alix Klingenberg on Earth & Verse.

10. Looking for New Ways to Live. “That was as close as I ever came to death in the mountains, before I even climbed one” by Emily Meg Weinstein.

11. Ancient Wisdom: How to Die Well. “I believe death should not be seen only as an ending. It is a teacher, a mirror, a catalyst. It shapes how we live, and where we seek meaning.”

12. 10 Entrances to Hell You Can Actually Visit. “Has someone told you to ‘go to hell?’ If so, let us direct you to these potential portals to the underworld.”

13. From Satya Robyn’s Move Towards Love series: Five Pond Practices, “and how they will help you to be a healthy & happy pond/person” and How Much Choice Do We Have? “MTL 2: Moving Towards Love & Seeing Love Reach Out.”

14. From Jamie Attenberg: Factoring in the Joy in Your Writing, “Sorry to be cringe, but I do have some thoughts on the matter” and How to Deal With Your Messy Notes, “It only hurts for a second.”

15. How do you like to be supported? “It’s a simple, but difficult, question” from Patti Digh.

16. What Burning Man doesn’t want you to see. (video)

17. Help! I’ve Become a Helicopter Parent to My Dog on The New York Times. (gift link)

18. Small, Easy Acts of Joy Mean Big Gains in Happiness. “A community science project finds that modest reminders to find joy in the day can have benefits that are on par with those of more ambitious well-being interventions.”

19. I wallowed in booze for four decades. Here’s what five sober years have taught me. “To give up drinking once seemed unthinkable – and when I finally made the leap, it didn’t go quite as expected.”

20. Tricks to snap yourself out of a funk (in 15 minutes or less)“In a slump and want to turn your day around? Try these science-backed techniques to help improve your mood in a matter of minutes. They can help you feel energized when you feel sluggish, calm when you feel stressed or connected if you feel lonely. No special tools or materials required (unless you want to jump in the ice bath!).”

21. On Not Writing, and Letting Wildness Be Your Guide. “Leila Chatti Wrestles With the Daily Idea of Being a Writer.” This post was so gorgeous, upon reading, I immediately bought a copy of her book.

22. I hope death feels like…this(video)

23. Gaza City, September 1, 2025(video) HOW is this still happening?!

24. Teacher uses “On the Road” to teach kids kindness. (video) “Teacher Derek Brown has been showing his fifth graders ‘On the Road’ stories for more than a decade, saying the stories teach them how to be ‘grounded and good.’ This week, Steve Hartman surprised his class.” 

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

Gratitude

Kestrel at Kestrel Fields Natural Area

1. Morning walks. I’m excited for next week because I was looking on Google maps the other day and found two alternative routes at one of our favorite trails that I want to try, see where they go. It’s cooler and darker in the mornings now and I’m okay with that — for one, it means fewer people but more animals are out. And, while I may have to start the walk with a headlamp, we get to see the sun come up.

2. Practice. The past three Thursday mornings, people’s schedules were wonky, so I’ve been doing unplanned private yoga sessions at Red Sage, just one person each week but also a different person each week, and it’s been kind of fun. I adore teaching and practicing there. Zoom was being wonky, so sadly my writing sangha and I didn’t get to practice together Friday morning. Hopefully we get that figured out by next week because that practice session with those women is one of my favorite things. I’ve been meditating at random times this week. Rather than first thing in the morning each time, I’ve been sitting when the need hits me — and it has been on the regular because some sad anniversaries are coming up and a few friends are losing their dogs and the ability to sit with those big feelings is such a gift. Yoga, writing, and meditation keep me sane.

3. Fall. Yes, there are sad anniversaries, but other than that, this is my favorite season in Colorado. The way nature invites us to slow down and let go, how things start to turn towards quiet and stillness, how everything turns golden.

4. Mom. She for certain is slowing down some, becoming quieter, but she’s still here and still remembers us. I’m so grateful for the continued care and company she is getting. I posted this on my social media last week:

A phone call with my mom this weekend: She has late stage vascular dementia, so I wait until my brother is there visiting, call his phone, which he hands to Mom as he explains to her how to hold it and listen and who it is on the other end. She tried once, but her first question for me was a struggle to find the words, “Are you…are you…are you taking…a break?” which I know to mean “Are you at work?” which is something she always asks me even though I’m now mostly retired because it’s what she can remember of previous conversations with me. Frustrated by not being able to find the words, we said goodbye and I love you and she handed the phone back to my brother. Then in a few minutes, she asked to have the phone back.

On her second try, she began with “It’s hard to talk to you right now because I’m trying to eat,” but as my brother pointed out, she didn’t have anything in front of her to eat, there was no dinner plate or even a small bag of chips. After she said that, it started to pour down rain at my house, so I told her, and she said, “You can keep it!” which is what she’s always said to me about our weather, whether it’s hot or snowing or storming. Then she said, “I’m going to hand this back to Dad,” which meant my brother, and with another goodbye and I love you, I was talking to him and not my dad, who has been gone for two years now.

We got off his phone a few minutes later and in another few minutes, my brother texted, “I know this might make you sad, but she just picked up the TV remote and said to it, ‘Hey, can you hear me?'” ❤️💔

5. My tiny family, small house, little life. My favorite, my favorite, my favorite.

Bonus joy: peaches and corn and watermelon and tomatoes — the last of the season, texting with Chris and Chloe’, stickers, clean sheets, a warm shower, grapefruit Bubly, when King Soopers sends customized coupons based on things I regularly buy (I know the “Big Brother” aspect of that is creepy, but also thanks for the discounts on stuff I was probably gonna buy anyway!), ordering pizza, all the laundry done and put away, tarot, sitting with Eric and Ringo in the backyard, how green our yard is right now, the opportunity to start over as many times as necessary, other people’s dogs and kids and gardens, good TV, listening to podcasts, getting books from the library for my Kindle, the glitter I keep finding everywhere, comedy, true crime, documentaries, good music, naps, fry sauce, reading in bed at night while Eric and Ringo sleep.