Monthly Archives: November 2025

Gratitude

1. Morning walks. We snuck in a few more golden trees this week, as the warmer weather has lingered and we haven’t had any hard frosts or snow yet. 

2. Practice. Red Sage yoga with some of my favorite people and one puppy, Friday morning writing with some amazing humans and poems, reading so many good books, and my meditation practice still trying to find its place, happening at random times but no less precious.

3. An average of 300 days of sun per year. I’ve been hearing from Oregon family how miserable it was there last week, stormy and gray. I’m so glad we landed somewhere that has all four seasons but also more sun and less moisture. Even when it snows and is the coldest it gets, there’s more light here than where I grew up, and I’m so grateful. And yes, I also complain all summer long that it is so dang hot. 

4. Good books, TV, films, poetry, comedy, and music. This week, I finished It Lasts Forever and Then It’s Over, a wonderful and weird contemplation of love and loss from the perspective of a lesbian zombie after an apocalypse that reads like a long form poem. This week’s editor’s note at the beginning of the “Weekend Reader” email from Lion’s Roar says, “I couldn’t help but liken the main character’s journey to the bardo. Bardo is a Tibetan word, often referring to the period between death and rebirth, or more generally the transition space between two states of being. It is the period of change from one reality to another.” I finally watched Past Lives, which really feels more like a play than a typical film, and the final scene just gutted me. I also started rewatching Somebody, Somewhere, which is one of my comfort shows. I’m reading the new poetry collection from James Crews, Turning Toward Grief: Reflections on Life, Loss, and Appreciation, and it’s just so good. I am looking forward to seeing Maria Bamford at The Lincoln Center (my favorite local venue in part because it’s only about five minutes from my house). And I have been obsessed with this song, Malleable by Tiny Habits, since I heard it a few days ago even though it is a year old. It reminds me a lot of Rosie Thomas.

5. My tiny family, small house, little life. My friend Cynthia said to me recently, “you’ve got backup, Eric and Ringo,” meaning I’ve got support, that it isn’t just me against the world. She’s absolutely correct. If nothing else goes “right” for me, I’ve already got everything I need, everything I ever wanted. I was telling my therapist this week that all I wanted when I was a kid, when I imagined my adult life where I would get to choose for myself, that I just wanted a partner who loved me and made me laugh, time to read and write, and some dogs. And look at me now. 🙂 ❤

Bonus joy: free geraniums from Eric’s campus nursery, slowly decluttering and cleaning our house, “trading some,” other people’s kids and dogs, looking forward to Christmas lights, gummies, Reese’s holiday shapes (hearts, eggs, pumpkins, bats, ghosts, Christmas trees, etc. — because they have less chocolate and more peanut butter filling), a hot cup of coffee, a warm mug of green tea, toast, getting books from the library on my Kindle, that Ringo is aging so well (better than me), being able to start over and begin again no matter how many times I need to, book club, that there was a single ticket left right next to Chloe’ and Barb and Eric and Jen wanted my pair of tickets, the cute plush blue heeler stuffed toy I got for the neighbor’s new baby (that is so cute I want to keep it but I already have two, see below, and don’t need anymore — right?), clean sheets, a warm shower, a sandwich (so weird how something so simple just hits the spot sometimes), onion rolls, down blankets and pillows, a couch that is comfortable enough to sleep on, cuddling with Ringo (which is very rare but does happen, is more likely once it starts getting cold out), the holiday lights in Old Town, poetry collections, true crime, grocery shopping, sitting in the backyard in the sun with Eric and Ringo, reading on my Kindle in bed at night while Eric and Ringo sleep.

Something Good

1. Poetry: Different Kinds of Sadness by Jenny Molberg on The Slow Down, Radiance Theory and Quiet Delay by Julie Barton, Here’s To You (also) by Julie Barton shared on Heart Poems, Oh, November by Alix Klingenberg, Prescription For The Disillusioned by Rebecca del Rio, Sound Bath and Right Here by Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, Nourishment by James Crews, and If Adam Picked the Apple by Danielle Coffyn shared by Patti Digh. Also this collection, Mindfulness Poetry from the Mindfulness Association.

2. Tending the Small Fires: Lessons in Light from a Darkening Season from Lori at Little Truths Studio.

3. You suffer for as long as you decide to: stop touching the wound from Patti Digh.

4. 11 things one day before leaving Facebook, including a few writing lessons. “Ending my extremely online era'” from Jena Schwartz (who in part inspired my own exit).

5. What if you gave up social media? “On ignoring the online drama, algorithms, and AI to find an authentic path forward” by Dan Blank.

6 Back from the Drift. “Re-emerging from a time of shifts and drifts” from Sara Saltee.

7. 5 Everyday Habits Secretly Stealing Your Ease by Courtney Carver on Be More With Less.

8. Stuff worth considering on The Beautiful Mess by John Pavlovitz: Trump Supporters Are Miserable People. Let’s Not Become Like Them, and Staying Human in Inhumane Times, and Christians Who Don’t Want to Feed People—Aren’t Jesus Christians, and SNAP is What Jesus Would Be Doing Here. That’s Why MAGA Christians Are Trying to Kill It.

9. 6 Strategies to Stay Calm When Life Feels Uncertain, According to Therapists

10. How Not to Waste Your Life by Maria Popova.

11. For a Literary Saint, Margaret Atwood Can Sure Hold a Grudge on The New York Times. (gift link) “She had to be pushed to write her new memoir, ‘Book of Lives.’ The result reveals the experiences (and a few slights) that have shaped her work.” In related news, ‘It is the scariest of times’: Margaret Atwood on defying Trump, banned books – and her score-settling memoir.

12. Woman Shocked by Neighbors’ Response After She Sets Up Día de Muertos Altar as Tribute to Beloved Dog.

13. Have We Finally Hit Peak Protein? “In 2025, protein isn’t just a macronutrient — it’s a marketing language that now defines how Americans shop, snack, and eat out.”

14. Josh Hawley: No American Should Go to Bed Hungry on The New York Times. (gift link)

15. Breaking Free From Doomscrolling: From Willpower to Redesign. “To make it easier to put down the phone, reshape your world for presence.”

16. What it takes to make. “Creating isn’t about talent or the muse. It’s a few things anyone can do. Including you” from Danny Gregory.

17. Getting Closure When the Universe Doesn’t Give It to You, a 5-day email course from Elizabeth Kleinfeld. “You’ve been waiting for an apology, an explanation, or acknowledgment that’s never coming. This 5-day course teaches you how to create closure on your own terms—so you can finally move forward without needing their permission or participation.”

18. You have to do the living yourself on The Imperfectionist, which shares this “deeply important point: building a meaningful life is much less about discovering the right set of practices or habits than it is about cultivating the willingness to step up moment after moment and just do more of the things that matter, for the projects and people and causes you care about most.”

19. Cultural Narratives and Craft Converge in the 2025 World of WearableArt Competition.