Author Archives: jillsalahub

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About jillsalahub

Writer & Contemplative Practice Guide holding space for people cultivating a foundation of a stable mind, embodied compassion and wisdom. CYT 500

Gratitude

1. Morning walks. Still cold and dark, but getting warmer and lighter. There was one particular morning when the sky was a certain color blue and the moon was out and it made me so happy to be alive, to be out there and able to see it.

2. Time with friends. As a highly sensitive introvert who would almost always rather stay home alone than do anything else, I don’t have a big group of friends that I see regularly — but the ones I do are something special. This week I got to spend time with my favorite ones: went to a modern dance performance loosely based on Alice in Wonderland, hung out at my kitchen table talking for hours, wrote with my Wild-ish sangha, and even though I turned down the offer of a coffee date and/or puppy time, I’m counting that too.

3. Practice. When I get up in the morning (somewhere between 5 and 6 am), I check to see if I have any texts from my brother or mom, then put my phone aside. Okay, most days I put my phone down after that quick check, and some days I get lost in my phone and it takes a bit more time to remember my intention to practice. I might do some yoga, anything from a few quick stretches to a full practice, and after I go into my practice room and read a short passage or chapter or poem (recently I’ve been reading from Mark Nepo’s The Book of Awakening: Having the Life You Want by Being Present to the Life You Have, which I especially like because even though it’s a day book and each entry is dated, you can open it to any page and find something worth contemplating).

When I finish, I open my Insight Timer app and settle in on my meditation cushion. Some mornings I use the simple timer, but other mornings I pick a track that’s a short dharma talk, or music or a mantra or both. Once I’m done, I dedicate the merit (“By the merit of my practice, may suffering be eased — in myself and in the world”) and bow in offering. Then I go out and fix a mug of green tea and a snack, go in to my office and sit in front of my HappyLight with a notebook and write. Sometimes what I write is garbage, messy or petty, and that’s fine, because the purpose of this “first thing in the day” write is to mainly clear my head. If it’s a morning I’m walking Ringo, I do that first thing before the rest of my practice, but that walk with him is a practice too. And I suppose the point I’m trying to make is I practice every day and I’m so grateful for it because I’m convinced it is why I’m still here, why I haven’t given up.

4. Healthcare. This week, I’m thinking specifically of my primary care doctor. I saw her yesterday, had four things I needed to check in with her about: my achy shoulder, whether I needed a pap smear after the other procedures I’d had earlier in the year, an in office check of my A1C, and “is this lump next to my belly button scar tissue from my surgery or a hernia?” As a result of our visit, I’m getting an x-ray of my shoulder, and if it’s arthritis, she’s sending me to an orthopedist, and if not, I have a referral to do some physical therapy; I don’t need a pap smear until next year; my A1C is holding steading in the normal range (I have a family history on both sides of every kind of diabetes and was in the caution zone a few years ago, so I like to keep a close eye on that); and yes, it is unfortunately a hernia, so I’m going to be consulting with a surgeon (the one who did my surgery last year warned that an eventual incisional hernia might develop but he just retired, so it will be someone new who does the repair, if I choose to have surgery). I’m just so grateful that I have a whole team who takes such good care of me, is accessible and wise and kind, and that even though we don’t have universal healthcare, my health insurance does help with costs, which takes some of the pressure off when seeking treatment and making decisions about what to do next.

5. My tiny family, small house, little life. I’ve been trying to be more honest with Eric about what’s going on with me, what I might be struggling with. I tend to not want to burden him with it or don’t even think to tell him because I can get so stuck in my own head or don’t want to talk about it. Now, I ask for more hugs and tell him when I’m hurting or admit the things I’m really afraid of, and it really helps. Like last night, I told him, “getting a hernia after my surgery makes me feel like I did something wrong” and he told me, “the only thing you did was work out really hard and that’s not a thing to feel bad about.” He helps me reframe how I see things (which often isn’t very accurate, is more focused on figuring out what I did wrong and what I need to do to “fix it”) and offers me comfort.

Ringo is pretty good at helping me too. The other day I was having a messy, tender, raw day, and I’m not even sure what triggered it, but I was shutting down my browser to get up from my computer, and I burst into tears. Grief is weird like that, how it catches you by surprise and sometimes doesn’t seem to have a clear reason for “why now?” After I cried for a bit, I went into the living room and found Ringo resting on the couch. I sat on the floor next to him and pet him, smelled his head, felt his soft ears, looked in to his eyes and told him he was a good boy, and got a few kisses. I felt so much better.

Bonus joy: having the whole pool to myself, sitting in the sauna with Eric, sunshine, oranges (pretty much any citrus, really), knowing what I want and being able to cook it for myself, saying “no”, canceling plans, sharing pastries, reading, organizing my TBR piles, hugs, poetry and poets, watching TV or a movie, listening to podcasts, aisle seats, my infrared heating pad, gummies, bread, the picture Jim took of a brown mink standing in the snow at the edge of the river, how Chloe’ compared our compost pile to the beaver lodge at McMurray ponds (it totally looks like it and I had never noticed!), talking to my mom on the phone and hearing not quite three year old Warren in the background doing that thing he does where he repeats everything you say to him (for example, Mom told him to close the door and his little voice said “close the door” as he was doing it — it’s SO cute!), the video’s Chloe’ sent me of Hendrix playing with the alphabet blocks I got for him, kittens, how much Ringo likes the food we cook for him, purple sweet potatoes, purple carrots with yellow centers, purple the color, kitchen counter love notes, texting with Shellie and sharing links, finding the perfect gif to send as a response knowing it will make the other person smile, other people’s dogs, the story Eric told me about the old man on the trail reaching down to pat Ringo on the head and Ringo letting him which reminded me of the time Sam nudged the hand of the guy who owned the fencing company replacing our privacy fence while we were talking and let him pet him which was super unusual for Sam and so sweet, the puppy available for adoption at the Boulder Humane Society that looked like a giant baby Dexter, art, flowers, bees and birds, flannel sheets, a nap, reading in bed at night while Eric and Ringo sleep.  

Something Good

1. I’ve been CEO for 17 years. Here’s what the most emotionally intelligent people do to be more successful in life.

2. 12 Reasons To Ditch The Diet Mentality“Restricting yourself ultimately doesn’t work. Here’s why.”

3. Pitties People Watch From Their Window Perch All Day(video)

4. This tiny NYC apartment goes for $687 a month! (video) “New York City comes in all shapes and sizes. In this new series, I explore interesting spaces and apartments. Today we tour $687 tiny NYC apartment and tour the famous 368 started by Casey Neistat.” What I found so interesting about this video isn’t so much the apartment or its size but what the person who lived there had to say about what is important to him, and in life. I have to say, however, I had anxiety the whole time about the possibility of his cat falling out the window.

5. Embracing the Dark Pleasures of Dystopian Literature: 10 Novels That Inspired Me To Write My OwnOne of my favorite genres, although in the past few years they’ve all seemed less and less fictional.

6. Writers, Ink Podcast: Author Jami Attenberg Helps You Hit Word-Count Goals and Get Your Book to the Finish LineI started following Jami on her Substack, Craft Talk, a few years ago, and have learned so much from her.

7. ‘Sort Of’ Review: The Max Show Is Back For Its Final SeasonThis show is SO GOOD.

8. Lauren Groff on Opening a Bookstore in Florida“The Lynx, which Groff aims to open this spring, will feature banned books, an act of resistance in a state where more than half of school districts have seen book banning activity over the past two years.” In related news, here’s a link to their fundraiser, The Lynx, A Bookstore in Gainesville, FL.

9. Homeless man rescues puppies, leaves them at shelter with touching note.

10. A Simple Sacred Pilgrimage from Gretchen Schmelzer. “A pilgrimage, practiced, no matter how small, is a chance to see the sacred in the ordinary— to see the newest growth in yourself and a chance to greet yourself as a long lost friend.” Also from Gretchen, The bitter and the sweet in transitions.

11. Manjula Martin Tells Us: About Trying Slow from Cheryl Strayed’s series “in which I invite an author to tell us five things—not only about their most recent book, but about their life too.”

12. For the introverts: 5 Signs You’re a People-Pleasing Introvert and How Introverts Can Show Themselves Love on Their Toughest Days.

13. Failing into the New Year, “on things dead and not dead.”

14. From Lion’s Roar: Lessons on the Three Poisons from Barbie and Ken (“Following the Barbie film’s win for best song with ‘I’m Just Ken’ at the 2024 Critics’ Choice Awards, associate editor Mihiri Tillakaratne explores what Ken’s journey teaches us about Buddhism’s three poisons: craving, anger, and ignorance”) and What Do You Really Want? (“Take time to discover your deepest desires, says Brother Phap Linh. By shining the light of mindfulness on your volition, you’ll find more freedom”).

15. The Sound of a Thing Carrying Doom on Short Reads.

16. A Few Good Questions, “On the value of our time and energy and more” from Jami Attenberg.

17. This pay phone is free, but you can’t make a call. It only plays birdsongs.

18. Gezellig: How to be cozy like the Dutch.

19. Close-Up Photographer of the Year Showcases Mindboggling Macro Images of the Natural World.

20. 365 grateful days on A Grace Full Life.

21. The Guilt of Feeling Joy, “On allowing yourself to be happy.”

22. Incredible Vegan Dinner Recipes to Put on Your Menu ASAP.

23. The Ezra Klein Show: How to Discover Your Own Taste“Kyle Chayka, a staff writer at The New Yorker, has written a whole book on it, the forthcoming “Filterworld: How Algorithms Flattened Culture.” We talk about how today’s internet encourages everything to look more the same and is even dulling our ability to know what we like. And we discuss what we can do to strengthen our sense of personal taste in order to live a richer, more beautiful life.”

24. Against Self-Criticism

25. 10 surprising psychological and physical perks associated with regular reading.

26. This Is What Happened When I Didn’t Buy Any New Clothes for a Year.

27. Feeling Stuck on a Task or Problem? Tons of Science Says You Should Take a Walk.

28. I deeply loved my time in Nebraska“Until I didn’t. Life bends in unreliable directions like that, and then something breaks” from Patti Digh. Also from Patti, You are Beautiful.

29. ‘It will be the end of democracy’: Bernie Sanders on what happens if Trump wins – and how to stop him“He’s the leftwing outsider who nearly became the Democrats’ candidate for president – twice. As his position on the Israel-Gaza war threatens to upset his support, the veteran senator says he’s tired but determined to fight the return of that ‘ bitter, humiliated man’.”

30. Not the end of the world: nine data-driven reasons to look beyond doomsday headlinesWe need good news too, if for no other reason than it might keep us from giving up.

31. Let Go Of These 8 Things For A Happier Life from Courtney Carver on Be More With Less.

32. Let’s go small together, “An invitation wrapped in an origin story” from Rita Ott Ramstad. “It can mean that we don’t have to find or live out a great purpose. We can simply live our small lives the best we can alongside other, similar beings. It doesn’t mean we don’t or can’t or won’t or shouldn’t care for others and the places we live, but it means we don’t have to do that caring in big, unique, changing-the-world ways. It means we can recognize and be OK with the idea that we are all just passing through, and the things we do and make and love will pass with us when we’re gone.” And this line really got me, “as it turns out, I want a lot less than I thought I did.” Amen, Rita. ❤