Category Archives: Something Good

Something Good

1. Poetry: Saying Yes on The Weekly Pause by James Crews, Nostalgic for Five Minutes Ago and Going Lightly and Bird Trapped in the Amsterdam Airport by Julie Barton, On place and being in place from Pádraig Ó Tuama on Poetry Unbound, poem in which a stinging thing appears by Maya Stein, Last Picnic by Charles Simic and shared by Patti Digh, The Poem I’d Give You by Daniel Skach-Mills on Heart Poems, and With the Stones of Our Stories and The Change by Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer.

2. Writing in the clouds from Andrea Scher. When Andrea shares the message of a SoulCollage card she made for her mom who died early this year — “Now I can love you in the way I always wanted to love you” — it makes me think of how I “told” my dad after he passed, “Now is your chance to be the dad I needed you to be.” A strange aspect of loss is that you still have a relationship with the person who is gone, and sometimes you have the chance to heal parts of your relationship you couldn’t when they were still alive in a body.

3. When the Shadow Speaks, “lessons in resistance, strength, and creativity – letter 3 {Falling Gently}” from Alix Klingenberg on Earth and Verse.

4. On The Beautiful Mess by John Pavlovitz: Congratulations, Trump Supporters, You’ve Owned the Libs and Now That Fascism is Here.

5. How to Contemplate Death on Lion’s Roar. “Lisa Ernst on how to be mindful of death—and live with more wisdom, freedom, and gratitude.”

6. 37 Simple Pleasures That Deliver Joy Without Draining Your Bank Account by Tammy Strobel on Be More With Less.

7. Give yourself a break. “On the necessity of recharging the spirit in order to keep fighting” by Jennifer Sahn on High Country News.

8. 12 New(ish) Reading Recommendations. “Orion approved books to kick off your fall reading plans,” recommendations from Orion Staff.

9. Good stuff from Patti Digh: No circus stays in town forever, and some comets never come back, and The power of a shape, and The 7 Types of Rest.

10. Vernacular Architecture and Mossy Trees Fill Michael Davydov’s Tiny Worlds. “In the miniature world of Michael Davydov, tiny houses, moons, trees, and barns balance precariously in clusters and stacks. Observing the architecture and flora around his home in the Nizhny Novgorod region of Russia, he taught himself how to draw and eventually began assembling small sculptures.”

11. What was going on when I was born? “Enter your birthdate to find out.”

12. Swiping less, living more. How to take control of your digital life. “In an always-on world, our phones have become lifelines – but at what cost? In Smartphone Nation, digital ‘nutritionist’ Kaitlyn Regehr explores our tangled relationship with screens and makes a case for reclaiming control through honesty, intention and digital literacy.”

13. The Guardian Documentaries“Real people, untold stories” from The Guardian.

14. The Imperfectionist: Five short thoughts, “in the return of an occasional series, here are five ideas that helped things click for me in recent weeks. I hope some of them might do the same for you.”

15. Truth Hurts: Scrolling at Night Is Cooking My Brain. “In this, his first column, John DeVore confronts an ugly truth about bedtime.” P.S. “‘Truth Hurts’ is a monthly column about accepting who you are, where you are, and how you’re doing. It’s written by John DeVore, a writer who doesn’t always feel comfortable in his own skin.”

16. A Thought on Normalcy in Fascism. “Fascism does not break normal life, it feeds on it” by Frederick Joseph. “History has already shown us how this story unfolds. Fascism is not built only in the camps and cells. It is built in the shrug, the silence, the insistence that life can go on as if nothing has changed.”

17. A Glossary for the Unspoken by Isabel Abbott. “So much gets lost in translation between the lived knowing and the words to say it. is not the absence of vocabulary exactly, but the way language keeps running out just when life is most alive. We have words for weather, but not for the way dusk bruises the sky and makes the body ache like a memory. We have words for grief, but not for the hollow shape it carves in the air where someone used to breathe. We stumble through love with metaphors and approximations, while whole galaxies of feeling go unnamed, shimmering just beyond the reach of our tongues. I keep thinking there should be more, an alphabet wide enough to hold the weight and the wonder of what it means to be here.”

18. Why I’m Leaving Academia after a Decade of Contingent Labor. “Roughly 70 percent of faculty are contingent. This exploitative hustle is driving dedicated teachers out of academia.”

19. The Coloradans Exercising Their Right To Die—and a Doctor Who Helps Them Find Peace. “More terminally ill Coloradans than ever are turning to Denver Health’s Medical Aid in Dying clinic. We spent the summer witnessing the quiet decisions and final moments of those who chose when—and how—to say goodbye.”

20. Sharing Your Life With a Dog: 5 Benefits.

21. Omar Mendoza’s Natural Pigment Paintings Radiate the Power of Ancestral Knowledge.

22. Bryan Sansivero Documents Otherworldly, Forgotten Houses in ‘America the Abandoned.’

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

Something Good

1. Poetry: Sit with the Pain in Your Heart, he said by Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, Wherever You Are by Maya Stein shared by Heart Poems, Lonely Young Mother’s Refrain and Text to My Friend from Julie Barton, Writing From Home from Jena Schwartz, Background Hum on The Weekly Pause by James Crews, and For You Who Have Loved Old Dogs by Silas House shared by Maggie Smith on The Slowdown.

2. Death and Her Compass(video) “Andrews, a ‘death doula’ and lover of the woods, works with clients nearing the end of their lives to confront the fear, anxiety, and hope surrounding death. As Andrews inspires those around her to be more open about their mortality, she reflects on her own relationship with loss.”

3. From The Beautiful Mess by John Pavlovitz: I Am (not) Charlie Kirk and What Exactly Do MAGAs Love, Anyway? 

4. How can we enjoy fall when democracy hangs by a thread? from Alix Klingenberg, “cozy sweaters and rage – Letter Two {Falling Gently}.”

5. Act now! from Seth Godin.

6. From problem to possibility: how your attention can improve your life. “In a world of constant digital noise, by reclaiming our attention we can improve the quality of our lives. Jodie Jackson, a specialist in the way the brain forms habits, explains how.”

7. The human stain remover: what Britain’s greatest extreme cleaner learned from 25 years on the job. “From murder scenes to whale blubber, Ben Giles has seen it – and cleaned it – all. In their stickiest hours, people rely on him to restore order.”

8. Sherwin-Williams’ 2026 Color of the Year. I can’t decide if this is utterly depressing or just right. Maybe both?

9. 8 Gentle Practices That Add Ease (When Pushing Through Isn’t Working) by Courtney Carver on Be More With Less.

10. Open Source Anxiety Toolkit. “Free tools to help when you’re feeling anxious. These exercises are simple to follow and don’t require any special equipment – use them whenever your mind feels too busy or when you need a moment of calm.”

11. The Permission Workbook: Writing About the Dead. “Is it ever okay? Also, some craft thoughts on Elizabeth Gilbert’s All the Way to the River” from Elissa Altman.

12. Resilience Fatigue. “A comic for when you feel overwhelmed” from Connie Sun.

13. Bryan Andrews Music on gun violence. (Facebook reel) “You can pray AND advocate for doing SOMETHING.”

14. ‘My wife is an exquisite goddess’: Nick Offerman on love, woodwork and storing gravy in his beard. “The Parks and Recreation actor answers your questions on being married to Megan Mullally, visiting Manchester and preparing for the apocalypse.”

15. They were right [that college makes you liberal]… but not for the reason they are angry. (Facebook reel)

16. Buck helps with everything on the farm(Facebook reel) Good boy, Buck!

17. Rudy Francisco reads his poem A Series of Gentle Reminders. (Facebook reel)

18. Simple Hack for Living in the Present Moment from Dan Harris. (Facebook reel)

19. Here’s a handy guide to help you spot AI writing.

20. This is How Bill Hader Relates to His Neuroses from Dan Harris. (Facebook reel)

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