Gratitude Friday

1. Morning walks. Ringo is getting better and yet we are still taking shorter walks in the morning. This week I decided to risk some of our favorite spots by the river and the ponds and the lake, even though I knew there would still be mosquitoes. There were, and it was so worth it.

2. Practice. Last year today, I posted on Facebook: “We should all take responsibility for the harm we do, making amends when possible. One primary way to minimize harm is to heal our own wounds. When we are hurt, instead of denying it, avoiding it, trying to escape it, or lashing out, we must direct our efforts at healing. Otherwise we will continue to generate suffering, cause pain, intentionally and unintentionally, for ourselves and others.” Still so true, maybe even more so now, and practice is the primary way I know how to do this.

3. The effort of all those making our lives better, easier. Whenever I watch the credits after a movie or watch a behind the scenes piece about the making of a movie, I am always amazed how many people, how much work it takes to make a single film. All that effort for a few short hours of content. When I expand that thinking to all the effort that occurs simply to make things run, I can hardly hold space for it all. In particular, my heart is holding space in this moment for all the teachers and parents and students going back to school, as well as all the nurses, doctors, scientists, EMS, pharmacists, office managers, maintenance crews, etc. that are keeping our medical systems going, doing everything they can to keep us healthy, to get us well when we get injured or are ill.

4. The way music can connect me to an earlier time. This morning, I’m listening to a satellite station called “2K Mellow Hits” and remembering what my life was like twenty years ago, what the world was like, feeling gratitude for all the good memories and all the struggles that are no longer, missing the friends and dogs who are no longer here. It’s good to move on, to grow and evolve, but it’s also good to remember where you’ve been, who you are and what you care about — the parts that don’t change even when you forget them for a bit.

5. My tiny family, my tiny house, my tiny life. Eric went back to work this week and Ringo and I are really missing him. It will probably take a few weeks to get used to it, get in a new routine. For now we are just letting ourselves be sad, and to love a little bit extra on each other when we are together.

Bonus joy: our garden harvest, clean laundry, grocery pickup, a big glass of cold clean water, a warm shower, podcasts, good TV (just watched the last season of Shetland), other people’s dogs, bike lanes, a/c, aqua aerobics, small group training with Shelby, sitting in the sauna with Eric, naan, bees, birds at our feeder and in the bath, good neighbors, down blankets and pillows, writing and hanging out with Calyx, texting with Mom and Chris, vaccines and face masks, reading in bed at night while Eric and Ringo sleep.

Something Good

1. 120 Things To Remove From Your Life from Be More With Less.

2. Writers and the War Against Nature by Gary Snyder on Lion’s Roar. Especially this: “Wild is a valuable word. It is a term for the free and independent process of nature…The wild is self-creating, self-maintaining, self-propagating, self-reliant, and self-actualizing, and it has no ‘self.’ It is perhaps the same as what East Asian philosophers call the Dao. The human mind, imagination, and even natural human language can also thus be called wild. The human body itself, with its circulation, respiration, and digestion, is wild. In these senses, ‘wild’ is a word for the intrinsic, non-theistic, forever-changing natural order.”

3. Good stuff from Austin Kleon: Clichés, puns, and hooks, and Absence of certainty, awareness of ignorance, and Rob Walker on curiosity. In related news, Sharing is Caring, a podcast interview with Austin Kleon.

4. 40+ Larger Fat Instagram Accounts You Should Be Following.

5. Grief Belongs in Social Movements. Can We Embrace It? “A Black activist reflects on intergenerational trauma, community, and coming to terms with death in movement building.”

6. With Capitol Sit-In, Cori Bush Galvanized a Progressive Revolt Over Evictions on The New York Times. “Refusing to move from the Capitol steps, the first-term congresswoman from St. Louis intensified pressure on the Biden administration and showed her tactics could yield results.”

7. Spiritual Bypassing In an Age of Climate Change and Vaccine Disinformation. “Action follows philosophy; philosophy follows attention. Right now, a growing number of people are paying attention to unimportant or irrelevant social trends, fueled and funded by a small cohort of wellness influencers spreading the gospel of disinformation. How long the illusion will hold is a question we’ll continue to face until it’s too close to our faces to ignore.”

8. You’re Still Exhausted. “I think the real problem is that life is still exhausting because the pandemic was and remains exhausting in so many invisible ways — and we still haven’t given ourselves space to even begin to recover. Instead, we’re just softly boiling over, emptying and evaporating whatever stores of energy and patience and grace remain.”

9. “The antidote is always turning deeper towards each other.” “Garrett Bucks on community building and white grievance snake oil salesmen.”

10. Some Of Our Favorite Olympic Photos, So Far. In related news, More Of Our Favorite Olympic Photos, and The Biggest Highlights From the Oddest Olympics on The New York Times.

11. Shoe Obsession for the Ages: Prince’s Killer Collection of Custom Heels, Now on View on The New York Times.

12. Republicans treated Covid like a bioweapon. Then it turned against them. “Trump’s team reportedly believed that coronavirus would hurt Democratic states – and Democratic governors – worse. But the virus does not discriminate.”

13. COVID news: Breakthrough cases aren’t the cause of the US Covid-19 surge, and Delta Is Surging. Here’s What You Need To Know To Stay Safe, and Former vaccine skeptics reveal what convinced them to get the Coronavirus vaccine, and An ICU Nurse Made An Emotional Appeal For People In Louisiana To Get Vaccinated.

14. “Delta” a poem by Rachel Mallalieu. “I am an emergency physician who’s been on the front lines of the Covid battle for 18 months. I also developed an autoimmune illness this year, which makes every Covid encounter feel even more dangerous. As spring gave way to summer, it felt like we had turned a corner. I went weeks without seeing cases in my ER. My teen children were vaccinated, and my younger kids went to camp. Suddenly, my ER has multiple Covid patients every shift again. They’re younger, sicker, and some are dying. It is exhausting to be in this battle; we finally have the weapon with which to fight, and some refuse that weapon. These days, I just try to do right by my patients and take care of myself and my family when I’m off.”

15. Japan Created a Kimono for Every Nation at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.

16. #PBSForTheArts Artist Spotlight: Brian Jordan Alvarez.

17. For Your Summer Road Trip from This American Life. “Hitting the road this last month of summer? These stories will make the miles fly by.”

18. How I Made It: Ada Limón, a podcast interview with one of my favorite poets.

19. Pray Away Lays Bare Conversion Therapy’s Cruel History. “The new Netflix documentary dives deep into the notorious ‘ex-gay’ organization Exodus International.” In related news, ‘It doesn’t leave you’: the toxic toll of LGBTQ+ conversion therapy.

20. Taking Self-Care Beyond its Commercialized Version. “Self-care that fails to address the full dimension of individual healing simply isn’t enough.”

21. Trauma and the Nervous System: A Polyvagal Perspective, (video). “This video was developed to give a basic introduction and overview of how trauma and chronic stress affects our nervous system and how those effects impact our health and well-being.”

22. Hiking as Medicine. “In this new life, I’ve come to understand that while my diagnosis limits the intensity of my outdoor activity, it doesn’t prevent me from engaging in it.”

23. Key takeaways from the new IPCC report. Not gonna lie, this read is depressing AF. “A hellish northern summer laced with deadly heat waves, perilous floods, and massive wildfires may be just a preview of coming attractions, according to a blockbuster new assessment from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The assessment lays out how the planet’s air, oceans, and ice are pushing relentlessly into new territory.” In related news, Landmark IPCC Report: Climate Catastrophe Ahead If Humans Don’t Act Quickly and A Major Report Warns Climate Change Is Accelerating And Humans Must Cut Emissions Now.

24. “Dumpster Diving”: 124 Of The Best Things Some People Threw Away That Others Gladly Took Home.

25. 50 Pics Of Dorky Dogs. In related news, 50 Photos Of Animals Just Living Their Best Life.