Letter to the world
Where I discuss “why” this newsletter exists.
Where I discuss “why” this newsletter exists.
Anne Applebaum on how authoritarians are willing to destroy their countries to maintain power.
With best wishes for a hopeful, purposeful, and joyful 2022, as we work toward a better future.
Writers with online platforms you can turn to for help in providing clarity and context for our times.
Rebecca Solnit suggests that no matter life’s challenges, we need to smell the roses along the way.
Joy is too often dislocated, as if there could be no simple pleasures which are not really about cash.
Moving at the speed of life as we walk, we touch the earth, transforming and healing ourselves.
Yesterday we took a walk through Brookside Gardens. It was a beautiful fall day, the colors were vibrant, and the air was clean. Along the path were small signs of “Garden Mindfulness” with reminders to “feel the air moving across your skin” and to “bring awareness to those parts of the body where you could feel the wind.” After a while we came upon a labyrinth placed in a tranquil meadow setting. As I slowly walked the curving stone path, I recalled the rules and morals of the practice from my reading of Rebecca Solnit’s delightful book Wanderlust: A History of Walking. “…sometimes you have to turn your back on your goal to get there, sometimes you’re farthest away when you’re closest, sometimes the only way is the long one. After the careful walking and looking down, the stillness of arrival was deeply moving.” In these troubled times, we are all on a difficult journey. It is important to recall that sometimes the only way is the long one. Work that is meaningful takes time …
Comfort is often a code word for the right to be unaware.
The world wants to categorize and pigeonhole love. But coming from a place of abundance, where there is room for everyone, “There’s so much other work love has to do in the world.”