Saturday, May 22, 2021
Isaac Mizrahi
Monday, April 5, 2021
Jessica Berta
The pandemic has forced me into the present. It's a meditation I never wanted but have come to appreciate. That said, last week I kicked a hole in the bathroom door.
from NYTimes 4/5/2021 Elizabeth Dias and Audra D.S. Burch 'Who We Are Now'
Friday, March 5, 2021
John Green
“The pleasure of remembering had been taken from me, because there was no longer anyone to remember with. It felt like losing your co-rememberer meant losing the memory itself, as if the things we’d done were less real and important than they had been hours before.” The Fault in Our Stars
Thursday, January 28, 2021
Jill Biden
Friday, January 15, 2021
Henry David Thoreau
Thursday, January 7, 2021
"Jacob"
Tuesday, December 22, 2020
Rob McCall
Just as we store up fuel and food during the warm months to sustain us through the cold, we can store up plans, dreams and visions during the cold months to inspire and guide us when the leaves again return to the trees. It is a time to look back and pack up the past, then look forward to form the future.
Plot out your next garden or book or painting or wedding. Sketch the new boat or the new out-building or the new world. Dream up new schemes to save money or energy or time or the planet. Envision a trip beyond the far corners of your town, or beyond the far corners of your mind. In a warm window, start seeds of broccoli and beauty, cilantro and silence, hollyhocks and hope, cabbage and compassion, peas and peace, to enrich the dreams of a bleak midwinter.
Some Glad Morning: Holding Hope in Apocalyptic Times. Wainscott, New York: Pushcart Press, 2020, p. 108, "She Sleeps."
Saturday, December 19, 2020
John Gray
“If you can do anything,” he told me, “then the solution to time scarcity is only to do the things that you really think are worth doing, and nothing else.”
Nikki Giovanni
Her staying power over half a century comes from a stream of acclaimed work, her proclivity for a punishing schedule of tours and readings, and a fearlessness born of not caring what foolish people think.
"The best thing you can do for yourself is to not pay attention," Giovanni said during a video interview from her home in Christiansburg, Va.
"People who pay attention all end up on drugs or alcohol, or crazy, or mean," she added. "You can't let people you don't know decide who you are."
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/16/books/nikki-giovanni-make-me-rain.html
Monday, November 2, 2020
Ellen Furlong
Dogs attach to their owners in much the same way human infants attach to their parents. Like babies, dogs show distress when left with a stranger and rush to reunite upon their person’s return.
A recent study found that dogs that have been deprived of food and owners choose to greet their owners before eating. Further, their brain’s reward centers “light up” upon smelling their owners. And, when your eyes meet your dog’s, both your brains release oxytocin, also know as the “cuddle hormone.”
All of this research shows that you can make your dog happier with just one ingredient: you. Make more eye contact to release that cuddle hormone. Touch it more — dogs like pats better than treats. Go ahead and “baby talk” to your dog — it draws the dog’s attention to you more and may strengthen your bond.
Understanding your dog’s mind cannot only sate your curiosity about your companion, but can also help you ensure your pup lives a good, happy life. The more you know about your furry friends the more you can do to meet their needs.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/science/dog-love-working-home/2020/10/30/75adc50e-1895-11eb-befb-8864259bd2d8_story.html
Timothy Pychyl
“When we all of a sudden have more time, we sort of wrongly assume that it will solve the problem of fulfilling our desires. But it really isn’t an issue of time at all,” Mr. Pychyl said. “We never had firm intentions before. They are just desires, like to fix up the basement or lose some weight. Had they been intentions, we would have been doing them a long time ago.”
-Timothy Pychyl, a professor at Carleton University in Ottawa who has written books dealing with procrastination
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/25/realestate/coronavirus-lockdown-self-improvement.html
Monday, October 26, 2020
Joseph Parent and Nancy Parent
Friday, October 23, 2020
Kathleen Smith
Don’t worry about feeling hopeful. When we’re feeling anxious about the future, we tend to think we need to muster a sense of hope before we shift into problem-solving mode. In other words, we focus on fixing the emotions first.
But
that’s the wrong order of operations. Problem-solving isn’t a result of
hope. It’s what calms us down and instills hope in us. Engaging our
frontal lobe, the part of the brain that defines goals and breaks them into
manageable steps, can shift us out of anxiety and into a more thoughtful state
of being. What once seemed like certain doom can start to look like a complex
but manageable challenge.
So when you feel like the world is crumbling around you, don’t worry about turning yourself into a calm optimist. Instead, try picking up a small piece of the problem and learning more about it. When you begin to think about the facts, without shutting or attacking others, you begin to find a way to manage the fear and face the challenge. And paradoxically, when you begin to think about yourself instead of everyone else, you become a little less selfish and more of a resource to those around you.
https://forge.medium.com/you-dont-have-to-feel-hopeful-96f04a924f5b
-Kathleen Smith is a licensed therapist and the author of Everything Isn't Terrible (December 2019)