Blog Summary
Thoughts and Musings
2021 - Present
How do we cope when our bodies and minds aren’t what they were? How do we find purpose in life? Is adventure still on the horizon? Can we cope much less thrive in today’s chaotic environement? How might adventure change as we sprout wrinkles?
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Adventuring
- Jun 20, 2023 Must an Adventure be Extreme?
- Apr 15, 2022 Adventure finds you when least expected
- Nov 2, 2021 Marooned in Memphis
- Oct 10, 2021 Why Girl Scouts?
- Dec 29, 2020 When will it end?
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Commentary
- Jul 18, 2023 AI is not the Monster, is it?
- Jul 1, 2023 Zooming with Ukrainians
- Jun 20, 2023 Must an Adventure be Extreme?
- May 15, 2022 Missed Rebellion
- Feb 23, 2022 Alone and Inbetween
- Jan 17, 2022 Troubling Times
- Dec 23, 2021 Holiday Cards
- Dec 16, 2021 It’s not about me at Christmas
- Nov 27, 2021 Opera is not dead
- Nov 2, 2021 Marooned in Memphis
- Oct 19, 2021 Art Fights Gun Violence
- Jul 3, 2021 Humbled and Renewed
- Jun 26, 2021 Buckshot not Bullets
- May 28, 2021 Dog Sitting
- Apr 28, 2021 Assumptions are Stupid
- Apr 22, 2021 First Kiss
- Mar 19, 2021 Messing with Meditation
- Feb 25, 2021 What’s in a Nickname?
- Feb 18, 2021 Confinement Messes with the Mind
- Feb 12, 2021 Breadth or depth?
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Medical Adventure
- Jun 11, 2023 Spine Surgery Epilogue
- Jun 4, 2023 Pushing too hard almost defeated me…
- May 30, 2023 A Step in the Wrong Direction
- May 21, 2023 No Bending, Lifting, Twisting
- May 16, 2023 Creeping Disabling Pain Got Me
- May 21, 2021 Pretzel Pain
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On Ageing
- Jun 7, 2022 Wise or Just Old?
- Nov 17, 2021 Memory on My Mind
- May 21, 2021 Pretzel Pain
- Apr 12, 2021 Pandemic Isolation Thwarted
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On Writing
- May 8, 2023 Pandemic Stress
- May 16, 2022 They liked it!
- Feb 23, 2022 Alone and Inbetween
- Feb 10, 2022 Rabbit Hole
- Oct 24, 2021 Fiction vs. Memoir
- Jun 26, 2021 Buckshot not Bullets
- Jun 19, 2021 Claustrophobia
- Apr 5, 2021 Ode to Southern Writers
- Mar 25, 2021 Criticism - Gift or Fault Finding?
- Mar 19, 2021 Messing with Meditation
- Mar 5, 2021 When writing ‘what you know’ is not enough
- Apr 22, 2020 The Writing Life
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Pandemic
- May 8, 2023 Pandemic Stress
- Jun 19, 2021 Claustrophobia
- Apr 12, 2021 Pandemic Isolation Thwarted
- Feb 18, 2021 Confinement Messes with the Mind
- Dec 29, 2020 When will it end?
It’s not about me at Christmas
I relish Christmas holidays, always have, even when the past year gets spotted with disappointment and sadness. Others complain about the commercialism, competitive light decorations, or the endless jingle bells music, but I don’t. I jump into the gaiety, opening my eyes, ears, and nose to all around me, and preparing me for the coming year. In fact, early Christians knew a marketing opportunity when they saw one steaing December 25th and customs from pagan winter solstice traditions.
I relish Christmas holidays, always have, even when the past year gets spotted with disappointment and sadness. Others complain about the commercialism, competitive light decorations, or the endless jingle bells music, but I don’t. I jump into the gaiety, opening my eyes, ears, and nose to all around me, and preparing me for the coming year. In fact, early Christians knew a marketing opportunity when they saw one steaing December 25th and customs from pagan winter solstice traditions.
In a 2018 CBS interview historian Kenneth Davis said, “As early as the fourth century… there was a feast called Saturnalia that celebrated the [winter] solstice… the day that the sun comes back, the days get longer. And most of the traditions that we have that relate to Christmas relate to the solstice, which was celebrated in ancient Rome on December 25….There’s a little discrepancy about it but there’s no question that the fact that it was celebrated in Rome as an important day with gift giving, candle lighting, and singing and decorating houses really cemented Christmas as December 25.”
I harness my inner pagan. I drop dollars in the Salvation Army pot, write checks to charities, and tip excessively. I dive into present making, buying, and wrapping. Whether it’s a small, silly stocking stuffer or a large, valuable gift, I most enjoy the happy excitement it bestows on the beneficiary. On the edge of my chair, I hover, watching my grown daughter’s wonder and abandonment as she rips wrapping ribbon and paper. It’s the box that sparks joy, not always the gift inside.
A few days ago, as I walked into a grocery store, I passed a young freshly minted 20s-something professional, smartly dressed, pushing a cart with a three foot fresh fir tree. He held its stable, along with the boxes of lights and ornaments. The grin on his face told me all I needed to know. Be it tree decorating, garland strewing, cookie making, or dinner hosting, let your guard down like this young man and take up traditions.
Focusing on others fills me with delight, so different from the pride I feel targeting achievement during the rest of the year when life becomes all about me. I plow my way toward goals, often ignoring consequences. My husband and daughter shake their heads, but forgive me.
This year, as we emerge from isolation and America’s chaos, let these holidays begin a life of less hubris, more kindness and simple pleasures. Let sadness, anger, and disappointment transform into hope and optimism. Let yourself sparkle, no matter how simple or ornate your holiday may be.