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Gratitude Challenge Day 20: Books

Oh I do love books and am so grateful for the worlds they transport me to, the new ways of thinking, the lives I immerse myself in. I have a number of books that are standouts. I’ve mentioned them in recent posts, but I’ll share a few more.

As a kid I loved Stephen King’s The Eyes of the Dragon and Devil on My Back by Monica Hughes. As a teenager and early 20-something, Judith McNaught and Jude Deveraux’s romance novels were IT, particularly Judith McNaught’s Perfect and Jude Deveraux’s Knight in Shining Armor. Perennial favorites include Steinbeck’s East of Eden, Ken Follett’s Pillars of the Earth, Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird.

I love romance novels because of the guaranteed happy endings. Things I would eschew in a film, I can more easily read like Thomas Harris’ treatment of Hannibal Lecter in Red Dragon, The Silence of the Lambs, and Hannibal. I don’t think I’ve read the fourth one…maybe later…

I’ve found in recent years it’s easier for me to read novels on the Libby app on my phone and have accomplished maybe close to 22 (plus or minus two) this year. I think it counts. 🙂 Regardless, I’m thankful for books and the portals to new dimensions they take me to.

Gratitude Challenge Day 19: Love

Oh, bringing out the big guns today, huh? Well, let’s get to it. What am I going to say new about love? Probably not a lot. Still…I am so grateful for love–the show up and be consistent love, the matching of actions to words love, the gentle calm love, the vibrant passionate love, the tender touch love, the belly laugh love, the hold your hand while your world is crumbling love, the cook you a meal because you can’t love, the kind word love, the smile of encouragement love, the hug in the kitchen love, the conversations deep into the night love, the curious about your day love, the got your favorite ice cream love, the this reminded me of you text love, the tough conversations love, the persistent even when you don’t feel like you deserve it love.

I’m thankful for the love that continues even after the people I love have gone. I’m thankful for the love that breaks my heart over and over and over again because it means my heart has room for more love. And I’m so thankful that I still haven’t met every person I’m ever going to love in this life yet.

Gratitude Challenge Day 18: Adventure

Tonight on the treadmill, the absolute opposite of adventure, I started thinking about this topic and what about it makes me grateful. I love a good adventure, but what I love more is the spirit behind adventure. Sure, backpacking in the wilds can be an adventure to some and a slog for others. Maybe throwing oneself down the side of a mountain with boards attached to the feet is one person’s idea of great adventure and for another abject terror. So are some folks cut off from adventure because they don’t do some of these things? I don’t think so. I think adventure stems from a spirit. Then what is an adventurous spirit? I posit it’s one that embarks on something, often times new, with no predetermination or sense of control of the outcome, an openness to serendipity, if you will.

I wasn’t a skier, Bryan didn’t bask in the thrill of an empty canvas before him, but somehow we managed to find adventure together, sometimes on a walk to Pioneer Park, or at the grocery store, or on a wild and woolly hike with our kiddo. Adventure comes in all shapes, sizes, and levels of risk versus reward, and yet, there’s a common theme–relinquishing the outcome of what MUST be to one of what MIGHT be or better yet a giant question mark of WHO KNOWS what will be.

Gratitude Challenge Day 17: Seasons

I kind of wish the topic was seasonings. That’d be more interesting, but alas, here we are. Really, it feels pretty duplicative with “time,” “weather,” and “change,” which I’ve already done, but I’ll do my best to differentiate.

Walla Walla gets all four seasons and for that I’m mostly glad. I really like spring, most of summer, and the first 3/4 of fall. Winter is rough. We’ve been over this. I won’t continue to beat this dead horse, even though that’s what winter in Walla Walla can smell like, but no, I’m focusing on gratitude and seasons. FOCUS, Becci, FOCUS! I do like the change of seasons and what each has to offer–even winter when I come inside and cozy up, reading, baking, and planning the garden. It’s not all bad, truly.

I also appreciate the more metaphorical notion of seasons. We have periods of our lives that are a certain way, but they don’t last, and this is good. This can be heartbreaking, relief-giving, sometimes both, even. I could quote Solomon, but I’ll let The Byrds do it instead…

Gratitude Challenge Day 15 & 16: Music and Food

Last night, with every intention of writing my Day 15 blog post, I fell asleep early and hard due to some pretty hardcore gummies–10mg of melatonin and some magnesium. WHOA! Don’t be making plans after that heavy-hitting dose! So, as penance, I’m going to have to write a two-fer on probably some of my most favorite things–things that bring me tremendous joy and fill me with gratitude. Let’s start with music and then segue into food. You with me? Ready? Let’s go!

I think I have a low-grade, constant struggle with mild depression. There’s any number of really good reasons for that *waves arms around wildly*. Genetics, probably first and foremost. But living on planet earth is no easy feat if you have two working brain cells and a heart and that’s on the days when children aren’t being shot or thrown in cages. Suicide rates among veterans and queer kids alone are enough to shake a person to their core. This living thing is HARD. (Okay, Bec, get to the gratitude part. I’m working on it. Gimme a second.)

On really hard days, I listen to Bach. If it ain’t Baroque, don’t fix it. Amirite? This particular playlist is one of my favorites: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-zHXX9J_n5E

I like to read about artists and what influences their work. I know literature professors of mine would say “let the work speak for itself,” but since I am an artist and a writer, I know my art isn’t separate from me. It is me. In that spirit, I like to learn. Johann Sebastian Bach was orphaned at the age of 10. He lost several of his children before they turned one. He had every reason to be sad, bitter, lost. And yet, we have this most gorgeous, joyful music for centuries. I feel like there’s this kinship with him in that yes I can have a broken heart and still cry for joy, too. And do. A lot. On his deathbed, he’s attributed as having these as his last words: “Don’t cry for me, for I go where music was born.” The best, most succinct apologia for heaven I’ve ever read.

On a biological level, by listening to music you enjoy you can decrease your heart rate, blood pressure, and cortisol levels while increasing seratonin and endorphins, your body’s own feel-good drugs. In a world that hurts every day, it’s critical to have all the possible tools in your toolbelt. Music is one of mine.

The other is cooking good food for those I love. I enjoy experiencing new flavors and experimenting with recipes. But what fills my heart is cooking or baking something that makes someone close their eyes and get a serene look on their face for just a moment. It’s a way to say I love you, we’re in this together, here, have a moment of joy. I’m grateful for meals shared. Conversation over a well-spun pizza crust or a roast dinner can be so vibrant and fun and rich. Time with people at table is the essence of what is good. And I’m also grateful to live in a place where we grow amazing food and share. It’s no wonder some of my favorite books and films are about the experience of cooking, eating, sharing meals. MFK Fisher’s The Gastronomical Me, the film Babette’s Feast, the Spanish mini-series The Cook of Castamar, Like Water for Chocolate (either the film or the novel), Chocolat (I preferred the novel to the film). The kitchen dance Bryan and I used to do when preparing meals for each other and friends still makes me smile. I’m grateful for all of it, even a simple omelette when nothing else will do.