Subtitle: Above the Fold
I have a feeling below the fold is going to go together pretty quickly...so I may have to take it slow. I'd like to stretch this one out until Christmas.....and I can't believe it's just a week away!
Subtitle: Above the Fold
I have a feeling below the fold is going to go together pretty quickly...so I may have to take it slow. I'd like to stretch this one out until Christmas.....and I can't believe it's just a week away!
It may be a cliche....but there is an abundance of Joy in Giving!
As I have gotten older I am reminded over and over how blessed I am....and I've never been so eager and happy about giving my time...my talents....and my stuff!
I volunteered at Maine Needs yesterday afternoon....and the place was just humming with activity. The first list I picked up was long...but I grabbed a cart and started shopping. I didn't realize until I got going that it was actually for three different families.It took as much time to tally....sort and bag it all as it did to shop for it...and my heart was full of joy the whole time. Then.....
Joy doesn't have to be flashy and loud. Most of the time it's subtle and quiet and hidden in ordinary moments.
I had an appointment early this morning.....and while I sitting in the waiting room I was making a photo montage for Alyson of some photos I took during yesterday's snow. As I zoomed in on this winterberry branch...there is was.
It's not completely in focus...but a sweet little star-shaped snowflake is balancing on top of this tuft of snow.Wage Peace by Judyth Hill
Consider the possibility peace is seeking you too, and the fact that you are searching for each other means you will both be found. Lori Hetteen
Paul was the family elf today and took our packages to the post office...I'm eternally grateful for his willingness to stand in line. I had a flurry of house chores this morning...and early this evening I'm going to an art show and Marita's birthday party.
Sandwiched in the middle....I'm taking a deep breath and going to sit at my puzzle table with a cup of tea...and maybe even take a nap. I'm certain peace and I will find each other.
The morning sun as I fed the bluebirds their dried mealworm breakfast. They come within seconds of me putting the food out.
True Peace isn't the absence of tension. It isn't peace FROM fear or imperfection or uncertainty or problems. It's peace IN all of that. Peace that somehow, impossibly, grows in the hardest, most trampled places. Dana Allen Walsh
My friend Dana is a UCC minister in Massachusetts...and writes an occasional Substack article. I was particularly taken with her recent post called Finding Peace in the Mess.
In keeping with my Lowly Christmas theme for Emily and Max....I had Max covered....but I needed something for Emily. She really doesn't need a thing....but I thought she needed her own Lowly Worm. Since I couldn't crochet her one...I decided to try and needle felt her one. How hard could it be!
I really had no idea if I could actually make it work...even when I was part way through...I was skeptical. There was a lot of messy middle.
With the help of a couple of Christmas movies it took me most of the day yesterday. I went from a pile of wool roving and some wool felt....It will be a great day when our schools get all the money they need and the air force has to hold a bake sale to buy a bomber.
We're in the middle of peace week and I can't help think of my mother-in-law, Margie....the peacemaker. She was generous with her time and money and spent much of her life advocating for peace and justice.Margie was so proud of her Peace Wall...and I was able to help her recreate in most of the places she lived. She loved that it told the story about who she was and what she believed in.....and was always eager to talk with others about it.
Margie proudly displayed Gandhi's Seven Deadly Social Sins, Martin Luther King Jr's What is Your Life's Blueprint, a Lion and the Lamb Pewter Peace tray, and a poster with the It will be a great day quote above.Paul now proudly displays the Gandhi poster Nate displays the Martin Luther King Jr. poster, and Sam displays the It will be a great day poster.
All of these are so relevant today.
Tomorrow would have been my regular visiting day and she would have gotten a kick out of seeing what I made and would have patiently listened to my story. She would have a puzzle on her board and stories of her own to share.
I miss Margie...the peacemaker.
Lowly Worm is a beloved character in the Richard Scarry books series with a positive attitude and the amazing ability figure things out....even though he only has one foot.
I included him in the remake of a Busytown book I made for two year old Max last year. It was a fabulously fun project...you can read about it here in this post: https://joyfulputtering.blogspot.com/2025/03/busytown.htmlI wanted to tie the cape into the Lowly Christmas theme so I wrote up a little blurb about how Lowly Worm has superpowers even though he only has one foot and the power of his imagination. Now Max can have superpowers too when wears his cape and uses his new magic wand. Is it a stretch? I don't think so. One of Lowly's superpowers is he can s-t-r-e-t-c-h whenever he needs to!
Then this happened....Lowly got his own cape!
It's fun when moments like this can surprise us with delight!
A few days ago I hoped for good weather for errands and not too long of a line at the post office. I was 4th in line early this morning to mail a birthday package and although it was cold, the weather was fine and the roads were clear for my errands. I turned up the non stop Christmas radio station and sang my way through traffic and leaned into the tasks at hand. I was at peace being out....even though I love just staying home.
With all the turmoil going on in our country...and with all the hustle bustle the season can throw at us....it's still possible to be at peace in the midst of it.
My friend Dotty shared a beautiful poem on her blog about her experience in late November with the bright red leaves of a Japanese Maple that dropped all in one day. She captured the awe and wonder of this very peaceful and "silently magnanimus show." I hope you take the time to check it out.
Dotty's poem prompted me to visit Bessie, my neighborhood hackmatack tree...a rare pine tree that drops all of her needles in the winter.
The last time I visited her in late November her needles were bright yellow and just starting to fall. Today, she was nearly bare....the yellow needles buried under the crusty snow. I was at peace knowing she was resting for the winter.The Advent week of Peace began today. Working my way through these four Advent themes is going to ground me a bit this Christmas season. I will keep hope in my heart...and move on to peace.
This morning I read a substack post by Claudia Cummins called Small Wonders. It helped me shift from reading the news to the peace that can be found in noticing small wonders....one of my favorite things to do.
Here is what Claudia shared:
The world spins into scary and uncertain territory and our bodies quake with angst. We so easily lose our footing. Our minds tend toward gloom and perhaps even despair.
And then we stumble upon a moment that shakes us out of melancholy and startles us back into the beauties of the here and now.
We pause. We marvel. We sigh. We crouch closer to the mystery.
We whisper thank you to whatever force it was just now that stopped us in our tracks. and opened our eyes, when we might have trampled over another small miracle., another moment of amazement and awe.
And when the swoon has passed and we return to the world's challenges and woes, recommit to keeping our eyes and ears open to these soul-filling moments of uplift and delight. We commit to becoming a hunter-gatherer of those tiny packages of light that keep us wakeful, hopeful and whole.
We open our hearts just enough to receive the improbable and the lovely. And we broaden our minds in ways that allow them to be perfectly poised to be surprised by delight.
Here's to finding peace this holiday season while being surprised by delight!
This is one of those tiny packages of light that keep us wakeful, hopeful and whole.
Thank you for taking the time to crouch closer to take a look Lynn!
It's time for puzzle update. You had to know it was coming.
I just finished one I got from Patsy and Brian.... a panoramic image of the waterfront in Kennebunkport, Maine. I started it knowing it would fill in the gap before I moved on to my Christmas puzzles...and the timing worked out well. It was a fun one!
Where there is love there is life. Where there is courage, there is hope. Mahatma Gandhi
There's that pairing of hope and courage again. They seem to go hand in hand....especially these days.
A few days ago I quoted Jonas Salk...who developed the first successful polio vaccine. It was the same day I shared the photo montage of Patty's front garden in the snow....and she and I have exchanged a few emails since.
Patty is active in Rotary and one of their major goals is the complete eradication of polio. Patty's husband Reid and his brother Tom were personally vaccinated by Jonas Salk in 1952 after their mother died of the disease in 1950. Here are some interesting things Patty shared with me about Jonas Salk.
Salk never profited personally from the vaccine. He chose not to patent the vaccine or seek any profit from it in order to maximize its global distribution. Six pharmaceutical companies were licensed to produce the polio vaccine, and Salk did not profit from sharing the formulation or production processes.In a 1955 interview, when asked by by television personality Edwin R. Murrow, who owned the patent, he replied: "Well, the people, I would say. There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?"
Jonas Salk is a shining example of someone selflessly working for the common good.
Hope is the spark that ignites our hearts, even when the world seems to dim its light.
I walked into the woods a few days ago to snip some pine branches for the kitchen window sill. I was glad I thought to look up....because the treetops against the white winter sky were magnificent.
Every day the news is more shocking and gut wrenching...so many hurtful words and choices that are dimming our light.
One of the things I am going to do more often is look up....reminding me to stay hopeful.
This is what I saw was today.