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Going back to a simple prompt from a few weeks ago! I sure needed it: gas prices around us jumped, our dog Samson puked on two of my rugs, we have ants in the kitchen and someone stole my credit card number and spent $3K on fraudulent plane tickets!
Here’s what I found this week:
Waking up to birdsong outside my bedroom window. Finishing up a few school subjects for the year. Healthy and diverse pasture for the broilers. Being so, so close to an empty laundry room (for one day, anyway). Blooms and new leaves on all of the fruit trees and bushes. House finches in the front porch nest. Another new driver in the house. The smell of freshly mowed grass. A trip to the used bookstore to add to my anti-library.
Hoping to document the abundance around me all year long!
Around here, abundance looks like…
+ making our groceries stretch! My husband stopped by the grocery store one day and picked up five items for me – five! – and the total was $50. My eyes almost bugged out of my head when I saw the receipt. Time to be creative in the kitchen again. This week, I made granola and bread. I also organized the pantry and collected items together to make specific meals. (That will help a lot on busy days.)
+ packing away my winter clothes and pulling out all of my spring/summer dresses. I went through everything (both piles) and took out the things that were too worn or too big. I have a few gaps in my wardrobe now, but I’ll make due with what I have until I can find some deals.
+ making a new junk journal completely with things I already own. I’m hoping to use this one as a scrapbook and a way to stretch my creative muscles.
+ selling eight unneeded items for the Farm Sitter Vacation Fund: six pieces of clothing and two pieces of literature curriculum. After shipping and fees, I made $93.38!
Reading //
- A Picture Worth a Thousand Words from Denise Trull at Theology of Home // “Holy cards just appeal to a real need for intimacy with God in our hearts. They are like getting to hold his hand or pressing His love to our cheek.” I loved this.
- The Cure to Our Social Breakdown from Seth D. Kaplan at First Things // “Embedded community is not only important to the future of our faiths, but also to the future of our country. Our growing social breakdown highlights this now more than ever.” I wonder if this is a similar argument to The Benedict Option (which I have heard a lot about, but never read).
- For the Love of a Thing: Not Every Worthwhile Endeavor Is a Performance from Keith Lowery // Thought provoking.
- “Higher Education and Home Defense” from Home Economics by Wendell Berry // This essay was about a community in Indiana concerned about the construction of a nuclear plant nearby, but you could easily equate it to communities in northern Virginia and their fight against data centers. Berry’s argument is that the highly educated professionals push their goals on a community because they have no attachment to the place. They do not consider the area home. They see themselves superior to the people who are naturally cautious about new advancements in their community. I especially loved this paragraph about the true sense of education:
Education in the true sense, of course, is an enablement to serve – both the living human community in its natural household or neighborhood and the precious cultural possessions that the living community inherits or should inherit. To educate is, literally, to “bring up,” to bring young people to a responsible maturity, to help them to be good caretakers of what they have been given, to help them to be charitable toward fellow creatures. Such an education is obviously pleasant and useful to have; that a sizable number of humans should have it is probably also one of the necessities of human life in this world. And if this education is to be used well, it is obvious that it must be used some where; it must be used where one lives, where one intends to continue to live; it must be brought home. (p.52)
- Places where you can peek into Heaven and how to find them from Fr. Michael Rennier at Aleteia
New Additions to The List //
- A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving // I stumbled on a Substack where the author shared his favorite quote from this book: “If you’re lucky enough to find a way of life you love, you have to find the courage to live it.”
- The Desert Smells Like Rain: A Naturalist in Papago Indian Country by Gary Paul Nabhan // Mentioned in Home Economics.
- A Natural History of the Hedgerow by John Wright // Another rabbit trail book due to Home Economics.
- The Lemon Tree: An Arab, a Jew, and the Heart of the Middle East by Sandy Tolan // A view on the Gaza crisis from a less hysteric/opinion-filled source. Even though this was written in 2006, I heard this is a sad but good look at both sides of a very complicated history.
Watching/Listening //
- How to fill your journal pages! Easy first page ideas and what to write from Johanna Clough // A little inspiration as I begin a new journal.
- 7 (8?) Books to Read as a Postpartum Mom from The Commonplace // Good ideas even for the non-postpartum mom!
Loving //
- the marigold varieties I bought this year from Park Seed // I got the Whopper Orange, the Flamenco, and the Disco Mix. I started them all under grow lights and they are beautiful.
- The 10 Year Reading Plan for the Great Books of the Western World // I found five of these old books at the used bookstore and am anxious to begin this plan. Seems challenging!
Melisa says
Hi Ashley,
So sorry for the dog puking on your rug, the ants and the theft of your credit card. We recently had someone get a hold of our credit card and though the amount wasn’t as high as yours, it’s so unsettling; luckily our credit union is so on top of things and notified us. As to your dog puking on your rugs, I’m reminded of a Christmas morning in my childhood when our dog Tiny plopped himself in my lap and proceeded to puke all over me. UGH!! It’s okay, you can laugh – I do now. Still, at the time, I was disgusted and briefly stunned into paralysis by the incident. Ants in the house are no fun either. We get them periodically and they’re tough to get rid of.
I see you’ve discovered Denise Trull too. I absolutely love her writing. I’ve joined a Catholic on-line writing community and one of the founders interviewed her on video and I got to watch it. She has such warmth, wisdom and wit!
Your junk journals are lovely. Inspired by yours, I started on one, but have yet to get any further on it. We’ll see…
Have a beautiful and blessed week,
Melisa
Ashley says
If you don’t laugh, you’ll cry, right?! Ha! Life is so full of ups and downs and all arounds… I’m trying not to be shocked and appalled when frustrating things happen and just roll with the punches, BUT that’s a much harder virtue in practice. Baby steps! 🙂
Laura M says
I’m sorry about the credit card. The last few days have sucked for me as well. It is admirable how you are always finding the positive side of things.
Ashley says
Sorry to hear that! Writing down the good things always brings me a bit of perspective when life feels so intensely out of my control.
Rosemary says
I really like the size of your junk journal! The binding is wide enough it looks like you could add quite a few things inside and still keep it within the overall allowance. And, with some of the links you noted: I am such a fan of Denise Trull and Fr. Rennier. I know both of them in real life and for each of them, their writing truly conveys a sense of the person and a sense of looking at faith in a sublime way. I am thrilled that Denise’s writing is getting out there.
Ashley says
Thanks! The spine is about 2″ and I only added three signatures this time to make plenty of room for all of the “stuff”. (I have a tendency to pack these books to the gills, ha!)
And how awesome that you know them in real life!! What a small world.