It’s Monday Morning

It’s Monday Morning.

Dana and I climb out a bed at 6:15. The air is a bit cold — that overnight opened window did indeed make it crisp.

We get dressed. By 6:45 ish, we’ve both made our way to the kitchen. Dana to her standing desk — she’s working from home today. She’ll start with tea, held and sipped between keyboard strokes. Me to the kitchen bar with my laptop. And some hot coffee. We will both have full days.

We are both appreciating the team-building retreat that we completed last Thursday – Saturday. It went well. It made connections. It lifted curiosity and learning together. It created community and friendship from added lanes — connection always creates added possibility. All of that sets the ground to grow healthy patterns together. The Circle above included collages made by participants — of people who care about us in our work and are at our backs (spouses, friends, grandparents, historical figures, sisters, other beloveds).

For me, Monday morning, I’m skimming email that I haven’t looked at since Friday. Oof!.

  • Minnesota — more stories of what is and what is not. Invocations of community and friendship. Longings. Yearnings. Freedoms. Violences. It’s gut-punches.
  • My friend Katharine’s new poetry book, Skyborne Insight, Homemade Love — I’m excited for her.
  • Some review of the event Dana and I hosted last week. I’ll gather a few harvest materials later today.
  • Todos that I put on the back burner and will get to today. Some of it simple task. Some of it conceptual attention. It piles up and I do well to remember that slow and steady is helpful and kind.
  • Some writing — there’s two workshops I want to hone in on and add to by B & B Sessions.
  • And, and.

I feel myself a bit slow. In the all of it. The utter delights. And the uber straining challenges. It’s a lot. For all of us in our different versions of what is real and in front of us.

Slow, yet steady.
Here it is, Monday Morning.

2 Replies to “It’s Monday Morning”

  1. Monday morning. Oatmeal with homemade almond butter, coffee brought home from Costa Rica. An hour spent walking and sitting in the rain and visiting my friends, a pair of eagles, a ruby-crowned kinglet I have recently met and the sea lions barking away on the bay.

    Catching up from two weeks away. Thought of blogging before my first call, but would rather say hi here.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Gifts of Circle - Question Cardsasd
Gifts of Circle is 30 short essays divided into 4 sections: 1) Circle's Bigger Purpose, 2) Circle's Practice, 3) Circle's First Requirements, and 4) Circle's Possibility for Men. From the Introduction: "Circle is what I turn to in the most comprehensive stories I know -- the stories of human beings trying to be kind and aware together, trying to make a difference in varied causes for which we need to go well together. Circle is also what I turn to in the most immediate needs that live right in front of me and in front of most of us -- sharing dreams and difficulties, exploring conflicts and coherences. Circle is what I turn to. Circle is what turns us to each other."

Question Cards is an accompanying tool to Gifts of Circle. Each card (34) offers a quote from the corresponding chapter in the book, followed by sample questions to grow your Circle hosting skills and to create connection, courage, and compassionate action among groups you host in Circle.

This will close in 60 seconds

asd
In My Nature
is a collection of 10 poems. From A Note of Beginning: "This collection of poems arises from the many conversations I've been having about nature. Nature as guide. Nature as wild. Nature as organized. I remain a human being that so appreciates a curious nature in people. That so appreciates questions that pick fruit from inner being, that gather insights and intuitions to a basket, and then brings the to table to be enjoyed and shared over the next week."

This set of Note Cards (8 cards + envelopes)  quotes a few favorite passages from poems in In My Nature. I offer them as inspiration. And leave room for you to write personal notes.

This will close in 60 seconds

asd
Most Mornings is a collection of 37 poems. I loved writing them. From the introduction: "This collection of poems comes from some of my sense-making that so often happens in the morning, nurtured by overnight sleep. The poems sample practices. They sample learnings. They sample insights and discoveries. They sample dilemmas and concerns."

This set of Note Cards (8 cards + envelopes)  quotes a few favorite passages from poems in Most Mornings. I offer them as inspiration. And leave room for you to write personal notes.

This will close in 60 seconds