Weekly posts: a Productivity Pause
As my almost non-existent audience may have noticed, I’ve paused my daily blog project. Here are some possible reasons: Most aspects of my life have become exponentially more difficult, even though my immediate family is well, for the most part still employed in not-front-line occupations. First, remote work is, for me as a teaching-focused faculty member at a suddenly fully remote institution, very difficult. I’m not just doing my regular job: I’m doing a much more frustrating, more exhausting, and less satisfying job. Next, our regular childcare situation is of course not functioning. It is literally impossible to do the full time childcare and child rearing while doing the full time other job.
But the more important reason that I’ve paused my daily blogging is that I am in a processing phase. Posts I’ve written or started feel irrelevant in this moment, and it’s hard to know what feels relevant.
I’m processing a new reality, and I’m deliberately removing the daily post project from my to-do-list. I don’t want this project to be just one more thing I need to do. So I’ll be posting, but probably weekly. Maybe when I’m not trying to do too many things at once I’ll be able to do that more effectively and efficiently.
Because an unexpectedly high percentage of my posts have been about tulips, I’ll wrap this up with this: after a hard frost last night, the tulips were frozen and drooping. They thawed. The perked back up. They look a bit wilder, a bit burnt around the edges, a few petal bent back prematurely, but not less spectacular.
The Joy of Tulips
Tulips…whereas my abandoned tulips planted too late have not shown signs of life (yet!), I have been getting a lot more joy than usual from my tulips.
I always love to watch the tight green buds become so incredibly bright. I love the colors and the wild combinations, the way the light shines through the petals. I love watching the colors of each tulip change, the yellow petals with an almost undetectable red edge becomes a red streaked.
At a time when many joys are inaccessible, this accessible joy has expanded more than I would have expected to be possible.
Planting Bulbs
Planting bulbs is always an act of faith and optimism. Last fall, I was out there, in the chill, with a long winter ahead of me, sticking something in the ground to be frozen and thawed repeatedly. It seems so unlikely to work even without the threat of squirrels digging up tasty tulips for a snack. In the middle of my fall bulb planting, it started raining. The kids and I kept at it. The rain wasn’t too hard. Then the rain turned to hail, tiny pellets of ice. I figured I should take the kids in. And I never made it back to bulb planting.
Fast forward four months.
Last weekend, we took inventory. The tulips I planted last fall are just coming up. The squirrels did not get them. I have a fenced in yard without deer, and apparently the local woodchuck isn’t as interested in destroying my tulips as it is in destroying everything else I try to grow (including zinnias and marigolds! It even munched off some hot peppers last summer. Unless that was a spice loving rabbit). Success, of a kind, has already taken place.
My optimism is being rewarded. Some of the edges of the green leaves poking up are tinged with red. Are those the red tulips? Some are curled, others smooth. Even the ones planted in somewhat questionable areas seem to be doing well.
So I did something even more outrageously optimistic: I planted the rest of my bulbs. Not the shriveled up ones, but the ones with weight and in some cases a bit of a shoot coming up.
It felt like the right thing to do, and even if none of them ever bloom, it was worth it.
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January 2023
- Jan 21, 2023 Book Review: Lolly Willowes Jan 21, 2023
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August 2022
- Aug 17, 2022 Book Reviews vs Memes Aug 17, 2022
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July 2022
- Jul 30, 2022 Netflix’s Persuasion makes me want to re-read Mansfield Park Jul 30, 2022
- Jul 21, 2022 Why I don’t write book reviews for nonfiction Jul 21, 2022
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July 2021
- Jul 6, 2021 Book Review: Lake Life Jul 6, 2021
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June 2021
- Jun 13, 2021 Unfinished summer reading and the advantages of a hard copy Jun 13, 2021
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March 2021
- Mar 13, 2021 Why is reading a book only once the norm? Mar 13, 2021
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January 2021
- Jan 29, 2021 19th c Canadian Chick Lit Jan 29, 2021
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December 2020
- Dec 31, 2020 Current Reading at the end of 2020, a partial list Dec 31, 2020
- Dec 22, 2020 Books: Interest rates and death Dec 22, 2020
- Dec 3, 2020 Is it possible to read “too many” books at once? Dec 3, 2020
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November 2020
- Nov 28, 2020 Family Poems: Wind Nov 28, 2020
- Nov 3, 2020 Family Book Review: The Water Dragon Nov 3, 2020
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October 2020
- Oct 8, 2020 Listen to Antonia Bembo Oct 8, 2020
- Oct 3, 2020 Inktober as an Inspiration Oct 3, 2020
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September 2020
- Sep 28, 2020 What do we mean when we say “The Classics”? Sep 28, 2020
- Sep 28, 2020 Family Book Review: Mangoes, Mischief, and Tales of Friendship Sep 28, 2020
- Sep 19, 2020 Looped freewriting to generate creativity Sep 19, 2020
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August 2020
- Aug 28, 2020 How a Story Ends Aug 28, 2020
- Aug 19, 2020 Family Book Review: The Seekers Aug 19, 2020
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July 2020
- Jul 24, 2020 Unfinished Book Review: Ducks Newburyport Jul 24, 2020
- Jul 23, 2020 Book Review: The Magical Life of Long Tack Sam Jul 23, 2020
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June 2020
- Jun 30, 2020 Catching up on what is good Jun 30, 2020
- Jun 29, 2020 The Annoyance of Wasted Effort Jun 29, 2020
- Jun 25, 2020 Genoise cake and the pursuit of perfection Jun 25, 2020
- Jun 5, 2020 Supernatural Bureaucracy Jun 5, 2020
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May 2020
- May 22, 2020 Playing with Ink May 22, 2020
- May 21, 2020 Clothes and Character May 21, 2020
- May 20, 2020 Strawberry Season May 20, 2020
- May 19, 2020 A Prompt and a Catalogue May 19, 2020
- May 18, 2020 What Day is this? May 18, 2020
- May 15, 2020 Writing as Frustrating and Satisfying May 15, 2020
- May 13, 2020 Re-reading A.S. Byatt’s The Children’s Book May 13, 2020
- May 12, 2020 Blueberry Syrup May 12, 2020
- May 11, 2020 Blueberry Lime Thyme Cocktail or Mocktail Idea May 11, 2020
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April 2020
- Apr 15, 2020 Weekly posts: a Productivity Pause Apr 15, 2020
- Apr 9, 2020 The Joy of Tulips Apr 9, 2020
- Apr 2, 2020 The Satisfaction or Baking Bread Apr 2, 2020
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March 2020
- Mar 31, 2020 Take Time to Do Nothing Mar 31, 2020
- Mar 27, 2020 Collaboration and Creative Freedom Mar 27, 2020
- Mar 26, 2020 Maple Acorn Cakelet Party Mar 26, 2020
- Mar 25, 2020 Slow Stitch: a Book Review Mar 25, 2020
- Mar 24, 2020 Intruder in the Dust and Vintage Paperbacks: A Book Review Mar 24, 2020
- Mar 23, 2020 Sour Cherry Pie Cocktail and Anne with an e Mar 23, 2020
- Mar 21, 2020 Dispatch 6 from a Novel Formerly Called Red State: Weekend Fiction Mar 21, 2020
- Mar 21, 2020 Multiples Mar 21, 2020
- Mar 19, 2020 Tornado Warning Mar 19, 2020
- Mar 18, 2020 Leftovers are the Best Mar 18, 2020
- Mar 17, 2020 What You See out Your Window Is a Sculpture Mar 17, 2020
- Mar 16, 2020 Planting Bulbs Mar 16, 2020
- Mar 14, 2020 Dispatch 5 from a Novel Formerly Called Red State: Weekend Fiction Mar 14, 2020
- Mar 14, 2020 On Building a Tiny Path Mar 14, 2020
- Mar 12, 2020 Looking Down Mar 12, 2020
- Mar 11, 2020 Planning Does not Equal Panic Mar 11, 2020
- Mar 10, 2020 Switching from F2F to Online Teaching due to Coronavirus Mar 10, 2020
- Mar 9, 2020 Sidewalk Chalk Walk Mar 9, 2020
- Mar 7, 2020 Dispatch 4 from a Novel Formerly Called Red State Mar 7, 2020
- Mar 5, 2020 Overwhelm Yourself to Jumpstart Creativity Mar 5, 2020
- Mar 5, 2020 Boxers and Saints: A Review Mar 5, 2020
- Mar 4, 2020 Time of Day Mar 4, 2020
- Mar 3, 2020 Efficiency vs Savoring Transitions Mar 3, 2020
- Mar 2, 2020 Green Objects Mar 2, 2020
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February 2020
- Feb 29, 2020 Dispatch 3 from a Novel Formerly Called Red State: Weekend Fiction Feb 29, 2020
- Feb 28, 2020 The Stress and Pleasure of Not Knowing Where You Are Feb 28, 2020
- Feb 27, 2020 The Top Five Reasons not to Call an Agenda-free Meeting Feb 27, 2020
- Feb 26, 2020 Hendrick’s Gin Really Does Taste Like Rose and Cucumber Feb 26, 2020
- Feb 25, 2020 Robot Clothes Feb 25, 2020
- Feb 24, 2020 Ambivalent Recommendation—Masie Dobbs: A book review Feb 24, 2020
- Feb 22, 2020 Dispatch 2 from a Novel Formerly Called Red State: Weekend Fiction Feb 22, 2020
- Feb 21, 2020 How minimalism is a consumerist menace Feb 21, 2020
- Feb 20, 2020 I Made Two Rose Barrettes Feb 20, 2020
- Feb 19, 2020 Signs Feb 19, 2020
- Feb 18, 2020 Processes and Policies Aren't Totally Bad Feb 18, 2020
- Feb 17, 2020 Habits and Small Adventures Feb 17, 2020
- Feb 15, 2020 Dispatch 1 from a Novel Formerly Called Red State: Weekend Fiction Feb 15, 2020
- Feb 14, 2020 Don’t Care for Agatha Christie? Read The Murder of Roger Ackroyd Anyway Feb 14, 2020
- Feb 13, 2020 When Personal Growth Looks Like not Doing Something Feb 13, 2020
- Feb 12, 2020 Books and Beverages: My Favorite Absurd and Impossible Book Review Concept (1/???) Feb 12, 2020
- Feb 11, 2020 I Don’t Have a Personal Brand Feb 11, 2020
- Feb 10, 2020 2/100 I’m not a blogger and this is my blog (part II) Feb 10, 2020
- Feb 8, 2020 1/100 I’m not a blogger and this is my blog (part I) Feb 8, 2020