Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Gratitude Overflowing

The holiday season was oh so busy, but so worth it.  I feel like we squeezed every last drop of joy and togetherness out of it.  I'm still reeling from all the loveliness....

We were so happy to host the 2nd annual neighborhood holiday pajama breakfast.  This event, perhaps more than any other, makes me feel so thankful for the people in our lives.  We ate and drank, watched Christmas movies, and snuggled our kids.  As we lazed around on the couches and floor, in our comfiest clothes, I looked around the room and just thought to myself how very lucky we are to have randomly landed in this neighborhood of people who have become some of our very closest friends. And then we ate more bacon.






For the first time since I've known Brian, we were home together on Christmas Eve.  Knowing that we had some busy times ahead of us, knowing that although family gatherings are lovely, they can also be stressful and frustrating at times, I started my Christmas Eve celebration with a beautiful solitary walk.  I breathed deeply, I thought about all I had to be thankful for, and I set some intentions for myself about how I wanted to feel and act during the coming celebrations.  I thought about maintaining control with my eating, I thought about listening more than talking, and I thought about being patient and loving with my family members. 
And then I headed home to my loving family, and settled in to celebrate in our own special way.  





After a quiet Christmas morning at home, we moved on to Denver for a beautifully relaxing day with Brian's family.  The day was so lovely because it was so calm, restful, and we really had a chance to visit and connect. And this has been the first year that Sadie and her cousin Elias were both old enough to really enjoy each other...it was the best thing ever to see them playing together and being silly.





After a quick day of work, and a family day for running errands and squeezing in a viewing of Disney's Frozen, we packed up the car and headed to my parents' house for the weekend.  I went into the weekend with a wish list which included playing cards, watching christmas movies, hot tubbing, walking in the woods, reading, napping, playing my mandolin, and drinking beer. 

Done.  Crossed all those things and more off my list...it was such a good weekend of connection with my family.  Oh how I love them..and absolutely cherish nothing more than when we're all together in the mountains in front of my favorite fireplace of all.

We left my parents house and made our way to the Peterson cabin and settled in for the rest of 2013!  We loved having one more night with Brian's parents, and even had a sledding party the next morning before they headed home.  We spent a peaceful day with just the three of us.  We played and napped and I cooked up a storm preparing for our New Year's Eve festivities.  We anxiously waited for our dear friends to arrive and got ready for all the fun to come.  As soon as they were unpacked and settled, we got right to playing tunes, painting faces, eating, drinking, singing, dancing, and laughing. 









What a perfectly, perfect way to end the year...surrounded by beautiful children, good friends, cooking, eating, and drinking delicious creations, and playing fiddle tunes!  I am SO filled up with love and joy and thankfulness for all the beauty in our lives.  How on earth can we be so unbelievably lucky? 


Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Soften Into Joy


Quote from Brené Brown via Soulemama

Haven't read Brené Brown's book, nor do I know what she means when she says this...but I saw this phrase today and it truly spoke to me and where I'm at right now.

Life is full.  Busy.  Hectic.  Frantic even. And although no one specifically asks me to do many of the things I fill my days with (other than work)...I sure do fill them up.  I often come to the end of a day, especially a weekend day which some people might consider using for relaxation and rest, and I feel utterly exhausted and depleted.  I look around at what I've accomplished and I feel satisfaction...but I'm beyond worn out.

And then often, without wanting it to happen, those feelings are followed immediately by resentment, anger, and bitterness that everyone else in my home might not be working nearly as hard as I am.  I think about all the things I've accomplished and compare them directly to what others around me have (or have not) accomplished in the same time period.  And that leads down a dark path that I don't like.  At all.  In those moments (which there seem to be a lot of lately), I try so hard to remind myself of a few things...
  • again...no one is asking me to take on all the the things I take on
  • I take them on because I WANT TO.  The cooking, baking, gardening, house concerts, decorating, crafting, community building, entertaining, and handmaking of gifts...these things bring joy to me, my family, and the people I love, and therefore shouldn't lead to negative feelings
  • it's o.k. if other people choose to spend their free time in a different way.  That's why it's called free time.
So, during this busy season of the year and this busy season of my life...I choose to change my perspective.  I choose to either find joy in this busy-ness, or do something to change it.  I choose to honor the freedom of my family members to do what they want to with their free time.  I choose to recognize that these things I fill my days with truly do make my life joyful.  I declare that rather than diving headfirst into anger and resentment, I am choosing to Soften Into Joy.

Monday, March 25, 2013

Echo

Michelle is a woman who I've known for several years through mutual music friends.  I've always known her to be beautiful, friendly, and a woman I'd describe as a "firecracker".  Then, through the magic of Facebook, I realized that I might have more in common with Michelle than I thought. 

Our friendship expanded as we started virtually training for our first half marathon together in 2011.  She is the one who joined me in starting our pukefaintordie blog to document our ups and downs while training.  


Although I don't see Michelle as often as I want to, we've managed to stay in touch online and she continues to be an inspiration to me in my own life.  She is truly following her passions in her work and in her play, and she continually reminds me to stay focused, be present, reach for your highest goals, and to keep smiling. 

Michelle is currently featuring short interviews with some really awesome women in her life, and I'm so honored to be a part of her Echo Project.  In her words, "Each week I will post a quick interview with one amazing woman in my life. The purpose is to inspire, connect and share inspirational women on the planet."


I'm honored that Michelle asked me to be a part of this, and inspired to be in the company of the other women she has featured.  Here's my interview below!


What do you do for a living? I am a project manager and geologist with an environmental consulting firm in Denver. I’ve been working for the same small company for 10 years, and most days I love what I do. My job is intellectually stimulating, I do something different every day, I work with great people, I have a lot of responsibility and room for growth, and it’s a great place to work as a full-time working mother. I’m very thankful for the career path I’ve found myself in.

What is your purpose in life? Hard question! As a mother to a little girl, I take a lot of responsibility for raising a strong, independent, powerful, kind, and smart woman. I also find a lot of gratification in sharing my love of music with the people in my life and in my community. I am absolutely passionate about supporting live, independent music, and through my history as a bluegrass radio DJ and now as a house concert hostess, I’m doing my part to share my love of acoustic music with everyone I come into contact with and to support all the amazing musicians out there who are trying to make a living through their art!

If you had the attention of every woman on the planet, what would you say to us? I’m constantly striving to support the other women in my life and in my career. If women are to be truly valued in all societies, and by our male counterparts, we have to start by supporting each other! I see too many women, especially in a professional setting, who are threatened by the successes of other women, and it sets up a vicious cycle of women cutting each other down instead of us raising each other up.

What is your super power? I think I am an awesome multi-tasker, and I am very organized. It’s the only way I stay on top of things in my very busy life. Very thankful that these are skills I possess.

If you could interview any woman alive today, who would it be and why? There are a lot of awesome women doing great things in the world right now. But I might just like to talk to other working mamas about how on earth they find the balance. Everyone has different tips and tricks, and I can use any and all advice given to me. Or else Beyonce.

What did you want to be when you were 5 years old? I couldn’t remember, so I asked my mom, and she said I wanted to be a magician!


Friday, March 1, 2013

image credit
I came into work very early today.  I'm the only one here.  It's quiet, I have a full cup of coffee, and I'm exhausted.  I'm starting my day by reading and slowly waking up and bracing myself for having to really use my brain this morning.

But first, I read these blogs.  I don't know any of these women.  But I feel like I do.  I read their blogs weekly or daily and I'm inspired and moved by them and the beautiful way that they tell their personal stories. 

And although I am nowhere near the writer or photographer that these women are, that's probably why I keep my blog going.  Because in some small way, I want to be a part of this community of thinkers and writers and observers.

A few lovely stories...

from the Yarn Harlot
from Kelle Hampton
the wilder coast
beauty that moves

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Busy busy!

I have so much blogging to catch up on!  We have been having so many lovely things happening since my most recent post.  Our last house concert of the season, Thanksgiving trip to Florida, and all the exciting holiday happenings...but I have no idea when I will actually have time to blog about them.  I'll get to it eventually.  In the meantime, these are some of my favorite things I've come across on the interweb recently.  Definitely reaching out for positive, beautiful, powerful, touching, funny stuff in light of all the horrible shit that has been going on in this country lately.  So, here it is, a little dose of love, laughter, and inspiration:

26 moments that restored our faith in humanity this year

this amazing video

I love that this mainstream commercial shows a woman breastfeeding in public.  Progress!

my favorite song from the Sufjan Stevens christmas collection

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Pondering on the solstice....



When I lived in Fairbanks, Alaska, the land of the midnight sun, and also the land of the long, cold winters, both the summer and winter solstices were days to reflect and celebrate.  More than anywhere else I've spent time, these two days marked VERY important turning points in our lives.  The winter solstice meant we'd survived the shortest day of the year.  Those few, short hours of sun shining low in the sky were so precious to us, and we felt hopeful knowing that although the coldest days of winter were yet to come, the daylight hours would be increasing...and that felt like something to hold on to on the shortest day of the year in Fairbanks. We'd buckle down; seek solace, comfort, and support in each other; and dream of the long, neverending days of summer.

And then summer solstice...oh how we'd celebrate!  We wouldn't have seen stars in weeks, for the sun was barely leaving the sky.  We had endless, boundless energy for life and each other and nature and everything northern Alaska had to offer us.  The long days of winter were far from our minds.

I loved mostly everything about living in Alaska, even (and especially) those long, cold, dark winters.  No, really.  But one of the things I loved most about my time in Alaska was how my life was lived so closely to nature.  Not only because of the drastic seasonal changes that you're subject to when living less than 200 miles south of the Arctic Circle, but seemingly every element of my daily life was more in tune with my natural surroundings.

I ate food (year-round) that was harvested from the wilds of Alaska. I hauled my own water from a natural spring outside of town.  In the summer I ate my meals on the porch.  I started and ended my days breathing fresh air.  In the winter I relished venturing out into the -30 degree and colder temperatures to use the outhouse because it might mean that I would catch the northern lights, or maybe see a mama moose walking through the woods near my cabin.  I walked and hiked and ventured and skied and sledded in order to keep my dogs happy and myself sane.  I took my clothes off and joined friends in natural hot springs or homemade saunas.  I drank and snacked around campfires and picnic tables. 

So here I am 11 years after celebrating my last summer solstice in Alaska.  I'm hardwired at this point to note the solstice as a holiday.  I've been in a reflective mood lately about where I am in my life and today, especially, I find myself evaluating how differently I live my life than I did a decade or more ago.

And obviously, much of it is inevitable.  I'm a mother and a wife now.  I have a mortgage and bills and a career.  Inherent in all of that is more responsibility than I certainly had when I was in my early 20s when I only had to take care of myself and my new puppy and I could spend summer solstice frolicking in the tundra.  And clearly the joy that my family brings to my life is worth all the changes that I have been through personally.

And yet, on this summer solstice, I'm spending the day cooped up indoors at work feeling relatively gloomy (due to several other factors).  And wondering how I ended up so far away from that lifestyle.  Maybe it's that I've spent the last three weekends sleeping in the mountains and the desert.  I spend MANY of my precious weekends with friends and family gathering for meals, listening to live music, hiking, camping, and connecting.  I manage to squeeze a whole lot of "authentic" living into my weekend days before slogging back to the reality that makes up my week/work days.   But today especially I'm feeling sad that the "authentic" life I lived back then in Alaska, and the connected, passionate life I live on the weekends now, can't extend into all my days. 

I think that may sound idealistic to many. A lot of people believe that you have to work to make money and support your family and uphold your responsibilities, and you suck it up and get over it if you don't love it all the time.  AND...by the way...I do like my job most days.  I have an exciting, interesting, intellectually challenging job and I am thankful for its stability and the financial security it offers me and my family.

But I also am lucky to know a lot of people who are spending their days and lives pursuing their passions.  I know it's not just idealistic.  It's possible.  But is it worth it?  Is the fact that my career allows me to live a passionate life outside of work enough?  Do I need to just suck it up, get over it, put my head down, work hard, and count down the minutes until Friday night?  And can I do that for the next 30 years?