Taking a Walk

This month, I’m writing posts from prompts in the Writing Down the Bones Card Deck by Natalie Goldberg, shared with me by my friend Barb Edler of Iowa. Today’s prompt gets us outside. We are to take a walk – just a slow walk, one step at a time……and then to return and begin with “What I Didn’t See….”

Vertigo

elevator drop

days are quicker to live out

than tilt-a-whirl days

What I didn’t see was anything standing still. It’s been a week. My slow, one-step-at-a-time walk happened from the conference room at Griffin RESA back to my car after a resurgence of Vertigo I thought was over – after making it only a half hour into the workshop session happening from 8:30-3:30. I left, dizzy and nauseated, at 9:00.

Vertigo had me in a spinning head lock that wouldn’t turn loose.

After years of living with its intrusion into my life with no announcement that it plans to pay a visit, I’ve often been asked to describe what it is like to suffer from this condition that medical professionals still find mysterious and undefinitive still in 2025. It sounds so cliche to reply, “It’s different for everyone, and no two bouts are really the same.” Because that same thing could be said of the flu or a stomachache or a sinus infection.

But let me try to describe what I mean about Vertigo and the way it happens to me. most commonly. Come along on this walk, of sorts, with me.

My frequency of Vertigo attacks started increasing from about two full blown episodes a year to maybe 4 ripply ones and a couple of full blown ones. The full blown ones always, always start at the beginning of the day. I wake up, but when my eyes open, I feel like I’m falling down a circular tunnel, kind of like how Alice in Wonderland must have felt when she fell in that hole, but there’s no wondering about this. It’s for real, and it will pull the rug right out from under your feet.

On these days, I can’t walk straight, so I feel my way to the bathroom and back to bed. I always pray that because I know these days will come, that when they do I’m home and not having to get up and be out of a hotel room by 10:00 or travel on a plane or by car or be somewhere that would be expensive to miss – like a conference or appointment of some sort. On these full blown days that I describe as Elevator Drop days, there is no functioning. I can only either lie down or sit up, depending on the nausea, close my eyes or leave them wide open, depending on the dizziness, and turn the temperature down.

I had my first attack when I was 12 years old, and I remember it clearly. I didn’t know what had happened. My bedspreads on my twin beds were 1970s bright bold sunshine yellow, bright Caribbean blue, and bright lime green. There were dots and designs all over them, and I had a small wicker nightstand between them with a lamp, an 8-track tape player, and a selection of 8-track tapes, most notably Donny Osmond singing Puppy Love. My rug was a shag green and blue, and I had just gone to tell my mother that I wasn’t feeling well one morning when I was returning to bed and suddenly it felt like someone had cut the cable in an elevator and the whole room started going up, up, up, up, up and I was falling down, down, down, down and could not stop. I fell to the floor between my beds and pulled myself back up. For the rest of the day, I could not open my eyes without feeling sick and endlessly plummeting.

As the years passed, I remember the same thing happening to both my parents. Dad had Vertigo days, and Mom had migraine days. Dad would lie on the couch for two or three days on end, and Mom would go into the bedroom and pull the heavy curtains shut to block out all light, lie flat on her back with a wet cloth over her head, and threaten to choke anyone who made any noise. I seemed to fall more into the camp of Vertigo, even though later I learned in my vestibular therapy sessions that vertigo is often referred to as a vestibular migraine. Apparently, there are crystals in the ear that form and break up, and when this happens it causes the fluid in the ears to tell the body that it’s dizzy. I do the Epley Maneuver, and when I do, it sounds like small aquarium pebbles gritting together when I turn my neck, and it makes me feel even sicker than before the maneuver. That’s the double-edged sword in all of this — that the attempts of things like eye exercises to stave off the vertigo often make it worse before making it better. The medicine to treat it basically knocks a person out, so going anywhere or trying to work is out of the question either way.

The tilt-a-whirl days are different. These can come on in the middle of the day, and I noticed the first time that ever happened to me, I was standing in the Chamber of Commerce window on the town square in downtown Zebulon, Georgia arranging canvases for National Poetry Month in April. The sun was bright, the heat was grueling, and I climbed a ladder a few rungs up and stepped into the display window to move the easels around. When I looked down, the world had tilted as I stood mere feet higher than the sidewalk and felt like I was on a high dive with a fast merry-go-round attached to it above a concrete pool with no water in it. I did not yet know that tilt-a-whirl days do not always end like elevator drop days once a full night of sleep has been had. Tilt-a-whirl days can stick around for a couple of days beyond the initial half day.

I get up the next morning and see that often times, things seem like there is a flame under them, the way it looks when a candle has rising heat and things move and ripple back and forth in that heat. I call these Jello Jiggles. These happen when you’re looking at a door frame or an object in a room and suddenly it looks like someone thumps it and it’s Jello. Only instead of moving like Jello, it’s much faster, like one of those spring doorstops that dogs run into and scare themselves half to death with the surprise noise they make.

I can at least function a little on tilt-a-whirl days , and sometimes I even get comfortable for a few minutes – – but inevitably I will find myself in a space where there is not enough air flow or it feels too hot or I turn my head a certain way and BAM! It’s back again. And then I have to get home from wherever I am. I take deep breaths for air to try to calm the nausea – – in through my nose, out through my mouth in a slow motion like blowing through a straw.

I wait until the wave of nausea and dizziness passes, and then I make my way to the car. I turn on the air conditioner full-blast on the coldest setting and take about 25 of those deep breaths. In. Out. In. Out. Slowly. But I do not tilt my head back as my mother would often do, closing her eyes to shut out the light. I keep my nose pointed straight forward and avoid any sudden movements. I take out my Vertigo essential oil and put a few drops on a Kleenex, wave the Kleenex like the queen waving a handkerchief to dry the oil, and place it over my nose and take a few deep breaths. This doesn’t fix the dizziness, but it sure works wonders for the nausea.

When things have stopped most of their moving around, I grip the passenger seat next to me with my left hand as I steer with my right. It doesn’t really make the world stand still, but it tricks my mind into believing that the road and sidewalks and mailboxes are not actually a swinging bridge – – that I can drive on it and won’t go plunging. And if that does not work, I wait longer and try again. And if I feel it coming back on again as I drive, I pull over. I know how to turn on the flashers and wait it out, even if there is not a great place to pull over. I also know to keep my bottle of Meclizine handy so that if a cop comes up, I can explain that I am just trying to get home to take my vertigo medicine and am waiting for the ground to stand still. Because there is no way I would pass a sobriety test walking a straight line with vertigo.

What I now know after complaining that they came to cut all our trees down when it was time to harvest the timber on our Loblolly farm is that there is a silver lining – the sky – which was hard to see at vast expanse when the trees blocked it. Nothing moves up there when there are no clouds clouding the way. When I get in the driveway, I can put my window down and, without tilting my head too far back, raise my eyes to the blue skies. There’s nothing there to tilt or fall – – and it tricks me into believing that I’m grounded. Sunglasses keep the brightness at bay so I can have the blank canvas of sky all to myself, where everything is still.

My left eye feels pressure behind it, on the outside section closest to my ear. It feels like someone is tightening a screw in there, and sometimes I feel tiny prickles on my orbital bone just a finger’s length from my ear. I hold my 3 middle fingers on my left hand up in front of the air conditioner as if I’m doing a Scout’s Honor gesture and then press them on the orbital bone under my eye. Immediately, this brings relief to the pressure even though it doesn’t last long. Sometimes, it feels like my ears are wanting to fold down as my sense of hearing performs an involuntary strain to keep noise out. Those are moments that I understand why my mother wanted to choke us for making noise.

All I can do is wait out the day as unproductively as ever clock watching can be. I can listen better than I can look at anything, so reading and writing is most often out of the question. Watching a movie can make it worse, as I’m looking into a lighted screen but hoping to keep the room dark. An audiobook is a good option for these days. I can’t look at the corner of a room – – a fixed point on a flat wall is a good friend. Sometimes I can lie down. Sometimes that makes it worse, so I have to sit up. Sometimes I can recline. Sometimes that makes it all worse too. Each time is different. Vertigo is different for everyone, and no two bouts are the same.

Now. About that walk and what I didn’t see. It is never about the physical things that are missing or present. It’s always about what’s around the next curve – or what isn’t. In so many ways, the not knowing is what makes it all doable – the small steps of this moment and the next without having to see the entire road map that may hold relief or may hold worsening. For today, I see the blue sky and not the wobbling horizon.

It’s easier that way, the not seeing.

#VerseLove Day 26 with Scott McCloskey of Michigan – Minor Ailments

I

Scott of Michigan is our host for the 26th day of VerseLove2025, inspiring us to write poems about minor ailments. You can read his full prompt here. He gives these directions:  Choose a minor ailment – I just googled it to find a list – and spend a bit of time with it.  Write a poem about it. 

Blurred Vision Apparition

glancing out the living room

window in the early morning

after a night of fierce storms

I see it ~

there behind a tall pine

its left half still obscured

by the tree

an alien-looking specter

with a long right arm

peering in my window

eyes so real they’re trying

to tell me something

I remove my glasses,

rub each lens between the soft

cotton fold of my pajama shirt

and look again

the apparition is still there

with a sense of urgency

in its eyes

but as the sun rises

I realize

it is only the dry bark

of a tree that

didn’t get rain-saturated

but still

I can’t help wondering

its message

for me

March 30: 8:28-8:59 Seed Sprouts

Sprout Smile Nonet

it’s been a long time since I’ve made them

I was a child in the kitchen

making sprouts with my mother

I got a kit today

two drain lids plus seeds

with my own jar

and I felt

my mom

smile

Way back in the 1970s, my mother taught me how to make alfalfa sprouts. It was fun for a kid to do. You get the starter seeds and rinse them, then soak them overnight. Each day for a week, you rinse and drain. After a week, you have enough sprouts to last you a week on sandwiches and salads, and it’s more economical than buying them in the store. Much more fun than when we hung a flat white bean on a wet paper towel in a Ziploc bag on the classroom window and watched it sprout and then took it home and threw it away. These sprouts we actually ate.

In my slice time this evening, after a day of visiting another camper dealership and then stopping for dinner and a shared banana split to celebrate our anniversary on the way home, I opened the sprout kit that I’d ordered and began the process of making the sprouts.

They’ll be amazing on a tomato sandwich with salt, pepper, and mayonnaise – – I’m already eyeing one of my green tomatoes on the back porch, wondering if just perhaps it will be the one to ripen in time to meet the growing sprouts in a springtime taste explosion of a sandwich on sourdough bread.

My mother would be so proud! I can feel her smiling down, knowing I’m thinking of those days in our avocado-colored kitchen of the 1970s at the corner sink, shaking out the sprout seeds together, all amazed and dazzled at their growth.

Sprout lids and seeds

Vestibular Therapy: There is Hope – Day 3 of 3

so it continues…..

eye and neck exercises

to prevent migraines

I hadn’t realized that my episodes of vertigo (a loose term, they tell me) are actually vestibular migraines. Everyone has different triggers and prompters, but mine seem to be rooted in eye fatigue from the computer, along with stress and anxiety (also a loose term, they say) that manifests in my cervicogenic (neck) muscles and creates tension that produces vestibular migraines, which is what I have described as a pressure headache. For me, it’s a disorienting pressure in my head that feels like my brain has gas but has no release valve like a stomach does. Light, temperature, and swift movement also seem to be factors that can trigger an episode.

One remedy that seems to work is dry needling, similar to acupuncture. Because the muscles in my neck get super tight, this process works by injecting a needle to spark the muscle to twitch, which in turn causes it to relax, relieving pressure and increasing the range of motion in my neck. I’m an instant fan of this technique – – a true believer. I have experienced its relief firsthand and appreciate the natural approach to treatment without using medicines and chemicals to treat it.

My therapy exercises are growing, and I was given a portal app with video exercises that play right on my phone. I installed the app, and I do the following exercises (10 repetitions each), which are linked below on YouTube :

Seated Gaze Stabilization with Head Rotation

Seated Upper Trapezius Stretch

Seated Levator Scapulae Stretch

Seated Gaze Stabilization with Head Nod

Seated Gaze Stabilization with Head Rotation

Seated Vertical Smooth Pursuit

Seated Horizontal Smooth Pursuit

Seated Horizontal Saccades

Seated Vertical Saccades

Cervical Extension AROM with Strap

Additionally, I am using a neck massage device for about 15 minutes each evening to loosen my muscles and try to help ease the tension. I wear blue light glasses for extended computer use and practice the eye fatigue movement of placing my palms over my eyes and looking directly into the darkness of the middle of my hands with my eyes wide open for about 5 seconds in 5 repetitions. This has helped already, just having the quick pause to reorient.

I wanted to share the secrets in case anyone out there can benefit from the things I am learning about managing vertigo.

There is hope.

Yes, there is hope.

Happy Howl’o’ween from The Johnson Funny Farm, our rural farm in middle Georgia!

Welcome, Great Pumpkin! Raising a mug with a favorite famous dog to you today! Celebrate big.

Vestibular Therapy: A Thick Slice of Questions – Day 1 of 3

and so it begins:

vestibular therapy

hold on for the ride…….

Photo by Suliman Sallehi on Pexels.com

I began vestibular therapy for vertigo last week after a five year ride of progressing intensity and frequency, and the older I get, the more I realize I’m my mother’s daughter. Mom suffered migraines most of her life – the kind where she had to go to her room, draw the blinds, put on an eye mask and take to the bed for the day in complete stillness. We had to be completely silent and not move around the house where she could hear our steps or our talking or breathing. .

My father, still living, has had bouts of vertigo from time to time throughout his life, his episodes bringing dizziness and nausea. He does not have headaches with his.

So I come to this psychedelic DNA altar honestly.

I answered all the hundreds of questions to help them fine-tune my triggers.

Yes, I’ve done some of the exercises I watched on YouTube. I have tried the Epley maneuver and it only makes me sicker and does not stop the movement. I use an Iso Cool pillow, have used one since 2008 and replaced it several times and they don’t make them like they used to – and yes, I’ve tried every kind of pillow out there. I sleep on a memory foam mattress, the kind that arrives in a box you have to cut open and watch rise like dough for 48 hours. I have four inches of memory foam toppers on top of that. I fight three dogs and a husband for space in that bed most nights. Bags…. let’s see, I carry a leather tote bag always on my left shoulder, rarely my right. That’s for work. I usually wear either a leather backpack or a canvas one with RTID if I’m going out for the day on a personal excursion, but only the tote bag is overloaded. No regular traditional purse for me. I do not eat a gluten-free diet (yet, anyway, but it sounds like I might be Googling that up when I get home). I prefer cloudy days to sunny ones – always have – the darker and stormier the better, probably because I don’t feel guilty reading on those days. I prefer cooler temperatures to warmer ones but I like to wrap up and find warmth in the cold. I sleep on my sides, my stomach, my back – wherever I can find sleep. I don’t have sleep apnea or snore unless I have a nasal cold. I take Melatonin to help me relax, and it helps me get to sleep but not stay asleep. Heck yes, my work life is stressful, and I use a computer a lot, especially during data windows where I’m disaggregating data in spreadsheets for days on end. I do have blue light glasses just for that. Yes, I work directly under a fluorescent light in a cubicle. No, I have not adjusted my computer light to low with the yellow glow, but I’ll add that to the list of to-dos. I do carry stress in my neck and feel eye fatigue. Yes, my home life is pretty quiet. Just my husband and me, our three spoiled brat schnoodles, and a lot of writing and reading with early dinners just like all the rest of the old folks we know – it is a place of peace, not triggering any headaches. And yes, I get at least 8 hours of sleep at night.

Yes, I get nausea. The kind I wish I could throw up and get it over with, but it takes hold and won’t turn loose.

Yes, I get a headache with my vertigo, but I must distinguish between the pressure headache and the painful headache. My vertigo headache is not the one with localized throbbing pain. My vertigo headache is a pressure headache – weird and uncomfortable, but distinctly different from the headache that comes at 3:00 like clockwork for some, on the heels of a day that was over the top. Describe the pressure headache? Sure. Please excuse my TMI here, but it’s like my brain has gas and gets bloated and there’s no valve. My right eye goes wonky like it pulls down a little like maybe that’s where a tight balloon is tied off and yet there’s no valve to release any of the pressure because I can’t let it out through my ear.

Describe a day of vertigo and what that’s like? That’s a post for tomorrow.

I’ll share my journey so far across 3 days this week, because I’ve learned more in two hours than in all the past 5 years put together.

Special thanks to Two Writing Teachers at Slice of Life

A Moment


they took my breath away, this moment

when Kona jumped up in Dad’s lap

to show him she understands

her master isn’t well

his gentle hand of

reassurance ~

I’m going

to be

fine.

Messages in the Sound Machine – Slice of Life Challenge Day 23, The Stafford Challenge Day 67

Special Thanks to Two Writing Teachers for inspiring writers, especially sleepless ones.

#messages in the madness

The melatonin was working fine, just fine, I thought, but I figured either we had a rogue sound machine with broken buttons or that one of the machines was possessed. I kept hearing things, but my husband didn’t. Just like when the car starts making a sound, only not a car but a tiny little white noise machine.

So finally, finally – – he in his melatoninlessness began hearing mysterious sounds, too. I didn’t know whether to cry, be scared, or celebrate.

If your children tell you they hear funny voices at night, believe them and check the sound machine. They’re in there.

Photo by Mariana Montrazi on Pexels.com
our old fan broke
but our new fan was too quiet


(they don't make 'em like they used to)

so
we bought a second
sound machine
the kind for babies
with the white noise

so we can both sleep
if one of us is traveling

but now I’m hearing
what he
can’t make out
in all the white noise

in this Sound Spa machine

we both hear
all the usual things: rain, thunder, waves
crashing, crickets chirping, owls hooting

but I roll over half asleep
and I hear
these:

computer printer printing
washing machine

pulsing monitor

injured animal

Moaning Myrtle
steel drums

robot sirens

Amazon notifications

vintage typewriter return dings

disco beats

messages in the machine

heard by one unpillowed ear

I'm afraid next I'll hear a murder
or a confession

or a ghost of a soldier who stood where I now sleep

looking for his lost buttons
and his lost love



no sleeping here

Slice of Life Challenge – March 28 – Making Stones Crystal Clear

My daughter in her desert rockhounding playground, where she locates stones.

When one of my daughters moved to Nevada, she began taking a greater interest in natural foods and overall wellness through diet, exercise, prayer, and meditation. She suffers from anxiety, so the healing properties of Himalayan Salt lamps and hikes through the desert to calm the mind and familiarization with the properties of crystals to alleviate stress are all pathways of interest for her. I made a commitment in February to involve others in my blog posts throughout March, and I invited her to share some of her knowledge of crystals. In today’s first part, our dialogue is exchanged through texting.

My daughter has been teaching me about each stone and what it can be used for – here, she holds an amethyst, used to promote serenity and calmness, and even help with headaches that come as a result of anxiety and tension.

I asked my daughter if it was true that crystals and stones really have healing properties.

What’s fascinating, Mom, is that ancient civilizations all used stones and found the same benefits from them, and this was before the days of communication between these civilizations, yet they somehow still found that a crystal or mineral that could be found in both places had the same benefits.

We were texting about her knowledge of crystals as I was suffering from a tension headache that has been debilitating since February 1, and I was willing to try anything – anything – to get my normal head back.

And they were all using them, especially certain civilizations that were known for it – like the ancient Chinese. Jade is very precious to them (as are many but everyone associates the ancient Chinese with jade) and even Cleopatra would grind down Lapis Lazuli for her famous blue eyeliner. There is an impact glass that formed millions of years ago from a meteorite crashing into the Libyan/Egyptian desert sand (I have a piece of this impact glass called Libyan Desert Glass) that was found set in the breastplate worn by King Tut and was found when his tomb was discovered. The history of people using stones in the ancient world is even an interesting topic on its own. There are even mentions of stones in the Bible.

The hour-long text session was taking us through the twists and turns from history to actual uses of stones, and I found myself growing more and more impressed by her vast knowledge of the topic.

I asked her how crystals fit into religion, because several years ago, there was backlash that stones were being used in place of God.

Honestly, this is just my opinion, Mom – nothing researched – but after working with and meditating with crystals, I am pretty convinced that the prophets in the Bible, I believe they had the gift of prophecy from God, but I believe they used crystals to help facilitate this gift. In Exodus, the breastplate of Aaron was a sacred object used by the high priest in order to communicate with God. It had 12 stones set in it, for the 12 tribes of Israel. During some of my meditations using crystals, when I’m in my meditation and visualizing, sometimes I get very unexpected quick flashes of visions. For example, if I’m visualizing things in my head during this meditation and I’m going through a walk in the forest on this journey, I focus on that, but on several meditations, visions of things have come into my head like a flash, just an image, without me ever thinking about them. I can’t explain it but it’s very cool when it happens. I think the prophets used them for sure. I haven’t researched that topic, but I just believe that.

But what about the people who say crystals are the work of the devil? There are folks out there who believe that, so I asked if she’d explored the reasons and the case for Biblical uses of crystals.

Mom, that’s because some people think they are associated with the occult. But why would God put them in such abundance on this earth if they weren’t for us to use? There are things that I don’t like or wouldn’t ever use when I go into a metaphysical shop that sells crystals because of my beliefs. For example, tarot cards. I don’t know much about them, but there are things in there that fall too far on the extreme side for my beliefs. I would never ever want a psychic reading. First off, you never know if you’re being scammed and second, that’s just not something I need.

She continued her line of reasoning.

As long as people don’t practice idolatry when using crystals, they’re fine. But that can be said for literally anything in the physical world: cell phones, televisions, anything. And why would he put them here on earth for us?? Okay, I’ll play devil’s advocate for a second and say the same reason he put Adam and Eve in a garden with forbidden fruit but he said not to eat the fruit, he never said not to use the crystals. That’s coming from humans, not God. He just said never to worship anything/anyone other than him.

I was following her thinking, even as my eyes landed on the prescription bottles in the kitchen window. What was the difference in using chemicals ground with a mortar and pestle, swallowed to enter my bloodstream to combat the effects of this severe tension headache and using the magnetic properties of stones to alleviate a headache? I had to believe in whatever remedy I was doing either way, but that didn’t mean God was knocked off the top pedestal of priority any more than when I consume the food I eat to sustain my life.

There are those who associate mediation with a variety of religions, like it’s different from prayer, so how do you think meditation is the same or different?

I believe that prayer is powerful, but I also believe the energy the crystals emit from vibrations can help calm you down for more focused prayer, uplift your spirits, help with appetite, anxiety, blood circulation, everything. When a lot of people are passing on into their eternal life, I’ve heard of people laying crystals on them as they’re dying and in all of the instances, it’s a calming peaceful last few hours/minutes. My boyfriend’s sister did that for their grandmother when she died too.

There are extreme minds who will not for one second wrap their mind around accepting the use of crystals in their lives, though, and will even go a step further and disparage anyone who would. How do you respond to these folks?

Mom, people use crystals and don’t even know. Watches are powered by quartz. When you use a barbecue lighter, it’s piezoelectric energy from hitting a quartz that sparks the flame.

I had to admit – – she had enlightened my thinking in a way that took me away from all of the negative connotations associated with crystals and had my mind turning. What could be harmful about a crystal that could have a worse reputation than headache pills? I was opening my mind to the new possibilities……

Stay tuned for Part 2 on Thursday……

Slice of Life Challenge – March 8 – Mother Nature’s Healing Powers: The Benefits of Ecotherapy

Throughout February, I worked on a plan to involve others in my blogging experiences this month. Today, my sister-in-law, Dr. Bethany Johnson, is my guest blogger on the benefits of Ecotherapy.

Dr. Bethany Johnson

Dr. Bethany Johnson is a professor of Sociology and Cultural Anthropology. She is a writing contributor for several online magazines, including Prime Women and Honey Good. Last summer , when working with @beginningisnow with actress Brooke Shields, she was selected as one of the 40 Most Influential Women Over 40. Currently, she is in the beginning stages of writing a book about losing unnecessary social expectations and rediscovering oneself. Please welcome Bethany today!

Mother Nature’s Healing Ability – The Benefits of Ecotherapy


Have you ever been feeling down, stressed, or just overall not feeling good and then gone outside for a bit only to begin to feel better? It isn’t a coincidence that being outside made you feel better. The answer to many of our physical, emotional, and mental lows can be found right beyond your door.


Ecotherapy is known as the practice of therapy that focuses on being outdoors and in nature. It is also known as nature therapy or green therapy. The term ecotherapy arose in 1992 when Professor Theodor Roszark used it in his book The Voice of the Earth. Many doctors (mostly functional physicians) are now using the connection with nature as part of protocol for getting healthier. Multiple studies have shown the benefits of being in nature. Many may say there is not enough research to validate this theory, however, there are enough examples of it working to make a reasonable connection.


A Dose of Nature a Day:
ï‚· Helps lower blood pressure
ï‚· Helps control diabetes
ï‚· Lowers stress and anxiety
ï‚· Rises energy levels, fights fatigue, and increases the quality of sleep
ï‚· Reduces depression
ï‚· Reduces the levels of ADD and ADHD
ï‚· Increases mental focus


Since I began studying the practice of ecotherapy, my experiences outside are so different. Each trip outside brings something different – even when I am in the same place. I now am very purposeful in slowing down and connecting with what is around me. Today, for example, on my walk I saw the bright white dogwood trees, I felt the sun warm my skin, especially my toes (which must have been cold from being inside and I hadn’t noticed until my walk), and off in the distance I heard a woodpecker. While walking, I first smelled something burning … wood. However, the wind shifted and then I smelled fresh cut grass. This is one of my favorite smells in the world and immediately took me back to my childhood living on the farm in Illinois! My walk tomorrow will be a whole new experience, and I can’t wait!


Gaining the benefits from ecotherapy is not difficult. You simply need to make time to get outside! The important aspect of ecotherapy is simply being outdoors and connecting to the natural elements. No matter what you are doing outside, be conscious of the fresh air you are breathing in, the wind or breeze blowing across your skin, the sounds that surround you (this is better if it is sounds of nature and not of human life). Make certain to acknowledge the colors that surround you. Look at the greens of the trees and grass, the vibrant colors of the flowers, the different textures such as the roughness of tree bark but the smoothness of a flower petal. Make certain to engage all four senses: touch, taste, smell and hearing. So, get up and get out!! Enjoy nature and heal your tired body, mind, and soul. Love to all of you!

Special thanks to Two Writing Teachers for giving writers space and voice!

My February Goal Update

Special thanks to Two Writing Teachers!

On the last day of each month, I update my goal progress in the areas I chose for the year. Monthly goal updates that began a decade ago in 2013 in the Notes app on my phone are now kept in table form on my blog, giving me a way to remain focused on my goals and holding myself accountable in actionable strides. Today, I’m sharing my second goal update of 2023.

CategoryGoalsMy Progress
LiteratureRead Around the USA
Give Away Books
Send out Postcards
Blog Daily (For March plan to participate in Slice of Life Writing Challenge)
I gave away another 5 foot shelf of books.
I mailed recipe postcards to my grandchildren.
I blogged daily throughout February, marking two full years of daily blogging today.
I wrote with Open Write this month.
I read my February selection from Colorado: Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore by Matthew Sullivan
I plan to participate in the Slice of Life Writing Challenge each day during the month of March
CreativityImprove blog photos
Indulge in photo excursions
I continued working with my Middle School Writers, and one submitted a piece to the Young Georgia Authors contest
I designed a prototype of a story walk planter for our town square
I am planning Bloom! for National Poetry Month with our L4GA community partners
SpiritualityTune in to church
Pray!
Keep OLW priority
We’ve tuned in to YouTube channels for Dad’s sermons this month in the two churches where he is preaching as a rotating interim.
I’ve prayed daily and kept my One Little Word at the helm
ReflectionWrite family stories
Spend time tracking goals each month
I’ve written some family memories, and Dad has written as a guest blogger, sharing some of his experiences
Self-ImprovementMaintain goal weight
Maintain Weight
Give away too-big clothes
I cleaned out my pantry and my medicine chest this month, following my closet in January.
I still take clothes to donate when they give me any room to take the temptation and eat the cake.
I am in weight maintenance range.
GratitudeDevote blog days to counting blessingsI continue reading in Simple Abundance and counting blessings, especially on family birthdays.
I remain grateful for my health, family, and the simple pleasures of life – like savoring Saturdays with coffee and having farm fresh eggs for supper.
ExperienceEmbrace Slow Travel
Focus on the Outdoors
I participated in the Great Backyard Bird Count
I traveled to Kentucky to visit family over my winter break (slowly – I broke up the trip into manageable driving segments, put the window down, and admired the Kentucky rolling hills and greening spring grass)
I traveled to Savannah, Georgia and spent time with my grandchildren strolling along River Street and eating ice cream at Leopold’s.