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Showing posts from March, 2020

Connecting While Sheltering

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We made it through the first two weeks of social distancing, staying at home, sheltering in place, flattening the curve, however you like to think of it.  One side of my brain says, "Has it already been two weeks?"  While the other says, "It has only been two weeks?!"  The days blend together into one long, nebulous form that often takes the shape of a terrifying and unpredictable rollercoaster when I'm home alone with two small children.  In two short weeks our priorities have changed and we have adopted a new vernacular around COVID-19.  Sometimes it's hard to remember what life was like before the invasion of the virus.   How's everyone doing out there?  What has been the highlight of your week, and the hardest part of your week?  Did anything make you laugh today? Like most of you, I'm spending way too much time on social media.  The news is increasingly foreboding, and there's a strong sense that the worst is yet to come, but...

Is it really the first day of spring?

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What a surreal and ominous time this is. I never thought the final month of my maternity leave would be defined by a global pandemic, widespread fear, and isolation. It is said that we are all products of our worldview; well, my worldview has done a complete 180 in the past week and, like many of us, I have had to adjust my thinking and my habits to face this new reality.  Like most ethnocentric Americans, I watched what was happening in China and Italy with compassion and disbelief, but also resting comfortably inside a safety net of naivety and with the belief that “that would never happen here.”  I worried more about flu,  pneumonia, and RSV, especially with a newborn at home, and while I loosely followed the news about travel precautions, I certainly didn't modify any of my daily habits up until a week ago.  Hand washing, sanitizing things we touch, and germ prevention were already part of our repertoire. Then a week ago today, as more articles flooded my social ...

Dorothy Stewart Trail

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Last week I took baby Meredith and Kua for a hike along the Dorothy Stewart trail, part of the lower Dale Ball Trail system in the foothills east of town.  This was Meredith's second hike in her first 6 weeks of life!  The trail is an easy loop with beautiful views of Sandia, the Jemez mountains, and Picacho Peak, as well as an aerial view of the city.  We've had really beautiful weather in Santa Fe and it feels like spring already!  As I tuned in to the world around me I could hear the birds chirping to each other and the breeze in the trees. I'm re-reading Braiding Sweetgrass  by Robin Wall Kimmerer, a beautiful collection of nature writing about our relationship with the earth and how humans and nature can coexist harmoniously.  I love this quote about the language of nature: "I come here to listen, to nestle in the curve of the roots in a soft hollow of pine needles, to lean my bones against the column of white pine, to turn off the voice in my head...