Saturday, March 5, 2022
All About Sky Tavern
Tuesday, March 1, 2022
Day 30: What Experience this Month
Skiing in 60 degree weather |
What experience this month are you grateful for?
This month, I'm grateful for skiing! I'm so grateful for all activities that get us outside together as a family, and I'm especially grateful for this one because it got us out regularly in a season when we tend to just hole up in the house, and doing an activity that we will be able to continue to improve at and enjoy for many years to come (and how often as an adult do you get to pick up a brand new activity that is so much fun?!). I'm grateful that this activity worked out for all four of us, which is not a given when you try anything new. I'm especially grateful for the friends and family who helped out with the kids so that I could take lessons and have practice time - it takes a village! I'm grateful that we live so close to mountains, which makes it much easier to participate. And I'm grateful that Sky Tavern made it so accessible and affordable for a family of complete and total newbies. (A few of you have asked for a lot more details about Sky Tavern, so I'll write up a longer post soon.)
That concludes the 30 days of gratitude posts. Thanks to the small but mighty crew of you who have followed along (and extra special thanks to the couple who have participated with me) - it really did bring cheer to this month!
Monday, February 28, 2022
Day 29: What Bill
What bill are you grateful to pay?
This is a funny prompt. The knee jerk first response is, "none". And then, when you start thinking about what you receive in return for the bills you pay, the next answer is "(almost) all". This morning, the bill that's standing out to me is the garbage bill. Garbage is a subject we hardly have to think about, except remembering once a week to get the bin out to the curb. But if you live in areas or countries without this service, you have to do a lot of thinking about garbage - burn it? Bury it? Live with a bunch of junk around? It provides major public health benefits to have garbage disposed of so efficiently, it keeps things more beautiful and orderly, and it just makes life way easier. I'm thankful for the waste management workers and the whole waste management system.
Sunday, February 27, 2022
Day 28: About Your Home
Zoey, age 4. Shortly before ropey entered the scene. |
What are you grateful for about your home?
I'm grateful that we have a front and back yard with trees. In the front yard, the big maple tree in our front yard provides shade in the summer so that the kids can hang out and run around even on the hottest of days. In the back, the fruit trees remind us of the seasons, with flowers in the spring, lush green leaves in the summer, fruit sprouting in the fall, and bare branches in the winter. The apricot tree branches start really low, so it's been fun for the kids to climb starting as toddlers. It's convenient to have a fenced in yard for our dog to run around. I'm grateful for the kids to have a place to run around, and I'm grateful to look outside the windows and see green.
Saturday, February 26, 2022
Day 27: In Your Country
What is something you're grateful for in your country?
Again, there's a list that comes to mind:
- Like the rest of the world, I'm watching the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and praying for and sympathizing with the Ukranians. It reminds me, despite the struggles in the United States right now, of how much we have to be grateful for here. I'm grateful that we are at peace, and not facing any military threat within our borders. I'm grateful that we have a strong military, and that there are so many willing to serve to protect our country.
- There are people in my life facing difficult and scary medical situations. This makes me grateful that we have access to excellent doctors, world class hospitals, and the best medicines and treatments available.
- Watching the winter Olympics and reading of some of the recommendations to athletes makes me grateful for our freedom of speech. I'm grateful that the government doesn't censor us or throw us in jail for the content of our words. I'm grateful that this allows for the exploration of ideas, the challenging of bad government policies, and innovation. It relates closely to other core freedoms - freedom of religion, freedom of assembly, freedom of the press. I am especially grateful for people who choose to use their speech well. It feels like there's lots of bad ways speech has been used recently - lies, cruelty, cancelling, ugliness - although I don't know if that's different than it's ever been, maybe it's just easier to see because of all the public platforms. But regardless, that makes me so grateful for people who use their speech well: to tell the truth, to be kind, to encourage, to speak something beautiful.
Friday, February 25, 2022
Day 26: Meal Today
What is a meal you're grateful for today?
I'm grateful for the comfort food of grilled cheese with homemade tomato basil soup. I remember my mom serving up grilled cheese on winter days and it was a meal that always hit the spot. Now I appreciate it because it's easy, the ingredients are usually on hand, most of the family enjoys it, and it really feels like the right food to go with a chilly day. We've had a warm winter here, but are finally getting some snow and a cold streak, so I'm finally getting to make soup to match the weather. I'm grateful for comfort foods, for any food vehicle that makes vegetables taste delicious, for the snow that we've needed so badly, and for foods that span generations.
Thursday, February 24, 2022
Day 25: About Your City
What are you grateful for about your city?
I am grateful for so much about Reno, so I'm going to do a list!
- I love the geography of Reno. I love that we're high desert, and when we go for walks around the neighborhood, we walk through sagebrush and our dog chases lizards rather than squirrels. But I also love that we're right at the edge of the mountains and can enjoy their beauty driving around town in almost every direction, not to mention adventure in them year round. I love that the high desert climate means we get all four seasons, but none of them are severe.
- I love the size of Reno. Midsized cities of about 200,000 - 500,000 are my favorite - there's plenty of interesting stuff to do and new restaurants to try and places to explore, but it's not so big that it feels crushing. And when you live here long enough, you start to feel the six degrees of separation effect - you're not too far removed by personal connection from anyone.
- I love the character of the people here. It's partly the wild wild west / independent / cowboy frame of mind, where people like to be left alone to live wild and free, but it's also heavily influenced by California, and has some of that healthy living / casual cool style. (But if you're going to be a true Reno-ite, it is an absolute must to blame Californians for everything that's going wrong here, from the affordable housing crisis to heavier traffic to overcrowded schools to anyone being rude in any time or place.)
- I love that leaders in the community are striving to reinvent this city, to make it more than a casino town living in the shadow of Vegas. They are bringing in interesting tech and start ups, creating shopping and restaurant districts that aren't all about casinos, and just in general doing a bang up job of moving Reno forward.
- Most of all, I love and am grateful for the people I'm close to here: the Ching family, my friends, and my Dayspring church body.