Showing posts with label simplicity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label simplicity. Show all posts

Friday, April 29, 2022

Friday links: 29 April, 2022

Good morning, and happy Friday! Boy, am I looking forward to the weekend, with slightly less to do (…maybe). I don’t think we have anything on the schedule, so maybe I’ll actually get to watch those YouTube videos I’ve been saving for a few weeks!

Today is our shortened day of school, with my daughter’s counselor appointment at 12, but we’ve been trying to squish in some extra schoolwork when we get home. The same will go for today, as long as I can also figure out what to make for dinner in that space of time as well…

Anyway, here’s what I found interesting on the internet this week!

 

1 in 5 Educators Say They’ve Experienced Long Covid

Coming soon to likely every school near you: a staff full of struggling people (and that’s not even touching on how any of the kids have been affected…). We were already struggling to keep teachers in the profession before the pandemic; now, with teachers having been and still continuing to be treated like garbage by both administration and parents and the community at large AND now they’re being disabled en masse by a virus we insist is no big deal? Yeah…this is an awful situation for everyone, and it’s just beginning. I think we’re really in trouble here.

 

‘Everywhere Babies,’ a picture book celebrating infants, on list of banning targets in Florida

*blinks*

This is how bad it’s gotten. The illustrations here aren’t even specifically of two dads or two moms (NOT THAT THAT WOULD BE A PROBLEM EITHER); they could be two not-parenting-together people of the same sex- a woman and her next-door neighbor, for example, or a dad with his brother- but either way, we all know that two people of the same sex never, ever do anything or go anywhere together in public unless it’s for nefarious purposes that are against these book banners’ limited sense of how the world is supposed to be. *insert the biggest eyeroll emoji you can think of right here*

Can you feel how disgusted I am? We’re actively working as hard as possible as a species to dumb ourselves down as much as we can, and it really seems like we’re succeeding at a disturbingly rapid pace, based on what these morons are doing. Speaking of disgusting morons (these people are putting me in quite a mood)…

 

Tennessee Lawmaker Suggests Burning Banned Books

Because THAT has worked out SO well throughout history! Book burners have always been looked at as paragons of freedom and liberty! Definitely not the opposite!

What is going on? Why are we so desperate to drag the country into fascism? Tennessee has been trying this out for years, and they’ve never been a state to embrace any kind of progressive measures – when I lived there and our schools couldn’t open for the year in August because they didn’t have enough money in the budget, one of the county commissioners sneered at us and told us he went to a one-room schoolhouse and turned out fine, so our kids, in 2012, shouldn’t worry that the computers in their schools were older than any of the students there (my son was ten at the time), that they didn't NEED technology at all! – but this is beyond disgusting. I hope this dude never has a solid bowel movement for the rest of his life.

 

Simplicity

This is a wonderful article that mentions Wendy Mogel, the author of the fabulous parenting book, The Blessings of a Skinned Knee (which I highly recommend). I’m a little bit in the process of mentally examining all the things I own and trying to figure out what to keep and what to send on its way to its next home. Articles like this really encourage me to keep the process going, because owning fewer things means fewer things to take care of.

And along those lines…

 

Do Less: The Power of Simplicity

Does this ever sound appealing after the hectic week I’ve had!

I do have a bit of a beef with this paragraph, however:

Business consultant Alan Weiss points out that “Time is the great equalizer.” Everyone has the same amount of time in their day, rich and poor alike. It’s what you do in that time that makes all the difference.

That’s entirely untrue. Someone who commutes or takes public transportation two hours to work each way does not have the same amount of time as a person who works from home. Someone who gets home from work and has a wife who takes care of every. single. thing in the house – food, laundry, cleaning, etc – has WAY more free time than someone who needs to come home and make dinner and help the kids with homework. People who pay someone else to do their housework have more free time than people who do scrub their own toilets and floors.

But, in general, less is often more, and simplifying life often means fewer things to worry about. What can you drop that isn’t bringing you joy?

 

And that’s it for this week! I’ve got to get dressed and then put my daughter’s carseat back in the car. Wish me luck; this is hard on my back and it’s already not feeling great. Wishing you all a wonderful, relaxing weekend! Shalom, friends. : )

Friday, April 22, 2022

Friday links: 22 April, 2022

It’s Friday! Always nice to have the weekend juuuuuuuuuust about here. This has been a pretty good week so far, so I’m not desperate for a break like I have been some weeks! Yesterday was amazing; almost 70 degrees, full sun (enough for me to slightly toast my right arm, whoops), it was gorgeous out there and we did a bunch of our afternoon school sitting outside, plus we went on a really nice walk afterwards. Saturday’s supposed to be hot as well, but then back down to chilly. Ah well. Can’t have it all at once, I guess!

I haven’t been online all that much this week, but what I did find was at least both interesting and useful. Here we go!

 

Illinois Officials Recommend Residents Take Down Bird Feeders, Baths Due to Avian Flu

Ours will be coming down either later today or tomorrow (we’ve got some thunderstorms rolling in, so it depends on when we can sneak out there). I know this is a problem in multiple states, so if you’ve got bird feeders or baths, heavily consider taking them down until May 31st to stop the spread of the EA H5N1 strain of Avian flu, which is hitting both wild and domestic birds. We love our birds; they provide us so much joy and entertainment at the feeder right outside our living room window, and that’s why we want to do everything we can to keep them safe and healthy.

 

Covid: Woman caught virus twice within record 20 days

If where you live is like where I live, you’re seeing way more of people’s faces than you’re comfortable with these days. Sometimes I’m the only one in the store wearing a mask. It doesn’t bother me; I’ve never had any problem with standing out or being different. But cases ARE going up. The wastewater data doesn’t lie, and it’s up, up, up. And now we’ve got evidence of people being reinfected within a three-week time frame? Not good news. Wear your masks, friends. Be careful about large gatherings, especially indoor ones. Multiple infections do our bodies no favors.

 

God Is Not a Consumerist

This is an article about Hanukkah (just a little bit), but it’s truly applicable for all holidays. Why are we so driven by stuff, and what does it mean? Is there any way out of this cycle? It’s hard: hard to explain why and follow through with our children, hard to make our extended family understand that we appreciate their generosity, but we don’t need anything (I’m thinking particularly of my mom here, who is wonderful, but whose love language is gifts). How can we better celebrate holidays in ways that don’t involve consumerism? Definitely something to ponder.

 

Simplicity as a Jewish Path

What a great article. One of the many, many things I love about Judaism is its demand for constant self-reflection: what are you doing with your life to help others, how are you living out these principles, are you helping the arc of the universe bend toward justice? It forces me to constantly reconsider what kind of person I am and want to be, and I love that so much. There’s a tradition of voluntary simplicity in Judaism, known as histapkut b’me’ut, and this article goes into what that means (and how the trauma of Jewish history has affected the way many Jews have struggled with this concept, which is entirely understandable). This article is giving me a lot of joy today, and you definitely don’t have to be Jewish in order to find inspiration in it.  

 

That’s it for today! There are a few places on the list for some scary weather this weekend, so if that’s you, take care and stay safe. Wishing you all a wonderful, peaceful weekend. Shalom, friends. : )