Today is Victoria Day, the unofficial beginning to the summer season in Canada. Oh, sure -- it's still spring -- but this is when we finally start to trust that winter is behind us and put the snow shovels in the basement for another year.
I've decided that this is the summer I begin composting. We have a cart that the city will empty every two weeks, so it's really just a matter of learning what should go in it and hauling the cart up and down the driveway. We already recycle what we can at the blue bins in the grocery store parking lot, so this is the next natural step. As someone who is interested in the preservation of (and has a spiritual connection to) the Earth, this has been on my Day Zero list for a while. So today it begins. On the refrigerator, I've posted lists of what can and can't go in the compost cart, so that Hubby and I have some guidance until we get the hang of it.
After we came back from the recycling bins today, Hubby, Piper and I spent some time wandering through our backyard. For the last ten years or so, it's been left au naturel, partly because it's too bumpy to run a mower over (and too big to weed-whack), and partly because Hubby believes that mowing lawns is bad for the environment. (I don't know if he really believes it, or if he's just poking at me and his tongue is firmly in cheek, but he started a Facebook group about it, so here's his free plug. :))Among today's discoveries: forget-me-nots growing among the thorns of the rose bushes, rampant buttercups, tons of dandelions, a snail on the compost cart, and several MIA tennis balls ejected from the groundhog den by its occupant.
It was nice to spend some time outside and just be.
Tomorrow will be a busy day, beginning with an academic appeal hearing at the university (#95 on the Day Zero List). After that, I need to make an appointment with my doctor, update my résumé, and figure out what to do next. I might wander by the high school, too -- not only to visit old friends, but to see if they have any use for me in the next three weeks, since I still have my substitute teaching permit. I'm not sure what the next year is going to look like, but today I came across a quotation that pretty much sums up my life's philosophy.
“To laugh often and much; to win the respect of intelligent people
and the affection of children; to leave the world a better place;
to know even one life has breathed easier because you have lived.
This is to have succeeded.” --Ralph Waldo Emerson
It's all gonna be okay.
1 comment:
Hey Karen,
Sounds like you are taking the positive outlook on things. I know you can succeed in whatever you attempt. Remember that your true friends are always there to be a sounding board or leaning post when needed. Take care and don't be afraid to ask for help when you feel the need.
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