I recently read an article in the New Yorker by Heidi Julavits. On the surface, it was an exploration of an active volcanic eruption in an accessible area of Iceland not far from the capital of Reykjavik. The article accomplished many of the goals of excellent nature writing. It faithfully reproduced difficult to spell Icelandic cities. It delivered a sense …
On Engagement And Energy
I’ve started keeping a journal, the first time I’ve resumed this activity in a decade and a half. It brings to mind a 14 year old emptying her emotional life in looping cursive within a Hello Kitty bound book, all while lying in bed speaking on the phone with the cord wrapped around her hand – something out of an …
A Summer In Europe Was Cheaper Than A Summer In The US
I am putting the finishing touches on this summer’s three week domestic travel itinerary, which will be a family road trip through northern California. I just totaled up the prices for our airbnb stays. Blame it on pent-up demand for travel, the relative safety of the outdoors, or simply the compelling nature of visiting our national parks, but it’s going …
Violence Is What Happens When We Don’t Know What To Do With Our Suffering
I recently read about Parker Palmer in a book on life design, and my interest was piqued sufficiently to lead me to a commencement speech he gave at Naropa University in 2015. Naropa is a Buddhist educational center in Boulder, Colorado, so we had a not-your-typical-speaker at a not-your-typical-university scenario. I thought one passage moving enough to share as a …
Flux As Opportunity
Since returning from a three week family road trip across my home state of California, I’ve been in a state of flux, and it’s left me feeling uncertain at times, a bit down at others. For one, it would seem that Rome is burning. An entire third of our trip was altered at the last minute due to devastating fires …
Stagnation
Erik Erikson was a developmental psychologist and analyst who coined the term “identity crisis.” His theory of developmental stages remains influential, despite the fact that his education was more experiential than his fellow analysts, who often touted their more impressive institutional pedigrees.I was introduced to his theories as an undergraduate majoring in Human Biology, and they stuck with me. His …
Becoming The Bucket Hat Brigade
Living in coastal California, one encounters significant exposed flesh on a daily basis. There are tattoos and tan lines and thongs to navigate. Despite this baseline, our family has mostly worn broad-brimmed hats and rash guards to pool and beach events. As one dad bluntly commented when our evidently out of place family arrived at a family pool party, “Here …
Trainspotting For Nerds
As a child, I walked with my head in the clouds and my eyes on the ground. I was a born scavenger. There was definite joy in finding dropped coins that others missed or pocketing unique and shiny metal contraptions that fed my daydreams (shortly after Star Wars came out, I excitedly mistook a hex shank socket driver for a …
Given The Choice Between You And Them They’ll Win Every Time
I started this blog in September of 2016, and I’ve been dropping a post at least twice a week since that time. I’m not convinced I have all that much to say, and I’m certain that many others could express it more eloquently or memorably than I do. Yet I persist because I relish the relationship this blog permits me …
Should I Want My Kids To Suffer Financially?
I recently wrote about one child’s wolfing down buckets of blueberries, which I consider to be a luxury fruit, and how it triggered in me a desire to have my kids experience certain financial milestones on their own path to financial literacy. Here’s where it gets complicated. Although I used the term milestones it was a poorly disguised euphemism for …