Tranquil Resources

Tag: gratitude

  • Sunrise Messages

    There is a quiet shift happening.

    The suitcases aren’t packed yet,
    but I can feel the turning.

    Soon, we will return to Wisconsin.
    To seasons that bite for a while still before the bloom.
    To thawing lakes instead of ocean waves.
    To a different rhythm.

    But before we go —
    I need to pause.

    I need to say thank you.

    What a gift it has been to be here.
    To wake each morning and walk toward the bay
    To breathe in air softened by salt and eucalyptus.
    To let the sky stretch wide above me,
    uncomplicated and generous.

    These morning walks became more than exercise.
    They became prayer.
    They became listening.
    They became noticing.

    I wrote a poem about those walks.
    About the way the light met the water.
    About how the sky held everything
    without trying to control it.

    And then, as sometimes happens,
    the poem began to hum.

    Words found melody.
    Steps found rhythm.
    Breath became song.

    The ocean has a way of doing that —
    turning observation into offering.

    Today I’m sharing that song with you.
    It carries the hush of early morning,
    the widening horizon,
    the gentle insistence that each day is a beginning.

    As we prepare to leave, I don’t feel loss as much as layering.

    Wisconsin is not a departure from this place.
    It is the next verse.

    I need to find morning walks there too —
    different skies, different winds,
    different lessons.


    Stillness instead of surf.
    But the same invitation to

    Notice.
    Breathe.
    Begin again.

    Gratitude travels well.
    It doesn’t require an ocean view.

    So I carry this season with me —
    the color of the water at dawn,
    the way the clouds part without argument,
    the reminder that rhythms continue whether I cling or release.

    Thank you, California mornings.
    Thank you for the song.

    Soon we’ll turn toward Wisconsin —
    not leaving light behind,
    but carrying it home.

  • When the World Pauses Without Asking

    Firefighter speaking to me over my Ring Doorbell

    Holidays are supposed to arrive gently.
    Marked by familiar rituals.
    By comfort.
    By things we expect.

    But sometimes the season is interrupted.

    A sound you didn’t anticipate.
    An impact you didn’t see coming.
    A moment where everything shifts, and suddenly the world you knew five minutes ago no longer exists in the same way.

    When a car crashed into my house, it wasn’t just damage to walls and windows. It was the feeling that routine had been broken. That life, once again, had reminded me how quickly everything can change. It was Thanksgiving. We were together, as a family. Then, just like that, everything changed.

    It felt strangely familiar.

    Like the moment when someone you love is gone,
    grief enters—the light in the room changes.

    There is a pause that follows moments like these —
    not one we choose, but one we are given.
    A forced stillness.
    A slowing we didn’t plan for. 

    The world keeps moving,
    but we are held in place,
    trying to understand how we got here.

    And the holidays don’t stop.
    Lights still glow.
    People still rush.
    Music still plays.

    But inside, we begin to move differently.
    More carefully.
    More slowly.
    We notice what matters
    because we have no energy left for what doesn’t.

    This kind of pause is not peaceful —
    at least not at first.
    It carries fear, frustration, and unanswered questions.
    It asks us to breathe when breathing feels hard.

    So now it’s Christmas, and so much is still unresolved with my house.
    With every breath, I need to swallow frustration.
    Allow space for unanswered questions.
    Let the uncomfortable pause not paralyze me with fear,
    but teach me.

    Life is fragile.
    Control is an illusion.
    Presence — real, honest presence —
    is sometimes all we have to offer.


    So this holiday season, I’m allowing interruption.
    I’m letting disruption invite stillness.
    I’m honoring the pause —
     even when it arrives through shock or loss.

    Because sometimes,
    when the world changes in an instant,
    the most human thing we can do is
    stop and remember:
    I am here.
    I am breathing.
    I need to let that be enough.