Category: uncategorized

  • rock-onnaissance

    rock-onnaissance

    June 3, 2026

    On the summer evenings of my childhood, my family would cruise country roads, tracing the patchwork of northern Indiana and southwest Michigan (aka Michiana. Yes, for real, look it up.) in our 90’s Dodge Durango. The sun, still shining high in the sky after dinnertime, gilded the rolling fields and subtle slopes left behind from the roving glaciers of the Great Lakes. We bounced along the freshly graded dirt roads – a family of four peering out of our respective windows at the bountiful acres that lay before us. Our eyes would survey the wildflowers and tall grasses that lined the borders of our well-worn route. Fat groundhogs would scamper off in our slow-moving wake. With the windows slightly parted, a humid breeze would roll onto our foreheads, kissing our sweat.

    Yeah, that sounds nice. Bucolic, even. But I have a truth to confess.

    These drives were not the pastoral family fun times I have led you to believe. These drives were rock-scouting missions. Boring, bang-my-head-against-a-window, “Can we please go home already?” car trips for the sole purpose of looking for free landscaping rocks. Rock-onnaissance, if you will. I spent multiple hours of my precious and fleeting childhood summers looking for rocks. And not in the budding geologist kind of way. Now look, I’m not trying to rag on rocks. I’m not a rock hater and I support rock nerds as long as they haven’t sold out to Big Oil. But imagine that you’re eleven years old, it’s a beautiful summer day, and you’re stuck in a slow-moving SUV with instructions to look for rocks that would look nice next to the hostas. Also, you have a maxi-pad stuffed in your plaid bermuda shorts and there’s only Christian radio stations on the presets. And your teenage brother smells! Ughhhh!

    We would look for rocks on the roadside and rocks at the edges of woodland and rocks in farmer’s fields – the latter only plucked with permission, of course. All kinds of rocks, too. Boulders to fill space and provide visual balance, flat slabs for stepping stones, football-sized rocks to line garden edges, etc. Boring, sweaty, and dirty work. Now, these trips were part of a larger array of home project-based activities. For the bulk of my childhood, it seemed as if every weekend was spent at Lowes, Menards, Home Depot, or a combination of the three. And if we escaped the clutches of the big box hardware store that meant that we were in a greenhouse, on a rock-onnaissance mission, or worse: doing the actual labor that the supplies demanded. Weeding, mowing, digging, planting, sanding, painting, staining, cleaning, watering, hauling, chopping, wheelbarrowing, moving, sweating, aching. And finally, rinsing ourselves off with the hose before being able to go inside. It seemed as if there was no end to the landscaping projects that my parents dreamed – every summer brought new work.

    During college and into my mid-20s I was freed from the kind of summertime manual labor that plagued my youth. Sure, I put out potted plants on my apartment balcony and even invested an entire summer into a community garden plot. And yes, I may have had a small composting set-up for said garden. But these efforts were quaint. I even began to understand what people meant when they said they “loved to get their hands in the dirt.” Then I bought a house.

    Dear reader, nothing could have prepared me for the sickness that overwhelmed my financial and energy-reserving senses when I became a property owner. It’s as if every dirt-dusted neuron in my stupid little brain went into overdrive the second we signed the closing paperwork. I downloaded the Lowes app. I started drawing garden diagrams in my notebook. I went so far as to create photo mock-ups so that I could envision the placement of the plants in both the front and back garden beds. The plants, of course, that I most definitely would be buying as soon as the nurseries opened for the season.

    It’s been two years since we moved in and I wish I could say that the impulse to do outdoor manual labor has improved but I fear that my condition has only worsened. The garden beds have expanded. The local conservation district has my contact information from their annual plant sale. The teen cashier at the local hardware store has sold me mulch not once, not twice, but three times in one day (I’m unwilling to do the math on cubic feet). And this year, for the first time, I went out on my own rock-onnaissance missions. But you see, I needed the rocks! The growing border of the front yard Monarch Waystation bed demanded the rocks! And they had to come from somewhere! Preferably somewhere where I wouldn’t have to pay for them! So I drove through the country – moving slowly and bumping along the dirt roads with my window down.

    I’ve realized that I don’t know what it feels like to sit in complete contentment in my own space. Ironically, I can find this feeling easily in wild, untamed nature. But in my yard? There’s always something to do. What is this impulse to suffer in gardening gloves? Is it desire to exert control on my surroundings? Is it to showcase my taste in plants or my ability to balance a dangerously overloaded wheelbarrow? Is it some weird 1950’s Good Housekeeping-esque way to display status? Is it genetic? And most importantly, don’t you think a pea gravel circle would look really nice around the fire pit?

    after

    TL;DR – As far as I can tell, the compulsion to do back-breaking landscaping work every time the sun comes out is a chronic illness.

  • the gratitude of billionaires

    the gratitude of billionaires

    May 4, 2026

    I move through most days like a regular person. I work, I eat, I shit, I sleep. Rinse. Repeat. And I feel generally content, albeit a little bored. Other days, I’m pissed off. I’m aware that this is not unique; such is the human experience! My pissed-off-edness is usually triggered by the limitations imposed by my monstrous student loan debt, the state of the world (it’s ass right now, btw), and those people that try to wave you through a four-way stop even though they have the right-of-way. Just GO! On these poopy days, to avoid a continued downward spiral, I force myself to practice gratitude. As recommended by probably every therapist and wellness article ever written, I go for a walk and make a mental list of all the things in life that I’m grateful for. It’s just like sharing with family around the Thanksgiving table except there’s no canned cranberry sauce and the purpose isn’t to set an intention for the meal, the purpose is so that I don’t throw a brick through a window. Of course I’m grateful for my home, for my health, for my family and friends, for nutritious food, potable water, and all the other modern conveniences of the American middle class. I’m grateful to be in the ever-shrinking American middle class. And I’m grateful that my neighborhood isn’t being bombed, that I’m not wrongfully imprisoned, and that I get to enjoy the small gifts in life – like the whirring sound of a fat bumblebee in flight or making my money back on a $5 scratch-off. Most of the time, the gratitude practice readjusts the trajectory of my attitude and I can settle back into my regular person routine. But some of the time, I end up just getting more pissed off.

    Recently, on one of these more-pissed-off days, I was lamenting my financial status a.k.a. the $1,800/month Sallie Mae-branded ball and chain that I’ll be dragging into my mid-40s. I’m grateful for my education and employment; but anthropology and public health degrees are not known for their high earning potential. And before you say “Yeah but you’re the one that made those choices blah blah blah.” I KNOW. Please, I have already wrestled with the teenage idiot who signed for the loans. Anyway – on one of these sourpuss days, I walked and wondered: do billionaires have gratitude practices? Do they need to? The way that I need to? Or do they do it in a Forbes “look at what made me successful (definitely not the exploitation of labor)” article type of way? Or in a Goop way?

    Do they have to make themselves walk to the Dollar General so that they can feel grateful about moving their body in the sunshine? Do they have to remind themselves to be grateful for the food at home even though they really want to eat out? Are they glad they get to do laundry in their basement instead of at the laundromat? Do they ever tell themselves that they have enough? Do they notice the bumblebees? Or buy $5 scratch offs with the impossible hope that tomorrow could be easier? Or do they just throw the brick through a window and pay to someone else to fix it? Correction: do they throw the brick through a window and pay some poor healthcare-less schmuck pennies on the dollar to fix it?

    I know that comparison is the thief of joy. And I know that comparing the tangible assets of my life to someone who makes at least 16,12,800% more than me isn’t a fair way to measure the worth of existence. But on some days, those truths feel a little bit harder to know.

    I will never be wealthy but I am rich in this life for an infinite number of reasons. I get to watch thousands of lightning bugs dance in the tall grasses of my backyard every summer. I get to relish in mending a worn pair of jeans. I get to cut rhubarb from the side of the house each May. And then I get to watch it bubble under a lattice crust in the same old oven that countless families have used before me. To roast Thanksgiving turkeys and bake birthday cakes made from mix bought at the dollar store. The one just down the tree-lined, dandelion-speckled street.

    TL;DR – Do billionaires have souls?

  • behind that locked door

    behind that locked door

    April 24, 2026

    The second Sunday in March is my favorite day of the year. Maybe not for the full year, to be fair, but it is my favorite day from November to February. I hold the second Sunday in March close to my chest with a desperate, white-knuckled grip. I count down the days. I check and re-check the calendar with a unique blend of fervor and despair. I talk to the pale, vitamin D-deficient girl in the mirror and tell her that she only has to make it 5 more weeks. 4 more weeks. 10 more days! The second Sunday in March, if you’re wondering, is when Daylight Savings Time begins. It’s when we collectively (minus the state of Arizona) agree to shift our clocks and our shared reality in order to feel happiness again. The longer days bring more sunlight and more sunlight brings a reassurance that life may actually be worth living – even though it is still really cold in Michigan on the second Sunday in March.

    As the days wax into April, the snow turns to rain, the robins return, and branches begin to bud – slowly at first – then you blink and leaves have appeared as if by magic. The promise of Spring is one of the universal gifts of being alive. It is also the primary support column for my sanity at the start of each calendar year. With the gracious deliverance of Spring comes a renewed desire to create – to put forth something fresh and beautiful like the flora and fauna around me. Unlike the flora and fauna around me, however, I recognize that creativity requires vulnerability. A tree doesn’t have to process its emotions or open the core of itself to critique from strangers on the internet in order to create. But apparently I, as a human, do. And that’s scary as shit.

    This fear isn’t new – it’s been a pervasive part of my psyche for a long time and has prevented me not only from sharing creative pursuits, but from beginning them at all. It’s like living behind a locked door with frosted glass panes. I can see the pastel sunset and the dancing interplay of light and shadows, and I can hear the birdsong on the other side. It’ just right beyond my reach. A little too far to grasp and hold in my open hands for others to observe and explore. I know what’s on the other side. If only I could unlock the door.

    Oh my god, I have a key. Oh my god, I am the key!

    And that’s why I started this blog. That and because I impulsively spent $48 to have the domain name and host this site for a whole year. In any case, this blog is a space to practice both creating and sharing – with the hope that it will get less scary over time. So here’s to my inaugural post and to the vibrant green leaves that are unfurling all around me.

    TL;DR – I started this blog as a form of DIY exposure therapy to become more comfortable with vulnerability and get past my artistic imposter syndrome.