cleothedog

Tag: winter

slow no wake

The following essay first appeared in my newsletter salt airsubscribe (free) for more!

Another winter storm on Friday. Drove home behind the plow. The woodpeckers and dark-eyed juncos were eating from the suet before the snow started. Then another storm. But the days are getting longer. The air and the snow feel damp; the birds are making noise; signs of early spring.

Hello friends,

I hope you’ve been staying warm and holding your loved ones close.

The first winter with a baby has felt—fast and slow, busy and quiet, isolating and full, big and small. It’s been a super cold winter for much of it, and that plus letting the wee one play on her mat and develop skills (day by day!) has kept us indoors a lot. When I come out of my bedroom after the baby and I wake up to set up for the day and see sun pouring in the windows that’s a major win.

Mother and Child by Charles William Bartlett (1900)


I can feel my brain and body continue to change, continue to rewire for complete attunement to this small individual, her needs, our bond, our family. Focusing on other things is a bit like forcing a crank to move the other way; it takes effort and is disorienting. At the same time, part of my mind is constantly aware of other things—of all the things! I’ve always been someone who both hyperfocuses and is constantly scanning and thinking three (or many more) steps ahead, and the way that has translated into an ever-growing capacity—both automatically and with WORK—to take care of my baby, myself, and my family is interesting—and tough and beautiful.

It’s been a winter of intense busyness and also rest—in all the forms, whenever possible. Seeing the pale winter sunset—white, lavender, grey blue—out of the back window when starting a nap with the baby. Creativity also brewing and overflowing, looking for vessels. Parenting takes so much and also creates so much. I think of those fountains that pour from one basin into another into another, before drawing the water up to start the cycle again.

Madre by Joaquín Sorolla y Bastida (1895)


I can think of few things as definitionally “bittersweet” as seeing a little one growing up as you are raising them. I recognize I’m only several months in, but the feeling is palpable. Every new sound and movement and shade of personality is delightful, a joy and awesome privilege to be present for, and also there’s a feeling of grief, mourning what’s already passed. Everyone talks about how “it goes so fast.” And it does. Sometimes she changes by the day, even by the hour. It feels so rapid—but there are also moments that feel slow; these might be heavy or difficult, or they might be so full of joy they are literally overflowing. For better or worse, we are stuck in it like a crumb in honey.

When she was a tiny newborn feels like both yesterday and a lifetime ago. . . .


Continue reading on Substack!

Love is not a luxury (newsletter relaunch!)

I recently relaunched my newsletter under a new title: salt air. Art and more in your inbox roughly once a month!

Check it out on Substack – and please subscribe (it’s free), read, and share!

Here’s an excerpt from the latest issue, “bitterness and light: Love is an act of resistance”:

One of the most salient things that I’ve been struck by, as the far-right movement has gained power and the country becomes increasingly fascist, is what I see as this movement’s potentially defining feature: its sociopathic lack of empathy. It’s every man for himself. And every animal, every ecosystem.

But when one person—or animal or ecosystem—suffers, we all suffer. And saying NO to this, in whatever ways we can, is an act of resistance.

Caring for our friends and family members and neighbors—showing them we care, doing what we can—is an act of resistance.

Love is an act of resistance. Joy is an act of resistance.

We can—and must—organize. We can and must find—and make—space for joy and connection. Fear—of what will come or that we can’t affect change—and apathy and pessimism—waiting it out, putting our heads in the sand—are what fuels this kind of darkness. The individuals behind this movement—and yes, there are particular people who benefit (corrupt politicians, tech billionaires, gas, oil, and healthcare industry execs, and so on)—want us to be separate and to feel afraid and powerless; it makes it easier to control us while they pillage. But we’re not powerless.

And when I say we must make space for joy, I don’t just mean “find ‘pockets’ of joy” or take what you can get, “just try and get through the next four years” or focus on “self-care” in the sense that that term is used now. Taking care of yourself is obviously paramount, and sometimes small things are what you can reach for and implement in a moment—lighting a candle, taking a bath, walking outside for 30 minutes, etc. But I mean radically making space for joy and connection, saying NO I will not submit, saying YES I love other people and we are together in this, even if (even though) we have monumental challenges ahead of and all around us.

Read more at saltairletter.substack.com!

i am dancing at the edge
twinkle lights and lit christmas trees & garland
even porch lights and lamps look like
holiday lights suspended in this fog

snow 2.26.22

Click on images to enlarge.

Chocolate pudding pie

Happy Valentine’s day, sweethearts. Hope you are staying warm. Does anyone else have this faint, embedded feeling – from elementary school days, or something – that with February comes at least the beginning of spring? I guess in a way it does. And I’m looking forward to spring – I’m starting to, slowly. But I am also trying to relish winter – we are really enjoying the snow. And even though winter days can be short and fast and dark, I know that the hustling, bustling longer days and strong sun of summer bring their own pressure and challenges. 

For this sweet, snowy holiday, I made a chocolate pudding pie! With an oreo cookie crust and fresh whipped cream! So good.

Read all about this delicious, chocolatey, creamy treat and find the full recipe in the most recent issue of Sundays are for baking. Along with a little love poem from me and more. Read on and subscribe now 💌 !