| Welcome
Hey All
Welcome to my
Portage Newsletter.
Most of my
thoughts in this
newsletter come from my wanderings though Northern Michigan and Ontario
when I am attached to only the moment I am in during my travels. I have
discovered more in the woods and on the water than I have in all my
years
of formal education. Sometimes my insights last only a moment and the
next
minute I'm contradicting myself. Some of my insights I'm sure will last
a lifetime. But it can never be my place to tell you what you must do,
what is wrong, or why. My ramblings here are just an invitation for you
to take a look for yourself and enjoy. Please take what suits you,
discard
what does not. I won't mind a bit.
“It is
something to be able
to paint a particular picture, or to carve a statue, and so to make a
few
objects beautiful; but it is far more glorious to carve and paint the
very
atmosphere and medium through which we look, which morally we can do.
To
affect the quality of the day, that is the highest of arts.” ~~ Henry
David
Thoreau
A special
thanks to those of
you who have passed this newsletter on to others. And I do appreciate
your
feedback. Keep it coming!
If you're
anticipating a transition,
personal or business, just give me a call at 231-879-4178 or
877-762-4178.
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Contents
How
Low Can You Go?
Tension is
who you think you
should
be. Relaxation is who you are. ~Chinese Proverb
What a
strange winter it has
been so far in Northern Michigan. We only have two inches of snow,
which
we acquired just last night. And we have not had any snow on the ground
since around the first of December. As I walked through the woods each
day,
the paths made by me and the dogs are so very clear. And the paths made
by the deer are even more evident. Without the snow and with the
undergrowth
dormant, the earth around me is experiencing low-level stress. It's
sad.
The stress is nothing the earth won't survive, but it's there. And the
impact on vegetation will last long into this new year.
So as I walk,
I think why would
it be any different for us? We all know immediate and sudden stress
when
we experience it. Our body rises to a challenge and prepares to meet
the
situation. But lasting low-level stress can sometimes be elusive and go
unnoticed for a long time until we find ourselves, like the little
patch
of earth around my home, exposed. Signs that we have low-level stress
in
our life often manifest in the form of feeling constantly hurried,
moodiness,
allergies, and sleeping problems. The earth around me this winter is
definitely
having a sleeping problem.
Some of the
common causes of
low-level stress are relationship problems, crammed schedules, a minor
health problem as simple as a sore body part or a change in vision that
has not been addressed yet, and constant but subtle noise. These can be
little things, but they eat away at us each day.
I've said it
many times in
this newsletter. And at the risk of being overly repetitive, I hesitate
to say it again. But you all know me well enough to forgive my rants so
here it is. Resolutions tend to cause stress. So if you're going to
make
one in 2007, make one to reduce the low-level stress in your life. As
2007
unfolds, take a stand:
Leave loads of
open space
in your schedule.
Allow yourself
to be imperfect.
Get more than
enough sleep.
Notice your
little thoughts
and make them good ones.
Solve little
problems quickly.
Breathe deeply.
Tend to a little
patch of
earth around you. You both will benefit.
And blow the
stink off by
walking the path less traveled.
Have an
outstanding 2007.
As I like to
do, I thought
I would share with you a quote or two about the topic. So I went on a
quick
search for quotes about stress. Oh my, there's a lot written. So here's
a little reminder for each month of the upcoming year.
January 2007
The man who
doesn't relax
and hoot a few hoots voluntarily, now and then, is in great danger of
hooting
hoots and standing on his head for the edification of the pathologist
and
trained nurse, a little later on. ~Elbert Hubbard
February 2007
Sometimes the
most important
thing in a whole day is the rest we take between two deep
breaths.
~Etty Hillesum
March 2007
Stress is
basically a disconnection
from the earth, a forgetting of the breath. Stress is an ignorant
state.
It believes that everything is an emergency. Nothing is that important.
Just lie down. ~Natalie Goldberg
April 2007
Sometimes it's
important to
work for that pot of gold. But other times it's essential to take
time off and to make sure that your most important decision in the day
simply consists of choosing which color to slide down on the
rainbow.
~Douglas Pagels, These Are the Gifts I'd Like to Give to You
May 2007
The mark of a
successful man
is one that has spent an entire day on the bank of a river without
feeling
guilty about it. ~Author Unknown
June 2007
Half our life is
spent trying
to find something to do with the time we have rushed through life
trying
to save. ~Will Rogers
July 2007
Rest is not
idleness, and
to lie sometimes on the grass under trees on a summer's day, listening
to the murmur of the water, or watching the clouds float across the
sky,
is by no means a waste of time. ~J. Lubbock
August 2007
To sit with a
dog on a hillside
on a glorious afternoon is to be back in Eden, where doing nothing was
not boring - it was peace. ~Milan Kundera
September 2007
Slow down and
everything you
are chasing will come around and catch you. ~John De Paola
October 2007
How beautiful it
is to do
nothing, and then to rest afterward. ~Spanish Proverb
November 2007
Loafing needs no
explanation
and is its own excuse. ~Christopher Morley
December 2007
There is
precious little hope
to be got out of whatever keeps us industrious, but there is a chance
for
us whenever we cease work and become stargazers. ~H.M. Tomlinson
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Contents
Peace and
much love
Deb
The
Fine Print
A Note About
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Copyright
(c) 2007 by
Deborah Martin. All rights reserved.
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