Northfield Mayor Mary Rossing was one of the Memorial Day speakers at Northfield Area Veterans Memorial in Riverside Park on Monday. Her speech was why it’s important that all citizens…
Locally Grown (LoGro) Northfield Posts
Northfield’s version of Captain America and Billy (Jose Rodriguez and Charlie Kyte) were revved up on caffeine in front of the GBM yesterday morning.
John Brookins, head of the City of Northfield’s Building Inspection Division and the City’s Building Official, no longer works for the City. Although his name is still listed on that…
I’m reading a book called Rapt: Attention and the Focused Life by Winifred Gallagher (available in downtown Northfield at Monkey See Monkey Read). She has a section on “savoring,” described as “the mindful, intentional focus on positive feelings. Quoting a researcher: “If you can’t say, ‘Yes, I was aware of and attended to that pleasure,’ it’s not savoring.”
Whether you’re focused on your ice cream cone or your Nobel Prize, the experience’s beginning and ending offer the best savoring opportunities. Initially, sheer novelty grabs your attention, as do later cues that something is almost finished. Those first and last few bites of cake, rays of light, or days of vacation prompt you to appreciate what you have and then, are about to lose.
I tried to put this in practice on Sunday, the most gorgeous day of spring thus far: 70 degrees, clear skies, no wind, no bugs.
- Left: I took a slow walk around Valley Pond at 5:30 am. The ducks were paddling in the cool morning fog.
- Left center: trimming some tree branches gave us a better view of the pond
- Right center: on the desk at sunset with a bottle of wine, grilled hamburgers, steamed asparagus, luscious tomatoes, raspberries with ice cream.
- Right: a backyard fire
Again, savoring is not just enjoying these experiences, Gallagher says. Savoring required that I stop myself at some point during each of the experiences and make note of the pleasure, either mentally to myself or with Robbie. I can report that it really made a difference.
Some other savoring-related quotes from the book: (continued)
Sunday’s NY Times Magazine had an article titled The Case for Working With Your Hands which is adapted from the new book, Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work by Mathew Crawford (available in downtown Northfield at Monkey See Monkey Read). I started getting interested in this topic back in March after reading the comments to my blog post, Whither the clocks of the Middle School Industrial Technology classes? It was brought home to me last week when a guy in my motorcycle trials club, Jim ‘Bubba’ Blount, diagnosed my carburetion problems just by listening to my bike. (continued)
Instead of taking photos of Northfield area Boy Scouts (Troop 313) and Girls Scouts putting red carnations at the markers for the Last Roll Call (honoring area veterans who died…
Gorgeous weather graced this morning’s Memorial Day ceremony at Northfield Area Veterans Memorial in Riverside Park. See the album of 95 photos, the large slideshow, or this small slideshow:
Today is Memorial Day. See the blog post by Jane McWilliams on Northfield.org for details on this morning’s 9 am ceremony at Northfield Area Veterans Memorial in Riverside Park. See…
LoGroNo (Locally Grown Northfield) traffic for April was down 11-12% across the board, according to Google Analytics. The reason? I have no clue. 17,966 Visits; Previous: 20,572 (-12.67%) 7,725 Absolute…