Post vacation feelings

After a most fabulous week of vacation with friends and then a less-than-ideal week after getting back, I have some feelings and thoughts.

Be the friend who spontaneously picks up a bubble wand for your visiting friend just because you know how much she loves bubbles.

Be the husband who buys his wife the giant pinwheel because she got so excited when she saw it in the store.

Do the touristy things. Do the non-touristy things. Eat local food, especially if it is home cooked! Seek out and go to small local places while on vacation! Try the mussels and the lobster rolls even if you think you don’t care for them. Forget your camera sometimes and know you will remember those crabs in your mind forever even without the photos.

Play cornhole (or Baggo, whatever) at dusk in the campground, mosquitos be damned. The itch will fade your memories will stay. Maybe drop a few less F bombs for the kids in the next space over though.

Tell people you love them. Cherish your moments with everyone, do not take time for granted. Share recipes, jokes and pictures. Love.

Reach out to those who might need you. Be willing to ask if you need someone. Be vulnerable. Be honest with yourself first, that is actually even more important than being honest with others.

Keep the inside jokes rolling. There is nothing better than your own language with those you love and have fun with.

Stand up for justice and what is right in the world, but do not let the fight consume you. Know there must be joy and grace and fun as well, otherwise what is the point? Stay informed, but also stay entertained.

Read for fun. Share books. Garden if you like it. Or sew, or paint, or cook…do what brings you joy, especially if you can also get joy from sharing it with others!

And most important of all. Do not bring shells home from vacation, just leave them on the beach. They will stink a week later and you will just have to throw them out anyway (trust me, I tried to clean them).

It’s Leap Day, what does that mean?

Happy Leap Day!


Here’s a quick summary from The History Channel why we get this extra day every 4 years:
“While the modern calendar contains 365 days, the actual time it takes for Earth to orbit its star is slightly longer—roughly 365.2421 days. The difference might seem negligible, but over decades and centuries that missing quarter of a day per year can add up. To ensure consistency with the true astronomical year, it is necessary to periodically add in an extra day to make up the lost time and get the calendar back in synch with the heavens.”

Did you know there are other traditions associated with this day?

Women proposing to men on Leap Day was ‘allowed’ by St Patrick in 5th Century Ireland. This spread to Scotland and England and so on. It is known as Bachelor Day by many. Women can propose whenever they choose now in modern cultures, but it has become a fun twist to do it on Leap Day. Especially since it is still the more accepted norm for the men to do the asking.

Greek culture long believed Leap Day to be bad day for wedding vows. Whether due to this superstition or simply not wanting to miss anniversaries, it’s still not a popular day to get married in Greece.

The odds of being born on Leap Day are about 1-in-1,461, and those who get that distinction are known as Leaplings. There are special celebrations organized by the roughly 5 million people who share this birthday phenomenon around the world.


There has even been a special drink curated for this once every four years occasion.
According to The Savoy Cocktail Book: “This Cocktail was created by Harry Craddock, for the Leap Year celebrations at the Savoy Hotel, London, on February 29th, 1928. It is said to have been responsible for more proposals than any other cocktail that has ever been mixed.”

Enjoy your bonus day! Wish a Leapling a happy birthday, have a special cocktail (or mocktail), make a proposal or create your own tradition that flips the script on a social norm.

It’s only once every 4 years, have some fun with it!