Knowing your limits works both towards deciding what you’re willing to do just as much as what you’re not willing to do.
Mike Vardy, from his most recent ATTN Newsletter
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by Patrick Rhone, Master Generalist
Knowing your limits works both towards deciding what you’re willing to do just as much as what you’re not willing to do.
Mike Vardy, from his most recent ATTN Newsletter
Lovely day of beauty and culture. First with a visit to The Minneapolis Institute of Art to see Botticelli and Renaissance Florence: Masterworks from the Uffizi








Then, to see Proving Up by Journey North Opera Co. which Beatrix had a small part in (she played one of the pioneer daughters in the trailer).



Celebrating our 18th “Dateaversary”. How can a time with another person seem simultaneously like a blink and forever? Love, that’s how.

Fun time doing a vintage store crawl with Beatrix today.

This post from Kurt on Punctuality reminded me of my Grandmother who set all the clocks in the house ahead so you never knew what time it really was and if you had somewhere to be you better make sure you were early and that was one way to ensure it. “We’ll never be on CP time!”
Our limit for love and grace for others is measured by how much love and grace we give ourselves. Want to love more, grace more, compassion more, forgive more? Start with yourself.
Really enjoyed this beautifully shot tour of my state.
“Numbers are often used to sway and influence opinion and it is especially true when the data behind them, the math, is purposefully opaque.”
Like I’ve said for a long time… Never trust polls.
My daughter’s first high school play is a doozy.

Don’t obsess over politics. Don’t let it overwhelm your everyday experiences, moods, and interactions. That’s not the role of politics in a representative democracy—and we should enjoy that fact for as long as we still have one. Like our relentless mutual hate, our nonstop political obsessions are by design, manufactured by others, and no good for us.