
June arrives differently in the high desert.
Not softly.
Not politely.
One day, the wind still carries spring on its shoulders, and the next, the sunlight sharpens against the white fence at Winterpast as if summer has suddenly remembered where we live. The sage begins to silver in the heat. Long evenings stretch themselves across the yard. Somewhere in the distance, a train whistle drifts through open windows while the sprinklers begin their nightly conversation with the thirsty earth.
Hello, June.
A new month deserves to begin with hope, even when understanding how quickly life can change. Hope is even more important after those years. Grief changes the way a person looks at calendars with the realisation that a promise of endless summers is a myth. Ordinary mornings matter more. A cup of coffee on the deck becomes enough reason to pause. A bloom opening in the flower bed feels almost heroic after surviving late frosts and brutal winds.

This spring has been a little like life itself around here. Warm one moment. Frozen the next. Confusing. Beautiful. Exhausting. Full of surprises.
At least the roses are trying, and so are we.
Winterpast is waking into its summer self now. The lawn needs mowing faster than I can keep up with it. Tiny birds scold from the trees while Oliver patrols the fence line as if national security depends entirely upon him. The irrigation system continues to behave like a practical joke designed by exhausted engineers. Somewhere, mildew is undoubtedly plotting against HHH. And still, every morning, the desert sky rises impossibly blue above all of it.
There is comfort in familiar rhythms.
For years now, writing has become one of mine.
Some mornings, the words arrive easily. Other days, they come slowly, like reluctant visitors unsure whether they are welcome. But I keep showing up anyway. That is something grief taught me. Healing is rarely dramatic, but most often it looks like continuing. Watering flowers. Vacuuming dog hair. Paying bills. Laughing unexpectedly. Planning trips. Writing another sentence.
Living another day.

June feels like an invitation to do a little more of that.
Not perfectly.
Not fearlessly.
Not with life completely figured out.
Just faithfully.
There was a time when I thought healing would someday arrive like a lightning strike. A sudden moment where everything hurt less, and life returned to normal. Instead, healing arrived quietly. In gardens. In friendships. In road trips. With HHH. In writing. In dogs growing old beside us. In learning how to carry both joy and sorrow at the same time without dropping either one.
That may be the real gift of June.
Not a fresh start exactly.
But permission to keep growing anyway.
So here at Winterpast, beneath a Nevada-blue sky and the sound of sprinklers turning against dry earth, I’m welcoming another month with cautious optimism and grateful hands.
The flowers are blooming again.
And after everything, so are we.











































