
The weather here at Winterpast has been as close to perfect as weather can be.
Even though July arrives tomorrow, we have been gifted with days that feel more like a gentle invitation than the beginning of a high desert summer. The afternoons have been hovering in the eighties, warm enough for flowers to stretch their faces toward the sun, but not so hot that everything wilts by noon.
Last night, the desert remembered it could still be cold.
By bedtime, the night air chilled the house, and the electric blanket earned its place on the bed. There’s something wonderfully comforting about that. Summer by day. Almost-autumn by night. It’s a nice change when living on the high desert plains of northwestern Nevada.
There is a rhythm settling over Winterpast now. The frantic pace of spring chores has eased a little. The trees are full. The flowers are finding their places. The birds keep arriving as if they own the yard, which of course, they do. Oliver and Tanner have also settled into their summer schedule, which mostly includes keeping a careful eye on me, barking when necessary, and napping as if they have worked a double shift.

HHH has found his golf clubs again.
They’d been waiting quietly for him, probably wondering if they had been forgotten. On Mondays, he dusts them off and heads out to golf with his brothers. There are old friends to see, stories to tell, and a ball to chase across green grass. I love that for him.
There is something good and healthy about watching someone you love return to something they enjoy. Golf gives him fresh air, brother time, laughter, and a few hours of being exactly where he wants to be.
It gives me something too.
Quiet.
Delicious, uninterrupted quiet.
While HHH is golfing, Winterpast becomes my writing nest. The house settles down around me. Oliver and Tanner give up on supervising and fall asleep nearby. The coffee cup sits within reach. The garden waits outside the window. My words begin to gather.
For a few hours, there is no hurry.
It is just me, my thoughts, my memories, and the page.

There was a time in my life when quiet felt empty. After loss, silence can be a room too large to stand in. It echoes. It reminds. It waits.
But life is tender in the way it changes things, and quiet does not feel quite the same anymore.
Now, on a good day, quiet feels like a gift. It gives me room to breathe. It gives me space to remember without being swallowed by remembering, allowing me time to listen for the next sentence.
Sometimes I write a blog. Sometimes I work on the book. Sometimes I simply sit and think about how far life has carried me from the days when breathing itself felt like work.
These days, I am learning the grace of simply being, without rushing, proving, or fixing.
Just being.
Being in a home I love.
Being married to a man who can spend Monday mornings golfing with his brothers and come home smiling.
Being watched over by two dogs who believe naps are holy work.
Being surrounded by a garden that keeps teaching me patience.
Being grateful for eighty-degree days and electric-blanket nights.
There is beauty in this kind of ordinary, and just maybe that’s what makes it feel so extraordinary.
After seasons of grief, change, work, worry, and rebuilding, a simple Monday can feel like a miracle. A husband golfing. Dogs sleeping. A woman writing. A garden growing. A house resting in summer light.
Nothing that would make the evening news.
Just life, quietly offering its hand again, while I reach back.
Golf is happiness.
Writing is Life.
Go enjoy this last day of June!!! It’s going to be a beauty.



































