My Abundant Life 5-2-26

May 2nd, 2026

Living in the House of Spirit

“How to be happy when you are miserable. Plant Japanese poppies with cornflowers and mignonette, and bed out the petunias among the sweet-peas so that they shall scent each other. See the sweet-peas coming up. Drink very good tea out of a thin Worcester cup of a colour between apricot and pink…”

Rumer Godden (British Author; December 10th, 1907 to November 8th, 1998)

“It was the small things that helped, taken one by one and savored. Make yourself savour them.”

Rumer Godden (British Author; December 10th, 1907 to November 8th, 1998)

“The soulcraft of creating and sustaining safe havens, set apart from the world, in which to seek and savor small authentic joys.”

“…everyone is a house with four rooms, a physical, a mental, an emotional and a spiritual. Most of us tend to live in one room most of the time, but unless we go into every room every day, even if only to keep it aired, we are not a complete person.”

Indian proverb

“I spend time in each room everyday as that is living fully into every day and every moment.”


–Ban Breathnach, Sarah. “Simple Abundance: A Daybook of Comfort and Joy”. Grand Central Publishing. (1976). Kindle Page 142 to 144 of 501.

I challenge each of you on this blog series to post comments so we all can grow together.

My Abundant Life 2-22-26

February 22nd, 2026

Excavating the Real You, Part II

“My memory is certainly in my hands. I can remember things only if I have a pencil and I write it and I can play with it. I think your hand concentrates for you. I don’t know why it should be so.”

Dame Cicily Isabel Fairfield DBE (known as: Rebecca West or Dame Rebecca West) (British Author, Journalist, Literary Critic, and Travel Writer; December 21st, 1892 ~ March 15th, 1983)

“Pick up your pen to play and in your daily dialogue pages return to the home of your childhood. …How was it decorated? Take a walk through the rooms and see them once again. Did you clean your room? Was the door usually kept closed? What was your favorite spot in the house? Was your mother a good cook? Do you ever prepare any of her special recipes for yourself? …How did your mother comfort you when you were sick? When was the last time you had alphabet soup and saltines for lunch on a try in bed? …Where did you go on vacation? To your grandmother’s house? Can you remember them? Is there a sense memory you associate with childhood vacations?”

“Now fast-forward to your teenage years. Were there any girls in your class that you admired? Envied? Who were they and why? Did you go to prom? Decribe your gown. How did you fix your hair? Who initiated you into the feminine rituals of good grooming? Was there an older woman in your life whose sense of style impressed you?”

“Let’s move ahead to when you set up your first home, either as a young working woman or when you first got married. Where was it? How was it furnished? Are you still living with some of your early decorating choices? Do they reflect who you are now or have you outgrown them? Are you living with things that you’ve inherited from your family? Do they really suit you?”

“Minor things can become moments of great revelation when encouraged for the first time.”

Dame Margaret Evelyn de Arias DBE (known as: Margot Fonteyn) (English Ballerina; May 18th, 1919 ~ February 21st, 1991)

“We tend to think it is the major events that mark our lives, when really it is the minor moments that resonate in memory.”

My Bucket List

MEMORIES
Savannah, GA.

“Before my story began…” (Heather Houston 2-22-22)

1972 Me…at my Aunt Carrie’s Baby Shower

“Today, I am not feeling I need to keep up with the ‘Jones’. Instead, I look at my home as my sanctuary and items must be appealing and have function. Just to collect stuff seems unnecessary. Simplicity is so much more appealing. My husband has excellent taste and the furnishing in our home are largely from his time and I love each item as it has a space and a reason for being there…no more and no less.: (Heather Houston 2-22-26)


–Ban Breathnach, Sarah. “Simple Abundance: A Daybook of Comfort and Joy”. Grand Central Publishing. (1976). Kindle Page 55-56 of 501.

I challenge each of you on this blog series to post comments so we all can grow together.

My Abundant Life 2-1-26 (Part 1/2)

February 1st, 2026

February

“China tea, the scent of hyacinths, wood fires and bowls of violets—that is my mental picture of an agreeable February afternoon.”

Constance Spry OBE (British Educator, Florist and Author; December 5th, 1886 ~ January 3rd, 1960)

–Ban Breathnach, Sarah. “Simple Abundance: A Daybook of Comfort and Joy”. Grand Central Publishing. (1976). Kindle Page 35 of 501.

I challenge each of you on this blog series to post comments so we all can grow together.

My Abundant Life 1-7-26

January 7th, 2026

How Happy Are You Right Now?

“Perhaps if one really knew when one was happy one would know the things that were necessary for one’s life.”

Marion Blackett-Milner (or: Milner) (pseudonym: Joanna Field) (British Author and Psychoanalyst; February 1st, 1900 ~ May 29th, 1998)

“How happy are you right now? Do you even know?”

“Thankfully, I do know how happy I am presently. Words cannot describe the joy and happiness I experience on a daily basis. I live with the love of my life. We are aligned and connected in extraordinary ways that I have come to believe that we were made for one another. I have waited a lifetime to find him and now that I have, I’m not letting go! He supports me to live authentically with power, full self-expression and freedom. It is MAGIC!” (Heather Houston 1-7-22)

“I believe it possible to transform yourself through intentional practice at being, gratitude and paying attention to what makes you happy. I have been doing that the last 4 years in earnest and I am reaping the fruits of my commitment. I owe a large part of my transformation to my husband who has afforded me space to be me in the moment. That simple gesture has been so loving and renewing for my soul.” (Heather Houston 1-7-26)

“What is missing from many of our days is a true sense that we are enjoying the lives we are living.”

“We must learn to savor small, authentic moments that bring us contentment.”


–Ban Breathnach, Sarah. “Simple Abundance: A Daybook of Comfort and Joy”. Grand Central Publishing. (1976). Kindle Page 6-7 of 501.

I challenge each of you on this blog series to post comments so we all can grow together.