First Day of Spring🌺…or Is It?❄️

Today is the vernal equinox—the official first day of spring. Day and night are in perfect balance, and from here on out, the days will keep getting longer. After a long Vermont winter, that alone feels worth celebrating.

And honestly, March has been unusually kind to us this year. It’s been warmer than usual, and much of the snow has already melted away. For a moment, it almost feels like spring has actually arrived on time.

But if you’ve lived in Vermont long enough, you know better than to trust that feeling.

So the question becomes: is this the first “fake spring”? It probably is.

Because while it may feel like spring, nature doesn’t seem entirely convinced. The trees are still bare—no green buds yet, no real signs of new growth. It’s like everything is waiting… just a little longer… before committing.

And then there’s the forecast. Snow on Friday. Snow again on Sunday. Vermont reminding us not to get too comfortable just yet.

Still, for the foreseeable future, our highs are supposed to stay above freezing, and that’s no small thing. The air feels different. The light lingers a little longer in the evening. There’s a subtle shift happening, even if it hasn’t fully revealed itself yet.

Spring is in the air—or at least teasing us.

Of course, in Vermont, spring also means mud season, which is not exactly the most glamorous time of year. But it’s part of the process. The in-between stage where winter gives way to something new.

If autumn is the most beautiful season here, I think spring might be the second—if you’re willing to overlook the mud.

So for now, we wait. We enjoy the warmer days, even if they’re temporary. We keep an eye on the forecast. And we remind ourselves that sooner or later, the green will come.

Even if Vermont makes us work for it.

Have a great day everyone!


Pic of the Day


Sleeping In

Since I’m working from home today, I was able to sleep in a bit. When Isabella started trying to wake me, I fed her and then went back to bed. I managed to get an extra hour and a half of sleep. Of course, when I finally did get up, she was more than ready for me to join her. I’m never quite sure whether she doesn’t want me to oversleep or if she just wants me in the living room where she is.

She has always preferred being in the same room as me. That doesn’t necessarily mean I can always see her or even know exactly where she is, but she knows I’m nearby, and for her, that seems to be all that matters.

People often say that cats are aloof, that they do their own thing and care about little else. I’ve never found Isabella to be that way. Unless I get home much earlier than usual, she is almost always at the door when I come in. If I’ve been away, she seems like she can’t get enough of me afterward. She is a very faithful companion, and I feel lucky to have her in my life—though I do sometimes question that at 3 a.m. when she decides she needs to be fed.

In this week’s Isabella pic of the week, the image may not be perfectly focused, but it captures something better—a quiet affection in her eyes as she looks at me.


Pic of the Day


Running on Empty (But Still Running)

Yesterday was a busy, exhausting day. By the time I got home, all I wanted to do was crash.

I talked with Susan for a bit, watched the news and Jeopardy!, and tried to read for a while. But I kept catching myself reading the same paragraph over and over again, my eyes drifting closed between sentences. Eventually, I gave up and fell asleep almost immediately.

Apparently, Isabella decided I needed the extra rest. She waited until after 4:00 a.m. before making a halfhearted attempt to wake me. After a few minutes, even she seemed to give up, and I managed to sleep until 4:45 before she determined I was finally awake enough—and, more importantly, that she needed to be fed.

So, I got up.

Even after coffee and breakfast, though, I still feel like I could go right back to sleep.

Unfortunately, that’s not an option today. I have to go into work for a meeting and a public program that I’m hosting. I’m hoping today won’t be quite as exhausting as yesterday, but if it is, at least I have something to look forward to—working from home tomorrow.

Normally, I work from home on Fridays anyway, but this week got shuffled around because of coworkers’ medical appointments. Still, the thought of a quieter morning tomorrow (assuming Isabella allows it) is enough to get me through today.

Let’s just hope she sleeps in.


Pic of the Day


Requiescat

Requiescat

by Oscar Wilde

Tread lightly, she is near
Under the snow,
Speak gently, she can hear
The daisies grow.

All her bright golden hair
Tarnished with rust,
She that was young and fair
Fallen to dust.

Lily-like, white as snow,
She hardly knew
She was a woman, so
Sweetly she grew.

Coffin-board, heavy stone,
Lie on her breast,
I vex my heart alone,
She is at rest.

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About the Poem

On the surface, Requiescat is a quiet elegy. The title itself is Latin, meaning “may she rest,” from the familiar phrase requiescat in pace—“rest in peace.” The poem speaks softly, almost reverently, as the speaker mourns someone young who has died. The repeated instruction to “tread lightly” and “speak gently” creates a sense of hushed grief, as if the poet fears disturbing the peace of the dead.

What makes the poem so striking is its restraint. Rather than dramatic declarations of sorrow, Wilde offers images: snow, daisies, golden hair turned to rust, the weight of the coffin-board and stone. The poem moves quietly from life to death, from youth and beauty to the stillness of the grave. The final line—“I vex my heart alone, / She is at rest”—captures the loneliness of grief. The dead have found peace; the living must carry the sorrow.

Although the poem appears to mourn a woman, many readers today feel something deeper and more complicated beneath its surface. Wilde often wrote about beauty, youth, and loss with a sensitivity that resonates strongly with queer experience—especially the sense of loving deeply in a world that did not always allow such love to be openly expressed. The line “I vex my heart alone” feels almost like a confession of private grief, the kind of emotion that must remain hidden.

Whether Wilde intended the poem to carry such layers or not, it reflects something universal: the quiet sorrow of loving someone whose presence is now gone. It is a reminder that grief is often most powerful when it is whispered rather than shouted.

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About the Poet

Oscar Wilde was born in 1854 in Dublin, making him one of Ireland’s most celebrated literary figures. His mother, Jane Wilde, was herself a poet and Irish nationalist, and the young Wilde grew up surrounded by literature, politics, and intellectual debate. He later studied at Trinity College Dublin and Oxford before rising to fame in London as a playwright, novelist, and poet.

Today Wilde is remembered not only for his brilliant wit and works such as The Importance of Being Earnest and The Picture of Dorian Gray, but also as one of the most famous queer figures in literary history. In 1895 he was prosecuted and imprisoned for what Victorian England called “gross indecency,” a charge stemming from his relationships with men. The trial and imprisonment destroyed his career and ultimately shortened his life, but they also transformed him into a lasting symbol of both artistic brilliance and the injustice faced by queer people in the past.

As we celebrate Saint Patrick’s Day, Wilde stands as one of Ireland’s most distinctive voices—an Irishman whose sharp intellect, aesthetic sensibility, and emotional depth helped shape modern literature. His life reminds us that Ireland’s cultural legacy includes not only great writers but also queer voices whose stories were once silenced.

Reading Wilde today, especially poems like “Requiescat,” allows us to hear that voice again—soft, lyrical, and deeply human. In its quiet meditation on love and loss, the poem offers something timeless: a reminder that beauty, grief, and memory are part of what connects us all.


Pic of the Day


Monday Again

It’s Monday again, and it was very hard getting up this morning. Isabella finally convinced me to wake up, and I sat on the side of the bed for a few minutes before promptly laying back down and going back to sleep. Isabella was not amused. She made her displeasure quite clear, but I simply put a pillow over my head and continued to ignore her.

Eventually, I sat up again, and this time I managed to get out of bed for good—mostly because Isabella was not going to let me forget that she had not been fed yet. Once her breakfast was served, peace was restored in my apartment.

I’m still not entirely happy about being awake, but I have a busy few days ahead. Work is going to keep me moving today, tomorrow, and Wednesday, so it’s shaping up to be a bit of an exhausting week. Hopefully everything will go smoothly.

In the meantime, the coffee is hot, Isabella is fed, and the day has begun whether I like it or not.

Have a great week, everyone!


Pic of the Day