I do not want to criticize nature. It gives much more than it takes. I could not achieve a state of peace, calm, tranquility without it in my life, in copious amounts.
However...
Survival does require a certain amount of fight. Nature commands us to punch out the enemy. Maybe even eat them for breakfast. And nowhere is that more clear than in the animal world.
Last night, strange sounds came to us from the outside. Eerie ones. Aliens, landing in our back yard kind of sounds. Our two farmhouse cats perked up and walked to the door, ready for combat (actually, they only appeared ready for combat: when I cracked the door open, they backed away). Ed went out, saw nothing, came back inside. I went out and the noise resumed. I made my way to its source. There was Pancake, our porch feral cat, in a face off with a giant newcomer. A cat the size of a coyote (or maybe the night shadows added volume to his body..). I took a broom and put it between them. The interloper backed off. Thankfully, no one attacked me, a.k.a. the peace keeping force. I went back inside.
The next morning, as I came down to feed everyone, I glanced out on the porch and there was Pancake. Beaten up, bedraggled. With sores, dirt covering his black and white fur, and a limp. And sadness in his eyes. (One can only hope these animals are not carrying the Avian flu virus. How to protect them? I don't think there is an effective strategy out there at this point.)
I've never been tempted to make friends with Pancake because his presence on the porch makes it difficult to send cats outside (they are a bit fearful of him). Ed, on the other hand, has long petting sessions with him which, I admit, have helped tame the dynamics between all. Today, I could not help it -- I'm out there soothing the poor guy, finally offering him a gentle pet, to let him know that I understand his need to defend what little space he has carved out for himself on this planet. (I then scrub my hands. I mean, he could be exposed.)
Up and down the animal chain, we have fights, vicious fights. And I know that the way things work is that we need food and animals need food and we all cannot be vegetarians, but is there really no humane way to resolve this? Must there be fights?
Walk to the barn? Cold! The slush froze overnight, so slippery, too.


Immediately after, I had a visit with my cardiologist. This is an annual thing and today it's rather amusing, because in the last three years I have worked my way through three cardiologists. I did not reject them -- they all retired! One by one! So now I got assigned to someone very young. And that's good, because the newer generation of docs is happy to talk to you about heart health as measured by, say, your smart watch.
[My heart, by the way, is basically fine, and I see a cardiologist for quirky things that are not likely to kill me.]
One question (out of many) that I had was how much you can push yourself at my age. In spring, I garden hard. With shovel and rake work that lead to blisters on my hands. When I travel, I push myself with walks, hikes, treks that are very long. With or without elevation. Is that good?
Turns out this generation of docs thinks it is: every extra hour beefs up your cardio health (with the proviso that you have to have good heart function as you set out to add all those hours, which, of course, only a doc can assess). I have a season of arduous gardening/walkingbiking before me. It's good to know that I am likely to improve, not damage heart with that effort.
And then Ed and I ate breakfast.

Yes, it was late and yes, we talked about the news of the day (no tariffs, a threat of tariffs, sudden tariffs, imposed tariffs, postponed tariffs, dangled tariffs -- we've had it all, within the first 6 weeks of the new leadership! And for what??). But, too, we noted the sunshine outside and the warmth of the house and how totally lucky we were to be coming into spring. Gently, slowly, surely.
In the afternoon, the kids are here once again.

Sun's out, jackets are discarded (even though it's just a few degrees above freezing). Who am I to protest. Besides, it's a short walk from car to farmhouse.
Evening comes, the kids return home, I turn on the news. Which story sticks out? I'm at a loss to pick a winner. How about the interview with the former Commissioner of Social Security who advises us retirees to start saving cash as the combination of increasing numbers of retirees and crazy staff reductions is very likely to result in a malfunction and at least a temporary interruption of payments. So maybe that one?
I reheat soup and make a salad, keeping an eye out for porch invasions -- raccoons, cats, maybe bobcats. I can only hope that the skunk family will stay away. And please, guys: no more fights. There's nothing to be won here. Nothing at all.
with love...