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2022 Gratitude30

Gratitude Challenge Day 2: Nature

My appreciation for nature began in college. As a student at Binghamton University in upstate New York, my dorm community, Mountainview, backed up to the nature preserve on campus. 

I think it was looking out of our common room window, which faced the preserve, that I first really saw fall foliage colors for how beautiful they are. I mean, I’d noticed the changing colors of leaves growing up, but for some reason never quite registered how wonderful this truly was until I was presented with that dormitory mountain view.

The mountain view from the Mountainview dormitory common room, September, 2006.
Gotta love that digital camera in the window’s reflection!

It was also that Binghamton nature preserve that helped me learn that I enjoyed hiking trails and spending time surrounded by nature. Prior to this, I’d never really considered myself to be a “nature girl”. I had never gone camping (full disclosure: still haven’t), I didn’t enjoy being in close proximity to bugs (still generally don’t), and the thought of walking around in the wilderness just didn’t seem like a fun hobby.

However, during junior year when I first begrudgingly explored some of the nature preserve’s trails with my college boyfriend, I realized what I’d been missing out on. Being surrounded by trees, flora, and fauna brought this overwhelming sense of peace, and completing a trail created this wonderful feeling of accomplishment. Like YES, I just spent time in nature and I freaking LOVED it! 

One of my earliest captures of nature in the Binghamton Nature Preserve, May 2010.
I sincerely hope my photography skills have improved since then.

It wasn’t just woods and trails that captivated my attention as I got older. If you follow me on Instagram, you probably know that I adore going to the beach. As a kid growing up on Long Island, it was common to pile into a car with family or friends on any summer day with towels, beach bags and coolers in tow, and head to Field 5 at Robert Moses beach. There, we would begin the process of locating any square foot of sandy real estate to plop our towels down on, and proceed to spend hours sunbathing and frolicking in the Atlantic until we either got too burnt or too tired.

In my twenties, I began to think more about this summer ritual that was so normal to me. So many people in the United States alone do not live remotely close to a body of water, let alone an ocean. Yet I have the ability to drive 20 minutes north or south and end up at the Long Island Sound, the Great South Bay, or the Atlantic Ocean. That’s pretty damn fortunate, and something that I have become increasingly cognizant of and grateful for as an adult.

The Fire Island Lighthouse, just east of the Robert Moses beaches

There’s still plenty of nature exploring left to do, and I’m here for all of it. 

Now, here’s my challenge to you for this upcoming weekend:

Take at least 15 minutes to appreciate nature in some way. I’m planning to check out some of the trails around the Bear Mountain Bridge in Garrison, NY. Let me know either in the comments below or on Insta what you end up doing, and most importantly…enjoy!

Until next time

Lau

2022 Gratitude30

Gratitude Challenge Day 1: Comfort

Happy November! I hope that you had a healthy dose of sugar yesterday (candy corn, you have my heart), and are ready for Mariah Carey season are ready for taking November ONE DAY AT A TIME! Don’t get me wrong, I’m pumped for all things Christmas, but I’m not ready to let go of harvest season and rush away this month just yet.

That’s part of the reason why I’m taking part in Positively Present’s November Gratitude Challenge for the third year in a row. Each day, creator Dani DiPirro gives a new word for participants to focus on in terms of gratitude. You can join in at any time, and express gratitude in any way you’d like, publicly or privately.

Source: Instagram @positivelypresent

So, let’s get started with Day 1: Comfort!

Seeing “comfort” as the first word of the 2022 Gratitude Challenge initially threw me off. What aspect should I focus on for this first post?

Visions of cuddly blankets and warm autumn scenes danced in my head, as did cozy Christmas montages and summer beach sunsets. All lovely, all comforting, all…so basic to me.

Not that there’s anything wrong with basic, she thinks, as she sips her pumpkin spice latte while scrolling through her Insta feed, which is filled with- you guessed it! – images of cuddly blankets and warm autumn scenes and cozy Christmas montages and summer beach sunsets.

Sigh.

My 19 year old cat was also a strong contender- now that it’s getting colder outside, she graces me with her presence nightly, snuggled on my lap until that God-forsaken 5:35 AM alarm goes off, scaring both of us out of our wits and making her dart out of my bedroom faster than I can hit “snooze.”

The aforementioned princess of the house. Buzz buzz!

But she, too, got the “comfort veto”.

Ultimately, I decided on something that may not seem like it would fall into the comfort category: flying on a plane.

I know, I know…it kinda sounds strange. 

I mean, unless you’re one of the lucky elite consistently flying First Class (teach me your ways), your standard airplane seat isn’t exactly winning the coziness game. In fact, it’s more of a first place contender in the leg-cramping, temperature-varying, inevitably-annoying-human-behind-you-aggressively-assaulting-their-tray-table game.

Flying over the Great Plains en route to Austin, Texas; July 2022

HOWEVER

(you knew there had to be a “however”, right?)

Every time I get on a plane, I feel an overwhelming sense of comfort and relaxation. I’m at home when in flight, knowing that it’s bringing me to my next adventure. The child behind me kicking my seat and the freezing air vent that won’t shut off don’t matter. I’m in my travel element, and there’s nowhere else I’d rather be.

The opportunities I’ve had to travel via plane this year alone are enough for a lifetime of gratitude. As I board my flight to Florida next week, armed with material for that day’s Gratitude Challenge, I’ll be keeping this day in mind, remembering to say an extra “thank you” for yet another flying opportunity.

Until next time,

Lau