Category Archives: animals

Excerpts from this book: A Secret History

photo by Sylvia

“…there were flowers everywhere, roses and carnations and anemones, on his desk, on the table, in the windowsills. The roses were especially fragrant; their smell hung rich and heavy in the air…Breathing deep, I felt intoxicated. Everywhere I looked was something beautiful—Oriental rugs, porcelains, tiny paintings like jewels—a dazzle of fractured color that struck me as if I had stepped into one of those Byzantine churches…”

photo by Sylvia

“Death is the mother of beauty,” said Henry.

“And what is beauty?”

“Terror.”

photo by Sylvia

“One likes to think, there’s something in it, that old platitude amor vincit omnia. But if I’ve learned one thing, in my short sad life, it is that that particular platitude is a lie. Love doesn’t conquer everything. And whoever thinks it does, is a fool.”


All excerpts from the book, The Secret History by Donna Tartt, 1992

photo by Sylvia

The Feeling of Spring

photo by Sylvia (some daffodils were harmed in the taking of this photo, but no dogs were harmed as the potentially poisonous daffodils were not ingested)

Spring arrives and the woods are damp, rich, earthy. You can smell it and almost taste it and certainly feel it—hopefulness.

photo by Sylvia
photo by Sylvia
photo by Sylvia

Winter Ingredients for a Contented Life

photo by Sylvia (Percy, my daughter’s dog at 2 months)

good health—the positive management of your health

enough food—bowls of berries and platters of cheese, black beans, red tomatoes and good chocolate 

the love of another person, or of an animal

safety—a warm home without fear

steaming cups of coffee and strong, black tea

good books on frigid mornings

candles that smell like balsam, like cherry pipe tobacco, like spicy cinnamon

old photos 

tattered quilts

pine cones and dried flowers in vases

love letters tucked away with ribbons

crunchy walks in the snow

a good type of tired—from puttering in the house, from doing good for others, from shoveling someone’s walkway, from reading an entire book of poems in one night

freedom to get things wrong and freedom to get things right every once in a while

photo by Sylvia
photo by Sylvia (a winter sunset to the right of my back yard with deer)
photo by Sylvia (Percy, my daughter’s dog today at 4 months)

Excerpt from this book: The Wisdom of Wolves

In the end, the only virtue that wolves need from us is honesty—regarding them, regarding us, and regarding our shared past. Only by seeing them as they are, as neither demon nor deity but as creatures worthy of our admiration, will we find tolerance with our own human character.

Excerpt from the book: The Wisdom of Wolves, Lessons from the Sawtooth Pack by Jim & Jamie Dutcher, 2018

instagram.com/wolfnevemama/