Ten Things of Thankful

There are workmen on scaffolding next door, fitting replacement windows. They’ve been at it all week. One morning, I asked to borrow their van so I could go to the shops — it was blocking my driveway. They’ve parked elsewhere since. I am thankful.

1. Thankful for workmen who appreciate passive-aggressive humour, and decide it’s unwise to park their vans across my driveway.

workmen's vans parked in front of my house

2. Thankful for anthropomorphic humour — like this pigeon lifting a wing to wash its armpits during a torrential rainstorm.

pigeon on the fence rinsing down in the rain

3. Always thankful for Six Sentence Stories and the joy of brainstorming a mindmap Liturgy that I write to create the Six.

Next week, Brigid slips an Inserted Note into her diary pages. What will she reveal!

ai image of 1800's France farmers' market

4. I used to bake a loaf of bread once a week, but stopped after a bakery opened in the village; their loaves are as good as mine, and now bread is on the table in 10-minutes rather than 24-hours (proofing/rising time). However, I decided to bake a sourdough loaf the other day. Glad I did. Thankful my starter was still alive.

homemade sourdough bread

5. Thankful for the ability to mentally disconnect. I have lots of ways to do that, but today … folding stuff. It’s a Virgo thing, I’m told. It’s calming. Restorative. It invokes attitude: I-don’t-give-a-damn about Excel spreadsheets.

folded towels and cleaning clothes

6. Thankful that the rain held-off long enough for the clothes to dry on the clothesline. Also thankful that the wind knocked all the wrinkles out of the shirts.

clothes dry on the line

7. Weather of all sorts, but particularly when clouds rise and grow, and then turn thunderous. Bought Friday’s fish today — sat with a cup of coffee looking eastward across the sea, and listening to the waves.

Thankful for a moment alone with my thoughts.

view from Eastbourne Sussex

8. Very thankful that I have a lovely wooded area with a creek just a few steps away from home. I’ve changed my walking route to one that has a mobile network coverage. My favourite forest is a ‘dead zone’ with no coverage at all.

footpath through the woods near my house

9. Thankful that the old fashioned* climbing rose at the front of the house is doing so well. Out of the direct south wind and late afternoon sun, it seems very happy and healthy in this spot.

*An old-fashioned rose (officially called a Heritage Rose) is strictly defined as any rose variety that existed before 1867.

old fashioned roses in front of the house

10. Thankful that the week ended well today by seeing a graceful cormorant on the beach.

a cormorant on the beach

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Welcome to TToT (Ten Things of Thankful) blog hop! Join bloggers from all over the world as we come together to share those things that we are thankful for. Ten is in the name, but no one is counting; feel free to link up no matter how many (or few) you can list. Make sure to go read and comment on the posts, too. The TToT has always been big on making this a friendly community, and getting to know each other through posts and comments is a huge part of that. We’re thankful for you!

Thanks also to those who help get the word out about this blog hop, especially our Board of Co-Hostinae: MimiKristiLisaDyanne, Denise,  Misky,  cai , Knit Cat  and. Andrew

©Misky 2006-2026.


25 responses to “Ten Things of Thankful”

    1. Thank you, Brian. Happy Saturday!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Happy Saturday Misky 👋🏼 It’s actually Sunday now 😁

        Liked by 1 person

  1. An excellent list, Misky! And oh… that great song (I’m grinning).

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    1. Thank you! I was grinning also when I added it to the post. Such good fun!

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Must be pretty cold in there by now!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Scaffolding is still there, but I think they’re all finished now.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Drat! You’ll need to find fresh entertainment next week.

        Liked by 1 person

  3. I do not think I have ever seen that many cloths and tea towels in one person’s possession- let alone in one drawer! hehehe

    Liked by 1 person

    1. ☺️ I usually use a couple of them each day. I like a clean one when I’m drying something.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. I like how that pigeon took a bath. Beautiful loaf of bread!

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Line dried clothes are the best. I truly enjoyed your list and can almost smell the bread.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. So true, and my daughter-in-law has never dried clothes outdoors, and when my grandchildren first encountered the scent of fresh air in sheets, they didn’t like it because it didn’t smell like flowers. 😂

      Like

  6. Renata Hartsong avatar
    Renata Hartsong

    Love your lists and gorgeous photos…and I’d kill for some of your sourdough bread. Odd point: “Bertrand” was my birth surname.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Pity that you don’t live nearby because I always make two 500g loaves. Freeze one — eat one. And what a coincidence in names, eh?

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Renata Hartsong avatar
        Renata Hartsong

        I could live on good bread alone, so I’d be buying your weekly extra at any price. And yes, interesting coincidence in name.

        Liked by 1 person

  7. NO (won’ insert the expletive on the tip of my tongue as I do not typically swear so, in public, lol) WAY!!! In my search last evening for a music vid for my Six, I listened to this same one you have used. Wavy, or is that undulating? lines move across my screen 😆

    I laughed out loud at your intro – can you borrow their van. Excellent!

    #2 – a fantastic photo, I love it! #7 and #10 hit hard. I am missing proximity to beach and salt air. Wait! #9 – the roses are beautiful.

    Have a wonderful week, Misky.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. How funny, and what a small world, that we both latched on to the same song. 😂

      Thank you, and wishing you the same, Denise.

      Liked by 1 person

  8. loved your stratagem*

    fun TToT ‘specially the Grat involving the sea

    *of course I looked up ‘strategies’ fave was ‘Deceive the heavens to cross the ocean’ no, really!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’ve always liked ‘a hare hidden amongst a thousand sheep’ — and those sheep don’t even know he’s there.

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  9. Grat 4 – I have discovered a great Polish bakery in Bradford and they make a great seeded, sourdough Rye bread which will be a regular each week now… I am going to provide a special Excel sheet to them that both works out the price of recipes, but also calculates the nutritional values…

    Have a great week Marilyn…

    Liked by 1 person

    1. It’s very good for you. Will you use the Atwater system 4-4-9-7 Rule?

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  10. You have just supplied the missing link in my knowledge, Marilyn. I always knew that simple burning in a calorimeter was different from biological burning, and whilst with all other nutritional elements, I use the sum of the parts to calculate, I was using a government website to calculate the calories, so I just did a query to see if thet use the Atwater calculation and they do! So I maybe able to integrate it into my spreadsheet and cut out the external stage – so thanks for that! Where did YOU learn about such abstruse things, Marilyn?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Excellent! Glad to hear it’ll work for you. As to your question: OU Level 2 nutrition certificate after Peder was diagnosed with diabetes. The doctor gave him an A4 double sided print-off of general information, mostly pertaining to weight loss, which is certainly not applicable to Peder. He’s always been slim. So I decided to learn what needed to be done to keep him healthy and with me into his old age. I took onboard what I needed to know, but found the maths involved a challenge. That’s where Atwater came in.

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Your comments are always welcome