Home Again
After over 350 consecutive “Home Again” columns, I still feel privileged—and amazed—that my words show up on page four of The Edmonds Beacon every week, and that local residents read those words. It feels good to hit “Send” and know that I’ve completed another column, and it is on its way to my editor.
“Home Again” is based on memories, hopes, regrets, gratitude, interests and my observations of the town and residents of Edmonds. After being away for many years, I came home again, knowing myself better than I used to, knowing other people better, too.
I know that kindness wins the day, generosity is noble, and letting somebody go ahead of you in line at the market will make you feel good.
I know that acting petty, resentful or mean-spirited is like taking poison and hoping the other guy dies.
As long as little kids fly kites on the beach, my high school classmates meet monthly for lunch, the Dogs of Edmonds greet me on my walks, the holidays overwhelm hearts with joy and sorrow, and grandparents envision their own grandchildren when they read about mine, I won’t run out of topics, serious or light-hearted.
I can always write about things I like, which include train whistles, flannel sheets, sourdough bread, the color blue, zebras, rainy nights, baskets, Asian pears, down pillows, beach walks, sugar, red geraniums, cats, public libraries, Foss tugs, cheesecake, old cottages, my Writing Sisters…the list goes on.
As a columnist, clearly, I can write about almost anything I want. I like to write about something people already know or feel but perhaps haven’t thought about lately. I like to show people the ordinary, leading them to recognize that the ordinary deserves status equal to the spectacular.
I want to remind readers that they’d better grab whatever opportunity comes along today, because today is what there is, and I want them to believe that they have more inner strength than ever they could imagine.
For me, the point of being a columnist is to get people to feel something—to question, relate, imagine or remember. Writing “Home Again” every week for The Beacon offers me that opportunity.
Additional Column Posts (25 - 44 of 216) Prev Page | Next Page
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An almost perfect Thanksgiving
By Joanne Peterson - Nov 29Sometimes privilege heaps upon privilege, and I can scarcely believe my good fortune. It’s a lasting treat to savor lovely memories of a recent ...
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The cost of ‘work done’
By Joanne Peterson - Nov 15I leafed through a year-old copy of “O, The Oprah Magazine” recently and noticed an appalling statistic. It had to do with spending money, and it ...
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O politics
By Joanne Peterson - Nov 01No matter what party or which candidates one favors (or abhors), it seems everyone will be glad when the election is over--when the warped and ...
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A fine week on Lopez
By Joanne Peterson - Oct 18By the time you read this, I’ll be home from Lopez Island. An October week on an island is a grand respite from routine. And, as I think is true ...
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2 of the best
By Joanne Peterson - Oct 04Preoccupied with moving from one condo into another, I packed away my calendar and totally forgot to write last week about my Writing Sister ...
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The job of living life as it comes
Sep 20The late Charles Schultz amused Americans for years with his “Peanuts” characters. He did a lot of other good things, too, but I recently ran ...
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Appreciating Edmonds art
By Joanne Peterson - Sep 06Last weekend, I attended the opening night performance of “The Sugar Bean Sisters,” at The Phoenix Theatre in Firdale Village. The play, written ...
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Soft spoken teaching
By Joanne Peterson - Aug 23My grandson Adam was three in April and now is of an age to be helpful when I’m spending time with him and with his little sister Abby, who is 18 ...
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Could it have been any better?
By Joanne Peterson - Aug 09If I were to wish for the perfect Edmonds summer day, I might wish for a minus tide and four hours at the beach with a novel, a notebook and ...
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Kids on a plane
By Joanne Peterson - Jul 26My son-in-law Eric recently rode in the Seattle-to-Portland bicycle event, spending seven hours on his bike for each of two days, sleeping in his ...
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Shop Locally!
By Joanne Peterson - Nov 20Thanksgiving comes pre-loaded with complexities. Most of them are a pleasure. There’s the decision about where to have dinner, who’s fixing what ...
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Of those who have served
By Joanne Peterson - Nov 08I’ve been thinking a lot lately about patriotism—prompted partly by the elections, I suppose. And next comes Veterans’ Day, a day filled with ...
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Change for the better… or not
By Joanne Peterson - Oct 25I recently watched a Discovery channel program featuring several generations of a family living self-sufficiently in a remote Alaska location ...
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The joys of island living
By Joanne Peterson - Oct 11I am on Lopez Island, far removed from the cares of everyday life. Within the first 24 hours of this trip, I quite forgot the hassles of moving ...
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Big decisions on small things
By Joanne Peterson - Sep 27I’ve been moving. Not across the country or across the state or out of Edmonds – which I cannot imagine doing. Why would anyone move out of ...
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Remembering Al Holte
By Joanne Peterson - Sep 13(My friend Al Holte died in early September. He was a dear man of great integrity, kindness and intelligence. Al was a friend of my father’s, ...
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Pain and blessings
By Joanne Peterson - Aug 30Many people I know have significant problems—health, money, family. I cannot help but notice how seldom they complain. They are inclined to say ...
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Olympic fever, and missing Marvin
By Joanne Peterson - Aug 16Did you spend countless hours and days in London attending the Olympic Games? I did, at least in spirit. Winter Olympics thrill me, with skating ...
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The dog days of August
By Joanne Peterson - Aug 02July edges into August, bringing warm summer days, multi-colored sunsets and perfect pale half-moons. It’s a grand time of year to live in the ...
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Do it before it’s too late
By Joanne Peterson - Jul 19First, I’ll tell you what should have happened. I should have kept in touch with Stormee, my college roommate, for all the years between college ...
