As we spend more and more of our time at home, sheltering in place for safety and health, it can easily feel like our personal worlds are shrinking. We feel isolated, claustrophobic, and even bored.
National Public Radio today offered a wonderful way to fight these feelings, publishing “Tips From Someone With 50 Years Of Social Distancing Experience.” The story centers on Billy Barr and his life alone for 50 years in the remote mountains of Colorado. Specifically, Barr offers his tips for living sanely in isolation.
Billy’s number one tip: keep track of something.
So, I encourage you to embrace the idea of keeping track of something during this time of social distancing with this idea: keep track of the nature right outside your door.
Spend time studying your landscape plants, the bark of oak trees, the variations in thickness of your lawn. Turn leaves over and observe the insects living on the shady underside.
Take pictures of what you see and use those pictures to learn about the incredible world right outside your doorstep. Spend time looking through the high-quality photos on insect identification websites, like www.insectidentification.org/insects-by-state-listing.asp.
And if you need a bit more inspiration, there is a great book by David George Haskell called “The Forest Unseen: A Year’s Watch in Nature.” Haskell observed each day for a year what would seem a small, simple 3-foot-by-3-foot patch of forest. By year’s end, though, he had seen so much he that it took a 250-page book to hold his observations. There are also dozens of websites with tips for photographic urban nature.
Observe. Notice. Learn about the world right outside your door. And keep track of what you learn. Make notes, take pictures. Your world may feel a little bigger.