
All day long — whether we are experiencing some of it personally or simply receiving the daily waves of news — we are encountering difficult realities and outcomes. Of course, each of us carries our own particular concerns connected to ourselves, our families, and the people we love.
Meanwhile, many people are struggling with higher gas prices and inflation. Even before these recent shifts, many people were barely making rent. Some of us are parenting. Some of us are caring for aging parents. Some of us are in the sandwich generation, trying to hold both at once. Many of us are asking new questions and rethinking our priorities. And if we’re honest, sometimes those priorities don’t feel as centered as we want them to be, and we find ourselves numbing with all kinds of opportunities for distraction and dopamine.
I guess what I’m wondering in the midst of all this is: Is there anything we can make easier?
Easier for ourselves. Easier for others. Easier for our loved ones and neighbors.
Maybe we feel the weight of needing to fix enormous systems. And yes, we should be working together on those things. But is there anything we can do within our own lives, rhythms, relationships, and possibility-making that might make things just a little easier — or in some instances, a lot easier?
I had a little chuckle with myself recently when I said that I wanted a “season of ease.” Then I started calling it an “easeon,” blending the two words together.
And honestly, I think I want one.
I don’t mean checking out. I don’t mean disengaging. I mean paying attention to what can be softened, simplified, shared, supported, or carried together. What big thing or tiny thing can we make easier on a regular basis?
What if, over a period of time, we practiced this?
What can you make easier for yourself and others? Want to join me?
—Renee Roederer















