
Resources & Inspiration
My life is steeped in inspiration - wise women, island living, backyard nature, poetry, books, blogs, news stories - to name only a few. So many things fill me with wonder, inspire my thinking and writing, and guide my life as a human being.
Here are just a few.
Art & Literature Online
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The Marginalian
Maria Popova is the brilliant one-woman labor of love who writes The Marginalian. In her words, “The Marginalian is a record of my reading and reckoning with our search for meaning: sometimes through science and philosophy, sometimes through poetry and children’s books, always through the lens of wonder”.
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Psyche
Psyche, a free digital magazine, is dedicated to helping you know your self and live well. Psyche takes a multidisciplinary approach, covering not only psychology, but also philosophy, history, anthropology and more. The magazine combines practical knowledge that helps people to navigate their everyday lives with the voices of people reflecting on their own journeys in life.
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Reflections of Life
Reflections of Life reminds me that I am not alone. Justine and Michael use their passion for filmmaking and their love of storytelling, to remind us that we are all human, and inside our hearts and minds, we all face similar challenges. They remind us that we have so much to learn from each other, and our connections run much deeper and stronger than we think.
Reading
Snippets of Wisdom
Why do I read and collect quotes? They offer new insights and different perspectives. They provide a context for feelings deep inside of me that I find difficult put into words. They introduce me to new ideas, concepts, or ways of being. They reveal emotions. They help me realize I am not alone.
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May Sarton. As We Are Now.
The problem is that old age is not interesting until one gets there, a foreign country with an unknown language to the young, and even the middle-aged.
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Joan Chittister. The Gift of Years.
The burden of regret is that, unless we come to understand the value of the choices we made in the past, we may fail to see the gifts they have brought us. The blessing of regret is clear — it brings us, if we are willing to face it head on, to the point of being present to this new time of life in an entirely new way. It urges us on to continue becoming.
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Florida Scott-Maxwell. The Measure of Your Days.
You need only claim the events of your life to make yourself yours. When you truly possess all you have been and done…you are fierce with reality.
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Margaret Mead
There is no more creative force in the world than a menopausal woman with zest.
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Mary Oliver. What Can I Say.
The song you heard singing as a child is singing still.
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Jean Kwok. Searching for Sylvie Lee.
The years had begun to reveal the truth of her face, as they did to all of us.
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Anne Lamott. On Aging.
I have an organic life finally, not the one people imagined for me or tried to get me to have or the life someone else might celebrate as a successful one. I have the life I dreamed of. I have become the woman I hardly dared imagine I could be.
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Grace Paley
Perhaps the greatest perplexity of aging is how to fill with gentleness the void between who we feel we are on the inside and who our culture tells us is staring back from that mirror.
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Mary Pipher. The Joy of Being A Woman in Her Seventies.
There is a sweetness to 50-year-old friendships that can’t be described in language…Lucky women are connected to a rich web of women friends.
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Marilyn French
I am no longer driven. I no longer imagine that I can do much to help bring about the millennium of the humane ideal, or that I can change anything at all. I have relinquished my painful freight. I am free. I am permitted to enjoy myself. I have noticed that my laugh has changed, is more spontaneous, deeper.
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May Sarton. At Seventy: A Journal.
One thing is certain, and I have always known it—the joys of my life have nothing to do with age. They do not change. Flowers, the morning and evening light, music, poetry, silence, the goldfinches darting about…
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Parker J.Palmer. On the Brink of Everything.
Welcome to the brink of everything. It takes a lifetime to get here, but the stunning view of past, present, and future—and the bracing breeze in your face—make it worth the trip.
The Season of Becoming
Later life doesn’t arrive with a road map — only questions, memories, and a quiet sense that more is still possible. Since creating Ageless Possibilities, I’ve come to see this season not as an ending, but as a new beginning: a time to choose, to grow, and to shape a life that feels truly my own. In these pages, I share five key insights from my past six years, along with snippets of wisdom, inspiring quotes, and thoughtful questions to help you reflect, explore, and chart your own path forward.