Presence

Grace at the Gas Station

March 14, 2026

Beautiful sunset. Highlight of my day the other day, along with getting to the gas station at just the right time.

In a Time of Spiking Pump Prices and War

I got gas yesterday at my favorite gas station, which is just up the street from where I work. The national news is reporting that the average price of gas in the country is up to a whopping $3.68 a gallon, rising more than twenty percent in some areas because of the war that the president recently started with Iran.

Those of us who live in California are slightly amused by the horror that people in other states feel when gas goes up to these levels, since we’ve been paying more than $4.00 a gallon for what seems like forever. Recently, in the days before the war started, I was paying $4.39 a gallon for gas and didn’t think much about it—the higher cost of fuel here is a price I’m willing to pay for living in one of the most beautiful places on the planet. Also, some of the money we pay for gas is due to strict regulations that help protect the environment, which is something I support.

After the bombing started, the price of gas quickly rose $0.20 a gallon, up to $4.59, which I paid when I filled up last week. Then, since I knew I had a longer drive soon to do massages for some quilting friends in the Napa area, I stopped and topped off my tank Wednesday afternoon. By then, the price had risen to $4.79 a gallon. Which brings us to yesterday, when I needed to fill up my tank again after getting home from my road trip. The price was $4.99 a gallon.

I didn’t think much about the fact that a big tanker truck was there, filling up the station’s underground pumps. I pulled in next to it, went into the store, gave the clerk cash (because the thing I love best about this station is that you get the discounted rate for both cash and debit card transactions—I often use my debit card, but today I had a little cash), and went outside to fill my car. I have to say that I was grateful that this gas station, which doubles as a convenience market and liquor store, also traditionally has the best gasoline prices in the area. On the freeway on my way to work that morning, I noticed that the stations along the highway were already pricing their gas above $5.00 a gallon. To find a station that was at $4.99? It felt like a win.

Another win? I had a little change coming back after finishing my fill-up. I went back into the store to get my money, was first in line, and was greeted by the apologetic clerk, who said they had to restart the cash register system and that it would take a minute or so to get my change. Continue Reading…

Presence, Success

Maybe I Do Have a Little Problem with My Phone

March 7, 2026

Definitely seems too early to see a California poppy blooming. Still, it’s a beautiful reminder that spring is on the way.

Sometimes it is helpful to have someone remind you of something you already know.

Mel Robbins’ podcast is jam-packed with episodes that promise to significantly improve my life. Recent podcast topics included the “Ultimate Skincare Routine for Amazing Skin,” “How to Design Your Life in One Hour,” and a conversation with a cybersecurity expert that could “save you thousands of dollars.” Another recent podcast told me that I should try to have 30 grams of protein first thing in the morning. But a few years back, I listened to one of her experts talk about the benefits of intermittent fasting. So is it still good to eat thirty grams of protein in the morning if you are intermittent fasting and don’t usually eat breakfast? Sometimes all the advice from different directions is a little confusing.

But I listened to a Mel Robbins podcast this week that helped me more than it probably should have, because the tips provided were basically common sense. Apparently, it was a week when I needed someone to go through basic things with me again. Robbins talked for an hour about small choices (she called them “micro choices”) we make every day that can make a “surprisingly huge difference” in how our days go.

Let me summarize the four micro choices for you so you don’t need to listen to the podcast: she encourages us to decide first thing in the morning if we’re going to have a good day or a bad day, because “if you’re not choosing one, you’re choosing the other.” She tells us to make wise decisions about our food intake and asks if we’re going to run our days on “fuel or fumes”?; she exhorts us to eat real healthy foods, because relying on caffeine and donuts is not ideal. In the evening, when the day’s work is through, she says that we need to make a choice about whether we will “scroll or sleep.” You can guess which option is the preferred one, since sleep is such an important part of a healthy life and doom-scrolling on social media late into the night is not.

All of that made sense to me, nothing earth-shattering. But the first small choice she talked about was the one that grabbed me. I put it into practice this week, and she was right. It was a small choice that made a huge difference. And it couldn’t have been simpler: first thing in the morning, after you wake up, consciously choose what you reach for.

In other words, for me: do not reach for my phone. Leave it on the charger. Grab it only after I’ve done some of the things that I say are most important to me, like writing with my online writing group, writing in my journal, or sitting for quiet meditation. Continue Reading…