It's Thursday. You shared delightful stories about the best parts of 2023 so far. Plus, Los Angeles hotel workers pause their strike. |
| Francesco Ciccolella |
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To find some relief in a world that too often feels tumultuous and deeply fractured, I've recently been trying to cultivate more delight in my life. |
This hasn't necessarily meant seeking out more pleasurable experiences. It can simply be reveling in good things that happen daily, no matter how small. The extra step of acknowledging and feeling grateful for a meandering walk, a pint of fresh strawberries or the rediscovery of a once-favorite song has been linked to impressive mental health benefits. |
A friend and I have even begun texting each other about our delights at the end of the day. Telling her the things that made me happy (most recently, exploring a new neighborhood grocery store) and hearing her positive experiences (yesterday, a neighbor's backyard party) is now one of my regular delights, too. Joy begets joy, it seems. |
That brings me to today's newsletter. In June, as we wrapped up the first six months of the year, I asked you about the best thing that had happened to you so far in 2023. You told me about whale sightings, a spectacular 80th birthday party, falling in love, momentous graduations and more. |
All your responses were, well, delightful. |
Here are some of them, lightly edited for clarity. Enjoy. |
"I became a grandmother! I am now fully retired from my teaching career of 35 years and am babysitting my grandson full time. It is a joy to watch him grow and develop. When I was raising my own two children I was balancing motherhood and my work life, so I rushed through those baby years. Now I can sit back and enjoy every little bit of it." — Victoria Evashenk, Cupertino |
"My major win this year: I started volunteering at an animal shelter and ended up adopting a senior bulldog named Knuckles. He has been a bright light in the chaos." — Barbara Soares, Sherman Oaks |
"I have been getting outside and painting the native Matilija poppies this spring. After all the healing rains this year, these giant poppies have been exploding. I found some up in the Santa Monica Mountains, along the L.A. River, by the 134 Highway and even in the cracks of concrete parking lots." — Lois Keller, Studio City |
"I recently went on my third whale-watching tour with a friend, and we saw a humpback breach from the water — a first for me! The whole boat gasped and cheered." — Barton Lynch, San Diego |
"I'm really, really proud of myself and my fellow 2023 college graduates — many of us began college before the pandemic, had our freshman years disrupted and torn apart once Covid started, endured over a year of remote school and an overwhelming sense of disconnect from our campus communities and then made it back to campus to complete our final two years in person. The class of '23 is proof of the commitment, adaptability and enduring hope of today's young adults." — Megan Musolf, Isla Vista |
"My greatest delight so far this year is the unprecedented abundance in my hillside garden after the terrifying atmospheric river rainstorms of winter. Plants that had struggled to survive through years of drought and skimping irrigation have now doubled in size and dance in the breeze in glorious colors." — Carol Campbell, Oakland |
"I got engaged for the first time at 57. We met each other during the height of the pandemic, in August 2020, online, after I did a show on dating in the time of Covid-19. My journalistic curiosity and cynicism led me to find out for myself what was happening to dating during such an unusual time in history." — May Lee, Los Angeles |
"Since Christmas, my partner, Clebia, had been planning a surprise party for my 80th birthday in June. The party itself was not the surprise — it was the guests. I had no clue who was coming. |
First to arrive — a friend from Brazil whom I've known since the '60s, when I was a Peace Corps volunteer. Then a friend from Seattle. The next day, one of my dearest friends from Orange County walked in my door and joined me for breakfast al fresco on the deck. She had sent me ceramics through the mail, so I had assumed she wouldn't come. At the party the next day, two of my besties from high school came, one from Chicago and one from L.A. They brought an album of high school photos they'd created for me. Another couple from Pasadena arrived, and a Peace Corps colleague from the East Bay who struggles with Parkinson's climbed my 40 steps. A friend I've known since 1973 from San Anselmo brought bouquets from her garden, and my next-door neighbor brought me art supplies. |
I had no idea that these beloved people were coming. If my jaw had dropped any farther, there'd be a dent in my floor. I was humbled and astounded that they would travel so far to help me celebrate my 80th year on the planet." — Anne Karin Glass, San Francisco |
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| "You just work on something for so long, and then at one point, it just clicks, and that's kind of what it did for me," Minjee Lee said of how she hits her irons.Matt Rourke/Associated Press |
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- Golf champion: Minjee Lee, the reigning U.S. Women's Open champion, sat down with The New York Times in San Francisco to talk all things golf, before the 78th annual championship tees off at Pebble Beach this week.
- Ultramarathoner: A running prodigy who participates in races beyond the traditional marathon is taking a break to focus on treating his borderline personality disorder.
- Breast cancer activist: Dr. Susan Love, the surgeon, researcher and former U.C.L.A. faculty member who for a time was one of the world's most visible faces in the war on breast cancer, died on Sunday at 75.
- Nxivm: The actress Allison Mack was released from a federal prison on Monday after serving two years of a sentence connected to her role recruiting and grooming women for the cultlike group Nxivm.
- Bad air: Los Angeles was among the places with high air quality indexes after Fourth of July fireworks.
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- Hotel workers' strike: Thousands of Los Angeles hotel workers returned to work on Wednesday after striking for three days. The union has said that more walkouts may come this summer, The Los Angeles Times reports.
- Social Security fraud: A California man admitted to hiding his mother's death from the government for over three decades and collected more than $800,000 in benefits intended for her, prosecutors said.
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- Environmental justice: Facing water scarcity and other environmental woes, residents in Tulare County and other marginalized places say they feel forgotten by their local governments. A new analysis of a 2016 law aims to fix that, KVPR reports.
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- Wages: A few Bay Area cities increased their minimum wages on July 1, a small relief for workers in one of the country's priciest regions, KQED reports.
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| Visitors look over the vineyards at Faust, which has become one of the "coolest places to taste in wine country," according to the author Christina Najjar.Adrian Gaut |
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And before you go, some good news |
Tuesday wasn't just July 4. It was also the close of an incredibly snowy ski season in Tahoe. |
"This has been a sensational year," Maddy Condon, a spokeswoman for Palisades Tahoe, said Tuesday afternoon from the summit. The resort logged 723 inches of snow this year, compared with an average of 400, the news outlet reported. |
"People have been coming from all over the world," Condon said. |
Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Soumya |
Maia Coleman and Johnna Margalotti contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com. |
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