I was recently reminded of how fleeting life can be. I wanted to seize every moment moving forward, so I vowed to try something new and push myself to show up to life every day.
My life had become a routine of commuting to work, sitting in a cubicle, coming home, and repeating the same evening activities almost daily. Do your work days seem to be a blur, and before you know it, you’re waking up on Saturday uninspired? I can relate.
So, I promised myself that I would incorporate new experiences into my day to break up the monotony and force my brain to fire off new circuits to impact my life and health positively. Some days, I wake up and already know what new experience I will have on that particular day and other days, I refer to a bucket list of sorts saved in my phone notes.
Either way, I’m having a blast learning about myself, firing up my brain, and sharing these experiences with others. I’m feeling rejuvenated and showing up for a more delightful life.

You must live in the present, launch yourself on every wave, find your eternity in each moment. Fools stand on their island of opportunities and look toward another land. There is no other land; there is no other life but this.” – Henry David Thoreau
We only get one life, and I plan to live mine to the fullest. This list consists of activities I recently experienced or that I hope to try soon. Not all of these experiences require spending too much money or require a lot of time. Perhaps you would like to stretch the boundaries of your comfort zone and try one or all of them too?
- Go to brunch with your parent at a restaurant you’ve never tried.
- Drive a different route to work.
- Call up a family member you haven’t spoken to in years (or that you only text occasionally) and ask about their day.
- Reach out to a co-worker or friend who works nearby and ask them to meet you for lunch.
- Volunteer on a committee, for your church or kid’s school or a neighborhood association.
- Say yes when a friend invites you to travel to the lake, go camping, or site-seeing outside of town. Better yet, ask them to go with you.
- Eat local. Sip coffee at a local cafe or try the seasonal beer at a brewery.
- Style your hair differently than you did yesterday.
- Change up your fragrance. Wear new perfume or cologne.
- Pull your bicycle out of the garage and take it for a spin around the neighborhood after dinner one evening.
- Visit the library, walk over to a book category that interests you, and close your eyes. Run your hand across the shelf of books until you decide to stop. Remove whatever book your hand landed on and check it out to read it.
- Introduce yourself to a stranger and make small talk.
- Tour a neighborhood in your city that you never explore.
- Smile and say hello to a stranger on the street. You might find you have something in common with them.
- Don’t just sunbathe while at the lake or pool. Run and jump in the deep end with careless abandon. “Cannonball!”
- Desk yoga.
- Paint and sip wine at an art studio.
- Visit a festival and eat at a food truck. Ever tried bbq nachos? Curry chicken?
- Eat your lunch away from your workplace at a park.
- Try an adult coloring book.
- Learn new skills by taking a webinar.
- Grab some friends and sign everyone up to try an escape room challenge.
- Experience a local seasonal activity like riding in a horse-drawn sled at Christmas, making s’mores with the Girl Scouts on National S’mores Day or grab a map and navigate a corn maze at a pumpkin patch.
- Wear colored socks to work.
- Pick up a new hobby that doesn’t involve using technology.
- Create a date jar with ideas for date night fun. Draw a new idea from the jar this weekend.
- Buy yourself flowers.
- Travel anywhere you’ve never been before.
- Throw a party that coincides with a random food holiday.
- Follow a recipe for food you normally buy. No churn vanilla ice cream anyone?
- Visit a tourist attraction or museum in your own city.
- Pick fruit in an orchard.
- Point the car west and just drive.
- Stop and talk to your neighbors when you see them outside.
- Always go to the movie theater? Try a dramatic play production instead at a local theater.
- Lasertag. Paintball. Water balloon fights.
- Grow vegetables or purchase them from a local farmer instead of buying them from a store.
- Walk into a toy store and buy a toy to assemble yourself like a puzzle or box of Legos.
- Try a different way of exercising or use a different exercise machine at the gym.
- Watch wildlife anywhere but in your own neighborhood.
- Take a new car for a test drive.
- Walk your friend’s or neighbor’s dog.
- Host a potluck or food contest amongst friends at your home. Who can make the tastiest beef jerky, mac-n-cheese, or pizza?
- Let a local artist or friend sketch your portrait.
- Get a henna tattoo.
- Celebrate your city or town’s birthday. Take in the sites and buy cupcakes to celebrate.
- Try a Pinterest DIY project.
- Listen to a different radio station all day long.
- Take a tour of the city from the air.
- Do anything counter to your normal routine, and when a friend or family member suggests doing something you’re about to reject, say “yes!”
Have an idea of something I should try? Challenge me by leaving your idea in the comments section below.






That’s it! I’ve been pleasantly surprised that I haven’t needed to reposition the dowel rods or twine even after moving the pots several times. I think you’ll agree that this do-it-yourself method for building a tomato cage is not only inexpensive but incredibly easy to do.





After brushing the rust pieces loose from the metal stand, you can position it on top of old cardboard boxes or newspaper to prepare your space to cover it with Rust Stop indoor/outdoor spray paint.
Using smooth, continuous strokes, spray all sides of the metal stand. Allow it to dry, then turn it upside down and spray the bottom sides as well. If you need to apply more than one coat, allow for several hours of drying time.
This spray, in particular, is fantastic to use because it not only prevents future rust but also paints your metal items just as great as any other brand of spray paint. I am running a few minutes late; my previous meeting is running over.




Mom’s garden house is an extension of her own home. The interior’s neutral colors, off-set by the bright white counter tops and trimmed windows, includes various green hues from decorative additions and dark black metal pieces. Having collected many of the sitabouts over time, she decorates in a style more sophisticated than rustic farmhouse but less stuffy than classic traditional. She has an eclectic sense of design style that is uniquely her own.



Today, she still sees beauty in the colors of delicate flowers and enjoys the harvest of a vegetable or herb garden. Her accepted challenge each year is to learn about the needs of plant placement in her landscape while always attempting to attract birds, bees, and insects.




While I love the outdoors, I’m not a natural gardener. I struggle to keep plants alive. I either over or under water them. Completely forget about them. I never installed the proper drip system. Can a person’s “green thumb” be learned? Maybe I just wrote it off as “mom’s hobby.” I should have really paid more attention when helping her in the yard as a teen. Just last week I called her seeking advice about our sad rose bushes. Before I knew it, I was at her house on my hands and knees pruning her rose bushes while she used wood glue on the stem ends to prevent bores for invading them again. Glue? Who knew!
I’ve have so much to learn from her wisdom about nature, about plants and birds. As I mentioned before, I’m at best a wannabe gardener. In fact, I’ve killed so many house plants over the years that if there is every going to be any hope for me, I’m going to have to spend more time with mom in the garden house. If you’re more like me, you’ll appreciate a post she helped me write last summer
But not every day can be spent gardening. Sometimes the body needs a day of rest between the hours spent digging in unforgiving soil and pulling weeds away from flowers. On these days, she takes time to let her body relax but we all know she is still thinking about her next outdoor project.








Remember that hosting a party doesn’t have to feel like work if you follow a plan and execute it well. Heck, it’s supposed to be fun so get in on the action and enjoy yourself too! What tips do you have for the ultimate shin-dig? Post your must-do ideas in the comments section below. Check out ODL
USE THE ORANGE ESSENCE AS PART OF A CLEANING SOLUTION
REFRESH YOUR GARBAGE DISPOSAL
