The habit of noticing—paying attention—makes life richer. —Anne Lamott
Was this a year to remember?
Fa la la la la festivities are fading, my friend!
If the days have been slipping through your fingers lately, you’re not imagining it.
We assume time vanishes because life is busy—because the holidays are hectic, the calendar is full, and there is always one more task. But I’ve noticed it’s something quieter and more surprising:
Time speeds up when our days look the same.
Not because we’re tired.
Not because we’re doing too much.
But because we’re moving through our days on autopilot.
We haven’t started the new year and it’s already happened to me…you, too?
When mornings blur together and evenings repeat themselves, our minds stop recording our lives. Also, when we don’t record moments, entire days collapse into a single blur.
The antidote isn’t adding more meaning or more magic.
It’s drawing attention.
The Practice: Mark the start and end of each day
Here’s a gentle invitation—one you can begin today and carry with you through the new year.
Mark the beginning and the end of each day.
Not in a journal.
Not with reflection questions.
Just with awareness.
In the morning, notice one thing that tells you the day has begun:
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the sound of the house waking up
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the first sip of coffee or tea
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the way the light lands on the floor
That’s it. Let that moment count.
At night, before sleep, notice one thing that marks the day’s closing:
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the glow of a lamp
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the quiet after everything is turned off
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the feeling of your body settling into rest
No fixing. No judging. Just noticing.
Why This Works (and Why It Matters Now)
When you mark the edges of your day, you give it a container. And something beautiful happens inside that container: time slows down.
Not because the hours change—but because you do.
Attention tells your nervous system, I am here.
It tells your mind, This moment matters.
Over time, those small moments begin to stack. Days feel fuller. Even ordinary days feel textured instead of flat.
And after the holidays—when time often feels like it’s racing toward the next finish line—this practice becomes a quiet form of reclaiming. A way of saying, This season belongs to me, too.
Make this Moment Matter
You don’t need to do this perfectly.
You don’t need to remember every day.
Just begin today.
And return to it again tomorrow.
And the next.
Let this be a soft through-line from now until December 31st—a way of honoring not just the year you’re finishing, but the life you’re actively living.
If your weeks have been shrinking, even when nothing special happened, consider this your next Sunday Seed:
Slow time not by doing more—
but by noticing where your day begins,
and where it gently ends.
You’re not the only one…I’ll be practicing this myself this week and in the year ahead.
Let’s slow down time together!




