Anyone else thinking of getting off social media (I’m looking at you Instagram)??! The more I think about it, the more I don’t love how it makes me feel, among other things. Writing here has been a breath of fresh air and I’d love to pour all my energy into this space. What has it been like for those who’ve taken the plunge and said goodbye to the gram? Especially if you have a Substack page.
You made it, you own it
You always own your intellectual property, mailing list, and subscriber payments. With full editorial control and no gatekeepers, you can do the work you most believe in.
What do IVF and euthanasia have in common? The involve life and death—and big potential profits. Hear about it on this week’s Home Front podcast.
And there’s more, as always: The demographic crisis of American Catholicism, and the problem— THE problem— the Church must confront.
The Home Front
Euthanasia and IVF share death-dealing control issues; why embryo "adoption" is not a good idea; the shocking truth about bishops, money, and Church demographics -- and more!
My dad called me this afternoon to tell me that the field between our houses was covered with robins, that it wasn’t just one robin that arrived as a sign of spring but a whole field full.
What he didn’t say was that birds were my mom’s thing. She would have been the one to notice. He did in her stead and made sure to bring them to my notice, too.
You always own your intellectual property, mailing list, and subscriber payments. With full editorial control and no gatekeepers, you can do the work you most believe in.
I read Romy Holland’s “What Nobody Told Me About Abortion” this morning and couldn’t help but respond. The pro-life movement continues to behave as though society’s acceptance of abortion is a crisis of science. I’ve said it for years: this is not a crisis of science. This is a crisis of faith. And Romy’s abortion account - specifically,…
That one about finding myself after a shopping freeze, why I freeze when Alex gets sick, how to become radiantly beautiful without spending a dime, and the kids' favorite halibut chowder.
I sent this to my sister with a new baby. It’s so valuable to learn early that there are more options in life than the most traditionally accepted. I wish I had felt more comfortable doing what I wanted instead of what was socially expected.
You always own your intellectual property, mailing list, and subscriber payments. With full editorial control and no gatekeepers, you can do the work you most believe in.
The fundamental problem with progressivism — and I say this as someone who was a leftist for my entire life, until maybe five years ago—is that progressives want there to be a different reality than the one that is, and become angered when confronted with reality, and blame whoever is presenting that reality to them for being the perpetrator of whatever unpleasant or imperfect reality presented.
Was walking my kids to school today and wasn’t paying attention to the ground as I crossed the street. Stepped on something squishy going through the intersection. “Nooo… not dog poop,” I thought. Good news: it was not dog poop. Bad news: It was a freshly killed rat and my foot had just squarely squished its guts out onto the street. I jumped up and down for about 2 minutes in full recoil mode. My worst nightmare come true. Baltimore, man.
I did this once on a run and had a full blown panic attack. Chucked the asics gel nimbus I was wearing and don't think I'll ever wear an gel nimbus again based on the memory.
The feeling of it goes straight to the marrow of your bones, I can’t describe it any other way but it’s unshakeable. Me, I just wore my New Balance 990 straight to the office 😂
Fellow running Substackers: What’s exciting you about the sport, the industry, the culture, and/or your own running right now? I’ll start: For as many people that are finding running in some form for the first time and making it a part of their life(style), which is, of course, awesome, I love seeing more and more folks sticking with the sport and training hard into their 40s and beyond, others who are coming back to running—for health, social, and/or competitive reasons—after an extended time …
Runners: Learn to differentiate between easy/moderate/steady/hard/really hard by listening to your body and understanding the signs that it’s giving you. Use a few key data points to identify patterns/correlations but don’t overwhelm yourself with meaningless metrics in the name of precision or optimization. This involves some trial and error, which is 👍🏻👍🏻. We are not programmable robots.