Wednesday, April 15, 2026

More thoughts on sleep

There’s a moment at the end of an evening, you are alone, the room is empty, but a feeling lingers. A chair pushed back, a coat buttoned slowly, someone is passing by your door. Outside, the air is cooler, quieter. And yet inside your head, the noise continues. News headlines, worries about health, finances, family… all swirling just when the world goes still.

That’s where sleep gets lost.

Not because the bed isn’t comfortable. Not because the room isn’t quiet. But because fear has followed you home and slipped under the covers.

The good news? Fear is not a life sentence. It’s a habit. And habits can be retrained, gently, patiently, and sometimes surprisingly quickly. Over the next five posts, I hope to open five small doorways out of fear, and into rest, strength, and even excitement.

 Notice the Beauty That Surrounds You

Margaret stood at her kitchen window one evening, arms folded, the news still echoing in her mind. Everything felt heavy. Too much happening, too much uncertainty. She wasn’t even tired, just worn down.

Then something small caught her eye.

A bird. Nothing remarkable at first glance. But it landed on the fence, tilted its head, and sang, confidently, as if the world wasn’t complicated at all.

Margaret didn’t solve her problems at that moment. But something shifted.

That’s the power of noticing.

Fear narrows your vision. It pulls your attention toward everything that might go wrong. Beauty does the opposite; it widens your view. It reminds you that life is still happening all around you, quietly and faithfully.

And here’s the surprising part: you don’t need an hour. Sometimes you don’t even need five minutes.

Look out the window. Notice the colour of the sky. The way light lands on a table. The sound of leaves, or laughter in another room.

When your mind says, “What if something goes wrong?” gently answer with, “Yes… and look at this.”

This isn’t denial. It’s a balance.

Before bed, try this: name three beautiful things from your day. They don’t have to be grand. A kind word. A warm cup of tea. A moment of stillness.

You are retraining your mind, teaching it that the world is not only made of problems, but also of quiet, steady goodness.

Fear shrinks in the presence of beauty.

And sometimes, that’s all it takes to finally rest.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Ideas on getting a good nights sleep 4

Routines, Relationships, and Real-Life Sleep Savers

Sleep doesn’t live in isolation; it’s shaped by the life around it.

A steady routine is one of the strongest sleep signals you can give your body. Going to bed and waking up at roughly the same time each day builds a rhythm your body begins to trust.

If you live with others,  children, pets, or a partner,  your sleep is connected to theirs. A settled household supports a settled night. Feed the pets, let them out, and guide children into their own routines. It all matters.

If a partner snores, don’t just tolerate it. Sometimes a simple adjustment helps,  but persistent snoring may point to something more serious, like sleep apnea, and deserves medical attention.

Take medications as prescribed, especially those meant for evening use. Skipping them can quietly disrupt your rest and your health.

And here are a few additions that can make a real difference:

Limit screens before bed;  the light from phones and TVs can trick your brain into staying awake.
Get some natural daylight each day;  it helps reset your internal clock.
Keep caffeine for earlier in the day;  it lingers longer than we think.
Try a consistent wind-down ritual,  tea, music, a few quiet minutes,  something your body begins to recognize as “the end of the day.”

A good night’s sleep isn’t one big change;  it’s a collection of small, thoughtful choices.

And the beautiful part? You don’t have to do all of these ideas.

Start with one. Then another.

Because somewhere tonight, someone will walk into their bedroom, take a deep breath, and for the first time in a long while… simply fall asleep.

Monday, April 13, 2026

So You're Thinking About Joining a Senior Centre? Let Me Make a Slightly Biased Case

Full disclosure right up front. I am the President of a local senior centre. So yes, I am biased. Deeply, unapologetically, "I-have-a-parking-spot-with-my-name-on-it" biased (I don’t have a spot, but I do have an area that I can park in, along with everyone else).

But here's the thing. Even if I weren't the President, I'd still be telling you to join one. Because senior centres are one of the best-kept secrets in aging. And I'm about to blow the lid off that secret with the enthusiasm of someone who just discovered the early bird special at a new restaurant.

In my community, we have five senior centres. Five. Each one has about a thousand members, and plenty of seniors belong to two or three. Because why settle for one place to be fabulous when you can be fabulous all over town?

Here's what you need to know. Senior centres were created specifically for people like us. Not "us" as in people who enjoy early bedtimes (though that's also true). "Us" as in people who want to stay active, engaged, and independent. People who refuse to let the world decide we're done contributing. People who still have things to do, places to go, and opinions to share.

There's a reason they call isolation the silent killer. Sitting at home, watching the same reruns, talking to the cat (no judgment, my cat is a great listener), it does something to your brain. Not good things.

Walk into a senior centre, and suddenly you're surrounded by people your age who are doing things. Playing cards. Learning Spanish. Arguing about the best route to the garden centre. Your brain wakes up. It remembers that it likes solving problems, telling stories, and laughing so hard your dentures feel loose.

We have people at our centre who swear they only joined for the coffee and stayed for the chair yoga. Now they're doing line dancing. Not well, mind you. There's a fellow named Harold who moves like a scarecrow in a windstorm. But he's moving. And he's laughing. And his doctor is thrilled.

Exercise is easier when it doesn't feel like exercise. When it's "going to the centre to see what Margaret brought for snacks," and there happens to be a tai chi class before lunch, you end up doing tai chi. It's sneaky. It's effective. It's how we trick ourselves into staying healthy.

Here's where my bias comes in handy. Not all senior centres are the same. You need to find one that fits you. Here's what to look for:

Walk in. Does it feel welcoming? Do people look up and say hello? Or does it feel like you've just interrupted a secret meeting? The right centre will make you feel like you belong before you've even signed up.

Look at what's on offer. If you're a knitter and they only offer powerlifting, that's probably not your place. But also look for variety. A good centre has something for everyone. Card games. Book clubs. Technology workshops. Trips to places you've never been. Guest speakers who actually have something interesting to say.

This is crucial. A good senior centre encourages independence. They don't do things for you. They give you the tools, the space, and the support to do things yourself. Want to start a pickleball group? They'll help you find space. Want to organize a bus trip? They'll help with logistics. They treat you like capable adults who happen to have a few more candles on the birthday cake.

Here's a pro tip. You don't have to pick just one. In my community, lots of seniors belong to multiple centres. They go to one for the exercise classes, another for the social events, and a third because their best friend goes there and they need someone to gossip with over coffee.

Membership is usually ridiculously affordable. We're not talking country club fees here. We're talking "skip one fancy coffee a week, and you've covered for a year" kind of affordable.

Let me paint you a picture of what happens at a good senior centre.

Mornings start with coffee, conversation, and the crossword puzzle. Someone always has the answer to 17 Across. Someone else disagrees. They argue for twenty minutes and then discover they were both wrong.

Midday brings programs. Maybe it's a gentle fitness class. Maybe it's a speaker on fraud prevention (because those scammers keep calling and we need to stay sharp). Maybe it's someone teaching watercolour painting to people who swear they have no artistic talent. (They're wrong. Everyone has some talent. It just takes practice.)

Afternoons are for cards, or billiards, or that group that meets to plan the next big event. There's always a next big event. A dance. A lunch. A trip to the casino that everyone pretends is about the bus ride.

And through it all, some people notice when you're not there. People who call to check on you. People who save you a seat at the table. That's the thing no one tells you about senior centres. They're not just about programs. They're about people who become family.

I could give you statistics about how seniors who stay socially engaged have better cognitive function, lower rates of depression, and actually live longer. But you already know that. What you might not know is how much fun it is to prove the researchers right.

Every time you show up, you're not just having a good time. You're investing in your future. Your future mobility. Your future mental clarity. Your future happiness. It's like a retirement savings plan, but instead of money, you're depositing laughter, friendship, and the occasional questionable potluck casserole.

Look, I know what you're thinking. "I'm not a 'senior centre person.' Those places are for old people."

Friend, look in the mirror. You are old people. And so am I.  At a meeting we were talking about age and I said to the group,"I don't look 80", and everyone laughed and I said,"Well I think I don't look 80." and someone else shouted "You don't look 15." (jPart of the conversation about youth and seniors, which I will not discuss herem but look for it in futture post."  and I responed, "No, I think I look 17". We all laughed, the conversation went on, and it's great.

We've earned the right to do exactly what we want with our time. If what you want is to sit at home, that's your choice. But if what you want is to feel alive, connected, and useful, if you want to laugh until your stomach hurts, learn something new, and be part of a community that actually knows your name, then come find us.

We'll save you a seat. Harold will show you his line dancing moves. Margaret will have snacks. And someone will argue with you about the crossword.

It's not just good for you. It's the best time you'll have all week.

Now get out there and find your centre. Preferably mine. But I'm biased.

P.S. If you visit and don't like it, you can blame me. I'll be the one with the pretend parking spot and the slightly ridiculous enthusiasm about chair yoga.

 

Ideas on how to get a good nights sleep 3

 Calming the Mind,  Where Sleep Really Begins

Most sleepless nights don’t start in the body,  they start in the mind.

If thoughts are racing, don’t wrestle them. Write them down. A simple list for tomorrow, or even a note about a worry, tells your brain, “This is handled,  for now.”

Reading can be a gentle bridge into sleep, as long as the story doesn’t pull you too far in. Choose something calming, something that lets your eyes grow heavy instead of wide.

Relaxation matters. Slow breathing, loosening each muscle, or simply sitting quietly for a few minutes can dissolve the stress of the day.

Sound can help too. Some people sleep better with soft music, others with white noise or the gentle rhythm of water. It’s not about silence,  it’s about comfort.

And if something is weighing on you,  a disagreement, a worry,  try to settle it, or at least set it aside, before bed. The mind loves to replay unfinished business in the dark.