Sunday, May 17, 2026

The Day My Neighbour Turned His Garden Into a Spa (and Made Me Look Lazy)

It started, as many good ideas do, with my next door neighbour.

“A great way to spice up your garden,” he told me, “is to add a fountain.”

Now, this is the same neighbour who once told me that “a little pruning” would take ten minutes and ended up requiring three tools, two bandages, and a strong cup of coffee. As always, I approached his advice with… cautious optimism.

But then he invited me over.

There he was, sitting on a bench in his backyard, book in hand, looking like he’d just stepped out of a retirement brochure. And beside him? A gently bubbling fountain. Not flashy, not over-the-top, just enough water flowing to make the whole place feel calm, peaceful… almost suspiciously serene.

“Listen to that,” he said.

I did.

And I’ll admit it; he had a point.

There’s something about the sound of water that makes you slow down. Your shoulders drop a little. Your mind quiets. Even if you’re not into meditation, yoga, or anything that involves sitting cross-legged and saying “mmm,” the effect sneaks up on you.

It’s like your garden suddenly whispers, “Relax… the weeds can wait.”

Now, I always assumed adding a fountain was one of those projects best left to professionals with large trucks and even larger invoices. But my brother assured me it wasn’t nearly as complicated, or expensive as I thought.

“Minimal maintenance,” he said confidently.

Which, in gardening terms, usually means “you’ll only have to worry about it occasionally instead of constantly.”

Still, I was intrigued.

So, like any sensible person, I started with the most important step: imagining how good it would look without actually doing anything yet.

Eventually, reality caught up, and I had to think about choosing a fountain.

This, it turns out, is where things can go sideways.

You can’t just pick any fountain and plunk it down in your garden like an afterthought. It has to fit. Blend in. Look like it belongs there, like it’s been quietly bubbling away for years, not something you wrestled out of a box last Saturday afternoon.

My neighbour, who knows his limitations, solved this brilliantly. He took a picture of his garden to the store.

Smart man.

Armed with that photo, he managed to find a rock-style fountain that looked like it had been custom-designed for his space. It didn’t scream for attention. It just… worked.

Of course, no good project goes completely smoothly.

His garden, as it turns out, is not conveniently located next to a power outlet. A small detail, but an important one when your fountain depends on electricity to do its “fountain-like” things.

This is where I expected the story to end in frustration.

Instead, he talked to someone at a local garden center, who introduced him to the concept of a buryable extension cord. Yes, apparently this is a thing.

There he was, a few hours later, digging a trench across his yard like a man on a quiet mission. Not exactly glamorous, but effective. The cord disappeared underground, the fountain came to life, and the garden remained blissfully free of anything that looked like a tripping hazard.

Problem solved.

And the result?

Well, let’s just say his garden now has… presence.

It’s no longer just a place with plants. It’s a place you go to sit, think, read, or enjoy a moment without the noise of everything else. The fountain doesn’t dominate the space; it completes it.

Meanwhile, back at my place, I found myself looking at my own garden and thinking, “You know… we could use a little bubbling confidence over here.”

Because that’s really what a fountain adds.

Not just sound. Not just movement.

It adds a feeling.

It turns a garden from “that area where things grow” into “that place where I actually want to spend time.”

If you’ve been thinking about trying something new, something that adds a bit of character, a bit of calm, and maybe even a bit of quiet pride when someone visits, consider a fountain.

Start simple. Pick something that fits your space. Don’t be afraid to ask for advice (or borrow a good idea from a sibling who’s already done the trial and error).

And if it involves a little digging along the way, well… think of it as part of the story you’ll tell later.

Preferably while sitting beside your very own fountain, book in hand, wondering why you didn’t do it sooner.


Saturday, May 16, 2026

Confessions of a Reluctant Gardener: How I Accidentally Became a Container Gardener

 Let me start with a confession.

I do not have a green thumb.

I have what I like to call a “lightly tinted beige thumb”, the kind that has good intentions but a questionable track record. Plants have entered my care full of hope… and quietly exited without much ceremony.

So, when we decided last year to redo the backyard, new artificial turf, tidy, low-maintenance, the kind of yard that says, “We have our lives together”, I thought I was finally free from gardening expectations.

No more digging. No more weeding. No more apologizing to plants.

And then my wife said, “Why don’t we try container gardening?”

Now, I’ll admit, I was skeptical. This sounded like gardening… just in smaller, more portable ways to fail.

But something about it made sense. We didn’t have space for a full garden anymore, but we did have a patio and a few spots that looked like they were waiting for something green to happen.

So, we started small. A few pots. A couple of hanging baskets. Nothing too ambitious, no need to overwhelm the beige thumb.

And here’s what surprised me.

It worked.

Not perfectly, mind you. There were still “learning experiences”, which is what I now call plants that didn’t make it. But overall, something shifted. Container gardening felt… manageable. Almost forgiving.

For one thing, I discovered that if a plant didn’t look quite right where it was, I didn’t have to live with it. I could just pick it up and move it.

Imagine that.

After years of thinking gardening meant commitment, dig once, regret forever, I suddenly had options. If the sun was too strong, I moved the pot. If guests were coming over and I wanted things to look impressive, I rearranged everything like I was staging a photo shoot.

“Ah yes,” I’d say casually, “we like to keep things flexible.”

What I really meant was: this used to be over there five minutes ago.

Then I stumbled into something called “vertical gardening,” which sounds very technical but is really just a clever way of saying, “Use the space above your head because you’ve run out of room.”

I hung a few baskets. I even found an old step ladder, gave it a coat of paint, and turned it into what I now refer to as my “plant display unit.” Suddenly, my modest collection of plants looked like a carefully designed cascade of colour.

In reality, it was a strategic effort to keep them all alive in places where I could actually see them.

Because here’s the truth: if I can’t see a plant, I forget it exists.

And if I forget it exists… well, let’s just say the beige thumb strikes again.

Now, I won’t sugarcoat it. Container gardening does require a bit more attention. You can’t just rely on rain and good luck. You actually have to water the plants.

Regularly.

This came as a surprise.

At first, I overcompensated. I watered everything like I was trying to break a drought single-handedly. Turns out, plants don’t appreciate being flooded any more than they enjoy being ignored.

So now I’ve found a rhythm. A quick check in the morning, a little water here, a little less there. It’s less about perfection and more about paying attention, which, I’ve discovered, is a useful life skill beyond gardening.

Choosing the pots turned out to be another adventure.

I went in thinking I’d just grab a few containers and be done with it. Instead, I found myself standing in the aisle, debating style, size, and whether my plants were more “modern minimalist” or “rustic charm.”

In the end, I went with containers that looked like they belonged together, but not identical. Kind of like a group of friends who all get along but have their own personalities.

I also learned something important: the size of the pot matters.

A lot.

Put a plant in a small pot, and it stays… modest. Give it more room, and suddenly it has ambitions. This, I realized, is one of the few times in life where you actually get to control how big something grows.

For someone with my gardening history, which felt like a dangerous amount of power.

So, I started paying attention and matching plants to pots. Doing a bit of research, nothing too intense, just enough to stay one step ahead of disaster.

And slowly, something unexpected happened.

I started enjoying it.

Not because everything was perfect, it wasn’t. But because it was flexible. Forgiving. Adaptable.

A bit like life, really.
If you’re like me, someone who has hesitated to try gardening because you’re convinced you’ll end up with a collection of empty pots and quiet regret, let me encourage you.

Start small.

Pick a few plants you like. Get some containers that make you smile. Move them around until it feels right. Water them (but not too much, that lesson comes quickly).

And most importantly, keep your sense of humour.

Because if a plant doesn’t make it, you haven’t failed.

You’ve just made room for the next one.

And who knows?

You might discover that your thumb isn’t beige after all.

It might just be… a work in progress.

Friday, May 15, 2026

The Day My Friend Won the Wrong Lottery (and Why He’s Still Winning Anyway)

 There’s a certain kind of confidence you carry through life without even noticing.

It shows up when you walk into a room and don’t think twice about where to sit. When you take the stairs without checking the handrail. When your body quietly cooperates with whatever your brain suggests.

For most of us, that confidence sticks around for decades.

Until one day… it doesn’t.

I was reminded of that recently while sitting with a group of friends, coffee in hand, solving the world’s problems the way retirees do, comfortably and without deadlines.

One of the guys, a fellow who had spent most of his life in motion, told us about his “winning moment.”

A few years ago, his hip failed him. Not gradually, not politely, just packed up and left the job. Surgery followed. Now, doctors will tell you these things are routine. Very safe. The odds of complications? About one in a hundred.

He paused, took a sip of coffee, and smiled.

“I won,” he said.

Unfortunately, not the kind of lottery anyone wants.

The replacement didn’t work. He’s now waiting for a second surgery, moving with a cane, managing pain, and adjusting to a body that no longer follows instructions as reliably as it once did.

He also admitted something else.

“It was the first time I’d been in a hospital in over fifty years,” he said. “Scared the life out of me.”

Now here’s where the story could have gone one way, the way we’ve all been trained to expect.

This is the point where someone says, “Well, that’s ageing. Nothing you can do.”

But that’s not what happened.

Instead, he looked around the table and said, “I’ve been lucky. I’ve seen people worse off than me. I guess it’s my turn. I’ll deal with it.”

And then, almost in the same breath, he started talking about how quickly he expects to recover after the next surgery.

That’s the part that caught my attention.

Because it lines up almost perfectly with what researchers have been discovering.

For years, the dominant story about ageing has been simple: we peak, we plateau, and then we decline. Slowly, steadily, inevitably.

It’s a neat story. Easy to understand. Completely wrong, or at least, incomplete.

A large study following more than 11,000 adults over the age of 65 decided to look at things differently. Instead of averaging everyone together, which tends to smooth out the interesting parts, they tracked individual journeys.

What they found was surprising.

Nearly 45% of participants improved in either cognitive function, physical ability, or both over time.

Let me say that again, because it goes against everything we’ve been told.

They got better.

Not younger. Not magically immune to ageing. But better.

Around a third improved their brain performance. A significant number were walking faster years later than when they started.

And here’s the real kicker.

The researchers looked at what people believed about ageing at the beginning of the study, and then checked whether those beliefs predicted what happened later.

They did.

Strongly.

People who believed ageing meant inevitable decline were more likely to decline.

People who believed they could stay capable, adapt, and even improve were far more likely to do exactly that.

This isn’t just about attitude in the cheerful, “think happy thoughts” sense.

It’s deeper than that.

Beliefs seem to act like instructions, quiet signals that shape how the body responds over time.

So when someone says, “Well, at my age…” it’s not just a comment.

It’s a direction.

Now, let’s be clear about something.

This isn’t about pretending everything is fine when it isn’t. My friend’s hip is very real. The pain is real. The frustration is real.

Ageing brings changes. Some of them are inconvenient. Some of them are serious.

Ignoring that would be foolish.

But assuming that decline is the only possible outcome? That might be just as foolish.

Because here’s what often happens.

We absorb the cultural script. The jokes about forgetting names. The quiet lowering of expectations. The idea that your best years are behind you.

And then, without noticing, we start living into that script.

We move a little less.

Try a little less.

Expect a little less.

Until one day, the script feels like reality.

But what if it isn’t?

What if it’s just a story that needs editing?

My friend, with the faulty hip and the unfortunate lottery win, is already rewriting his.

He’s not denying the setback. He’s not pretending it didn’t happen.

He’s just refusing to let it define the rest of the story.

And that’s something all of us can do.

It starts small.

Noticing that inner voice when it says, “You can’t do that anymore.”

Questioning it.

Looking around for people who are doing exactly what you thought wasn’t possible, and realizing the rules might not be as fixed as you believed.

And maybe, most importantly, keeping your sense of humour intact.

Because if you can laugh when your body surprises you, and it will, you’re already ahead of the game.

So here’s a challenge for you.

Think about one belief you hold about ageing. Just one.

Maybe it’s about what you can’t do anymore. Maybe it’s about what you shouldn’t even try.

Now ask yourself:

Is that a fact?

Or is it a story I’ve accepted without question?

Because the evidence is starting to point in a different direction.

The road ahead isn’t a straight downhill slope.

It’s a lot more like a path with turns, bumps, and the occasional uphill stretch that reminds you, you’re still very much in the game.

And if my friend can look at a second hip surgery and say, “I’ll be back on track soon,”

Then maybe the rest of us can loosen our grip on that jar just long enough to reconsider the story we’ve been telling ourselves.

Who knows?

You might still get it open.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

“Well… At My Age…” and Other Dangerous Phrases

It starts innocently enough.

You’re standing in the kitchen, staring at a jar. Not just any jar, one of those jars clearly designed by someone in their twenties with something to prove. You twist. Nothing. You try again, adding a grunt for emphasis, still nothing.

And then it slips out.

“Well… at my age…”

Stop right there.

That phrase is more powerful than the lid on that jar, and not in a good way.

Years ago, when I was teaching, one of the first lessons I had to learn was that I was replaceable. A bit of a humbling thought at the time. But retirement brought an even bigger realization: my body had quietly joined a different team than the one in my head.

In my head, I can still run up stairs two at a time. In reality, I now negotiate with stairs like a diplomat in tense talks.

But here’s where things get interesting.

Science, yes, actual research, not just wishful thinking, has started to poke holes in the old “everything goes downhill” story. Turns out, nearly half of older adults in one long-term study actually improved in brain function, physical ability, or both.

Let that sink in for a moment.

Improved.

Not “held steady.” Not “declined gracefully.” Improved.

Even more surprising? Around a third of participants sharpened their thinking, and many were walking faster at the end of the study than when they began. Faster! At an age when society expects you to be asking where you left your glasses, while they’re on your head.

So, what’s going on?

It turns out that what we believe about ageing isn’t just a nice thought or a motivational poster, it’s part of the machinery. Your beliefs act like instructions your body listens to.

If the message is “we’re done here,” the body tends to follow along.

If the message is “we’ve still got work to do,” well… things can get interesting.

Now, let me tell you about a friend of mine.

A few years back, his hip gave out. Completely. One day he’s walking along, the next he’s negotiating with gravity and a cane. He had surgery, and as he likes to say, the odds of something going wrong were one in a hundred.

Naturally, he won.

The first operation didn’t take. Now he’s waiting for a second one. He’s in pain, moving slower, and had his first hospital stay in over fifty years. He described it as the most frightening experience of his life.

But here’s the twist.

He still calls himself lucky.

“I guess it’s my turn,” he said. “So I’ll deal with it.”

And he will. He’s already talking about how quickly he’ll be back on his feet after the next surgery.

That’s not denial. That’s perspective.

Because none of this is about pretending ageing doesn’t exist. It does. Loudly, sometimes. Things creak. Things ache. Things… surprise you.

But the story that it’s all downhill? That’s optional.

So maybe the real challenge isn’t to avoid decline entirely. That’s not realistic.

The challenge is to catch yourself the next time you say, “Well, at my age…” and ask:

“Is that actually true?”

Or is it just a story I’ve been told so often I started telling it to myself?

Because here’s the thing.

You might not win every battle with the jar.

But you don’t have to hand it the war.