Kathryn Rankin CovingtonKathryn Rankin Covington

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Minimalist Kids

4:42 p.m

We pile into the house and my voice echoes in the living room. A daily admonishment to put the shoes away, hang the coats. I pull the half-bent folders out of the backpacks, wiping the strawberry smear off of the shiny cover of one of them. There are papers to sign, flyers asking for donations of money and time, more decisions to make and events to squish into a packed calendar. Notes from friends flutter to the floor. My son’s folder is crammed with “seat work,” adorable bears and narwhals counted and sorted and colored with crayons.

In exactly forty-eight minutes, my daughter is due on a soccer field across town. She is to be fed, clothed in layers of sports frocks, hair pulled up (that’ll be a battle…), and carrying her bag, ball, and bottle of water. Do her earrings need to be out for practice or just games? I can’t remember.

I’ve been exhausted since I was thirty. Everyone’s exhausted.”

Read On

Unburied

I gazed at the mountain of plastic bags and felt anger flow through my veins. We’d spent months donating and selling our stuff.  An actual truck had come to haul half a house of furniture away. How was there this much left for the landfill? All of the plastic plush precious things I thought were so important were now shoved in black bags, off to pollute the Earth.  I shook my head.

What had we been doing?

When the good husband and I got married, we combined our lives into one unified household, stuffing the past in the basement. As our lives expanded, the boxes of stuff accumulated and got put away in bigger and bigger basements.  Eight years later, we made the big decision to move home to Michigan.  We also made the choice to value location over square footage. This meant a big downsize.  

It was time to face the Stuff.


“It doesn’t matter what objects leave our lives; the experiences are still there.”

Read On

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  • Kathryn Rankin Covington
  • Shop
  • Local Stores carrying “The Ripple of Stones”
  • Event Calendar, 2021
  • Reviews, “The Ripple of Stones”
  • Contact Us
  • Blog
  • The BOOK
  • Poetry, The Journey Home
  • Cart
  • Checkout
  • My account

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Minimalist Kids