

Dear Lovely Peeps,
This is from an honest & not-entirely-happy blog post by #TheodoraGoss - but I loved the imagery of this excerpt:
"One of the best things I’ve done recently is left my #knitting on the sofa. It’s a bit messy, but across the sofa is draped a scarf of rainbow yarn, green and yellow and orange and red and blue and purple, all fading into each other, like the stages of sunset.
I chose the easiest project imaginable — I’m literally just knitting one row after another, with the colors of the dyed yarn making the only pattern.
That means at any time of day, I can sit down for a few minutes and knit another row, without thought or planning. Sit, knit, watch the colors develop. Joy!"
I love this image. 🥰
She ends with:
"Small joys. Try to find the small joys. They will get you through — they are, sometimes, the only things that will get you through. And then, when you can, work for a better world."
The entire post is here:
https://theodoragoss.com/2026/03/29/small-moments-of-joy/
Children being reunited with their parents after the end of air raid evacuations, London, UK, end of WW2, 1945
And he presented it to the Corinthian Christians to provide them a framework through which they could understand their recent experiences of grief, shame, and repentance, so they might find #comfort and #joy in the resolution of it all.
We can appreciate what Paul has done and find ways to apply it to our own lives of faith so we might be able to well contextualize grief, distress, and pain and the comfort and joy that comes in the morning.
And he presented it to the Corinthian Christians to provide them a framework through which they could understand their recent experiences of grief, shame, and repentance, so they might find #comfort and #joy in the resolution of it all.
We can appreciate what Paul has done and find ways to apply it to our own lives of faith so we might be able to well contextualize grief, distress, and pain and the comfort and joy that comes in the morning.