I finished this beautiful puzzle only to discover it was missing a piece. I searched for days to no avail. Then when I was pulling old receipts from my purse, I found it! Hooray!
There’s such a satisfying and calming feeling to puzzling. I love it.
Today’s #OneGoodThing with Mama is finding the 500th piece! What was your #OneGoodThing today? Please share in the comments! And remember, kindness is everything!
Day 235 of 366. And Now Totaling 3,157 Days In A Row. Here’s the first year (2016), and 2017, as well as 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2023 of #OneGoodThing Daily!
On this day…
Categories: OneGoodThing
Tagged as: #OneGoodThing, #OneGoodThingDaily, ADHD, ADHD in women, adventures with mama, anxiety, autoimmune awareness, autoimmune disease, autoimmune pernicious anemia, Bay Area, brain cancer, brain cancer caregiver, brain tumor, cancer caregiver, canna crafting, cannabis crafting, care for the caregiver, caregiver burnout, caregiver life, caregiver mental health, caregivers, caregiving, carer, caring for mama, chronic fatigue, chronic health issues, chronic illness, chronic migraine, chronic pain, combat caregiver isolation, crafters, crafty, crafty caregiver, crafty family, crafty weirdo, Crohn’s Disease, daily gratitude, depression, elder care, family caregiver, family of crafters, fibromyalgia, find joy, finding the joy, gabriana, gastroparesis, gratitude, grief, grow your own cannabis, health advocate, hEDS, living with brain cancer, living with chronic illnesses, mental health, mental health awareness, millennial caregiver, mothers and daughters, Nosy Parker, Nosy Parker family, PCOS, persistently positive thinking, POTS, power of positivity, San Francisco Bay Area, Santa Rosa, senior living, silver linings, Sonoma County, spoon theory, spoonie, spoonie life, Vitamin B12 deficiency, xennial caregiver, young caregiver
I am in awe of people who can do jigsaw puzzles. I give up very early in the piece and play online bridge instead! 🙂
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I’ve never played Bridge before, but I’d like to learn sometime. There’s always a few moments early on in a puzzle where I despair and want to give up, often even after I’ve finished the borders. I have to take breaks and only work on a puzzle when it feels calming.
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Brudge is a frustrating, fascinating game; there is always something new to learn.
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