Celebrating 21 Years of Helping Women To Create Lives Less Ordinary

My Library

The Commonplace

Mar 21, 2026

There is an old tradition, older than the internet and wiser than the algorithm, of keeping a commonplace book. A place to gather. Quotations, recipes, remedies, the name of a paint colour that stopped you in your tracks. One hundred small things that mattered enough to write down.

So this is that. Every Friday, one hundred things on a single theme: to read slowly, to dip in and out of, to carry into your weekend like a basket of good things. Not a to-do list. Just the pleasure of noticing, gathered up and laid out for you.


This first list is yours, entirely and without condition. All one hundred things, with nothing held back, because you should know what you’re being invited into before you decide whether to stay.

From next Friday, the first twenty-five things will always be free. The remaining seventy-five are for paid subscribers, those who have decided that a weekly act of gathering is worth the small cost of keeping it going. If that’s you, you are so very welcome and appreciated.


No. 1: Spring, At Last


  1. The French have a phrase for it: le renouveau. The renewal.

  2. Open every window in the house for exactly three minutes, regardless of temperature. The Swedes call this luftning and consider it non-negotiable. The cold air is the point.

  3. WRITE IT DOWN:“One must always maintain one’s connection to the past and yet ceaselessly pull away from it.” (Gaston Bachelard)

  4. Buy yourself peonies this week. No explanation needed.

  5. Read: Franny and Zooey by J.D. Salinger. For the woman who feels everything too much.

  6. The Japanese call it mono no aware, the bittersweet awareness that everything is passing. Spring is its highest expression. Stand in it.

  7. Stand outside and face east toward the rising sun and set one intention for spring in whatever words come to you. Let the direction hold it.

  8. WRITE IT DOWN: “She was a girl who knew how to be happy even when she was sad.” (Marilyn Monroe). Pin it somewhere you’ll see it.

  9. In Lisbon they call the ache of spring saudade, a longing for something you can’t quite name. You know this feeling. You were born knowing it weren’t you? Surely.

  10. WATCH: Certified Copy (2010, Abbas Kiarostami). A film about a woman in Tuscany in spring who may or may not be pretending. You will think about it for weeks.

  11. Keep your kitchen counters completely clear except for three objects: olive oil, sea salt, and one beautiful thing.

  12. “April is the cruellest month, breeding lilacs out of the dead land.” (T.S. Eliot). He wasn’t wrong. But we go anyway.

  13. RECIPE: make a simple French tarte aux fraises this weekend. Blind bake a pastry shell, fill with crème pâtissière, lay strawberries over the top like you’re arranging flowers. Eat it standing up.

  14. Face east when you drink your morning tea. In Vastu and Feng Shui, east is the direction of new beginnings

  15. Take a walk somewhere you’ve never been. Spring makes strangers of familiar streets.

  16. LISTEN: Debussy’s Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune. Put it on while you do the washing up. Notice what happens to the washing up.

  17. WRITE IT DOWN:“I am not afraid of storms, for I am learning how to sail my ship.” (Louisa May Alcott). Think of it as forecast, not metaphor.

  18. In Morocco, spring smells of orange blossom and something just slightly rotten underneath. That’s the truth of it. Beautiful things often have something composting at the root.

  19. Clear one drawer completely. Do not organise it. Simply empty i

    ...

This is premium content. You can unlock this post by choosing a subscription. Choose either Premium Content Only Access or become a member of my lovely Library and gain access to all my content, courses and printables.

If you are already a member, you can log-in here

Unlock Premium Content

Library Member? Visit Our Exclusive Community Here...

Yes Please

Comments