My routine is not designed to be impressive. It is simply the series of movements that keep my house readable for a senior terrier like Mabel, a hound mix like Walter, and a sweet, graying foster like Pickle.
My house often feels like a graveyard for expensive rubber puzzles that Mabel and Walter decided were not worth the effort. I look at the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker and remember the days when I thought a challenge was supposed to be difficult.
I first noticed it when the foster stood near the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker, staring at the wall instead of the pantry door. The morning light on the kitchen floor felt unusually long and still, highlighting the hesitation in his usually hungry walk.
My routine for keeping track of Pickle is not some grand medical project. It lives in my small leather-bound notebook that sits right next to the ceramic dog-bone jar on the kitchen counter. I do not aim for perfection. I simply aim for a readable history of the week.
The light shifts in the living room around seven, turning the space where I usually sit into a place of deep, stretching shadows. I often find myself reaching for the lamp by the reading chair, needing to carve out a small, bright island against the encroaching dark.
My morning starts with the sound of the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker. It is a hollow, familiar rattle that tells me the day has begun. I reach for the notebook with the frayed edges that lives on the counter corner, tucked just behind the toaster.
My routine is not about perfection. It is about catching the small shifts before they become a mountain. I used to keep my notes in a chaotic pile, but now I keep a dedicated notebook next to the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker.
My morning routine is built on the simple assumption that I will forget the details if I do not write them down. While the coffee maker finishes its cycle, I stand in the kitchen counter corner with my notebook. It is not an elaborate system.
My kitchen usually hums with a frantic pace that belongs to the humans, not the animals. I start by filling the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker, listening for the kettle to whistle.