Nothing much happens: bedtime stories to help you sleep - Dandelions and Moss
Episode Date: May 12, 2025Our story tonight is called Dandelions and Moss, and it’s a story about a craft project made from things gathered in the yard. It’s also about wishes and wire, memories of schoolyard games, making... something with your hands at the picnic table in the afternoon sun and the magic of a moment preserved under glass. Subscribe to our Premium channel. The first month is on us. We give to a different charity each week and this week we are giving to The Upper Michigan Brain Tumor Center, working to empower patients and families through advocacy, education, treatment, and research. Make your own dandelion craft! Inspired by Julieanne on TikTok. Watch here. AquaTru water purifier: Click here and get 20% OFF with code NOTHINGMUCH. Beam Dream Powder: Click here for up to 40% off with code NOTHINGMUCH. BIOptimizers’ Sleep Breakthrough: Click here and use code NOTHINGMUCH for 10% off any order! Cornbread Hemp’s CBD gummies: Click here to save 30% on their first order! Cymbiotika products: Click here for 20% off and free shipping! Moonbird, the world’s first handheld breathing coach: Click here and save 20%! NMH merch, autographed books and more! Pay it forward subscription Listen to our daytime show Stories from the Village of Nothing Much on your favorite podcast app. Join us tomorrow morning for a meditation Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi friends, a quick note. You will notice that when you listen to older episodes, anything
beyond the most recent eight, you will sometimes hear ads that aren't in my voice right after
this message and before the show starts. This wasn't an easy decision. I care a lot about protecting the calm space we've built here.
But making this change is necessary to keep nothing much happens happening.
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Thanks for being here.
I'm so grateful that we get to do this together.
Craving an escape? Bring the vibrant flavors of Mexican street eat energy Welcome to Bedtime Stories for Everyone, in which nothing much happens.
You feel good, and then you fall asleep.
I'm Catherine Nicolai.
I write and read all the stories you'll hear on Nothing Much Happens with audio engineering
by Bob Wittersheim.
We give to a different charity each week, and this week we are giving to the Upper Michigan
Brain Tumor Center, working to empower patients and families through advocacy, education, treatment, and research.
You can learn more about them in our show notes.
Remember that you can have a completely ad-free Nothing Much experience for just ten cents
a day and sleep easy knowing that you are helping us to continue to bring you new episodes
on a weekly basis.
Find the link in our notes or just go to Nothingmuchhappens.com.
Now, I have a story to tell you.
It was written with care.
It'll be read with calm and steadiness. And just by listening, we will shift your brain
from its default mode to its task positive mode
where sleep is much more accessible.
With practice, it will become practically instant.
Sleep can be something you rely on and no longer worry over.
Sleep can be something you rely on and no longer worry over.
I'll tell the story twice and I'll go a little slower the second time through.
If you wake again in the night, you can think through any part of the story that you remember
or just push play on another episode.
Our story tonight is called Dan DeLions and Moss.
And it's a story about a craft project made from things gathered in the yard.
It's also about wishes and wire,
memories of schoolyard games,
making something with your hands at the picnic table
in the afternoon sun, and the magic of a moment preserved under glass.
If you'd like to try the craft in this story for yourself,
I've put a link to the lovely video and maker that inspired it in our notes.
video and maker that inspired it in our notes.
I was a full-time yoga teacher for over 20 years, and I know the power of intentional breathing.
It's why our two deep breaths have been part
of our bedtime routine since episode one.
And that's why I want to introduce you to Moonbird.
Moonbird is a handheld breathing device
designed to comfortably fit in the palm of your hand.
When you shake it, it will start inflating and deflating.
So in your hand, it will feel like you're holding
a little bird that is breathing in and out.
And the only thing you need to do is breathe along with it.
When moon bird inflates, you breathe in.
When moon bird deflates, you breathe out.
Simple, intuitive, it takes all the effort
and thinking out of your breathing exercises.
It's the perfect companion to your bedtime ritual.
Or use it when you're meditating,
when you're stuck in traffic,
anytime you need an assist and feeling calm and focused.
Listen, I know how to breathe to feel better, but still I use Moonbird.
Because when my mind is racing or wandering, I need a little guidance, and it makes my
deep breathing more effective. So when you wake in the middle of the night, don't reach
for your phone, unless it's to restart your bedtime story. That's fine.
Reach for Moonbird.
Visit moonbird.life
slash nothing much happens to save 20%. We've got it linked in our show notes.
Okay, it's time.
Slide down into your sheets and get as comfortable as you can.
There is nothing left to do today.
You did enough.
Feel your body getting heavy, your eyes relaxing and closing. Feel calm settle over you. Take a slow deep And release through your mouth.
One more time, nice and deep.
Let it all out.
Good. Dandelions and moss.
The backyard was dotted with yellow-headed flowers sitting among the green blades.
I'd never bought into the idea that they were weeds. I remembered picking handfuls of them when
I was a child, and proudly handing them dropped onto the compost pile. I'd felt a
bit bad for the grown-ups then. How did they not see that something with a stem and pretty petals was clearly a flower, not a weed.
And they were like a magic flower that could overnight turn into a snowball,
an orb of fluff to make a wish on.
fluff to make a wish on. Even now, as a grown-up, I admired dandelions and left them to bloom in my yard, to feed the pollinators as they were the first meal many ate after their winter naps.
Today I would, yes, be plucking a few from the ground, but truly just a few, and they
wouldn't end up in the compost bin. They would be preserved, their fluff seen as the work of art that it was.
I'd read about a craft project in one of my magazines, and it was calling my name today. A simple undertaking that only required a few supplies I already happened to have.
I'd read the article in the magazine several times, pressing down on the crease between
the pages to get a good look at the pictures that went along with it. And now it and my supplies
sat on my picnic table waiting for the star ingredient.
The article suggested waiting till the afternoon to pick my dandelions, to let the sun dry
them out as much as possible.
And now the sun was behind the trees in the west, and the dew had long evaporated from
the yard.
I was looking for two or three dandelions that were still closed up and green, with
just a smidge of white fluff poking through the end of their bud. As I walked slowly through the yard, I realized
that dandelions were a bit like caterpillars. They had to go through some time, closed up, away from the world, to make their final transition.
The flowers opened to show their yellow petals, but then closed again before they revealed
their fluffy seeds, ready to fly on the wind. It seemed obvious to me now, but I'd never considered it before.
How many grand moments were preceded by periods in the dark?
In the sunniest sections of the yard, most of them had already shed their seeds, and
in the shadier spots, several hadn't opened for the first time yet.
But around the edges of the raised bed in the back, I found what I was looking for. I took time inspecting
them to be sure. through at the tips.
I'd meant to bring the kitchen scissors, but had forgotten.
Still the stems broke easily, with a bit of pressure from my thumbnail.
I picked two. While I was out there, I hunted for a couple of twigs.
I wanted old, dried-out bits of bark or woody sprigs that were coated with lichen or moss.
I found several and soon became entranced.
Twigs led me to noticing root systems around the old trees in the back corner along the
fence.
There were several kinds of moss growing around and on the roots, and more in the crooks of bark and on the
fence itself. I carefully plucked some of itgy, waving-looking tufts of what I thought might
be rock cap moss.
I carried all my goodies over to the picnic table and laid them out on an old, pale tablecloth.
Besides the things I'd gathered from the yard, I had a few pieces of thin wire, a pair
of pliers, and a small stand with a clear dome top.
I started with the wire and the two dandelions.
I measured out the wire to the length of each stem plus a few inches
and began to carefully feed it up and through the flower stem. I had a sudden memory of picking dandelions in the schoolyard when I was in first or second
grade. There was something about holding a dandelion under your chin. If the yellow glow reflected
on your skin, it meant you liked butter?
I laughed out loud, thinking of it. I had to stop working for a moment as my body shook. What had that
been about? Who needed to diagnose their interest in butter in that way? A series of playground rituals came back to me.
We made wishes on dandelion fluff,
hunted for four leaf clovers,
found signs in the clouds,
jumped over cracks in the sidewalk,
and blew kisses at ladybugs, trying to figure out the world through the
lore handed down by kids just a year or two older.
While it didn't make sense, we hadn't needed it to.
We were just playing at life.
I still was, though in a quieter way.
My flowers stood tall with the wire threaded through them, and I wound the ends of it around a sturdy twig. I set the twig and flowers on the small
stand and laid in a few bits of the moss I'd gathered. The stand had come from a special cupcake a friend had brought me on my birthday.
A small single cake on a stand with a clear dome over it.
It had felt very fancy indeed. So I'd kept these pieces after the treat was gone
So, I'd kept these pieces after the treat was gone, and this was the perfect use for them.
I slid the dome over my little craft and pressed it into place with a click. In a day or two, these flowers would open up, and that moment would be preserved.
The perfect downy blooms would last for years, like a seed caught in a drop of amber, like Like the memory of those schoolyard games pressed between the pages of a book.
Faded a bit around the edges, but still holding their shape. shape, dandelions, and moss.
The backyard was dotted with yellow-headed flowers sitting among the green blades. I'd never bought into the idea that they were weeds. I remembered
picking handfuls of them when I was a child, and proudly handing them over to a grown-up, expecting they might go into a vase and onto
the kitchen table, only to see them dropped onto the compost pile. I'd felt a bit bad for the grown-ups then. How did they stem and pretty petals was clearly a flower, not a weed.
And they were like a magic flower that could, overnight, turn into a snowball,
turn into a snowball, an orb of fluff to make a wish on. Even now, as a grown-up, I admired dandelions and left them to bloom in my yard, to feed the pollinators as they were the first meal
many ate after their winter naps. Today, I would, yes, be plucking a few from the ground, but truly just a few.
And they wouldn't end up in the compost.
They would be preserved, their fluff seen as the work of art that it was.
I'd read about a craft project in one of my magazines,
and it was calling my name today.
A simple undertaking that only required a few supplies I happened to already have.
I'd read the article in the magazine several times, pressing down on the crease between the pages
to get a good look at the pictures that went along with it.
And now, it and my supplies
sat on my picnic table, waiting for the star ingredient.
The article suggested waiting till the afternoon to pick my dandelions, to let the sun dry
them out as much as possible.
And now the sun was behind the trees in the west,
and the dew had long evaporated from the yard.
I was looking for two or three dandelions that were still closed up and green,
with just a smidge of white fluff poking through the end of their bud.
As I walked slowly through the yard, I realized that away from the world, to make their yellow petals, but then closed again before they revealed fluffy seeds ready
to fly on the wind. It seemed obvious to me now, but I'd never considered it before.
How many grand moments were preceded by periods in the dark. In the sunniest sections of the yard, most of them had already shed their seeds.
And in the shadier spots, several hadn't even opened for the first time yet, but around the edges of the raised bed in the back, I found what
I was looking for. I took time inspecting them to be sure.
Dry to the touch, closed and green on the outside of the bud,
with a bit of white showing through at the tips.
at the tips. I'd meant to bring the kitchen scissors, but had forgotten. Still the stems broke easily, with a bit of pressure from my thumbnail. I picked two while I was out there. I hunted for a couple of twigs,
or wanted old dried out bits of bark, or woody sprigs that were coated with lichen or moss.
I found several and soon became entranced. Twigs led me to noticing root systems around the old trees in the back corner along the
fence. growing around and on the roots, and more in the crooks of bark and on the fence itself.
I carefully plucked some of it away from the wood, a few strands of moss that looked like tiny ferns, and some shaggy,
wavy-looking tufts of what I thought might be rock cap moss. I carried all of my goodies over to the picnic table
and laid them out on an old, pale tablecloth.
Besides the things I'd gathered from the yard, I had a few pieces of thin wire, a pair of pliers, and a small stand with a clear dome top.
I started with the wire and the two dandelions.
I measured out the wire to the length of each stem plus a few inches, and began to carefully feed it up and through
the flower stem.
I had a sudden memory of picking dandelions in the schoolyard
when I was in first or second grade.
There was some game about holding a dandelion
under your chin.
If the yellow glow reflected on your skin, it meant you liked butter? I laughed out loud, thinking of it. had to stop working for a moment as my body shook.
What had that been about?
Who needed to diagnose their interest in butter in such a way. A series of playground rituals came back to me. We made wishes on dandelion
fluff, hunted for four-leaf clovers, found signs in the clouds.
Jumped over cracks in the sidewalk.
And blew kisses at ladybugs.
Trying to figure out the world. through the lore handed down by kids just a year or two older.
While it didn't make sense, we hadn't needed it to.
We were just playing at life. And I still was. Though in a quieter way.
My flowers stood tall with the wire threaded through them. And I wound the ends of it around a sturdy twig.
I set the twig and flowers on the small stand and laid in a few bits of the moss I'd gathered.
The stand had come from a special cupcake a friend had brought me on my birthday.
A single, small cake on a stand with a clear dome over it.
It had felt very fancy indeed, so I kept these pieces after the treat was gone, and this
was the perfect use for them. I slid the dome over my little craft and pressed it into place with a click.
In a day or two, these flowers would open up and that moment would be preserved.
The perfect downy blooms would last for years, like a seed caught those schoolyard games pressed between the pages of a book, the edges but still holding their shape.
Sweet dreams.