Nothing much happens: bedtime stories to help you sleep - Paddling on the Canal
Episode Date: June 24, 2024Our story tonight is called Paddling on the Canal, and it’s a story about a quiet morning on the lake. It’s also about dragonflies and water lilies, weeping willows along the shore, a bell ringing... from the back porch of the inn, and a connection point, felt with people around the world. We give to a different charity each week, and as your bedtime stories are written and recorded along the banks of the Rouge River, this week, we are giving to Friends of Rouge Park. They work to protect, restore, and promote a natural, environmentally healthy, and culturally vibrant Rouge Park that engages the community for the benefit and enjoyment of all. Save over $100 on Kathryn’s hand-selected wind-down favorites with the Nothing Much Happens Wind-Down Box. A collection of products from our amazing partners: Eversio Wellness: Chill Now Vellabox: Lavender Silk Candle Alice Mushrooms: Nightcap NutraChamps: Tart Cherry Gummies A Brighter Year: Mini Coloring Book NuStrips: Sleep Strips Woolzies: Lavender Roll-On. Subscribe for ad-free, bonus, and extra-long episodes now, as well as ad-free and early episodes of Stories from the Village of Nothing Much! Search for the NMH Premium channel on Apple Podcasts or follow the link belownothingmuchhappens.com/premium-subscription Listen to our new show, Stories from the Village of Nothing Much, on your favoritepodcast app. Join us tomorrow morning for a meditation at firstthispodcast.com. Purchase Our Book: https://bit.ly/Nothing-Much-HappensSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
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Welcome to Bedtime Stories for Everyone, in which nothing much happens.
You feel good, and then you fall asleep.
I'm Catherine Nicolai.
I read and write all the stories you'll hear, and nothing much happens. Audio Engineering
is by Bob Wittersheim. We give to a different charity each week, and as your bedtime stories
are written and recorded along the banks of the Rouge River. This week we are giving to
friends of Rouge Park. They work to protect, restore, and promote a natural, environmentally
healthy, and culturally vibrant Rouge Park that engages the community for the benefit and enjoyment of all.
You can learn more about them in our show notes.
We are here to help, not only to tuck you in at night with a bedtime story.
We also have a daytime version of the show called Stories from the Village of Nothing Much.
I think of it like easy listening, but for fiction.
And we have a morning meditation show,
just 10 minutes, practical and fully guided.
It's called First This, all free content. You can get them right where you're
listening now. We also have premium subscriptions, and even the top tier comes out to just 10 cents
a day, ad-free, with dozens of bonus episodes and extra long apps.
And most recently, our wind-down box.
It's packed with full-size products,
hand-selected by me,
to make bedtime your favorite time.
Find the links in our show notes.
Now, here's how this works. I'll read you a bedtime story
it's soft
and soothing
and not much happens in it
just by listening
will shift your wandering mind
onto a steady track
where it will be rocked to sleep.
I'll tell the story twice,
and I'll go a little slower the second time through.
If you wake again in the night,
don't hesitate to turn an episode right back on.
And if you are new to this, have some patience.
Habit building takes time.
Our story tonight is called Paddling on the Canal.
And it's a story about a quiet morning on the lake.
It's also about dragonflies and water lilies,
weeping willows along the shore,
a bell ringing from the back porch of the inn,
and a connection point felt with people around the world.
Now, get yourself all tucked in.
Even if you are a grown-up, you still deserve to feel safe and snug and cared for as you settle in for bed.
So take a second.
Get as comfortable as you can.
Let your jaw soften, your shoulders and neck relax.
All is well now.
The day is done.
Nothing more is needed from you.
Truly,
let the day slip from your fingers.
Let them rest,
better to grasp tomorrow. Take a slow, deep breath in through your nose, and let it out through your mouth. Again, fill it up and let it go.
Good.
Paddling on the canal. I sat at the end of the dock,
my legs dangling off the edge,
and looked out at the water.
It was still today,
flat and reflective as a mirror.
On the far side of the lake,
in the top branches of a tall pine,
I could make out the profile of a bird,
an eagle, in fact.
The sparrows that flitted around the shrubs at my front door were somewhat
anonymous to me. Unless one had a particular, unique feature, I'd never be able to tell one from another.
But once I'd learned to spot this eagle,
to find his shape among the brown and green,
I knew him.
I guessed that to him, I was like the sparrows, just another human, up to human business, indistinguishable from the others.
But that didn't bother me.
Sometimes it is quite relaxing to be anonymous, seen but not wondered about. I watched the eagle turn his head into the wind. Just a breeze down here, but undoubtedly stronger up high in the branches.
Then spread his wings and push off.
How good that must feel,
to soar and be wrapped in air.
I appreciated the breeze, however slight.
It was a warm day.
The katydids and crickets were noisy in the grass,
and I was glad to be close to the water.
Usually, I'd have been dipping my toes in
here at the end of the dock,
but between my soles and the lake
was the firm surface of my paddleboard.
After a few funny but very wet attempts at getting on it,
I had learned this useful approach. I eased it around with my paddle until it floated directly beneath the dock,
the front half of it sticking out toward the lake. And then I'd shift my weight onto my feet and slowly stand, knowing I could always sit right back down
on the warm wooden boards if needed.
Today, balance was with me, and I pulled along my oar as I gained my on floaties and music pouring from the
speakers on each deck. But this, Wednesday morning at ten o'clock, was perfect. I had the lake practically to myself,
besides a yellow lab whose owner was patiently throwing his toy out into the water
so that the dog could take leap after leap to fetch it,
and some geese and swans far out in the center.
I was alone.
I liked to look down as I paddled
and watch the shelf of sand shift under me
till I got far enough out
that the deeper water lost its clarity.
When I switched hands
and crossed the paddle over the board,
drips of the fresh lake water landed on the tops of my feet. It felt cool, but not cold. Sunny days and warm nights were bringing the water temperature up slowly but surely.
I paddled around a cove where the water was shallow and a patch of lily pads grew.
I was careful not to disturb them,
but slowed enough to really look at the three or four blooming flowers.
They were pink and white
with rows and rows of overlapping petals, and a bright yellow center full of pollen.
Water lilies felt like they belonged in the same category as rainbows and the aurora borealis.
Natural, yes.
Of this world, certainly, but just a bit too special to seem real.
They seemed straight out of a fairy tale.
And as I paddled past
and noticed a frog resting on one of the pads,
his throat puffed up like bubblegum about to pop,
I thought I'd better not lean down and ask for a kiss.
I wasn't sure my board could hold two.
I paddled across the lake,
taking a minute or two in the center to just stand,
to stop propelling myself forward and draw deep breaths of air down into the bottoms of my lungs. Though spring was over, there was still a sweetness
in the air, fresh paddles and that clean rain scent that came from the lake.
The mirror-like surface of the water was just beginning to ripple
as the breeze picked up,
and I turned the board back toward the shore.
I wasn't quite ready to be done yet,
but I had an idea.
A little adventure I hadn't taken in a while. That appealed to me.
There is a long, winding canal that connects our lake to a smaller one just south of ours. The canal cuts through backyards and in places passes through shady wooded lots, and circles around a tiny island
the size of a school bus.
I liked to take a trip through it, at least once a year, and hadn't done it yet this summer.
So off I paddled
to find the small ingress to it.
Just past the dock
where the yellow lab had been diving and fetching, and was now stretched
out in the sun, letting his thick fur dry.
I turned into the canal. across the lake at the inn
I spotted a couple of rowboats
casting off
leisure-minded vacationers
often took the boats out
for a slow row
and I chuckled, remembering how
I'd bumped into one,
literally, a few days before.
He'd gotten dozy in the sunshine
and tucked his oars into the boat,
set his straw hat over his eyes,
and stretched out on the bench.
I'd been trying to steer around him
when the wind shifted
and my board bumped against his prow,
he'd lifted the corner of his hat and squinted at me.
I chuckled a bit as he yawned and blinked,
looking around to see how far he'd drifted.
He asked me if I'd heard the bell ring at the inn yet.
It was rung on the porch, reliably, every day at 5 p.m., announcing cocktail hour, and could be heard echoing across the lake.
When I told him it hadn't tolled for him yet, he thanked me, laid back down, and replaced his hat.
I chuckled again as I paddled down the canal,
wondering how long he'd slept,
and if he'd made it to the inn before all the sandwiches and spritzes were gone.
The canal was shady.
It seemed almost dark
after being on the open water.
Tall willows, their leafy trellises
drooping into the water, lined either side, making a canopy
of thick leaves.
And I noticed more birdsong as I went deeper in. On a few back porches, I spotted folks sitting out, enjoying the day. And between wave. The canal curved and I followed it. I imagined myself an explorer finding a path
through an unknown land. There were dragonflies skimming over the surface of the canal, and when they passed through a patch of sunlight, their iridescent blue bodies shimmered. I wondered if anyone else in the world was seeing or feeling what I was in this moment.
A club of canal paddlers
on waters up and down the continents,
watching pretty winged insects and listening to a breeze
ruffling through leaves,
looking forward to a swim soon and a nap as the day got warmer. I liked that idea of a club of humans scattered over the globe,
their membership being a few minutes of similar experience.
I switched my oar to the other side and kept paddling.
Paddling on the canal.
I sat at the end of the dock, my legs dangling off the edge, and looked out at the water.
It was still today, flat and reflective as a mirror. on the far side of the lake
in the top branches of a tall pine.
I could make out the profile of a bird,
an eagle, in fact. The sparrows that flitted around the shrubs at my front door
were somewhat anonymous to me.
Unless one had a particular, unique feature,
I'd never be able to tell one from another. But
once I'd learned to spot this eagle, to find his shape among the brown and green. I knew him.
I guessed that, to him,
I was like the sparrows,
just another human up to human business,
indistinguishable from the wind. A breeze cloudedly stronger up high in the branches.
Then spread his wings and push off into the air.
How good that must feel
to soar and be wrapped in air.
I appreciate the breeze, however slight.
It was a warm day.
The katydids and crickets were noisy in the grass
and I was glad to be close to the water
usually I'd have been dipping my toes in
here at the end of the dock. But between my soles and the lake was the firm After a few funny but very wet attempts at getting onto it, I'd learned this useful approach. the board around with my paddle until it floated directly beneath the dock, the front half
of it sticking out toward the lake. And then I'd shift my weight onto my feet, and slowly stand,
knowing I could always sit right back down
on the warm wooden boards if needed.
Today, balance was with me, and I pulled along my oar as I gained my feet away from shore. On the weekends, on holidays, the lake can be busy. Boats everywhere, kids and music pouring from speakers on each deck.
But this, Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock, was perfect.
I had the lake practically to myself.
Besides a yellow lab whose owner was patiently
throwing his toy out into the water
so that the dog could take leap after leap to fetch it, and some geese and swans far out in the center.
I was alone. I liked to look down as I paddled and watch the shelf of sand shift under me
till I got far enough out
that the deeper water lost its clarity.
When I switched hands
and crossed the paddle over the board,
drips of fresh lake water landed on the tops of my feet.
It felt cool, but not cold.
Sunny days and warm nights were bringing the water temperature up, slowly but surely.
I paddled around a cove where the water was shallow and a patch of lily pads grew. but slowed enough to really look at the three or four blooming flowers.
They were pink and white
with rows and rows of overlapping petals
and a bright yellow center full of pollen. Water lilies felt like in the same category as rainbows and the aurora borealis.
Natural, yes. Of this world, certainly. But just a bit too special to seem real.
They seemed straight out of a fairy tale.
And as I paddled past and noticed a frog resting
on one of the pads,
his throat puffed up like bubblegum about to pop.
I thought I better not lean down and ask for a kiss.
I wasn't sure my board could hold two.
I paddled across the lake,
taking a minute or two in the center to just stand,
to stop propelling myself forward
and draw deep breaths of air
down into the bottoms of my lungs.
Though spring was over,
there was still a sweetness in the air, fresh petals and that clean rain
scent that came from the lake. the mirror-like surface of the water
was just beginning to ripple as the breeze picked up.
And I turned my board back toward the shore.
I wasn't quite ready to be done yet,
but I had an idea.
A little adventure I hadn't taken in a while
that appealed to me.
There is a long, winding canal that connects our lake to a smaller one just south of ours.
The canal cuts through backyards and in places passes through shady wooded lots
and circles around a tiny island the size of a school bus.
I liked to take a trip through it at least once a year, and hadn't done it yet this summer.
So off I paddled to find the small ingress to it. Just past the dock where the yellow lab had been diving and fetching, and letting his thick fur dry.
I turned into the canal.
Across the lake, at the inn,
I spotted a couple of rowboats casting off.
Leisure-minded vacationers often took the boats out for a his eyes, and stretched out on the bench. I'd been trying to steer around him when the wind
shifted and my board bumped against his prow. He'd lifted the corner of his hat and squinted at me.
I chuckled a bit as he yawned and blinked,
looking around to see how far he'd drifted. He asked me if I'd heard the bell ring at the inn yet. It was rung
on the porch, reliably, every day at 5 p.m., announcing cocktail hour, and replaced his hat.
I chuckled again as I paddled down the canal, wondering how long he'd slept and if he'd made it to the inn
before the sandwiches and spritzes were all gone.
The canal was shady.
It seemed almost dark after being on the open water.
Tall willows, their leafy trellises drooping into the water, lined either side, making a canopy of thick leaves.
And I noticed more birdsong as I went deeper in. On a few back porches, I spotted folks sitting out, enjoying the day.
And between strokes of the oar, I raised a hand to wave. The canal curved, and I followed it.
I imagined myself an explorer finding a path through an unknown land.
There were dragonflies skimming over the surface of the canal,
and when they passed through a patch of sunlight,
their iridescent blue bodies shimmered.
I wondered if anyone else in the world was seeing or feeling what I was at the moment.
A club of canal paddlers on waters up and down the continents, watching and listening to a breeze ruffling through leaves,
looking forward to a swim soon,
and a nap as the day got warmer.
I liked that idea of a club of humans scattered over the globe, their membership being a few
minutes of similar experience. I switched my oar to the other side and kept paddling.
Sweet dreams.