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A few more sentences – 37

Chris La Tray transforms a simple calendar correction into a profound meditation on attention, revealing that the true milestone isn't a date on a page, but the cumulative weight of noticing the world. While the piece begins with a playful admission of error regarding the start date of his "one-sentence journal" practice, the real story is how this discipline of observation serves as an antidote to the noise of modern life and political exhaustion.

The Architecture of Attention

La Tray frames his three-year experiment not as a literary feat, but as a survival mechanism for the mind. He writes, "Regardless, the practice is excellent training for paying attention to the small moments of my life, and I enjoy sharing those moments here." This is a deliberate pivot away from the grand narratives that often dominate public discourse, suggesting instead that clarity is found in the granular. By cataloging the mundane—a "misty body of water," the "thrums against the roof" of a rental car, or the "scent of wood smoke"—he constructs a counter-narrative to the chaos of the day.

A few more sentences – 37

The author's choice to include specific, unpolished details lends the work an immediate, tactile quality. He notes, "To twist a knob and have clean, drinkable water gush forth is a miracle too often taken supremely for granted." This observation lands with particular force in an era where infrastructure and basic utilities are frequently subjects of political contention and failure. By elevating the tap to the status of a miracle, La Tray reminds the reader that stability is fragile and often invisible until it is gone.

"In service to attention I accomplished nothing but to enjoy a lovely day."

Critics might argue that such a focus on the personal and the immediate risks retreating from the urgent demands of collective action. However, La Tray seems to anticipate this, weaving in moments of social friction that ground his introspection. He describes the "jolt to my consciousness" of moving from a "joyous multi-generational gathering" to "noisy, alcohol-swilling capital city movers and shakers," highlighting the dissonance between community and power.

The Weight of History and Identity

The piece does not exist in a vacuum; it is deeply rooted in the author's identity as a Métis writer and the specific historical currents of the region. La Tray explicitly connects his daily practice to a larger lineage, noting, "The 140th anniversary of your sacrifice, Louis, and you remain well remembered for the part you continue to play in our unfolding story." This is a direct reference to Louis Riel, the Métis leader executed in 1885, whose legacy remains a potent force in Canadian and Indigenous history.

By anchoring his daily observations to the anniversary of Riel's death, La Tray demonstrates how the past actively shapes the present moment. He suggests that attention is not just about seeing what is in front of you, but recognizing the ghosts that walk alongside you. This framing adds a layer of gravity to what might otherwise be a collection of nature vignettes. The "unfolding story" he mentions is not a linear progression of events, but a continuous dialogue with ancestors and history.

Furthermore, La Tray touches on the internal conflict of identity, admitting, "I'm reminded that there was a time when I just loved books and writers and writing and wasn't caught up in all this other identity-based stuff that consumes me with such abundance of stress and frustration and general unhappiness." This vulnerability is crucial; it acknowledges that the struggle for recognition and the burden of representation are exhausting. It humanizes the intellectual labor of being an Indigenous voice in a space often dominated by other narratives.

The Haiku as a Return to Simplicity

In the latter half of the piece, La Tray introduces a new layer to his practice: the haiku. He explains that a previous comparison of his sentences to haiku led him to "fall hard for haiku and the tradition of it." This shift is significant because it represents a move from the prose of the day to the distilled essence of the moment. He writes, "midday autumn light a brief joyful immersion in being alive," capturing a feeling that prose often struggles to condense.

The inclusion of these poems serves as a structural break, forcing the reader to slow down and engage with the text differently. La Tray notes that he wrote one every day in November, creating a "little notebook" of observations. This consistency mirrors the "tight ship" he runs around his newsletter, but with a focus on brevity and silence. He observes, "The 140th anniversary of your sacrifice, Louis, and you remain well remembered for the part you continue to play in our unfolding story," but then immediately pivots to the quiet of a "gray afternoon leaves me feeling slightly ill cured by winter nap."

This juxtaposition of the monumental and the microscopic is the piece's greatest strength. It suggests that one can honor the weight of history without being crushed by it, provided one also makes time for the "utter stillness" of a morning after the first snow.

"Time and the weight I strap to my back both seem to expand and contract with variations in the amount of inner peace I am carrying into any given day."

Bottom Line

La Tray's commentary succeeds by refusing to separate the personal from the political, instead showing how the practice of attention is a radical act of resistance in a fractured world. The piece's greatest vulnerability is its reliance on the reader's willingness to slow down, a luxury not everyone possesses, yet the argument remains compelling: without the small moments of noticing, the larger story loses its texture. The reader is left with the conviction that the most important work we can do is to truly see what is happening right in front of us.

Deep Dives

Explore these related deep dives:

  • Louis Riel

    The author references 'the 140th anniversary of your sacrifice, Louis' on November 16th, referring to Louis Riel, the Métis leader executed in 1885. As a self-identified Métis writer, this historical figure is central to understanding the author's cultural identity and heritage.

  • Métis

    The author identifies as Métis (calling the newsletter 'An Irritable Métis'), mentions Fort Belknap community gatherings, and uses Ojibwe greetings (Boozhoo, Aaniin). Understanding Métis history and culture provides essential context for this personal writing.

  • Powell's Books

    The author describes 'Lines to stand in lines in Portland, a city who loves books and the people who write them' - referencing their book tour stop. Powell's is the iconic independent bookstore that defines Portland's literary culture.

Sources

A few more sentences – 37

by Chris La Tray · · Read full article

Boozhoo, indinawemaaganidog! Aaniin! That is to say hello, all of my relatives! Welcome to another edition of An Irritable Métis. I must confess that I just spent ten minutes scratching my head and pacing my office1 and then scrolling back through three years of posts to come to the realization that when I said last month that the November 1st edition of the sentences marked THREE UNINTERRUPTED YEARS! of sharing this practice with you, I was wrong. That milestone has actually been reached TODAY!, on December 1st. I know! I’d been thinking all along that I started writing the sentences for sharing on October 1st, 2022, and shared the first batch on November 1st. That is incorrect. I started vigorously attending to them on November 1st of 2022, and the first actual post came on December 1st, three exact years ago.2

You may say, “Yeah, so?” and I assure you it matters. We run a tight ship around here!

If you are scratching your own head and making a “WTF?” face, I’m going to assume you are new here, and I am happy to explain that this monthly edition, where I post the daily, single sentences that I’ve accumulated for the month-just-ended, is based on the practice that ultimately led to my first book, One-Sentence Journal, back in 2018.3

It’s a simple practice and fulfilling … and also maybe not so simple as it may seem. Regardless, the practice is excellent training for paying attention to the small moments of my life, and I enjoy sharing those moments here. This remains the best and most consistent aspect of my writing efforts, and something within the reach of anyone who simply wants to be a more attentive participant in their own life.

I’m always interested in readings offerings from any of you practicing similarly. Share them in the comments! Also, if you’ve been around since that very first post, feel free to raise your hand via a comment as well. I’m very grateful and I would love to recognize you, even if only via a fist bump emoji or the like.

Friends, before I continue, I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention that if you receive the email alerts concerning IndigiPalooza MT: Resistance 250+ you will know that we announced our headliner for the next edition, which is scheduled for July 31/August 1 of 2026. We can hardly contain our excitement! ...