6 Fredericksburg Parent and Family • April 2026
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letter to reader
Amanda Danaher,
Frederickburg Parent
and Family Acting Editor.
On the first truly warm day last month, my two
youngest kids discovered a couple of old pots in the
garden. Chipped and forgotten, the pots looked a
little sad after the long winter.
Still, my kids grabbed them from our soggy garden
bed and insisted we use them to plant a few apple
seeds they had saved from their snack.
We cleaned the pots, filled them with soil, tucked
the seeds inside, and watered them carefully. Then
my three- and five-year-old plopped down on the
back deck and simply watched, their little faces full of
wonder and anticipation.
"Cute," I thought. How precious that these sweet
little souls believed that with just a moment of care, a
tiny seed might grow into a tree before their eyes.
But then it hit me.
Why don't I expect good things to grow like that
anymore? Why don't I believe that care and attention
might actually change something?
My kids looked at two cracked old pots and saw the
possibility. They didn't question it. They didn't hedge
their hopes. They simply believed that because they
planted something and cared for it, something good
might grow.
Watching them, I realized how easily we lose that kind of simple faith. Yet even
the smallest acts of care can bring life and renewal to things that might otherwise
be overlooked. My kids saw something worn and forgotten and turned it into a
vessel for new life simply because they cared.
Maybe I can hold on to a little of that hope too.
Growth, whether in a garden, in our relationships or in our communities, rarely
happens overnight. It takes patience, attention and the quiet belief that small
efforts matter.
When the world feels heavy or uncertain, it is easy to forget that we do not need
perfect circumstances to make a difference. Planting kindness, like planting seeds,
begins wherever we are, with whatever we have.
Sometimes it looks like watering a small pot on the deck. Other times it means
picking up litter at the park, listening carefully to a child, or offering kindness to a
stranger. These small acts ripple outward in ways we may never fully see.
As the world begins to wake up this spring, I hope we do too. I hope we notice
the possibility in small things and find joy in everyday moments.
Plant a garden. Clean up a park. Take a slow walk in the sunshine. Or vote for your
favorite local spots, shops, businesses, schools, and practices this month for our
2026 Family Favorites contest.
Whatever you do, do it all with hope for a better tomorrow.
Let's care a whole awful lot, in ways big and small, and see what begins to grow
for our children, our families and our communities.
Xoxo,
"Unless someone
like you cares a
whole awful lot,
nothing is going
to get better.
It's not."
— Dr. Seuss,
The Lorax
Let's Care a
Whole Awful Lot