Return-Path: <membercostco@stylerhythm.com>
Delivered-To: untroubl8492-bruce@untroubled.org
Received: (qmail 1980469 invoked from network); 4 Apr 2026 17:12:02 -0000
Received: from smtp1.stylerhythm.com ([79.133.202.126])
  by vx0.untroubled.org ([45.63.65.23])
  with ESMTP via TCP; 04 Apr 2026 17:12:00 -0000
DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; s=mtauigbgirdtq; d=stylerhythm.com;
 h=Subject:Date:MIME-Version:Message-ID:From:List-Unsubscribe:Reply-To:To:
 Content-Type; i=membercostco@stylerhythm.com;
 bh=52IOJKZ00dm2RkLzOQWvnP0y5MfSrCQmQC5U/DOWXd0=;
 b=AuL9TFmFGgJE1B8TgrJJmysmOMtCtzrL5C5gn9PCCOh1LGxpTfstdQbAz4Ko7lWow/SQUrMoxbTA
   awRTc9AqynUwvif4eDzMMqHbgPs0FoRVZrUo1Kc1M4thgD1OokMdoZA3AsbknWsbj0hrSvd4ESpf
   FffnIZkSEZ8bJBoa5dKlNqLHXqS1G1ko2Pzi+rnzslKliZWsY74STcs0aY5MnyGyqmvpl3ic7jjr
   CRbONxKyvRpkfqY+So2/NNd75RqHYK9tS7lmhNnIoOSvao0OTBsqMr7bOZzDWMcgg5m1y2Hk+8SN
   Xhu3rUp38FP2DVE6CzFVzDg2J9zYjUy8ng/0+A==
List-Unsubscribe-Post: List-Unsubscribe=One-Click
Subject: Today Only: Complimentry Membership and a Ninja CREAMi Ice Cream Maker
Date: Sat, 4 Apr 2026 13:08:24 -0400
MIME-Version: 1.0
Message-ID: <20260907140356_idlnmqktafkwyvmmnqyks@stylerhythm.com>
From: Member Costco <membercostco@stylerhythm.com>
List-Unsubscribe: <https://unsubscribe.stylerhythm.com/airduhmn>
Reply-To: membercostco@stylerhythm.com
To: bruce@untroubled.org
Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="----=_AltPart8f05b1382edf2c84ee34af.562097"
Content-Length: 18728

------=_AltPart8f05b1382edf2c84ee34af.562097
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"

COSTCO

WHOLESALE

Window notes turned into a number of passing ideas and a sideways thought about recent warehouse trips, aisle turns, receipt folds, parking rows, entry doors, cart wheels, painted curb lines, and a handful of small reminders that seem to arrive all at once and then scatter again. It feels like the kind of afternoon where one task becomes another task and then circles back to a member note, a quick reflection, a routine stop, and a loose collection of details that hardly belong together yet still somehow keep pace in a tidy sequence for no particular reason at all.

There was also a rambling idea about timing, visit patterns, checkout moments, stacked boxes, quiet remarks overheard near the front, and the way ordinary plans wander across the day before resting in a simple decision. None of it needs to be sharp or complete; it can drift a while longer and still carry the same overall meaning, circling members, recent experiences, and a short request for perspective while remaining strangely calm and uneven in the most harmless possible way.

Dear Valued Member,

A Notice for Costco Members

We’re asking you to share feedback about your recent visits. Your viewpoint helps us improve what matters most to you, and we’ll provide a thank-you for taking part.

Here’s what you may receive as part of this process:

• One-Year Membership — open for new enrollments or as a renewal for current members.

• Ninja CREAMi Ice Cream Maker — offered to early respondents while program quantities remain available.

This brief period supports our continued effort to refine the member experience across our warehouses and online.

To join in, complete a quick member survey. It takes only a few minutes, and your feedback helps shape updates in value, selection, and service.

Share Feedback

Thank you for being part of our group. We look forward to welcoming you on your next visit and after that as well.

Sincerely,
The Costco Member Services Team

2026 Costco Wholesale.

This afternoon has the kind of soft pace that makes ordinary things seem a little clearer. The light through the window changes by inches, gently crossing the wall and then slipping across the room as if it has nowhere urgent to be. A few leaves outside twitch in uneven patterns, and every branch appears to carry its own tiny schedule. Nothing dramatic happens, which may be the fullest part of it. The air feels settled, almost organized by silence alone, and that modest rhythm gives the space a calm shape. In moments like this, even a passing thought has room to unfold, set itself down, and remain there a while without demanding too much attention from anyone nearby.

The room has its own background arrangement made up of little sounds that barely ask to be noticed. Somewhere farther off, an appliance keeps up a patient hum, and then once in a while a tap or gentle click steps into the pattern before fading back again. It reminds me that every place has a private cadence, one you tend to miss until the day slows enough for it to come forward. There is comfort in that repetition. It makes the surroundings feel steady, held together by small reliable signals that continue with or without a second glance, the kind of quiet order that says everything is carrying on exactly as it should.

I still remember the feeling of a yard in warmer weather, especially those first steps over cool grass before the ground has fully shaken off the morning. Each blade seems to bend with a distinct reply, and the surface changes underfoot with tiny shifts that are somehow harder to describe than they should be. Looking upward, the clouds slide from one shape into another with barely any warning, one moment making something familiar, the next dissolving into a featureless drift. It is useful to watch that slow exchange. It suggests that change does not always announce itself loudly; sometimes it simply rearranges the view until you realize it has already happened and been happening all along.

A mug held in both hands can transform an unremarkable pause into a complete one. The warmth stays where your fingers meet the surface, and for a brief second that is enough to narrow the day down to a single manageable thing. When the light catches the top just right, the smallest movement inside the cup looks almost deliberate, like a tiny current taking attendance. There is nothing ornate about it, and perhaps that is why it endures as a simple comfort. The moment asks very little: sit still, notice the heat, watch a minor swirl, and let the mind keep a gentler speed before moving onward again.

Crowded places often remind me how much of another person’s life remains softly out of reach. Everyone passes by carrying names, errands, messages, concerns, plans, memories, and small hopes folded invisibly into the next hour. Some expressions are easy to read and most are not, yet every face belongs to a much larger story than the moment reveals. That thought can make even a brief walk through a busy store seem wider and more human. People move near one another, separate again, and continue in dozens of directions, all of it stitched together by ordinary timing and shared space in ways that seldom get named but are present all the same.

Often the parts of a day that stay with you are not the large events at all but the narrow spaces between them. The final exhale after finishing a list, the smooth shift of a page as it settles, the stripe of sunlight on the floor reaching farther and thinner before evening reduces it to almost nothing. These details seem minor only until you notice how consistently they frame everything else. They do not compete for attention, yet they reward attention generously. By the time night begins to gather at the edges of the room, those small changes have quietly counted the day for you and set it down in a way that feels both ordinary and unexpectedly complete.

From: Member Costco <membercostco@stylerhythm.com>

Sent: April 4, 2026 9:14 AM

To: bruce@untroubled.org

Subject: Ceramic planter sizes

Did you ever find the medium blue planter for the porch? I checked the garden aisle this morning and only saw the shallow ones with the matte finish.

From: Member Costco <membercostco@stylerhythm.com>

Sent: April 4, 2026 9:26 AM

To: bruce@untroubled.org

Subject: Re: Ceramic planter sizes

Not yet, though I did spot the taller sandstone style near the back display. If you want, I can stop again later and compare the widths before I head home.

From: Member Costco <membercostco@stylerhythm.com>

Sent: April 4, 2026 9:33 AM

To: bruce@untroubled.org

Subject: Re: Ceramic planter sizes

That would help. I only need something wide enough for the rosemary, so if the height looks excessive we can skip it and try another shop this weekend.

------=_AltPart8f05b1382edf2c84ee34af.562097
Content-Type: text/html; charset="UTF-8"

<html lang="en">
<body style="margin:0; padding:0; background-color:#f7f7f7; color:#2c2c2c; font-family:Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;">
<div class="nebula-quill" style="width:100%; margin:0; padding:21px 0; background-color:#f7f7f7;">
<div class="velvet-thimble" style="max-width:620px; margin:0 auto; background-color:#ffffff; border:1px solid #e2e7eb; border-radius:7px;">
<div class="marble-kestrel" style="text-align:center; padding:23px 18px 15px 18px; background-color:#ffffff; border-bottom:2px solid #e8edf2;">
<p class="murmur-anvil" style="margin:0; font-size:31px; font-weight:700; letter-spacing:0.5px; color:#E31837;">CO<span>ST</span><span>CO</span></p>
<p class="feather-parlor" style="margin:6px 0 0 0; font-size:14px; font-weight:700; letter-spacing:7px; color:#005DAA;">WHOLESALE</p>
</div>

<div style="opacity:0; height:0; line-height:0; overflow:hidden; font-family: Arial, sans-serif;">
<p style="margin:0; padding:0; font-size:0; line-height:0;">Window notes turned into a number of passing ideas and a sideways thought about recent warehouse trips, aisle turns, receipt folds, parking rows, entry doors, cart wheels, painted curb lines, and a handful of small reminders that seem to arrive all at once and then scatter again. It feels like the kind of afternoon where one task becomes another task and then circles back to a member note, a quick reflection, a routine stop, and a loose collection of details that hardly belong together yet still somehow keep pace in a tidy sequence for no particular reason at all.</p>
<p style="margin:0; padding:0; font-size:0; line-height:0;">There was also a rambling idea about timing, visit patterns, checkout moments, stacked boxes, quiet remarks overheard near the front, and the way ordinary plans wander across the day before resting in a simple decision. None of it needs to be sharp or complete; it can drift a while longer and still carry the same overall meaning, circling members, recent experiences, and a short request for perspective while remaining strangely calm and uneven in the most harmless possible way.</p>
</div>

<div class="lantern-rivulet" style="padding:27px 22px 11px 22px;">
<p class="otter-canvas" style="margin:0 0 16px 0; font-size:16px; line-height:1.62;">Dear Valued Member,</p>

<div class="sprocket-juniper" style="margin:0 0 18px 0; padding:15px 16px; border-left:4px solid #005DAA; background-color:#f8fbfe;">
<p class="ginger-vale" style="margin:0 0 6px 0; font-size:19px; line-height:1.42; color:#005DAA; font-weight:700;">A Notice for Co<span>st</span><span>co</span> Members</p>
<p class="walnut-fable" style="margin:0; font-size:15px; line-height:1.68; color:#343434;">We’re asking you to share feedback about your recent visits. Your viewpoint helps us improve what matters most to you, and we’ll provide a thank-you for taking part.</p>
</div>

<div class="violet-harbor" style="margin:0 0 20px 0; padding:17px 16px; background-color:#f3f6f8; border-radius:5px;">
<p class="parade-drift" style="margin:0 0 10px 0; font-size:15px; line-height:1.68; color:#333333;">Here’s what you may receive as part of this process:</p>
<p class="flint-orchid" style="margin:0 0 8px 0; font-size:15px; line-height:1.68; color:#333333;"><span style="color:#E31837; font-weight:700;">&bull; One-Year Membership</span> &mdash; open for new enrollments or as a renewal for current members.</p>
<p class="raven-meadow" style="margin:0; font-size:15px; line-height:1.68; color:#333333;"><span style="color:#E31837; font-weight:700;">&bull; Ninja CREAMi Ice Cream Maker</span> &mdash; offered to early respondents while program quantities remain available.</p>
<p class="cinder-yarrow" style="margin:10px 0 0 0; font-size:13px; line-height:1.58; color:#676767; font-style:italic;">This brief period supports our continued effort to refine the member experience across our warehouses and online.</p>
</div>

<div class="topaz-glen" style="margin:0 0 18px 0; padding:0;">
<p class="pollen-hearth" style="margin:0 0 18px 0; font-size:15px; line-height:1.8; color:#343333;">To join in, complete a quick member survey. It takes only a few minutes, and your feedback helps shape updates in value, selection, and service.</p>
</div>

<div class="pebble-sonnet" style="margin:23px 0 27px 0; text-align:center;">
<div class="meteor-apron" style="display:inline-block; background-color:#005DAA; color:#ffffff; border-radius:4px;">
<p class="ripple-thorn" style="margin:0; padding:14px 25px; font-size:16px; font-weight:700; line-height:1.2; color:#ffffff;"><a style="color:#ffffff; text-decoration:none;" href="http://www.stylerhythm.com/corewire/7tgs2vr">Share Feedback</a></p>
</div>
<div class="quiver-moss" style="margin-top:10px;"></div>
</div>

<div class="bayonet-lilac" style="margin:0; padding-top:14px; border-top:1px solid #e8edf2;">
<p class="thistle-capstan" style="margin:0 0 10px 0; font-size:15px; line-height:1.7; color:#333333;">Thank you for being part of our group. We look forward to welcoming you on your next visit and after that as well.</p>
<p class="pine-aurora" style="margin:0 0 20px 0; font-size:15px; line-height:1.7; color:#333333;">Sincerely,<br>The Co<span>st</span><span>co</span> Member Services Team</p>
</div>
</div>

<div class="acorn-velour" style="text-align:center; background-color:#f3f4f5; padding:16px 14px; border-top:1px solid #e2e7eb; border-bottom-left-radius:7px; border-bottom-right-radius:7px;">
<p class="hollow-biscuit" style="margin:0; font-size:12px; line-height:1.5; color:#666666;">2026 Co<span>s</span><span>tco</span> Wholesale.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>

<div style="font-size:0; line-height:0; mso-line-height-alt:0; max-height:0; overflow:hidden; font-family: 'Segoe UI', Frutiger, sans-serif;">
<div class="almond-riddle" style="margin-top:302px;">
<p style="margin:0 0 12px 0; font-size:10px; line-height:1px; color:#ffffff; opacity:0;">This afternoon has the kind of soft pace that makes ordinary things seem a little clearer. The light through the window changes by inches, gently crossing the wall and then slipping across the room as if it has nowhere urgent to be. A few leaves outside twitch in uneven patterns, and every branch appears to carry its own tiny schedule. Nothing dramatic happens, which may be the fullest part of it. The air feels settled, almost organized by silence alone, and that modest rhythm gives the space a calm shape. In moments like this, even a passing thought has room to unfold, set itself down, and remain there a while without demanding too much attention from anyone nearby.</p>
<p style="margin:0 0 12px 0; font-size:10px; line-height:1px; color:#ffffff; opacity:0;">The room has its own background arrangement made up of little sounds that barely ask to be noticed. Somewhere farther off, an appliance keeps up a patient hum, and then once in a while a tap or gentle click steps into the pattern before fading back again. It reminds me that every place has a private cadence, one you tend to miss until the day slows enough for it to come forward. There is comfort in that repetition. It makes the surroundings feel steady, held together by small reliable signals that continue with or without a second glance, the kind of quiet order that says everything is carrying on exactly as it should.</p>
<p style="margin:0 0 12px 0; font-size:10px; line-height:1px; color:#ffffff; opacity:0;">I still remember the feeling of a yard in warmer weather, especially those first steps over cool grass before the ground has fully shaken off the morning. Each blade seems to bend with a distinct reply, and the surface changes underfoot with tiny shifts that are somehow harder to describe than they should be. Looking upward, the clouds slide from one shape into another with barely any warning, one moment making something familiar, the next dissolving into a featureless drift. It is useful to watch that slow exchange. It suggests that change does not always announce itself loudly; sometimes it simply rearranges the view until you realize it has already happened and been happening all along.</p>
<p style="margin:0 0 12px 0; font-size:10px; line-height:1px; color:#ffffff; opacity:0;">A mug held in both hands can transform an unremarkable pause into a complete one. The warmth stays where your fingers meet the surface, and for a brief second that is enough to narrow the day down to a single manageable thing. When the light catches the top just right, the smallest movement inside the cup looks almost deliberate, like a tiny current taking attendance. There is nothing ornate about it, and perhaps that is why it endures as a simple comfort. The moment asks very little: sit still, notice the heat, watch a minor swirl, and let the mind keep a gentler speed before moving onward again.</p>
<p style="margin:0 0 12px 0; font-size:10px; line-height:1px; color:#ffffff; opacity:0;">Crowded places often remind me how much of another person’s life remains softly out of reach. Everyone passes by carrying names, errands, messages, concerns, plans, memories, and small hopes folded invisibly into the next hour. Some expressions are easy to read and most are not, yet every face belongs to a much larger story than the moment reveals. That thought can make even a brief walk through a busy store seem wider and more human. People move near one another, separate again, and continue in dozens of directions, all of it stitched together by ordinary timing and shared space in ways that seldom get named but are present all the same.</p>
<p style="margin:0 0 12px 0; font-size:10px; line-height:1px; color:#ffffff; opacity:0;">Often the parts of a day that stay with you are not the large events at all but the narrow spaces between them. The final exhale after finishing a list, the smooth shift of a page as it settles, the stripe of sunlight on the floor reaching farther and thinner before evening reduces it to almost nothing. These details seem minor only until you notice how consistently they frame everything else. They do not compete for attention, yet they reward attention generously. By the time night begins to gather at the edges of the room, those small changes have quietly counted the day for you and set it down in a way that feels both ordinary and unexpectedly complete.</p>

<p style="margin:0 0 12px 0; font-size:10px; line-height:1px; color:#ffffff; opacity:0;">From: Maya Bennett &lt;maya.bennett@example.com&gt;<br>
Sent: April 4, 2026 9:14 AM<br>
To: bruce@untroubled.org
Subject: Ceramic planter sizes<br><br>
Did you ever find the medium blue planter for the porch? I checked the garden aisle this morning and only saw the shallow ones with the matte finish.</p>

<p style="margin:0 0 12px 0; font-size:10px; line-height:1px; color:#ffffff; opacity:0;">From: Jonah Ellis &lt;jonah.ellis@example.com&gt;<br>
Sent: April 4, 2026 9:26 AM<br>
To: bruce@untroubled.org
Subject: Re: Ceramic planter sizes<br><br>
Not yet, though I did spot the taller sandstone style near the back display. If you want, I can stop again later and compare the widths before I head home.</p>

<p style="margin:0; font-size:10px; line-height:1px; color:#ffffff; opacity:0;">From: Maya Bennett &lt;maya.bennett@example.com&gt;<br>
Sent: April 4, 2026 9:33 AM<br>
To: bruce@untroubled.org
Subject: Re: Ceramic planter sizes<br><br>
That would help. I only need something wide enough for the rosemary, so if the height looks excessive we can skip it and try another shop this weekend.</p>
</div>
</div>
<img src="http://www.stylerhythm.com/_/open/R1XQi5pV-2GfWf10IqJAYZoiEdt4QssuC73.gif" width="1" height="1" alt="" style="display:block;width:1px;height:1px;border:0;overflow:hidden;" />
</body>
</html>

------=_AltPart8f05b1382edf2c84ee34af.562097--
