The Morning: Reconsidering Tax Day

A time to take account of your year.

Good morning. Tax Day is upon us. It's a time of personal inventory, of looking back and taking account.

María Jesús Contreras

Happy returns

April 15 has, to put it mildly, a terrible reputation. Tax Day (don't freak out — you have until Tuesday to file) is a near universally dreaded occasion of financial self-scrutiny, a compulsory rite of adulthood whose rank in the boogeyman taxonomy includes root canals and D.M.V. visits. It sneaks in with the rest of the spring holidays, marring an otherwise celebratory season.

Tax Day needs a new public relations representative. I'm not nominating myself for the role — I have received a phone call from my accountant that began "Are you sitting down?" — but I do have some ideas for rebranding.

When Tax Day looms, I print my credit card statement from the previous year. Recently, as I set about examining my year in spending, I began to marvel at the document, at the organized way in which my very unorganized activities can be marshaled into some kind of order: Here are the restaurant meals you paid for (the lobster rolls we ate outside, the dinner in D.C. with my friend from college). Here's what you bought (so much for decreasing reliance on retail behemoths). Here's how much you spent on travel (that trip was a year ago?), on gas, on charitable giving.

I found myself reading this spending statement with interest. It's an emotionless album of debits to anyone else, but, like a logbook, it provoked a torrent of sensations in me. I wouldn't go so far as to say reading my bank documents was fun, but it was enjoyable to look back on the year, to take stock. What I spent mapped in my memory to what I did and saw, where I went and whom I went with.

There's no other time when we go month by month, reviewing the year. In the waning days of December, perhaps, but, at least for me, that's more of a general looking back than a detailed inventory. We're one-fourth of the way through 2023, a logical time to take a pause. Why not make Tax Day slightly less unpleasant by taking the occasion as one of personal reckoning with the year that was?

We lament years passing too quickly, our inability to account for them. By looking back closely at the days and their details, we can at least try to get a handle on how we're spending our time.

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THE WEEK IN CULTURE

Prince Harry and King Charles III last year.Karwai Tang/WireImage

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CULTURE CALENDAR

🕹️ "Dredge" (Out now): In this indie game, available on every major platform, you play someone in a mysterious archipelago who must pilot a boat around to fish the waters. Pretty soon, in between meeting the often creepy inhabitants of the island towns, you start to pull up odd creatures and artifacts from the deep. With beautiful art and evocative sound design, "Dredge" is pretty chill and subtly terrifying.

📚 "The Wager" (Tuesday): David Grann, a staff writer at The New Yorker, is well lauded for his deeply researched narrative nonfiction, including "The Lost City of Z" and "Killers of the Flower Moon." His latest book is about British sailors who were shipwrecked on a miserable island off the coast of Patagonia in the 1700s and then turned on one another in a vicious struggle for survival.

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RECIPE OF THE WEEK

David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.

Crispy tofu with cashews and snap peas

Yewande Komolafe is a revered tofu whisperer for those in the know, and her recipe for crispy tofu with cashews and snap peas is one of her most beloved. After a searing in a hot skillet, the tofu is topped with a velvety coconut sauce spiked with ginger, garlic and molasses, which adds depth. Lightly charred sugar snap peas give the dish color, along with a slight crunch that's underscored by a chopped cashew garnish. If sugar snap peas aren't available, feel free to substitute broccoli, green beans or asparagus. As the headnote promises, "if it's fresh and green, it'll work just fine."

REAL ESTATE

Imani Keal estimates she has spent $10,000 upgrading her Washington rental.Kenny Holston/The New York Times

Aesthetic apartments: These renters are redesigning their homes for social media and making thousands of dollars from brand deals.

"Homegrown": The television host Jamila Norman transforms backyards into productive gardens. She brought the same can-do spirit to updating her century-old house in Atlanta.

What you get for $2.8 million in California: A 1903 Craftsman house in Los Angeles, a Mediterranean-style home in San Rafael or a midcentury-modern retreat in Cambria.

The hunt: A first-time buyer wanted three bedrooms for $350,000 in Minneapolis. Which house did she pick? Play our game.

LIVING

On Air New Zealand, the Skycouch comes with pillows and a thin mattress pad.Air New Zealand

Skycouch: Airlines are letting passengers book beds in the economy cabin.

Ghosting friends: It can be just as painful as ghosting in dating.

Unpredictable weather: Why the West got buried in snow this year but the East didn't.

Beginner workout: Kettlebells offer a low-impact, full-body workout.

ADVICE FROM WIRECUTTER

Spring pressure washing

When it comes to getting cleaning outdoor areas for spring, nothing is quite as satisfying as using a pressure washer to, say, scour years of mildew off a piece of patio furniture. I have a small farm, so my needs are extreme: blasting cow manure off tractor wheels and spraying out the sheep waterer. But pressure washers are great for all sorts of outdoor chores, like rinsing the car or restoring the grill to its shining glory. The best models Wirecutter experts have tested are often electric, and some are even small enough to carry around with one hand. I can't imagine this time of year without one. — Doug Mahoney

GAME OF THE WEEKEND

The Knicks' Josh Hart, left, and Jalen Brunson.Evan Yu/Getty Images

New York Knicks vs. Cleveland Cavaliers, N.B.A. playoffs: Both squads are looking for their first playoff series win in five years. Keep an eye on the clash between Knicks guard Jalen Brunson and Cavs guard Donovan Mitchell. In their last matchup, the pair combined for 90 points with 13 three-pointers. Once overlooked, Brunson has had by far the best year of his career, scoring 24 points per game and leading New York to its most regular-season wins in a decade. Mitchell, whom the Knicks sought but failed to acquire in the off-season, proved himself again this season to be a superstar, scoring 40 or more points in 13 games and earning his fourth consecutive All-Star nod. Game 1 is tonight at 6 p.m. Eastern on ESPN.

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NOW TIME TO PLAY

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Thanks for spending part of your weekend with The Times. — Melissa

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