A Postcard For All The Winter Holidays

Happy Whateveritisyoucelebrate!

I have considered making an upcoming Christmas post, a Hanukkah post, a New Year’s post and then I realised that I also have friends who are Taoist, pagans of several different descriptions, atheists, agnostics and you name it.  Can you tell I don’t pick my friends based on their faith (or lack thereof)?  In the season of celebrations, it’d be silly to single out some and not the others, so this is a postcard to everyone, for whatever – really! – it is you celebrate.

I am posting this now because cannot promise to write with any regularity during the holiday season – the food that gets made between parties is generally leftovers, shortcuts and the like, and the food that gets made for parties may or may not get photographed, and then I may or may not have time to blog about it.  In fact, there are several things which I have wanted to write about, and a post which I had planned to reblog (with permission) that I will still write about as well – possibly after the holidays, when everyone is in New Year’s resolution mode (except me, I don’t do those).

I decidedly reject the commercialized nature of the holidays.  I’ve proudly bought a heap of holly twigs and some glittery spray-painted birch from a corner flower stand, and arranged it myself.  I will not cave to the plastic non-shedding tree fad!  I have found a couple of fir branches and hung them up on the wall to scent the apartment like evergreens.  But, that’s what I like.  Have you considered, for example, the color selection for napkins?  Red for Christmas or blue for Hanukkah?  Or white for … boringly politically correct stuff?  Bugger it, I like red and it’s not like Christians have a monopoly on Santa Claus or his red suit.  Or holly.  Because you know, some pagans I know may have a prior claim… so decorate your home as you like, celebrate what makes you happy, and above all, don’t forget what it is all about.

So with this, I will wish all of you a wonderful holiday season, glittering parties, beautiful clothes, eating too much and likely drinking too much (stock up on Alka-seltzer or Samarin, depending on where in the world you are!), utter absense of any hangovers, and in general, a wonderful time spent with friends and loved ones.  Let us all be thankful for the life we have and how amazing it truly is – because this, this is what there is to celebrate.  Best of happy whatever-holiday wishes to you all!

A Few Of My Favorite Things

I’ve been up since too early for consciousness.  I mean, I’ve been awake since about an hour before the sun bothered to peek up over the horizon.  I’ve consideried going back to bed.

Why would anyone in their right mind do this (be up) if they didn’t have to?  Normally, I’d say they’d have to be out of their mind, but as it happens, T has gone to Canada for a seminar and his taxi to the airport was leaving at 6:40am.  So we’ve been up since 5:40am, and I made him coffee and then shared it, and so here I am, waiting for a text message, missing him already, and not asleep.  Normally, however, I would be.  Asleep.  I love sleeping.

And so, with my brain running mostly on neutral (and how well does your brain function this early in the morning?!), I’ve decided to write about things I love.  Other than sleep, that is.  The inspiration for this post came from the blog of the illustrious Sophie, which had a post somewhat like it, which I enjoyed reading.  A lot.  And not just because Sophie is a friend, but because reading the post way back last summer, I realised that it’s a list that is very much worth making for myself.

Why?  Because we all have a busy life.  Really busy.  Even me, studying from home as I do, I don’t actually have that much “free” time.  I have time to do things I want (read, write, study, cook, cuddle T, water my flowers, etc.), but I don’t have time I don’t have anything to do with.  In fact, I’ve always wondered about people who go “I’m bored…” and expect the world at large or their friends to entertain them, but that’s a story for another post entirely.  Back to the list of favorite things – after reading Sophie’s, I came to the conclusion that if one writes one’s favorite things to do, eat, have, look at, etc. down, they are on paper, and then they are much harder to forget about/ignore in the hamsterwheel of day to day life.  And before you protest that you don’t forget about your favorite things – I don’t know about you.  I know that when I think about it, I realise that I do, and if I don’t think about them, I don’t do them – the things that I enjoy.  Which is, let’s face it, pretty silly in a not-good way.

Another thing which I’ve talked to a friend about recently is how a lot of people have one favorite everything – a favorite color, a favorite flavor, a favorite X.  I realised that while I do have preferences, I don’t actually have singular favorites, and so listing the variations became even more of a good idea, in the sense that perhaps I am overlooking something I’d like if I thought about it more.

Also, reading someone else’s list made me think of a handful of things which I hadn’t ever considered, but which really ought to end up on my list.  And so, I am writing it.  In no particular order.

  • Coffee.  A lot of it, medium-roast with loads of milk, sweetener, and possibly whipped cream.  Or a good latte made so it’s not bitter.
  • Sleeping.  Sleeping well, at night, in a cool but not cold room, in a huge pile of bedding.  Preferably with T to curl up next to.
  • Tea.  Green, oolong, black.  No, rooibos (red ‘tea’) is not tea!
  • Really good shampoo and conditioner.
  • Long black dresses which, when worn, make T stare happily.
  • Writing.  Blog, poetry, prose, nonfiction, whatever.
  • Reading.  A lot.  I’m a very fast reader, so fat books are a plus.
  • Sharp bladed weapons (swords, daggers, that sort).  I guess good kitchen knives go under this category, too.
  • Cast iron cookware.  Also doubles as blunt weapons or home bread oven.
  • Really good lip balm.  Or just pure shea butter out of a jar directly onto lips.
  • Cacti.
  • Leaves turning in the autumn.

  • Quinces.
  • Coconut ice cream and saffron-honey ice cream.  Also, fresh strawberry ice cream.  And … ok, good ice cream in general.
  • Bath+unlimited hot water supply.
  • Bras in correct size.  Pretty ones.  With matching undies.
  • M&S hold-ups with lace tops.  Black.
  • Meat.  Preferably beef, preferably not very cooked.  Steak cooked bleu or rare is amazing!
  • Cured meats (charcuterie) – French, Italian, Hungarian, Spanish, you name it, I want it.  Let’s not leave out the Germans and the Austrians, either!
  • Oil paintings – mostly of pre-1930s.
  • Mushrooms.  The sorts you eat, not the sort you get high on.
  • Apricots.
  • Outdoor swimming pools (with weather/climate to match).
  • Candlelight.
  • Beautiful ceramic dishes and vases.

  • Dragons.
  • Arugula (aka rocket or rucola)
  • Curling up in a warm pile of blankets on sofa when it’s snowing or raining outside.
  • Skinny dipping in natural bodies of water.
  • Fancy dress-up events.  Or any rason to wear beautiful clothes.
  • Cats.
  • Tobias.
  • Citrus trees.
  • Soup.
  • Wide-brim hats.
  • Spending time with friends.
  • Long dresses in colors other than brown, beige, pink, turquoise or teal.
  • Really high heels.
  • Fur.

  • Old buildings.  Or ruins.
  • Men in formal wear.
  • Jewellery.
  • Food magazines.
  • Expensive scented candles.  Good perfume in general.
  • Sunlight – at any time of year.
  • Very cold prosecco in crystal flutes.
  • Waterlilies.
  • Restaurants that cook better than I do.
  • Milk chocolate.

Meet my ORANGE dress. Also in this photo, an orange soup I met last summer.

  • Really bright colors.  Especially purple, crimson red and orange.
  • Egyptian cotton sheets.
  • Being right.
  • Libraries, bookstores, and any place full of books, old or new.
  • Roses.  In any color that’s not pink or dyed.  Also to eat.
  • White star chrysanthemums.
  • Stationery.  Preferably Italian, preferably very pretty.
  • Cast iron things other than cookware.
  • Shiny, sparkly lip gloss.  I just wish it’d not get all over T’s face when I wear it.  (I swear, teenagers get away with this sort of stuff because they don’t actually smooch anyone a whole lot!)
  • Boots No. 7 eye shadow and mascara – they stay where you put them.  Really, I kid you not!
  • Cooking for people.
  • Lanterns.
  • Fresh blue mussels, cooked by me.
  • Cashemere scarves.
  • Leather gloves.

  • Orchids.  Looking at, owning, growing.  Getting to bloom.
  • Things made of terracotta.
  • Koi ponds.
  • The way I feel after a yoga class.
  • Seeing new places.
  • Canadian maple syrup.

I could go on.  And on.  And perhaps at some point I will, but this has gotten long enough already to make me think of things I should do, should do more, or haven’t done in a while because I’d not thought how much I enjoyed them in ages.  So, I am going to rectify that, starting with making myself some lunch.  Involving arugula.  And some prosciutto crudo as well, why the heck not?  Life’s too short not to do, see, eat and enjoy your favorite things.

The Art of Happiness

The morning dawned a perfect August day – none too hot, but warm, slightly breezy and with bright sunlight under the ridiculously blue Stockholm sky.  And, sitting in the view of an open balcony door with my huge mug of coffee (I ingest the holy-bean beverage in half-liter installments, including loads of full-fat milk), I came to think of how sometimes people do not appreciate moments (or days, or times) of happiness when those happen – and that it is not necessarily due to the lack of such moments.  And I came to think of the fact that many people, despite not starving or being abused, and in generally having a decent life, are not happy – simply because they do not know why.

Beauty in shades of purple

You’d think – “easy for you to say, lazy blogger, I have problems…“, but before you say that, remember that said lazy blogger is also a human being, and, by definition, too, has had problems.  In fact, I’ve had scores of them, some brought on by my own stupidity, and some visited upon me by misfortune and other people – in short, I’ve had a normal life, problem-wise speaking.  I still have problems, too.  What I have also had – and still very much do – is a happy life.  And though, like anyone, I’ve had times when I’ve wanted to whine and been miserable, that makes it no less so.

Though, it has taken some effort, and time.

The quest for happiness, for me, started years ago.  Like any teenager, I was searching for a place in the world, and it was then that, in my incessant reading, I came across the quote “Two men looked through prison bars – one saw mud, the other saw stars.“  I no longer remember where I’d read it, and chances are that it was not even the original author, as a search on the net suggests the author is either unknown or one of a number of 20th century self-help quacks who attribute it to themselves (yeah, right!).

Being teenage and even more impressionable at the time than I am now (hard to imagine I was even more so!), I took the words very much to heart, and have decided that I will not waste my life being unhappy – and to such end, that I will make sure to notice the proverbial stars, and all other beautiful things around me, day in and day out.  And I’d promised myself that I will not stop noticing the beauty of everyday things, no matter how dragged-down by aforementioned problems I’ll become.

... I tend to photograph them, too

It hasn’t always been easy keeping that promise  (I’m human, remember?), but it has certainly been worth it, for in all the places I’ve lived and all the problems I’d gotten into, I refused to stop seeing the sky, the flowers, to stop enjoying the new and interesting food found there, and to reject the good things about the place (however many or few they have been).

This philosophy has also translated into my love of food, which, considering that my teen years ended in the ’90s – heyday of the starving models – was unintentionally rebellious and against the common trend of problem and difficult relationship with food and weight, and the fact that having an eating disorder was in vogue among the trendier of my classmates.

Along with the refusal to hate my body, food, the universe and everything, I also decided that I will not be afraid to pick myself up and move.  Why is this important?  Because moving around, in many ways, has made me who I am today.  Moving between countries since I was quite young, and between houses and apartments before and after that, and then moving to another continent and then countries on my own has taught me that there was actually no reason to have been afraid – and that there is far more happiness to be had from going to where you want to be, than from staying where you do not wish to stay (and complaining about it).

Another large aspect of learning to be happy was, and is, the willingness to embrace what is simple and silly – the colors I love, squeaking and hopping when I am happy (ok, maybe not in formal settings, but any other time), and not being afraid to ask for what I want (if you don’t ask, you don’t get) if I want something.  It may sound silly, or simple – but that is because it is.  It is also rather great to feel happier just because there is something purple, or orange, or red (or whatever colors make you happy) around.  This led to not being afraid of bright colors – in one of my previous apartments, my bedroom walls were painted a medium purple color just because I liked it that way.

Phalaenopsis supermarketensis

I grow orchids.  Not professionally, the way some collectors do, and not any difficult sorts of them – just the regular run-of-the-mill supermarket Phalaenopsis hybrids.  Why?  Because they are large and showy and beautiful, and because seeing them come into bloom in my own home (rather than buying them that way and then disposing of the plants when the flowers have faded) makes me happy.  They aren’t actually difficult to grow – but I think that in a way, they symbolise one of the most important things I’ve learned on the way to being happy: the fact that in order to be happy, one should first learn to not be afraid.

In the case of orchids – one should not be afraid to get one and try to keep it alive.  It’s a learning process, but if you don’t try, you’ll never get there.  And, to reflect on things I’ve mentioned above – one should not be afraid of surrounding oneself with bright colors.  One should not be afraid of moving from where you don’t belong to where you do.  One should not be afraid of food, and of other pleasures in life, or of seeking them out.  And, most importantly, in order to be happy, I think one should learn to not be afraid to seek and keep happiness in whatever form it comes to you.

In parting, I will share a Jewish joke with you:  There was once a good and pious Jew who prayed to God over and over so that he may win the lottery and become rich.  And because he was such a good Jew, one day the clouds parted, God looked down at the Jew, and yelled: “Yes, yes, I will let you win the lottery – but do me a favor, and at least go buy a bloody ticket!

Those who do not seek, will not find.  And gods help those who help themselves.