28 Dec 2010

Long lazy days

Do you remember how you used to feel at the beginning of the summer holidays? Weeks and weeks of warm carefree days with nothing to do but amuse yourself and relax and unwind? Remember?

Alas, those days belong to childhood. Along with your graduation certificate, your last days of education signal an end to having all the time in the world to relax and do nothing. From then on you never have to freedom to dream. It is gone, along with your childhood.

Except for a few days each year between Christmas and New Year.

Those last few days of December, for me and my family, are the only time in our hectic whirlwind of everyday life when we organise and do absolutely nothing at all. We simply loll away the days doing just as we please. And all you need to do it is time.

So here is how we've been spending our time doing nothing, these last few days. Just in case you find yourself with time on your hands and nothing to fill it, and you want to do just as we are:
  • Read the sublimely wonderful The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society. Isn't this the most beautiful book you've read all year?





  • Read Thea Astley's Coda and ponder how easily Grannie Abuse can happen in civilised society. This is a book that will really get you thinking. What do you do when you can no longer live safely at home but you're certainly not ready for the Passing Downs Old People's Home?

  • Read The Mystery of a Hansom Cab by Fergus Hume (online here) - a murder thriller set on the streets of Marvellous Melbourne and first published back in 1886. This Australian classic novel is a real page-turner!

  • Dip into Randolf Caldecott - His Early Art Career by Henry Blackburn (online here) - a fascinating memoir written back in 1886 soon after the artist's death. You'll love the wonderful pictures and the stories behind them contained in this entertaining book. If you can find an original edition like mine then I think you will appreciate why I am enjoying this book.

  • Browse through A Family of Readers - The Book Lover's Guide to Children's and Young Adult Literature by Roger Sutton and Martha V Parravano, editors of The Horn Book Magazine. If you like to read about books as much as I do then you'll enjoy this guide to selecting books and its essays of how books are read to and by children today. I am.

  • Play Board Games: Mousetrap, Monopoly and The Great Penguin Bookchase - the world's first board game about books, which, as I'm sure you can imagine, is a great favourite this Christmas. Strange, but I always lose these games. I personally think the others cheat...

  • Pick fresh strawberries from your garden and eat them outside in the shade of the trees dipped in whipped cream with real vanilla and sugar. (It there anything more sublime than eating strawberries straight from your own garden?)

  • Invent special Christmas cocktails. Raspberry Gin made from fresh raspberry coulis, gin and lemonade is a winner, let me tell you.

  • Drink coffee from lovely Japanese pottery cups.

  • Eat fresh white bread sandwiches filled to bursting with turkey and lettuce with cranberry sauce.

  • Have a French Champagne tasting.

  • Work in the garden tying up the tomatoes and eating the first cherry tomatoes of the season while nobody is watching.

  • Watch The Hedgehog video together on the telly.

  • Dutifully munch your way through the Christmas chocolate Santas. Lindt are tall, hollow and elegant; Caffarel Santas are short roly-poly skittles full of Gianduja. Personally, I like the skittles.

  • Eat out at friends' places.

  • Sleep in and lounge around in dressing gowns and fluffy slippers lovingly knitted for each of us by our dear friend Sarah.

  • Consume mountains of nut bikkies, yoyos, shortbread and mince pies. Remember to make a wish on the first mince pie for each of the twelve days of Christmas.

  • Complete Wentworth wooden jigsaws - 'Koi Carp' by B Lee, and 'An Early Taste for Literature' by Charles Conder this year. Very satisfying, jigsaws, don't you think?

  • Tidy, weed and water the children's garden.

  • Pick bunches of out-of-season sweetpeas for the kitchen table. Why did the pink ones survive best, do you think?

  • Make elves from old wooden clothespegs with a creative Auntie.

    Jemimah's on the left; Auntie Kay's on the right

  • Assemble, decorate and eat gingerbread house with a creative Grandma.

  • Bake biscuits, package attractively and deliver to residents of the local Nursing Home on Christmas morning. Make extra for the nurses and ancilliary staff on duty.

  • Marvel at how much you can get done when you're not doing anything. Have you been doing nothing too?
    • 12 comments:

      1. We are having a soggy, froggy time. Wet Christmases are the best, I've decided.

        I do so like those peg dolls!

        (The word verification is ditswedo. What a great word!)

        ReplyDelete
      2. we are having a wonderful time doing nothing. Joseph is building a stronger bond with Steve and I am feeling so invigorated since he isn't as demanding and is sleeping much better.

        ReplyDelete
      3. Yes we've been doing nothing much except eating and socialising with a bit of reading thrown in!

        ReplyDelete
      4. i am having a great time - reading, watching movies, having fun with a photography software + spring cleaning the kitchen cupboards and throwing away stuff (very liberating). it has been as great week so far. I even baked my first loaf of bread that i made, i thought it turned out very well.

        enjoy your holidays.

        blessings

        ReplyDelete
      5. Oh, your week sounds absolutely lovely.
        I so agree with you, "The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society" is a wonderful book. I read it last year about this time and thoroughly enjoyed it.

        ReplyDelete
      6. Happy Christmas. Enjoy this quiet time.

        ReplyDelete
      7. Enjoyed reading about all that nothingness going on.

        Lots of nothing here as well, though the only gardening is indoors. Ditswedo, I guess.

        ReplyDelete
      8. Ditswedo to all of you too. Maybe!

        ReplyDelete
      9. Hey Jeanne,
        Glad to hear you are thoroughly enjoying your break.
        I have discovered another board game which I purchased from an Op Shop a year ago...its called Bookworm.
        Believe it or not, its based on books from The Opie Collection of Children's Literature, published in 1994 and made in England. Here is a link:
        http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/15754/bookworm
        Have a great day,
        Butter Fly

        ReplyDelete
      10. Ooh, Butter Fly - Bookworm looks marvellous. How wonderful to find it in an Op shop! Jealous...

        ReplyDelete
      11. What a wonderful break you are having! I cannot take the glory from my incredible mother who knitted all the fluffy slippers, but I did ask her to do it! I did have the thought, and I can imagine you walking about with them on! xxx

        ReplyDelete
      12. it all sounds wonderul and the pictures are lovely thanks for sharing

        ReplyDelete

      I'd love you to leave me a message. Tell me what you like - and what you don't. Just remember that this is what we do in our family - it doesn't have to be what you do in yours...