With Courtesy to Mavis Cheek this is now "Mrs Hugel's Country Life" - (Bavarian's Country Life instead of Buzzing through Berlin)
Wednesday, 30 November 2016
Thank You All, My Blogger-Mates!
I know that this year I was a bit unproductive in the blogger-world (I had a lot of other things on my plate, sorry).
But I want to thank you all for making my life richer: by reading your blogs, smile, getting ideas (thank you Elaine for the tip about the Christmas book - you see: I've got it!), lending an ear.
I hope that at least December will see more input of mine here.
Wednesday, 2 November 2016
The Agony of Choice, Mr. Karl Lagerfeld
Yesterday I saw this "KARLBOX" presented in the KaDeWe in Berlin. Hundreds of beautiful colour pencils, crayons and pencils. For the
Ridiculous.
Every real artist - Rachel, Tom and Cro know that of course - needs good 'tools', and they have their price, but even a layman as I know that you mix most of your colour hues yourself - with a lot less pencils than those 72 in my Faber Castell Artists' Watercolour Pencils box.
When I stand in a drugstore in front of a shelf of 100 cream jars all promising everything under the sun - and we all know that in the end it all comes down to oil & water! - it happens that I walk out of the drugstore without buying anything.
An overload of choice, scientists found out, stands in no correlation to happiness - it produces - and do I really need a scientist to tell me this? - STRESS.
So: it is nice to have choice. But not too much.
Because the most important 'things' you can't buy anyway: creativity and discipline and talent and inclination to work really hard for success. (And a little pinch of luck).
The funniest thing, Mr. Lagerfeld, is, that YOU prefer BLACK.
Which reminds me of a passage in a German children's book, König Mauzenberger: eagerly the King (Cat) mixed all the beautiful colours he had in his new paintbox. The result:
Monday, 31 October 2016
Highway to Hell - Bavarian Style
Dear You,
it's Monday - and Halloween - so here's a little uplift -from Bavaria :-)
it's Monday - and Halloween - so here's a little uplift -from Bavaria :-)
Thursday, 27 October 2016
Berlin in Five Minutes - SWEET!
You came over by aeroplane to Berlin. You are in a hurry, maybe you have to attend a conference - so there is not much time for sight-seeing?
Here is my sweet solution!
In 1918 the family "Wilhelm Rausch jun." started to produce chocolate for their "Private-Confiserie". . Just follow your nose - the scent of chocolate - and lots of people - hurry to the Gendarmen-Markt in Berlin Mitte. Open the door to the biggest chocolate
And here you can see (almost) all important buildings in five minutes - created in chocolate!
The Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedächtniskirche:
The Reichstag:
The Berlin TV Tower:
The Brandenburger Tor:
But be careful and don't overeat,
though you might be tempted (this is only a little snippet of the truffle section):
The results of too much indulgence you see here - the Berliner Bär could not resist!
“When you are a Bear of Very Little Brain..."
Tuesday, 18 October 2016
Patience... Solitaire...Banana Solitaire...
I'm not blessed with it. PATIENCE , I mean.
At the moment I take "Patience" - that's how we call your "Solitaire" - literally, and try to learn the game.
For a long, long time I regarded it as an utter waste of time - the voices of my late parents urged me to do "something meaningful" instead.(I still have difficulties to watch TV in the afternoon!).
But better late than never I try to free myself.
I take small steps, patiently. On my own.
Though Bananagrams, which, after Amelia Bullmore (wonderful DCI Gill Murray in Scott&Bailey) mentioned it in an interview, I ordered impatiently (the English version of course - and please don't laugh at my humble attempts) is even more to my gusto:
“Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and try to love the questions themselves" as our poet Rainer Maria Rilke said in "Letters to a Young Poet".
I'll try. Have BUNCHes of them. Questions BANANAS!!!
144 files for a Bananagram Solitaire.
PATIENCE!! (Otherwise you go bananas)
Saturday, 15 October 2016
I believe In Kissing
When I was in Vienna in August, I lost my pink Pashmina - in a tram, (well... after visiting a Heurigen(Wine)-Lokal, with son and daughter-in-love). And as hard as I tried: I didn't get it back.
So sad, because I loved it very much, it had the perfect Pink.
"I believe in pink. I believe that laughing is the best calorie burner. I believe in kissing, kissing a lot. I believe in being strong when everything seems to be going wrong. I believe that happy girls are the prettiest girls. I believe that tomorrow is another day and I believe in miracles." Audrey Hepburn
Me too!
Friday, 14 October 2016
Ambiguity of Entertainment
Well -- I am not insensitive to deafening silence... :-)
AND I see myself more being cheerful than nagging about Nobel Prizes in Literature.
So when I came back from the Museum für Fotografie - this time I had seen photos by Helmut Newton - such beautiful women he photographed! - I hummed a little meaningful tune, it went like this:
"Don't follow leaders,
watch the parkin' meters.
Tra-la-la, tra-la-la,
Rum-tum-tiddle-um-tum."
Knut, my little red Fiat 500, stood outside on the street - sulking, because he is very, very rarely moved. The son of our caretaker grinned broadly when he saw me: "You'll move it?!?" he chuckled.
"No", I said.
"Why?" he asked.
"Because I have found such a perfect parking place".
Now he ponders if I meant it. "The Ambiguity of Entertainment", that's it.
Thursday, 13 October 2016
Yes: There's always Something...naked...
In Germany we say: "With a tear in the buttonhole". You say "With a tear in the eye" - ours might come from the parsimony of 1 tear in the buttonhole of a suit - a more manly version of showing feelings :-)
This morning a Berlin radio moderator announced the winner of a competition - prize: a voyage to Cuba with the whole team - task: the chef has to come to work stark naked. (No place for a buttonhole or a tear). Winner: a doctor who will come nude to the surgery - and work that way - all day long.
That doctor volunteered - argument: "As a dermatologist my patients have to undress in front of me too - so it's only fair."
Aha.
I hope that the few doctors I have will be able to pay their travels with the money they earn from us private patients (One handshake: 150 Euros, in combination with a smile: 250 Euros).
Why the tear in my buttonhole (or on the Gaura on my balcony - took a photgraph yesterday - it is still raining - but isn't it lovely?)
Well - at the moment I have lots of work to do. That's why I'll change the style of my posts - at least for a while - to shorter impressions.
As the sign on German phone boxes in the Sixties urged:
"Make it brief!" (Haha - I :-) - anybody knocking at the glass door?)
Wednesday, 12 October 2016
There's always Something...
Fire on the roof of the Europa Center in Berlin yesterday - thank God nobody of the 1500 people who work there was hurt.
The building is 103 meters high and was built between 1963 - 1965. As a pupil visiting Berlin with my classmates we all thought it the highest fashionable store we'd ever seen.
Yesterday I came from the Museum für Fotografie, where they show an excellent exhibition by Bernard Larsson: "Leaving is Entering" - with photos from 1961 - 1968. Then I saw the smoke and grabbed my smartphone (NO, not the Galaxy Note 7 :-) and took some pictures.
What people bemoan most: the huge Mercedes-Star on the "Icon of City West" doesn't turn around anymore (if you try hard you might see it middle-left) - it is ten meter high and turns around 1,9 times in a minute, never stopped since 1965, when the Center was built.
PS: But today all is fine: it turns again.
Saturday, 1 October 2016
Grateful
L' été c'est fini ...
... and I feel thankful for such a lovely, lovely solitary summer!
Here a part from George Herbert's poem 'The Flower'
...And now in age I bud again,
After so many deaths I live and write;
I once more smell the dew and rain,
And relish versing: O my only light,
It cannot be
That I am he
On whom thy tempests fell all right.
Monday, 26 September 2016
Boring for England?
No, I don't want to bore you.
So these photos will be the last ones from my visit to London I'll show you, promised.
They are more traditional, because Rachel complained that the others "could be everywhere"-
These ones NOT:
Ha, you might think: now I've got you! These could be from Paris!
Maybe they could - but they are from Battersea Park.
Glorious!
And can you believe that the father of my friend Trish accompanied Mr.Churchill to the Wannsee-Konferenz?
And that I saw a letter to her father, written by him:
PS: "And what do you think of Britta's Dream Aga, Sweetie?"
"Absolutely Fabulous!"
... and VERY British
And this I found - I swear - in London - Street Art you could find anywhere?
:
Anyway: I will return. Again. And again.
(Promise to myself)
Monday, 19 September 2016
A quick run on Monday through London (Part II)
I visited museums for old and modern Art
e.g. Tate Britain
and Tate Modern
revelled in Street Art
and felt refreshed by Nature
saw Things battling hard to survive
or having lost the fight against time already
dreaming seclusively of times bygone
while others, overhauled, look somehow like fakes:
As it is Monday evening (but I promised to write, so discipline wins) I was a bit in a hurry, sorry - in a few days I will show you the last (condensed) part of my impressions of lovely London.
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