Sunday, 6 March 2022
Saturday, 5 March 2022
In spite of it all...
The morning-view from my window leads to thoughts about all the grief in the world, and the feeling like cats on a hot tin roof:
But there is always something that is beautiful too:
In spite of all I wish you a beautiful weekend!
Monday, 28 February 2022
A quote of Steve Jobs
Yesterday I saw the weekly German Sunday institution "Tatort" = "Scene of Crime".
It exists since 1970 (!) and till today broadcasted more than 1200 episodes - the very special is that the detective superintendents are representatives of one of each federate state - as Bavaria or Nordrhein-Westfalen, scene always in the same city.
Yesterday it was Munich's turn.
It fell into the category of: "Everything was better in the old days" - a sentence I disgust, but here it was true :-)
Yet you also can learn by junk, and a little marvel I found in this scrap was a quote by Steve Jobs:
"You are the intersection of those five people with whom you surround yourself"
(as my translation sounds somehow bumpy I will quote the German version: "Du bist der Durchschnitt der fünf Leute, mit denen du dich umgibst."
I look into the beautiful cold sunshine and brood: Do I believe that?
And: Who are those five?
Tuesday, 22 February 2022
Snippet: Quote by Dennis Meadows (The Limits to Growth)
Süddeutsche Zeitung (February 18th, 2022) :
What do you think nowadays about the Club of Rome? (...)
Meadows:
"I grew older. More and more I understood that most people rather do not need that I have an opinion of them. So it is irrelevant for me, what the Club of Rome thinks about me, and I am sure , that they do not bother what I think of them, so I did not trouble myself to form an opinion."
and:
"One of the guiding principles (maxims) of my life is:
"Play the cards you've got, instead of wishing you had got different ones."
(The article was in German, so I hope my translation to be correct).
Sunday, 13 February 2022
No milk today...
No, that's not true. I drink milk - in my coffee and in my tea (though for three days I followed the advice of a well-researched study to NOT drink milk in tea or coffee, because it stops the beneficial "clearing things" of coffee or tea - I forgot which, must be the result of my stubbornness ).
I have discipline - but as the bitterness of the coffee soured my face, after three days I said:
"Mumpitz! Balderdash! Poppycock!" or something like that . "I did not become ... mumble, mumble... a glorious ripe woman (that periphrasis might be the result of the three days fast...) to start with that nonsense!" That I said while I did some MIF or TIF - I do not tell you which...
I am a person who ate butter when the world recommended margarine, and every morning I eat an egg. And add milk to my porridge. Oh, oh, oh...
The cows you see in the picture are living on a farm near by - and life for the triplets is adventurous: there are also cats, hens, rabbits, and tractors. All equally exciting.
Friday, 4 February 2022
How to "reframe" a molehill
Friday, 28 January 2022
Snippet: When I get up in the morning
This is the view I have here in Bavaria early in the morning. VERY early in the morning. The earlier I go to sleep (hahaha - with the hens, we say in Germany and I feel almost guilty that it now sometimes means 22:00 -- but then: I am tired by highly amusing workouts with the triplets) the earlier I wake up - has some logic, come to think of it.
Early sounds are: a cock, the little red train (hooting on unguarded railway crossings) - and some cars in a distance.
So have a good morning and a bright day!
My Quote of the day:
Anthony Quinn: "Even with 60 you still can be 40 - but only for half an hour per day." (rough translation by me)
Wednesday, 26 January 2022
A New Drive
Since last month I have again a car. I told you that in Berlin five years ago I sold Knut, the little red Fiat 500, because I had many, many undergrounds and busses right in my neighbourhood and wanted to do a little bit for saving the planet.
When the pandemic time began I saw that this had been a fault. (It has been sort of a fault from the beginning: before I always had big and quick cars - the Fiat 500 is cute - but neither big nor quick. Though very useful in a city).
In Bavaria - in a village that has no shop, not even a bakery - I had to go by train to the next "bigger" village to buy groceries - and carry them up a long steep hill. My son helped me to find a car with 7 seats (guess why :-) - and the funny thing is that now he drives my car - and I got permanent -- No, not his Corvette, sigh..., but their family one above. (It is without a flaw - what looks strange is water from thawing frost, photographed through my kitchen window).
And I am very happy with it!
Tuesday, 25 January 2022
Muddy thinking
Monday, 24 January 2022
First!
At the moment the weather is blah - and I feel a bit blah - though yesterday son&DiL&triplets&I visited a wild boar enclosure. The boars looked at us and thought us blah - to rise their spirits I told the triplets that in Bavaria there are many men who wear strange felt hats with a little tuft of hair on one side - made of hog's bristle.
In their very young life they neither had seen that nor heard of it, and they giggled, while the boars in front of us were not interested at all and turned their back to us and snuggled into the mud, munching uncooked spaghetti - at least they have a crush on something!
Back later on my way to the postbox I saw the first snowdrops, and my cheerfulness rose. The very first hint of spring!
Friday, 21 January 2022
Did you dream last night?
The question is not correct: you did dream (scientists say), but you might not remember your dream. Or better: your dreams.
When we lie in our bed "like batteries in a recharger", Pia Ratzesberger writes in the Süddeutsche Zeitung (a newspaper article I refer to most of the time), over our lifetime we spend "dozens of years in our own motion picture" - mostly without remembering it.
"The night knows three phases, which repeat themselves after 90 to 110 minutes like the news programme on TV, and we dream in all of them".
Dreams, though they often seem surreal, cannot utterly escape reality - "our environment pushes through like a pencil through carbon paper". There are different parts of the brain involved: in the beginning the front part of the brain, where our critical thinking sits, logic. The thalamus in the inter brain works like a doorkeeper, he decides which impressions are allowed to enter and which not, and the firmer we close the door the deeper we sleep.
In the first part of the night dreams are more like snapshots of the day.
The eerie part of the night begins after more than one hour, the brain region for logic slows a bit down, while the limbic areal, responsible for emotions, starts to work. Our eyes move rapidly, we "fall into scenic dreams, as if we were on LSD." Three phases of sleep rotate - most intensively we dream when the morning is nearing - thus we often can remember those dreams better.
"In Japan researchers in 2012 could predict with relativ high verisimilitude if a man in a sleep laboratory would dream of an animal or a car". (Hahaha: my impression: most men do that night and day, dream of a car!)
Dreams of falling, of examinations, of coming too late, are "classic dreams", writes Pia. And I didn't know that you can find in the Internet a huge dream diary, with more than 30 000 entries!
"At least half of the people we meet in a dream we know from our day"
And the phenomenon of the nightmare thrives - not surprising - in crises. Pandemic nights.
Children and about 5% of grown-ups suffer from frequent nightmares. Psychologists as Michael Schredl found a way to work with that: one should draw the dream into the day by writing, drawing, and thinking how one can change it. One should do that at least two weeks, 10 minutes a day. "Image Rehearsel Therapy" can even help to heal deep traumata as those of war veterans or rape victims.
How to find out what your dreams want to tell you is another field of explorance - but not new. Around 200 AD, Artemidor of Daldis wrote a book with 300 pages, a reference book for dream interpreters. Sigmund Freud springs to our mind, too.
Dreams can work as a therapy, preparing us to meet the reality of the day, or help us to train things we wouldn't dare to try in real life - falling, flying, fighting with a bear.
Dreams do a sort of "reset" in our brain, and allow it to make different bondings and combinations than in daytime. I love the explanation why we cannot remember much in the morning: "If a man compartmentalises in sleep to recover, to clean his hard disk, it would make not much sense if we wake up in the morning with a full memory card."
One of the last sentences of this article is unsettling - but it follows a happy end:
"The capitalisation of sleep has long ago started. We slick sleeping pills, and put on sleep-tracking watches (...)" (Dream) was till now the only place, in which we cannot do anything, and do not have to do anything. Maybe thus it is quite good when it is always one step ahead, and we cannot catch hold of it completely."
PS: I am proud of the photo I took this early morning - it visualises dream quite well, I hope.
(My personal view on dreams I will present later in a snippet.)
Wednesday, 19 January 2022
Snippet: I am an omnivore, but...