Dear You,
These three little amber flowers above were the answer to a sympton that I watch Argus-eyed when it occurs:
Caution! when books with titles like this attract me:
(There are hundreds of them in bookshops - instead of being minimalistically thrown away they slouch on a bench or table - and as Tom Stephenson in one of his recent blogs ranted: They are utterly daft!)
Why are they - at certain times - singing like
Loreley from the height of the bookshelves to me?
Whispering: "
Throw everything away - life will be simple then - just do it!"
Maybe because at such a weak moment my life is overflowing with THINGS, like here:
How come? Me - having written a groundbreaking book on good housekeeping?
(Well - a signpost does not have to run himself, as dear
Monsieur J.J. Rousseau said, when he put his five children one after another through a baby flap of an orphanage, then writing the worthy pedagogical book "
Émile ou De l'Education")
No: normally my flat is full of harmony and beauty.
But I had subscribed for the "Berliner Tagesspiegel" - a newspaper which arrives daily, even on Sunday - and I still have to find a way to turn that flow from toil to joy.
What vexes me in books on minimalism: the writer takes photos of all his objects that he discards - letters, things, whatsoever.
Mmm, mmm, mmm - here I protest: he ignores all the sensual, haptic feelings! To look at a flowers on Instagram: haha, poor sod! To look through that silly
Card-Board Brille 3D Google Virtual Reality - instead of touching or loving a woman - Geez!
He imprisons all poor things - and senses! - into his posh Macbook!
Not for me,
Great Preacher of Nothing, I mumble - and walk to the
Bernsteinzimmer, a little shop right beside the
KaDeWe. Normally it is crowded with Chinese tourists - they buy amber - as the shopowner tells me - because they believe that amber is good for their health.
Defiantly I buy three (3!!!) little amber flowers - carved out of amber, nothing to be utilised, only beautiful -- something that the
GPoN would throw out immediately with a derisive laugh.
I cherish them.
And throw out the heap of old
Berliner Tagesspiegel instead - singing a song of the
Rolling Stones, that - luckily! - I have kept in my CD-rack: "
Who wants yesterdays papers?"
Then I have room again for "S
itting on my Sofa" - a song of the
Kinks on a CD I luckily kept in my overflowing CD-rack...
And leaf through a new book, with the alluring title:
,