Sunday, December 24, 2023

This isn't Yule

 It's quarter to five on Christmas Eve afternoon, and I'm miserable. I don't know what is missing, but this isn't Yule. It has been snowing and the weather is wonderful. It's cold and white and glistening and so wintery and Christmassy as one could wish. I'm spending my Yule with my husband in a decorated and clean home, and he's making us the traditional Christmas dinner from his tradition. He's Danish.

I feel so bad. I feel depressed. Where are you, Christmas?


Christmas is supposed to be fun, happy, exciting and cosy time of being together with loved ones, relaxing, and enjoying things. 

I think one of the things missing is my family. It's just me and my husband, and I come from a big family. I'm the youngest of 6 kids, and our extended family (siblings with their spouses and children, and children's spouses and children) is now about 20 people.

We aren't doing anything special during the days leading to Yule. I think I want to watch movies together, do crafts and cook and bake and such things. Have a glögg party and cookie exchange and such things. Bake and decorate a gingerbread house. Have a winter hot chocolate picnic with ice skating. Play in the snow.

I want to sing carols.

I think I want to watch movies every day and do something connected to that. Like, have movie-themed snacks, and do some decoration or activity inspired by the movie.

I think I want to have Elf on the Shelf kind of tradition. I don't like the "official" Elf, because he's a snitch and created to control and manipulate the kids, and that's nasty. 

I want to play games, gather puzzles, and do things like that.



Wednesday, November 15, 2023

How I want my holidays

 I was watching a YouTube channel I like, and their preparations and celebration of the American Thanksgiving. And I am... judgmental. I know, I know, it's none of my business, done is better than perfect, everyone does their thing their way, not my way, and that's a good thing, and F me, that's why. I know, it's not good. I'm not pretending I have any right to be judgmental. I just am. So I am going to use this to talk about how I want my holidays as different from theirs, and I am not going to talk about theirs. 


Firstly, I want the home to be decorated. Thoroughly. Every room, every corner, nook, and cranny. (It's kind of interesting, that... nook is like a nose, a ridge, and the cranny is the opposite, a crevice. But nook has also come to mean a corner or a niche. Niche and nook might sound similar, but there is no etymological relationship.)

I want the decoration to be used to build memories and heirlooms. I don't want cheap crap bought new for every year with no connection, no personality, no meaning. Have one evening before the feast when you gather to make decorations. Give ornaments as gifts. It doesn't need to be expensive, it needs to be good quality and meaningful. Handmade is good. Children's paper decorations are great. Just make sure that you use good quality materials and not some cheap kiddie craft items that will deteriorate when one looks at it. I love decorating because I remember where and when and from whom I got all the pieces, and every piece has its place. I smile every time I pass them using my home, because every time I see them, I remember them again and again. That creates memories and love.

I want the decoration to appeal to all senses. Mainly the five well-known ones, but if you can find a way to appeal to one's sense of balance or spatial orientation, or... I don't know, hunger, good. I want everyone to feel good and sense pleasantry all the time they are in the area.

That's why it is very important to me, that the home is clean. Not just cleaned and tidy, but clean. Every nook and cranny, from floor to ceiling. 

And just a couple of words about "tidy". Of course, a home is meant to be used as a home, and if you use the dining room as a playroom, the kids should be able to play in the playroom even during the holidays. Nevertheless, the play should be put away when the dining room is to be used to dine in. Have toy boxes that don't look like toyboxes, or have curtains to the toy shelves, so that the dining room looks like a dining room, not like a playroom with the dining table in it. The dining table should be clean and decked with clean table cloth and good china and glasses, not paper plates and cups. Sure, when you have 10+ celebrators at the table, there's going to be a lot of dishes, but that too should be done together. You can even play games about who does the dishes. Make it a program point. Use it as a team-building activity. 


That's another thing about my perfect holidays. They should be "team-building events". A chance to enhance the feeling of being one big family, belonging to a group. That is why I want every member of the group to participate in building the feast. Every chore should be shared, done preferably by several members of the group, divided equally, age-appropriately, and so that no one has to do most of it. Let everyone do what they can and what they are best at, "from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs". Give the chores plenty of time, so that you can be patient with people who might not do things the same way or speed as you do. Remember that done is better than perfect, and the main thing is being together, not that everything is perfect. No hostzillas wanted, OK. 

Then the food. I don't like ready-made and semi-finished, thank you. There are, of course, SOME things that I'm OK with, like canned and frozen vegetables, but things like packed macaroni and cheese or green beans are so easy and quick, that I think it's an unnecessary money pit, especially during the holidays. I also think the preparations for the meals are part of the "team-building activities". All the casseroles and most of the baking can be done beforehand and frozen. Also, if you have parties with many families coming together, a potluck is a perfect way to divide the cost and responsibility. So what Uncle Roger can't cook, or that Aunt Elizabeth's mashed potatoes aren't as good as cousin Carolyn's. It's most certainly good enough, and Uncle Roger can buy the cranberry sauce, or get a cheesecake from a bakery. He could have some team-building activities of his own, with friends, and exchange favors. "You make this casserole for my family dinner, and I'll build you the IKEA thing you want". 


Food is important. Every guest should have a meal that is pleasing and satisfying. At the same time, it is "just" food. It doesn't need to be perfect, it needs to be edible. Make your garlic-infused mashed potatoes to yourself, don't force that on your guests if some of them don't want to eat garlic. Give your vegan guests a vegan feast. Most traditional holiday dishes have an adequate alternative that fits all the eaters' diets and preferences. You can have questionable flavors as side dishes, like roasted garlic, garlic powder on the spice rack, and so on. Mind your guests more than "I've always done it this way" and "I like it better like this". Not using cilantro might make the food somewhat lacking in your opinion, using cilantro makes the food inedible in my opinion. Just think about the food you just can't eat, be it offal, insects, or soup, and remember the feeling when planning the dinner menu. If your holiday isn't a holiday without a certain dish, you can always make it for yourself. (You can of course turn that around - if all the other guests are OK with that dish, you can make the dish without the hated ingredient for that one guest - or ask them to bring it themselves. That is totally fine.) 

I just saw another Thanksgiving dinner preparation video, and there was garlic in EVERY dish. Even mashed potatoes. I hate garlic. I think it's disgusting. It smells and tastes like rusty nails in sweaty woolen socks, rolled on the barn floor. I wouldn't eat rusty nails and woolen socks with cow poo, I wouldn't serve it, I don't see the fascination, I wouldn't be able to eat anything except desserts there. Or, of course, I would, because I was raised right, but I wouldn't enjoy the food. I really hate garlic. 

Don't throw away food. Most scraps can be used to make stock, at least, if not other things. That's one thing that really bothers me. Of course, if you compost, it's somewhat OK to be a bit more wasteful, because everything that can be composted will be. But if you cook Brussel sprouts, the outer leaves can be cooked, too. 

Another important detail for me is that one needs to dress up. During a holiday dinner, one needs to have holiday attire. Sunday best. Formal knee-length dress with pumps. Suit. Business suit. Something like that. Neat hair. If you have long hair, tie it up. Or holiday holiday-inspired outfit, like a Christmas sweater. It's not OK - in my mind - to come to the table in sweats or T-shirt. (This, of course, depends on the family style. For some people, a shirt and jeans ARE "Sunday best". But they most certainly must be clean and neat.) Also, the whole company needs to "match". So, discuss the clothing options with all the guests good time before the dinner. 

And then the last thing about this. Everyone eats together and stays by the table until everyone is finished. No running to watch the television, what ever is on. No eating on flimsy paper plates balanced on knees. No eating at different times, in different rooms. 



Saturday, October 14, 2023

Some Halloween decoration tips

 I read a couple of articles, and here are some thoughts I have about them.

The 5 Mistakes Everyone Makes When Decorating for Halloween

Firstly, I think it's a lot of pretentious crap. :-D But they do have a couple of good points. Like "If you have to wipe fake cobwebs away to get through your front door while trying to see straight ahead of the blinding strobe light, you’ve gone too far. Halloween decorations are meant to be whimsical, but not inconvenient, impractical eyesores." 

The main thing here is that you do you. Do what pleases you, what you find nice, whimsical, if you like that kind of thing, even a little inconvenient if it assists in creating the atmosphere you want. Decorations are there to create the mood, atmosphere, air, and feeling. There are no "you should" or "don't do this, it's a mistake" other than you going against what you want.

“The biggest mistake people make when decorating for Halloween is going the traditional route"

I say total BS to that. That's not a mistake at all if you want to take the traditional route. So some fancy schmancy designer doesn't like orange. *I* like orange and it's MY house, not his!

The traditional Halloween colors are the colors found in nature; the color of soil, wet bark, midnight sky, root vegetables and pumpkins, autumn leaves... That is why the traditional colors of Halloween are black and orange. All the other colors added to the Halloween palette are things like bone white, rotting flesh purples, moldy green... :-D 

Now, if you don't want to take that route, take whichever you like. There are no problems with people having a pink Halloween, or turquoise, white, the whole rainbow. You do you, as said.

I like the idea of using a lot of textures and such, so adding metallics to the mixture is just a good idea. I mean, if you look at those pumpkins above, I love the blend of textures. The iron, the wood, the stone, the rough pumpkin and the smooth pumpkin, the crispy leaves, and the carved wood. (I think it's carved wood, it could be carved pumpkin, to be honest. I just like to think it's carved wood.)

If you want to have an all-black Halloween, go for it. And don't "romanticize it", if that's not your "speed". 

Going kitschy about Halloween is all fine. Go all store-bought. I personally love vintage and antique things, hand-made things (high-end artisan stuff as well as kid's pottering), and I have a very eclectic, bohemian style, but that's me. 

Sure, if you buy the usual dollar-store things everyone has, you won't win any prizes for individuality, creativity, and originality, but why would you need to? This is a holiday, not a design competition.

Also, the Kusama pumpkins... er... uh...


About the lighting... yes, do use colored light bulbs. There are tons of things to do with lighting. Read up about that, and experiment.

7 THINGS I’VE LEARNED ABOUT PLANNING A KILLER HALLOWEEN PARTY

"Halloweenie Roast started with a very simple concept: roast hot dogs around a fire pit in my parent’s backyard. (I have no outdoor space, and they’re gracious enough to share theirs every October.) Year two I did the same thing, and I’ll be honest – I was kind of underwhelmed by my own party. It wasn’t the Halloween gathering I wanted. So the next year, I went BIG. I added a theme. I had one of my photographer friends create a photo booth for us. I made tons of Halloween-themed goodies. I added a costume contest. And it was a HUGE success."

Remember to appeal to all senses. Touch, sight, hearing, smell and taste. Most people just think about the sight, especially now in the Pinterest age, with a lot of visual inspiration. But things like music and smells are very effective in creating the proper (desired) atmosphere. 

This House Doesn’t Half-Ass Halloween

"I change out all the etageres, vignettes, mantels, hutches — you name it. Sometimes I even color code my bookshelves with orange, black, and white spines."

I think this is a very good advice. Change some details. Change the "soft furnishing", like curtains, sofa cushions, towels, etc. You can paper the books, or turn them spine against the wall so that only the white pages show out. That will create a very nice backdrop for items. 

Also, incorporate everyday items into Halloween decorating. "The easiest thing is to look at the color of things. For me, I have my mother’s typewriter from college as a Halloween decoration because it is orange. I collect vintage cameras and in the right setting, they can be spooky. I mentioned I like subtle spooky. Not everything has to scream BOO in your face — black and orange Murano glass ashtrays, vintage Band-Aid tins, doll heads, game pieces and more can be Halloween decorations in the right setting."



Friday, June 23, 2023

Family Game Night

Turn off the television, unplug the phone, and ignore the "to-do" list. Instead, focus on your family by planning a night filled with a winning combination of fun, food, and games. (Kids have a skill for being silly, so be sure to include them in the planning!)

First, pick a night when no one has to work and doesn't have mandatory meetings or events. If possible, try to make Family Game Night a regularly scheduled occasion.

Use a score sheet from a game to write out "invitations." Send them along in briefcases, backpacks or lunchboxes. You can also place them on bed pillows, tape them to a mirror or set them on breakfast plates.

Resist the temptation to include other families and just concentrate on having fun with your immediate family.

Have on hand inexpensive door prizes for the winners of each game. Such as decks of cards, hand-held games, and books of crossword puzzles or sudoku. (Here's some great suggestions of pocket (purse) games and here some travel games)

Plan your menu. For extra fun, use recipes that tie into the theme. Choose foods that keep the fingers clean and grease-free. 

Use a game table to display the food. Or decorate a dining table with playing cards, dice, game pieces, game boards, etc.

picture from Mimi's Doll House

Starting with the youngest family member, let each person choose a game to play.

Keep a running tally of the winners and post it on the refrigerator or family bulletin board. Award a larger prize (like a new board game) to the winner after a few weeks or months.