Oct 252019
 

I know it’s been a while since I have written. I kept thinking about sitting down to write a post and then I didn’t.

Time passes by quickly whether I am happy or whether I am sad. Time stops for no one. It’s really just a matter of how we spend the time.

People go through phases. Regular patterns reveal themselves throughout the year if we take the time to note them.

For me, the end of summer always brings a busy period and so it seems quite consistent that I write less in the early fall due to external factors. Probably, it is also the time when a low period hits after having to return to a normal schedule after being on holidays.

While this year wasn’t this case, I suppose that it was still a quiet period in terms of me pondering ‘out loud’ the meanderings of my mind.

On top of all that, I have realized that I have been in a bit of a funk. I was keeping busy to avoid acknowledging it or processing the source. My ups and downs are less obvious these days because overall life is fairly chill.

However, there has been quite a lot whirling in my mind.

During our recent holiday (post on that coming eventually), I 95% went off-grid. The remaining 5% was for a few minutes of mindless scrolling on social media, watching a video here and there, and keeping up with my French studies on Duolingo.

In any case, I read a book in a day (pictured above – nice when the cover matches the scenery, huh?!), watched the changing cloud patterns, drank tea and wine in our outdoor bathtub, swam in the sea, contemplated whether or not a school of fish could actually eat my body, enjoyed the rugby πŸ‰ matches, savored our nightly 8-course meals, laughed with my husband about nonsense, absorbed the ‘real purty’ scenery on our drives, and basically let my mind process what it needed.

While I’m not necessarily out of the funk, I definitely have a clearer idea of where my mind has been. The cogs of the wheel have been cleaned and oiled a bit, so I imagine I will finally be back to posting again. πŸ˜€

More to come….

~T πŸ˜€

Aug 302019
 

There is a thing called personal space.

The amount required depends on the person, culture, etc. I have gotten used to having less of it through living in Japan πŸ‘₯ where this concept is a luxury even if on a person to person basis people would like more of it.

The other day, I knew that I had grown in my tolerance for close proximities to strangers when I only momentarily paused as someone stepped on the back of my flip-flop as I got off the train.πŸšƒ

This was again tested, the second time that someone stepped on my shoe on the same day.

Although my inner voice was screaming, β€œBack the F*@K off”, πŸ—£ my more β€œmature” voice took in a deep breath, smiled, waited for the foot to come off of my shoe and continued on. πŸ§˜πŸ½β€β™€οΈ

Of course, there are multiple perspectives on this. One, ☝🏽I should/could choose to wear different shoes that might be less likely to get stepped on. Two, ✌🏽I could push back or give dirty looks at the offender to make them feel momentarily bad or confuse them as to the problem – either way creating a negative exchange. Three, πŸ‘ŒπŸ½ I can accept it for what it is and delay contemplation.

Obviously, I have chosen the latter of these options.

My contemplation πŸ€” is, what makes it necessary to be so close to someone that you can actually step on the back of their shoe? Or, is it the make of the shoe in that the delay of the flip and flop is just that slow in that it unbalances the rhythm of steps for everyone? 😳

Whatever the case, I thought I would bore you with this anecdote, but interested in other theories and thoughts too because I can’t quite figure it out. In the meantime, I am wearing thicker soled shoes to thicken my patience. πŸ˜‰

~T πŸ˜€


Aug 252019
 

Eating is one of my favorite things to do. Good food makes my legs move and my body dance. I am also wont to hum a happy tune as I chew and savor a bite of goodness. πŸ’πŸ½β€β™€οΈ

Some time back, I was talking to someone and relaying a story about an experience eating. As I was telling the story and saying, not for the first time in my life, that I hate to eat alone, I got suddenly teary-eyed. I had to smile to ward off more tears as I said it again, more for my own sake than the other person’s.

Perhaps it was hormones or the chemical imbalance of my emotions, but as I contemplated later the emotional reaction, I realized just how deep the feeling goes.

In my adoption papers, it says:

According to the foster mother, she (I) would eat much. In my (social worker’s) opinion, it seems that she (I) would take (eat) much because of her (my) lack of love.

Food seems to always have had an emotional connection to me. Possibly, eating was always a happy time with my birth mother. 🀱🏽

In my family, sitting around the dining table for dinner together was always one of my favorite times of the day. It was when we shared our days, talked about plans, and in general talked with one another – good or bad. Generally, it was less about the food (though I do love food!), but more about the socializing.

This attitude continued as I got older. University mealtimes were something to look forward to as time to catch up with my friends and we almost always met up in the cafeteria or went there together. It was an unspoken agreement that no one ever ate alone.

Never did I eat alone outside of my home until I was in my 30s. Even these days, I will limit the places that I consume food on my own to cafes or while on the move 😳in between locations. Also, I will often avoid eating at all until I am home where I deem it safe to eat by myself if I must. πŸ€·πŸ½β€β™€οΈ

More than this dislike for eating alone, I especially dislike eating in silence. πŸ€πŸ™…πŸ½β€β™€οΈThere is absolutely no need to be in the company of others and not be talking while enjoying some food.

Whenever I see couples together at a restaurant and they aren’t talking while eating, I feel sad for them. Or, when groups are out and most of the people are on their phones, it is disappointing even if they are ‘talking’ online.

In these cases, the full experience of breaking bread together is diminished. The Urban Dictionary defines “breaking bread” as:

To break bread is to affirm trust, confidence, and comfort with an individual or group of people. Breaking bread has a notation of friendliness and informality, derived from the original meaning regarding sharing the loaf.

Therefore, it is meant that through eating together and conversations we build trust and confidence with each other in a comfortable manner.

So, when I am with someone who doesn’t talk while eating, choosing to look at their phone or do something other than share the experience with me, I get sad and disappointed. When I am with someone who devours their meal without breathing, or the reverse, picks at their food with boredom, I get frustrated. I’d almost rather eat alone in those cases – almost! πŸ€¦πŸ½β€β™€οΈ

In any case, it’s probably just me and my issues.

I get that, but if I can encourage everyone to develop an appreciation for food or at least the experience of eating with someone else, then I feel as if I’m helped to make the world a better place!

Let’s eat! 🍽πŸ₯°

~T πŸ˜€

Aug 222019
 

Reading is my joy. Reading is my escape. Reading keeps me sane. Reading is life!

In past posts, I have mentioned this first set of three books that were on my read-ar, but as I was thinking that it is probably about time that I update on the other books I’ve covered, I realized just how much I have read since my last proper literary escapes post in February.

One way that I can get through many of these books is through Audible. Audiobooks have been a thing for me since I was young since my parents went through a phase of listening to books on their road trips. I used to buy books and download as gifts for years.

However, when I had less time for listening and more time to lounge around on my balcony or home, I read books on my Kindle or in paper form.

Now, being back in the land of a lot more walking and train commuting, I am back to having a ton more time to listen and less to carry around a ‘book’. Therefore, of the 14 titles posted here, I only “read” three and a half of them in totality. The half was _Sapiens_ as I ended up getting the audio version as it was just taking me far too long to read it on my Kindle before bed at night.

So, I’m up to 20 books for the year so far, which is pretty good. I’ve got another audiobook going now, plus one I read at night to slow my brain down.

Of these titles, I have enjoyed all of them. But, will give you a short rundown of my thoughts.

_Spilled Milk_ and _Educated_ fall into a similar genre of the autobiography of a girl who overcomes her circumstances to be ‘successful’ in life. I use quotes because, of course, this is a subjective idea. Both were inspiring in ways and very challenging to read/listen to in parts. I am still processing the impressions they have left on me.

_Stay Sexy & Don’t Get Murdered_, _The Killer Collective_, The Weight of Silence, and _Lying Next to Me_ fit into the ‘murder’/crime genre. Though, the first title is less about crime per se, but is what binds the story together. All were great reads. I recommend the first, though if you are interested in the ladies behind the same titled podcast – which I love!

_Sapiens_ and _My Spiritual Journey_ were historical reads. Neither of which I can say I enjoyed in the sense of the storytelling aspect, but both of which gave me new information about the historical contexts they relayed. I also recognized that though it is good for me to read this genre now and then, I’m just not so interested in it.

_I Feel Bad About My Neck_, _I’m Fine and Neither Are You_, and _Trail of Broken Wings_ were a kind of journey into the mind of women whether from the challenges of aging as in the Ephron book or in finding oneself in the second title, or redefining our inner strengths like with the latter, each offered a different view of the female world. Although I am not necessarily a fan of this kind of literature, I am somehow finding my own female voice through these kinds of works. Of the three, I enjoyed the latter the most, but possibly because it was the more depressing of them all. πŸ˜›

_A Year in Provence_ and _Where the Crawdads Sing_ were lovely fiction stories that I thoroughly enjoyed. I highly recommend both, though they are not similar at all.

Finally, the self-help genre with _The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F…_ and _Dare to Lead_ were informative and motivational in different ways. I didn’t quite get all the hype over ‘subtle’ because it assumes a reader who is not reflective or thoughtful already. Thus, not much sunk in as I took much of the advice as ‘duh’ statements. πŸ™ Not to say that I didn’t have anything to learn from it, just that an introverted over-thinker such as I had already processed these points. As for Brene Brown’s book read by the author, well, I have been motivated to research the possibility of completing my PhD somewhere. It’s not a for sure thing and, quite possibly I’ll change my mind next month, but through her book, I realized I am indeed still fascinated by leadership and development. So…we shall see.

With that, these are the inputs to my brain the past six months. Still got a few more months to go in 2019 and plenty of trains, planes and automobiles to entertain myself in until then! πŸ˜€

Happy Reading!

~T πŸ˜€

Aug 122019
 

While waiting at the airport with my mother due to our seven-hour delay to get to Mongolia πŸ‡²πŸ‡³, I did a lot of people watching. I am always fascinated by behavior whether as a social norm or an individual. Often, I find myself imagining what people are thinking or the background behind their actions. πŸ’‘

As we were sitting on lounge chairs to pass the time, people came and went to rest before boarding their flights.

Some people dropped their stuff on multiple chairs to lay claim to them while freely coming and going. Some people rested for a few moments and then jumped up to carry on with their business. 🧳 Still others sat down, like we did, pulling out devices πŸ“±and settling in for a long wait.

The seats next to me were generally occupied by a brother and sister πŸ‘«, who were like any other kids these days, playing on their devices. Over the period of a couple of hours, they had spread out their things with a sweatshirt hanging on the back of a chair, bags all around, and they were in for the wait.

Finally, the time πŸ•° to board their plane πŸ›« came and they quickly gathered up their things to stand in line, leaving behind the sweatshirt.

Typical of the lounge seats, they are rarely ever unoccupied for long and soon enough a mother and young daughter swooped in to have their turn in the coveted seats. The mother noticed the sweatshirt hanging off the chair and yelled out to the girl who had just been occupying it. However, the girl was busy putting her things into her backpack πŸŽ’ and no one else was paying attention; so the shout out went unheeded. πŸ™‰

I wondered what the mother would do next while her daughter looked at her with a seemingly similar question. πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§

The mother simply shrugged her shoulders and said, “Well, I tried.” To which, her daughter accepted and they carried on. πŸ’πŸ½β€β™€οΈ

I almost laughed out loud. πŸ€¦πŸ½β€β™€οΈ Was that a reasonable claim to “trying”? πŸ€”

Only a couple of minutes later, the mother and daughter got up to stand in the same line as the girl who had left the sweatshirt behind. The sweatshirt remained.

Clearly, the mother’s trying was complete and forgotten.

In the meantime, I found myself debating on my own action. In my disbelief with the mother’s claim to have tried, I ran through my own mind 🀯: What is my version of trying? Should I get involved? What if the sweatshirt was actually important to the girl? What if it was the only sweatshirt she had? What if her dead grandmother had given it to her as the last gift she had received from grandma? (Like I said, I can create all kinds of scenarios and drama in my head!πŸ€·πŸ½β€β™€οΈ)

Seeing the girl up ahead in the line, I processed these questions in the 30 seconds or so that they passed through my mind 🧐 and grabbed the sweatshirt. I needed to stretch my legs anyway. I walked straight up the line, asked the girl if the sweatshirt was hers – to which she acknowledged it was -, smiled as she thanked me and went for my walk. πŸ‘πŸ½

It was a small act and took very little extra effort of “trying” than shouting out to deaf ears and giving up.

What affected me and still lingers in my mind is the human capacity of lying to ourselves on what it means to “try” without any deep consideration of the results in the action.

To me, one of the main reasons that people are unhappy is a lack of empathy and compassion for others or our possessions. That mother had no concern for the left behind object, nor what it might mean to the person who left it behind.

In our privileged world, we tend to take everything for granted. We lose a sweatshirt, we’ll buy another one. We forget a birthday, there’ll be another one. We haven’t talked to a friend in weeks, they’ll still be there.

Yet, what if that sweatshirt can’t be replaced financially, sentimentally? 😒 A little bit more effort could prevent an emotional disturbance. 🀩

What if there isn’t another birthday for that person? πŸ˜₯ A simple message to acknowledge their life could make a difference in the final days. πŸ₯°

What if your friend isn’t there next week? 😭 A quick “Hey, thinking of you.” could reconnect you and perhaps be just what was needed for both you and your friend. πŸ˜‡

Everyday, we make choices. We love to claim that we don’t have time to do this or that choosing to connect with our phones or TV rather than “trying” to participate in the building of humanity. πŸ˜”

Rather than express our annoyances or joys with one another, we bury our heads into our devices, or tell ourselves that either we or they are unimportant. Thus, we don’t really ever “try”. 🀐

The mother and daughter in the story sadden me πŸ₯Ί because the daughter learned from her mother that both objects and people are only worth a minimal amount of ‘trying’ and any conscience-ness can be shrugged away with “Well, I tried”.

As a humanist, I believe we can do better and that we have a responsibility to “try harder”. πŸ’ͺ🏽

~T πŸ˜€

Aug 092019
 

It had been a while since Mom and I had taken a mother-daughter trip, so with life starting to return to normal, we made plans to reinstate them. With lots of options, we decided on Mongolia.

Many people gave us quizzical looks respectively whenever we mentioned where we were going as it is not a common travel destination – yet. However, this sort of made the journey even more exciting.

We booked an 8-day tour with Amicus Travel Mongolia focusing on being able to see Mongolia’s annual Naadam Festival towards the end of it.

Our tour started in Ulaanbaatar, the capital city, with just one night in a hotel before meeting the rest of our group and a driver, who took us all to the airport in the morning. Then, we were left to our own devices to figure out where to check-in and catch the morning flight to Murun (Moron as spelled on our boarding passes – was that a hint?!). Luckily, there were five of us together, so we figured it out. It was a short flight and then we met our tour guide and driver for the first three days of the tour.

A rather long and bumpy car ride took us toward Lake Khuvsgol in the northern part of the country which shares the waterway with Russia. It was a beautiful area with green mountains, herds of animals, untouched lands and fresh air. Actually, just the scenery reminded me of Trillium Lake at home in Oregon, but the Blue Pearl lake is called such for a reason. The water was rather chilly, but it was gorgeous to see.

We spent two chillier nights in the Ger camps, experiencing how the local nomads might live in these homes. It was a bit like ‘glamping’, only less glamorous.

During this time, we visited a reindeer herd and explored the area with a visit to a couple of local families’ homes.

After a couple of days of this area, we then headed back to Ulaanbaatar for another night in a different Ger camp outside of the city area and compared the differences in herded animals as well as culture of the people.

We also experienced a bit of the spiritual side of the country in visiting temples both in and out of the city.

Of course, the highlight was seeing the festival with all its competitions from ankle-bone throwing to archery to horse racing to wrestling and the opening ceremony.

We toured the city and saw highlights as a close to the tour.

On the whole we enjoyed the trip. It was fun to see a completely different and fairly unknown country. While the history is rich with stories of Genghis (Chinggis) Khan, there is little known about its current status in the world.

With that said, I do not need to visit it again anytime soon. I might be interested to see its development in another 20-30 years since it is indeed a developing nation. Also, much of the tour was spent in a car getting from locations, which is not as fun. It reminded me a bit of the tour I took in Turkey.

As for recommending it, I’m not sure. I think if one has an interest in Mongolia or seeing a still fairly untouched country, then it is worth it. However, don’t expect the food to wow you or to be overly impressed with the tourism industry.

Click on the pic to see all trip pics!

Still, I’m glad I got to do another trip with my mama and to revive the travel bug in me! Now, the real question is, where to go next…? πŸ˜›

~T πŸ˜€

Aug 072019
 

Having weekends to myself has been the most challenging in terms of how to pass the time enjoyably, but also meaningfully for me.

I have loved fireworks since I was little, but in the US we can only enjoy them once a year really. However, it was always my favorite part of the 4th of July picnics that my family would host. Each year, they got bigger and better, but honestly, once I saw them in Japan nothing ever compared.

Every night, we can see the Disneyland fireworks from our bedroom window, but M thinks I’m crazy to get excited for them. He also felt lukewarm about the shows put on in the UAE, so I figured this was a good chance to go see some summer fireworks and he would not necessarily be disappointed by missing them.

The only issue with attending any major event in Japan is the crowds. It doesn’t matter where you go, if it’s an event, you’ll be sharing it with thousands of other people. So, I decided to be proactive in minimizing my crowd-discomfort and bought a ticket to ensure that I would get a seat to enjoy the show. Plus, I would have a safe place to aim for to keep me from being overwhelmed with too many people.

Despite my planning ahead in buying a ticket in order to avoid the chaos involved with attending summer fireworks festivals, I ended up on the wrong side of the river. How would anyone ever know this?!

While I do fully appreciate the Japanese complacency to follow rules to the letter, I am not such a kind of person when efficiency proves doing so to be completely out the door. The nice staff lady tried to tell me I had enough time to walk another kilometer, get on another train and then find my seat on the other side of the river, all I could think about was that I’d have to return to this side of the river when all is said and done to get home; thus why I thought my seat would be here.

So, taking advantage of the fact that most would not assume that I wouldn’t follow the rules, I snuck back in to the riverside and walked down where people were not on their previously saved blue tarps – the peanut gallery.

I found a nice little free space amongst those who most likely knew better than to consider buying a ticket and knew that one could just show up to find a grassy spot for the viewing.

While waiting for the show to start, I listened to my audiobook and observed as a solitary individual within the sea of chattering people in groups or couples who had come together to experience β€˜summer’ culture in Japan. Although it would be basically impossible to merge into a giant BBQ event in the US, it’s rather easy to blend with the crowd of unknown faces while remaining in my own private world looking forward to the moment when the dark sky becomes alight with colors.

What is it about fireworks that people love? What is it about them that I love?

I can’t really say. But, there is something awesome about seeing man’s talent for shooting up bombs of fire that burst into colors, shapes, or designs. In a way, it’s how I imagine the ‘heavens’ with lights blended together into a glorious mass of color.

Edogawa is said to have 14,000 fireworks making it one of the largest shows in Tokyo. The hour long display was marvelous. It was fun to oooh and awwwwe with the crowd and feel a part of the whole audience. Plus, I got to play with my camera to capture the lights!

Click on the pic to see more!

~T πŸ˜€

Aug 022019
 

While some people choose to go into a sauna to sweat out πŸ˜₯ the toxins in their body, the summers in Japan πŸ‡―πŸ‡΅ work just about the same when you step out the door. 🏝

The weather has drastically changed from rainy season β˜”οΈ to sweaty season πŸ˜“. Although I don’t feel that it is that hot in terms of temperature, the humidity makes the 91 degree F into something in the hundreds πŸ₯΅. It also means that despite a cool-ish breeze, it is impossible to open windows to let the air circulate in the house due to the dampness that will surely enter instead. πŸ’§

Thus, it’s nothing by β€˜dry’ function or straight AC all the time.

Somehow, though, I think I have gradually adjusted to it and accepted that the next month or so is going to be filled with trying to remember to take a hand towel πŸ§–πŸ½β€β™€οΈ with me everywhere to wipe the sweat from walking between air-conditioned locales.

In a way, this has timed well with my decision to do a food detox. Since I don’t particularly like to cook, πŸ™…πŸ½β€β™€οΈπŸ‘©πŸ½β€πŸ³ and especially don’t enjoy doing it for just myself, it was a perfect time to give it a go.

Although I regularly do intermittent fasting once or twice a week to maintain my weight, I found that my body was getting used to it and I was gaining more than I liked. Therefore, I decided to try a full-on five day cleanse. πŸ’πŸ½β€β™€οΈ

This means that I did the following:
*Drink warm freshly squeezed lemon πŸ‹ water in the morning in lieu of tea or coffee.
*Drink water or sports drinks throughout the day (to fight the humidity sweats).
*Drink dandelion tea at night with a few more glasses of water.
*Have a simple smoothie of half a banana 🍌, frozen berries πŸ“, super-green powder and fruit juice or water on the few occasions when I felt weak or just wanted a variation of liquid.

After six days, actually, I returned to food, but following Lyn-Genet Recitas’s _The Plan_ to become more aware of what food my body reacts negatively to.

This is based on the idea that there are a number of ingredients that we eat that can cause bloating, indigestion, constipation, πŸ₯΄ etc., which are considered negative reactions. We tend not to pay attention to how our bodies react to the food that we eat because we eat everything altogether and do not carefully consider which specific thing we ate could have caused the reaction.

As I have become more and more sensitive to food, air, nature, etc. as I get older, I have noticed an increase in skin issues, digestive concerns, and more. Therefore, I would like to investigate πŸ€” in a natural and methodical way what my body is doing with the food that I put into it.

Even on the detox, I have noticed that my throat has slowly been constricting 😲 from either lemons or dandelion tea. I’m leaning towards the dandelion tea as the culprit since it is the newest addition to my intake list and as I’m allergic to grass, it’s probably related. Unfortunately, the symptoms can take days for me to realize what is happening since it does not come on instantly like other reactions that I can have. So, I am eliminating it now while keeping everything else the same for a couple of days (i.e. not adding in anything different or new until I see if the reaction in my throat goes away). If it doesn’t after a couple of days, then I’ll eliminate the lemon water as well and see if that does it.

In any case, I’m in a holding pattern now with the carrot-ginger soup πŸ₯£ and steamed broccoli πŸ₯¦. Though, I think I will try the hummus I made with carrots πŸ₯• as well since these ingredients are not meant to be reactive according to The Plan (though I still could have reaction to these as well).

While my goal was not to lose weight βš–οΈ exactly, I have already lost 3 kg (6.6 lbs) in just about a week. Some of that would obviously be water weight, though I feel as if I was drinking enough water to counter that! So, that’s a kind of perk. More happily for me personally is that the underlying 4-pack I’ve been working on at the gym πŸ‹πŸ½β€β™€οΈ is finally showing itself since the flabby belly that was hiding it is starting to disappear. It helps me to see what areas to work on more in my workouts. 😜

So, the journey continues. I have another week on my own to not be overly influenced by my hubby’s eating habits πŸ€£πŸ˜‚ and to keep on experimenting with my food. Hopefully 🀞🏽, by the time he comes back I’ll have a base to be able to keep me on track (and maybe get him started?!).

I’ll keep you posted on what I find! πŸ‘πŸ½

~T πŸ˜€

Jul 252019
 

Although I am due to post some full write-ups of my trip to Mongolia with my mother, I thought that I would post at least something just to get myself back into the swing of things.

Time goes so quickly that I was shocked πŸ™€ and dramatically dismayed 😫 to see that my last post was almost a month ago!

There are a number of topics for me to cover, but I’ll start with something more current to my mind at the moment.

Starting tomorrow, I will be on my own πŸ₯³ for two weeks while M takes his summer holiday – meeting friends and touring France πŸ‡«πŸ‡· with his eldest. Despite his grumblings 🀬 about the fact I chose to go on holiday with my mother πŸ’πŸ½β€β™€οΈthis summer instead of him (forgetting that we have tons of holidays planned together this yearπŸ’), I am of mixed emotions about my pending time alone.

I have joked a couple of times about how he and my BFF conspired against me 🀨 to both be out of the country at the same time. Now, we all know that jokes 🀑 hold truths (thus why I am not a fan of most comedy), and the truth is that despite my general preference to be alone and complaints about the fact that other humans roam this earth with me 🀬, I love my peeps. πŸ₯°

As a Cancerian crabπŸ¦€, I love my home 🏠(wherever that may be). As a Dragon 🐲, I protect those whom I love and trust. Without either one I am lost. So, in a less dramatic way (WHAT πŸ€·πŸ½β€β™€οΈ – I’m a Footner now: we do DRAMATIC!) I feel a little bit lost with the idea of two solid weeks without either one around to keep me company or vice versa.

On the other hand, I’ve already filled my weekend schedule πŸ—“ (as I do) with pampering πŸ’†πŸ½β€β™€οΈπŸ’…πŸ½ and events πŸŽ† that I don’t mind doing on my own. I contemplated a road trip by myself as I do love to travel on my own, but trying to be more fiscally responsible has put that on hold for the moment.

So, I shall focus on hanging with the kits 😻😻(guess I should post about them soon!), enjoying the house being magnificently spotless πŸ‘πŸ½πŸ™ŒπŸ½, and the time for a semi-silent retreat (by default! πŸ˜‚πŸ€£). Plus, I’ll probably (definitely, 🀞🏽hopefullyπŸ™πŸ½) do a bit of writing. 😜🀩

~T πŸ˜€

Jun 282019
 

The summer has started off slowly this year, for which I am extremely grateful. The humidity has brought about some interesting skin conditions (I’ll spare the details), but the nice thing is that the nature around us could be enjoyed more.

I love the sunny days and try to take advantage when I can. These are just a few images of those moments. πŸ˜€

~T πŸ˜€

 Posted by at 14:01