How to Liven Up a Tired Old Rental Flat (Part 1)

Here are a couple of cheap and easy ways to bring the funky into a rented flat (a.k.a apartment. Flat is what we call it in New Zealand). These simple tips will allow you to create a bright, funky and comfortable living space while also being able to get your bond back. Ideal for Uni students or professionals.

Simple Luxe

  • Boring old curtains can be changed to some plain print curtains from IKEA to brighten up the room.
  • Get a large rug to place over any ugly tiles or carpet and to further personalise the space.
  • Cover bare bookshelves with quirky objects and vintage books to make the space your own.

How to Liven Up a Tired Old Rental Flat

Kitschy Kitchen

  • Buy a set of bright matching place mats, a contrasting tea pot and set of cups.
  • Buy a few metres of bright material and turn this into a table cloth to cover a boring looking table or eating area in the kitchen.
  • A centrepiece always looks good on the table, so use bright coloured fruit or freshly cut flowers to brighten it up.
  • Invest in decent crockery and a matching dinner set. This is always money well spent.
  • Herbs growing near the window sill lend an atmosphere of homespun comfort to a kitchen. They also double for use in recipes.  Just don’t forget to water them.

How to Liven Up a Tired Old Rental Flat

Image Source

Bedroom Bliss

  • As with the lounge, take down ugly soft furnishings and replace them with spruced up alternatives.
  • Use a bright and funky material over the top of an ugly headboard. Pin this at the back with easily removable tacks. Nobody will notice if you put pin tacks into the back of the headboard.
  • Get a large mirror to place in the room to create the illusion of more space.

How to Liven Up a Tired Old Rental Flat

 

How to Liven Up a Tired Old Rental Flat

Create Privacy

  • If you live on the ground floor where others can see in, then invest in some plants in high quality terracotta pots to sit on your balcony. Just ensure that you match them to the amount of sunlight hours that the spot receives and remember to regularly water them.
  • Alternately, if you don’t have a balcony, lace curtains are good for adding privacy and personality to a place while also letting in sunlight.

How to Liven Up a Tired Old Rental Flat

Sectioning Off Living Spaces

For tiny apartments or studios you can section off living spaces to create the illusion of separate living areas. You can do this with furniture very effectively. An IKEA bookcase can be placed in a part of the room and separate out your bed from the rest of the living area. For more information on this technique, see here.

How to Liven Up a Tired Old Rental Flat

 Let me know if you implement any of these tips. I have used these in the past in various places and found they really do work. I am now living in a place where thankfully I don’t need to hide stains on carpet or furniture, but it’s always handy to know. 

Poetry For Inspiration: The Sea, The Sea

Exhultation is the going

Of an inland soul to sea

Past the houses – past the headlands

Into deep Eternity

Bred as we, among the mountains

Can the sailor understand

The divine intoxication

Of the first league out from land?

Emily Dickinson. American (1830 -1886)

The Sea

 

 

Ask Us Anything And We Will Answer…Google Before Computers

Remember what it was like when you needed a question answered, and you consulted a book and not Google? Back in the analogue age, we consulted unweildy encyclopaedias which smelt of dusty paper and a pleasant musty ink.

Or you could ask the New York Public Library?

By writing on a little cue-card, which was researched and promptly answered by a real life human librarian.

Ask Us Anything And We Will Answer...Google Before Computers

Ask Us Anything And We Will Answer...Google Before Computers

 

Back in the day though people asked weird and random questions to the New York Public Library as Google wasn’t invented yet. In 2014, the NYPL have released a series of intensely personal and yet universally interesting questions that people have needed answering from decades spanning the 1940’s to the late 1980’s.

Ask Us Anything And We Will Answer...Google Before Computers

 

Ask Us Anything And We Will Answer...Google Before Computers

NYPL still perform this admirable public service

Although they have now shifted irrevocably to the digital age. See more about their now online Ask Us Anything service.

Ask Us Anything And We Will Answer...Google Before Computers

Some more timeless condundrums and kerfuffles

  • Is it possible to keep an octopus in a private home?

  • I just saw a mouse in the kitchen. Is DDT OK to use? (1946)

  • Does NYPL have a computer for us of the public? Answer: No sir! (1966)

  • What did women use for shopping backs before paper bags?

  • Are black widow spiders more harmful dead or alive?

  • Is it proper to go to Reno alone to get a divorce? (1945)

  • Are Plato, Aristotle, and Socrates the same person?

  • Can NYPL recommend a good forger?

  • Where can I rent a beagle for hunting (1963). We also had requests to rent a guillotine.

  • Has the gun with which Oswald shot President Kennedy been returned to the family?

  • What is the life span of an eyelash? Answer: Based on the book Your hair and its care, it’s 150 days.

  • What is the life span of an eyebrow hair?

  • Does the Bible have a copyright?

  • What percentage of all bathtubs in the world are in the US?

  • Can you tell me the thickness of a US Postage stamp with the glue on it? Answer: We cannot get this answer quickly. Perhaps try the Postal Service. Response: This is the Postal Service.

  • What does it mean when you dream of being chased by an elephant?

  • How do you put up wallpaper?

  • A question from New Year’s Day 1967: I unexpectedly stayed over somewhere last night. Is it appropriate to send a thank you?

  • What’s the difference between pig and pork?What kind of glass should I use in my greenhouse in Cuba?

  • Can mice throw up?

 

Enjoy more of these by using the hashtag #letmelibrarianthatforyou to find more each week on Instagram!

 

Winning Life’s Trifecta

It’s 2015 baby! Is it time to dust away the cobwebs and start on that new regimen of lifestyle changes? Is it? I don’t put much stock in new year’s resolutions. Any day is a good day to begin the rest of your life. Without getting all Dr. Phil on your ass, here are some ideas for rejigging and rebooting your life.

January 1st: An Auspicious Day…For a Hang Over

Taking control of your life can seem intimidating. However, take comfort in the fact that everybody feels frumpy, grumpy and not terribly together at some point in their lives. There is no magic bullet solution for everything at once, but if you make changes on a sustained basis, you will see results.

January 1st: An Auspicious Day...For a Hang Over

1. Revamp Your Diet

Make a solemn promise to cut back on carbs, fat, sugar and salt. This may seem easier said than done. Although the results are self-evident: you will feel great, lose weight and be healthier. Steer clear of temptation zones like bakeries, chippies and McDonald’s. Do whatever you need to do, watch documentaries about the fattest people in the world – just keep away from bad foods. Instead opt for healthy and yet tasty sandwiches, salads packed full of colour and flavour. To ward off sugar cravings, eat sweet fruits like pineapple, melon, peaches and grapes. Your skin, body and mind-set will thank you for it.

January 1st: An Auspicious Day...For a Hang Over

2. Start a Fitness Kick

  • Baby steps. You won’t be swimming between continents or participating in ultra marathons just yet. Start small with your workout and build up cardio resistance, strength and fitness in a slow yet manageable way.
  • Get into a routine and don’t break it, pretty soon it will become normal part of your day and you will actually miss it when you neglect it.
  • Ditch the car and ride a bike or walk to work (where possible).
  • Don’t put yourself through the torture of exercise that you don’t enjoy. Instead do things that you enjoy. If you enjoy dancing, join a samba or swing dance class.

January 1st: An Auspicious Day...For a Hang Over

3. Do What You Love

Our lives seem to zip past at the speed of sound. You shouldn’t leave the planet with any regrets. Learn a new skill in 2015, change your career or drop everything and travel. It’s change that makes you see the world with new eyes and with revitalised energy.

January 1st: An Auspicious Day...For a Hang Over

Soul work, physical improvement, feeding yourself well. All of these three factors feed into one another and strengthen you on the inside and outside. Good luck and I hope that 2015 brings you everything that you desire!

 

Got enough books? What a stupid question!

Here are some book inspired goodies that will satisfy the avid bookworm inside of you, or inside of someone you love. Each has a great Christmas snuggle factor to them.

Book Bricks

Lovingly crafted in Melbourne by Light Reading, these bricks are customised to reflect your literary obsessions. They are novel enough to stand alone as pieces of art without needing to be functional at all. I love the idea. Check them out or purchase them on Facebook.

 

 

 

Iceland’s Powerful Wilderness + Indigenous Wisdom From Around the World

Black Elk: Oglala Sioux (1863 – 1950)

The first peace, which is the most important is that which comes
within the souls of men when they realise their relationship, their
oneness with the universe and all of its powers. When they realise
that at the centre of the universe dwells Wakan-Tanka, and that this
centre is really everywhere.

Magic by Iceland and Thoreau

Image Source: Moyan Bren

 It is within each of us. This is the
real peace and the others are but reflections of this. The second
peace is that which is made between two individuals, and the third
is the peace which is made between two nations. You should
understand that there can never be peace betweeen nations until
there is first known the true peace that dwells within the souls of
men.

14317488193_dea04a6ff3_z

Image Source: Moyan Bren

10014691675_d514aaf0bc_z

Image Source: Moyan Bren

14317488423_ed2ff7aa8b_z

Image Source: Moyan Bren

Orpingalik: Netsilik Inuit (Early 20th Century)

Songs are thoughts sung out with the breath when people let
themselves be moved by a great force. Ordinary speech nolonger
suffices. A person is moved like an ice-floe which drifts with the
current. Your thoughts are driven by a flowing force when you feel
joy, when you feel fear, when you feel sorrow.

 

6925426162_1cd0a832fc_z

Image Source: Moyan Bren

 

Magic by Iceland and Thoreau

Image Source: Vic Montol

Thoughts can surge in you, causing you to gasp for breath and making your heart beat
faster. Something like a softening of the weather will keep you
thawed. And then it will happen that we, who always think of
ourselves as small, will feel even smaller. And we will hesitate
before using words. But it will happen that the words we need will
come by themselves. When the words that we need shoot up by
themselves – we have a new song.

9369200257_617c78a3b5_z

Image Source: Claudia Regina

 

Mevlana Rumi: Turkish (1207 – 1273)

Love is the astrolabe of god’s secrets
This way or that, love guides all to eternity
Words may enable us to understand
but ineffable love…is the best enlightener

9687226902_64c09fa9a7_z

Image Source: Moyan Bren

 

 

10017474965_0fa6c7722a_z

Image Source: Moyan Bren

 The intellect becomes like a donkey mired
in mud in its efforts to explain love
It is love which explains love
The evidence of the sun is in the sun
If you require proof, turn your face from it.

 

14317487833_dbd6b1f971_z (1)

Image Source: Moyan Bren

I hope you enjoyed the journey into the mystical sources of our human knowledge. There is limitless wisdom there that can be used in our everyday lives. I think the ancient spiritual wisdom pairs well with the misty and magical landscapes of Iceland. Let me know what you think!

Short Form Writing on Wonder

Some things lead into the realm beyond words

it is like that small mirror in fairy tales

you glance in it and what you see is not yourself;

for an instant you glimpse the Inaccessible…

And the soul cries out for it.

Alexander Solzhenitsyn

Writings on Wonder

Start with the little things seen through a magnifying glass of wonder, and just as a magnifying glass can focus the sunlight into a burning beam that can set a leaf aflame, so can your focused wonder set you ablaze with insight. Find the light in each other and just fan it.

Alice O. Howell

 

 

 

 

Book Review: Paul Auster’s The Book of Illusions (Plus Get The Copy Free)

Hi there friends. I recently finished the amazing The Book of Illusions by Paul Auster. It’s a truly remarkable story. If you want to read it, then simply like my page and I’ll send it to the first person who does so.

Book Review: Paul Auster's The Book of Illusions (Plus Get The Copy Free)

The Narrative (No spoilers) 

Academic David Zimmer’s life is completely devastated when his wife and son fall five miles out of sky on a doomed airplane. With his life in tatters, Zimmer watches a silent movie and is captivated by a long-dead silent film star named Hector Manning. He decides to inexplicably take hiatus from his academic life and undertakes a strangely compelling journey to piece together the life of the obscure 1920’s film star. In the wake of the devastation in Zimmer’s life, this is all he can bring himself to do as a way of putting one foot in front of the other. So begins the compulsive story that twists and turns into valleys filled with ghosts and films filled with clues to times long gone past. It’s via the mechanised and forensic discovery of someone else’s unusual life that Zimmer begins to find out how to live again.

 

This is a strange, compulsive and achingly vulnerable book, the character of David Zimmer is frail and beaten but also mercurial and curious, he is likeable and you (the reader) begin to feel strangely protective of him as he ambles through this unforgiving life that he never chose for himself.

The lives of Hector Manning and Zimmer are twinned in the most macabre ways. Both are victims of the disintegration of stability, both men seek salvation through art and both travel in a literal and metaphorical sense to discover who they really are. It’s a tale of unexpected journeys: demeaning, bewildering, humane and triumphant journeys.

Write about your favourite book to get this copy! 

Write in the comment below about your favourite book.

The first person to do this and provide a compelling review of their favourite book will get a copy of The Book of Illusions. I would love to gift this book to one of you. In return perhaps you could give me a copy of a book that you have loved and want to send on its way?!

Disclaimer: Only one copy, so get in quick!

 

18 Rules for Living by the Dalai Lama

At the turn of this century, the Dalai Lama issued these simple and humble rules for living than anyone can follow.

Rule 1. Take into account that great love and great achievements involve great risk.

Rule 2. When you lose, don’t lose the lesson

Rule 3. Follow the three Rs: 1. Respect for self 2. Respect for others 3. Responsibility for all your actions.

Rule 4. Remember that not getting what you want is sometimes a wonderful stroke of luck.

Rule 5. Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.

Rule 6. Don’t let a little dispute injure a great friendship.

3144131193_cf89a74219_o

Image Source

Rule 7. When you realize you’ve made a mistake, take immediate steps to correct it.

Rule 8. Spend some time alone every day.

Rule 9. Open your arms to change, but don’t let go of your values.

Rule 10. Remember that silence is sometimes the best answer.

Rule 11. Live a good, honorable life. Then when you get older and think back, you’ll be able to enjoy it a second time.

Rule 12. A loving atmosphere in your home is the foundation for your life.

Rule 13. In disagreements with loved ones, deal only with the current situation. Don’t bring up the past.

Rule 14. Share your knowledge. It’s a way to achieve immortality.

Rule 15. Be gentle with nature.

18 Rules for Living by the Dalai Lama

Image Source

Rule 16. Once a year, go someplace you’ve never been before.

Rule 17. Remember that the best relationship is one in which your love for each other exceeds your need for each other.

Rule 18. Judge your success by what you had to give up in order to get it.

Source: The Open Mind

18 Rules for Living by the Dalai Lama

Image Source

Free Online Course for Dreamers: Origins – Formation of the Universe, Solar System, Earth and Life

This is quite possibly the most amazing course ever presented on Coursera. It’s called Origins – Formation of the Universe, Solar System, Earth and Life. A sweeping epic that begins at the moment of the Big Bang and the creation of matter and careens along at a throttling pace through Deep Time towards the Human Age, sometimes called Anthropocene Epoch (i.e. the current geological epoch where humans dominate the earth).

Have ever looked at the sky and wondered with amazement at how we got here? how we evolved from single celled organisms? If there is any life on other planets? what the meaning of all of this chaos is? Then you need to take this course!

What is beautiful about this course, to paraphrase the great and eminent Richard Dawkins, is that the course shows that science is the root of all wonder, not the antithesis of wonder. The beautiful logic of it all is stunning. The course is slightly challenging, but if you have an interest in science, history, anthropology, biology or you’re just simply curious about how the world was created and evolved, then you should give this course a look in. A warning: it is challenging but still couched in terms that are (mostly) accessible to anybody without a background in science.

It’s happening now. Eric Gehlin and I are taking it, come join us here!

Oh, and here’s a cool video tweeted today by RichardDawkins which is uncannily similar to the themes and preoccupations of the course. 

Let me know if you have taken the course and if you are enjoying it…