A Compendium of New Zealand Woo, Cults and New Age Claptrap

New Zealand is no stranger to woo, religious cults and strange pseudoscientific ‘cures’ for various ailments. Have a look closely at this vintage 1932 poster from the New Zealand Railways, advertising Rotorua as a ‘health spa destination’ and peddling all sorts of odd ‘miraculous’ treatments! Then learn more about the unusual cults that are tucked away in the sleepy hillsides of New Zealand.

Modern-day snake-oil peddlers in Aotearoa

Kosmic Fusion

Followers of a woman living in suburban Auckland believe she is the reincarnation of an Indian deity, who can tune into people’s souls through special frequencies. But two former volunteers for her group, Kosmic Fusion, have described a frightening experience where they were subjected to gruelling “confession” sessions. Read more

Shincheonji

A religious sect based on the teachings of a South Korean “messiah” and convicted sex offender has quietly infiltrated university campuses, schools and mainstream churches in New Zealand. Read more

Eckankar

A group in Wellington (and all over the world) that meets and recruits via Meetup and talks about soul travel, the sound and light of god (also known as ECK) as well as past lives. The chant you are hearing in the below is the sound of ECK or the sound of god. Along with images of the masters of ECK. I don’t know…to me it looks and sounds a bit like a David Lynch movie. Also from this video, it looks a bit of a sausage fest. Anyway, it’s creepy AF!!!!!

Gloriavale

New Zealand’s most high profile and well-known cult is Gloriavale, which was the subject of several prime time TV series. The secretive community has operated for 80 years in a remote part of the South Island. They look a bit like the Amish and shun all contact with the outside world. And yet despite a Royal Commission into historical neglect, sexual and physical assaults of children and women, the cult continues on as normal and even has a Charity status. A new Trust has been set up to help people leave the community.

I am not sure how to feel about cults, along with their nefarious cousins dubious health or wellness products and services. These religious groups, products and services are so common in New Zealand and seeing them on meetup or on Eventbrite always makes me uneasy. It’s worrying to see people being duped and manipulated. It could be on a small scale to buy some activated almonds or it could be far more sinister. I think there should be more active regulation and monitoring of such groups in New Zealand.

Seven suspenseful and unforgettable historical novels

Great historical novels are fully immersed in time, place and have a tangible effect of bringing you into a time period that you may otherwise never know. This is what’s truly exhilerating about the historical novel. The setting and surroundings become like a fully formed character in the novel. Whether we’re talking about a British pub just before WWII, or the painterly skies of the Dutch Golden Age. A cramped and freezing hut in Iceland in the 19th century or a dangerously plague-ridden village in England in 1666. Here are some suspenseful historical novels where you just don’t know what will happen next!

Tulip Fever by Deborah Moggach

Book Review: Tulip Fever by Deborah Moggach

Tulip Fever takes place in Amsterdam in the 1630’s during a time of immense wealth that is brought into the country by merchants and tulip sellers. A bored and wealthy young house wife and an attractive artist have a romantic tryst. Yet far from being predictable, the plot here has plenty of surprising twists and turns. A short and fast-paced book with lots of vibrant, vivid depictions of life under painters skies. I found this book to be thoroughly enjoyable as an escape hatch from the world for an afternoon or a weekend. Read more

Twenty Thousand Streets Under the Sky: A London Trilogy by Patrick Hamilton

Historic Jukebox: Everything But the Girl, Deep Dish and Patrick Hamilton
Cover of Twenty Thousand Streets Under the Sky

Twenty Thousand Streets Under the Sky is a trilogy of novels in one. It’s as bleak as its setting – the rain strewn wintery London streets in the weeks and months before World War II. This is the ultimate tale of longing, loneliness and sexual desperation. A young man Bob works hard as a waiter and scrimps and saves. He dreams of one day becoming a famous novelist. Then he meets a pretty girl Jenny. Who is capricious, immature and toys with his emotions horribly. It’s a disturbing, edge of your seat thriller that you will enjoy.

Burial Rites by Hannah Kent

Book Review: Burial Rites by Hannah Kent

Burial Rites is a bittersweet and melancholy tale of a woman named Agnes Magnusdottir. Set in Iceland in 1829 the book showcases Agnes’ life and all of its shimmering promise and how her life has been tragically hemmed in on all sides by poverty, circumstances and bad luck. When Agnes is accused of murder, we the readers are left in the dark. This is heart-stopping stuff, inspired by a true crime story. Hannah Kent has woven a remarkable tale that is totally bewitching and magical in how it draws you in. Read more

His Bloody Project by Graeme MacRae Burnet

Graeme Macrae Burnet - His Bloody Project

His Bloody Project by author Graeme Macrae Burnet recounts the story of the triple murder and subsequent trial of accused 17 year old crofter Roderick McRae, who brutally slays three people in his remote Scottish village in 1896. There’s a lot of layers to this onion of a novel, with class and moral politics being main themes that sit uncomfortably alongside the brutal and viscerally described murders. His Bloody Project was an outlier for the 2016 Man Booker Prize and in my book it deserved to win the big prize.

Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks

This is the powerful and haunting story of the 1666 plague and how one bolt of cloth makes its way from London to an isolated village. There a housemaid named Anne Frith watches as her fellow villagers all succumb to the disease. She tends to them faithfully. Sooner after, a horrible witch hunt ensues. This is her story of survival, spiritual sanctuary personal strength. There is a meditative quality of hope to this book that permeates the book, even during the bleakest times of the plague year. It has become even more relevant in 2020 than what it was when it was written in 2001. It’s really classic historical fiction in my opinion.

The Line of Beauty by Alan Hollinghurst

In the boom years of Thatcher’s Britain when the wealthy got more wealthy, young Nick Guest moves in as a lodger in the home of a rich friend’s house whose father is a Conservative party politician. Over the years Nick, finds himself in awe of and embedded within this family and has a series of love affairs and misguided adventures. This is an emotionally charged and sensitive novel about power, money, class, sexuality and family. It’s a compelling, sweeping and enormous novel.

Book Review: She Rises by Kate Worsley

Book Review: She Rises by Kate Worsley

She Rises is an erotic, sea-faring adventure by debut novelist Kate Worsley. Under the tutelage of mentor and maven of the historical novel Sarah Waters, Kate Worsley has created a beautifully sculpted jewel of a novel set in an Essex fishing village in 1740. A word to the wise, the book is very raunchy and contains a lot of sex and violence. If that is not a deterrent to you (and is in fact an attraction) then dive right in, you will love it! Read more

Honorary mentions should go to Donna Tartt’s The Goldfinch and The Secret History and also the amazing historical books by Margaret Atwood including The Blind Assassin and Alias Grace…I just haven’t got around to reviewing these, but these are also classics in the suspenseful historical fiction genre! Do you have any more to add? I would love to know!!!

Book Review: Twenty Thousand Streets Under the Sky: A London Trilogy by Patrick Hamilton

*No spoilers

Patrick Hamilton isn’t really as well known as he should be, which is a crime and a shame. He is a fantastic and yet underrated British writers of the post-war era. You may recognise his work in the play Rope which was turned into a well-known Alfred Hitchcock film of the same name.

Twenty Thousand Streets Under the Sky is a trilogy of novels in one. It’s as bleak as its setting – the rain strewn wintery London streets in the weeks and months before World War II.

This is the ultimate tale of longing, loneliness and sexual desperation. A young man Bob works hard as a waiter and scrimps and saves. He dreams of one day becoming a famous novelist. Then he meets a pretty girl Jenny. Who is capricious, immature and toys with his emotions horribly. We witness his unpredictable emotions oscillate wildly between infatuation, confusion and violent frustration. It’s a disturbing, edge of your seat thriller, fueled by enormous amounts of alcohol and cigarettes imbibed in the shadows of a London pub called The Midnight Bell. This is the tale of how a group of young people find their way through life during one of darkest and most foreboding periods of Britain’s history.

If there would be a soundtrack to this novel it would be some deep, gritty dubstep or perhaps some hard and dark post-punk by Joy Division or some Nick Cave. This is a visceral and powerfully moving novel and you can feel the pain of the characters and their emotional powerlessness and loneliness in your bones. It’s immensely unsettling and the kind of book that stays with you, becomes a part of you in a way. It is not a light read in any sense of the word, it’s heavy but it’s brilliant. 5*/5

Words and Music: Stases & Neist Point on the Isle of Skye

[I will write a poem about a place that I’ve been each week with music to match]

Neist Point on the Isle of Skye

Swirling batons of time

Erasing thoughts and hushing life and death

On a clear day you can see all the way to Iceland it’s said

In any case there to the north is Uist

Some puffins, squalls and lonely boats

swirling smoke and witchy breezes

snake around and between standing stones

Moss ridden ancient runes

Smashed to the ground by careless tourists

Who marked this place as sacred?

A ferryman, lighthouseman or a missionary?

Loneliness is an island cliff or peninsula dissapearing into the mist

Before time, before humans, before the rocks gave birth to the larvae that led to us

Adventures on the Isle of Skye
Night falls on Portree. Copyright Content Catnip 2010

10 uplifting and quirky things I found on the internet this week #15

A Love Letter to my dog by Leena Henningsen

Empath and spiritual seeker Leena Henningsen’s videos all have a cosy, gentle and inspirational vibe. She moved from the stressful bustle of Hamburg to rural Norway along with her beloved dog Aivy and her partner. In this intimate and moving short film she talks about why she loves her dog. The breathtaking landscapes of Norway in the background.

Daruma Dolls by Jonelle Patrick’s Only In Japan

This post by Jonelle is an enchanting history of Daruma Dolls. Japanese symbols of luck and protection that stand sentry for us during the challenging year of 2020.

Daruma Dolls by Jonelle Patrick's Only In Japan
Firstly you colour in an eye when you make a wish/pray. Then you colour in the other eye once it comes true.

Daruma figures are all about hoping GOOD things will happen, so a more cheerful feature is that they’re weighted, so they can’t be tipped over. Daruma might get knocked down, but he never fails to pop right back up.

Find out more on Jonelle Patrick’s Only in Japan, fantastic blog about all things quirky and Japanese.

Jonathan, aged 184 years old takes his first bath

The oldest living land animal Jonathan the Giant Tortoise has shuffled around in St Helena, Seychelles for the past 184 years. Recently, he got a bath for the first time in his long life.

A celebration of healing and black freedom with Sampa the Great

Sampa the Great AKA Sampa Tembo is a Zambian-Australian artist and musician. Known for her glittering, floral, ultra feminine performances in glam clothes, along with bassy hip-hop and soul. She reminds me of Sade – has the same ultra glam vibe and stage presence.

Are You Being a Friend to Yourself? By Dr Eric Perry

Psychologist and psychotherapist Dr Eric Perry offers amazing advice on his blog on a myriad of subjects. This week he talks about being a friend to yourself.

Are You Being a Friend to Yourself? By Dr Eric Perry

In order to silence the negative talk, it is essential to cultivate a loving relationship with yourself. It takes practice and self-awareness, as well as, the ability to look at yourself from the outside. For example, say you become overwhelmed in crowds and are at a family gathering with a large group. As hard as you try, you are not able to fight the urge to flee. After you leave you are disappointed in yourself and the negative self-talk takes over. If you stop and look at the situation from the point of view of a loving friend your thoughts would be kinder and more accepting. Your friend would point out that you tried your best and not to be so hard on yourself.
You have to have compassion and kindness for yourself. No one is perfect and we all do the best we can with whatever obstacles come our way. Of course, it is important to acknowledge a fault, shortcoming or a mistake, but mentally beating yourself up is not going to help any situation. Give yourself the gift of a lifelong and loyal friendship by being a kind and compassionate friend to yourself.

Read more on Dr Perry’s blog.

Dasha, the baby Pallas cat living in Siberia is released successfully from captivity

Fabricius by Google allows you to learn hieroglyphs and decode them

Welcome to a world of delightful fun and Ancient Egyptian historical discovery. If you’ve always wanted to decipher the mysteries of hieroglyphs, well now you can!

Fabricius by Google allows you to learn hieroglyphs and decode them

Find out more about Fabricius

10 hours of magnificent creatures under the ocean in 4K

No music, no narration, just unbelievable BBC footage of macabre and wondrous animals living in the great deep. Float your worries away for ten hours of cuteness and wonder.

Slavic Mythology by Ulla Thynell

In Slavic mythology, the universe is an oak. On its top branches, resides Perun, god of sky and thunder. At its bottom, in the roots, Veles god of the underworld. The mortal world, in its stump, witnesses the eternal fight among the gods.

Slavic Mythology by Ulla Thynell
Starlit Woods by Ulla Thynell

The Chapel of Panagia Kakaviotissa on Lemnos Island, Greece

The chapel of Panagia Kakaviotissa located in Lemnos island, Greece, was founded in 1,416 A.C. by monks who managed to escape the Ottoman invasion in Agios Efstratios island. Nested inside a rock cavity on the top of Kakavos Mountain at an altitude of 260 meters, the church has no need for a roof. Read more on eMORPHES.

The Chapel of Panagia Kakaviotissa on Lemnos Island, Greece
The Chapel of Panagia Kakaviotissa on Lemnos Island, Greece

A collection of high quality 80’s power ballads on vinyl

I compiled this playlist of cruisy reflective tracks, I hope you enjoy them.

10 Hours of Aliens from a Sea Shanty of the Deep

Here is 10 hours of BBC deep ocean footage in 4K without narration or music. Bliss out and enjoy these wondrous and cute creatures that dance on the ocean floor. No need to watch news just escape to the world of the ocean. No wonder people in ancient times mistook these animals for monsters!

I Saw Your Name on a Wall [Short story]

Soundtrack for story Hear playlist

I saw your name on a wall. I paused and couldn’t look away. It was a busy day in our cathedral to capitalism, our hive of activity where there was a lot of people milling around but mostly they were seated, with headsets on like train drivers of the post-modern age. At each of their thrones, people were transfixed on the blue-tinged screens in front of them. They were practicing portraying a calm and smiling voice into their microphones as they spoke to people from all over the UK about why their broadband wasn’t working and how long it would be until it was fixed.

Anyway, I saw your name on the wall in a photocopied certificate along with other names stapled jauntily in a long conga line of playful celebration – you were doing well inside of the corporate juggernaut – clearly. Your name stood out on the wall. If only because it was exotic, Polish and different from Mc and Mac and O’Celtic names around it.

Somehow it haunted me, followed me everywhere and back to my seat like two kindly eyes watching me curious from afar. I felt my face blush and the lower half of my body dissolve as though even then, without even seeing your face, I knew you were someone monumental to me.

I had wandered over and through the undulating bright green hills of Edinburgh, over and around the Pentlands, through the hazy, orange-tinged lower boughs of the Old Town at night, within and through the porcelain cavernous innards of bars, clubs, back alleys where nobody could see me, not really only see my face contort into the seemingness of smiles or animated laughter. Or see my body move like that, in a feigned and faded attempt at joy, or to remain a tightly wound mystery that couldn’t be unravelled easily by anyone, no matter their frustrated attempts at carefully, lovingly delicately peeling back the layers in various stages of bright and dim light and in different seasons.

Some seasons were frigid and flaky with snow that fell silently and crystalline and huddled brown and damaged like ashamed refugees on the sides of roads. Other seasons were warmly lit as though god herself had flirted and dropped champagne into the Water of Leith. The people of Edinburgh revelled and greeted the outside cathedral of the sky as though greeting an old, old friend.

I floated wraith-like and lingering in my checked shirts, my woolen kilt and leather jacket. Under worn and cracked window casements in Leith and underneath of ornate cornices of grand New Town houses. Like a phantom I moved and all the while, a great hard rock had been sewn up inside of me, dessicated and dry as a tiny angry homunculus, where my heart used to be. A thick epidermis had almost consumed me, slaked and black with the dissapointments and cynicism of a thousand attempts at connection. Had swallowed my gentle spirit whole, as though devouring a tasty meal.

I ran every day. From myself, from my still healing body which was scarred from the cancer that had eaten away at half of my torso. From my deep and abiding loneliness in my single room in a shared house.

Where no amount of Dutch pancakes and stewed sweetened chestnuts could warm me inside. I listened to metal and techno and ran up Arthurs Seat every day. In the blue dawns of winter amongst the snow storms and blizzards and wearing Vibram shoes that gave grip to the snow, but made me feel the frozen unforgiving earth through my feet. With each pounding hit of my limbs into the frozen ground, I felt more darkly alive. I came back with raw blue feet and eyes wild and widened by the terror of winter. Back to the domesticity and caring of my flatmates, who nursed my feet in front of the open fire and marvelled with angled brows at my unique brand of self-discipline and self-hatred.

I greedily gathered flowers from the park during spring time, even despite the death stares of middle-aged do-gooders who followed me throughout the park just to glare at me, like ferocious barking Scottish terriers that I could hear vaguely over my headphones and above the vivid beauty of tulips and irises. I took them home and artfully placed them around my single room and let them crowd out the greyness inside of me. They arched over the window casement and obscured the low-slung grey sky, a protective amulet of cheer, colour and lush promise.

I twirled and sang and listened low and longingly to Scottish folk music in ancient pubs and drank my weight in whiskey stumbling home from The Royal Oak at 2 am. Past closing time by myself and completely unaware of any living soul in the shadows. Instead

I was followed home by the curt, raucous and alcoholic ramblings of a thousand Edinburgh ghosts who came before me, walked these rain-slaked streets after midnight long before I was born. They were my friends, their banter a companion to the blind euphoria of the drink.

I cut myself slack because I drank my whiskey with filtered water and so that made me a moderate drinker. Sometimes I awoke in other people’s houses, oddly one time in a lamp shop hidden among the tassled amber glow of a 60’s floor lamps as though I had safely squirrelled myself away the night before into a field of giant mushrooms in a fairytale. I sheltered under Turkish rugs or towels or under duvets under the watchful liquid eyes of anonymous cats and dogs. Myself also like some kind of rescued animal. Hair dischellived, body torpid with spent desire, mouth like the bottom of an abandoned well. Eyes like two lumps of coal in the snow. What now? Was always my first thought, like an embattled soldier awakening from a battlefield after an indeterminate period of unconsciousness. Suddenly vigilant. Then – where am I?

The journey to you was long and obfuscated by sedate low-squatting houses with brown and white cladding and humble stone fronted gardens filled with dying flowers and children’s toys blackened with dirt and mould.

Past black faced street signs that sighed and hushed with a thousand people’s lives, both good and bad, upstanding and dodgy. The knife-weilding and flower-wielding, the open-hearted and closed-fisted folk in the good neighbourhood of Leith.

I saw your name on a wall was remained fixed in place long after my 15 minute allocated break time was up. Long after I had been called back by Sarah to my allocated place amongst the rest of my rag-tag renegade team, led by Sarah. Sarah, the portly red-head. The tough-as-nails team leader who regularly chastised me for being late and who sometimes yelled at me for various reasons until I started to cry silently. Snivelling like a little toddler and looking downwards in shame at my own emotions. ‘Don’t cry’ she would say in disgust. She spent her youth in a children’s home in Fife and her twenties in prison and it was well-known she didn’t stand for any nonsense like that.

Even despite the menacing shadow of Sarah behind me and the end of my break time, the pressing need to resume my position as a corporate cog, I stared at your name for so long, it seemed like a lifetime.

I saw instead of your name a fire-cracker or a Roman candle, burning brightly but not in a way that was terrifying at all. I was filled with elated joy as though by seeing your name, I was being pushed into the cavernous inside of a hot air balloon, suddenly hot from the fire, buoyed up and weightless in my body and careening across the universe out of touch with reality.

Who the fuck are you? I thought to myself. What the fuck is going on here? I had to meet you. But I knew….I just knew I wouldn’t be dissapointed. Yet another obsession to overcome. I chastised myself in advance for my stupidity at thinking, at hoping that you would be all I imagined you to be.

When I finally did see you, my heart pounding in my ears, fresh blood coursing through my neck, my toes barely scraping the floor. It was the strangest feeling. I kept my eyes to the ground, more so that I didn’t give away anything at all to anyone around. My huge expressive eyes tended to be a liability. They were tellers of the deepest truths that people could then use against me, had used against me many times.

You were sitting there laughing with your manager, leaning back in your chair. Confident, muscly arms folded behind your head. Three giggling girls were sitting around you , vigilant to your every move. Mousy, overweight and rough-cut gems who followed you around like faithful flirty servants.

Suddenly, you answered the phone, the impeccable picture of class and professionalism and smooth amiable customer service. Yet you were wearing a black t-shirt featuring sexy almost naked girls enveloped in the Swedish flag and straddling giant spiders. Girls and spiders in the throes murderous erotic delight. This is very interesting, I thought to myself.

You had a large open face with icy blue eyes like warm, blue glaciers and that were infused with a beautiful sweetness. I had never seen blue eyes that could be warm, could be anything other than cold, simple blue. Your dark blonde hair was cropped into a functional crew cut. Now, knowing that you were there, in the building at the same moment I was, I couldn’t feel the outlines of my body, where the floor and my body met. Everything was formless and filled with a strange joy that I had never experienced before.

I must be finally losing my mind out of loneliness I thought to myself. I guess I should just fold myself up into a neatly squared hankerchief, book a ticket back to Melbourne and forget this strange period of my life. I said to myself on the bus on the long journey home from work. Past the towering council flats in Saughton and Sighthill and the tunnelled concrete pathways and the shadowy figures of people bent over against the wind, rain and sleet.

I knew how to say your name, because I had a Polish friend from my youth who also had the same name. So when I first spoke your name and called to you, you smiled and seemed surprised that I could pronounce it properly. When I was around you, I had a weird feeling I was close to home.

Any time you were in the large cannon-like long room with endless banks of phones, partition walls and people in the midst of resolving broadband issues, I felt you there.

As though a bright beacon was close by, a great and ancient bell was ringing, but only inside of my mind and the closer I came to you, the louder it got and the safer I felt.

This is weird –the rational part of my brain said to myself. Oh well – it will pass. But then I noticed that you too were circling around me. Finding reasons to come over to my end of the office circulate towards me with a beaming bright smile and those glacier blue warm eyes. I would twiddle my thumbs, fidget and squirm in my swivel chair and I would repeat incoherent sentences to customers, sometimes sounding like I had lost my mind. As you watched me, smiling calmly from a distance and in full view of my entire team. Everyone else around me seemed to have faded to black and white and it was just me and you. Your eyes drilling into me intensively, making my heart thunder with excitement and excruciating embarassment.

Then people around me began to talk – apparently L likes you they said. He would then dissapear at lunch and reappear with Tunnocks Tea Cakes, a selection of Polish sausage cut into even circular pieces and Leicester cheese in tiny cubes all arranged in perfect symmetry on a paper plate and presented to me with all of the pomp and ceremony of Polish formality. ‘For you, dear lady’ you said in mock irony and with a silly expressive flourish of your hands. My team mates cooed and giggled and jumped up and down with glee and excitement on my behalf.

I laughed and allowed myself to feel special for the first time in a very long time. Then it continued, every day with different treats. Sometimes pieces of Lindt chocolate alongside of the Polish sausage and cheese. Suddenly through some conspiratorial miracle we happened to always on the same shift together, leaving at exctly the same time each day.

“I moved all of my shifts around to match yours” he later told me.

His pasty-faced entourage were initially confused and unsettled by my presence. Who was this olive-skinned imposter with a strange accent, who was not feminine at all and wore punk and metal Tshirts with offensive slogans, had a half shaved head and a lacksadaisical attitude towards work.

How on earth could L – the great L – have any interest in her? I heard their arch questions, confusion and judgement in the way they looked at me, scathingly, with hating blackened eyes. Their ire and jealousy made me feel a bit smug and also and a bit scared.

I too was baffled – his acolytes all seemed good enough, if a little boring.

“They are basic and stupid…you are not, you are interesting and rare. An endangered species”L would later explain to me.

I was behind in rent and could barely afford to feed myself, so I brought along some very basic fried rice with frozen veg that I made at home and wapped in glad wrap for us to eat together one lunch time. It had been sitting in my bag for the whole morning on the bus. So it was all sweaty and weird when I put it into the microwave. I was so nervous that I felt too ill to even eat it, but you ate it and claimed to like it. Although I doubted this as being the truth given its paltry ingredients and its rough journey from farm to plate. We took our break together so that I could gift the fried rice to you, a gift given with all of the love I could muster from my damaged heart.

We had the rice in mid-morning while others were still on the phones and in the hush before the lunch time, a soft warm light came through the window and the narrow young trees outside wavered in the wind and light rain. It was very cosy, as though I had just walked into the room where I needed to be, all of my life.

When you meet someone who feels so very familiar to you, someone it seems you have always known, even though you have only met. This made absolutely no sense at all, but also made more sense than anything else ever in my whole life. A dim and weak light inside of me that had always struggled to remain alive suddenly became like a solar ray bathing everything with brightness.

The music inside of my soul matched to the music inside of your soul. Your voice matched to my voice. The way you moved in the world matched to the way that I moved. Your body fit snugly into mine. Your chest neatly fit the curve of my head. Your arms could neatly wrap around mine. Your name matched to mine. And when I saw it for the first time I knew all of that instinctively. That’s all. It’s as benign, boring and as devastatingly beautiful as that. The same story that some lucky people have, told in a different way.

Yet the crossing point, the meeting point was so worryingly tenuous. So vulnerable to many millions of moments of chance that came before it. The happiness we have enjoyed together over many many years the countless innumerable moments together that we have had, the many places we have been together. Too many to count. All of it depended on a unique confluence of events and complex circumstances – Luck.

Our thousands and millions of moments of laughter together. The joy, frustration, adventures, arguments, tears, hugs and kisses. The moments of quiet silence in the canyon of darkness after midnight, blue of early morning. Covered ina film of sweat and the innocent confusion of sleep.

All of it so fragile and riven by chance that it is almost too unbearable to think about. How we first came into contact.

How I first saw your name on a wall.

Weirdly…I am getting almost no likes on my posts nowadays?!

I’ve been doing it regularly as usual and making each post high quality. I’ve been getting the same amount of traffic but hardly no likes or comments.

I know you all aren’t ignoring me, because on Twitter I seem to get a lot of feedback from people saying that they like these posts.

Anyway if you do see this post from me, and have seen others recently please reach out. I have been writing to WordPress Support for a number of weeks but they don’t think it’s an important enough query to warrant a reply.

On the other hand, if you feel that lately my posts have gone downhill and that’s why you don’t like them anymore, please let me know why. I will take the feedback constructively.

Amazingly intricate surreal art about lockdown by Marija Tiurina

When the covid-related quarantine began back in March I had this idea to start a big watercolor piece that would be constructed out of people’s submissions. Imagine a large painting that is like a weird salad where everyone’s thoughts, memories, dreams and ideas are mixed in a bowl and dressed with my imagination – well, after about two months of work it’s finally here and I’m happy to share it with you. ~ Marija Tiurina

Amazingly intricate surreal art about lockdown by Marija Tiurina
Lockdown In Watercolor – by Marija Tiurina

” I decided to visualise people’s submissions straight onto paper and then began to outline them without creating a sketch or planning a layout – I wanted to keep the whole process quite raw and intuitive. It’s possible I didn’t come up with the perfect placement for things, but the creatures and the objects landed where they wanted to sit and became a big organic (yet pretty weird and alien) family.” ~ Marija Tiurina

Find more of Marija’s work and purchase some of her art on Behance https://www.behance.net/tiurinam

Seven Unique and Moving Fictional Books Set in Japan

Japan is a country close to my heart and since I first went there a few years ago, I have become a big fan of Japanese fiction and Asian fiction translated to English.

Japanese fiction tends to emphasise the liminal and fantasy aspects hidden at the edges of everyday reality and also exploring the inner emotional topography of people’s lives. Also, just like in real life Japan there is a reverence for the poetic, philosophical spiritual elements of nature. From the books I have read so far, there’s a focus on the outsider or lone wolf archetype. A person who goes on a spiritual and literal journey into the wilderness of their own soul and the mystical wilderness of Japan. Here are some of my favourite fictional books set in Japan.

A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki

Using profound linguistic grace and emotive firepower, author Ruth Ozeki manages to capture the relationships between people, time, space and memory in this heartbreaking, poignant, and very human novel which weaves in and out of time and place.

Themed around the interconnectedness of all things, a familiar philosophical underpinning of Zen Buddhism, Ruth Ozeki manages to interweave the story of Nao a teenage girl living in a Japan prior to the recent cataclysmic earthquake and a struggling writer living a decade later in a remote Canadian seaside town.

Pachinko by Min Jin Lee

Book Review: Pachinko by Min Jin Lee

Pachinko is full of melancholy, joy, emotion and humanness. It’s the story of several generations of Korean migrants trying to carve out an existence against the backdrop of the unheaval of the 20th Century. The novel traces struggles, triumphs and colourful personalities of several generations of one family. It rockets along at an amazing pace and doesn’t let up. This is a book to curl up with a relish over a weekend. It packs an enormous emotional punch and was incredibly satisfying. I enjoyed this book more than any other fiction I have read for many years.

The Pine Islands by Marion Poschmann

The Pine Islands is a short novel that punches well above its weight. Although it is written by a German, Marion Poschmann, this is a very Japanese novel. It’s the tale of a German transplant to Japan, Gilbert who is searching his inner world and outer landscapes of Japan for meaning in his life. Along the way he meets a suicidal young man. This is a really unique, surreal, strange and funny novel that deftly tackles deep topics in a funny way: mortality, ageing, love and connection.

Convenience Store Woman by Sayaka Murata

Convenience Store Woman is an oddball treasure of a novel about an unusual and friendless woman Keiko and her over-sized love and dedication to her job as a sales assistant in a Convenience Store. This is a deeply emotional and funny novel by Japanese debut novelist Sayaka Murata, another one to savour on a rainy weekend.

Picnic in the Storm by Yukiko Motoya

A short story collection which takes a leaf out of Murakami’s book with its uncanny magic realism style. Although unlike Murakami, Motoya’s stories are about women and explore the world through a vivid female lens. Her stories are about women who are losing their spark and trying to regain and reclaim their former selves. Picnic in the Storm is about keeping one’s own identity, when it’s so easy to lose it in a marriage. Although it’s not as fast-moving as I would have liked.

South of the Border, West of the Sun by Haruki Murakami

A slim and slight book, but don’t be fooled by its physical size. Within a mere 200 pages you can sink into a thoroughly immersive story. In the hands of a less-skilled writer, this would be impossible. This is the story of lifelong erotic longing and unrequited love between two childhood friends who grow to become restless adults. The book has the vibe of a smoky, lounge-bar in Tokyo. It seems much more vast than it actually is and is over far too quickly, so I recommend slowly savouring it, it’s a bit like literary foreplay.

Kafka on the Shore by Haruki Murakami

In this novel, 15 year old Kafka Tamura, a teen runaway takes refuge in a remote town. It all gets very David Lynch in this book very quickly. Mysterious celestial phenomena happen in the Shikoku mountains, along with some World War II throw-backs and guardians to the underworld. Another completely otherworldly, highly addictive book from legendary Murakami.

Have you read any other good books set in Japan that you can recommend?