Awesome low-fi / house / ambient / psychedelic artists from New Zealand

Skip to the end for an amazing playlist of these artists on Youtube

Aldous Harding

From Christchurch, Aldous Harding is known throughout the world for her strange, unnerving stage presence and her delicate and yet raw brand of folk. She’s quite enigmatic and unlike any other artist. You may take a while to warm to her and her music, and could just end up confused. But guaranteed that if you do persist, she will become quite an obsession. You don’t merely become a fan of Aldous Harding, you become devoted to her.

Module

Wellington-based musician Jeremy Ross AKA Module describes his expansive classical/ambient music on his website:

“Its all about our TIME here on earth and all the things we experience with our emotions and minds. SPACE about our dreams, hopes and Inner and out of space concepts. and LOVE, finding true connections with each other which is what it’s all about really.

INFINITY FOREVER – Part 1 – Time (The Studio Sessions) by Module

Haast – Hāwea

An enigmatic electronic music artist from Wellington who creates experimental new age/meditative music. This album is a glorious blend of new age atmospherics and calming samples of waterfalls, birds and rustling trees in the Central Otago Lakes region of the South Island. It would make the perfect soundtrack for your next hike in New Zealand or a spacey and atmospheric road trip.

Haast – Hāwea by haast – hāwea

Mild Orange

Dunedin band Mild Orange are all about jangling and serene dream-pop that’s brimming with nostalgia, joy and romance. I really love this video clip and has they seem to have got several million views on it since it’s release a few months ago – it seems everyone else likes it too.

Look forward to seeing them in Wellington!

Vanessa Worm

Vanessa Worm is from Dunedin via Melbourne and Glasgow. Her debut album Vanessa 77 was delayed in release due to the pandemic. Thankfully, it is now finally released and it’s a full throttle punch in the guts of post-punk, funky house and dark electro-clash mixed around in a washing machine. It’s experimental and yet endlessly funky. It’s completely unique and exciting. A bit like listening to the early music of Peaches or X-Ray Specs – she has that same Don’t Give A Fuck energy.

VANESSA 77 by Vanessa Worm

Purple Pilgrims

Take one part Sonic Youth, one part Kate Bush, add a pinch of Cocteau Twins and you come close to the brilliance of Purple Pilgrims. This is atmospheric, operatic and surreal dream-pop that is unique, ecstatic and beautiful. The masterwork of sisters Clementine and Valentine Nixon who come from Tapu, a coastal hamlet in the North Island.

Unknown Mortal Orchestra

Auckland psychedelic rock band Unknown Mortal Orchestra moved to Oregon several years ago and have since achieved global success with their brand of funky, melodic and swirling synth-heavy psychadelic rock. They also have some pretty amazing and surreal anime video clips.

Connan Mockasin

Intergalactic traveller and trippy transplant from the psychadelic 60’s Tant Hosford AKA Connan Mockasin is from Te Awanga, a tiny beachy town in the North Island. with his shock of white blonde hair, he looks a bit like Andy Warhol. His surreal and disturbing video clips have gained millions of views. Especially the esoteric Forever Dolphin Love about a man obsessed with a woman-shaped porpoise. Off-key, slightly deranged and yet warmly melodic music for kooky people.

JJ Mist

Auckland based singer, songwriter and producer JJ Mist resurrects 80’s experimental and optimistic pop. Sounds a bit like Madonna or Whitney Houston during their heyday and also reminds me of City Pop, a genre of Japanese pop from the 80’s that has enjoyed a resurgence in popularity in recent years. It’s so fun, infectious and enjoyable to listen to!

Communication by JJ Mist

Chaos in the CBD

Underground house producers, Kiwi brothers Ben and Louise Helliker-Hales are Chaos in the CBD. Their extensive back catalogue is full of acid house bangers and old-school sounding throwbacks along with a lot of atmospheric, jazzy and nostalgic house tracks. Perfect uplifting background music for coding, making food, working, dancing pretty much anything!

Emotional Intelligence / It's Up To Me by Chaos In The CBD

Here are the artists in one playlist. If you like it, don’t forget to visit bandcamp and buy it!

Let me know if you like these sounds. Also why not share your favourite music from your home country with me below…

10 Interesting Things I Found on the Internet this Week #14

Nick Cave performing Stagger Lee in Copenhagen is electrifying

I have seen Nick live three times so far and his live performances of this song Stagger Lee are always a big highlight. The song escalates and gets harder, darker and more intense as it goes on. This is definitely my favourite Nick Cave song because of how incredible it is to see live. Who would have thought a song about sodomy and murder would be so unbelievably amazing.

Chill Sounds: The Serpent’s Egg by Dead Can Dance

I love this band and it’s mysterious, Celtic, Gregorian darkwave vibe. They have a very dedicated cult following and would be incredible to see live. Dead Can Dance were formed in Melbourne in 1981 by Brendan Perry and Lisa Gerrard. I am a bit of a fan girl of multi instrumentalist, composer and singer Lisa Gerrard of Dead Can Dance. You would have heard her work before, she has also composed award-winning soundtracks for famous films like Gladiator, Whale Rider and Ali.

Dead Can Dance were formed in Melbourne in 1981 by Brendan Perry and Lisa Gerrard

Weird quirky books that nobody in the world ever asked for or needed

Did you ever want to know how to speak to a cat about gun safety? Or how to play with a lion’s testicles?

No? Perhaps you will want to know after seeing this Twitter thread!

The Crannogs of the Ancient Celtic World

Prehistoric and neolithic crannogs in Scotland, Wales and Ireland were small man-made islands inside of lochs which acted as boltholes during times of danger and added legiitimacy and a sense of ownership over vast swathes of land in the ancient Celtic world. Often these small islands were used to build neolithic roundhouses or forts, some of these have been reconstructed in the British Isles today. Read more on the Bushcraft UK blog and eMorphes

Ashes, a poem by Robert Okaji

To sweeten the dish, add salt. To bear the pain,
render the insoluble. She envied

the past its incursions, yet the past yields to all,
avoidance to acceptance, trees to smoke.

My mother brought to this country a token of her death to come.

Now it sits on my shelf bearing implements of music.
In her last days I played Sakura on the mandolin,

trusting that she might find comfort
in the blossoms fluttering through the failing notes,

a return to mornings
of tea and rice, of
warmth and paper walls and deep laughter.

Today the rain spells forgive

and every idea becomes form, every shadow a symptom,
each gesture a word, a naming in silence.

Scatter me in air I’ve never breathed.

Read more poetry on Robert’s incredible blog O at the Edges

The main funerary temple of Kan’eiji, Tokyo. Read more

This doggo’s selfie in the park

This naughty pup pressed record on a phone in the park and took a selfie. What a handsome and distinguished boy. Special mention goes to the little tongue poking out.

You cannot save people, you can only love them

If you have loved ones, friends and whānau who are living their lives in an unhealthy way, then it can be really difficult to hold your tongue and not cast judgement on them or tell them how they can change and become happier/healthier and stronger. This will just make them feel angry, or judged or cause them to distane themselves from you. A very wise friend told me that you can only love them, closely or from afar, and also set a good example that they can follow, if they choose to make changes.

The Luttrell Psalter – A Year in a Medieval English Village

The Luttrell Psalter was an illuminated manuscript commissioned by Sir Geoffrey Luttrell, lord of the manor in Lincolnshire somewhere between 1320-1345. The exquisite manuscript contains canticles, a mass and it’s richly decorated by vibrant scenes from rural life, strange fantastical beasts and humorous and cheeky scenes. It charts life across the wheel of the year during medieval times.

Here, Crows Eye Producions have created a wonderful short film which brings alive the pictures in margins of the Luttrell Psalter. The chanting you hear in the short film is actual medieval songs. Crow’s Eye also have some incredibly interesting videos about other aspects of history as well, definitely worth a sub.

The Luttrell Psalter – A Year in a Medieval English Village
Strange beasts in the Luttrel Psalter

You can purchase a fascimile of the Luttrel Psalter as well.

Kanariya Eishi performs a Rakugo of Noppera-bō

Kiwi/Japanese Rakugo artist Kanariya Eishi performs the creepy ghost story of Noppera-bō– the story of a ghost (a yokai or fantastical Japanese creature) which looks like a human but has no face. Eishi’s performances are always very enjoyable, engaging, funny and sometimes creepy – because he’s able to immerse you right into the story and switch effortlessly between playing several characters. It’s nice to spend some time learning about these legendary Japanese stories in English using a traditional form of Japanese entertainment. It’s a great channel to follow if you are an enthusiast of Japanese culture.

Kanariya Eishi performs a Rakugo of Noppera-bō

Hauntingly relevant ancient Mesoptamian Proverbs about love and friendship

A mere friend will agree with you, but a real friend will argue. ~ Assyrian Proverb

Helen Keller's Fierce Friendships and Bold Legacy
“The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched. They must be felt with the heart.” – Helen Keller with Charlie Chaplin

Tell me your friends, and I’ll tell you who you are. ~ Assyrian Proverb

Inspirational People: Tenzin Gyatso

Friendship is for the day of trouble, posterity for the future. ~ Babylonian Proverb

Ancient word of the day: Nekyia
Pierreuses au bar / Picasso

What comes from the heart is known by the heart. ~ Sumerian Proverb

The odds in favour of you being born were slim | Nassim Nicholas Taleb, The Black Swan

A loving heart builds houses. A hating heart destroys houses. ~ Sumerian Proverb

Reflexion by Odilon Redon
Reflexion by Odilon Redon

Friendship lasts a day, family lasts forever. ~ Sumerian Proverb

My K House, Kyoto © Content Catnip 2018 www.contentcatnip.co
My K House, Kyoto © Content Catnip 2018 http://www.contentcatnip.co

Ten Quirky and Mind Expanding History Books

Here’s a collection of the best and treasured history books that I don’t think I could ever part with. They are quirky and delve into a little known aspect of history making them delightful lazy weekend reading. I hope you can get a hold of them, if you do…please let me know what you think below!

The Book of Symbols by the Archive for Research in Archetypal Symbolism (ARAS)

The Book of Symbols: Reflections of Archetypal Images by the Archive for Research into Archetypal Sybolism (Taschen)

Aside from being a superb reference book, The Book of Symbols is perfect for anyone who has a curious nature, enjoys quirky history and appreciates art and beauty. It is hard to not feel a sense of awe at the beautiful typesetting and illustration along with the evocative and fascinating write-ups. The storytelling is weaves together the Jungian archetypal, the Freudian and post-modern into a cohesive whole. It achieves what most other books can only dream of achieving, an accurate description of the material world we live in, in all of its splendour and wonder.

The Map of Knowledge by Violet Moller

Book Review: The Map of Knowledge by Violet Moller

The Map of Knowledge: How Classical Ideas were Lost and Found A History in Seven Cities is a really great book for curious minds, history lovers and anybody who simply enjoys romping through ancient cities.

Writer and historian Violet Moller brings to life the vibrant and bustling stories of ancient cities of Alexandria, Baghdad, Cordoba, Toledo, Salerno, Palermo, Venice and beyond. Along the way we learn how iconic texts and manuscripts including Euclid’s Elements, Ptolemy’s The Almagest and Galen’s works on medicine and psychotherapy were passed down through generations and via the steady, determined hands of various key people (many who are obscure in the history books). Read more

Medieval Bodies Life and Death in the Middle Ages by Jake Hartnell

Book Review: Medieval Bodies: Life and Death in the Middle Ages by Jack Hartnell

Medieval Bodies is an incredibly enjoyable read. How medieval people saw themselves and their own bodies in relation to the medieval world could be a boring book, but Hartnell is an exceptionally skilled writer, making for an entertaining and yet erudite read. He deftly shifts between ancient mysticism, religion, politics, medicine, art and culture. Almost every page features amazing full colour illustrations which vividly bring to life beliefs about the body in ancient times.

The Book of Barely Imagined Beings by Caspar Henderson

The Book of Barely Imagined Beings is a whistle-stop tour of philosophy, humanism, spirituality, evolutionary biology, literature, AI, technology and more.

Book Review: The Book of Barely Imagined Beings by Caspar Henderson

These weighty topics are tackled deftly and confidently and are interspersed with facts about the most macabre and unusual creatures on the planet.

Author and playful intellectual Caspar Henderson sets out to write a modern compendium of beasts, and show, in the process, that truth is a lot weirder than fiction. Forget about dragons, cyclops and faeries, the world of extant species such as the thorny devil, nautilus and puffer fish are enough to inspire wonder. Read more

Opening Pandora’s Box: Phrases Borrowed from the Classics and the Stories Behind Them by Ferdie Addis

If you are in love with language, storytelling, folklore or classical history then you will love this book. It’s short at only 162 pages, yet Opening Pandora’s Box punches well above its weight in terms of quality with many amusing and shocking stories from classical history to enjoy. You will learn about the quirky origins of many often heard modern phrases such as ‘sour grapes’ and ‘the lion’s share’.

Lost Wisdom by Una McGovern and Paul Jenner

Book Review: Lost Wisdom by Una McGovern and Paul Jenner

Lost Wisdom is a wonderous and obscure treasure that I found in the library. Written by Compiled by Una McGovern and Paul Jenner in 2009 it is designed to completely wallow in; with beautiful images and areas of interest grouped logically. Lost Wisdom is a part of a trilogy of books that provides us with insight into ways and methods of everyday living, crafts and lore and it glimmers with the shared knowledge of our foremothers and forefathers.

This is a compendium of old wive’s tales and medieval European wisdom that has guided and sustained people for many centuries before modern technology ran the whole show.

Weatherland by Andrea Harris

Weatherland by Andrea Harris

Weatherland by Alexandra Harris is a sweeping panorama and magic carpet ride through the history of England using a quirky weathervane to measure the changing culture – the weather.

Author Alexandra Harris’ debut book won The Guardian’s Book of the Year. It’s no surprise either because this is a far-reaching, expansive book written in an engaging, poetic and erudite way.

Harris casts her curious eye and nimble mind over how weather has been portrayed since ancient times in literature and art in Britain. The prose is tight, imaginative, deliciously inventive. You are swept along as though you’re reading a great fictional novel. This is no prosaic story of a mundane subject. Instead it’s a majestic and all-encompassing history of England as a whole, and it’s beautiful. I relished every page and was sad when it ended. Read more

In Miniature: How Small Things Illuminate the World by Simon Garfield

Book Review: In Miniature by Simon Garfield

Are you fascinated and delighted by small things? Then I’ve found the ultimate book for you. In Miniature: How Small Things Illuminate the World by Simon Garfield. Each chapter delves into a miniature world of its own and there is only a tenuous connection between them, but no matter. All is forgiven because learning all about tiny replicas of Eames chairs, tiny models created by the late and great architect Zaha Hadid, and exquisite replicas of Windsor Castle and tiny towns all have their own peculiar and quirky way of drawing you in.

You will also learn about how tiny models of crime scenes were the CSI in the analogue era of crime investigation about 100 years ago. This eclectic assortment of tiny stories about tiny things that changed the world in big ways is a true delight. Read more

Life in a Medieval Castle by Frances and Joseph Gies

Book Review: Life in a Medieval Castle
Book Review: Life in a Medieval Castle

Life in a Medieval Castle focuses on Chepstow, a crumbling Norman castle that survived the turbulent Middle Ages and has remained battle scarred but still standing today. Husband and wife historians, the Gieses take us through the full cycle of a medieval year, governed by the rhythms of the harvest and occasionally punctuated by war, invasion and a bad crop. We learn all about how lords and ladies thought about themselves and others, and what they ate, wore, did for pleasure and how they imagined the world to be.

The book is all the more compelling because it’s factual and this adds further weight and colour to the already colourful descriptions of medieval falconry, sumptuous banquet menus, honourable knights, forthright and strong women and the currencies of power that flowed through these iconic castles. The medieval magic and romance of castles isn’t dismantled in this book, but rather is celebrated in all of its imaginative glory and colour. Read more

The Sky Atlas by Edward Brooke Hitching

Book Review: The Sky Atlas: The Greatest Map Myths and Discoveries of the Universe by Edward Brooke-Hitching

The Sky Atlas is a treasury and history of some of humankind’s most beautiful maps and charts. Yet this book is more than that, it’s a sparkling and glittering array of sky-bound achievements. It’s a visual history of what it has felt like over aeons to look up at the heavens in wonder.

10 Interesting Things I found on the Internet #13

1. Chilled out hip-hop grooves from Emapea – Seeds, Roots & Fruits

2. These book-rescuing heroes don’t wear capes

3. François Schuiten’s steampunk cityscapes ‘Les Cités obscures’

Immense skyscrapers and towering monoliths dwarf the citizenry in François Schuiten’s ‘Les Cités obscures’, a graphic novel series (1983–present) that captures the steampunk modernist aesthetic. Read more

François Schuiten’s steampunk cityscapes 'Les Cités obscures'

4. Wartime evening wear

5. Everything is going to be OK

The always interesting blog Miscellaneous Details featured Everything is Going to be OK. An installation by US conceptual artist Allan McCollum, currently on show at the Thomas Schulte gallery in Berlin. Featuring captioned screenshots from popular TV shows, it’s something I think we all need to remember right now. See more

6. Beautiful illustrations of classic Slavic folk tales by Googie McCabe

Googie McCabe is an immensely talented illustrator living in Kent and originally from Poland. She has created these beautiful, serene and magical illustrations for a book about Slavic folk tales. See more.

7. Teddy bears travel and enjoy themselves in the absence of people in recent times

https://twitter.com/buitengebieden_/status/1277138128298561536?s=20

8. The power of reframing

According to the wise and informative blog by Jeremy in Hong Kong, we can implement cognitive reframing as a powerful way to reinterpret events in a more positive way.

It comes from the idea that life events are inherently meaningless and only develop meaning when we assign meaning to them. Our thinking is so heavily influenced by past experience, values, beliefs, biases that it’s often possible to substantially change our view of an event by simply adjusting our perspective (story) about it: re-framing it in other words.

Read more

9. Rilakkuma and Kaoru -escapist anime on Netflix

Are you fed up with the world and all of its cruelty, confusion and violence? Look no further than this sweet and uplifting anime about a young woman who lives with animated stuffed bears Rilakkuma and Kaoru, along a very fussy and moody baby bird. Afterwards your brain will be repaired.

10. When a talented ambient producer creates music for a video, rather than the other way around

The results are magical! Found on the always interesting blog about ambient and drone music, Stationary Travels.

Video Premiere: Nebula by Slowburner

Fritz Khan’s painting Der Menschen als Industriepalast in dreamy animation

Fritz Kahn’s Der Menschen als Industriepalast by Henning Lederer.

 

Fritz Kahn combined industrial and mechanical functionality with the working wonders of the human body. He was a creative genius whose work remained undiscovered for many years. Until a curious curator Uta Von Debschnitz unearthed them.

Kahn was a Berliner who did well for himself during the period between WWI and WWII. As a trained medical practitioner and microbiologist, he was fascinated by medical illustration as a communication medium for explaining medicine in simple ways.

He was excited by the complex possibilities of the human body. From his own studio he guided a team of illustrators and produced surreal and timeless illustrations that intersected between medical and industrial perspectives.

Kahn was outspoken about Fascism and growing Nazi unrest in the period before WWII. Consequently Kahn’s work was burned and vanished during this period and his reputation in medical illustration vanished along with it.

“Windfall fruits are ideally packaged so that they do not get ­damaged when they hit the ground. The way a walnut is packaged is the same as for a man’s brain: (a) core/brain, (b) soft core skin/meninges, (c) hard core skin/meninges with vertical and horizontal walls, (d) hard shell/bone layer, (e) fruit husk/skin layer.” 1939, © Fritz Kahn

 

 The act of chewing “A set of teeth is a tool chest containing various different implements. The incisors (a) cut the food, (b) the canines perforate it, (c) the carnassials saw through it and the molars (d) grind up the crumbs. The tongue converts the food broken up by the teeth into mush; it is covered with papillae shaped like clubs, rollers, graters and brushes.” 1939, © Fritz Kahn

 

“Technical-schematic representation of the male erection system.” 1939, © Fritz Kahn

In the past decade, art enthusiasts and siblings Uta and Thilo von Debschnitz collated a landmark collection of Kahn’s work for publisher Taschen. Suddenly the world rediscovered the magic of Fritz Kahn, the godfather of infographics and medical illustration. Find out more about the book and the man himself.

10 Interesting Things I Found on the Internet this Week #12

1. Haunting and cinematic Norse music

2. Tatsuya Tanaka‘s tiny whimsical worlds

Each of these mini masterpieces represent a vibrant and quirky aspect of Japanese life (both past and present) made from the flotsam and jetsam of our everyday world.

Tatsuya Tanaka's tiny whimsical worlds

3. The price we pay for awareness

With every level of consciousness or awareness, we are expanding ourselves into a place where we get to experience deeper states of happiness as well as sadness. Being in a physical reality that is dualistic in nature, we are bound to experience the depth of sadness at the same level as we have experienced happiness. It is in experiencing the sadness, that we come to be aware of the happiness when it does come.Peace with Anxiety

From the interesting blog Peace with Anxiety

4. The paintings of Michiel Schrijver

His surreal and imaginative paintings are outside of time and place and seem to have an otherworldly quality that captivates me. The settings have a bewitching quality and are always in the gloaming of the late afternoon…

View more

Entrance to the Night by Michiel Schrijver Michiel Schrijver
Entrance to the Night by Michiel Schrijver

5. Classical PMS face

6. The sound of kawaii

7. It’s OK to feel your feelings by Dr Eric Perry

Feelings enrich our lives and add depth to our existence. We are not one-dimensional entities who are capable of only feeling one emotional response. A world where only happiness exists would inevitably lose its luster over time. We must be able to experience feelings such as sadness and unhappiness in order to truly appreciate the opposite end of the feelings spectrum. Without knowing the darkness of sadness we would not be able to appreciate the lightness of happiness.Dr Eric Perry

8. ASMR micro cooking with wool

Ever wanted to know what it would be like to cook with woolen food and woolen utensils in a woolen kitchen? Now you know!

9. James Baldwin talks about what it feels like to be a black man in America in the middle of the 20th Century

I can’t claim to know or understand much of American history, but seeing the documentary I am Not Your Negro was deeply moving, and Baldwin’s ideas about race and identity are poetic, profound and deeply affecting. This is a film about otherness and being born an outsider, and viewed as threatening based on how one looks. This is a common thing many people can relate to.

10. Connan Mockasin – Jassbusters [Full Album]

Medieval bangers and tavern stompers circa 2020

Treat thine ears and eyes to a new genre of music – bardcore!

Perhaps you’re looking for that tavern banger that you enjoyed back in 1365. Or perhaps you want to reminisce on the summer solstice when you gathered with jolly folk at Stonehenge, got wasted on mead and were visited by a strange celestial portent from the gods, telling you to down tools and look for a maiden fair and true?

Somebody that I used to know (Medieval style)

Hips don’t lie – Shakira (Medieval style)

Jolene – Dolly Parton (Medieval cover)

What is Love? – Haddaway (Medieval style)

Nothing else matters – Metallica (Medieval style)

Eye of the Tiger – Survivor (medieval version)

Creep – Radiohead (medieval version)

What is Bardcore?

Bardcore or Taverncore is a manifestation of internet memes which lampoon medieval culture, along with remakes of pop songs from previous decades. This is a bleakly funny meme which became very popular over the COVID lockdown and also grimly satirises both the uncontrolled pandemics of the medieval era – the Black Death, leprosy etc, and the pandemic of 2020. Or at least…that’s how I interpet it!

The comments section under each of these songs is pure comedy gold.

10 Interesting Things I Found on the Internet this Week #11

1. Natalie Wong’s exquisite and strange fantasy coral murals made from paper

Natalie Wong's exquisite and strange coral murals made from paper

Read more

2. This guy who really wanted McDonalds but could only go through the Drive-Thru

https://twitter.com/vickie19761/status/1268158165377482753?s=20

3. How to break free of the stimulation nation

Some advice from the always relevant Dr Eric Perry

Here are some steps that I use with my clients to help them become accustomed to less stimulation and learn to enjoy S. I. L. E. N. C. E.:

1. Start slowly
Do not rush into this without realizing that it may be challenging. You will need to acclimate to the “noise” of silence. Accept that you may not be able to be away from stimulation for long periods of time, but with patience and dedication, you can learn to wean yourself from the urge of constantly being on your phone.

2. Intent
The most essential ingredient to accomplishing any goal is to start. Set the intention to sit quietly for 10 minutes then gradually increase this time by 10-minute increments. The ultimate goal is for you to be able to spend time away from your phone without feeling that you have to check your phone. The phone should be an accessory in your life, not a necessity.

3. Listen
Listen to the world around you as well as the world within you. At first, the sounds of silence may be a bit distracting. You may experience a quiet buzzing or other noises in your ears or perhaps you will hear your heartbeat. Enjoy the quiet time for self-reflection. If you are taking a walk outdoors, enjoy the different sounds that nature has to offer.

Walthamstow Neon Art Sculpture. About Neon Art and Loneliness http://wp.me/p41CQf-aU
Walthamstow Neon Art Sculpture. About Neon Art and Loneliness http://wp.me/p41CQf-aU

4. Endure
Don’t give up. Be patient with yourself. Many times we are our own worst critique and this causes us to give up. Remember no one is judging you. Focus on the reason why you are trying to wean yourself off your phone. Life away from your phone and other electronic distractions can be more meaningful if you dedicate the time to building healthy bonds and surrounding yourself with positivity.

5. Nurture
Nurture your relationships with your loved ones. Perhaps being constantly on your phone has caused some disconnect in your relationship. Take the time to communicate and acknowledge that you have a problem. Together, you can create a system where there is accountability for over using your phone.

6. Create
Not having your life dictated by your phone or other electronic distraction will free up your time. Why not use your mind to create something beautiful. I believe that everyone has the ability to write and touch at least one person. Just imagine if you used all the time you spend on distractions on honing your writing skills. Perhaps if you unchained your brain from the internet you could write a beautiful poem or even a novel.

7. Enjoy
Once you have stopped the cycle of having to be constantly stimulated and are ready to exit the Stimulation Nation, put away your phone. Start enjoying your life while interacting and connecting with friends and family without having to disconnect to check your phone.

https://makeitultrapsychology.wordpress.com/2020/06/29/break-free-from-the-stimulation-nation/

4. Victorian cook Mrs Crocombe make a macaroni cheese in the Victorian way

In case you are wondering. Mrs Avis Crocombe was a real woman who lived and worked in Audley End estate in Essex during the Victorian era. She passed down to her descendants a book of recipes, which the family passed on to English Heritage. These form the basis of many of the videos on the channel as well as in the cookbook. A fascinating story if you want to delve deeper is available on the podcast.

5. Pride of Wellington City, Mittens aka His Floofness

wins the coveted Keys to the City for his work, following in the paw-steps of Sir Peter Jackson (of LOTR fame)

Read more

6. Portguese words that became Japanese by Kanariya Eishi

Talented Rakugo performer Kanariya Eishi who performs the timeless art of Japanese Rakugo explores the quirky and little known aspects of Japanese culture as well as Rakugo performances.

Here are other Portuguese words that have become Japanese, which we still use today:

Buranko (ブランコ; from balanço) = swing

Furasuko (フラスコ; from frasco) = flask (for experiment)

Jouro (じょうろ; from jarro) = watering can

Kappa (かっぱ; from capa) = rain jacket

Read more on his blog

7. Director General of Health Dr Ashleigh Bloomfield has a chill-wave channel

Director General of Health in New Zealand Dr Ashleigh Bloomfield recommends that if you feel stressed, just listen to this laid back mix with his voice in it

8. A recipe for erotic dreams by Surrealist artist Remedios Vardos

Spanish Surrealist Remedios Vardos

Ingredients:
One kilo black radishes; three white hens; one head of garlic; four kilos honey; one mirror; two calf’s livers; one brick; two clothespins; one whalebone corset; two false moustaches; two hats of your choice.

Via { feuilleton } the blog of artist John Coulthard

9. The difference between ordinary and extraordinary people

On Sam Cardy’s extraordinary blog Patchwork, he discusses what we can all take from the philosophy of great author Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Where the first category represents “ordinary people” and the second, “extraordinary people”:

The first category are always the lords of the present, while those of the second category are the lords of the future.

The first conserve the world and increase its population; the second move the world and lead it towards its goal.

10. Interesting and relaxing chillout beats by Phlocalyst

Any cool stuff you have seen this week? Let me know!

Ancient word of the day: Flukra

As the southern hemisphere turns now towards the colder months we are all finding comfort into our nests and getting cosy for the winter. In New Zealand and the southern parts of Australia we are experiencing snow in the alpine regions. So it seems appropriate now to talk about the many ancient words for snow.

As you might guess, words for snow are linguistically numerous in Scandanavia and northern Europe as well as in Inuit and first nations people in Canada and Alaska.

Ancient Eye Glasses: Fascinating Historical Artefacts
Inuit eye goggles

Here are some beautiful words to inspire you this winter (or summer, as the case may be where you are).

SwedISH: Lappvantar

 It’s snowing ‘lappvantar’ (snowflakes big as gloves ).

OLD SCOTS: Flukra

Flukra” – snow falling in large flakes (Scots, esp. Shetland); cf “skalva”, soft flaky snow (from Old Norse “skaf”; a peeling, a flake). “Muckle flukra” are very large snowflakes.

“Muckle flukra,” Scots for snow falling in big flakes.

Every Picture Tells A Story: A lone fox during a July snowstorm

NORSE: SKALVA

“Skalva,” norse for soft flakes. Lovely, and fun to say! And metaphorically pleasing. It was Imbolc, and as the skalva gave way to muckle flukra, she felt a sky full of trouble descending.

“det snør kjerringer” it snows old wives

DUTCH: Vlokken

Or vlokka: It’s snowing  in Dutch

Polish: Platek sniegu

A snowflake in Polish

Corsican: u floccante

Icelandic – snjókorn

Lapland Over Four Splendid Seasons
Finnish lapland in the winter