Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge: Preoccupied

Upptagen…Ingen blir så fullständigt absorberad av något som Mille – och detta Något är främst vatten – vatten OCH snö innebar storslam för honom i helgen. Äntligen snö! Vi lämnade av sonen i Skövde där han studerar, och till vår stora glädje snöade det hela tiden. Vilka fina dagar för oss alla i familjen! Milles gener (gammal vattenhund från Romagna) tog fullständigt över…

Preoccupied...no one beats Mille when he finds some water AND snow! Being an old water dog from Romagna, he has not forgotten his origin…He’s ”fishing” with his paws and dips his beard and mouth into the water to catch bubbles – or whatever he sees in there.  This weekend we finally got some snow and both dogs and the whole family celebrated outdoors with long walks and great joy!

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Weekly Photo Challenge: Windows

Fönster har alltid varit viktiga för oss – inte minst i länder där ljuset behöver komma in under de mörka  vintermånaderna. När jag var barn hade man dubbla fönster med bomull/ull emellan och ibland eterneller därpå.

Inga fönster är mig kärare än de enkla fönster vi har i sommarstugan. De är mycket gamla, med flagnande färg och gistet trä som gör dem svåra att öppna och stänga. Men de är – Sommar. Det andra fotot visar S’t Mary’s Church i Scarborough, som har sällsynt vackra fönsterbågar.

Windows have always been important to us, and I think maybe especially in countries where they are much needed for the light during the dark winter months. When I was a child many windows were double and had a string of cotton or wool in between the two window glasses. Sometimes people decorated with flowers or herbs there as well.

To me, no windows are more beautiful  than the simple old windows of our summer house. Their colouring is fading and their wooden frames so worn that they are no longer easy to open and close…but they are – Summer. The second photo shows St Mary’s church in Scarborough – where I simply fell in love with both the windows and their frames.

Travel theme: Illuminated

Ailsa’s theme this week is Illuminated

– and that is what you could say about Cervantes and his heroes Don Quijote and Sancho Panza in Madrid. Walking home a soft night, we lingered here for at least an hour. Peaceful. He lives on into the future, standing illuminated against a modernistic building.

 

Happy Anniversary to Leya!

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Happy Anniversary with WordPress.com!

Today I got this celebration badge sent to me because it is exactly 3 years since I registered on WordPress.com. I didn’t know it was today, but I knew it was about 3 years…

Three interesting, adventurous, exciting years that have brought me new, valuable knowledge and many friends all over the world! (There are things good with the Internet…) So much I have learned from you, so much fun and so many useful things! Hopefully we will have many more discussions, reflections, likes (and dislikes…) to share. And, bits and pieces of our lives will fit together in this great Big Puzzle. Intriguing!

To celebrate this – my way – I have created another blog, because…well, I will put the link under my photo blog faialflores,( created last year, right column) but for now…you can find my New blog Here. What it’s about? Be my guest, click and find out!

My rays of light!

As I suffer severely from the darkness, the loss of daylight and the constant grey drizzle this winter, I decided to make a post of the short rays of light on the latest days’ walks. Maybe there are more of us who need some light – I hope you will enjoy them!

Suddenly there was a short glimpse of sunlight on these beautiful straws, resting by my path in the soft wind.

This broken twig, and its bright lichen, caught my eye inside the forest. Hit by a tiny ray,  it lay glowing on the dark ground.

A dark green candle provides the soft light of my evenings.

This years’ fiery Christmas flower in my home is a colourful Hippeastrum called ”La Paz”.

May the light be with you all!

Ese’s Weekly Shoot & Quote Challenge: Music

Music is an important part of our lives – and Music is also Ese’s challenge this week. Young people today have music plugged in their ears all day it seems…which would be a bit too much for me… I love silence.

I do love silence, but I also love almost all kinds of music, from bird song to heavy metal. I have a sweet tooth for music coming up spontaneously among people, for big voices like Freddie Mercury’s and tenors as Andrea Bocelli’s, for clear and soaring ones like Mireille Mathieu’s and Sara Brightman’s – and  also for odd instruments.

Music is everybody’s possession. It’s only publishers who think that people own it.

John Lennon

The green winter light

As there is no snow this winter in southern Sweden – but rain there is – mosses seem to grow more than ever in the damp environment. Shining green, they light up all the grey and the darkness. So more than ever we have a green winter this year.

According to Wikipedia, mosses are a botanical division of small, soft plants that are typically 1–10 cm (0.4–4 in) tall, though some species are much larger, like Dawsonia, the tallest moss in the world (found in NZ for example) which can grow to 50 cm in height. They commonly grow close together in clumps or mats in damp or shady locations. They do not have flowers or seeds, and their simple leavescover the thin wiry stems. At certain times mosses produce spore capsules which may appear as beak-like capsules borne aloft on thin stalks.

There are approximately 12,000 species of moss classified in the Bryophyta, a division that formerly included not only mosses, but also liverworts and hornworts. These other two groups of bryophytes are now placed in their own divisions.

Moss covering great parts of the ground under the trees.

They climb the trunks and some trees are totally covered.

Tiny brown spore capsules on their thin stalks.

Every stone is more or less covered in a soft coat of green.

Travel theme: Possibility

There’s always a possibility that we finally will have some snow this winter…

It would slow Totti down a bit…

…so I can outrun him!

For more and other possibilities, go to Ailsa’s place!

Dame Judi Dench in ”Philomena” – based on a true story

Efter storslagen fantasy kände jag att jag behövde en mer verklighetsförankrad film – det blev den verklighetsbaserade Philomena, med en av mina favoritskådespelare, Dame Judy Dench.

Filmen är baserad på Martin Sixsmiths The Lost Child of Philomena Lee från 2009. Philomena blir gravid som väldigt ung och därmed hårt straffad av det katolska Irland. Hon placeras i kloster tillsammans med andra ensamstående,  olyckliga unga mödrar och nunnorna säljer hennes son till ett amerikanskt par. Hon tvingas skriva på att aldrig göra efterforskningar för att finna sitt barn. Som pensionerad sjuksköterska börjar hon, efter 50 år, med hjälp av den sparkade BBC- reportern Martin Sixsmith (Steve Coogan), att söka efter sonen.

Regissören Stephen Frears (”The Queen”) fokuserar mycket på Philomenas och Martins humoristiskt retsamma smågrälande under resan tillsammans och trots att de är så olika – de kommer från olika samhällsklasser och har helt olika intressen – så kommer de närmre varandra allteftersom vidden av Philomenas livsöde rullas upp.

Storyn väver skickligt samman allt från sexuella begär och religiös fanatik till dagens pressetik och ger oss en både spännande och informativ resa. Gammalreligiösa katoliker och vänner av äldre republikansk politik kan kanske stöta sig på hur historien utvecklas, men innehållet hålls historiskt och faktamässigt riktigt, samtidigt som det presenteras mycket väl balanserat. Martin reagerar starkt på nunnornas fruktansvärda synder i det förflutna medan Philomena trots allt som hänt henne är förlåtande ända till slutet.

Det här är en mycket berikande film. Judy Dench är som alltid fantastisk och tillsammans med Steve Coogan är de det perfekta smågrälande, humoristiska paret som trots grundberättelsens tragik gör att du lämnar biosalongen med både ett leende och en tår. Se den. Njut av skådespelarnas skicklighet, det lugna tempot och en fantastisk livshistoria. Du kommer inte att ångra dig.

Movies, movies, after the fantasy of Smaug, Hobbits and Dwarves I needed some reality – so I went to see Philomena with Dame Judi Dench, who is one of my favourite actresses.

From Imdb: In short, based on the 2009 investigative book by BBC correspondent Martin Sixsmith, The Lost Child of Philomena Lee, Philomena focuses on the efforts of a retired Irish nurse, Philomena Lee (Dench), mother to a boy conceived out of wedlock – something her Irish-Catholic community punished her severly for – and given away for adoption in the United States. In following church doctrine, she was forced to sign a contract that wouldn’t allow for any sort of inquiry into the son’s whereabouts. After starting a family years later in England and, for the most part, moving on with her life, Lee meets Sixsmith (Steve Coogan), a BBC reporter with whom she decides to discover her long-lost son.

This image released by The Weinstein Company shows Judi Dench, left, and Steve Coogan in a scene from ”Philomena.”

Director Stephen Frears (”The Queen”) keeps the focus on Philomena and Martin’s sweet-and-sour banter, making “Philomena” a marvelous movie, a heartwarming drama with plenty of comedic pathos that features Judi Dench playing a simple Irish woman who doesn’t get the jokes of her traveling companion.

This odd-couple road trip tale is based on an incredible true story. Philomena has kept a secret for 50 years — when she was a teen, nuns sold her baby and those of other “shamed” young women to wealthy American couples. Now Philomena Lee is ready to find her son, and her own peace of mind, but she’s going to need some help on this journey. That’s when her daughter finds Sixsmith (Steve Coogan) at a party.

Coogan is co-star, screenwriter and producer — plays just-sacked government press secretary Martin Sixsmith, who takes on Philomena’s human-interest story as a journalistic assignment, despite it being the kind of article that he says only “weak-minded, vulnerable” people appreciate. He’s crass, and the two of them are divided by class – but on their journey together, they bond.

The story neatly weaves in themes such as sexual desires, religious beliefs, regrets of a lifetime and journalistic ethics, making for an intriguing as well as informative experience. Those of the Catholic faith and old American Republican politics will find matters to dislike here. The story is tough on these points and historically accurate, but neatly balanced as well: Martin is furious with the long-ago sins of the nuns, yet Philomena is the one with forgiveness in her heart to the end.

The journey of “Philomena” is an enriching one. It’s pure joy seeing Judy Dench – as always – and Dench and Coogan provides just the right touch of friction as well as humor. “Weak-minded, vulnerable” people as well as those more sophisticated will not regret they took this trip. At least I don’t.

See the trailer here:


Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge: Free and Easy

Den här dagen är nog en av de mera lyckliga och sköna i livet. Du har gått din sista dag i skolan – nu är du helt fri och framtiden är ett oskrivet blad. Du bestämmer själv vart du vill gå och om du vill jobba eller plugga eller kanske resa och se världen. Även om framtiden är osäker så är känslan den här dagen obetalbar – du är fri! Jag minns fortfarande när jag själv sprang ut på gården viftande med den vita mössan – världen låg öppen!

This day – I think belongs to the happiest free-and easy-days in your life. The last day in school, the world is an open book with unwritten pages and you are free to do whatever you want. You feel grown up and from now on you make your own decisions about what steps to take from here. I can still remember my day…there is no comparison to that feeling. Even if the future seems uncertain, this day is totally – your own!