Five Things.

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Hello and Happy Friday!

“I know a guy who’s tough but sweet
He’s so fine, he can’t be beat
He’s got everything that I desire
Sets the summer sun on fire
I want candy, I want candy… [….]

First of July. Wow! I have had the most amazing week so far being able to discover Coburg and new places. Petit Joel and I spent tons of time outside in nature and I did not turn the TV on once. Well, television tells lies to your vision anyway, so who cares. Here are my Friday Five’s! Enjoy! 

Reading: I am about to finish Amy B. Scher’s book How to Deal with Yourself when No One Else Can. It is a nice little book and the author talks about self healing for mind, body and spirit. Books like this are right up my alley these days. Next I will read One More Thing by B.J Novak. Also, I have Juli Zeh’s Unter Leuten on my to-read list as well as Bella Mia by Donatella Di Pietrantonio.  

Watching: I enjoyed a documentation about Bill Cunningham who recently passed away. Watch it here if you would like. Je suis Charlie on iTunes was something that made me think and reflect on life a lot. Great movie and highly recommended. 

Discovering/Learning: Watch this amazing O.J. Simpson documentary on ESPN.  The New York Times called it a Masterpiece, which I think it is indeed. 

[The director, Ezra Edelman] is able to give a true, and truly operatic, 360-degree treatment of a story that basically nobody has ever before been able to process except in pieces. There was the way the trial was viewed so differently by black and white audiences, of course, but also all the aspects that could be appreciated only by smaller groups — those savvy about race in American sports, those crusading to make domestic violence an unoverlookable national horror story, those who knew the celebrity cult of Los Angeles and its tabloid-economy underbelly, those who appreciated the coming of reality television, and those who saw the terrible naïveté of a country trying to reckon with centuries of racial injustice by turning the trial of a single man into a national morality play. Simpson’s trial was always bigger than him, bigger than sports, bigger than celebrity, bigger than anyone realized at the time. It has taken 21 years for someone to capture what the trial was really about — everything it was about.

 I found out about the restaurant Alte Henne in Ahorn (Hohenstein) and would love to try it. Sounds amazing. Also, this cocktail sounds amazing. 

Thinking About: I just came back from the Reiki Seminar. Today, it started with a little introduction. I don’t want (and simply cannot due to lack of understanding at this point) to write too much about it. I simply know that energy work is good for me. It makes me discover myself in a way I did not know before. It makes me love myself 100% unconditionally. Usually, my quickest fix when I was feeling a little off was to sleep, hydrate or laugh which worked fine sometimes. But with Reiki I discovered so many new ways that are even more fantastic. If you every get a chance to try it, and of course if you are open to try something new, do it. Simply do it. 

Looking Forward to: The movie The Innocents. Watch the trailer here if you would like. 

“Warsaw, December 1945: the second World War is finally over and French Red Cross doctor Mathilde (Lou de Laage) is treating the last of the French survivors of the German camps. When a panicked Benedictine nun appears at the clinic begging Mathilde to follow her back to the convent, what she finds there is shocking: a holy sister about to give birth and several more in advanced stages of pregnancy. A non-believer, Mathilde enters the sisters’ fiercely private world, dictated by the rituals of their order and the strict Rev. Mother (Agata Kulesza, Ida). Fearing the shame of exposure, the hostility of the occupying Soviet troops and local Polish communists and while facing an unprecedented crisis of faith, the nuns increasingly turn to Mathilde as their beliefs and traditions clash with harsh realities.”

Have a Great Weekend.



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