To go out with friends increases your sense of happiness, however going to the mall doesn’t. Of course it can be a buzz to get a new dress or a flat screen TV, but that buzz is very temporary. The more you buy, the more you want. Same thing happens if you get an increase in salary; soon you take the extra money on your account every month for granted, and you turn discontented and unhappy again, and you want more, more, more...
I don’t go out much. Maybe I hesitate because of the
nature of my job, or maybe because I’m just plain boring, but I don’t really
like it.
Most places you go to, to have a night out (apart from
restaurants, that is) play music so loud you feel it in your guts. I don’t
understand that. The quality of sound doesn’t improve just because the
loudspeakers blast out volume to the limit of capacity (including unnerving
jarring and dissonance). Quality of sound doesn’t improve just because it is
loud, but I understand some people think so. Now, don’t misunderstand me: there
is no better therapy than laying down on the floor, letting loud music wash
over you and invade you entire body, but not when you are out with friends. We
don’t want to scream our lungs out, just to let our friends know we are going
to powder our nose. The bawl makes both my throat go dry (good for business, I
suppose) and me a bit nervous. Experience tells me that at that moment; when
you really tell in an impatient, overly clear and crispy voice, the music
stops, and everybody hears the most private and embarrassing part of your
message loud and clear.
When the music stops we discover how few actually talk
together, as the premises go dead silent.
It’s like as if we are there on our own, all of us,
together. Don’t forget now: I love music. Music is a great part of my life. If
I was to talk about anything at all in capital letters, it would be music. I
enjoy most genres (right now, as I am writing this, I listen to Crazy by Patsy
Cline. Lovely!) Not fond of techno, though, but that’s a different topic.
When we finally come to a place where the music is
muffled to a level possible to have a conversation at, with almost no
exceptions, previous students approach me and tell about their present life,
income salary and how great life is now that they have finished school and
don’t have me as their teacher anymore. I really think it’s nice to hear they
are doing well, but not when I am not at my best behavior.
The biggest advantage of eating out is actually not to
do the dishes myself. That is a reasonable good excuse to eat out by itself,
but the meal isn’t always all that. Too often it is overcooked, blend, cold and
overpriced.
So, when I stand there at the bus stop, waiting for my
bus to appear, dressed up and freezing, wondering where it’s safe to look, I
usually just wish I was already at home.
Happiness to me is not to go out. The talk flows
easier around the kitchen table at home, and coffee is served in big enough
mugs with free refill. Wine is chosen from personal liking and taste, and the
snacks have not been fondled by a number of strangers with questionable habits
as far as personal hygiene and washing hands is concerned.
To buy more the more you make… I admire people who are
groomed and well dressed, even wish I was more like that myself. The thing is
that when I for once really pay attention to… let’s say my hair, I go outside
and the rain or wind, or both, makes the hour spent in front of the mirror a
total waste. Being a mum means you constantly end up in situations when you
have to step in or step up. To avoid the huge outfit and looks disasters and
minimize the damage caused by weather and sticky fingers I go for the natural
look, most of the time. (How I now and again comfort myself by looking at my
wedding picture is a totally different story. I designed my dress (and the
bouquet), and my mother made it from silk specially imported. I was very pretty
that day, I think.)
I buy clothes online late at night. After work I have
to pick up kids, cook dinner, do homework with the kids, make sure the kids get
to their after school activities alright, supper must be served, bedtime
routines, walk the dog, chores around the house… you know, run the family and
our home. When I finally get time to spare the only store still open is IKEA. I
can only bring so much furniture and Swedish crispbread into this house (Which
are delicious, by the way, the crispbread I mean).
The most exciting thing about IKEA is to watch and
eavesdrop to others who shop there. Usually, when you shop something for your
house, you are looking for something you need. Walking through IKEA (and you
have to walk through cause most shortcuts are blocked, so you end up walking
the endless trail), you hear people comment upon the different items and nick-nacks
displayed. The most intriguing comment I hear is: “That’s pretty awesome, I
wonder where I can find space for it at home?” We fall for clever solutions,
beautiful colors and design so simple it is exciting. We just simply feel we
need it… and most definitely want it.
I find it such a blessing not to want something new
all the time. Besides I have decided upon «cease-to-shop». Until I have cleared
out all the clutter in my house nothing new will be bought. For many years I
have struggled with too much stuff in my house, clothes included, now I catch a
glimpse of an ending to the overwhelming abundance, and it is such a relief! It’s
like the house is slowly getting orderly and not just a source to constant
feeling of guilt.
I have no idea what the right answer to what
happiness really is, but ... although I shiver and tremble with freezing cold
(perhaps not that strange as it is, after all, winter, and the wind has been
whistling cold and hard for over a month now) spring is already well underway
within me. I thaw and feel warmer inside, and although this is not the correct
definition to what happiness is, I am sure it applies?
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