This is the story of a guide in Co. Westmeath that lights up their house every Christmas for charity. They raised over 160,000 this year for the share a dream foundation. But, they have announced that this will be the last year they do it. They said if they ever had to take money for the Esb bill from the donations(€160,000) box they would stop doing it. This year, businessrd did not pay for the esb bill so they had no choice to raid the donation box.
So, they appear in the papers today complaining about this and announcing they will not be lighting their house for charity again.
It doesn’t make sense some how. They spend €1,000 on electricity but take in €160,000 for their charity. Surely, a handsome profit?
I just don’t understand what the issue is or maybe there’s another reason for this?

I said I’d share my huge, fake eyelashes with you.. I’m feeling generous so here’s my fully made up face on new year’s eve! They took an hour to get them out but I’d do it again. Thanks to Christine in butterfly beauty, carlow.

Fascinated by the Wren boys.. They used to be rubbish back in there day. Now, they can sing and play stuff.

Torun, the most prettiest “You could be living on a film set” city I have been to. Fact.
So, my sister in law and brother have been raving about the city of Torun in Poland, for years now. So, when my new baby nephew was christened in Poland last week, we just had to go there.
The city of Torun can be found on the Vistula river and is surrounded by pieces of the old city wall. Its a small city and we did an orientation walk of it in just an hour.
Every part of this Gothic city has a romantic feel to it. It’s a university city, a Unesco heritage city and is going to be the place to visit in 2016, when it becomes European city of culture.
Copernicus was born there, its the home of a special Torun gingerbread and is also famous for stained glass windows, amber jewellery and a Pied Piper type mythical man who drove frogs out of the city rather than rats.
It should also be famous for the best Mulled wine and Polish Pierogi (dumpling pie things with yummy fillings) I’ve ever tasted. Though, this was my first time to taste proper Polish Pierogi!
Get there before the silly hen and stag nights taint it with their noise…for now, it’s completely peaceful to walk around it, with a “Harry Potter” feel to the buildings, cafes and sights
Please, don’t let the Harry Potter reference put you off, the films are so so but it’s that magical and musical world that JK Rowling created that I’m speaking about not the average story telling.
Its not often I want to return to a city but I’m still thinking about it and the contented and inspirational thoughts it gave me.
Go now.
Ryanair fly to Bydgoczsz and catch a train there within half an hour!

Berlin needs to stop being so big…right now…

So, the kind, young man that is Simon Lewis whisked me away to Berlin.

Excellent. We booked a 2 night stay at a nice hotel near the shopping area. That’s important, isn’t it? 

I knew that my BFF Terry had been there, him being the well travelled fellow. His advice was to plan before we got there as Berlin is a huge, huge city. He said that it wouldn’t be possible to simply stroll around like other smaller European cities. I listened carefully but didn’t actually get around to taking his advice.

Ish.

I attempted to. I got a Berlin book with a Top ten of what to see, I spent hours on the net searching for top cafes, top restaurants and top everything. That in itself was overwhelming and it was impossible to plan a 2 day trip like this. I just didn’t have the energy. 

Normal procedure of a Rozzie holiday*(*TM) is to arrive at city and sit in coffee shop all day with guidebook, coffee and other novel. At the end of the day, the rest of the group are happy to go anywhere and we have a plan for the next day. The plan usually centres around coffee shop, Jewish area, some sort of walking tour, glass of wine, sitting, art museum and more sitting.

However, this break was only 2 days. Plus, Berlin decides to shut all of the shops on a Sunday. How odd. 

So, Sunday was spent visiting the usual must-sees of Berlin-The Reichstag, Brandenberg gate, Victory Column and the piece on the ground that shows “Berlin Wall was here”. I used the word “visit”, we moreso walked past these landmarks, posed for a photo and off we went.

We spent hours walking that day and even more hours navigating the Berlin metro/tube/underground. It was a great way to get a feel for the place but it was bleddy cold.

Apparently, the Berlin tube is the best and most efficient underground system in the world. Apparently, the German people are efficient too. Sunday night did not prove these stereotypes to be correct. It took us nearly 3 hours to get home on a combination of 4 tubes, walking outside to find another station and a broken down/cancelled tube. Simon may have a different account of the numbers I have used but that is not the point.

The point is it was cold.

We went to 2 rather nice restaurants, one called “Florian’s”, which was in the theatre district. http://restaurant-florian.de/ It served good ol’ traditional German home cooking, which I am not usually into. The pickled beef was divine and the chocolate mousse was so good that I regretted the “1 dessert, 2 spoons” idea of sharing immediately.

The other was a yum Vietnamese restaurant called “Saigon and more” which is run by this really, really cool and warm Turkish man who had lived in Berlin for about 40 years. The food was unbelievably tasty and fragrant, which I am told the way Vietnamese food should be. The dessert was Turkish-creamy yoghurt with grape syrup and toasted peanuts. This restaurant was one of hundreds we wanted to visit, it was way off the popular area but was thriving with people. Check out his sense of humour at http://www.saigonandmore.de/speisenenglish.htm 

Shopping is amazing in Berlin but the main shopping street is so long and wide that crossing over to a chosen shop may cost you hours of your time. 

Again, the time I have mentioned above may be slightly exaggerated. The very plush shopping department is Ka De We. Floors of unique things, including a Christmas gift section where the German humour was evident. A set of Christian teabags, anyone? Or how about a boxing glove on a stick to punch your husband when he is snoring? The top floor was dedicated to food….drink…nice things…Just sitting at a funky coffee bar with tasty German cake made my day. Now, this was more like it, I felt relaxed and took out my guidebook. 

But…it was time to go back to the airport and fly home…

Booooooo…to big places…Boo o days going too quickly…Boo to not being able to live there….

We barely touched the surface of Berlin and I do wish that one of my friends had told us about needing a plan…

 http://www.kadewe.de/en

Hmm, I need someone to share this mammoth of a muffin in the chocolate lounge, T2, Dublin airport on the way to Berlin.

Writer’s block
It’s a writer’s disease, isn’t it?
You sit in front of a screen or page and wait for inspiration to arrive.
And, it won’t. Because, it can’t. What happens then is I become demotivated as the failure of the task takes over.
I’ve been reading a couple of articles about this disease. Some you may have heard.
1. Always start your writing or blogging session with a free writing exercise. Use a prompt, there are millions of then on the net, just google “writing prompt”. Write something random and unchecked, write about you like with no break for checking over for grammar or even sense.
2. A paradoxical tip to avoid writer’s block is to write!
Book in the time you write like an appointment. Set a schedule. Maybe, you could try half an hour a night or 300 words a day. Mary E. Pearson, author of The Jenna Fox, young adult novels, says that she commits to 10 words. Inevitably, those 10 words become 20 and hey, they become a page and so on.
3. Give yourself a reward. If you reach your weekly/daily goal, treat yourself to a magazine, cream cake or glass of wine. Whatever you fancy. However, if you don’t finish those 300 words, deprive yourself of something you love…hmm, I hate bad consequences…
4. Remember, why you are writing. Take out those great novels or that bio of your hero. For me, a Stephen King or a Suzanne Collins, The Hunger Games trilogy.Actually, forget people or writing that inspires you. If I read through any of the Twilight books or flick through a Cecelia Ahern “novel”, that would probably be enough to get me writing again!!
5. See writing as a mental escape from mental people and situations. If you have a tough, uncreative job, writing can be an excellent way to unwind and escape.

So, there are some thoughts and ideas for you. These tips were gleaned from a writing book by Deborah Halverson and. M.T Anderson.

We need to talk about Kevin
So, I read the book ages ago, how cool am I? I can’t say the book was better than the film or the film was better than the book. Both left me with too many questions.
“We need to talk about Kevin” is a film from the novel of the same name, by Lionel Shriver. Its about a couple who have a baby. Not just any baby though, an evil baby. This is probably a very simple summary of it though. This book is about Mum who never wanted to settle down and have kids but did it because of her husband,who reallywanted those things. Its about dissatisfaction with settling,the perfect house, the traditional family set up. So,what happens if a child is born into a family where his Mum doesn’t want him and doesn’t know how to be a maternal figure?
Well, lots of things happen! I won’t give anything away but the actors who play Kevin( there are 4, from baby to 18 year old Kevin) were mesmerising, especially the teenage Kevin, played by Ezra Miller. In the book, I disliked Kevin immensely but in the film, I kinda liked him somehow.
When I read the book, I was very annoyed by the Dad character, how could he not see his son was a vile thing? Why was the Mum so passive about everything? And why does the Mum still love Kevin after 18 years of being a nightmare child and when the final horror of what he is capable of is revealed?
The films ends the same way as the book with no answers.
Worth a watch for the lead actors alone but ultimately, it never gets to its point. The film and book try to give many possibilities for why Kevin is the way he is.
Give me the answers, please.