Perfume Tag

I guess it was bound to happen one day… I’m tagged by my friend Wen, a fellow blogger and expat living in beautiful Malta. I must admit I’ve tried to stay away from the tagging thing that seemed to be a hype in the blogosphere at some point. I’ve managed so far but when I read her request on her blog I simply couldn’t refuse *hehe*. I’m just very aware of the fact that this is a book tag and the one book I’m still reading at the moment is the one that I’ve mentioned in my previous posts already. So I’m gonna bend the rules slightly or else it’ll become a bit of a drag to read.

The rules are:

1. Pick up the nearest book.

2. Open to page 123

3. Find the fifth sentence.

4. Post the next three sentences.

5. Tag five people, and acknowledge who tagged you.

I also won’t tag five people… Why? Because most of my readers are in hiding mode and probably too shy to take part in this, leave a comment or they simply don’t have a blog of their own. So I’m not gonna bother them unless they want to [then feel free to let me know!]. I have a slight dilemma though because rule number one tells me to pick up the nearest book. My desk is right next to my bookcase so I guess that leaves me with plenty of books to choose from. I will behave and skip my seventeen technical Bibles: PHP, Actionscripting, Flash and all the -vintage by now- Mac OS troubleshooting ones that I used back when I was a sysop.

My choice is one of the most hilarious books that I’ve ever read years ago. I will read it again once I’ve finished my other book because I’m in need of a good laugh. I wonder what’s on page 123 because some might be offended but I’ll warn you, I’m really not gonna take responsibility for the sentences that I’m about to copy below. So stop reading while you can… here goes:

‘For miles around the mountain, there lived not one human being, nor even a respectable mammal -at best a few bats and a few beetles and adders. No one had scaled the peak for decades. Grenouille reached the mountain one August night in the year 1756.’

This an excerpt taken from the book: ‘Perfume‘ -the story of a murderer, by Patrick Süskind. And lucky me it wasn’t that bad at all *hehe*

The cover from my copy of this book, old and worn…

Well, that was today’s tag… The other bit of my life is less exciting at the moment, just much of the same ol’ same ol’. I’m dying to hear from a bunch of cool people about a role very close to where I live which involves education and a CMS called Drupal. They’ve checked my online web folio twice now so please keep your fingers crossed for me, I so want this role! I’m designing an invitation for my friend IvS. in Scotland who is going to throw a party in August: my flight is already booked. I’m really looking forward to seeing her, hubby and kids again because it feels like ages, although it was last year when they came to London for the Chelsea Flower show, it’s gonna be great. 120 people are invited to the party and they will receive the invitation so it might be a good idea to leave my mark somewhere…

I’m asked to redesign a B&B website for people up north in Scotland. I’ve designed their business cards a few years ago and another website recently in February this year. I’m also still busy working on the ‘hush-hush-project’ which is another website design for a real and a virtual shop. And in between I’m working on my own new project which involves fifties design and an online shop which for now is another ‘hush-hush-project’ until the launch of the website. It’s quite a lot of work so don’t expect anything soon, I’m still in the research phase: looking for proper software because I need to be able to adjust the look and feel of the shop, reading about online payment methods because I need to know how much they charge etc. and designing content in the meantime.

Lucky me MvdM. didn’t ask me yet about his business blog project, I will have to design the templates for the blog and start writing posts for him on a weekly basis once the blog is up and running. I won’t have time to do this at the moment. Talking about time, I really need to do something about time management, but that’s another post… If you have any suggestions?

Bluebeard and Wolves

Thanks to the gift of this wonderful person I have found my long lost craving for words again and I started reading books and actually finish them instead of giving up when I only have 35 more pages to go… But I believe there is a difference in just reading a book for entertainment value or actually taking in each and every written word, consuming the deeper meaning and trying to read the message between the lines. Perhaps it’s the kind of books that I like to read which make me look for the deeper meaning, I don’t know. I don’t read ‘simple’ books and I guess because I seem to be a complicated kind of woman I like my books complicated as well. The books that I read these days and that I used to read in the past, you would mostly find in the psychology section of a library, on the other hand, I also had a SF phase when I was 12 years old…

My love for reading came at an early age, I was eight years old when my level of reading was exceptionally good for a child my age. Twice a year we had to do a reading test where a government-sent stranger would come into school and call the pupils one by one to sit down in front of him or her at a small desk at the end of the long corridor. Where you had to start reading out loud long lists of words, as many as you could within three minutes. Words that were hard to pronounce, with more than three syllables, words that an eight year old didn’t understand yet. One by one you would have to leave the classroom, walk towards the stranger waiting for you to deliver, which was threatening in a way. And because my results were good, the teacher wanted me to go to another classroom each Friday to sit and read with the nine/ten year old kids.

It was a frightening and exciting experience whenever Friday came around and I was asked to leave the classroom at a certain hour to read with the other kids two doors further down the corridor. It’s scary at that age to walk into a room with kids that are one or two years older and staring at you, kids that you normally don’t even talk to or play with. You see, my elder brother was in that class too so it all felt a bit weird to me. Each and every pupil had their own desk to keep their own books, pencils etc. it would be your desk assigned to you for a whole year. So I would be sitting at a desk that wasn’t taken by one of the pupils, a spare desk close to the teacher. Children were asked to read a few pages out loud taking turns and from what I can remember reading class was about two hours so it was very likely that I had my turn as well…

In those days it wasn’t unusual for me to go to the library twice a week and come home with the maximum amount of books that you were allowed to borrow, in my case that would be five and I would’ve finished them five days later, return them and get new ones. I guess when you get older you start to appreciate the amount of spare time that you had as a child, these days I would be extremely happy if I would be able to finish a book within a month. Especially the kind of books that I read which force you to put them down for a while and think about the content. The book I’ve started to read last Wednesday is called ‘Women Who Run With the Wolves: Myths & Stories of the Wild Woman Archetype’ written by Clarissa Pinkola Estes. It has over 500 pages and I’ve finished reading another chapter last night which was called Bluebeard.

I basically had to force myself to stop reading, the book is very intriguing so I promised myself to read one chapter at a time. I read about the Bluebeard tale and how it’s part of the dark psyche of women, the destructive side. All I’ve read so far has left a deep impression on me because I recognise so many things in the book, situations that I’m currently in or emotions that I’ve experienced, things that I can easily apply to my own life. It gives me insight and a way to deal with the past and improve and find spiritual growth. I strongly recommend this book to women out there who lost and/or neglected their own ‘self’. This particular chapter about Bluebeard was a true eye-opener to me and I’m sure it might help others going through a similar phase in life.

I’m eager to finish this book but I wanted to share this in order to make others aware of its existence. It’s been published in 1992 and I’m sure I’m ‘late’ in my discovery but I regard this as a timeless jewel. It’s a second hand book and it wasn’t the type of book that I thought it would be much better to be honest. The title caught my eye for some unknown reason, perhaps because of the word Wolves… It has been in my possession since 2006 but I think it has been waiting for the right time for me to discover its value. I also would like to thank J. and W., their enthusiasm for books inspired me as well.