I'm doing my annual flip through of Dr Rangan Chatterjee's 'Feel better in Five'. At sometime during the year I'll go back to it for a reminder. His premise is that if you sped Five minutes a day on each of three short activities Five days a week, you will feel a lot better. He sets out a mix to choose from, under the heading of mind, body, spirit, an you choose one from each category.
For spirit, I spend five minutes a day outside, or looking out of the window if it is too cold for me to go out.
For body, I'm doing the five minute daily ballet based exercises - thoracic (upper body) stretches today,
For mind, I'm reading, writing, and keeping my daily page-day diary going.
I find that a few weeks of this gently sorts out any looming lethargy. Of course the best cure for lethargy is to DO SOMETHING instead of just thinking about it! So yesterday I dusted off the piano and played through a chunk of 'Dozen a Day' exercises. Just about anyone who ever learned the piano used these books!
The exercises are illustrated with delightful little stick-man drawings, even at the advanced levels, and everyone I've ever taught, and me too come to think of it, colours them in as they go...
....
Ang's 2By2 collaboration stitching arrived today. I've just about finished mine. As usual I thought I'd chosen a quick project for mine. As usual it isn't!
I'll post mine tomorrow. I just need to get on with it.
Which reminds me
I have two memories of the very first nursery school I attended; Mrs Stallman, I think she was called, used to lead us into a elegant drawing room, and we walked round in a circle all holding hands and singing nursery rhymes while she played the grand piano. Very staid. Very dull. Then we would go into a smaller darker room. We all sat at little desks working in our exercise books. I had a desk over in the corner, surrounded by a fire guard because I worked so slowly. I can remember Mrs Stallman continually nagging me; 'Get on dear, get on!'. My mother rescued me quite soon, or maybe Mrs Stallman asked her to take me away... The next nursery school was a much brighter and happier place.
the phrase 'Get on dear, get on!' in an exasperated tone of voice lives on in by subconscious even now, 65 years later. Oh dear.
At the moment my scales are sounding too much like this
Instead of like this!






