Deck the Halls

Not our own hall, though. Not if I can avoid it. Not this time.

You see, I plan to be in Athens for the holidays this year. Last time was in 2009, and I've missed the atmosphere so much.

We haven't booked tickets yet, so I don't know exactly when we will be away – any time between 17 December and 2 January. I want to be there as long as possible, and not only because I desperately need seven workdays to bring my paperwork up to date, failing which would create no end of trouble.

You see, we say 'holidays' there, instead of just 'Christmas', because Christmas is only the beginning of the festive season. During most of the 12 days, the party goes on non-stop. There are so many name days to be celebrated, and a good few of them involve such popular names, that an overdose of treats is very likely, if one really keeps in touch.

The week between Christmas and the New Year also hosts more parties than any other time in the year: one long revel to celebrate the birth of the Son and chase the old year away. Add to it the fact that presents are exchanged on New Year's Day, rather than Christmas, and you can understand we could never be satisfied with a day or two of celebrating. Oh no. That's just a warm-up.

So I'm going to do everything in my power to be down early, to enjoy the build-up of activity. To decorate the tree in my mother's living room, which I haven't done since 2006, together with my little one. To welcome carol singers on Christmas Eve and New Year's Eve. To go to church at dawn and hear liturgy in Greek again. To have the pork and leek casserole that is traditional Christmas Day fare in my part of the country, and my mother's incomparable melomakarona. To visit with uncles and aunts and cousins and old friends, who haven't seen my son since he was just crawling. To see old friends, walk along crowded decorated streets, and welcome the New Year with fireworks at midnight and clinking glasses of bubbly with the family that made me and the one that I made, all together.

Despite the bleak economic climate in Greece right now, all I can think of is spending time with the people I care for. Nothing else matters. We've faced the spectre of poverty here as well, and we're just beginning to raise our heads above water, but I'd do anything to never have to spend another holiday season separated again.

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Year End To-Do's

Perhaps setting a close deadline works better than new year resolutions.

Things to do today

I've already struck the unfeasible items off the list (read The Wheel of Time in six weeks? yeah, right), so this is only what depends solely on myself and circumstances as they are right now for its accomplishment.

1. Get myself accustomed to a daily schedule involving more sleep and exercise. With husband's new job, I have to get up earlier and shoulder more tasks during the day, so I need to rake up more energy and keep the winter blues at bay.

2. Finish the book series I've put on hold for NaNoWriMo (Cate Tiernan's Sweep). Five instalments are down, 10 remain to go. Each one is a couple of hours' worth of reading, so it may seem like a light task. It is, as long as I manage to make the time, which can be trickier than it seems, especially on full-blown work days.

3. Bring my paperwork up to date. My passport will expire in January, and my identity card is still of the kind that started to be replaced a decade ago. Unless something goes terribly wrong, we will be going back to Greece for Christmas, and I will have both taken care of while we're there, saving myself trips to London and dealings with the embassy.

4. Buy myself at least a couple of smart garments. I've grown too comfortable with the 'mum uniform' of yoga pants, t-shirts and sneakers; I need to reacquaint myself with smart clothes (especially slacks – that's going to be hard) and heels, in anticipation of working opportunities.

5. Take the little one to at least one Christmas event. Probably the arrival of Father Christmas at the local zoo, in a sleigh pulled by real live reindeer.

6. Be happier, for myself and in myself.

That's it, I guess. A short list, fully achieved, would do much better things for my self-confidence than having to work out success percentages.

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Best Foot Forward

I'm not high maintenance. It only takes some skillful arrangement to meet a few basic necessities, and I'm firing on all cylinders.

Lift Off- Best Viewed Large

Being at my best, in my book, is a combination of feeling good and doing well, both of which are theoretically easy to achieve. (Practice is another story entirely.)

The most basic feel-good factor is getting enough sleep, which can be inordinately difficult. I sleep generally well, but not long enough; on days when I've been allowed to sleep in, the improvement on both my mood and performance is immediately noticeable.

After sleep, food. I can't function if I'm either hungry or weighed down. In the morning, I need to eat something substantial within half an hour of getting up, or all the coffee in the world can't keep me going. On the other extreme, I'm literally good for nothing if I'm digesting a big meal. A bite of savoury, a bite of sweet, a drink to wash it all down, and my motor is purring. That's why I love Meal Deals.

A shower and clean clothes also go a long way on the feel-good scale. If I've had a few minutes to dry-brush before showering, the effect intensifies exponentially. Same when the clothes are comfortable – a crucial factor particularly when it comes to shoes – and suited to the season. Being too hot or too cold makes for certain misery.

I'm much better in the afternoon and evening than in the morning hours. It's my internal clock that works this way. Granted, a lot of my morning grouchiness is due to sleep deprivation, but by no means all of it. My ideal weather is cool and moderately sunny – no wonder autumn is my favourite season.

To complete my happiness, some alone time with the chance to read every day is just the thing. I used to put my daily train commute to such use; I was a much better person to work with if I'd had my daily read first.

So, in recap: rested, full, clean, comfortable, up to my intellectual speed – that's when I'm at my best, a rare and wonderful sight. Isn't learning to function optimally in less than optimal conditions what life is all about?

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Running Hot and Cold

As a Greek ex-pat in the UK, I claim weather opinions as a specialty. Respect my authoritay!

English weather

I've been called crazy to my face for moving from Greece to the UK. Clearly, someone who leaves the land of the bluest skies for the most proverbially variable weather in Europe, if not worldwide, must have taken leave of her senses first, right?

Well, no.

There was much more than the weather involved in my decision to move, like for everyone else (if you know anyone who can afford to pick their residence by weather alone, point them out to me; I need to find out how to become a lady of such leisure myself). As far as the weather goes, though, neither country is quite like the stereotypes. Shocking, I know.

Yes, Greek weather is milder than anything I could find in the UK. To claim that it never rains is an exaggeration, but we do get at least 300 days of sunshine a year. The sky is really bluer than it can ever be here in the north, and the sun brighter, but after a point, those very characteristics used to become the bane of my existence. In and around Athens, at least, where I lived most of my life, we simply didn't get enough rain – and what rain we did get used to fall in buckets, creating flash floods that made the life of entire neighbourhoods a misery. In summer, the temperature would rise to baking point – it's a cool summer if it doesn't go over 40C – and the sun doesn't feel friendly at all under such circumstances. The price of keeping the indoors air-conditioned is making the outdoors even more unbearable, and the summers are, slowly but steadily, growing longer. Halloween in T-shirts is less fun than it sounds, especially if one has had nearly six months of that kind of heat already.

On the other hand, at least my part of the UK is neither grey nor wet. Here in the east, we're on the wrong side of the mountains for rain. Of course the 'less rainfall than the Sahara' line is blatantly untrue, but we can go weeks in a row without rain in the warm half of the year. Nothing like, say, Stornoway, which I've never seen without rain on the weather report. The winter is cold, but we only get a handful of snow days (though even those are enough to bring everything to a grinding halt), usually in January – it has happened twice in the four winters I've spent here. Summers are cool, and I usually need a light coat even when everyone else is in tank tops, but I can live with that. If it gets really hot (and 25-30C is really hot here), the humidity makes it stifling.

From all this it is obvious that I can cope with cold much better than with heat. No matter how cold it gets, there is always a heating system, central or otherwise (and believe me here; I spent two winters depending on a portable space heater rather than central heating, with not much discomfort), and more clothes to pile on. While, when it gets hot, one can only strip down to the skin, which is not even appropriate for anywhere but within one's own walls. Even in the worst of times, I don't risk frostbite here; while I'm fair game for heat exhaustion at best, and lethal sunstroke or heatstroke at worst there.

I don't think I'm going to visit back home in August again (not after the exhaustion of last year). From now on, only between October and April. And when I'm independently wealthy, I'll be spending the whole winter in Athens, every year. That would take care of the issue of having to be out and about in the rain.

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Oh Happy Day

Eleven (just to buck the trend) things, people, and ideas that make my life worth it. The list is by no means exhaustive…

My husband
We fell in love without even realising it, at a junction in life when things couldn’t possibly look less favourable. We pulled through that, got together, built a family, and we look forward to growing old together. Things are far from easy, but that’s when one gets to appreciate the people who matter: those who support you despite everything.

My son
He’s a toddler (smack in the middle of his Terrible Twos, actually) and a handful on a good day, but for each time he gets my pulse racing he knows to counter it with a big dimpled grin, or by climbing into my lap to snuggle and watch TV, or by feeding me bits of his food, or by the cuteness overload he is when asleep, or by surprising me with a new word.

Chocolate
Is there anything in this world that doesn’t look or feel better through the lens of a good chocolate fix? The ultimate feel-good food, not even the workouts I need to keep it off my hips can make me give it up. Moderate, yes. But hell would be forbidding it me for the rest of my life. So don’t do it. This means you.

Baby animals
Even those beasts that grow up to be ugly or scary manage to be cute as babies. If we talk about fluffy kitties or frisky puppies, I challenge anyone out there not to have their spirits lifted; or a belly laugh at the very least. That’s why CuteOverload.com has been in my bookmarks for nigh on eight years.

Fashion
I don’t mean anything expensive or bleeding-edge fashionable. But there’s no resisting a pretty tone-on-tone embroidered coat or dress, or a pair of soft ballet slippers or jazz boots. Such items make me feel pretty, sexy, and distinctive at the same time. Epic win!

Crisp clear days
The best weather to walk out in. I enjoy wrapping myself warmly, but not needing to thaw out uncovered bits when I get back, and to be as certain as possible that it’s not going to rain. There are no two months better suited to long hikes than April and October.

Music
It’s what makes a long drive or walk fly by. It’s what gets me in the mood for writing, or provides inspiration. Discovering a new artist I like is like receiving a gift for no reason.

BookMooch
Books I want to read coming through the letterbox, without me having to pay a penny for them. Nicely broken in books, vibrating with the life of having been read and enjoyed. Chances to get rid of books I otherwise wouldn’t know what to do with. Thanks, Trip, for alerting me to this wonderful thing.

The Body Shop
When I was a penniless student, and later equally penniless unemployed, I used to trot over to my local branch when depression struck and go around sniffing products until my mood improved. The whirl of colour and gorgeous smells is still effective – last time I was there, I let my son have a sniff at their new orange body butter and his response was, ‘Yummy!’

Words
Whether I read them or write them, whether they’re books, blogs, roleplaying games… the sheer creativity that is creating vibrant worlds and living people out of a handful of squiggles is irresistible.

The internet
A few clicks here and there are enough for me to find information, entertainment, socialisation, everything. I don’t really know how I managed before I found it, and if I were to lose it, I’d feel bereft without my online communities.

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