Thursday, October 29, 2009

Grand Hotel, Moss


In the 1920's a friend of my father came to work in
Moss. He first lived at the Grand Hotel, close to the
railway and the canal.

I don't know when it stopped being a hotel, but these
days there seem to be apartments on the upper floors
and businesses on the street floor.



The end wall was recently replastered.
Did it also get six new windows or were those
there before?
I am not quite sure.

Autumn in Moss



Kirkeparken with the statue of the elk / moose
in the background.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Simple fun




This is a copy of the cheese slicer my Norwegian
grandmother had in her home in Oslo.

I have now bought a copy of that cheese slicer.
It looks beautiful, and every time I will use it,
I will fondly remember my grandmother.

Simple fun.


Monday, October 26, 2009

"More humane, tolerant and eager to share"

My friend Norberto from Brasil wrote, in a longer text with
thoughts after a trip abroad:

In that respect, revisiting places and meeting old friends,
has the dual effect of registering and incorporating changes,
and reviving old feelings through smells, tastes, images,
and in less extent sounds.
The name of the game is perfecting oneself, this endless game,
the increase of consciousness and well-being regardless of
our health conditions.
The feeling of belonging to someone, a family, a musical
group, a country, or the human race is always reassuring,
and it can be achieved by listening to a symphony,
looking to a landscape either in a painting or through
a real scenery, or trivially sharing one sorrows and hopes
with a long-standing friend.
This feeling makes us more humane, tolerant, and eager to share.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Forgiveness

I used to think that forgiveness only was possible
if the person who had done something I considered
wrong or hurtful to me, asked me for forgiveness and
probably also in a convincing way.

Now I feel that forgiveness has more to do with a
conscious decision from my side to let the grievance
go emotionally.

I like these two quotes Jerry sent me:

"When deep injury is done to us,
we never recover until we forgive.
Forgiveness does not change the past,
but it does enlarge the future."
Mary Karen

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"Not to forgive is to be imprisoned by the past, by old
grievances that do not permit life to proceed with new business.
Not to forgive is to yield oneself to another's control. . .
to be locked into a sequence of act and response, of outrage
and revenge, tit for tat, escalating always.
The present is endlessly overwhelmed and devoured by the past.
Forgiveness frees the forgiver.
It extracts the forgiver from someone else's nightmare."
Lance Morrow


"Forgiveness frees the forgiver". I like that.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Summer vacation in Sweden



I am not yet three years old on this photo,
but I remember when it was taken.

Lately I have realized that I have a few very clear
memories from the age of two and a half to three.

Renting a cottage for a ski vacation in 1939

Among my father's correspondence, I found this letter
he had received back in February 1939:



Thanks for the letter I received yesterday.
As already mentioned I can supply "dyner"
( bedcover with feathers) and pillows, but I
assume you bring woolen blankets,
because those I cannot supply.

Bread you can buy up here.

Greetings,

70 years later I think about my father and his friends
planning to rent a cottage up in the mountains to go
skiing and having a good time. I also imagine my father
volunteering to find and rent a cottage.

Then the whole group sitting on the train from Oslo
with their packpacks, including woolen blankets....

Friday, October 23, 2009

Swedish crossword



Who would have believed it?
I not only finished one of those big crosswords
in the Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter, but
won their symbolic lottery ticket too.
Quite proud of that!

Interesting where all those Swedish words are stored
in my brain.....
After all, my mother tongue is Norwegian, though my
mother's mother tongue is Swedish.

I could probably say both sentences and be right:
My mother tongue is Norwegian.
My mother tongue is Swedish.

I once heard that immigrants often learn their children's
mother tongue from their own children.

Monday, October 19, 2009

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Photo versus scanning


This is part of the embroidery on my grandmother's
Sunday kitchen tablebloth.
I decided to do an experiment, first scanning it
(see above)



and then taking a photograph.

A day of rest



I put this embroidered tablecloth on my grandparents'
diningtable.
My mother told me that her mother-in-law, my
grandmother, put this on her kitchen counter on Sundays,
as a way of showing that Sunday was different from the
other days of the week.
We think the embroidery was done by my paternal aunt
Kari, but it could also have been made by my grandmother.

These days, in most Norwegian homes, I doubt that an
embroidered tablecloth is placed on the kitchen counter
on Sundays.

Kate in October 2009





As Halloween is one of the holidays Kate will grow up
with, this is one of the holidays her grandma will have
to learn a little more about.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

The price of travelling

It is true that Ryanair is starting up a new route
from the local airport here in Moss, but even as
a PR stunt I don't know how they can afford it.

But fact is that somebody I know is flying from Moss
to Skavsta airport near Nykoping in Sweden and the
ticket, one way, costs 58 Norwegian kroner for a flight
that lasts around one hour.
58 kr. is roughly ten dollars.
By comparison, a local bustrip in Moss will
cost you 25 kr.

Then this same person is going from Skavsta airport
in Sweden to Warszawa in Poland, and will then use
an Hungarian airline called WIZZ. The two hours flight
will cost around 210 Norwegian kroner.
Roughly 35 dollars.

True, in both cases, with only ten kilo of handluggage,
no meal, no extra insurances.

The price of travelling......

Friday, October 16, 2009

From autumn to winter

Yesterday morning it was minus 2 degrees Celsius
outside my kitchen window, but it turned out to warm
up a little as it became a very sunny day.

This morning the rain is pouring down
and just now it is plus three degrees Celsius outside.

But I should remember we are in the middle of
October already. As a child living up in the Norwegian
mountains I remember that we often had snow in the
end of September.

Moss definitely has a milder climate than most places in
Norway, and I am grateful for that!

Travelling

Tonight, through the internet, I ordered tickets for a trip
I want to take towards the end of December to my
second country.

I will be using an airline I did not even
know existed, and I will be going through an airport
I have never visited.

The most important part is that these are the cheapest
tickets I could find.

Cheap means I will travel with 10 kilo of
handluggage and nothing more, and that weight will
include the food I bring with me to eat on the plane....
:-)

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Driving licence from 1914 - for a velocipede


That same Swedish greatgrandfather, back in 1914,
before he had bought his T Ford, used
a bicycle.
How far could he go on a bicycle at the age of 46?
It is far from his farm to this town.

In any case, the document above shows that he had
obtained the permission to ride his bicycle, here called
velocipede, in the town of Nykøping, Sweden.
More surprisingly, this was issued in November 1914 - brrrh, cold!

There were many rules to follow. One of them was
that he had to keep a metal plate at least eight cm high
on the back of the saddle with the issued number
4594 clearly showing in red numbers.

Hearing the word velocipede I immediately thought of
those really old bicycles with an enormous front wheel,
but googling around, my greatgrandfather's bicycle

T Ford Touring 1924


It is just a photo copy, but it still feels rather special.

In September 1924 my Swedish greatgrandfather
had bought a T Ford Touring and it cost him
2200 Swedish crowns, including 5 crowns for the
number plate he had borrowed!
He was a farmer and a politician and he must have
understood the advantages of getting around in a car
quite early. He must also have had the necessary money!


Looking for how the car had looked, I found this photo
on this website

My mother thinks it was how her grandfather's car looked.

After he bought a second car , probably in the beginning
of the 1930's, this car ended up in the forest as a playground
for the children in the family!


Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Halloween 2008 and 2009

Halloween is one of those holidays I have seen on
American movies and read about in American literature.

Now that my son lives in the States, it is interesting
to see what is going on in real life,
at least through the family photos.

Last year I loved the photo of these two pumpkins
safely strapped in when they were brought back from
the farm.

That was 2008, with a baby on the way.


And here she is - Kate - in 2009.
She seems to enjoy the pumkin farm very much.


What a difference one year can make!

Listening

Photo : Cheryl


So when you are listening to somebody, completely,

attentively, then you are listening not only to the words,

but also to the feeling of what is being conveyed,

to the whole of it, not part of it.


J. Krishnamurti


Thanks, Jerry!

Monday, October 5, 2009

A blunt pencil



As someone who needs to write down things,
I liked this quote:

A blunt pencil is better than a sharp mind.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Kate



In August 2008, my son and his wife were
visiting us here in Norway, and we knew there was
a baby on the way.
During that visit my son's three cousins gave them
a book - "1000 words and Pictures in Norwegian
and English" - urging the coming parents to
teach the baby Norwegian.
So here, in this photo taken in the States a few months
ago, Kate seems to have taken matters into her own
hands, so to speak.

Will she one day learn Norwegian?

Lesson : Banana boxes are strong



A friendly piece of advice I got when I came to Norway:

If you need boxes for moving, use cardboard banana boxes.

If you need boxes for storing, use cardboard banana boxes.

They are strong and sturdy.

Just for the joke


Cigarettes, me?!
I have been lucky.
I never smoked one single cigarette in my life.

Some of my coworkers are smokers, and go out a
few times a day for a smoke. I do not envy them
the nicotine, but the break of five minutes would have
been great.....

So up came the idea that I should get my own cigarettes,
either made out of chocolate or of chewing gum.
This way I too, would be able to take a break for
"smoking".

In Norway you cannot buy these "cigarettes",
but a very kind woman living close to the Swedish border
liked the joke and bought me two boxes, one of each kind.


But an old habit is hard to break.
Even with this three dimentional excuse, I cannot bring
myself to go out to "smoke".

So today I opened up one box and tasted the chocolate
version - just for fun.



Thor Bjørklund and the cheese slicer


Thor Bjørklund was a carpenter at Lillehammer
back in 1925.
He did not like the fact that it was hard
to cut the cheese with a knife.

Using one of his carpenter tools as an inspiration,
he invented the cheese slicer - ostehøvel, in Norwegian.
Bjorklund's contribution to the world.

He started the production in 1927 and his firm has existed
at Lillehammer till now.
I found they had a website in English and in Norwegian

Cheese slicers now come in very many shapes, and the
firm also produced cake slicers, cutlery for serving
salads etc.

Imagine how sad it was to read this afternoon that
the firm had been declared bankcrupt in the end of
September 2009.