Sunday, December 7, 2014

Space is. Spaces


When I think of space, I look up and see loads of stars. I see dozens, but I know there are millions. No, billions. I do believe it because books say so. And people who have telescopes say so. Their space is fuller than mine. It feels like it, because I certainly don’t see everything they see. Different things fascinate us. I get lost in time, connecting stars like dots in one of those books from my childhood. If you connected them in the right order, you would get a picture out of it. With stars it’s harder, more advanced. There are no numbers on them and you need good imagination.


Space is. Spaces. Those two sound the same, but are they?


“Space is a continuous area or expanse which is free, available and unoccupied. Spaces are dimensions of height, depth, and width within which all things exist and move”, it says in the dictionary.


I disagree. Spaces are a matter of discovery. They remain in secrecy unless (not until) we discover them or start to see them as spaces. The word ‘until’ is unsuitable here. Not everybody is eager to discover. You don’t discover some things until you bump into them. Not all spaces can be bumped into. The space which one can see with the help of a telescope is eternal. No width, height or depth of it can be measured. When you fix your look on one particular star, you can’t tell how far away it is until you know its name. You look into the space without knowing how deep you are into it.


What about paper? A piece of paper can be measured, written on, torn, burnt. But what is it if not a virtual reconstruction of paper that I write on right now? I can measure the screen, but I cannot measure the paper until I print it out. How thick or thin is it? I could never tell, even if I looked from the side of my laptop. I can only touch or measure the piece of paper I print these words onto, but what is it I am writing in now? How is it not space? I think the world is too old for such a narrow definition of space(s).


Space is not only width, depth of height. It’s capacity for something. When we say ‘feelings in my heart’, I doubt if anyone sees an actual box in your internal organ that you can measure. It’s a metaphor, but how is heart not a space? It has capacity for feelings. Our minds have capacity too. For thoughts, ideas, stories. For memories that we store or chose to erase. We don’t bump into it, we realise it exists. We find it long after it’s created. When is it though? Do we have any thoughts before we come out of our mother’s womb? Nobody can define when our mind starts ticking like a clock. When does it end? Some writers create stories and essays that are still relevant today, even though they are two or three centuries old. Do our minds die when our body dies?


What is the capacity of human mind? Brain is one thing – it’s a physical object. Some of us have them bigger, others smaller, or at least we think so. Einstein’s brains were smaller than average but he was smarter than many. Mind is on one hand tied very closely to brain, but, on the other hand, it exists on its own. It’s another thing, they’re incomparable. We can’t measure the mind. It’s abstract. Definition of ‘space’ can only be used when it comes to the skull where the brain lies, but how is our mind not a space?




We all discover our spaces. Just like people who love watching stars, we “construct” more and more powerful telescopes to see deeper and deeper into our spaces. We free ourselves from seeing only physical objects. We discover new dimensions and that we lived all our lives in. Our minds become our resort. And when we have no capacity left for our feelings, we cry. Out of misery, or happiness, or memories, or grief, or guilt.


We pile things up all the time. People fill their houses with old things they want to keep forever – old shoes they love too much to get rid of, clothes they “might use someday”. But physical space is limited. Let’s take wanderers as an example.


I have been thinking about this for a while and yes, my conclusion is that people who wander are not always lost. There are so many controversies in their lives, so much chaos and movement, spiced with risk, instability, and longing that it seems to be the best condition to get to know oneself in all ways possible. Even though there is no way this lifestyle is suitable for anyone or attractive for everyone who sticks to it, this is the right path with self-omniscience waiting at its end.


The main reason why I think so is very practical. I am not talking about a person who walks around with a wooden walking-stick and gives strangers advice, even though they were also considered more knowledgeable and experienced than the sedentary ones. Here I am referring to travelers without permanent accommodation, such as international students, couch-surfers, au pair nannies, etc. So, when 'the sedentary ones' move out, it becomes an event of a decade. Collecting their stuff, putting it into boxes and getting rid of some of it becomes a burden, because that 'stuff'' turns out to be the result of years and years of piling it up, filling up the space, even without realizing it. A notion of space emerges.




A modern wanderer cannot afford this luxury. In this case, moving out becomes an annual, seasonal(?), once-in-a-term, or any other kind of periodical thing. It becomes a well-practiced skill. But the hard thing is, we can never help buying new things, and we are given things all the time as well. So, the so-called modern wanderer usually encounters the dilemma I will refer to as 'space/value judgement'. Every time he/she moves out, some things have to be refused. One cannot afford to pile up, or to store things somewhere. And if the space is limited, judgment upon personal value has to be performed. Even very precious things have to be rid of sometimes. When a person goes through it again and again, it becomes a lesson for life. What it teaches, however, it not only the 'proficiency' in moving out.


It is, most importantly, self-exploration. Every time you move out, you see how you have changed. Under the light of cardinal changes, some things suddenly seem needless, and new valuables emerge. And this, being so material (we often think the big self-discoveries are made within oneself), becomes a way to know what's happening even before you find the changes within your inner self.


Wanderers, for example, students who move flats every semester, can’t afford the luxury of piling things up. You have to keep it consistent, because your piece of luggage is a space too. It has the three dimensions you have to deal with upon every move. Every new thing you buy makes you get rid of an old one. If you have your priorities sorted, it is not a burden at all. You understand that there are spaces you don’t have to fill up. Life is a dance floor.


What do I call a space? What do others call a space? Are they different or the same? When I feel happy or sad or guilty, I sometimes wonder if others’ feelings feel the same. I wonder if everyone can feel as intensely as me. But there’s no way to find out. Not with technology and not even with human communication.


So, if a piece of paper is a space, how can I fill it? I can write or draw on it, poke holes in it, burn it, tear it apart. I can write in small or capital letters, make spaces between words big or small. What about children? They might draw a single line with a colorful pen. Or they might draw something and then explain what it is they have drawn. They might as well just leave the piece of paper as it is – empty. What would a teenage do with that piece? Maybe he or she would turn it into a diary, or draw something as well. Do they realize a piece of paper is a space? At what point of life does this realization sink in? Are there many spaces I do not view as spaces yet? Some people can turn paper into music. They write notes on paper and you can hear the melody if you can read them. Is music a space? I don’t think so.


But silence is.




We try to fill it with words or any other sounds we can make. Some of us more, some less. Latino people speak way more than northern, Scandinavian people. Lithuanians are in the middle. Is silence a space of different sizes for each of us? In some conversations people feel desperate need to fill the silence, but in others it’s the opposite – no words are needed. The latter usually happens when people know each other well. In this case it might be that their spaces collide. You don’t feel uncomfortable when your beloved one crosses the line to your comfort zone. You worry when it’s an unfamiliar person who does that. You feel the need to distract yourself and so you begin to talk to them.


In my life I have discovered quite a few spaces. I saw a piece of paper as a space and I wanted to fill it with words. When my mind was too full of emotions, I discovered that tears made me feel lighter. I filled the space in my heart with feelings and found it was hard to control them. Love could make me feel better that all of my thoughts combined, but sadness and guilt burnt me from within. The older I get, the more doubtful I become about ever learning to control my heart.


My mind is a space that gets fuller as I grow and learn. All of my best memories are stored right there. There are some memories I want to forget. As they pop into my head, I want to cover my face with my hand and wake up from this dream. But that’s not what it is. I want to erase some of my memories, but they keep coming back. Can we ever gain total control of our abstract spaces?


As people mature and become more experienced, they learn to fill in spaces more and more professionally. Incomprehensible lines on a sheet of paper become artworks. Lines and lines of long-perfected handwritten letters in primary school notebooks become blogs, diaries, books. The list of feelings expands. We discover them, too. I always loved my mother, but when I said “I love you” to her for the first time in my teens, I discovered it was the feeling I was craving. I cried as a baby, I cried because it hurt physically, but when I cried for the first time out of sadness and stress, I discovered that there was limited space in me for these feelings.


As we become more experienced, we learn to fill our spaces in different ways. Even human history doesn’t hold the answer to how I should be filling up my spaces in a decade or two. I might have a family by then, so new errands and problems will emerge. Will I cry out of happiness or sadness more often? Will I discover more spaces in or around me? These questions are yet to be answered. I can’t wait to see what the future holds.


However, even though we’ve all seen space with our own eyes, there are people who’ve been there. This abstract space we see has become a physical space for some. Realizing the concept of space itself, the depth, length and width of it, can be overwhelming. But placing a tiny human being in there – it sounds surreal. And yet it becomes reality for those who don’t let their hands down.

Monday, November 3, 2014

Beautiful as we are (III): Mind the tights

Sitting on a tram this morning, I was wearing a short dress and thick tights. You know when your stop is nearing and you get ready to quickly stand up and get out? At this stage I caught myself thinking whether there were any sharp angles on the metal seat that could potentially ruin my tights. And then I asked myself - do men find themselves in this situation? What about other hassles that not-entirely-comfortable clothing leads to? Shoulder bags that always threaten to slide off your shoulder, high-heels that slow you down or make-up that prevents from enjoying the rain? I'm not sure about the shoulder bag situation, but others are only lived through by women.

In Sweden, men ride bikes in expensive suits and women ride bikes in high-heels. Because why not? 

Getthing back to the topic though, whilst on my stay in Newcastle, England, I wrote a paper on how clothing is meant to restrict women. I stumbled upon that topic barely out of curiosity. I was in the library and I randomly opened a random book that happened to be about gender performativity. And it definitely drew me in. I read plenty of book chapters and articles on it. I read way more than my paper demanded. 

And now I see it. Women are unconsciously restricting themselves every day with their clothing. I sat there on a tram this morning thinking about my tights, and that girl stood under a roof in pouring rain the ofher day for half an hour to save her makeup. Yes, my tights are alright, but maybe that girl got a cold afterwards? Again, I'm going back at the #LikeAGirl campaign I mentioned in "Beautiful as we are (II)" - yes, a woman can be physically powerful and open jars in the kitchen herself. She just doesn't know it most of the time.


Monday, October 20, 2014

Beautiful as we are (II) : too beautiful to be smart?

This post has been in my blog as a draft for nearly five months by now, and there are so many things unsaid that I don't really know how to say. A few days ago I came across an article that did what I seemingly cannot. It viewed gender inequality in the job market objectively.
I don't have many front-row experiences of when a woman was denied a high position because of her appearance. However, I have minor stories, and I believe that they plant the very same seed in young and perspective women that grows to prevent them from high positions in their fields of expertise.
Compliments, when spoken out, have to be differentiated. Not all of them seek to flatter.
"What do you know about struggles for recognition, you are pretty and it's way easier for you" - I have been addressed one of these as well.
"I will shed all of this skin down to the very bone beneath it if that's what it will take for you to come to the realization that appearance is not what makes a human beautiful" - this quote basically says all I think of it better than I ever could put it in my own words (I've posted it in one of my older blog posts).
Beauty is a 'given' and intelligence is an 'achieved'. Why is it so hard for some people to see the distinction?
Self-confidence is not a 'given' as well, and not only the 'ugly' ones lack it. Many girls stay in lower positions, never daring to think of having more power and, instead, leaving it either to the 'hungry for power' women (in their opinion) or men. They keep all their ideas in and stay in low positions with their mouths shut.
A lot of damage has been done for the physically beautiful, but I won't blame men. Some things are done just because things 'have always been like this'. We all do it - through advertising, media, movies. Music videos are not even worth mentioning in this case, I guess - some of them are the perfect demonstration of beautiful women doing silly things and exposing themselves to be recognised. We need to make them realize - everybody has the equal and basic right to...be intelligent. There's just no other way to say it, really.

Here's a video from #LikeAGirl campaign that majorly inspired me to get back to this post:


The situation is starting to get better with Emma Watson and other famous women speaking out about gender inequality, but the change is slow and will take a lot of time to spread worldwide.

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Is my Lithuanian me dead?

Constanly wondering. That's what I'm like not only in my mind, but physically as well.
Since I finished highschool, I've lived in four countries in two years. Four different cultures, nations. Four different worlds, basically.

I have met a few Lithuanians along my way and they all seemed so different from what I see around me now, living in the capital of my belved country.

Now, getting to the point, I must say that every - or nearly every - Lithuanian who's lived - or is living - abroad complains a lot about my country, in the most extreme manner.

'There's nothing good about this country anymore - the people never smile, the prices are high, the jobs are shitty and none of them pay you well', they say.

I don't mean to say it is not at all like that, but c'mon - why did they come back if it's so bad for them here? I see what they're saying, but I see good things, too.

People here do smile - if you smile to them first and you can get a well-paid job, if you are willing to go that extra mile it demands.

I just don't understand why people who are living abroad spread all this negativity through their impolite and rude comments in Lithuanian online media. If you hate it so much, why go back to it? This really frustrates me and I have no way of telling that to people who are living their happy lives in their miraculous countries yet proving to be the most negative of all in the comments sections.

Every time I come back from my adventure abroad, I try to contain myself and not speak badly of my country. Yes, in Sweden you earn ten times more than in Lithuania and pay almost the same price for your groceries, but do I really have to point out that you are welcomed when you are searching for a job here instead of being dismissed as a foreigner in nationalist Swedish job market?

Personally, my adventures abroad make me love my own country more and more. Since I moved to Sweden for the first time, I became incomparably more patriotic than I was before. I got my values sorted out and the fact really sunk in - I just could not speak badly of the country I grew up and live happily in. Surely, there are bad things and I am free to point them out, but I don't see why I should compare it to something totally different.

Am I really the rare type? Someone please back me up.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Swing until you're calm

I moved to Vilnius the capital city of Lithuania one month ago and I've been loving it a lot. I got an internship in one pf the biggest online newspapers in the country and couldn't believe there's so much going on in town all the time - all the exhibitions, concerts, workshops etc. However, all the fuss and chaos of the city made me want a restart sometimes, or at least have a good break.

I may not be the first one to say this, but I have found a way to disconnect from everything for a short while. What you need to do is simply find some tree swings!

Every morning, on my way to work, I pass by a public garden and that is where I now find my peace every time I have 5 extra minutes. On my walk down a busy avenue, I just turn up there and sit on a semi-comfortable wooden swing under a giant oak, near a sculpture of a well-known Lithuanian writer Zemaite.

I couldn't wait to have those 5 extra minutes to try them out since I started working three weeks ago, and one day I did. The sun was shining and it was quite cool outside. Sellers were preparing their mobile shops for a weekend fair in the busy Gediminas avenue, and I sat on the swings for a while.

Trust me, life just feels better on swings.




Sunday, August 31, 2014

Summer's come, summer's gone

So here I am, back on the last day of summer 2014, after months of silence. Did I only find the guts to write again only because it seemed absurd to not squeeze at least one post into my blog while it's still summer? Maybe. I'd say yes.
It's this strange feeling that's been all over me for a while. It's contradictory: I want to write and I don't at the same time. I barely write anything in the summer. No letters to my pen pals, no blog posts, no short stories in my notebook. I'll blame the summer, it's always like this:


However, pushing away my zero productiveness in writing as a hobby, I worked as a journalist for a local news website. This job made me face my fears and do things I've never been  comfortable doing (e.g. call people I've never met multiple times a day, five days a week), but at the same time it's been an adventure. I love interviewing, and I had plenty of opportunities to do that. One of my greatest memories of the whole summer is the day I interviewed an Australian guy and his American girlfriend, who, thanks to a house exchange program, moved to a Lithuanian countryside. The two people from big cities now use water from a well, take care of ducks and grow their own food. Meeting them definitely was an opportunity I wouldn't have gotten otherwise.


Other than that, i also went to a music festival, which was way wetter than anyone could have expected. It rained for three days and tents were floating in water. We got lucky so our belongings didn't float, but others' did. Not being able to dry my wet clothes and cutting my toes whilst swimming on he sea on the first hour of a three-day festival was really annoying, but now that I am back and my cuts are healing, I remember that festival as one of the greatest adventures of the summer.


Yesterday I went to cheer for my friend and her boyfriend in the first-ever color run in Lithuania and that was amazing, too. Came back with my camera covered in pink dust paint and smiling from ear to ear :3



All in all, I can really say that my summer has been one of the best summers I had :)

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Beautiful as we are (I)

This post has been here as an empty draft with only a name on it for exactly one month and one day. Everybody starts with a blank page, but I don't usually struggle with it as much as I did this time, not sure if it's because I have too much to say and I don't know where to start, or because I'm just afraid of being misunderstood, my words and thoughts being misinterpreted or thought of as egoistic and narcissistic.

I'm pretty sure I'll write more on this topic because I have way too many thoughts on presently existent perceptions of beauty and I don't want to make my posts too chunky and overloaded. I know - I'll make a series of posts on it :)

So, to start off, a few days ago, a friend of mine recommended a book called "1984" by George Orwell, which I will definitely read. From what she told me, it's about how societies can become dull only by narrowing down people's vocabularies and making them use basic words. As I think of it, it hits me just how true it may be.

The course I took on my Erasmus exchange this semester really got me thinking about so many cultural and social aspects of my life and my environment, and I think I might have found the connection between the ideas in "1984" and what I heard from my lecturers throughout the course- endless streams of academic vocabulary. Every time a simple word could be substituted for something more scholarly and professional - it was. It is shocking how much my own vocabulary has grown and how critically I started to see things since I started it in January, 16 weeks ago.

Even though I will be writing my own thoughts, mainly based on what I have read when I was searching for quotes to use in my exam papers, I feel like I need a disclaimer here: I do not intend to be egoistic or, worse, narcissistic. I have been told numerous times that I am physically beautiful, and it's not an achievement that I intend to brag about. And yes, technically, from the global point of view, I have, in fact, an "ideal body "- pale white skin, blonde hair, blue eyes, tall, long legs and all this shit that makes people think I am beautiful and assume I'm not smart at all, sadly. That is purely a social and cultural thing about which I intend to talk in my "Beautiful  as we are" series. Here we go :)

Friday, April 4, 2014

Unspoiling spoilers

I just found a perfect quote that hints at my upcoming post in this blog. Coming soon :)


Monday, March 24, 2014

Why wanderers know themselves better

   I have been thinking about this for a while and yes, my conclusion is that people who wander are not always lost. There are so many controversies in their lives, so much chaos and movement, spiced with risk, instability, and longing that it seems to be the best condition to get to know oneself in all ways possible. Even though there is no way this lifestyle is suitable for anyone or attractive for everyone who sticks to it, this is the right path with self-omniscience waiting at its end.
   The main reason why I think so is very practical. I am not talking about a person who walks around with a wooden walking-stick and gives strangers advice, even though they were also considered more knowledgeable and experienced than the sedentary ones. Here I am referring to travelers without permanent accommodation, such as international students, couch-surfers, au pair nannies etc. So, when 'the sedentary ones' move out, it becomes an event of a decade. Collecting their stuff, putting it into boxes and getting rid of some of it becomes a burden, because that 'stuff'' turns out to be the result of years and years of piling it up, filling up the space, even without realizing it.
   A modern wanderer cannot afford this luxury. In this case, moving out becomes an annual, seasonal(?), once-in-a-term, or any other kind of a periodical thing. It becomes a well-practiced skill. But the hard thing is, we can never help buying new things,  and we are given things all the time as well. So, the so-called modern wanderer usually encounters the dilemma I will refer to as 'space/value judgement'. Every time he/she moves out, some things have to be refused. One cannot afford to pile up, or to store things somewhere. And if the space is limited, the judgement of personal value has to be done. And yes, even very precious things have to be rid of sometimes. And when the person goes through it again and again, it becomes a lesson for life. What it teaches, however, it not only the 'proficiency' in moving out.
 
   It is, most importantly, self-exploration. Every time you move out, you see how you have changed. Under the light of cardinal changes, some things suddenly seem needless, and new valuables emerge. And this, being so material (we often think the big self-discoveries are made within oneself), becomes a way to know what's happening even before you find the changes within your inner self.

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Ponderings of a 20-year-old

This still doesn't sound real. Doesn't feel real. And yet here I am, freshly-baked 20-year-old.
My birthday yesterday was felt much more online than in reality. No big party, crazy stuff or crowds. Facebook posts, messages, coffee with a friend and calls from my precious ones did the trick fantastically. I thought of making a new decade's resolution, but who needs it anyway, not everything's about planning or predicting, or hoping for something better than you have all the time and making deadlines for that. So yes, I discovered this special sort of one-day holiday when I allowed myself to just enjoy what I have and not think about any deadlines, assignments, mess in my room or the storm outside. Enjoy my own company in pyjamas, in front of a laptop with a good movie playing. This might sound miserable, but that's really not the worst there is, after wanting a day to do whatever you want and however you want it, without any regrets or inner conflicts. So there's that :)

Sunday, February 23, 2014

Tie-dye!

I've always been fond of tie-dye. All these colors and patterns you could never make purposely, the spontaneous coincidences of the paint settling in one spot of fabric rather than the other, for reasons you could never tell. However, I have never had a chance to wear tie-dye, or do something way more exciting - make it myself. So, as you could guess, I finally did it. Accompanied by my English Studies' classmate, who is also here for one semester, I went to this tie-dye workshop, organised by the arts society of Newcastle university. The  cafe accommodating the event got crowded in no time, and the atmosphere was welcoming with everyone splashing colorful paint on white t-shirts, rolled in tiny balls and restrained with rubber bands. I had so much fun! And, of course, now I am all happy and excited, seeing (and using) what came out of this colorful and 'splashy' experience.




Saturday, February 22, 2014

Opportunities that enrich

   One of the courses I am having, called "Introduction to Social and Cultural Studies", has been giving me a lot of thought recently, especially concerning the issues of racism, obesity, and disability and how society 'copes' with it, especially in the post-soviet Europe. I was comparing the views of people from small towns to ones of those coming from bigger cities. Then I thought about the small town I grew up in. People were crazy about football there, and we had two black players in out team, who were the only one making the local community interracial. People loved the sport, and the two guys did really well on the team, but still there were racist comments coming from the crowd every time they were in the field. The black players were being judged and picked on for slightest mistakes they made much more intensely than the other players. Everyone still loved the team but things were different than before.
   What I settled with was just a pile of questions I was going through over and over for the past two or three days. What really struck me was the final understanding that what all this fuss was ans still is about is really just the matter of 'otherness'. Offensively enough, I was able to compare it to a situation where a little child sees something other than  himself and radiates distrust. at it or..gets scared. And maybe that's just it, maybe we're just scared at the sight of someone entering the bubble of trust our society has formed easily enough because we were all similar physically? 
   But then I think about the western culture where the interracial background has been on much longer. Does this have to do with the national character? The soviets and their enclosure on the east part of Europe? The economy? It gets complex as different all these different aspects pile up, but what I think it's going to turn out to be is a matter of time. Time needed for a child to grow up and realize that all he feared was just another opportunity to make his life richer.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Feeling photography

This morning, finally, my long-awaited camera arrived right at my door. So excited !!! New classy pictures coming up soon! Moreover, since it's my first digital camera, I'll have to figure out how everything in here works first :D

One of my first shots :


Friday, January 31, 2014

Mingling around in the world of blogging

Recently, there have been quite a lot of changes in my routine.. Well, I could cay it has disappeared for a month or so. I changed my university, my location, almost got used to the British accent and started to understand the local Geordies. However, there are still things I feel unfamiliar with. For example, the left-sided traffic is just driving me mad, together with the friendliness of the locals. It's insane, and I guess could not be more extreme after living in Sweden, where people tend to be very reserved and extremely hard to make friends with.
Here, in Newcastle, I am still shocked how cashiers, library workers, baristas etc. call me sweetheart, young lady, love and all these super lovely names that get me smiling before I even think about it. It's just so much more relaxed and laid-back.. So, if you combine it with the cultural differences which are pretty challenging for me as a newcomer, it equals out and makes it so much easier to feel like home.
Moreover, besides all these new experiences, I was given an opportunity to try out blogging on WordPress. Undoubtedly, I took it, so now I have a second blog on my Swedish university's website, which is exclusively about my new university experience in Newcastle. Due to this change, this blog might become less active, but I will still post things here, as I quite often feel the urge to spill the bits of my inner world in this blog, which had become the home of random stuff that I find exciting.
Lastly, I have always wanted to read more on blogging so that I could not only practice more, but improve my writing techniques as well. Also, I just started the course "Writing for the Media: Journalism", which I fell in love with immediately and which I will hopefully benefit from in all aspects of writing, including blogging.

More on the new courses I am taking and my uni-related adventures - in my other blog: http://blogg.mah.se/studyabroad/author/emilijariaukaite

As for now, as they say here in Newcastle,
Cheers!

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Christmas came and went

This point, at which one year ends and another starts, is the time for coming back. Not symbolically, but because that is what I personally want all the time. It's like a Christmas gift to myself, a gift that requires an occasion. Being with people I love and miss all the time. This is, however, the time of great sadness, lurking just behind the corner to take over. Time of realizing how temporary and fragile this precious time is. The best time of the year. Well, maybe summer is better, but this is more recent.

So, I went home for Christimas, and spent 3 amazing weeks in my home country. Met all my best friends, strengthened my relationships, spent time with my beloved ones. After four months abroad, I got over from emptiness and loneliness. Brought back to Sweden a lot of memorable moments, warm hugs, and, sadly, a few good-bye kisses.

This post is not going to be an organised one, but when I do not write for a while, I lose the skill, just like in sports or studying. It's been embarrassingly long since the last post, so it just feels good to be back and not pressure myself.

Some news: I am going on an Erasmus exchange in Newcastle, England, for this spring semester. I'm leaving on Monday, so, from then on, it is expected to reflect here, in this blog, maybe even including some impression-based posts or first opinions :)

So, back to my holiday. despite all these bad feelings that are in me now, I feel like this period of time was one of those that people remember when they are old and think how great these times were. But, since I am not planning to stop being crazy when I am with these people,the list of my best memories is still open, and that's something to look for :)

As for this blog's future, I have got plenty of topics to write about and am still open for constructive critic and suggestions. I am also working on getting rid of unreasonable excuses, sso this is just about to show how it goes for me.

Birthday marathon :)


Home-made cookies with my art on them :)


Me and my brother