Friday, 14 December 2012

Make Merry!

It's that time of year again: work is winding down, the days are getting hotter and South Africans everywhere are attempting to turn our sunny summer country into a green and red winter wonderland.

Isn't it all just wonderful?

Apparently not. In the last week, I haven't gone a day without hearing someone moan about the commercialization of Christmas. With a lot of head-shaking and tut-tutting, we are urged to tear down all our Christmas decorations, stop playing Christmas carols in shops and take this holy day seriously, dammit!

To these moral compasses I say, have a Christmas cookie.

I LOVE this time of year. I would even go so far as to say I love the commercialization of Christmas, because it means it's everywhere: in the shops, in the newspapers, on the radio, on the TV, in the movies. For a month or two, the world is infested with Christmas trees, tinsel, shiny baubles, brightly wrapped presents, enormous Christmas dinners with family, charity drives that help spread the joy, and so much JOY. I especially love that.

Why would you want to rain on this big, beautiful Christmas parade?

Understand that I am a Christian. I believe that Christmas celebrates the birth of Jesus Christ, but  it's such a happy event we're celebrating, why wouldn't we want to throw a big, colourful, noisy party and invite everyone?

By the way, everyone is invited.

If Christmas is about Jesus, then it is also about love and grace that is for all of us. If you understand that, you at least understand something of God, whether you believe in Him or not. If you understand that, you should celebrate Christmas.

I get that people worry about the real meaning of Christmas getting lost between all of the sparkles and gifts, but then don't get rid of the pretty stuff - add some more pretty stuff. Give generously to charity (my favourite is the Santa Shoebox project - www.santashoebox.co.za), tell a stranger how much God loves her or him, throw your friends a Christmas party, or bake your colleagues holiday cookies. It is, after all, the season of giving.

Like I said, I love the joy of Christmas. The world could use some of it. So let's all come joyfully and triumphantly and rejoice in Christmas trees and shiny decorations and carols and beautifully wrapped presents and holiday feasts and friends and family and generosity and love and grace and in the Baby Boy who started it all.

Make merry!


Tuesday, 21 August 2012

I believe in a thing called Love

This is just my 2 cents worth on the terrible tragedy that occurred in Marikana last week.

Do I have an opinion on whose fault it was? Yes. Do I harbour feelings of anger and disgust? Yes. 

Will it make any difference whatsoever to the lives of those affected by the violence if I started pointing my finger and ranting at those that I think are responsible? I doubt it.

Instead I choose to turn to some simple, but eternal truths, like

"All you need is love." - The Beatles

"Love changes everything." - Andrew Lloyd Webber

And my personal favourite

"Love is a higher law." - U2

So what do love songs have to do with this awful, awful thing that happened last week? 

Well.

If love were involved, Lonmin would pay their employees fair wages. 

If love were involved, the protesters wouldn't have raised weapons against the terrified cops who were sent to keep the peace.

If love were involved, the cops wouldn't have needed to fire a single bullet.

It goes even further. If love were involved, people wouldn't condemn other people to hell for believing differently or for being homosexual. Politicians would actually care about the victims of South Africa's poor education system and stop squandering taxpayers' money on lavish parties and fancy cars. Men AND women would stop treating women as second class citizens. People would drive more responsibly, out of appreciation for the lives of others. Beggars wouldn't go hungry because the hundreds of people who pass by them every day would reach out to them. Despite being non-profit, charities would be coining it due to a never-ending stream of donations. Even the scathing remarks in online comment sections might stop. 

If we had more love, we would listen to each other more and there would be less ignorance, more understanding and more tolerance of the things we might not agree with.

If we had more love, we would stop squabbling about creation vs evolution, whether it's a sin to use contraception, and paintings of heads of state with their genitalia exposed. Instead, we would throw our weight behind the (peaceful) fight for justice and righteousness for ALL. Love would compel us to speak out against injustice - not to call people names or throw insults around, but to take a compassionate stand for the rights and dignity of all humankind.


As for love for our broken country, someone much wiser than me once said that true love endures all things.

I believe in love. I believe that it is the only thing that can truly change the world for the better. It might take decades, even centuries, but just like other activists believe against all odds that they can convert people to their cause, we must never stop trying to win people over for love.

If any good can come out of the Lonmin tragedy, let it be this: my (and maybe even your?) crusade for more love in our country starts today.

May the men who lost their lives in Marikana rest in peace. May their loved ones be comforted.

























Tuesday, 5 June 2012

OSS


There are some parts of your personality that you outgrow. Then there are other parts that the universe keeps reaffirming. For me it is the simple, eternal truth that I am not cool.

Let me come clean about my heinous crimes against my youth: I was the biggest geek in high school. Unlike the cool girls, I made sure that my school pinafore was no shorter than the required 4 fingers width above my knee. I wore my hair slicked back in the neatest pony tail ever. My teachers loved me and I loved them. And sin of all sins, I actually enjoyed school. Loved it, to be honest.

My social life also speaks volumes about the absence of the cool factor in my genes. It is a rare privilege to see me drunk, and I’ve never smoked so much as a cigarette in my life; not because of a moral objection, but because I'm not a fan of eau de ashtray.

I’m not awfully fond of the club scene, and much prefer an evening at home with my best friends and a bottle of wine. When I do go out at night, it will most likely be for dinner at a nice restaurant or to the cinema.

In my spare time I enjoy the geriatric delicacies of poetry, trivia games, foreign films and classical music. Right now my car’s radio is actually tuned to Fine Music Radio - not a popular choice among my generation, but I love it.

So you see, not cool. Not even a little bit.

As a teenager and student, I was quite content with myself for the most part, but ever so often I would make a truly pathetic attempt to be cool. I could go into details, but then I would lose the last glimmer of street cred I might have left. Let’s just say that one day I finally admitted defeat and accepted the fact that I am an old soul.

Unfortunately, Old Soul Syndrome is completely incurable, and all you can do is learn to live with it. Thankfully, OSS is pretty easy to live with once you embrace it. The biggest mental hurdle to get over is confusing OSS with actually being old. People who do not understand OSS can be very insensitive and see it as a symptom of someone “being old before her time”. 

The truth is we old souls have as youthful an enthusiasm for life as any other young person. We just have different ways of enjoying the lives that have been given to us. When talking to our friends, we don’t want to yell over ear-melting music. When dancing, we’d much rather dance around in our living rooms to a song we chose, than to rub up against a sweaty stranger in a club. We like our wine, and we even like having too much of it upon occasion, but only among good friends who will put us to bed, and certainly not when we need to drive somewhere. We like the same popular music, books and films as other young people, but we refuse to give up Bach, Eliot and musicals simply because it’s not cool.

No, old souls are not withered souls. Cautious? Maybe. Conservative? I guess from a certain point of view. But old? Never. I would even venture a guess that you’ll find more optimism, passion and joie de vivre in the heart of an old soul than in most.

Then there’s another hurdle for old souls to overcome: the “supposed to” hurdle. I remember lying in my bed at university res, listening to the other girls coming back in at 3am. After shouting at them through the window to be quiet, I would lie awake until dawn, wondering...am I not supposed to be out until 3am, too? Is that not what 20 year olds are supposed to want to do? Should I not also care more about makeup and clothes, and should I not also want to drink and smoke and experiment? Is that not what you’re supposed to do in your 20’s?

Then, one night, I suddenly realised: there is absolutely nothing in this life that I have to do, except to be happy and bring happiness to others.

A fundamental change happened. No, I didn’t become the cool kid who didn’t care what anyone else thought of her. Let’s face it. We all care a little about what others think. What changed was my perception of what it was to be young and to “have a life”. Youth simply means opportunity, and belongs to those who grab it. And having a life simply means having joy and gratitude.

As for that little word, “cool”, what does it mean anyway? Who decides, and frankly, who the hell cares?

Not me. Not anymore. I like being an old soul. It might not be cool, but it feels great.







Tuesday, 10 January 2012

Place

I’m going to try and write this without sounding like a brochure.

There’s this place that I consider my place and that I consider myself belonging to. It's such a lovely place, that thousands of people have shared my sense of belonging over the years. It has so many stigmas attached to it and is often surrounded by controversy, but to me it is simply my favourite place in the whole world.

Stellenbosch.

There are so many reasons why I love this town. I love how the green oak trees seem to envelop you in the summer. I love how, when it rains, everything seems illuminated. I love the vast selection of coffee shops, where the waiters don’t hate you for ordering drinks only. I love the surreal blue backdrop of mountains, with endless neat rows of vineyards creeping over the hills.

I love Dorp Street, Victoria Street, the Botanical Gardens, Café Creme, The Birdcage gift store, Stellenbosch Moedergemeente church, Jonkershoek, the tiny Exclusive Books store in Andringa Street, The Apprentice restaurant, Eikestad Mall’s Ster-Kinekor, Aandklas, The Brazen Head, Hillcrest Berry Farm, The Deli-cat-essen restaurant at Tokara Wine Estate, my parent’s house in Bosman Street, the Arcade Fire-like feeling I get when I drive by the school I went to, my student res or an old friend’s house where we used to hang out.

Having lived outside Stellenbosch for four years now, I’m starting to feel like an unfaithful wife who has abandoned her one true love. As is the case with most twenty-something Stellenbosch locals, my world started to feel awfully small. I said earlier that Stellenbosch belongs to me. That’s because Stellenbosch let’s you own him. He lets you in completely, sharing every nook and cranny, every interesting shop, every new restaurant, every walking trail, every street, and every dirty secret.

The problem is that after a while, you get tired of having nothing left to discover. So, bored housewife that I was, I ran off to an exciting new lover - Cape Town.

The Joburgers are probably rolling their eyes at this point. As one of my lecturers eloquently remarked, “Cape Town is a town in love with the idea of a city.” Fair enough. Let’s call Cape Town a town, then. It doesn't change the fact that it’s a damn exciting place to live. Life in this tiny coastal metropolis is large, colourful and never, ever boring. There’s always one more place you haven’t been to or one more shortcut you never knew you could take home. The people are a diverse bunch of hipsters, yuppies, creatives, executives and bums that challenge your world view on a daily basis, even if a lot of them leave you shaking your head in annoyance.

Much as I love Cape Town, though, I cannot claim ownership. Yes, I do call myself a Cape Tonian now, but it is not my city. I know this because of the way I feel every time I return to that other town that has always taken me back with open arms. As soon as I pass the Durbanville turnoff on the N1, and see Simonsberg, Botmanskop, the Pieke and Stellenbosch Mountain in the distance, the fog clears from my fatigued mind, and I start to feel calmness spread through my body. And as soon as I turn right at the Klipheuwel/Stellenbosch turnoff and the road becomes lined with vineyards and my beloved mountains (like spectators at a bicycle race cheering me on through the last stretch) I know, I realise it utterly and completely:

I am home.

Travellers well worth their salt might not agree with this sentiment, but after a few travels of my own, and despite loving discovering new places, my sincere love for Stellenbosch has lead me to believe that each of us has only one place we can truly call home. I say this while living a blissfully happy life 40 minutes away from the place I call home.

Because home isn't necessarily where you’re happiest, or where your things or even your people are. It is – as the old cliché goes – where your heart is. And even though I love nothing quite as much as travelling, my heart is definitely a home body.

My heart lives in Stellenbosch.

I can imagine that some who read this might feel sad for me, but don’t worry. I’m quite good at burrowing and chiselling out a lovely living space for myself wherever I go. I am always happy just to have my own beautiful space, be with people I love and explore new places.

I’m also happy to know that if life gets too hectic and I need to remember who I am, I can always, always go home.My heart will be waiting there with all the answers I already have.

I leave you with this poem by a fellow Stellenboscher, Philip Nel:

Oor akkerdrome rys
geklimde berge
waar my spore tussen fynbos lê
waarna ek my lewe lank verlang
seun
wat wou uitwyk
ver weg
om sy moeilike lekker jare
met iets beters te vervang
nou kruip my oudste eikewortels
onkeerbaar terug 
na fietse sonder modderskerms
donker winteroggende
met dae lange motreën
en dan
op ’n windstil dag
trek die Pieke oop
teen helder blou
vergewende vergetende nostalgie
die witste witste sneeu

Above oak dreams rise
climbed mountains
where my footprints lie among fynbos
that I long for all my life
son
who wanted to go
far away
to replace his difficult fun years
with something better
now my oldest oak roots
inevitably creep back
to bicycles without mud guards
dark winter mornings
with endless days of drizzle
and then
on a windless day
the Pieke appear
against bright blue
forgiving forgetting nostalgia
the whitest whitest snow