Today it struck me how much I incorporate the "old ways" into my daily life. By the old ways I mean time tested ways, methods or objects versus a more modern or convenient way.
I get up to a windup alarm clock. Winding it every night at bed time is a ritual. Once out of bed I come down stairs and stoke up the woodstove we use for heat. The windup grandfathers clock lets me know i am on schedule. After letting the dogs out I start the bathroom ritual that has always involved a mug and a brush and just recently a double edged safety razor. Its a relaxing process that yields incredible shaves.
I drive to work in a car with a manual transmission - all of the household vehicles are. Throughout the day I use a self-winding watch to tell time. For fancy dress up affairs I have a pocket watch.
If it is a weekend or very cold I will fire up the wood cookstove and cook a meal in it or on it. Breads turn out great. When the stove is lit there is always a kettle full of water ready for tea. "High tea" is a tradition from my British mother and requires loose tea leaves, preheating the pot (hot the pot) and dainty teacups and saucers. It is best when served with warm scones baked in the wood cookstove.
We cut a lot of our own firewood. or we buy rounds or logs and cut and split as necessary. Most of the splitting is done with a splitting axe.
We also make our own maple syrup, can our home grown spaghetti sauce and strawberry jam.
My friends at work call me a dinosaur. But I am not a complete Luddite. i'm typing this on a wireless laptop. I have and know how to use my cell phone. At work I run a pharmacokinetic lab chock full of the latest greatest analytical technology for a drug company. Maybe because of that I want to slow down and savor things when I get home.
So how about you all? Any tried and true methods you prefer to the modern ways? I'd be interested in hearing about it.
Phil
I get up to a windup alarm clock. Winding it every night at bed time is a ritual. Once out of bed I come down stairs and stoke up the woodstove we use for heat. The windup grandfathers clock lets me know i am on schedule. After letting the dogs out I start the bathroom ritual that has always involved a mug and a brush and just recently a double edged safety razor. Its a relaxing process that yields incredible shaves.
I drive to work in a car with a manual transmission - all of the household vehicles are. Throughout the day I use a self-winding watch to tell time. For fancy dress up affairs I have a pocket watch.
If it is a weekend or very cold I will fire up the wood cookstove and cook a meal in it or on it. Breads turn out great. When the stove is lit there is always a kettle full of water ready for tea. "High tea" is a tradition from my British mother and requires loose tea leaves, preheating the pot (hot the pot) and dainty teacups and saucers. It is best when served with warm scones baked in the wood cookstove.
We cut a lot of our own firewood. or we buy rounds or logs and cut and split as necessary. Most of the splitting is done with a splitting axe.
We also make our own maple syrup, can our home grown spaghetti sauce and strawberry jam.
My friends at work call me a dinosaur. But I am not a complete Luddite. i'm typing this on a wireless laptop. I have and know how to use my cell phone. At work I run a pharmacokinetic lab chock full of the latest greatest analytical technology for a drug company. Maybe because of that I want to slow down and savor things when I get home.
So how about you all? Any tried and true methods you prefer to the modern ways? I'd be interested in hearing about it.
Phil