Why I love Vintage

Petals the Pony a Mastercraft Scotland Creation

Petals the Pony a Mastercraft Scotland Creation

I do. I love old and interesting. I find new yawn worthy and boring but more than that I find it doesn’t hold up to the test of time or the test of my family.

I find new doesn’t last these days. Most of the time. This is bad news with such a boisterous bunch using what’s in the house so I find another to buy older stuff.

The lovely creature above is Petals the pony. there is some heated debate as to whether petals is a he or a she but one thing is for sure Petals is TOUGH.

S/he is made mid century by Mastercraft in Scotland and I think it is made from old fighter planes (possibly, citation needed!) and although we bought it as a wacky ornament (albeit a large, beaten up and rather expensive ornament) we found our children love it and use it too. Luckily Petals is up for this with a very stern solid riding action (yes s/he moves under rider power, you move the pedals up and down- it’s pretty scary for me but the children adore it). A modern ride-on would have been in the bin a long time ago sadly. I am not sure why they are so destructive but until this phase passes I am not buying susceptible toys!

Another child proof vintage but is our Formica kitchen table setting, the seat upholstery is getting worse for wear but the table and the chairs themselves are going strong (you see the green of this table in many of my photos so you will get sick of seeing it!). I don’t mind paying for Vintage as it gives us good hard-wearing products as well as adding atmosphere to our interior decorating (is that what it is when we put all the things we like in our house? Let’s say it is!).

There are so many other benefits, not least the minimising environmental impact by not using up more resources and stopping things going to landfill as well as the act that buying vintage sees more money go to small family businesses rather than large multinationals which my have dubious working conditions for their overseas factory workers and a lot of new furniture is made with compressed board which is not only not durable (especially if it gets wet – like a Mogwai) but it could be made with weird glue which can outgas at you (also like a Mogwai? Our cat looks like some sort of gremlin and he definitely outgases!).

Do you have some great durable vintage pieces? Did you buy them or inherit? What benefits have you found?

Yes You are Very Clever, But are You Happy?

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I spend a fair bit of time on social media. There are a lot of intelligent and educated people many of whom have a pet cause, perhaps it is politics, feminism, equal rights, environmentalism, disability awareness etc. All very noble and worthy causes. I don’t argue that any of these issues should be ignored but I have become increasingly aware that those who are most vehement about furthering their cause are the ones who seem to be giving themselves over to it. I see people who only view the world through the eyes of feminism meaning anything that doesn’t have an equal amount of female representation is a deliberate attack on the concept of equality for women. Sometimes it’s just the way things pan out but being worked up about it seems to have limited benefit for the person’s happiness and effectiveness as a whole.

Impotent rage would be an unkind but descriptive term for the sorrow and anger I see online, people pushing their cause seem to conclude that keeping it in the public eye will make the problem one people have to deal with, whilst there is no actual action on the lobbyists behalf. I hesitate to dismiss this as slacktivism which seems to be more in the realm of “click this is if you agree with marriage equality”, the people I speak of are genuinely involved with it on an emotional level but not actually doing much more than allowing themselves to get upset and making the rookie mistake of arguing with people online.

These people are mostly extremely educated and intelligent people. There is no arguing that, but I don’t see any joy or happiness in their tweets, their posts or their articles. By focusing on the intellectual side, by drawing attention to the what they see as the bad stuff, the injustices in the world and ignoring the light or worse, denigrating it for being “unscientific” or “cultural appropriation”. There seems no regard for the fact that cultures other than the one people are born in can have much more to offer the health and well being of people around the world, can increase the happiness. I know my life would be a much grumpier place to live without Yoga* and curries but these are not from my Celtic/Germanic heritage. Neither is anyone from India being exploited due to my actions. Attacking things that don’t make intellectual sense purely on this basis isn’t clever. It isn’t helpful.  Too often I see unhappy people doing their best to tear down what people use to initiate their own happiness. Happy people are what this world needs, not raging intellectual tearing down of the ethereal.

Culture and the world as a whole are evolving and some of it is for the better. Yes we may struggle with other people’s choices such as not vaccinating their children (which I can’t find any solid argument for by the way- science is at its pinnacle here in my opinion- so many lives saved since vaccinations have become more prevalent) but I think if you want to change the world for the better you need to show the world what you can be. I certainly dismiss the opinions of those who appear to be so desperately unhappy with their lot that all they can do is argue and attack others, no matter how valid the point or worthy the cause. Do I want to be like them? No? Then I won’t take on their anger.  (I am not referring to people who reach out on Social Media during episodes of mental health problems but I do hope that they are talking to someone about their depression, anxiety, bi-polar etc).

I used to live in Northern NSW where there were a lot of people who appeared to be happy. Yes they were covered in dirt, yes their concept of democracy and the way society works and science was hazy at best but through the drum circles and the pyramid sitting tree worship there was an enviable simple happiness. Their lack of tertiary education and random cultural appropriation (belly dancing whilst, doing yoga with a Native American Headdress anyone?) didn’t appear to be hurting anyone and the lack of noise in their heads seemed most desirable (of course there were also those who had been stoned for twenty years and muttered about aliens, them not so enviable).

This is just a musing, I do not have citations to give, I am not writing about any one person in particular (and there are some amazing people I know who are tertiary educated and really walk the talk too!) but if this strikes a chord with you perhaps you can think of a way to bring a bit of positivity in your world that doesn’t have a peer reviewed study about its effectiveness. Walk barefoot on the earth, volunteer to work with the people whose cause you champion so much, try a yoga or mediation class (without even being Indian!) Sing and dance. Be joyful, positive and happy! I bet you can influence the world for the better if you do!

*Yoga is, by the way, almost unrecognizable these days as the spiritual pursuit that involved sitting naked in the dirt and smearing oneself with funereal ashes amongst other things. Oh and it was only for men. It has evolved and over time the current form has been rigorously studied by Western scientists who found it not only has amazing mental and physical benefits but that the outcomes are often counter to what the process is. Put simply, it’s not quite explainable yet. So they can go and study and explain it and I will just keep practicing and receiving the benefits and sharing them with my family who likes a happier me better than a cleverer one!

Photo credit of educated but rather miserable looking monkey.