Dearest readers, thank you for your patience!
I admit it, I’ve been a lousy blogger in the past few days and I will probably not be particularily active in the coming few days. However, I can see from the blog stats that you keep visiting, although a little bit fewer in the past few days than in the weeks before. I guess you are also busy with Christmas preparations, huh?
When I started this blog I had been looking for blogs from ordinary Icelanders in English. I wanted to see if anyone was writing about the crisis. I could not find much. Now, however, I’ve found two that I really like:
The Iceland weather report - not only about the crisis, but the everyday life in Iceland and
Surviving Iceland - more focused on the crisis, but also about some other stuff
See links on the right side of the page, too.
Both of these writers are much more active than me and have the English language far better at their service than I do (is this even English?).
So, I’ve been thinking if I should just quit and leave it up to them. And I’ve decided to keep going, at least for a while.
Each of us, me and those two mentioned above have a slightly different angle. They seem to be much better up to date with headlines and better informed about activism in the society. I, however, am a thirty something mother of two, until recently unemployed and struggling to make ends meet. I don’t have much time to follow news and read blogs, I’m busy making life bearable for my two young ones. So I figured, this is what I will be representing.
And speaking of which, it looks like our Christmas will not reek of recession as much as I feared. I’ve done the Christmas food shopping and I came home with 11 bags. That is ELEVEN!
I’ve never paid so much for food in my entire life. Admittedly I did buy food that should last a bit into the new year, but still, I know that there is plenty of people that can’t afford any food or presents this Christmas. Technically we can’t either, but as long as the payments for our loans have been cancelled until March or so, we can make ends meet. No more, but ends meet.
I heard someone talking about saving up money during the months that the payments are frozen… yeah right. Even if I’d buy less than 11 bags of food for Christmas I’d still not really have a significant amount of money to save for payments of the loan.
Anyway, I want to wish you all a merry festival of light (jól) or winter solstice. Here is some Wikipedia info on the origin of that festival, now celibrated all over the world as a Christian thing.
GLEÐILEG JÓL!


