One-Liner Wednesday & JusJoJan the 5th, 2022 – New Philosophy

“Work hard, nap hard.”

Demi Lovato

For Linda’s One-Liner Wednesday Challenge and #JusJoJan Day 5

Daily Prompt – JusJoJan the 4th, 2022 Generosity

It’s been a while since I took part in Linda’s JusJoJan month-long prompts, but, since I vowed to be creative, here goes!

It’s January 4th, so this is the 4th prompt for Just Jot it January 2022, and it’s brought to us by Sadje. Thank you so much, Sadje! Please be sure to visit her blog to read her post and say hello. And follow her while you’re there, if you’re not already.

Your prompt for JusJoJan January 4th, 2022, is “generosity.” Use the word “generosity” any way you’d like. Have fun!

Generosity

I'd like to think I'm generous
With time, and all I have
But please don't ask for my chocolates
Because that would drive me mad!

Ritu 2022

Oh, my, so silly!

Daily Prompt – JusJoJan the 3rd, 2022 – Abundance

It’s been a while since I took part in Linda’s JusJoJan month-long prompts, but, since I vowed to be creative, here goes!

It’s January 3rd, so here’s the 3rd prompt for Just Jot it January 2022, and it’s brought to us by Janet. Thank you so much, Janet! Please be sure to visit her blog to read her post and say hello. And follow her while you’re there, if you’re not already.

Your prompt for JusJoJan January 3rd, 2020, is “abundance.” Use the word “abundance” any way you’d like. Enjoy!

Abundance - A Poem 
If you have a lot 
Do count yourself blessed 
Material things are good 
But an abundance of love
Is so much better 

Ritu 2022

I have an abundance of books
Piles, in all crannies and nooks
I have an addiction
To Rom-com fiction
But, it's not as bad as it looks!

Ritu 2022

First poem in a long while!

Chai And A Chat #167 #ChaiAndAChat

And bring on the new year! 2022, we are waiting for you!

Grab your first drink of the year with me and let’s see how the end of one year passed into another!

  • If we were having chai I’d begin by saying that as soon as I scheduled that post, last week, we made a plan for me to get to Birmingham to see Pops and Mum. The next update regarding restrictions was going to be on Monday evening, so I thought, rather than waiting, and then possibly being told I can’t go, I would grab the bull by the horns, along with Lil Princess, and we would take the three hour road trip to see them. Just for a night, but I’ll not look a gifthorse in the mouth! We left plenty early, so we could maximise our time there and arrived at 11am. It was just bliss to be able to be with them. Pops is looking so much better, after the operation, and is itching to te out and walk, or exercise, but he knows it’s too soon, yet. Mum, well, she was hobbling around with her knee injury, but she was mobile and happy to have us there. We sat and chatted and just made up for lost time. I left on Tuesday morning, sat to be going already, but so, so happy that I had been with them.
  • If we were having chai I’d tell you that once we got back, I have just been trying to laze a bit, getting ready for that back to school start, this week, and rest, too. I read plenty, as always. In fact, I finished the year with my Goodreads total being 145 books! I think there may have been more, with some arcs and such like, but still, that’s a lot of books!
  • If we were having chai I’d mention that I still had a whole other Christmas dinner in the freezer, so we had our own mini Christmas, take two, on Thursday, at home. It was lovely, just the four of us, snuggled up around the coffee table, and we played games together too!
  • If we were having chai I’d say that once it hit that last day, we popped over thto the in-laws for a couple of hours, but wanted to see the new year in, in our new home. We chlled together, watched TV, and then waited for the countdown on BBC One before ushering that new year in. It was a peaceful start to the new year. Here’s hoping it is a better one than last year!
  • If we were having chai I’d mention that since the start of the year, I have already ordered a special journal to help organise my writing journey over the next couple of years. I have blogged every day, using the JusJoJan prompt, and read three books! It’s not groundbreaking, but I have also jumped on my mini trampoline for a very short while, but that’s longer than I have done for a long time, so, yay to that!

This week, I am dreading the start of school again. We already know of staffing issues that will be occurring due to people being unwell or isolating. Who knows what will happen once we are all back together… My aim – to get through the week, but also, to add in bits for me, so to exercise a couple of times, and get some writing done at least twice a week… Here’s hoping I can do it!

And while you’re here, did you sign up for my mailing list? I am in the middle of writing an exclusive Chickpea Curry Lit story for my subscribers, and there will be news, tips and even recipes! You know you want to join… go on! Click the pic below to sign up!

Daily Prompt – JusJoJan the 2nd, 2022 – Gobbledygook

It’s been a while since I took part in Linda’s JusJoJan month-long prompts, but, since I vowed to be creative, here goes!

Today we have the 2nd prompt for Just Jot it January 2022, and it’s brought to us by Dan. Thank you so much, Dan! Please be sure to visit his blog to read his post and say hello. And follow him while you’re there, if you’re not already following him.

Your prompt for JusJoJan January 2nd, 2020, is “gobbledygook.” Use the word “gobbledygook” any way you’d like. Have fun!

I’ve always loved the word, gobbledygook.

It covers a multitude of things.

I’ll take you back to a little example of my experience with gobbledygook.

I’ve grown up in a family with several tongues vying for first place as home language.

Punjabi, because that is heritage-wise, our mother language.

English, because that is where we were born, and where we live.

And, Swahili, because Kenya is where my parents were born, and brought up, and so, Swahili was, for them, what English is to my brother and me.

Obviously, Swahili doesn’t have the same place in our lives as it would have had for my parents, but it obviously had its uses.

We were never proficient in Swahili.

Sure, we knew how to say hello, how are you, please, thank you, that sort of thing. I can even still sing the Jambo song, but don’t ask me what it all means! But, besides that, not much more.

So, it was a great little tool for my parents to use when they wanted to talk about something a bit sensitive, with little ears around them.

We’d be sitting in the back of the car, and they would spout off this gobbledygook, with the odd name or word that we might recognise, but they would put the world to rights, and we’d be none the wiser as to what they were talking about.

But, we weren’t totally clueless. (Or, maybe we were!) You see, because of that deep-rooted Kenyan connection, Swahili even filtered its way into our day to day language, with words being used, that I had no idea were actually not Punjabi!

And I had no reason to question their origins because the whole of my family spoke this mishmash of languages.

Punglihili, I call it. (Yes, I have blogged about it before!)

Until I went to university and was finally surrounded by lots of other Indian faces, none of whom were related to me. At my school, there has been very few, too so, besides my family, I had no other Indian connections.

There I immersed myself in my British Asian-ness, busting out the home lingo with pride. Until one of my friends stopped me, in midflow of asking for the iron (we were going out). I repeated that I needed the pasi.

She looked at me as if I was a nutter. “What’s a pasi?”

“You, know, the iron!”

“Oh, you mean the press?”

Cue lots of laughing at me.

Apparently, in her part of India, they had taken a word from the colonial Brits and called the iron a press. (But you have to say it in an Indian accent to get the full flavour of it!) The actual Punjabi word, which mum finally told me, was istri.

I was confused for a while, until she explained that I wasn’t wrong, but that pasi was actually the Swahili word for iron. And that many of the words I had always thought were Punjabi, were Swahili. So I really knew more than I had ever realised, before!

The words for vegetables, meat, the rubbish, a knife. All Swahili!

Then I got married to a man whose family were from India, not Kenya, so I had to make sure I learned the proper words, or else they would think I was speaking gobbledygook, too!

I spoke to a cousin’s wife about this whole thing, one time, and she sympathised, but she had it the other way around, marrying into a Kenyan Indian family, and not understanding some things her mother in law would say to her!

Still, we live and learn!

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