Once in a while the pop of fireworks breaks the silence, as people let loose a rocket or two in anticipation of New Year's Eve; in the living room stands a Christmas tree topped with a white star, hung with paper drums, flags, angels, tinsel, hand-folded paper hearts, and red candles now lit on New Year's Eve, the last day of the year.
2014 was an exciting one for me, with many welcome challenges in my professional and creative life.
In February I started work as a moderator at a children's social networking game / website. Although the community is in the United Kingdom, I work from home in Denmark; it is a job that gives me considerable flexibility in my schedule and reduces the amount of time spent on a long and expensive commute. The portability of the job was aptly demonstrated during a four-week visit to the Philippines in March, where I continued to work while able to spend time with my family (and applauded as my niece Fia graduated from elementary school).
We entertain quite often, at a table that my husband inherited from his father (and grandfather), at which two Nobel prize winners, Wole Soyinka and Bjørnsterne Bjørnson have sat. This year, we were visited by Valerie Coghlan from Ireland, director of IBBY's journal Bookbird, and Edwin Thumboo, Singapore's "grand old poet", and two of Brazil's children's literature stars: Ana Maria Machado and Roger Mello. In the summer, we visited two of Vagn's longtime friends at the seaside town of Bastad in Sweden, where world-famous tennis matches are held. And this summer I persuaded my husband to drive me all the way to the Louisiana Museum to watch a reading by Margaret Atwood, one of my favorite authors, and to get my copy of Handmaid's Tale in Danish signed. It joins the modest collection of signed books in the small room I call my office -- I have likewise a small piece of authors like Doris Lessing, Amy Tan, Toni Morrison and Richard E. Grant.
In the fall came another challenge, something I had been looking forward to for some time -- teaching two writing courses in English (intermediate and advanced) at Studieskolen, a language school in Copenhagen, as well as a course in beginning-level Filipino.
My health has not been perfect the last few years, and three weeks into the fall term I underwent laparoscopic surgery -- my first under general anesthesia; fortunately what was found and removed was not malignant. The procedures at the Danish hospital where I was treated were all impressive, and I amazingly it was free, or rather, paid for by the high income taxes (nearly 50% in some cases) that are a part of life in Denmark. Now I have every reason to pay them with gusto (insert smiley!) I recovered quickly and missed only the fall break and two class days out of the fall term.
This year, I travelled to Mexico for the first time to accompany my husband Vagn to the IBBY Congress in September. We spent three days on the Yucatan peninsula, renting a car and driving from Cancun to Rio Lagartos, then Valladolid, then the Mayan ruins at Chichen Itza, then the seaside resort of Tulum. Once we drove through a curtain of rain so thick we navigated only through the lights of the truck in front of us. We took a boat tour through mangrove swamps, and photographed flamingos, egrets and a crocodile that slipped sinuously out of its hiding place in the mangroves to take a whole fish from our guide. Flying to Mexico City, we visited the canals at Xochimilco (boatloads of mariachis bellowing "Cielito Lindo" etc), and, while Vagn was at the Congress, I ventured out into the city with map in hand, visiting the Zocalo, the Diego Rivera museum, and the amazing National Anthropology Museum. I took a guided day tour to the ruins of Teotihuacan.
Happy New Year, dearest friends!
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