The Appreciation Game (Join in!)

This new forum is created and a focus for those that want to participate with the study of Abraham-Hicks in their many books and processes.
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Paradise-on-Earth
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Post by Paradise-on-Earth »

spiritualcookie wrote: Sat Jan 04, 2025 9:47 pm :in_love: :wave:
:dancing: :hoppy: :in_love: :kiss: :wave:
oh wow! what an amazing photo with your husband and son in the snowy pine forest! It really does look like something from a fairytale!
exactly! :hearts: We had 1 m snow at that day... It was an for me, before, unknown world!
I LOVE this idea! :hearts:
I do, too! :lol: Since I saw Hägar the Horrible convince Helga, that they should not clean up their court outside, because it will look like magic when it snows, I always ponder this idea in autumn! :lol: :lol:
yes!! I so enjoy to hear your interpretation of clarity! Thank you for playing with me! :D :hearts:
:vortex:

Thanks for asking! That was a precious pondering for me... :vortex: :five: :hearts:
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Post by spiritualcookie »

W: Walk(s)

I like spending quality time with loved ones, going on walks.
I like how it's just us, the fresh air, and the changing scenery as we make our way ever forward.
I like the feeling of the fresh air against my skin.
I like the feeling of movement in my body.
I like how it feels dynamic and refreshing.
I like how I feel the powerful capability of my body.
I like looking around, taking in the scenery.
I like noticing all the little details in the different seasons.
I like finding names for the plants and trees and challenging myself to remember them in the future.
I like noticing little changes from the last time I had walked this walk. It feels satisfying - like a game of "spot the difference" :lol:
I like the peaceful energy of walking together at a pleasant pace.
I like the opportunity for relaxed chats - how it really feels like good one-on-one time, with lots of attention and focus to listening to one another.
I like the opportunity to mutual appreciation as we appreciate the sights around us together - pointing out things that maybe the other didn't notice; or adding our unique perspective and thoughts about the sights around us. Maybe sharing a happy memory it reminds us of.
I like going for walks in new places - exploring places I've never been before - I like the newness and the interest in it. I like feeling it out. Taking it in.

A walk together -
it feels like togetherness;
it feels like a pleasant joint experience
it feels like an opportunity for deepening our bond
it feels like lifting stagnation and clearing out the cobwebs
it feels like being really IN the world, seeing the wider world around
it feels relaxed and easy and pleasant
and in our togetherness it feels comfortable and safe and quietly loving
I like how I enjoy holding his arm and how he doesn't mind it :lol:
I like how I feel our closeness
:hearts:
-

Next letter K or S
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Post by Paradise-on-Earth »

Oh, I really enjoyed "taking a walk with you", Cookie! :hearts: It felt even a bit as driftwood, to- maybe- someday soon, be able to take enjoyable walks for FUN! :romance-hearteyes:

I just now asked my son for something nice that starts with "K", because I wasn't inspired, yet. :lol: :shock: He started rattling off all the alpha-male German K-words... (beginning with German 4 letter words that I will not repeat) as Kalaschnikow (Russian assault rifle), Königswelle (crankshaft bearing), Koenigsegg (Swedish Super-sports-car manufacturer), and ended with Kartoffel (=potato). I HATE plain boiled potatoes, so I, at first, thought that would not be a good idea, either. But then :think2: I thought again.... :vortex:


Kartoffel- PommesFrites (French Fries) and Strohkartoffeln (Deep fried very thin and crispy FrenchFries)

Really not having been a fan of potatoes as child, I also was a late-bloomer in regards to french fries. But I learned to love them, with mayo AND ketchup,

but ESPECIALLY as Strohkartoffeln ("straw from potatoes") This is sooooo good! Sometimes it even gets mixed with incredibly crispy "straw from onions". Your life will not be complete without having tried this!


Kartoffel-Stampf (more elegant: totally lump-free Kartoffelbrei, both: Mashed potatoes)


...what once was poor-people food, mashed maybe with milk or just water and salt, becomes an amazingly delicious, creamy, dreamlike purée when stirred softly with butter, creme or even Crême fraiche, herbs, garlic, sometimes melted cheese... a side dish for royalty!


Kartoffelkroketten (potato croquettes) from mashed potatoes

When I have leftovers from Kartoffelbrei, I add some more butter and an egg and pipe it onto a tray,and bake it until golden brown. Kids love the "potato-roses" and they are such a quick delight!


Kartoffelkrapfen (deep fried potato dumplings, made with flour and a bit yeast)

A special delight from deep-fried dough . SO yummy.


Kartoffelpuffer (potato fritters, or -pancakes)

With or without grated onions in the dough, baked super-crispy in a pan, can these be served sweet (with applesauce or Preisselbeeren, sort of cranberry-jam) or with any hearty stew or shortly fried leftovers, tossed together with a dash of creme and some cheese. I love them for being such uncomplicated tasty "life-savers" when there is "nothing" in the kitchen, or too much that doesn't fit together, or I am not inspired to think up a meal!


Kartoffelchips (potato chips/crisps)

As a child I didn't like them either. Today there are sooo many awesome different tastes and recipes, I LOVE finding new ones!


Kartoffelgratin (potatoes au gratin, or Pommes pavé)

When I want to show my love to hubby in an extraordinary way, I sit down for several hours and prepare such an amazingly time-costly dish. :hearts:


Kartoffelknödel (potato-dumpling, either from boiled or raw potatoes, or from a 50/50 mix), in the picture it's "Seidenknödel" from boiled potatoes ("silk-dumplings") The probably most Bavarian side-dish you can imagine. While, really, they are all over Europe, especially in the Eastern regions! I SO love Seidenknödel!! :drool2:





Kartoffel-Bube-Spitzle ("boy's little parts", made from potato-dumpling-dough)

Very Southern-Germany and Austrian- specific are "tiny Wieners from boys", just cooked and served as dumplings, or fried and served with salads and as a vegetarian dishes.


Gnocci filled (or not filled) potato-dumpling dough, boiled or fried

They seem to be Italian but really, they are known all over Europe maybe in other forms- and from lot of other veggies as pumpkin, beets, sweet potatoes, turnips, peas... the possibilities are endless and always sooo delicious!!!


Kartoffelsalat (potato-salad)

Endless options exist, and I am always amazed how much I learned to love all of them!


Kartoffelbrot und Brötchen (Potato bread and -buns)

In my youth this seemed to be a speciality, it's not anymore. Very soft and moist bread, in the land of intensely crispy and hard bread-crusts, this might be a life-saver for Americans! ;)

...Oh my, what have I done...? But I seem to really... like, what one can do with potatoes! :lol: :vortex:
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Post by spiritualcookie »

Paradise-on-Earth wrote: Fri Jan 17, 2025 5:04 pmKartoffel (=potato).
I am always in such awe of the breadth and depth of your knowledge of so many delicious dishes! I think you have enough knowledge to write several volumes of wonderful cooking books! Thank you for sharing - I would like to try them all! :D :hearts:

I feel inspired by the Kartoffelkroketten! I like how in adding an egg, it adds so much nutrition to the humble potato. It is inspiring in me ideas for all sorts of mashed thing with egg to try! Sweet potato, butternut squash, blitzed vegetables... Since at the moment my body doesn't digest fried things or fat very well, I like also that it's baked and potentially I don't have to add fat to it, so it's something my body will be able to handle happily :)
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Post by Paradise-on-Earth »

spiritualcookie wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 11:28 am
Paradise-on-Earth wrote: Fri Jan 17, 2025 5:04 pmKartoffel (=potato).
I am always in such awe of the breadth and depth of your knowledge of so many delicious dishes! I think you have enough knowledge to write several volumes of wonderful cooking books! Thank you for sharing - I would like to try them all! :D :hearts:

I feel inspired by the Kartoffelkroketten! I like how in adding an egg, it adds so much nutrition to the humble potato. It is inspiring in me ideas for all sorts of mashed thing with egg to try! Sweet potato, butternut squash, blitzed vegetables... Since at the moment my body doesn't digest fried things or fat very well, I like also that it's baked and potentially I don't have to add fat to it, so it's something my body will be able to handle happily :)
Awww, thank you so much for the wonderful compliment! :hearts: And I love that I might have inspired you. The butter in the Kroketten is only for some crunch, when you bake it in the oven.
Yes :hearts: eggs complete almost everything into a full meal! :lol: I tend to finish all leftovers in cracking an egg over it, frying it in a pan, and finding it delicious!

...Can you digest the fat in the yolk, though? :hearts: *I* am always blown away how things that we can't work with physically become sometimes more bearable, when you use them in their natural form (as organically pressed virgin oils, or as medicine the whole herb, not just an isolated part... where it all helps together to break each other up in easier digestible forms, or where tiniest natural ingredients (as something in a plant) makes it not poisonous, any more!

...I DID write a cooking-book for my family (hand-copied, full with old photos and postcards...) with all the family recipes that I learned to love, from my ancestors, including the tiny stories and memories that are tied to them. :lol: ...I see it coming that my answer to you is becoming "another book", so I will take the "L" from the rear of the Kartoffel and make it the beginning of :


"Love for food, family and history (and writing about it!!)..."
(Sorry for being so creative with the headlines, AGAIN!! :lol: :shifty: )

When I planned to pull together our familie's recipes, I had asked for recipes from Wolfgangs side also, but it didn't happen. The only idea was to NOT use the trait of his grandmother, who used to cook liver for hours in the oven: It turned into a dry, almost green "Sole of a Boot", and everyone tried to escape from needing to eat it... My mother in law became "immortal" in my book by once having not stirred the chocolate in a mousse long enough, so there where still little chocolate lumps in the cream, which was DELICIOUS. Since then, I always add some finely chopped chocolate in the end, to every "Mousse au Chocolate"!

But otherwise, mostly my Grandmother taught me to cook. Her mother had married rich and so, their family had a maid who did the cooking. And so, she didn't know recipes from her youth. Besides lemon-cream! In her youth, citrus-fruit were an immense treasure, and lemon-cream was on their table only once or twice a year. She HAD to learn preparing it, as it was so delicious!!

Later, she learned most of real cooking from her mother in law: Opi was a very poor farmer's son, and Omi cared to learn all the tricks of his mother and the other village-women, when the whole huge family (having lost their houses and often other relatives as well) gathered after WW2 on the farm, to be able to survive. It has been Opi's mother and 4 aunts, his 3 sisters and their 4 children, my Omi and her 5 children, all under 1 roof. The men had croaked in service or were still in captivity...

Omi learned to bake bread and "cakes" in an old fashioned bread-oven, heated with wood. The "cakes" were tray-bakes, topped with a bit of sourcreme and an stirred-in egg, sweetened with Rübenkraut -self made turnip-molasses, as they had no sugar, using modest bread-dough. Only flour and water with yeast or sourdough- as long as that was available they werent hungry. Hurray!!

She learned to be incredibly creative with making something out of almost nothing. They ate lentil- or pearl-barley- or potato-peels-weed-soups with "waterdumplings" (made from flour, water and salt) and whatever grew in the garden. The presence of a few herbs, almost always eggs and a bit milk (blessings of living in the countryside) made her clear how few humans really NEED. The presence of fruit-trees that lined the rural roads who were available to all folks (a special idea of landlords to help their people in famines) made it so clear to her, that having 2 or 3 trees herself would make life really better when hardships come!

I learned it all from her. And I LOVED the stories that went with it! I LOVED to understand wild (and old, forgotten) vegetables, and old methods of conserving. And I highly appreciated understanding that people have dealt with times, where there was no money to simply buy it all. But I also HIGHLY appreciated to find, more and more, the fruit and vegetables from all around the world, the foreign spices, and the foreign methods to cook... it all was SUCH a treasure-trove to me!

I also loved the stories of the family. How family assures survival. How, when the harsh winds blow, family holds together and shares what is crucial. I heard of my mother and all her siblings and cousins, playing in the woods and on the grassy hills, and of my uncle as the oldest of the gang (-as all his siblings not overly religiously educated) was snatching an old broom made from straw and carried it out on the village-street, while mumbling in typical sing-song of the catholic processions: The priest, walking ahead and praying, and the rest of the community, walking behind him and repeating the prayer in a lower tone. My Omi said she never run so fast than in the moment when she saw all her children (the "faithless refugees") walk out of the court, to play "Corpus Christi Procession"... :shock: :lol: :lol:

I also learned a lot from my mother, who had married back into Canada (where I got born). She was a farmers wife for a long time, preparing her own cheeses and joghurts, planted a huge berry-garden and of course used the tricks and traits of the farmer-family she had married into. SO fascinating!!

My second family-cook-book is already gathering, as it will be not be inspired by my ancestors, but by DH's and my travels- and by my children and their mates. As my daughter in law is a Kazakh who got raised in Russian culture, this is already quite fascinating! Whenever my Forum-Friends offered to share a special recipe from their family or their wonderful part of the world, I added those, too! My children ask for "Hopes Israeli Shakshuka" for breakfast, or for "Leafs Texan Pekanpie", or for WellBeans awesome "Blondies" from the US-Eastcoast. Lately, it is "Mashed Peas", from spiritualcookie! :hearts:

:hearts: :grouphug:


“Seize the moment. Remember all those women on the Titanic who waved off the dessert cart.”
– Erma Bombeck


(By the way, I own a recipe about the dessert that got served in Titanic's last night: It is Eclairs, filled with vanilla custard, topped with lemon-icing, served with Hungarian Tokaj Wine... ALMOST worth drowning...)

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Post by spiritualcookie »

Paradise-on-Earth wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 2:45 pm ...Can you digest the fat in the yolk, though? :hearts:
Yes, I can digest fats as long as they are in very small amounts. The amount seems to be the key at the moment. :)
Paradise-on-Earth wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 2:45 pm ...I DID write a cooking-book for my family (hand-copied, full with old photos and postcards...) with all the family recipes that I learned to love, from my ancestors, including the tiny stories and memories that are tied to them. :lol:
It sounds like a wonderful treasure! :chef: :vortex-small:

It reminds me: My grandmother was a wonderful, talented (and very proud of it! :D) cook, who's number 1 way to show her love was through her cooking; so for her 80th birthday all her children gathered together all her most well-loved, most frequently cooked recipes, typed them up and put them into a book alongside photos of family members sitting at the table together, and alongside photos of her dishes over the years. On her birthday, she was presented with a copy, and all her children and grandchildren received their own copy too :) I loved the idea so much and I am so appreciative that I have this book of her delicious dishes. Even though she is no longer physically here herself to make them, the delicious flavours she created and the memories that go with them continue to live on in us all and continue to be made a-new :)
Paradise-on-Earth wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 2:45 pm The only idea was to NOT use the trait of his grandmother, who used to cook liver for hours in the oven: It turned into a dry, almost green "Sole of a Boot", and everyone tried to escape from needing to eat it...
:lol: :lol: :lol: :hearts:
Paradise-on-Earth wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 2:45 pm My mother in law became "immortal" in my book by once having not stirred the chocolate in a mousse long enough, so there where still little chocolate lumps in the cream, which was DELICIOUS. Since then, I always add some finely chopped chocolate in the end, to every "Mousse au Chocolate"!
How magical when mistakes turn into new wonderful inventions! :) :hearts:

I love the joy you find in your family history and stories :hearts:
Paradise-on-Earth wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 2:45 pm My second family-cook-book is already gathering, as it will be not be inspired by my ancestors, but by DH's and my travels- and by my children and their mates. As my daughter in law is a Kazakh who got raised in Russian culture, this is already quite fascinating!
The second cookbook sounds amazing! If it is ever published (or even self-published someplace like KDP) so I can buy a copy please let me know! :D :hearts:
Whenever my Forum-Friends offered to share a special recipe from their family or their wonderful part of the world, I added those, too! My children ask for "Hopes Israeli Shakshuka" for breakfast, or for "Leafs Texan Pekanpie", or for WellBeans awesome "Blondies" from the US-Eastcoast. Lately, it is "Mashed Peas", from spiritualcookie! :hearts:
aw :in_love:
How beautiful that the forum brought such expansions! And how beautiful that we can touch each other's lives in positive ways even across the seas at other ends of the world!
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Post by Paradise-on-Earth »

Our posts X-ed yesterday, and I still read yours and enjoyed it soooo much! You sent me with a big fat smile into my night, sleeping...THANK YOU! :kiss: And today, I started 3 times to answer, and each time, something piled up that I had to do... but NOW! :hearts:
spiritualcookie wrote: Sat Jan 18, 2025 4:10 pm Yes, I can digest fats as long as they are in very small amounts. The amount seems to be the key at the moment. :)
I wish you a wonderful full recovery to being able to do EVERYthing that you desire! :hearts:

I must now sleep with a breathing-mask, and it helps me SO much (it literally saves my life), but truly, I want to be as "free" as I was before. And, that MUST be possible... Abe say, in the end it is all just vibrations,and they can shift to ALL that we want! :dancing: *MY* big dream is really to point, and things become. Until now I'm practicing :lol:
It reminds me: My grandmother was a wonderful, talented (and very proud of it! :D) cook, who's number 1 way to show her love was through her cooking; so for her 80th birthday all her children gathered together all her most well-loved, most frequently cooked recipes, typed them up and put them into a book alongside photos of family members sitting at the table together, and alongside photos of her dishes over the years. On her birthday, she was presented with a copy, and all her children and grandchildren received their own copy too :) I loved the idea so much and I am so appreciative that I have this book of her delicious dishes. Even though she is no longer physically here herself to make them, the delicious flavours she created and the memories that go with them continue to live on in us all and continue to be made a-new :)
reading this is sooo precious to me. Thank you a ton for sharing!!! Oh yes, I want that, too! :vortex: And such a gem that you have it!!

How magical when mistakes turn into new wonderful inventions! :) :hearts:
I love the joy you find in your family history and stories :hearts:
:ta:
I am sure, the very best things in life started out as mishaps. As, sourdough, or yeast. All sorts of cheeses. All sorts of fermentation. Wine-making! It feels, as if somewhen something would have gone "wrong"... the story of Dom Perignon, the monk who wanted to make wine and ended up with champagne is such an awesome example!
The second cookbook sounds amazing! If it is ever published (or even self-published someplace like KDP) so I can buy a copy please let me know! :D :hearts:
That is SUCH a wonderful compliment!! I'll keep it in mind. It will take another decade, though, for sure... but I am willing to translate it ino english, just for you! :D :dancing:
aw :in_love:
How beautiful that the forum brought such expansions! And how beautiful that we can touch each other's lives in positive ways even across the seas at other ends of the world!
Sooooo true!!! :vortex: :grouphug:
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Post by spiritualcookie »

:hearts: :wave:

-

So! Last one was: "Love for food, family and history (and writing about it!!)..."
So I guess next one after Love starts with E:

E: Education

I have always loved learning new things.
That feeling of gaining knowledge -
It feels like a fresh newness that is so refreshing, and light and bright!
It feels like a glorious lightbulb going off in your head
It feels like clarity
It feels so beautifully expansive; like I'm becoming more than I was before.
I love feeling like I'm growing; learning; becoming more.

I love the feeling when someone explains something and you are able to follow it completely and understand it all.
I love how everything slots together neatly.
I love that feeling of "I get it!" and "That makes so much sense!"
I love how it makes me feel smart and makes me appreciate this part of myself!

I liked today when he explained his idea to me, and I liked the feeling of going from "Hm I'm not so interested in this subject... I'm not sure I want to listen to this..." to "It's fun how I can understand what he is explaining! And I like how I'm enjoying following this thread of logic and words - I like this feeling of understanding - I like this feeling!" :lol:
I liked that pivot!
I remember in school so many times how a subject didn't sound like it would be interesting at all... and then there was that surprise and delight in being able to find the joy in it afterall! Usually it was some talented, passionate teacher who loved the subject, and feeling their joy and interest was so contagious that I ended up being fascinated by the subject too! I love how that can happen! Finding joy where you didn't think you would - it's such an exhilarating, expansive feeling!

-

Next letter: N
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Post by spiritualcookie »

N: Naan Bread!



This is such a delicious bread!
There is an Indian restaurant my family used to go to - and they made the most delicious Naan Bread - brushed with newly melted butter!

It always arrived steaming hot, fresh from the oven - the steam swirling as you tore it with your hot-bread-warmed fingertips. And the buttery, sweet aroma of it dancing through the air - tantalising our noses and tastebuds.

I even liked the way it looks; satisfyingly thick - with plenty to sink your teeth into! And with inviting crispy bubbles of dough, well-baked and looking like some kind of delicious bready landscape!

Biting into it, the bread is so soft with a beautifully browned crisp base.
It's very satisfying getting your teeth into this warm, light softness! Feeling its sweet, soft, comforting warmth.
Eating it put me instantly into a space of appreciation and gentle joy.
I always thought it was a very good way to start a meal! :hearts:

Next letter: N or D

-
Aaand LOA is now bringing me thoughts of related things and it makes me want to do a little appreciation for another Indian bread :lol:

So a side appreciation for:
Parathas:

Growing up, my best friend was Indian and for her packed lunch at school, she would bring different parathas each day, wrapped in shiny silver foil: One day it would be potato parathas, another day onion ones, another day lentil ones. And she was always so generous and shared with her friends :hearts:
It was so sweet of her to share in this wonderful homemade treat! Eventually her mum made much more than her daughter needed herself, because she knew all her friends wanted to taste some too! :lol: Eeeveryone wanted to taste some because it was so delicious! That was so kind of her mother to make extras like that!

To this day I still remember these wonderful parathas!


- The potato one was the most plain, but still very tasty. Soft, and thin and satisfying - and filling! When I went to her house, we'd eat it dipped in ketchup and it was really enjoyable!


- The onion one was always much more firm and crisp, with a beautifully browned exterior speckled with green spring onion. I loved how much flavour it had - savoury oniony deliciousness!


- The yellow-coloured lentil paratha was my favourite! The lentils sandwiched between the two layers of dough had an interestingly pleasing dry texture. Eating it felt like eating a thin, round parcel of goodness. I liked the mouth-feel of all the textures coming together and their more complex, earthy lentily flavour. So yummy!

I loved those days of being introduced to so many wonderful things through my friends. New flavours; new smells; new dishes with interesting names, new words for meals! ("tea" was a meal some friends had which wasn't a thing in my house), new games to play; new crafts to make together with extremely cool craft-making kits; being exposed to cable tv for the first time with alllll those channels! (in my house there were only 4 or 5!) and being introduced to new tv shows we watched together; seeing new places when I visited their houses for the first time and taking in all that newness of how they do things in their home. It all felt so stimulating and interesting and wonderful! :hearts:
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Post by Paradise-on-Earth »

:D :D :vortex: WHAT a satisfying unfolding!!! Ohh, I also always LOVED to learn, and to get it!!! I looooved the words you described that. Hmmmm, wonderful emotions!

And then the bread... I was not hungry when I started reading. :lol: Now I am. I never ate Parathas! And I so enjoyed your appreciation of the generosity and love of the mother who cooked for all of you in the end... I just love embracing it ALL... Thank you so very very much! :kiss:
:in_love: :wave:
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