Opening Up The Cottage (Encore)

Published May 23, 2024, 4:00 AM

Originally Aired: May 19th, 2019 (Season 3 Episode 9)


Our story tonight is called “Opening the Cottage,” and it’s a story about the first day back in a well-loved, familiar place. It’s also about the little traditions that make up the history of a family, a sandwich eaten on the end of a dock, and the soft, happy feeling of summer arriving.

So get cozy and ready to sleep.

Save over $100 on Kathryn’s hand-selected wind-down favourites with the Nothing Much Happens Wind-Down Box. A collection of products from our amazing partners:

Eversio Wellness: Chill Now, Vellabox: Lavender Silk Candle, Alice Mushrooms: Nightcap, NutraChamps: Tart Cherry Gummies, A Brighter Year: Mini Coloring Book, NuStrips: Sleep Strips, Woolzies: Lavender Roll-On

 

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Welcome to Bedtime Stories for everyone, in which nothing much happens, you feel good, and then you fall asleep. I'm Catherine Nikolay. I read and write all the stories you hear on Nothing Much Happens. Audio Engineering is by Bob Witterersheim. Today marks six years of telling you bedtime stories, which has become the most exciting gentle adventure of my life. And it seems fitting that today I can share something I've been working on for quite a while, something created just for you, bring a piece of the village into your homes and to guide you into healthy wind down routines that will feel so good. This month, we are releasing but Nothing Much Happens wind Down Box, a wellness box of hand selected products that I personally use and that I love, along with a few exclusive stories to round out your cozy routines. Each box features products specially selected for your relaxation, from Everescio Wellness's Chill Now, a high potency organic certified Raschi mushroom extract to nutri Champs tart cherry gummies great for sleep and reducing inflammation, and they taste great. There's a lavender candle to mark your moment. Of calm from our favorite small batch candle maker's Vella Box. A meditative activity for you by way of a Brighter Year's mini coloring book, a fantastic way to disconnect from your screen and tap into your creative self before bed. Then more mushrooms, this time in chocolate specially formulated for sleep, from the lovely team behind Alice Mushrooms. And some delicious essential oils to rub on your wrists and neck from our friends at Woolsey's. And of course some melotonin for those who need an extra helping hand to rest by way of new strips. Place it on your tongue and it dissolves in seconds. Like everything in this village, we took our time to create this for you. It's such a pleasure to be able to help so many of you, to tuck you in at night and to keep watched till the morning. And I'm excited to help create comfort in new ways with our first ever wind Down Box. Head over to Nothing Much Happens dot com for more information. Now, let me tell you a bit about how to use this podcast. It's designed to help you quiet down your mind and ease it to sleep. It does that by giving your mind a place to rest that isn't the tangle of thoughts you might have been caught in all day. The story is simple and not much happens in it, So just follow along with my voice and the soft details of the story, and before you know it, you'll be waking up tomorrow feeling refreshed and recharged. I'll tell the story twice. On the second time through, I'll go a little slower. We're training your brain along the way, and the more you use the stories, the faster you'll settle and sleep. So have a bit of patience if you're new to this. Our story tonight is called Opening the Cottage, and it's a story about the first stay back in a well loved, familiar place. It's also about the little traditions that make up the history of a family, a sandwich eaten on the end of a dock, and the soft, happy feeling of summer arriving. Now, turn off your light, put away anything you've been looking at, and snuggle your body down into your favorite sleeping position. Pull the blanket up over your shoulder and tuck your pillow in just the way you like it. Take a deep breath in through your nose and out through your mouth. Let's do one more in and out. Good opening the cottage. It is perhaps a distinction that not every one will agree with, But as far as I am concerned, cabins are in the woods and cottages are by the water. A cabin might live in a shady glade, tall pines or ancient oaks standing close by, with branches curling overhead. It might have dark paneled walls and a wood burning stove for warming feet and thick socks. It might be the best place to be on a foggy autumn morning, or at the first snow of the year, with a cup in hand and eyes on the slowly blanketing landscape. But a cottage sits on the edge of a river or by a broad lake. Its walls are painted a faded shade of yellow or white. It has weeping willows for neighbors, their buds, the first to go green in the early spring. It is the best place to be on the cusp of warm months, with a glass of iced tea in the afternoon, and eyes always on the moving water. And so we were on our way to open the cottage. The car was packed with a few days worth of clothes good for cleaning and walking in paper grocery sacks of provisions, a couple of dogs, and our giddy selves. The drive was familiar roots we'd been taking for years. Here's the shop we sometimes stop at for ice drinks and sweet corn in the late summer. Here's the little town with one stop light and the old depot overgrown with ivy and wisteria. Turn on the state road, Circle past the house with shrubs cut to look like animals and train cars, and keep going just a bit longer till the air starts to smell different. Finally, lean forward in your seat, squint a bit, and catch sight of the front porch and familiar trees of the cottage. It was an old place, built at the beginning of the last century, with white clattered siding and a front full of windows. We pulled up, dogs dancing in our laps. They knew where we were and were as excited as we were. When we opened the doors. They jumped down and started a determined sniffing investigation of every blade of grass. They were checking the guest book as it were, seeing who exactly had passed through since we'd closed up in the fall. We let them sniff and did our own bit of inventory, checking for loose screens in the windows. We noticed a few branches that had fallen on the roof during a storm, and the buds of lilacs on the bush. We stepped up onto the front porch and the dogs rushed to follow us in their whole bodies wagging now and noses pressed up against the crack under the door. I found the key on my ring, the one with a tiny red heart daubed on in nail polish, and wiggled it into the lock. I pushed the door open, and the dog shot through the place, running from room to room, and we started to pull back curtains, roll up blinds, and open windows. Under the closed up, musty smell, I could already detect the scent that was so deeply tied into this place. It was like old wood warmed in the sun, like old books and the cases they had lived in for years, and with it the smell of fresh water and hundreds of breakfasts cooked late on Saturday mornings. It was simply the best smell in the world. Once the car was unpacked and the dogs had worn themselves out with sniffing and found spots to lay in the sun of the front porch. We rolled up our sleeves and started to work our way through the little house. We put fresh on the bed and swept the floors. We stocked up the kitchen cupboards and filled the fridge. We put clean towels in the bathroom and wiped the dust from the surfaces. We frowned at the fuse box and water heater and flip switches until we'd figured it out. We should write down how we did that, so we have it for next year, I said, mm hm. We both knew we wouldn't. It was part of the tradition. We strung the clothes line up in the back yard, knowing soon it would hold exclusively beach towels and swimsuits. We waved at neighbors, called out hellos, and how our ewes. There was more to do, but we'd done all we wanted for the day. So we stood shoulder to shoulder in the kitchen and fixed some sandwiches. Carried them out to the water. We walked to the edge of the dock and sat down with our legs dangling over toes, a few inches away from the still chilly flowing river. We'd been saving this moment and we both knew it. Is it this way for everyone? That water calls you like home, that you get antsy an edgy when you're too long away from it, and that as soon as you're back you feel yourself restored. Is it because I grew up here, because I'd slept on the front porch, swing a hundred times as a kid, and jumped off this dock in every year of my life since I could walk? Or does water pull every one the same? If I'd grown up in a desert, walked dunes of dry sand, and celebrated the days of my life in the rare shade of palms, would I feel called by the arid heat beside me? An arm was raised and a finger pointed down the length of the river at a long dash of steel in the distance. Ship Ship, I said back. We'd see a hundred before the summer was over, but it never stopped being exciting. Some we knew well, having seen them for years, and having looked them up in the ship's book. We knew how long they were, what they carried, and could see just by looking at them if they were full or empty of cargo. This one looked brand new, fresh paint and sleek lines. I looked forward to hearing the ship's horns in the night, to seeing their lighted boughs and sterns slipping through the black water. There was no sleep like cottage sleep, and no waking like cottage mornings. We heard the paws of the dogs behind us, and they crept down the dock to sit beside us. A furry head came to rest on my thigh, and I slipped my hand over her shaggy ear and stroked the spot between her eyes. We were all quiet together, just looking out at the slow moving ship, the wake building at her bow, on the water birds overhead. I was sure that cabins held their own joys, but this was a cottage and it was the best place to be for the summer opening the cottage. It is perhaps a distinction that not everyone will agree with, but as far as I am concerned, cabins are in the woods and cottages are by the water. A cabin might live in a shady glade, tall pines or ancient oaks standing close by with branches curling overhead. It might have dark paneled walls and a wood burning stove for warming feet in thick socks. It might be the best place to be on a foggy autumn morning, or at the first snow of the year, with a cup in hand and eyes on the slowly blanketing landscape. But a cottage sits on the edge of a river or by a broad lake. Its walls are painted a faded shade of yellow or white. It has weeping willows for neighbors, their buds, the first to go green in the early spring. It is the best place to be on the cusp of warm months, with a glass of iced tea in the afternoon, and eyes always on the moving water. And so we were on our way to open the cottage. The car was packed with a few days worth of clothes good for cleaning and walking in, paper, grocery sacks of provisions, a couple of dogs, and our giddy selves. The dry was familiar roots we'd been taking for years. Here's the shop we sometimes stop at for ice drinks and sweet corn in the late summer. Here's the little town with one stoplight and the old depot overgrown with ivy and wisteria. Turn on the state road, circle past the house with shrubs cut to look like animals and train cars, and keep going just a bit longer till the air starts to smell different. Finally, lean forward in your seat, squint a bit, and catch sight of the front porch and familiar trees of the cottage. It was an old place, built at the beginning of the last century, with white clabbored siding and a front full of windows. We pulled up dogs dancing in our laps. They knew where we were and were as excited as we were. When we opened the doors. They jumped down and started a determined sniffing investigation of every blade of grass. They were checking the guest book as it were, seeing who exactly had passed through since we closed up in the fall. We let them sniff and did our own bit of inventory, checking for loose screens in the windows. We noticed a few branches that had fallen on the roof during a storm, and the buds of lilac on the bush. We stepped up onto the front porch on the dogs rushed to follow us in their whole body's wagging now and noses pressed up against the crack under the door. I found the key on my ring, the one with a tiny red heart daubed on and nail polish and wiggled it into the lock. I pushed the door open, and the dog shot through the place, running from room to room, and we started to pull back curtains, roll up blinds, and open windows. Under the closed up, musty smell, I could already detect the scent that was so deeply tied into this place. It was like old wood warmed in the sun, like old books and the cases they've lived in for years. And with it was the smell of fresh water and hundreds of breakfasts cooked late on Saturday mornings. It was simply the best smell in the world. Once the car was unpacked and the dogs had worn themselves out with sniffing and found spots to lay in the sun of the front porch, we rolled up our sleeves and started to work our way through the little house. We put fresh sheets on the bed and swept the floors. We stocked up the kitchen cupboards and filled the fridge. We put clean towels in the bathroom and wiped the dust from the surfaces. We frowned at the fuse box and water heater and flipped switches until we'd figured it out. We should write down how we did that, so we have it for next year, I said, hm hmm. We both knew we wouldn't. It was part of the tradition. We strung the clothesline up in the backyard, knowing soon it would hold exclusively beach towels and swimsuits. We waved at neighbors, called out hellos and how are yous? There was more to do, but we'd done all we wanted for the day. So we stood shoulder to shoulder in the kitchen and fixed some sandwiches, carried them out to the water. We walked to the edge of the dock and sat down with our legs dangling over toes, a few inches from the still chilly, flowing river. We'd been saving this moment, and we both knew it. Is it this way for everyone? That water calls you like home, that you get antsy an edgy when you're too long away from it, and that as soon as you're back you feel yourself restored. Is it because I grew up here, because I'd slept on the front porch swing a hundred times as a kid and jumped off this dock in every year of my life since I could walk? Or does water pull every one the same? If I'd grown up in a desert, walked dunes of dry sand, and celebrated the days of my life in the rare shade of palms. Would I feel called by the arid heat beside me? An arm was raised when a finger pointed down the length of the river at a long dash of steel in the distance. Ship Ship, I said back. We'd see a hundred before the summer was over, but it never stopped being exciting. Some we knew well, having seen them for years, and having looked them up in the ship's book. We knew how long they were, what they carried, and could see just by looking at them if they were full or empty of cargo. This one looked brand new, fresh paint and sleek lines. I looked forward to hearing the ship's horns in the night, to seeing their lighted boughs and sterns slipping through the black water. There was no sleep like cottage sleep, no waking like cottage mornings. We heard the paws of the dogs behind us, and they crept down the dock to sit beside us. A furry head came to rest on my thigh, and I slipped my hand over her shaggy ear and stroked the spot between her eyes. We were all quiet together, just looking out at the slow moving ship, the wake building at her bow, and the water birds overhead. I was sure that cabins held their own joys, but this was a cottage and it was the best place to be for the summer. Sweet dreams

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