Our impromptu Nature Day picnic turned out nicer than we expected.Did you know that April Fool’s Day is celebrated in Iran too? Thirteen days after Persian New Year (our 1st day of Spring, which you saw us celebrating here and here and here), Persians stay out all day and play games. It’s Sizdah Be-dar (literally 13 Outdoor), also called Nature Day. One must dispel any potential bad luck from the number thirteen. Some people like to play innocent pranks on that day too!
Often that 13th day falls around Easter, filling local parks to double their capacity. So many people gather that folks will run into childhood friends, ones from other countries.
Sheltering, quarantine, house arrest, what’s in a name? Yes, it’s grim, but it also bespeaks of a hopeful world, one where everyone is pulling together (not counting the every-present handful of conspiracy theorists). (Here and here and here and here and here and here are a few more posts to cheer you through the crisis.)
Nature Day was an at-home workday for us. Half-heartedly, my husband and I set a modest picnic under the dwarf kumquat tree in our little front yard. Our sweet doggie joined us for a quick round of cards over tea and Persian cookies. One thing led to another, and before we knew it, we were having fun. Then we ran back indoors to return to our at-home work. Dinner involved more Persian deliciousness – see in this post that reveals how Persian food has something for everyone!
Get in close to smell Khashayar’s bubbling tomato-bean-potato stew.No, I don’t have a right to complain — not when people have suffered far worse and continue to do so. We’re all well here. This far, California seems to have evaded the tsunami of illness that’s still predicted to swell, probably thanks largely to our horrid mass transit that scares folks off from piling together into busses and subways.
Family in Iran, thank the heavens, is fine if we don’t count how the country has been walloped by the epidemic, amid a grossly hobbled infrastructure.
I’m rambling. Forgive me. This is what one does when one is cooped up for weeks, relegated to video chats and to regarding anything to do with life outdoors as if its all of it is radioactive waste, from people to food to petting — hands off! — each other’s dogs, and why aren’t you wearing a mask? Well, I thought outdoors…
Thank goodness for the arts. I’ve got this video-post about my enchantment with those who pursue arts and hobbies for no other compensation than inner glee.
A gift to you from Iran! Here’s some of my extended family there sharing fine musicianship — enjoy their classical Persian music performance of “Tak Derakt: Single Tree”…
With that loveliness in mind, here are a few photos from my dear husband’s visit to Tehran several years ago. (Here and here are more about that same trip.)…
The whole of Tehran turns green in Spring.
Even at night this Tehran bridge is colorful.
Flowers in Spring in Tehran.
Tehran’s spring-time snowy mountains.If you want a better idea of how a real Sizdah Bedar is meant to be, look here and feel here.
How are you fairing indoors, dear reader? Healthy and happy, I hope…
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It’s good to ramble… I enjoyed it!
It looks like you had a good day! I’m glad…
Love, light, and glitter
Ps. You’re allowed to complain, it doesn’t make others lots better. Whatever is, is real to you and equally valid 💕💕💕
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I’m so glad your family are safe. I hope and pray that stays the same.
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Wonderful Sijdah-Bedar.❤
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I can tell that you and your husband long to return for a visit to Iran – hopefully you will in future, when the world is healthy and peace reigns everywhere.
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thank you, dear – hopefully sooner than later…
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The photos are gorgeous! I wish I am outdoors but I’m in a lockdown now so I can only stay indoors.
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this is just in our tiny front yard. you can’t see our neighbor’s car parked right beside us lol
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Lol. Nice shot to avoid your neighbor’s car.
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Those mountains are really gorgeous!
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yes, Tehran is a bit like Los Angeles, tho an inland version, both are basins ringed with snowy mountains
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Wow 🙂
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