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Post by Phantom of London on Jan 1, 2021 20:20:18 GMT
Obviously with theatre taken away and not being going away on holiday.
So with this lockdown, has anyone taken up any different interests? Even with an existing hobby done more vigorously?
For me though at the beginning of the year, I may have been able to tell the difference between a daffodil and a tulip, but not much more. But since lock down I have got real green fingered and can tell you what are many plants are. This is due to buying many books as bedside reading and watching gardening world, when on earlier this year. I have spent a small fortune on my garden and planted many bulbs, some come through now and winter plants to replace the summer annuals.
if you said to me in March I would have 15 pots in the garden and a compost heap, I would have fallen off my garden chair.
Of course I can do all this by listening to my favourite perennial Elaine Paige.
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Post by dontdreamit on Jan 1, 2021 21:06:19 GMT
I’ve been gardening for a number of years now, and have learnt almost everything I know from Monty Don!
My favourite thing to do on Sunday mornings from March- October is to put on a podcast or some music and spend the morning pottering in the garden. I know I would have found the first lockdown very hard without it. I was also luck that I’d been given a mini greenhouse last Christmas which allowed me to grow loads of plants from seed when all the garden centres were shut. I buy the odd gardening magazine so had quite a few packets of seed at home.
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1,127 posts
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Post by samuelwhiskers on Jan 1, 2021 21:41:49 GMT
Even with an existing hobby done more vigorously? Drinking.
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2,389 posts
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Post by peggs on Jan 1, 2021 21:48:59 GMT
Not hobbies as such but by things going online, hay festival, book prizes, gigs streamed that I'd never normally be able to get to I've expanded my interests quite a bit just by the process of joining one thing and then something else being recommended etc. So now I'm following twitter feeds/reading blogs on farming, about soil health, rotational farming, re-wiggling rivers etc. I've got interested in greek and roman mythology. Have discoverend new musicians and podcasts and re-disovered the absolute joy that music than impart. Started to discover how interesting and varied fungi is (and the various and terrifying invasion of other host wildlife that are taken over by it). Started to read more history and different periods. But all very early days as i'm possibly trying to do too much at once and there never seems to be enough time.
I wish i remembered mroe about plants, I know some basics, but like birds and other things if i didn't learn them as a child i seem incapable of remembering now.
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2,422 posts
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Post by robertb213 on Jan 1, 2021 23:30:09 GMT
I bought a ukulele. I'm rubbish but it's quite fun 😂
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4,156 posts
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Post by kathryn on Jan 2, 2021 11:58:07 GMT
Juggling. I learnt the 3-ball cascade at uni nearly 20 years ago, but didn’t get any further than that.
Re-took it up in March just as something to do indoors that wasn’t sitting staring at a screen, discovered YouTube tutorials, and have now learnt a bunch of tricks and found a local group that meets once a week (well, when we are allowed!).
It’s actually quite good to do in front of the TV, so it hasn’t reduced the screen time, but at least I’m standing up and waving my arms around while I am doing it.
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2,389 posts
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Post by peggs on Jan 2, 2021 12:23:04 GMT
That's got to count as exercise and a bit if brain activity, good choice.
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Post by jess173 on Jan 2, 2021 12:52:55 GMT
I bought a piano and I started learning Spanish. Both things are going really well as I have time to practice every day. And the occupation helps to keep me sane.
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Post by firefingers on Jan 2, 2021 14:21:35 GMT
I also got a keyboard, don't plan on learning proper just chord bashing through fun songs which is going quite well. I've learned to cook and bake, something that had always on my list but just hadn't had the time when working on shows and being on tour. Relearned a chunk of GCSE French as my friend's parents live out there these days. Done a bit of model making which I haven't done in a good 15 years. Did couch to 5k, then started hiking more but travelling beyond my council area has been banned for months so that went to sh*t. Going from full time employed in theatre with it's 6 day weeks and working late to having a completely clear calendar but most things outside the home shut (bar the two weeks of Tier 2 where I must have been one of only a dozen sound engineers mixing shows in London), I feel like I achieved a fair bit but the main thing I've achieved is still being here.
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2,389 posts
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Post by peggs on Jan 2, 2021 14:47:17 GMT
Wow, you're all very impressive! I tell myself I would have done impressive things too if I hadn't been working but blatantly not true. I've learnt to make chilli con carne and I'm still quite proud of that
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Post by jaqs on Jan 2, 2021 15:03:30 GMT
Writing has kept me sane while not working. I’ve also done a lot of watching cranes being built and dismantled out the window and watching the tide go in and out on the river Lea. Looking out the window is the new theatre for me.
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Post by Forrest on Jan 2, 2021 15:41:05 GMT
I love this thread, excellent idea Phantom of London. Also, some of you absolutely put me to shame. :) The most positive thing in this whole mess, for me, has been the opportunity to listen to a lot more music than I normally would. Music is the longest-running love in my life (I caught the bug from my uncle, who was a DJ, when I was a kid), and I've been doing a lot of walking since the pandemic started, which has melted into a cherished little ritual of discovering new albums and new bands, and rediscovering old ones, on these walks. It has also meant going down a few rabbit holes of looking for YouTube live videos, reading about concepts behind the albums and things like that, for which there usually isn't much time. I know it's a pretty silly thing to say, and it's not really a hobby, but music has kept me sane through the pandemic. I've also decided I wanted to learn more about how music is created, so I've been watching videos/reading about the basics. Finally, I've purchased a drum practice pad and a pair of sticks to try and apply some of that in practice, and work on my hands/feet coordination. The plan is to switch to real drum lessons once all this ends, so I've also been saving up. (Although, I have to honestly confess I'm pretty bad at it so far.) It's something I've always wanted to do, but never mustered up the courage to try. Turning 37 amidst a global pandemic seemed like a good excuse to start, given that I'm not getting any younger and I literally have nothing to lose.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 2, 2021 15:56:27 GMT
I wish I had time to take up new hobbies.
In a way I feel bad for moaning when I am fortunate to still have a job, but these past 12 months have been so awful work-wise I am on the verge of choosing to be unemployed and live off savings for while.
A prolonged period of 18+ hour days in a very challenging job (which is non-medical and really not in the current or any circumstances important) have taken a huge toll on my mental and physical health. They were already starting to before the pandemic and then covid blocked any hope I had of rescuing the situation as we got even busier with fewer people as those with kids couldn't cope with working and home schooling and the rest of us had to pick up the slack. I know that's not their fault, but neither was it really fair, and I think me having a breakdown was almost inevitable with that extra workload.
So while I was signed off work I managed to start doing some gardening, baking and jigsaw puzzles, none were really to the extent that I could call them new hobbies. Hopefully this year I will be able to do something to that extent that isn't work.
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4,156 posts
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Post by kathryn on Jan 2, 2021 16:35:50 GMT
That's got to count as exercise and a bit if brain activity, good choice. In all seriousness it does get the heart rate up!
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Post by NeilVHughes on Jan 2, 2021 17:11:04 GMT
Having moved to working from home the initial lockdown was very similar to @posterj ‘s experience, working in pharma supply chain those first few weeks were hectic and then managing Brexit towards the end of the year kept me busy and did daydream of being furloughed but in the end it is the work and the routine it provides which has been my saviour as living alone and with no support bubble the isolation would have been soul destroying.
The only thing that came out of it was the time not having to commute let me get out on the bike especially as during the first lockdown the weather was glorious.
Used to be a strong cyclist years ago and then life got in the way and never was able to put in the time to build my fitness to a level where I felt good on the bike.
The last 9 months and particularly the last few months where I found virtual cycling I have had the time to get back to a level of fitness I thought I would never reach again, it’s nice to have legs of concrete, weigh less than 70Kg and a body fat % in the teens, not bad for an old timer.
Looking forward to this year building on my fitness and doing some cycle touring and audaxes and considering a 600K audax in the summer to see if I can ride 400 miles in 2 days as the itch to do Paris-Brest-Paris is back, 1200K in 5 days.
Strangely have not really read or played guitar as much as I thought I would.
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4,029 posts
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Post by Dawnstar on Jan 2, 2021 17:37:21 GMT
Wow, you're all very impressive! I tell myself I would have done impressive things too if I hadn't been working but blatantly not true. At least you have the excuse of working. I haven't worked since March & haven't done anything impressive either. All I've done is what I usually do when I'm not working - read, internet, walk - apart from not going to the theatre & watching a lot of livestreams. I have also worried about covid a lot. If I'd died of covid back in March I doubt anyone other than my mother would have noticed or missed me since.
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Post by Forrest on Jan 2, 2021 17:53:33 GMT
Oh, wow... That escalated quickly. I dare to disagree! I for one would miss your quirky, charmingly cynical sense of humour if you were to stop writing on here. And I don't even know you in person. [I'm starting to think I'll have to convince you to change that once we get to a point where the idea of socialising will no longer freak us both out. :)] @posterj and NeilVHughes , I hope 2021 is kinder to you both, and - in the case of Poster J - leaves you more time to reconnect with the things you love, or to learn to love some new ones. EDIT: I meant to quote your last sentence Dawnstar. But the Board disagrees with me doing it for some reason.
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Post by oxfordsimon on Jan 2, 2021 17:59:58 GMT
I have loads of crafts that I have ready to try. But have struggled to find the motivation. Needle felting and crochet are the fibre arts ones. I also got an airbrush. I keep looking at starting miniature painting and then getting a resin 3D printer.
I am great at buying. Really bad at using
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Post by londonpostie on Jan 2, 2021 19:25:58 GMT
Ha! This is amusing: I saw a comedian on twitter say something about there's nothing like a lockdown to reveal that all those aspirations you had about writing were actually self-aggrandising guff. Which, when I stopped laughing, was definitely a little close to the bone! I suppose the one thing about 2020 for me was I addressed everything I had been using to say to myself 'when I've done this I can finally get on with life!' Before it was more of that John Lennon quote about 'life is what happens when you're busy making other plans'. So now, it is more about being present and enjoying here. That's my new project: the present At least I hope so!
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Post by edi on Jan 2, 2021 20:53:27 GMT
Very predictable but this year
- I took a keen interest in south east asian cooking, I can do an excellent Singapore laksa now - Made a start at learning Chinese but gave up - unfortunately it cannot be done self learn style - I will need to join a class - Did lots of walking - not new hobby, but since lockdown I made a point of going for a long walk every day, even if the weather is awful - Gin Tonic - lots of it, at home and in home made batches in the park. I've never spent this much time in the parks of London. - Takeaway Coffee - I dislike coffee and I used to hate spending money on it. This changed drastically since March. I still don't like the stuff but I enjoy buying it now from independent coffee shops and have a chat with my partner over it. When there is nothing else to do, drinking hot coffee on the street is a small pleasure.
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2,389 posts
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Post by peggs on Jan 2, 2021 22:51:09 GMT
Wow, you're all very impressive! I tell myself I would have done impressive things too if I hadn't been working but blatantly not true. At least you have the excuse of working. I haven't worked since March & haven't done anything impressive either. All I've done is what I usually do when I'm not working - read, internet, walk - apart from not going to the theatre & watching a lot of livestreams. I have also worried about covid a lot. If I'd died of covid back in March I doubt anyone other than my mother would have noticed or missed me since. Don't think that Dawnstar, we would definately have missed you and I'm sure others would have too (although I admit to having similar thoughts too so I sympatheise for how you feel). Read, internet, walk, worry about covid, that sums me up pretty well too.
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Post by sfsusan on Jan 3, 2021 12:40:34 GMT
I've got interested in greek and roman mythology. Have you tried Stephen Fry's books on Greek mythology? I find the books a bit too jokey (although they might work well in audiobook format as it would be more conversational), but his stage show was fabulous, if that's been captured anywhere.
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2,389 posts
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Post by peggs on Jan 3, 2021 15:28:42 GMT
I've got interested in greek and roman mythology. Have you tried Stephen Fry's books on Greek mythology? I find the books a bit too jokey (although they might work well in audiobook format as it would be more conversational), but his stage show was fabulous, if that's been captured anywhere. I've seen a few hay type interviews, I found them interesting but I got lost fairly quickly as if you don't know enough names you soon lose track of who everyone is. I've got some Natalie Haynes books on hold as I've found her engaging and easy to follow. I'm pretty much starting from scratch so just need to learn AND remember some names I think and then might retry Stephen Fry.
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Post by sfsusan on Jan 3, 2021 18:11:29 GMT
I'm pretty much starting from scratch so just need to learn AND remember some names I think and then might retry Stephen Fry. He does the books as sort of a "Dummies Guide to Greek Mythology" and if you don't need to remember the 17 offspring of Whono and Whatsis, he'll tell you that. It's not written in any sort of a serious (let alone scholarly) manner... he's telling stories around a campfire, bad puns and rude jokes included.
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Post by Dawnstar on Jan 3, 2021 19:36:27 GMT
I dare to disagree! I for one would miss your quirky, charmingly cynical sense of humour if you were to stop writing on here. And I don't even know you in person. [I'm starting to think I'll have to convince you to change that once we get to a point where the idea of socialising will no longer freak us both out. ] I think I'm more interesting on the internet than in person! I have Asperger's so I'm pretty useless at face-to-face socialising. Don't think that Dawnstar , we would definately have missed you and I'm sure others would have too (although I admit to having similar thoughts too so I sympatheise for how you feel). Read, internet, walk, worry about covid, that sums me up pretty well too. I'm glad to hear I'm not the only one.
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