Hygge

Hygge

Hygge is a core element of Danish culture. Essentially, it means a A warm and welcoming atmosphere where one can enjoy life together with other people.

Hygge is a time for gathering in the late afternoon with family, friends, work teams, and acquaintances, enjoying delicious food, and exchanging ideas in a humorous and mutually beneficial way. The focus is entirely on what truly matters and not on destructive actions or unpleasant character traits one might have encountered in someone.

The GRATITUDE for the ability to perceive life in its essence And to celebrate it in varying intensities (quietly, loudly, saltily, sweetly, for a long time, briefly, etc.), this communal art is like a warm flame that a gust of wind could suddenly extinguish, but which burns beautifully at the center of a circle of people. Regularly celebrating hygge, aligning ourselves daily with the power of goodness, is like regularly reflecting on inner and outer nature. This nature, however, is not tangible, but rather the alchemical energy of the dissolving and binding of the elements. This nature is indestructible, for it is the ceaseless change fueled by the interplay of the elements.

Of course, we can also celebrate hygge and gratitude alone in the quiet of our own room and revel in the connection to ourselves. Being able to linger in a quiet atmosphere of gratitude is very precious and the foundation for creating healing spaces of reflection when the outside world demands and emotionally triggers us in everyday life. But what is it that is sometimes challenged IN EVERYDAY LIFE? Our attachments to habits and behavioral patterns, which may have formed over a long period of time, are triggered.

If we remain individually adaptable, then we as a COLLECTIVE can also adapt and develop in line with the current zeitgeist.

LIFE IS CHANGE AND WE ARE IN RELATIONSHIP WITH THE WORLD FOR THE CULTURE OF CHANGE.

We are always simultaneously in a multifaceted relationship with our body, our mind, our soul, our (chosen) family, with people and humanity, with the animal kingdom, the plant world, and the mineral cosmos. The sum or the wondrous interplay of all these relationships is what Peruvian cosmology calls PACHAMAMA.

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