February 25, 2023 – March 5, 2023
~ Uitwaaien ~
[out-vahyn] (Dutch) (v.) to take a break to clear oneâs head; âto walk in the windâ
successful red eye
across the pond last night // head is already much clearer







February 26, 2023
Geld moet rollen ![]()












Written March 3, 2023
âDenk aan al het mooie wat er in jezelf en om je heen groeit en wees gelukkig.” – Anne Frank
I havenât comprehended that we walked behind the bookcase today into their secret annex. Or that my Oma is the same age as Anneâs older sister, Margot. I think Iâll need to sit with that a while longer.
For now, feeling immensely fortunate ![]()
















Written March 4, 2023
Verandering van spijs doet eten ![]()
Translates to âA change in food makes one eat!â
A Dutch saying meaning itâs good to change things up once in a while to keep things interesting ![]()












Written March 5, 2023
âWere she better, or you sicker, then the stars would not be so terribly crossed, but it is the nature of stars to cross, and never was Shakespeare more wrong than when he had Cassius note, âThe fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars / But in ourselves.ââ

The Fault in our Stars (Book by John Green)
Below are comments from my original post:
I did some research and read it many times over and I think I decided I like it. The significance here is this quote is from the book A Fault in Our Stars by John Green and this bench is in a scene from the movie. Specifically, where one character tells the other theyâve had a PET scan and it is positive for cancer, again (they met in a cancer support group). So, they knew their stars were crossed (fate was messy) from the start because they met under the pretenses of being sick. The Shakespeare quote they reference is slightly contradictory and therefore, I think, so elegant, because he says the fault is not in fate (our stars) but in ourselves for not acting in the best way we know how. Then the end of the original quote says âwe are underlingsâ meaning, I think, he recognizes we are underneath heaven/underneath a higher being, but that still doesnât mean we canât take some of the fault for the direction our lives are going. So, in the book A Fault In Our Stars, they meet with their faults of having cancer and their stars pointing towards a premature death, yet they take it upon themselves to ignore the stars, fall in love, travel to Amsterdam, and so on. With my scan coming up soon it feels like a really beautiful reminderÂ
 In this line, however, theyâre pointing out that they feel the fault is with the stars, because itâs very unfair and random to have cancer! Both can be true, I think. We can shout at the Heavens, and look inwardly all in the same breath.
If you want more context about the Shakespeare quote, itâs from his play The Tragedy of Julius Caesar. Cassius is hoping to call Brutus to action to overthrow Caesar – noting their fate doesnât have to be in the stars – it doesnât have to be inevitable that he rises to power, the fault or responsibility can lie in ourselves.

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