Nothing much happens: bedtime stories to help you sleep - Out of the Cold
Episode Date: December 2, 2024Our story tonight is called Out of the Cold, and it’s a story about a windy day and aplace to warm up. It’s also about pine boughs and and open wrought iron gate, smokerising from a chimney in the... distance, a black cat, cookies and tea, and the good feeling of stepping into the warmth with a friend. We give to a different charity each week and this week we are giving to HowellNature Center. They pride themselves in being a second home to any person who wants to Heal, Grow, and Be Wild in nature. howellnaturecenter.org/donate/ Preorder your own NMH weighted pillow now! shop.nothingmuchhappens.com/Subscribe for ad-free, bonus and extra long episodes now, as well as ad-free andearly episodes of Stories from the Village of Nothing Much! Search for NMH Premiumchannel on Apple podcast or follow the link below nothingmuchhappens.com/premium-subscription Listen to our new show Stories from the Village of Nothing Much on your favoritepodcast app. nothingmuchhappens.com/stories-from-the-village Join us tomorrow morning for a meditation at nothingmuchhappens.com/first-this Save over $100 on Kathryn’s hand-selected wind-down favorites 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-OnPurchase Our Book: https://bit.ly/Nothing-Much-HappensSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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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 Nicolai.
I read and write all the stories you hear and nothing much happens.
Audio Engineering is by Bob Wittersheim.
We give to a different charity each week.
On this week, we're giving to Howell Nature Center. They pride themselves in being a second home to any person who wants to heal,
grow, and be wild in nature. You can learn more at the link in our show notes.
Before we dig in tonight, I just want to share something with you. I hear from so many folks who are feeling anxious
and I want to give you all the tools I can to help.
We have this show as well as our daytime version.
We have our guided meditation show.
All of those are linked in our notes. And
now we've added one more soothing aid to our offerings. It's a weighted pillow designed
to rest on your chest, your lap, or be hugged close to provide a comforting,
grounded sensation to help you relax.
It uses deep pressure stimulation
that encourages your body to release natural calming hormones
while lowering stress hormones.
I use one when I record. I have it right now
on my lap. So if you need extra help these days, I recommend it. You can order it now
through the link in our notes. thoughts. Now, I have a story to tell you. And just by listening, we'll shift your brain
from default mode, where it can wander endlessly, to task positive mode, where sleep is natural and accessible, and all you have to do is listen.
I'll tell the story twice, and I'll go a little slower the second time through.
If you wake later in the night, often just thinking back through any part of the story that you can remember, or replaying
a sweet memory will put you right back to sleep.
But if it doesn't, don't hesitate to turn an episode back on.
This is a kind of brain training, and it takes some time to build up the response you want.
Our story tonight is called Out of the Cold, and it's a story about a windy day and a place to warm up. It's also about pine boughs, an open, wrought iron gate,
smoke rising from a chimney in the distance,
a black cat, cookies and tea,
and the good feeling of stepping into the warmth
with a friend.
of stepping into the warmth with a friend.
So switch off your light, slip down under your blankets
and get as comfortable as you can.
Take a deep breath in through your nose
and sigh from your mouth.
Again, breathe in and out.
Good. Out of the cold.
I was bundled up, but the wind was blowing this morning.
I'd heard it blow all night as I was tucked into my bed, my thick old quilt pressing me down
into my mattress.
You know that feeling when you are very glad and grateful to be safe and warm inside your house.
When your bed feels like a dog wagging his tail.
And the sound of the wind had only helped.
Each time I'd come close to waking, the whistle of it, through the eaves of my old farmhouse, had sent me right back down
into my dreams. But today, even though I was properly bundled up against it. It was making my morning walk a bit colder than I'd expected. At least
the sun was out, bright and golden, reflecting on the thick frost in the fields. I was tromping down the dirt road, breathing the cold morning
air through a layer of crocheted cotton, my warmest winter scarf. And I could smell only the absence of scent, just as snow muffles sound, the cold muffles
aroma. The landscape rolled out in front of me, moaned down fields, dotted with barns and farmhouses.
A frozen over pond where two mallards waddled on the surface. Even when it is cold, something about a morning walk always sweetens my day.
It's like setting a table with your favorite dish and mug.
Every bite tastes a bit better.
So I kept going, past the crossroads, past the shuttered farm stand where I bought tomatoes
and sunflowers in the summer, and past the giant willow which caused the whole road to jog a bit to the right, then
correct to the left.
I appreciated that little divergence from the straight and narrow. Glad that rather than cutting a tree down, someone
a hundred years ago had just adjusted their path. I came to a long drive at the edge of the road and noticed that the evergreen garlands
were up at the entrance to the inn.
The drive was framed by a tall iron gate which always sat open. And on either side were regal stone plinths topped with
giant urns. In the summer they overflowed with vines and flowers, but now were stuffed with pine boughs and holly branches and strung with
lights. The innkeeper had been busy. I crossed the road, eager to see how far the decorations extended, and saw the whole drive was lined with garlands
and velvety red bows. In the bright daylight, I couldn't see any lights on the inn itself,
couldn't see any lights on the inn itself, but I knew they were there and looked forward to driving bit of smoke rising out of the chimney and decided
to drop in and see how she, the innkeeper, was doing. The inn closed for the season each autumn, and though there had been a big Halloween
party, it had otherwise been very quiet over here. They would open again at the end of the year for the holidays, be booked with guests over
Christmas and New Year's, and knew that it worked well for
all of them, this rhythm of on again, off again.
I hoped a visit would be welcome, and not an interruption of her solitude.
The inn sat on a large plot of land
and the drive curved first one way and then the other,
showing off the gardens and tall trees.
I noticed bird feeders hung in branches
and guessed this was one of the ways
she kept busy over the winter.
Hospitality must be built into her bones.
When her guests were gone, she took care of the birds.
As I got closer, I started to glimpse the lake
out past the house.
While the pond I'd spotted earlier was frozen over,
the lake was too big for that this early in the season. There was a rim of white at its edge,
at its edge, but the water was still moving, whipped up a bit by the wind and sparkling like diamonds in the sun. The row of trees along one side of the house looked strange without their hammocks.
Though I'd been there myself
to help her put them away in September,
Chef's garden was tilled over.
Only a few of the last hardy stems of kale and cabbage, still glinting with frost.
I could hear music playing as I crossed the circle drive, where guests unloaded their
cars and stepped to the front door. That usually meant she was cleaning.
And when I pressed the doorbell and heard the her head out into the hall, a scarf tied over her hair,
and a feather duster in her hand.
Sycamore, her black cat, shot down the long hall and bounced around the foyer like a pinball. He was obviously
excited to see a guest. I pulled my scarf down and waved a mittened hand, and she smiled as she recognized me and rushed forward to open the door.
Come in out of the cold, she urged and ushered me through the entryway.
I hope you don't mind an impromptu visit," I said, as I unwound my scarf and pulled off my hat.
The inn was cozy and warm, and I could smell wood polish and breakfast tea and lemon.
and breakfast tea and lemon. No, I'm so glad you stopped by. I've got the kettle on.
And Si wants a break anyway, she laughed.
I followed her down the hall to the library where a fire was going in the grate and the
just finished record was spinning on the turntable.
I stepped over to the window seat as she fixed a cup of tea for me, and looked out past the yard and down to the lake.
Sycamore jumped up onto the seat and rubbed his head against my hand. I scratched between his ears and down his back.
It would be another long windy walk back home, but I was so glad to stop in and see these friends, to be asked in out of the cold,
to sit by the fire with tea and windmill cookies,
and stories to catch up on.
Out of the cold.
of the cold. I was bundled up, but the wind was blowing this morning. I'd heard it blow was tucked into my bed, my thick old quilt pressing me down into my mattress. You know that feeling when you are very glad and grateful to be safe and warm inside your house.
When your bed feels like a sanctuary
and you can sense sleep about to pull you down
and you rub your feet together like a dog wagging his tail.
And the sound of the wind had only helped each time I'd come close to waking. The whistle of it, through the eaves of my old farmhouse, had
sent me right back down into my dreams. But today, even though I was properly bundled up against it. It was making my morning walk a bit colder
than I'd expected. At least the sun was out, bright and golden, reflecting on the thick frost in the fields.
I was tromping down the dirt road, breathing the cold morning air through a layer of crocheted cotton, my warmest winter scarf.
And I could smell, hmm, the cold muffles aroma.
The landscape rolled in front of me, mown down fields, dotted with barns and farmhouses. A frozen over pond where two mallards waddled on the
surface. But even when it's cold, something about a morning walk always sweetens my day.
It's like setting a table with your favorite dish and mug.
Every bite tastes a bit better. So I kept going, past the crossroads, past the shuttered farm
stand where I bought tomatoes and sunflowers in the summer, and passed the giant willow, which caused the whole road to jog a bit to the right
and then correct to the left. I appreciated that little divergence from the straight and narrow.
Glad that rather than cutting down a tree, someone a hundred years ago had just adjusted
their path. I came to a long drive at the edge of the road
and noticed that the evergreen garlands were up at the entrance to the inn.
entrance to the inn. The drive was framed by a tall iron gate, which always sat open, regal stone plinths topped with giant urns.
In the summer, they overflowed with vines and flowers,
but now were stuffed with pine boughs and holly branches
and strung with lights.
The innkeeper had been busy.
I crossed the road, eager to see how far
the decorations extended, and saw the whole drive was lined with garlands and velvety
red bows. In the bright daylight, I couldn't see any lights on the inn itself, but I knew they were there and looked forward to driving past
it all season, seeing the roofline and the windows framed with light. I squinted to look closer and saw a bit of smoke rising out of the chimney and
decided to drop in and see how she, the innkeeper, was doing.
The inn closed for the season each autumn. And though there had been a big Halloween It had otherwise been very quiet over here.
They would open again at the end of the year for the holidays, be booked with guests over over Christmas and New Year's,
and then spend another couple of months empty and hushed.
As a neighbor, I'd known her and the staff for years
and knew that it worked well for all of them. This rhythm of on again,
off again. I hoped a visit would be welcome, and not an interruption of her solitude.
The inn sat on a large plot of land, and the drive curved first one way and then the other, showing off the gardens and tall trees. I noticed bird feeders hung in branches,
and guessed this was one of the ways she kept busy over the winter. Hospitality must be built into her bones.
When her guests were gone, she started to glimpse the lake out past the house.
While the pond I'd spotted earlier had been frozen over, the lake was too big for that this early in the season.
There was a rim of white at its edge, though.
The water was still moving, whipped up a bit by the wind, and sparkling like diamonds in the sun.
The row of trees along one side of the house looked strange without their hammocks, though I'd been here myself to help her put them away in September.
Chef's garden was tilled over, only a few hardy stems of kale and cabbage, still glinting with frost.
I could hear music playing as I crossed the circle drive, where guests unloaded their
cars and stepped to the front door.
Music usually meant she was cleaning.
And when I pressed the doorbell
and heard the chimes ringing through the giant old place,
ringing through the giant old place. I wasn't surprised to see her poke her head out into the hall, a scarf over her hair, and a feather duster in her hand.
Sycamore, her black cat, shot down the hall and bounced around the foyer like a pinball.
He was obviously excited to see a guest. I pulled my scarf down and waved a mittened
hand. And she smiled as she recognized me and rushed forward to open the door.
Come in, out of the cold, she urged, and ushered me through the entryway. mind an impromptu visit," I said as I unwound my scarf and pulled off my hat.
The inn was cozy and warm, and I could smell wood polish and breakfast tea, and lemon.
No, I'm so glad you stopped by.
I've got the kettle on, and Si wants a break anyway.
I followed her down the hall,
to the library, where a fire was going in the grate and a just finished
record was spinning on the turntable. I stepped over to the window seat as she fixed a cup of tea for me and looked out past the
yard and down toward the lake. Sikomor jumped up onto the seat and rubbed his head against my hand. I scratched between on his back. It would be another long windy walk back home.
But I was so glad to stop in and see these friends
to be asked in out of the cold.
To sit by the fire with tea and windmill cookies and stories to catch up on.
Sweet dreams.