[This is a continuation of the author's series on
S is for Savoring
It's no coincidence that I've learned how to meditate while living in New Orleans. Nor is it a coincidence that I've learned about the Slow Food movement and taken up gardening. If my northern family thought I was slow before, they think I'm downright sluggish now, after ten years of New Orleans life. And that's fine with me: living slowly allows me to contentedly follow my own muse, and screw the rest.
People ask how we can deal with the heat down here, and it's simple (but not always easy): slow down. Don't run anywhere; take your time and just relax. Sit and have some water. Take a nap. Watch the sunset. Savor your life before it passes you by.
T is for Traditions
Because we take life so slow around here, we make the time to hold onto our dear traditions. From red beans on Monday to grillades on Sunday, our heritage finds its way into our daily lives. If you take the streetcar downtown, or go to the racetrack on Thanksgiving, or eat king cake on Twelfth Night, or fix black-eyed peas and cabbage for the new year, or go to Galatoire's every Friday, or drive in the Mardi Gras truck parade, or start Jazzfest in the Gospel tent, you know what I mean.
I could go on and on with these standard traditions, but there are plenty of good ones dreamed up by our creative population. Grilling out on the neutral ground for Lundi Gras. Making waffles for brunch on Super Sunday. Spending Halloween in the graveyard. Rereading Gone With the Wind to cope with an Ash Wednesday hangover. If you've got a juicy tradition to share, please leave a comment - you know we New Orleanians are always hungry for new ways to pass a good time!

To add to 
[Recovery Pen is a semi-weekly column which tries to provide a clever take on New Orleans life.]
Over the weekend, I (alone, should there by any inquiries) went to a local university and rummaged through its many dumpsters, braving many a stench, to bring you this report on a ritual known as Hippy Christmas. Although I don't know whether or not the term has its roots in '60s counter-culture or is just an homage to the cheapskate mentality of the namesakes, either way it has become a ritual of modern higher education. 


"New Orleans, how ya sleepin'?" Barrington Levy, the godfather of Jamaican dancehall, called out to us at the House of Blues Wednesday night. Considering the ongoing turmoil of our city, it was a good question. The crowd answered by blowing marijuana smoke up into the air; that night, everyone would sleep just fine.
It's time for the thirteenth Blogging New Orleans
[Recovery Pen sucks the marrow from the bones of New Orleans.]
The weather was perfect, hundreds of people lined the streets, and second-lined through the streets, with the Mardi Gras Indians.
It was like an open-air car show for people who spend A LOT of money on their cars.

It's time for the seventh Blogging New Orleans 






