FOR 10 blissfully slow-moving days, I have been living my life in a parallel universe. Normally I am habitually just on the unhealthy side of stressed out, I choose to do one more task than I can comfortably fit into my day and I depart point A five minutes too late to arrive at point B when I ought to.
I suck at being slow ... unless it's slow cooking, which when you boil it down (please pause to admire that awfully clever pun) is just a fashionable way to describe the trend of eating stew every day because it's easy.
So thanks, Queenstown. I love you, Wanaka. Your craggy peaks and deep, soulful blue lakes have forced me to sit still and just be. Be wowed. Be stilled. Be slowed. If there is one thing that makes my heart sing, it is watching the low, seductive light of early evening slide across the landscape.
But because this happens beyond suburbia and at a time when I'm more likely to be found parked in front of a high chair talking up broccoli, I seldom get to indulge this pleasure.
But among the Central Otago mountains it is impossible to miss Mother Nature's light show.