ICED tips : ICED hibiscus date tea

If you’re like me, you like your liquids. They’re hot, iced, and everything between. Savory or sweet. Caffeine, cocoa, cinnamon, cider, mulled, cream, alcoholic, grassy, fruity, tropical. And then there’s tea. Tea is water boiled in the good essences of organic matter like leaves, bark, roots, fruits, you name it. The beauty of tea is that there is no end to the possibilities. Even before the world closed, finding good affordable tea wasn’t easy. Artisanal was expensive, and many were sugary or bland. I lost interest when hype flooded the drink market.

Who knew literally boiling water and adding some stuff you have around the house would yield satisfying results ? Here is one I really came to love: Iced hibiscus date tea.

    1. boil for 15 minutes:
      hibiscus (1-2 tea bag)
      ginger (1/3 cup matchsticks)
      2 lemons
      2 banana peels (cleaned with baking soda, organic)
      1 banana flesh
      dried asian dates (5-8)
    2. agave syrup (to taste)
    3. use a frozen drink to cool down the hot liquid without diluting it
    4. add ice
    5. Sip and
    6. Enjoy
    7. Under
    8. The
    9. Balmy
    10. Festival
    11. Solstice
    12. Light
    13. tip: freeze unused bananas, extra lemons, and ginger for easy tea making

Get 17 laughs a day : A-musing on sardonic and humors

a musing on humor

laughter comes from a place deeply human, so they say.

for example, the Ancient Greek and Roman physicians believed the 4 humors- bodily fluid type yuckies- affected human health and disposition. there were only 4 of them: choleric, melancholic, sanguine, phlegmatic–and they were tied to seasons or elements, similar to Indian Ayurveda medicine doṣas, (pañca-bhūta): earth, water, fire, air, (and space).

They typology is as follows:

  • Blood (sanguis) → associated with air, spring, and a cheerful temperament (sanguine).

  • Phlegm (phlegma) → linked to water, winter, and a calm, sluggish temperament (phlegmatic).

  • Yellow bile (choler) → tied to fire, summer, and an irritable, aggressive temperament (choleric).

  • Black bile (melaina chole) → connected with earth, autumn, and a melancholic, depressive temperament (melancholic).

Greek Medicine: GREEK MEDICINE AND CHINESE MEDICINE

But what do the humors have to do with ha-ha humor?

I first became interested in the forms of humor like sarcasm and parody in 90s TV shows and literature, wondering how we humans developed a sense of humor. it’s a very subjective and human / biological activity– like crying or compassion, but I find it more elusive than other emotions. just as diverse as our personalities, what we find funny differs- from farts, Ren and Stimpy, to Mr. Bean and cats.

but do we only laugh because something is ha ha funny? no. 

because after some click-clacking, i found sardonic as a form of humor that comes from the Greek “sardónios, refering to someone curling their lips at danger, laughing in its face. 

from wikipedia: “a sardonic action is one that is ‘disdainfully or skeptically humorous’. a form of wit or humour, being sardonic often involves expressing an uncomfortable truth in a clever and not necessarily malicious way, commonly with a degree of cynicism.[3]”

an uncomfortable truth you say? So one has to be devoid of humor to face a truth but at the same time hold an incredulous expression to convey the inhumanity of it all?

furthermore look at this grim and dark origin of sardonic: “among the very ancient people of sardinia… it was customary to kill old people. while killing their old people, the sardi laughed loudly. this is the origin of notorious sardonic laughter (eugen fehrle, 1930).”

violence is a natural response to structural oppression of many forms. language, cultural, social, political, institutional, but killing our elderly? what could be the reason for this? is it an act of mercy knowing that the end of one’s material existence should be relieved of suffering and indignity? one could not mercy kill without having an incongruent reaction to it, like laughing. this idea is supported by the following:

  • “laughter accompanies the passage from death to life; it creates life and accompanies birth. consequently, laughter… nullifies murder as such, and is an act of piety that transforms death into a new life.”

from the author of dune: “the person who experiences greatness must have a feeling for the myth she is in. And she must have a strong sense of the sardonic. This is what uncouples her from belief in her own pretensions. The sardonic is all that permits her to move within herself. Without this quality, even occasional greatness will destroy a human.”

So the sardonic helps ground people and prevents them from abstraction and inhumanity. laughter is guttural: irrational, physiological, and VERY HUMAN.

Laughter is also social. According to the following source, we might laugh when there is “shared relief at the passing of danger. And since the relaxation that results from a bout of laughter inhibits the biological fight-or-flight response, laughter may indicate trust in one’s companions.” (https://science.howstuffworks.com/life/inside-the-mind/emotions/laughter.htm)

“Provine has also noted that laughter is highly behaviorally contagious…like yawning, contagious laughter is modified by social factors.”

Laughter as catharsis:

There is a link between laughter with better pain tolerance. In an experiment those who induced / forced  laughter had a drop in blood pressure and cortisol levels in comparison to those who did not simulate laughter.

All of this supports the argument that laughter and humor are complicated emotions that can relieve as much as it can reveal what lurks in the dark (in order to relinquish it). 

So ask yourselfif the average adult laughs 17 times a day, are you getting your daily dose of laughter? 

z. Find more opportunities for laughter  surround yourself with funny people or places (see t. grandmas below)
y. Induce or simulate laughter even if nothing is externally funnytrick your brain
x. diversify your humorweird/absurd humor > 20%  
random or joyful laughter > 50% 
sarcastic/self sabotaging < 10%
animals = 100%
w. eat something beyond your spice tolerancecry if you can’t laugh
v. consider being alien, other, or animalif you aren’t already
u. let your own sense of humor driveeven if its bad; especially if its bad
t. hang out with some grandmasthey gave birth to the jokers




Pro Tip: Throw a Tantrum (how to get relief when you’re overwhelmed)

1: It was always you

Family, friends, community — they’ve been there at times, and completely absent at others. Your mom nursing your flu, your dad explaining the same math problem for the fifth time, your brother laughing after you tumbled from the tree, fracturing a foot. There were the friends who waded with you through awkward growing pains and heartbreaks– who you could laugh with years later.

School was to glide us into work, life, and the trimmings of adulthood. When that didn’t quite happen — and the inherited world clashed with our lived reality — who carried you through the confusion?

You.

It was always you. The “support network” was training wheels, sometimes swapped for another set on a fancier vehicle.

Relationships matter — they keep us from becoming an echo chamber. But there’s a point of diminishing returns when social exchanges become wholly transactional or obligatory… it’s time to move on or take a break. We require self-preservation, especially if we were the responsible one, a parentified child, running interference to keep peace.

Unfortunately, the most in need of self-awareness are ones pushing uninformed agendas. So if it’s always been you, then what’s your obligation? To carry yourself when no one else can. Sometimes that means retreating.

A: Permission to retreat; throw a tantrum

The polemics and lightning polarization in today’s world make the sentiment of a tantrum unsavory. The “tantrum” here is inward-facing, not outward-destructive. If you had to keep your composure while people around you do un-people things, you deserve space and time for letting go.

Retreat, decelerate, and when you hit zero, see what’s left: tired, sore, sad, pissed? Do what you need to recoup — even if it means throwing a tantrum with admission for one. Think about it like a complete acceptance of all the debase emotions we are told to keep under a rock.

Contemporary society issues adults a behavioral script expecting stoicism and discouraging engagement with so-called “inferior” emotional states. These would be: bitterness, anger, resentment, melancholy, envy, fear, shame, self-pity, loneliness, despair, frustration, etc. They are socially coded as unproductive, unattractive, and regressive, even though they’re just as biologically hardwired and meaningful as joy, love, or excitement.
So suppressing natural affective responses — some of which may present as petulant or deflective — we risk long-term emotional ossification. This has demonstrably backfired.

How many people do you know who never nurture their inner child, live it shamelessly in public?

B. Methods of tantrum/self-indulgence

Toddlers are well documented for their sophisticated tantrums, directed outward for attention. Adults, however, rarely deploy such techniques for personal welfare. Bask in glorified self indulgence because who will do it for you if not yourself?

Personally, I conduct a full-day incommunicado: digital blackout, emptying of emotional receptacles while performing floor-based kinesthetic movements, such as rug angels. Whatever your method, make it 100%. Pay attention to every feeling on the “feelings spectrum” and tantrum responsibly. For example, anger points to boundaries crossed. Envy reveals what we secretly desire. Shame shows us where we’ve confused mistakes with identity. Melancholy and grief remind us of what we’ve loved.

Let them breathe responsibly without weaponizing them at others, and they become signals, stepping stones for a decluttered forward path.

So call it whatever you want. Let you reclaim yourself. It’s always been you, and it still is.

-Noon Mul 😉