The Magic of Ordinary Days
Celebrating small joys and everyday moments during the holiday season
There’s a special kind of time that arrives after Christmas. The presents are unwrapped, the big meals are behind us, and the sparkle of Christmas Day itself has settled into memory. What remains is a slower, gentler week — those in-between days from December 26th until the new year begins.
These days are often my favourite of the whole season.
The Gift of Slowness
December can be busy. The run-up to Christmas is full of concerts, parties, shopping lists, and to-dos. But once the holiday arrives, the pace shifts. School is out, work is quieter, alarms are set aside. We step into a stretch of time that feels softer, slower, almost timeless.
It’s a week where you lose track of the days, where you might ask, “Is it Wednesday? Saturday? Does it even matter?”
This is the gift of slowness — a pause at the end of the year that invites us to simply be.
The Comfort of the Ordinary
What makes these days so magical is not grand adventures or big events. It’s the ordinary things:
- Watching nostalgic films under a blanket.
- Reading the books received as gifts.
- Making endless cups of tea and finishing off the tin of biscuits.
- Sitting by the fire, chatting, playing board games.
- Taking slow walks in the crisp air, cheeks pink from the cold.
- Popping out for a coffee or a simple lunch, just for the treat of it.
They’re ordinary moments — but in this week, they shimmer with something extra. Perhaps because, for once, there is no rush. Nothing urgent. No school runs, no meetings, no deadlines. Just time to savour.
A Family Rhythm
In our house, these days are often spent lounging in pyjamas longer than usual, dipping in and out of films, nibbling leftovers, and enjoying the gifts we were given. The days have their own rhythm: slow mornings, cosy afternoons, evenings that stretch gently into night.
Sometimes we go for a walk on the beach, the cold wind in our faces, then come home to something warm simmering on the stove. Other times we stay in, light the fire, and let the hours drift by.
It’s nothing extraordinary. But it feels extraordinary because of the togetherness, the permission to rest, the absence of hurry.
Why These Days Matter
These ordinary days remind us that life doesn’t need to be full of events to be meaningful. Joy can be found in the simplest things when we have the time to notice them.
They’re also a reminder that rest is part of the season. That after the flurry of December, we are meant to exhale. That before we launch into the new year, it’s good to pause, to gather ourselves, to simply enjoy the moment we’re in.
An Invitation
As you move through the days between Christmas and New Year, I encourage you to notice the ordinary joys: the comfort of a blanket, the warmth of a cup of tea, the sound of laughter in the kitchen. Don’t feel you need to fill every day with outings or plans. Let the days unfold.
You might just find, as I have, that these are the most magical days of all.
The lights may dim, the carols may fade, but the magic of Christmas lingers — not in the grandeur of the day itself, but in the quiet days that follow. These are the days when we remember what matters most: being together, being present, being content in the ordinary.
“The magic of the season is often found not in the grand gestures, but in the simple, ordinary days when we finally have time to notice them.”
Chat soon,
Ciara x
📖 Winter Reading & Seasonal Inspiration
If you’re drawn to the quieter, slower rhythms of the colder months, these are some of the books I return to again and again during winter. They explore themes of seasonal living, rest, reflection, hygge, and finding joy in simpler days. I’ll leave the links below if you’d like to explore any of them further.
Some of the links below are affiliate links, which means I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. Thank you for supporting my work.
📚 Winter & Seasonal Reading
- The Christmas Chronicles – Nigel Slater
- The Almanac: A Seasonal Guide to 2026 – Lia Leendertz
- The Joy of Wintering – Erin Niimi Longhurst
- How to Winter – Kari Leibowitz
- Calm Christmas and a Happy New Year – Beth Kempton
- My Hygge Home – Meik Wiking
- The Art of Danish Living – Meik Wiking
- The Little Book of Hygge – Meik Wiking
- The Little Book of Lykke – Meik Wiking
- Wintering – Katherine May
- The Self-Care Year – Alison Davies
- The Happiness Year – Tara Ward
- The Wheel of the Year – Fiona Cook & Jessica Roux


