Could we maybe have something like Advent two or three times a year?

It’s anticipated, not because of the chocolate.

Not only.

Well, there is something about opening a cardboard door first thing in the morning and behind it to find a piece of chocolate that tastes extremely simple but is shaped like a bell, angel or star thanks to plastic molding.

But that's not really the point. As well as. Who does not have the super deluxe perfume tasting advent calendar for "her" or the calendar with 24 miniature wine bottles (for whoever), not the dog treats that look like shrink-wrapped hors d'oeuvres for dogs or something else, but the good old ones “Cardboard door calendar, filled”, calculated on 24 doors, comes to just 3.125 grams of milk chocolate per day. Karius and Baktus don't even begin to drill. A calendar with pious and happy pictures behind the flaps offers even more health. For less than one euro in a normal supermarket, we get a joyful reason every day to get up in the dark and somehow start the day sensibly.The children see it that way too - because sooner and more punctually than on the 24 days leading up to Christmas they simply don't jump out of bed.

Thanks to the advent calendar.

We'd have to talk about the décor of the one-euro splendor once in a while, this grinning Santa Claus with all the blond, curly-haired children around the bulging sack is a horror for traditionalists in particular - and it certainly doesn't fit everyone else.

Whatever goes well is chocolate.

And a countdown window.

21 days left, three more.

.

.

That would be nice, shall we say, in June and March.