
Season 17, Episode 41
Loading summary
Sponsor/Advertiser
Get more Nothing Much Happens with bonus episodes, extra long stories and ad free listening, all while supporting the show you love. Subscribe now.
Kathryn Nicolai
Hi, I'm Kathryn Nicolai and if you're looking for something gentle to listen to that isn't news or true crime or self improvement, I made this for you. Stories from the Village of Nothing Much is like easy listening, but for fiction. Cozy, warm, calm stories about ordinary moments that feel a little magical. They're grounding soothing and quietly uplifting without being cheesy, relaxing without putting you to sleep, and just dreamy enough to remind you that there's still sweetness in everyday life, perfect for your commute while you're tidying up or when you want a little escape that feels simple and good. Search for stories from the Village of Nothing Much wherever you listen.
Welcome to Bedtime Stories for Everyone in which Nothing Much Happens. You feel good, and then you fall asleep. I'm Kathryn Nicolai. I write and read all the stories you hear on Nothing Much Happens. Audio engineering is by Bob Wittersheim.
Sponsor/Advertiser
We are bringing you an encore episode
Kathryn Nicolai
tonight, meaning that this story originally aired at some point in the past. It could have been recorded with different equipment in a different location. And since I'm a person and not a computer, I sometimes sound just slightly different. But the stories are always soothing and family friendly and our wishes for you are always deep. Rest, Sweet dreams. I have a tried and true method for sending you off to sleep. A way to engage your mind just enough to shepherd it into a quiet pasture without giving it the zoomies. It uses the ancient technology of storytelling and all you need to do is listen. Follow the sound of my voice and know that this is a form of brain training. If you're new to it, keep coming back. Regular use will improve your response. I'll tell the story twice and I'll go a little slower the second time through. If you wake later in the night, don't hesitate to turn a story back on. Our story tonight is called the Lilac Booth Part 2 and it's a story about a lovely spring day at the farmer's market and the sweet smell of a favorite flower. It's also about street food and sunshine, memories pulled forward by a breath of perfume, crumpled dollar bills and the kind of beauty that can sit on your windowsill.
Sponsor/Advertiser
Did you know that even clear, clean looking tap water can contain contaminants, things like chlorine, lead, and even what are called forever chemicals? And surprisingly, most standard fridge or pitcher filters don't remove many of them. That's why I want to share with you Aquatrue. It's a countertop water purifier that uses a four stage reverse osmosis system to remove up to 84 contaminants including heavy metals, microplastics, and those forever chemicals that can build up over time.
Kathryn Nicolai
And it's simple.
Sponsor/Advertiser
There's no installation. You don't need a plumber, you just set it on your counter and use it. I've been using mine for over a year now and I love it. So if you've ever worried about what's in your drinking water, this is a really easy way to just take that worry off your shoulders. Go to aquatru.com now for 20% off your purifier using promo code Nothing much. Aquatru even comes with a 30 day best tasting water guarantee. That's aquatru.com a q u a t r u.com with promo code Nothing much.
Kathryn Nicolai
Okay, lights out. Set everything down. The stuff in your hands and the stuff on your mind. Set it down. It's okay to take the next watch. Let your body relax into the sheets and feel how good it is to be done with today. Take a deep breath in through your nose. Let it out your mouth. Nice. One more. Breathe in and out. Good. The Lilac Booth Part 2 the market was just starting to get busy and we were ready. I took one more look around to assure myself of that. Yeah, we were ready. I'd been up early, before the dew had dried on the grass or the chill had left the air to clip buckets and buckets full of lilac stems. For today. Me and my small crew of volunteers had snipped for more than an hour but still hadn't emptied the bushes that grew all over the patch of land surrounding my farmhouse. I was glad for that. There were still more sweet smelling, mostly purple blooms for the folks that stopped to pick them in the next week or so before they were gone for another year. I say mostly purple because since I'd become the steward of the lilacs, I'd planted many new varieties, including yellow and rose red ones. We had bright blue and pale pink and stark white flowers. They all carried the signature scent of lilac, which is a deep sweetness like a jasmine dipped in honey, slightly powdery and with just a bit of green and citrus. The van ride on our way to the market had been so fragrant I could still smell the flowers on my skin and sweatshirt. We'd buckled all the pails into the cargo space, settled in around the boxes of donated vases and slowly and carefully bumped our way into town. The Market is a long, low building on the edge of downtown. Half of it is an open air space, banks of wooden stalls with spaces behind them where sellers could pull up and unload their wares. The other half was enclosed, a long wide hall with cracked green tiles on the floor, vendors on either side. Small tables were also set up here and there, tucked in beside the entrance and a few running down the sidewalk for smaller home run businesses and makers. There was a coffee cart in the parking lot, an ice cream truck at the curb, and a few pop up stands selling empanadas and onigiri and flavored iced teas. A woman with a guitar was busking by the row of benches in the sun. We'd been able to get one of the outdoor spots for today and I was glad about it. The air had warmed a good bit since I'd been picking flowers in the early morning, and everyone who passed by looked to be enjoying was like watching a battery charge or a time lapse video of a plant after it's been watered. Faces spread with smiles. People took deep breaths and shrugged out of their sweaters and tied them around their waists. They lifted their faces to the light and weight seemed to lift from their shoulders. I liked looking out at them as I arranged lilacs into vases. We thought about just wrapping the bouquets in newspaper, tying them with ribbon, but we guessed many of the flowers sold would be gifted, and handing someone a bouquet that needs to be recut and arranged is a bit like gifting someone a chore. In our vases. They would be ready to set on any table or windowsill just as they were. And once I put the word out that I was looking for donated vases, lots of folks turned out to have way more than we could use, so we hadn't needed to spend a cent to upgrade our blooms. For our customers. We'd prepared a few dozen vases and set them out in rows and bunches in our booth. My helpers were ready with change in their aprons and soon we had our first customers, people who were drawn by the scent. You could see their faces change as they breathed in the scent, the way they were transported instantly to some other time and place by the perfume. Many told us of the lilac tree they'd had in their backyard growing up, or how it was their aunt's favorite flower, how those memories had come rushing back with one breath of this scent. It was something I'd heard so many times and knew myself to be true by Midday we were down to our last three buckets of blooms, and I was putting together vases of them as fast as I could. We told customers about my farmhouse in the country, surrounded by lilac bushes in every direction, how I'd been a lilac thief but was now reformed, how the money we were raising today would help the monarch habitat across from the elementary school. A few people had been to the farm before, had seen the signs encouraging them to stop and take home a few stems, but there were plenty who had never smelled a lilac, and I hoped we were creating a memory for them that they could return to. Many times I swapped jobs with an hour to go and let someone else handle bundling the stems. I wrapped one of the aprons around me, noticing that we had indeed raised a good bit of cash already. As I walked around to the front of the booth to appreciate this little dream that I had brought to life, I noticed a little girl, 10 or 11, digging in her pockets for crumpled up dollar bills. She was counting them out and looking at the vases, trying to decide if she had enough for the big one in the center of the table. I called out to the volunteer behind the booth that since it was almost the end of the day, we should put everything on sale for half off. She looked down at the little girl and nodded at me with a wink. Good call, boss, she said. The girl handed over her dollars and walked out with the largest vase we had. Her arms had barely wrapped around it and her face poked through the stems. I knew she might have bought them to gift to a parent or grandparent, but I sort of hoped they were all for her, that she would set them on her bedside table and that the perfume of them would work its way into her dreams as she slept. Yes, it could lead her to a life of crime, a life like my own, the life of a lilac thief. But I thought the world needed more of us, more people driven by a love for beautiful things. The Lilac Booth Part 2 the market was just starting to get busy and we were ready. I took one more look around
Sponsor/Advertiser
to
Kathryn Nicolai
assure myself of that. Yeah, we were ready. I'd been up early, before the dew had dried on the grass or the chill had left the air to clip buckets and buckets full of lilac stems. For today. Me and my small crew of volunteers had snipped for more than an hour but still hadn't emptied the bushes that grew all over the patch of land surrounding my old farmhouse. I was glad for that. There were still more sweet smelling mostly purple blooms for the folks that stopped to pick them in the next week or so before they were gone for another year. I say mostly purple because since I'd become the steward of the lilacs, I'd planted many new varieties, including yellow and rose red ones. We had bright blue and pale pink and stark white flowers. They all carried the signature scent of lilac, which was a deep sweetness like a jasmine dipped in honey, slightly powdery and with just a bit of green and citrus. The van ride on our way to the market had been so fragrant I could still smell the flowers on my skin and sweatshirt. We'd buckled all the pails into our cargo space, settled in around the boxes of donated vases, and slowly and carefully bumped our way into town. The market is a long, low building on the edge of downtown. Half of it is an open air space, banks of wooden stalls with spaces behind them where sellers could pull up and unload their wares. The other half was enclosed, a long wide hall with cracked green tiles on the floor and vendors on either side. Small tables were also set up here and there, tucked in beside the entrance and a few running down the sidewalk for smaller home run businesses and makers. There was a coffee cart in the parking lot, an ice cream truck at the curb, and a few pop up stands selling empanadas and onigiri and flavored iced teas. A woman with a guitar was busking by the row of benches in the sun. We'd been able to get one of the outdoor spots for today and I was glad about it. The air had warmed a good bit since I'd been picking flowers in the early morning and everyone who passed by looked to be enjoying was like watching a battery charge or a time lapse video of a plant after it's been watered. Faces spread with smiles. People took deep breaths and shrugged out of their sweaters and tied them around their waists. They lifted their faces to the light and weight seemed to lift from their shoulders. I liked looking out at them as I arranged lilacs into vases. We thought about just wrapping the bouquets in newspaper, tying them with ribbon, but we guessed many of the flowers we sold would be gifted, and handing someone a bouquet that needs to be recut and arranged is a bit like gifting someone a chore in our vases. They would be ready to set on any table or windowsill just as they were, and once I put the word out that I was looking for donated vases, lots of folks turned out to have way more than they could use, so we hadn't needed to spend a cent to upgrade our blooms for our customers. We'd prepared a few dozen vases and set them out in rows and bunches in our booth. My helpers were ready with change in their aprons, and soon we had our first customers, people who were drawn by the smell. You could see their faces change as they breathed in the scent, the way they were transported instantly to some other time and place by the perfume. Many told us of the lilac tree they'd had in their backyard growing up, or how this was their aunt's favorite flower, how those memories had come rushing back with one breath of this scent. It was something I'd heard so many times and knew myself to be true. By midday we were down to our last three buckets of blooms, and I was putting together vases of them as fast as I could. We told customers about my farmhouse in the country, surrounded by lilac bushes in every direction, how I'd been a lilac thief but was now reformed, how the money we were raising today would help the monarch habitat across from the elementary school. A few people had been to the farm before, had seen the signs encouraging them to stop and take home a few stems, but there were plenty who never smelled a lilac. I hoped we were creating a memory for them that they could return to. Many times. I swapped jobs with an hour to go and let someone else handle bundling the stems. I wrapped one of the aprons around me, noticing that we had indeed raised a good bit of cash already. As I walked around to the front of the booth to appreciate this dream that I had brought to life, I noticed a little girl, 10 or 11, digging in her pockets for crumpled up dollar bill. She was counting them out and looking at the vases, trying to decide if she had enough for the big one in the center of the table. I called out to the volunteer behind the booth, but since it was almost the end of the day, we should put everything on sale for half off. She looked down at the little girl and nodded at me with a wink. Good call, boss, she said. The girl handed over her dollars and walked out with the largest vase we had. Her arms had barely wrapped around it and her face poked through the stems. I knew she might have bought them to gift a parent or grandparent, but I sort of hoped they were all for her, that she would set them on her bedside table and that the perfume of them would work its way into her dreams as she slept. Yes, it could lead her to a life of crime. A life like my own. The life of a lilac thief. But I thought the world needed more of us. More people driven by a love for beautiful things. Sweet dreams.
Episode: The Lilac Booth, Part 2 (Encore)
Date: May 21, 2026
Host & Storyteller: Kathryn Nicolai
This episode, “The Lilac Booth, Part 2 (Encore),” gently guides listeners into calmness and sleep through a soothing bedtime story set at a springtime farmer’s market. Kathryn Nicolai narrates a peaceful, everyday tale focused on the magic of ordinary pleasures—fragrant lilacs, acts of kindness, nostalgic memories, and the joy of community. Told twice (with the second reading slower to encourage rest), the story is designed to anchor the listener’s mind, soothe anxieties, and invite sleep.
“The Lilac Booth, Part 2 (Encore)” is a perfect example of why Nothing Much Happens is so beloved: Kathryn Nicolai crafts a small, tender story set at a bustling spring market where the magic is in the everyday. Through fragrant lilacs, simple acts of generosity, and sensory-rich storytelling, listeners are encouraged to slow down, return to gentle memories, and find rest. The repetition further anchors the listener in calm, making this a soft ritual for both sleep and solace.