20061031

Bring that bolt back!

Actually, it occurs to me that I never posted this image in this space. But in any case, here's the backstory for this photo, which I first saw several months ago. The photographer's name is Kane Quinnell.

"The storm looked like it was five to 10 kilometres to the south. I thought it was perfectly safe to be outdoors, taking photos," Quinnell said.

After setting the camera for a four-second exposure, he began shooting pictures, suspecting there was little chance of lightning flashing while the shutter was open.

"I hit the button… and there was nothing. I hit the button again… and nothing. On about the fourth attempt, I hit the button again and I saw this lightning and heard the thunder.

"It was like a crack. The next thing I was about two metres in the air - it scared the hell out of me." Mr. Quinnell estimated the lightning struck about 20 metres away. "I think it hit the house behind me."

Unhurt, but buzzing with adrenaline, he rushed inside to check the photo on his computer.

"I was amazed. It was the first storm picture I had really taken."

brought up from the cellar




20061028

Planetary gearshifting, Part Four:
Mercury and Jupiter in the balance
{Libra, that is}

Mercury Retrograde begins tomorrow, Oct. 29, at 4:16 a.m. KST (which means 3:16 p.m. EDT/12:16 p.m. PDT on Oct. 28). Direct motion will begin again on Nov. 17.

You might (already) find yourself having intense conversations or surprising connections with a partner, spouse, colleauge, relative, or a long-lost (or perhaps long-avoided) person. If you're in the "already happened" category, then it was probably the Moon's transit through Scorpio on Thursday. I feel your pain -- and I'll remind you that there's a point and path to it's manifestation.

Anyhow... right about now, you might also have the beginnings of a bright idea for some new project or a journey to some enticing foreign land. Think twice, think thrice, and then still avoid doing it. Wait until the end of November before you sign the papers, buy the ticket, or book the hotel. Trust me on this -- or ask me to tell you about the fallout from last autumn's MercRet effects (enroute and on the ground between Cairo and Taipei).

Here's another overview of the sit'ation, from Molly's Astrology:

"Confusion, equipment problems, scheduling problems, miscommunications, and inaccuracies are common during Mercury retrograde. [Now is a fine time to backup your files, mp3s, pics, etc. --Ed.] Leave some extra time in your schedule to allow for delays, double-check the details, and get a second opinion in medical matters. As Mercury travels over territory previously visited, it’s a great time for us to review research, notes and projects from the past.

"Mercury will back into the Jupiter-Saturn square from October 29 to November 1. You might be saying the right thing, but at the wrong time. Listen to what others have to say, but you might be better off delaying a final decision until skies clear. Samhain/Halloween should be a doozy this year..."

Also, from the Lunar Planner:

"Mercury and Jupiter conjoin for their second trigger on Oct 30, now while Mercury is retrograde. This conjunction occurs on the cusp of sidereal Libra/Scorpio.

"The opportunity here at cuspal Scorpio centers upon the theme of sacrifice and offerings, but sacrifice does not mean self-sacrifice. In the true sense of the word, it means to give up a lower office for a higher office. When offering up the lesser, we are also faced with taking on a greater responsibility, moving from victim consciousness -- where we acquiesce to the conditions of life in which we find ourselves [caught in the clutches of the Scorpion] -- to taking responsibility for creating our life scenarios and choosing a new path that supports our experiential growth and spiritual maturity...

"The entire Mercury retrograde-Jupiter period provides a wonderful energetic opportunity to re-define and evolve logistical plans that lead to a greater freedom of being for all parties. It is an ideal time for evolving financial and business logistics as well."

To conclude:

"Mercury begins its retrograde on Oct 28 and Neptune returns direct on Oct 29, just before First Quarter Moon... Neptune's direct movement stimulates inspiration to follow our dreams and visions, those that lead to our true nourishment."

Oh! And remember: Mercury will pass in front of the Sun on Nov. 8.




20061027

Meanwhile, on the Bandiagara Escarpment...

I received word of this from the author himself.

The Science of the Dogon: Decoding the African Mystery Tradition, by Laird Scranton. Amazon's description reads: "A look at the close resemblance between the creation and structure of matter in both Dogon mythology and modern science."


"The Dogon people of Mali, West Africa, are famous for their unique art and advanced cosmology. The Dogon’s creation story describes how the one true god, Amma, created all the matter of the universe. Interestingly, the myths that depict his creative efforts bear a striking resemblance to the modern scientific definitions of matter, beginning with the atom and continuing all the way to the vibrating threads of string theory. Furthermore, many of the Dogon words, symbols, and rituals used to describe the structure of matter are quite similar to those found in the myths of ancient Egypt and in the daily rituals of Judaism. For example, the modern scientific depiction of the informed universe as a black hole is identical to Amma’s Egg of the Dogon and the Egyptian Benben Stone.

"The Science of the Dogon offers a case-by-case comparison of Dogon descriptions and drawings to corresponding scientific definitions and diagrams from authors like Stephen Hawking and Brian Greene, then extends this analysis to the counterparts of these symbols in both the ancient Egyptian and Hebrew religions. What is ultimately revealed is the scientific basis for the language of the Egyptian hieroglyphs, which was deliberately encoded to prevent the knowledge of these concepts from falling into the hands of all but the highest members of the Egyptian priesthood..."




20061025

A black-hole boost for Sunday's New Moon

A follow-up to the astronomology post

"Our [Oct. 2006] New Moon, in early sidereal Libra, [though spatially nested in the upper thighs of astronomical Virgo], articulates the theme of mutual support. The thighs, as a body part, correspond to the theme of support: The back of the thighs are past support, the front of the thighs are future support, the outer thighs are external support, and the inner thighs are of intimate support.

"Our New Moon also conjoins Mars, thus engaging the psychophysiological qualities of Mars into our lunar theme. Here the focus is about use of our creative power in the context of participating in mutual support with each other to birth something new in our lives.

"Our Mars New Moon specifically conjoins the Theta Carinae open star cluster, which lies in the very southern constellation, Argo Navis; and also Centaurus X-3, a potent neutron star/black hole.

"The Centaurus X-3 black hole lies exactly on the galactic equator, just above the Theta Carina star cluster of Argo Navis... Cen X-3 contributes significantly to the theme of early sidereal Libra -- accessing galactic evolutionary currents which provide a greater evolutionary context for evolving souls that transcend this mere lifetime. The events occurring here extend far beyond the mere present moment -- stretching through spacetime. Here, we are involved with opening portals in our lives that can change our evolutionary course.

"Cen X-3 provides us the capacity to function from an encompassing transcendent vision and perspective that straddles the present events of the visible world. Here perception embraces far more than the space of any given moment, thus providing us the opportunity to act in the moment with an almost certainty of how the timestream will unfold. It allows us the opportunity to walk away from the mundane, from what is established in our lives, from what seems to make sense to onlookers, and to leap into the void knowing there are subtle but greater currents supporting the move. Here we can gain access to soul-level currents and participate in harmony with those currents that can lead us to our greater fulfillment. Like with all black holes, this requires and all or nothing act with no in-betweens. Such action -- to delve deep, to jump into an abyss, to take that leap of faith -- can yield a place of far greater beauty and fulfillment than we had known before."




20061024

Looking at the Sun
in a different
wavelength
of light





20061023

Making a case for astronomology --
and what's this about Ophiuchus?

Recently, a friend forwarded a newsletter to me from Maya Del Mar's astrology website. That message related to yesterday's New Moon and a number of concurrent planetary alignments.

I read it and I found myself thinking, "OK, but what about the fact that these planets, the Sun, and the Moon aren't in the signs indicated?"

As those of you who've read this space since last winter know, I'm a proponent of sidereal astrology. As written in an earlier post, "sidereal astrology is the practice of some Western and all Indian [and other Eastern] astrologers to base their study of the sky on the actual position of the planets in relation to the starry background."

If you're wondering why the point about "the actual position" was made, then I need to explain that every 77 years, the Sun begins its transit through the zodiac one day later than it did 77 years earlier.

For example, in what can be called year 0, the Sun rose in Aries on the Vernal Equinox (March 21). Seventy-seven years later, the Sun crossed the equinox point on March 21, but it rose in Aries on March 22. Another 77 years later, the Sun rose in Aries on March 23 -- and so on and on until today, when the Sun doesn't rise in Aries until the 19th of April.

Thus, the widely known Aries Sun sign (March 21 - April 22) is almost a month off. And so it is for the rest of the signs -- even moreso for Scorpio, but that'll come later.*

The disparity between what Western astrology asserts and what is apparent in the sky is no secret, of course. Regular observers of the the planets, the Sun and the Moon [like myself] can tell you that astrological information about the position of those bodies is not accurate. This ought not be taken as "proof" that astrology is irrelevant or a sham. I just want to bring to people's attention -- those who adhere to astrology for insight into personality and behavior, in particular -- that the correlations and assessments put forth by Western astrology need to be reconsidered or revised in order to be in agreement with the positions of celestial bodies in real time, not a static framework that hasn't been accurate for almost 2,000 years.

This is where "astronomology" comes in.

In ancient times, those who we call astronomers today were likely also astrologers. A distinction between the two wouldn't have been necessary -- or perhaps even correct -- because they probably undertook the duties of both practices: observation of the motion of celestial bodies for calendrical timekeeping, and interpretaion of that information to deduce patterns that would signify influence on individuals and social organizations.

I think that the when practice of astrology was lost (or actually cast out, in European cultures) during the Middle Ages, people lost a framework for understanding their place in a larger cosmological or metaphysical system. When knowledge and methods in astrology resurfaced -- again, in European cultures and those that were influenced or colonized by them -- in the last century, those who used and continue to use those methods didn't and seemingly don't have the practical knowledge of astronomy that their predecessors possesed.

It's my opinion that anyone who has more than a passing interest in astrology needs to understand the fundamentals of astronomy as well. Likewise, astronomers and other left-brainers would do well to investigate what "the other side" can offer in regard to personal (or transpersonal) development and holistic synthesis.

With such an integrated approach, I think a more meaningful, insightful and accurate understanding of onself and the potential for existence can be obtained.

Anyhow... back to that newsletter:

The message was that today's New Moon was coming with lots of portentious alignments that signaled stress and serious changes in certain areas of life (politics, finance, the environment). As I said, I read this and thought, "What about the actual planetary positions?"

Most astro-updates asserted that at 1:14 a.m. EDT on Oct. 22, the Moon entered new phase in the constellation of Libra. A few degrees above the Moon, the Sun was to be in close conjunction with Mars and Venus (all in Libra), and Mercury and Saturn were highlighted because of their conjunction in Scorpius.

If you use a shareware application like Hallo Northern Sky, then you can produce a view of the celestial environment above your location and see that:

The Sun, Moon, Mars and Venus were actually in the constellation Virgo, where -- with the exception of the Moon -- they will remain until the end of October. And of course, at that point, they will transit into Libra not Scorpius. Meanwhile, Mercury and Jupiter are in conjunction in Libra. Remember, Western (or tropical) constellations/signs are almost a full month off compared to actual planetary positions.

About three hours after turning new on Oct. 22, according to the information sent to me, the Moon was to supposed to enter Scorpius, where the Sun and Mars were also supposed to appear on Oct. 25. The star plots show that the Moon won't enter the next constellation -- Libra -- for almost 20 hours. The Moon won't enter Scorpius until Oct. 25; the Sun won't arrive until Nov. 23.

Astrology tends to assign equal area to the zodiac constellations, but there's quite a bit of variation in size among the actual constellations in space. The Virgo constellation is much larger than Libra; so the one-sign-off situation aside, that's why there's such a big time difference between the reported and actual transits.

* And this brings me to the special point about Scorpius... and what ought to be regarded as the 13th sign of the zodiac: Ophiuchus.

Much earlier in this long, long post, I mentioned that the Sun's motion through the zodiac differs from the Western astrological zodiac by almost one month/one sign: the Sun passes through Aries between April 19 and May 13, for example. With Scorpius, not only does the Sun arrive a month later than it's typically said to, but its transit is only seven days long. November 23 to 29 are the only dates when someone born in the last several decades could truthfully be called a Scorpio.

This owes to the fact that the ecliptic, the path that most planets and the Sun follow as seen from the Earth, only goes through a small portion of Scorpius. Ophiuchus, the Serpent Bearer, is a much larger constellation through which the Sun travels for 19 days each year (Nov. 30 to Dec. 17). And considering some of the history and myth behind Ophiuchus, perhaps we need to talk about people being born under the sign of the serpent, not the scorpion.


"Ophiuchus is the only constellation in the sky which is patterned after a real person in human history, tracing back through time and space for its roots to an Ancient Egyptian mortal-made-god named Imhotep, whose life and times in or about the 27th century B.C. were honored by both the Egyptians and Greeks... Ophiuchus, in Greek mythology, was Asklepios, Master Architect, Healer, and God of Wisdom.

"Asklepios (or Aesculapius to the Romans) is universally acknowledged as a tutelary patron of physicians -- referred to throughout the world in alchemical, metaphysical, and mundane medical texts and treatises as the man who knew how to revive the dying and recently dead using the blood or venom of a snake.** As primitive medicine men are associated with snake spirits, so Asklepios is always mentioned in connection with the Cabir Telesphoros -- his private daemon who is said to have dictated or inspired his medical prescriptions -- and the Serpent of Epidaurus, his personal/professional emblem.

"This symbolic connection between physicians, divine inspiration, and snakes continues to survive to this day, finding itself consistently in each successive age as a universal symbol of knowledge applied with wisdom in the practice of medicine. The serpent-staff has a long history of being connected with religious and occult miracles... This same serpent-staff concept was adopted by the American Medical Association in its development of the Caduceus symbol, which looks something like a winged flagpole about which a pair of serpents is entwined.

"A closer inspection of the constellation of Ophiuchus poses an interesting New Age oracle -- is Ophiuchus holding a snake torn in two pieces or is he bearing in his careful grasp a two-headed king snake, each head adorned with a crown? It all depends on how you connect the dots."

* Sounds an awful lot like the attributes or achetypes associated with Scorpio: regeneration, death and rebirth... which reminds me of another ancient serpent symbol: the ouroboros.

OK, I'm done.




20061021

In re: the pale blue dot

"That's here. That's home. That's us. On [that dot], everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever lived, lived out their lives.

"The aggregate of all our joys and sufferings, thousands of confident religions, ideologies and economic doctrines, every hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of civilizations, every king and peasant, every young couple in love, every hopeful child, every mother and father, every inventor and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every superstar, every supreme leader, every saint and sinner in the history of our species, lived there on a mote of dust, suspended in a sunbeam.

"The Earth is a very small stage in a vast cosmic arena. Think of the rivers of blood spilled by all those generals and emperors so that in glory and in triumph they could become the momentary masters of a fraction of a dot. Think of the endless cruelties visited by the inhabitants of one corner of the dot on scarcely distinguishable inhabitants of some other corner of the dot. How frequent their misunderstandings, how eager they are to kill one another, how fervent their hatreds.

"Our posturings, our imagined self-importance, the delusion that we have some privileged position in the universe, are challenged by this point of pale light. Our planet is a lonely speck in the great enveloping cosmic dark. In our obscurity -- in all this vastness -- there is no hint that help will come from elsewhere to save us from ourselves. It is up to us.

"It's been said that astronomy is a humbling, and I might add, a character-building experience. To my mind, there is perhaps no better demonstration of the folly of human conceits than this distant image of our tiny world. To me, it underscores our responsibility to deal more kindly and compassionately with one another and to preserve and cherish that pale blue dot, the only home we've ever known."

--Carl Sagan




20061020

Take the long view:
Earth from four billion miles away

"This narrow-angle color image of the Earth, dubbed 'Pale Blue Dot', is a part of the first-ever 'portrait' of the solar system taken by Voyager 1 on Feb. 14, 1990.

"The spacecraft acquired a total of 60 frames for a mosaic of the solar system from a distance of more than four billion miles from Earth and about 32 degrees above the ecliptic. From Voyager's great distance Earth is a mere point of light, less than the size of a picture element even in the narrow-angle camera. Earth was a crescent only 0.12 pixel in size. Coincidentally, Earth lies right in the center of one of the scattered light rays that resulted from the image been taken while the planet was relatively close to the Sun."

Voyager 1 is now just about beyond the realm of the Sun's influence, in a region called the heilosheath. Much earlier in the spacecraft's journey...


"This picture of a crescent-shaped Earth and Moon -- the first of its kind ever taken by a spacecraft -- was recorded Sept. 18, 1977, by NASA's Voyager 1 when it was 7.25 million miles (11.66 million kilometers) from Earth... Because the Earth is many times brighter than the Moon, the Moon was artificially brightened by a factor of three relative to the Earth, so that both bodies would show clearly in the image."




Suburban star trails


"These are star trails -- slow, graceful arcs traced by the stars as Earth spins on its axis.

"'It was a clear night last night, so I decided to let my camera do an "all-nighter,"' explains pohotographer Larry Landolfi of Rochester, New Hampshire. 'I made this 8-hour exposure of my house looking towards the North Star.'

"The North Star, a.k.a. Polaris, is the stubby arc near the pattern's vertex. Because Earth's north pole points almost directly at Polaris, the star barely moves throughout the night, making it useful for direction-finding. But Polaris won't always be the North Star. Earth's spin axis is slowly precessing, and in 10,000 years or so Vega (six times brighter than Polaris) will take over as North Star. Star trail photos will look even prettier then, with an intense bright dot in the center of the starry whirlpool."

via Spaceweather




20061019

Transgalactic Grace
[How better to title post 777?]


Flipped my own image-based script with this one
-- see Trinity on the Isis Majik page.




A2+3 [years]

Images produced three years ago
from two taped-together negatives
of two women with the same name.





20061018

A little more eclipse business









Aurora borealis above British Columbia





20061016

Ripples





Snow crystal close-ups







Outer-planet occultations



"With giant Saturn hanging in the blackness and sheltering Cassini from the sun's blinding glare, the spacecraft viewed Saturn's rings as never before, revealing previously unknown faint rings and even glimpsing its home world... Color in the view was created by digitally compositing ultraviolet, infrared and clear filter images and was then adjusted to resemble natural color."

Obviously, the second image was altered to be more dynamic.

Meanwhile, beyond the lunar limb...




"Dennis Simmons of Brisbane, Australia, assembled this image from pictures he took moments before a lunar occultation of Uranus on Sept. 8th. Using his 9-inch telescope, he also spotted the planet's Shakespearean moons, Titania and Oberon."




20061014

A ray of light near the DMZ





20061013

Things have gone nuclear up north.

"North Korea said Monday that it has performed its first-ever nuclear weapons test. The country's official Korean Central News Agency said the test was performed successfully and there was no radioactive leakage from the site...

"South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun has convened a meeting of security advisers over the issue, South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported, adding that intelligence over the test has been exchanged between concerned countries.

"The nuclear test was conducted at 10:36 a.m. (0136 GMT) in Hwaderi near Kilju city, Yonhap reported, citing defense officials..."


Now that a few days have passed, I've noticed more stories that mention the DPRK's "claimed nuclear test." Because the explosive yield would seem to have been relatively low -- depending who's talking -- there's debate about whether there was a mistake, or if they intended for the blast to be small.

I saw a video segment (speculative, of course) on South Korean TV tonight that laid out a scenario in which the explosion took place inside a sealed, purpose-built cave under a mountain. The sealing would prevent radioactive material from being emitted, which would hamper efforts to determine what type of blast occurred.

But what am I saying?

The DPRK is threatening (and they do indulge in a lot of threats) to pursue more tests, and if --if-- they're bold, destructive or unrestrained enough to do one above or just below ground, then we have to start thinking more seriously about getting out of here. Fallout is no one's friend.

"While few argue Kim Jong-il's regime faked the whole event by packing a disused mine with conventional explosives, there is a growing view that while Pyongyang did carry out a nuclear weapons test it was only partially successful."

"The Pentagon said it had dispatched planes carrying sensitive atmospheric sensors into international airspace along the North Korean coast, in hope of picking up a whiff of radiation vented from the test site. But so far, they said, none has been detected."

I do want to point out one other thing:

Tonight, during a class with three advanced elementary students, they had to draw images for postage stamps (an exercise related to letterwriting). One of the girls drew an outline of Korea, then asked me how to spell bukhan, which is how the North is referred to. I told her and then she quietly continued her drawing.

When she was done, she showed me the image, which had two round-headed stick figures reaching out across the armistice line, with the characters for the word tongil -- unification -- written at the top.

And so it goes.




This is what eclipse trippin' is all about.


The total solar eclipse on March 29th, 2006, from the rooftop of the Sunrise Queen Hotel in Side, Turkey.




Egypt on my mind (as usual)

The photo was from my classroom, after I tried to show some middle school students how to describe an ideal vacation. The pi scribbling came later, as I explained this website's address to another teacher.

The video is obviously from Google, which I just discovered has a fair amount of people's eclipse content.


"Total solar eclipse (29/03/2006) as seen from Salum, Egypt. The pictures of the totality come from a video camera and from a sequence of images taken with a Canon 300D + Konus 500mm f/5.6@100ISO."

Be sure to check this eclipse video by Bruce Martin, taken in Side, Turkey.




Crepuscular sunrise


An image from the newswire.




Mercury will soon be on the move.

Mercury turns retrograde on October 28 at 3:16 p.m. EDT. The planet turns direct on November 17.

More on that later; but now, a special note:

Mercury will transit the Sun on Nov. 8, between 19:12 and 00:10 UT [11:12 p.m. to 4:10 p.m. EDT; 4:12 a.m. to 9:10 a.m. on Nov. 9 in Korea]. Those in western North America and eastern Australia and New Zealand will be able to see the whole event. The rest of the Americas and East Asia will only see it at sunset or sunrise, respectively.

I last saw this type of event in November of '99.




20061011

An eclipse revisited

Some new images of the Sept. 22 annular eclipse:






Waitaminute -- I posted a couple of these a couple of weeks ago. Oh well.




Temple tourism, part four
[Buddha's bio in pictures]

Another installment in an occasional series.
This was part three.


On Friday, our last full day on Jeju Island, we drove up the western side of Hallasan, South Korea's tallest mountain (a dormant volcano). At a certain point, the paved road ends and a rough? rocky? mountain road takes willing travelers closer to the peak.

I don't know because we didn't take that road. There wasn't really enough time to go further up the mountain (and I was the only one who might've considered going to the top on foot, which would've taken another hour or two). Instead, we took a long walk along another ridge, where we found the Jonjaamji temple.


1111px version



I lagged behind my Lady Friend and her parents for most of the hike, my attention caught by monarch-looking butterflies, bright sunshine behind red and orange leaves, and interesting arrangements of stones and moss. When I arrived at the crest, I became fixated on the small structure that covered a large bronze bell. A cadre of enormous and noisy crows darted from tree to tree as I attempted to photograph the scene. Then I walked around the main building and saw the painting shown in the third image above.

That image represents Shakyamuni's passing -- the event memorialized by the Reclining Buddha in Bangkok -- so I walked around to see if the the whole story of the buddha was on the walls. The captions were taken from "The Illustrated Life of the Buddha."

"The bodhisattva was conceived on the full moon night in July; that night his mother, Maya, dreamt that a white elephant carrying a white lotus in its trunk came and entered her womb through her right flank."

"As soon as the bodhisattva was born, he took seven steps to the north and proclaimed: 'I am chief in the world, I am best in the world, I am first in the world. This is my last birth. There will be no further rebirth.' The child was named Siddhartha -- 'he whose purpose is accomplished.'"

"As he leaves the confines of his luxurious apartments, Siddhartha encounters for the first time in his life a decrepit old man, a severely ill man, and a corpse being carried to the funeral pyre by mourners... His father, Shuddhodhana, always haunted by the fear that his son might enter the religious life, had succeeded in keeping such sights from him until his manhood."

"'When I shall become buddha, I will come back and see [my newborn son].' And with these words, Siddhartha went forth on his horse, accompanied by his charioteer, Chandaka... According to traditional reckoning, Siddhartha was then 29 years old and this was the beginning of a six-year quest for awakening."

"During these six years he first spent time with and practiced the systems of meditation taught by two leading ascetics of the time. Although he mastered their respective systems, he felt that here he had not found any real answer to the problem of human suffering. So next, in the company of five other wandering ascetics, he turned to the practice of severe austerities."

"The later legend of the buddha recounts the awakening through the description of the bodhisattva’s encounter with the demon Mara... Mara is not so much a personification of evil as of the power of all kinds of experience to seduce and ensnare the unwary mind... Enclosed by a zone of complete protection, the bodhisattva laughed at Mara's aggressors while not a single hair on his body was disturbed. Mara then sent his beautiful daughters before the bodhisattva to test his commitment to his purpose by offering themselves to him."

"In a deer park outside Benares, the buddha thus approached the five who had been his companions when he practiced austerities and gave them instruction in the path to the cessation of suffering that he had discovered."

"'Have I not formerly explained that it is the nature of things that we must be divided, separated, and parted from all that is beloved and dear? How could it be, Ananda, that what has been born and come into being, that what is compounded and subject to decay, should not decay? It is not possible.'"

"'Now, monks, I declare to you: all elements of personality are subject to decay. Strive on untiringly!'"

This was the second buddha biography that I saw last week. The first was at Jogyesa in Seoul. The murals at that temple were refurbished a few months ago.

Full-size version

Full-size version

And that's that for the Jeju-do photos.




Be the breath.

From a Monkey I know:

"Breath is life! Exchange of electrons. Flow of energy. Air is the primary nutrient. Survival without it is measured in minutes. It is so important that you do it without thinking. Your breathing is the voice of your spirit. Its depth, smoothness, sound, and rate reflect your mood. If you become aware of your breath and breathe the way you do when you are calm, then you will become calm...

"Focusing on the breath is one of the most common and fundamental techniques for accessing the meditative state. Breath is a deep rhythm of the body that connects us intimately with the world around us.

"Close your eyes, breathe deeply and regularly, and observe your breath as it flows in and out of your body. Give your full attention to the breath as it comes in, and full attention to the breath as it goes out. Whenever you find your attention wandering away from your breath, gently pull it back to the rising and falling of the breath.

"Inhale through your nose slowly and deeply, feeling the lower chest and abdomen inflate like a balloon.* Hold... then exhale deeply, deflating the lower chest and then the abdomen. Do this three or four times, then allow your breathing to return to a normal rhythm. You will begin to feel a change come over your entire body. Gradually you will become less aware of your breathing, but you will also not be swept away by a stream of thoughts. You will become more inwardly centered. You will just 'be there.'"

* You can see "balloon breathing" in action if you watch a resting animal or a baby breathe. A voice coach (though that's an oversimplification of what that woman's work was) instructed us to think of our abdomens and chests as a paper grocery bag being filled with air. One has to putting things in the bottom of the bag, fill toward the top, and then empty it from the top down.

If you regularly breathe into the top of your chest and then exhale, then you're cutting yourself from relaxation and proper circulation.

I recall sitting in on a children's yoga class a few years ago as the instructor helped the kids to settle into corpse pose. "Can you believe they've already forgotten how to breathe?" she said of some those six- and seven-year-olds.




Yahoo wants to help you
make a long distance call
across the galaxy.

Mexico's Teotihuacan, once the center of a sprawling pre-Hispanic empire, is set to become the launch pad for an attempt to communicate with extraterrestrial life.

"Starting on Tuesday [Oct. 10], enthusiasts from around the world will have a chance to submit text, images, video and sounds that reflect human nature to be included in the message.

"Those contributions -- part of Yahoo's "Time Capsule" project -- will be digitalized and beamed by a laser into space on October 25 from the Pyramid of the Sun at Teotihuacan, now an archaeological site near Mexico City.

"Archaeologists say a culture centered in Teotihuacan, known as the City of the Gods, dominated Mesoamerica for hundreds of years during the first millennium. It is unclear what led to the society's collapse."

Or perhaps not, considering info like this:

"New analysis of sediment samples from the southern Caribbean indicate that severe droughts occurred at the same time as the known collapse of the Mayan civilization. In a study in the March 14 issue of the journal Science, lead author Gerald Haug of Geoforschungszentrum in Potsdam, Germany, together with Konrad Hughen of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and colleagues report that sediments from the Cariaco Basin in northern Venezuela clearly show a dry spell that the Caribbean region starting in the seventh century and lasting for more than 200 years."




20061010

I'll admit that there's a tendency
for this blog to be a travelogue...

...but I do like to share sights that most of you might not otherwise see. Case in point: nearby sections of Seoul to the west, north and east of the tower in Namsan Park.



Seoul's a big city -- somewhere between 10-12 million people. About 22 million live in and around the capital... and the population of South Korea is 54 million. Quite dense, ne?

Here's a wider view, stitched together from other shots.




Jeju, part three
(The final chapter on film)





On the South Korean seas again





20061009

Meanwhile,
on the streets
of Yeoju...

Korea's harvest holiday, Chuseok, was last week. Families returned to their hometowns to spend a couple of days feasting and having ceremony with their relatives. Not all of the crops are ready for harvest, of course. While the rice is dry and yellowed, it's not quite ready yet. And there are many squash still on the vine, as seen here.








Focusing on stones











On the South Korean seas

The views en route to Jeju-do.
Other images were featured here and there.

I became the center of attention after I began to give
pastel drawings to children on the deck.




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The last one was obviously on land.
See the Moon, below and left of center?




20061007

Meanwhile, in Mexico City...


"Researchers said Thursday they have unearthed what may be one of the earliest calendar entries in Meso-America, massive stone sculpture that suggests women held important status roles in pre-Hispanic culture.

"The monolithic design depicts two decapitated women [that's "important status?" -- Ed.]. Markings on top of the figures appear to depict an entry from, or part of, a 13-month lunar calendar, said archaeologist Guillermo Ahuja, who led the excavation of the monument.

"'This would be the first depiction of a calendar or calendar elements in such an early time period,' Ahuja said.

"The monolith, which measures more than 25 feet and weighs about 20 tons, was found in March 2005 at the Tantoc ruins in San Luis Potosi state, near Mexico's northern Gulf coast, by construction workers.

"Ahuja theorized that the stone's glyph-like inscriptions were carved sometime around 700 B.C., likely by the Huasteco culture and may predate other early calendars by hundreds of years."




Jeju, part two

Of course, part one didn't have so much to do with the island's environment as it did with some African objects and artifacts that we saw on display.

And technically, this is part three, following the photos of the ferry ride to Jeju-do.




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20061006

West African art explosion
on a South Korean island

So, last night, I was eating a bowl of bibimbap and watching some antics on Korean TV when my Lady Friend mentioned something about an African museum on Jeju Island.

I thought she'd just found something in one of our tour guides, but then I noticed the large poster on a wall near the television.

As if it wasn't enough to find out that there was an African art museum on the island, the building in the photo was a replica of the Djenne Grand Mosque in Mali. If you know me, you know there was nothing else to think about: I was going to go.

Djenne Grand Mosque near Mopti, Mali

Museum of African Art, Jeju-do, South Korea

I was even more intrigued to learn that the museum was a few minutes away from our hotel. So the next day, after we visited a folk village on the other side of the island, we rolled up to the museum.

Aside from the oddity of a Christian cross embedded at the top of the building, and a number of not-quite-authentic, obviously Indonesian or Mexican products for sale in the gift shop, this place was a pleasure to visit. This was in no small part because of the fact that the museum is located on a small (but regionally popular) island between China, Korea and Japan, a region in which I've lived for about a year... and from which I will depart in a few months, most likely bound for Africa.

Anyhow, another impressive aspect was that the museum's three floors were full of artifacts: masks, clothing, statues, jewelry and other metalwork, large-scale photos, murals and other handicrafts. The fourth floor, the basement, was a performance venue. So after walking around, being tripped out by all that there was to see, our visit ended with us being hit between the ears by a quartet of Senegalese drummers. More photos to follow in time.











1111px version...and a little bit more
about chi'wara figures and the Dogon tribe



Lady Friend asked an important question: how would people feel to see their mosque turned into a cultural attraction in East Asia? Does the purpose of the venue lessen the architectural, cultural or religious appropriation?




20061003

Moon over Mokpo

moon over mokpo

moon over mokpo
We're in Jeollanam-do, one of the southern provinces in South Korea. Tomorrow we will board a ferry bound for Jeju-do, Korea's volcanic honeymoon resort island.

No, my Lady Friend and I did not get married. This is where her parents wanted to visit.




Speaking of Sol...

I got out of our rental car -- after helping my Lady Friend navigate out of Seoul -- and looked to the west in time to see this sight:

For better images of sun pillars, please visit this page.




The Sun through Saturn's rings?



" N00066661.jpg [and N00066651.jpg were] taken on September 26, 2006, and received on Earth on September 26, 2006. The camera was pointing toward SATURN [and what else?]."