Saturday, January 25, 2014

Gallery of Photos: Balinese Trees and Flowers

Heliconia



As with last week's posting, these photos were taken in either Ubud or Sanur on the island of Bali.
 

I believe this is called a ti plant

Orchid

Orchid

My guess is that this is a bird-of-paradise


Typical bouquet with a plumeria blossom on top

Traveller's palm



Fruit of the jackfruit tree
I have no idea what this is but I loved the rust-colored leaves growing up the trunk
Another mystery tree
I found this tree in Sanur
And this in the beach's sandy soil




Saturday, January 18, 2014

Gallery of Photos: Bali

A few years ago, at this exact time of year, I left the frigid Northeast to spend a month in Bali, a place long on my wish-list.  It was my first trip south of the equator.  Korean Airlines took me from JFK over the pole and Siberia to Seoul where I connected with a flight to Bali--a 40-hour trip, door to door.  Bali was as beautiful as I'd been led to believe.  The people were a delight.  The prices were reasonable.  The artistry lovely.  And the food, I found, excellent.  But ... I also wondered if I might get heat prostration, it was so very hot.  (Obviously, my northern blood hadn't adjusted yet.)

I meant to stay in Ubud, in the interior, for the entire visit.  But, feeling that I needed some sea breezes, I eventually moved down to Sanur, right on the Indian Ocean.  All these photos were taken in Ubud except for the last two, taken in Sanur.


View from my hotel room

Sunrise through the palms; rice paddy below

Along the main street


Public market

Artistic gateway

Making trays for offerings of flowers, incense, and food to be set by doors and walkways

Entry to art museum

On a side street

Shop window

Beautiful textiles for sale

Shop along Ubud's main street
Residential area

Food cart on the beach at Sanur

Early morning view of the beach at low tide.


Next week I'll post photos of Balinese trees and flowers.

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Best-Laid Schemes

Icicles out my window


You know that good line from Robert Burns, "The best-laid schemes o' mice an' men gang aft agley" (from To a Mouse, on Turning Her Up in Her Nest with the Plough).  Well, I wouldn't say such schemes often go awry, as the line indicates, but they certainly do sometimes.  And so it seems I'm not going to be away until the end of the month after all as I so stated in my last posting.

Wanting to be gone from here for at least part of yet another harsh winter, I had picked a date to travel when the holiday rush would be over and a family birthday had passed.  I figured if deep winter had already set in, there might be something of a January thaw.  I totally cleared my calendar, reserved a rental car at my destination, cleaned out all perishables from the fridge, notified the post office...

Rather than fly which I considered too iffy in winter, not wanting a flight cancelled because of some storm, I planned to take the train.  If you've got the time, trains are perfect.  There's no having to go through that airport mishmash, or being strapped into a highly uncomfortable narrow seat, or wishing you were on the ground rather than in the air.  Instead, trains plough through.  They soldier on.  They're already on the ground, a comforting thought.  And with a roomette, you have a little nook to yourself where there's room to move around.

So, this past Tuesday with just an hour before I was to get a ride to the Amtrak station some miles away, I had word from Amtrak telling me my train had been cancelled.  I was not completely surprised since they had cancelled the same train the day before--the Lake Shore Limited from Boston (and New York) to Chicago ... where I was to make connections to the Southwest Chief which would deliver me to New Mexico, my destination.

In fact, the brutal cold of this arctic vortex along with a blizzard or two en route meant that earlier trains (on both lines) had been up to 12 hours late reaching their destination, with three passenger trains stuck overnight in northern Illinois.  I certainly didn't want to be in a similar situation where it would be too cold to even get off the train and stand in line for a rescue bus, even if such a bus could reach the train.  Or to have the train run out of food.  Or the toilets and sinks flood.  Or the heating give out.

As one friend said, "On the bright side, it's kind of nice to know that there are some things in life we can do absolutely nothing about.  We humans haven't taken over the universe quite yet."

Rather than mess with the rest of January--or even February--I'm rescheduling for March!


Saturday, January 4, 2014

A New Calendar

Sunrise through the trees


NOTE:  I'll be away until the end of the month and am not yet sure if I'll post during that time.  If not, I'll resume posting on February 1st.  


Ah, yes, it's that time of year when we get out the new calendars and sit down with a cup of tea to write in the important dates, the dental appointments, property tax payments, kid birthdays.  I still use a physical calendar--not an online version--because I like something tactile with beautiful art-work.  For several years now I've received the gift of a 7" x 7" calendar displaying the works of Wolf Kahn, one of my favorite landscape artists who now mostly paints trees.  Trees at sunrise, at sunset, magenta trees, cobalt blue trees, some by a barn, some near a river.  I like the size and feel of it and the fact that it's within easy reach.

So, with a new year, it's time to begin doing again all those things we just completed--gathering IRS material, starting over with deductibles, renewing magazines and memberships, making annual contributions, plus, of course, watching the seasons progress from black fly to mosquito to hurricane to holiday.  To say nothing of looking ahead to good times.  The beginning of the farmers market.  Visits from friends.  Dying Easter eggs.  Getting out the grill.  Feeling the shift from summer's humidity to fall's crispness.  Some of these events make their way onto my calendar.  But many just arrive in their own good time.

Happy 2014!


Saturday, December 28, 2013

Best Reads of 2013: Non-fiction


A splendid, divergent list this year.

1.  Reza Aslan, Zealot, The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth  (This is a well-researched view of Jesus, the historical man, executed for sedition as were many, many others before and after him.  His brother James carried on his teachings which spoke of helping the poor, not the rich temple priests whom he defied.  But it was Paul who later shifted things around by calling Jesus the Christ.  As for being the (or a) messiah, that term meant an anointed one who would restore the land to the glory it had had under King David.  In fact, no one came along to do that and the Romans eventually destroyed Jerusalem and either killed or dispersed its inhabitants.  The author says that with the Holy Land destroyed, there was no longer a "mother assembly" to spread the original teaching which lay in the Law of Moses and came from the Jewish religion, so Paul's manufactured version took over.  A good presentation of the history of the times ... with debunking of various myths and a more accurate telling of the probability of what happened in this man's life.) 

2.  Alexandra David-Neel, My Journey to Lhasa, The Classic Story of the Only Western Woman Who Succeeded in Entering the Forbidden City  (Here in great detail is this French/Belgian woman's 1923-1924 eight-month journey when, at the age of 56, disguised as a pilgrim, she and her adopted son, a lama, walked from China, through Lhasa, to India.  They slept on the ground out in the open and lived on tea and barley flour tsampa.  Because her presence as a foreigner was forbidden, she wore a yak-hair braid and darkened her skin with Chinese ink and soot from the bottom of cooking pots.  Fluent in Tibetan, she could carry on a good discussion about Buddhist philosophy.  A classic tale, indeed!)




3.  James W. Douglass, JFK and the Unspeakable, Why He Died and Why It Matters  (Thoroughly gripping, well researched account of Kennedy's murder which the author says was planned and executed by those who, shall we say, disagreed with his foreign policy.  The thesis is that he sought winning the peace without taking lives, but they sought winning the Cold War with invasions, assassinations, and nuclear first strikes.)

4.  Natalie Goldberg, The True Secret of Writing, Connecting Life With Language (Combining Zen meditation with regulated writing and lots of no-nonsense instruction.  She's a dedicated writer, teacher, and Zen practitioner who lives in Santa Fe.  This must be the fifth or sixth book of hers I've read.)

5.  Matthew Goodman, Eighty Days, Nellie Bly and Elizabeth Bisland's History-Making Race Around the World  (Here is a vivid description of the race these two young journalists engaged in in 1889-1890 to circle the globe--largely in British ships--in less time than Jules Verne's fictional hero did it in 80 days.  Bly took 72 days, 6+ hours with Bisland not far behind.  An historically accurate adventure tale.)



6.  Jack Kornfield, A Path With Heart, A Guide Through the Perils and Promises of Spiritual Life  (This is the sort of book I mark up as I make notes of wonderful passages.  For instance, page 45, "... a deeper kind of healing takes place when instead of sending aversion and aggression to wounds and illness, we bring loving-kindness."  A wonderful book by a shining teacher of American Buddhism.  Make yourself a cup of tea, find a good chair, and open it any place.  It's all good stuff!)

7.  Mabel Dodge Luhan, Edge of Taos Desert, An Escape to Reality  (This and the following are must-reads for those who love northern New Mexico.  A friend of D. H. Lawrence and Georgia O'Keeffe, she describes her life in Taos when she arrived in 1917 and came to know and love Tony Luhan, a Taos Pueblo Indian.  Splendid.)

8.  Mabel Dodge Luhan, Winter in Taos  (Very pastoral, very gentle, a love song to Taos with beautiful resonate descriptions of that magical land.  Though framed around one winter day, she describes every season as she ruminates on her home, her life, her husband, loving it all--riding horses, taking the dogs up into the hills, knitting by the fire, watching August thunderstorms, planting and harvesting alfalfa, opening the acequia (irrigation channel) for the growing season.  It's the sort of book that makes you want to live only there, no place else.)

9.  Lynne Olson, Citizens of London, The Americans Who Stood With Britain in Its Darkest, Finest Hour  (Though the author speaks of other Americans as well, she concentrates on Edward R. Murrow, Averell Harriman, and our Ambassador, John Gilbert Winant.  Extraordinarily moving with an emphasis on London and the British, their dignity, work ethic, and stubbornness in not giving in.  Good descriptions of Churchill--a lion of a man with a deep emotional sentiment--and FDR who seemed to assume American superiority over Britain though at that point, we hadn't done all that much.  Very moving passages as, on D-Day, when the English went out with their flags and table-cloths and waved to the planes flying overhead to France.  Highly readable.)

10.  Paul Theroux, The Last Train to Zona Verde, My Ultimate African Safari  (Less a safari in our sense than an overland journey through--largely--Namibia and Angola.  Having already made the overland trip from Cairo to Cape Town for another book, he was hoping to travel from Cape Town up the West Coast of Africa this time but extremists and xenophobia blocked his way, so he turned around in Angola where the wealthy elite ignored its own people, leaving them hungry and unemployed.  Even the wild animals were gone--either killed to be eaten or killed by land mines planted during Angola's war.  Theroux is not one to skip slums but seeing an entire country of the abandoned living in squalor, he felt the cities were simply "transit camps for people wishing to flee.")

11.  Justin Webb, Cheers, America, How an Englishman Learned to Love America  (Sensible, amusing, and a lot of fun.  The author was a journalist working for the BBC in Washington, D.C., for eight years.  Quick and enjoyable reading, very chatty, with wonderful Brit/Yank comparisons of just the sort you want to know about.  )

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Best Reads of 2013: Fiction



It's that time of year when I look at the books I read (48 this year) and talk about those I considered the best.  As it happened, I seem to have read more non-fiction this time--many of them truly excellent.  So rather than try to fit both fiction and non-fiction into the same posting, I'm giving each its own space with non-fiction following next week.

My favorite works of fiction this time happened to be three I'd read many years ago but enjoyed enormously on second reading.  (I've put an asterisk by them.)  In alphabetical order:

1.  *James Agee, A Death in the Family (An autobiographical novel set in Knoxville in 1915 when his father was killed in an automobile accident.  It is beautiful, heart-felt writing that, to me, could not better describe the loss so powerful and immediate to the author as a six-year-old and to the entire family.)

2.  Gerbrand Bakker, Ten White Geese (A dying Dutch woman who renames herself Emily moves to rural Wales to live out the rest of her life and then die in a way that fits Emily Dickinson's poem, "A Country Burial."  Very spare writing by a Dutch author.)

3.  *Elizabeth Bowen, The House in Paris (Set on a single February day in post World War I Paris when two children spend the day together--the girl to go on to visit her grandmother, the boy to meet his mother for the first time.  Intertwined is the boy's story of his parents' lives before he was born.)

4.  Maria DermoĆ»t, The Ten Thousand Things  (Translated from Dutch.  Set in the Dutch East Indies and fictionalized, the narrator tells of her life and the lives of others there.  According to Chinese thought, each of us encompasses a unity of 10,000 things.  Places, too.  Very sparkly writing.  Published in 1951 when she was 63.)

5.  J. G. Farrell, The Singapore Grip (Singapore before and during the Japanese invasion in 1942 as it relates to a few families in the rubber industry.  Amusing, ironic, and warm if over-long.  The general theme concerns the pursuit of self interest over the common interest.  One in this Anglo-Irish author's Empire Trilogy.)

6.  Elena Ferrante, The Days of Abandonment (Translated from Italian.  A woman falls into "a void" when her husband leaves her and then struggles to get herself out, back to normal.  A difficult book, her journey is almost caricatured.  Excellent for showing rather than telling.)

7.  *Graham Greene, The Quiet American (Wonderful.  Early CIA shenanigans in Vietnam and the idealistic, "innocent" Americans who do harm by having no real understanding of the area ... all compared to the sardonic, seasoned, and uprooted English protagonist.)

8.  Penelope Lively, Passing On (After a domineering mother dies, her two still-at-home middle-age children find her only finally receding from their lives when the daughter decides against the wrong man and the son realizes he's gay.)

9.  Wallace Stegner, Remembering Laughter (An early novelette.  Lovely descriptions but a sad Calvinistic tale of repressed love.  One of my favorite authors.)



 



Saturday, December 14, 2013

Seventy-five Years





What does one say on reaching the three-quarters-of-a-century mark as I have now done?  What are the words of wisdom?  What is it we see for ourselves at this point?  What is it we've done in these past 75 years ... or not done that we thought we would?  The one constant, it seems to me, is to remain as flexible as possible whether that's in espousing new ideas, keeping one's body mobile, or "simply" expressing a consistent gratitude for life however it shows up.

I've now lived longer than either parent, my only sibling, and my spouse.  I certainly can't say that I still feel, say, 16.  No, in a way, I feel ancient, yet still perking along.  I do find that though I always thought of myself as "a person of projects," that seems to have ebbed as a degree of stamina has given way.  Also, I always thought I'd want to continue to "see the world."  That, too, seems more trouble than I care to put into it anymore, including all that mish-mash at airports, cramped seating on planes, extra charges, and jet lag.  And then my favorite mode of travel--by ship--is now a thing of the past.  (Also, having no warm soul to go with ... or to meet at the other end now seems important though I used to go places on my own.)

I think my mind and memory are doing pretty well but I do find myself sort of "skipping" things sometimes as if, after so many years of concentrating and wanting to take everything in, I know what all that's like and feel I no longer have to be quite so conscientious about it.  It's a bit as if I'm skimming over the tops of things rather than always having to get down into them and fit things together.  Maybe I'm getting lazy.  After 75 years, you have a good idea where conversations are going ... or how the news is going to be reported ... or what book and movie plots are like, etc.

When I think back to the year I was born--1938--it feels as if it were part of some period drama, as, I guess, it now was.  Back when cars looked classically old-fashioned, when women wore silks and satins, high heels and stockings, when you wrote (and received) letters from friends and relatives with stamps that didn't say "Forever" on them.  Back when we looked things up in books or card catalogs not having all this info at our finger tips.  Back when the news was broadcast on the radio for a short period each day ... and life didn't seem so frenzied despite the aching problems and continuing conflicts that persisted.  When holidays were celebrated on the days themselves, not the nearest Monday.  When you drove over hill and dale to visit your cousins along two-lane "surface roads" bounded by walnut groves and orange orchards that were being bulldozed even then.

Here's something I just learned.  This 75th birthday is known as one's dodranscentennial.   That is, 100 with 25 taken away from it.