Saturday, November 30, 2013
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Synchronistic Event Of The Verbal Kind #24
Just now I was reading an internet article. As my eyes moved over the word 'plastic', I heard a co-worker say "plastic" behind me.
I was going to say that there has been a long gap since the last one, but then I remembered there were a couple that I did not bother to record. So there has still been a fairly steady stream of them.
Related Post: Synchronistic Event #23
I was going to say that there has been a long gap since the last one, but then I remembered there were a couple that I did not bother to record. So there has still been a fairly steady stream of them.
Related Post: Synchronistic Event #23
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Another Hummingbird Today
At least I think it's a different one from the bird I photographed a few weeks ago. But again, on a cold, overcast day.
Saturday, November 16, 2013
Monday, November 11, 2013
A Landscape In Tartarus
The dismal, barely-glowing body that is hell's counterpart of the Sun, which floats above the desolate floor of hell's deepest caverns. Or so I imagined this image to be on this occasion. After all, my motto for this blog is "Forever seeking Beauty and Terror in all things everywhere".
Saturday, November 9, 2013
Last Week's Worm Rescue
For a long time I had not run across any stranded worms on my walks. My schedule has not changed, so maybe the lawn sprinklers are on a different schedule now? Either that, or the neighborhood worms have been getting smarter^
Anyway, last Monday morning there were an unusually high number of dead worms drying out on the sidewalk. Among them there were two that were still alive. They were barely clinging to life, but when I picked them up they had strength enough to writhe a little in response, so maybe they were able to recover once I put them back in the earth.
Anyway, last Monday morning there were an unusually high number of dead worms drying out on the sidewalk. Among them there were two that were still alive. They were barely clinging to life, but when I picked them up they had strength enough to writhe a little in response, so maybe they were able to recover once I put them back in the earth.
ONE WAS DESCRIBING AN ELEGANT, CALLIGRAPHIC SQUIGGLE
THE OTHER ONE WAS REALLY FAT
Number of worms rescued: 69
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Sand Mandala
MUSINGS ON IMPERMANENCE
Saturday I went to watch the dismantling of a sand mandala. A group of Tibetan Buddhist monks from the Drepung Gomang Monastery in Karnataka, India, had constructed the mystic figure at the county library in nearby Rosemead, and while I was unable to attend the opening ceremony, I was determined to witness the closing.
The mandala in situ:
A mandala is a kind of cosmogram -- a drawn or painted image that serves as a symbolic map or diagram of a universe or realm. Being a very visual-arts oriented person, I myself like to think of them primarily as visual aids in meditation and contemplative focus, but there are many different mandalas, representing different 'buddhaverses' or states of mind, used for different purposes.
A near-overhead shot of the mandala:
Considering that the medium used to create the 'painting' is fairly gross by nature -- grains of sand -- it's pretty amazing the level of fineness the monks manage to attain. The photo above was uploaded without downsizing so it can be expanded to full size (after clicking on the image, you may need to right-click and 'open image', or whatever, to get the full expansion). To obtain this image I stepped right up to the edge of the table and extended my camera arm as far as I dared -- I actually thought it would be a perfect 'Seinfeld moment' if someone tried the same thing, craned too far and fell over the sacred image, sending multihued sand flying everywhere^ (later I found out that such accidents have actually happened in the past).
The monks file in and make preparations:
The Ven. Geashe Lobsang Tsetan, the leader of the group, spoke briefly about what mandalas are and why the monks travel the west creating and destroying them (he mentioned that this is the mandala of the Medicine Buddha, which would be the Buddha Bhaisajyaguru -- written སངས་རྒྱས་སྨན་བླ། in Tibetan and 약사여래 in Korean); then those who had been instrumental in making the event possible were recognized.
At last the ceremony proper commenced in earnest. Here began the solemn and mysterious chanting that I had previously only heard in recordings. Here is a short video clip of it:
Then, without any special announcement, the actual dismantling of the mandala began.
The initial 'crossing-out' of the mandala, followed by a spiraling sweep toward the center:
Finally, the sand was divided up into little portions, to be given away as reminders of a very special experience.
After I came home I poured some of mine into a tiny bottle (which I purchased years ago without any special purpose in mind -- everything finds a use, or a reason is found for everything, eventually) so I could carry it around with me, as a kind of rainbow-colored charm.
Saturday I went to watch the dismantling of a sand mandala. A group of Tibetan Buddhist monks from the Drepung Gomang Monastery in Karnataka, India, had constructed the mystic figure at the county library in nearby Rosemead, and while I was unable to attend the opening ceremony, I was determined to witness the closing.
The mandala in situ:
A mandala is a kind of cosmogram -- a drawn or painted image that serves as a symbolic map or diagram of a universe or realm. Being a very visual-arts oriented person, I myself like to think of them primarily as visual aids in meditation and contemplative focus, but there are many different mandalas, representing different 'buddhaverses' or states of mind, used for different purposes.
A near-overhead shot of the mandala:
Considering that the medium used to create the 'painting' is fairly gross by nature -- grains of sand -- it's pretty amazing the level of fineness the monks manage to attain. The photo above was uploaded without downsizing so it can be expanded to full size (after clicking on the image, you may need to right-click and 'open image', or whatever, to get the full expansion). To obtain this image I stepped right up to the edge of the table and extended my camera arm as far as I dared -- I actually thought it would be a perfect 'Seinfeld moment' if someone tried the same thing, craned too far and fell over the sacred image, sending multihued sand flying everywhere^ (later I found out that such accidents have actually happened in the past).
The monks file in and make preparations:
The Ven. Geashe Lobsang Tsetan, the leader of the group, spoke briefly about what mandalas are and why the monks travel the west creating and destroying them (he mentioned that this is the mandala of the Medicine Buddha, which would be the Buddha Bhaisajyaguru -- written སངས་རྒྱས་སྨན་བླ། in Tibetan and 약사여래 in Korean); then those who had been instrumental in making the event possible were recognized.
At last the ceremony proper commenced in earnest. Here began the solemn and mysterious chanting that I had previously only heard in recordings. Here is a short video clip of it:
Then, without any special announcement, the actual dismantling of the mandala began.
The initial 'crossing-out' of the mandala, followed by a spiraling sweep toward the center:
Finally, the sand was divided up into little portions, to be given away as reminders of a very special experience.
After I came home I poured some of mine into a tiny bottle (which I purchased years ago without any special purpose in mind -- everything finds a use, or a reason is found for everything, eventually) so I could carry it around with me, as a kind of rainbow-colored charm.
Friday, November 1, 2013
Halloween-Themed Cloud
'GHOST RISING NEXT TO SKULL'
Posted a day late, but I think the image works, and that's the important thing.
Posted a day late, but I think the image works, and that's the important thing.
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