Sunday, August 31, 2008

Aw yes the awesome trip to Thailand.
As I convert the photos (RAW to jpeg) I will put them up online.

So first a few pictures from our hotel in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

The De Naga Hotel

According to northern legend, this formidable serpentine creature, a symbol of strength, opulence, and eternal life, helped the righteous Kings in building the city. As an act of allegiance and obedience, the Naga endowed the kings with vast wealth and power, and thus safeguarding the prosperity of the land. A guardian of the Buddha and protector of earthly waters, the Naga exhibited magical powers that allowed it to take human semblance.

The hallway leading to the rooms from the main office.
The restaurant in the court.
The driveway fountians
Thew sharp Door Handles...on every door that can be opened.

Friday, August 29, 2008


Chiang Mai Thailand. Another shot with a monk after walking through the temple gate.
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Chiang Mai Thailand, I was lucky enough to be in position waiting until a couple of monks passed each other in this shot from a monk temple/university.
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Saturday, August 16, 2008

A couple of shots from last weeks Mid Ghost Month prayers.

Just
as the West has Halloween for ghosts and ghouls, so also does Taiwan have a holiday to fete the departed spirits of the underworld (Ghost Festival, a popular occasion celebrated throughout China on the 15th day of the seventh lunar month.

Historically, families offer sacrifices of the newly harvested grain to departed ancestors on this day, which also coincides with the Buddhist Ullambana (Deliverance) Festival and the Taoist Ghost Festival.

Since each of these traditions in some way honors the spirits of the departed the seventh lunar month has come to be known as Ghost Month, celebrated as a time when the "Good Brethren" (ghosts from the underworld(come back to earth to feast on the victuals offered by the living. Over time the Ullambana Festival and Ghost Festival have melded together to become the present day Chung Yuan Putu or "Mid-origin Passage to Universal Salvation."

In Taiwan, Ghost Festival is passed by slaughtering a pig and sheep, which together with a prodigious table of wine and meat is offered to one's ancestors and ghosts from the underworld. Numerous Putu festivities are also held at this time around the island, crowned by the grand Keelung Ghost Day Ceremony.

The Chinese believe that the dead become ghosts roaming between Heaven and earth. Spirits without descendants to care for them are prayed to during Ghost Festival so that they may also enjoy the warmth of life among the living. This custom, an extension of the traditional Chinese ethic of "universal love," has been woven together with the didactic legend "Moginlin Saving His Mother From Hades," giving Ghost Festival positive significance as a time for remembering the importance of filial piety.

Some general snapshots of the event follow...

Monday, August 11, 2008

I was at an English speaking competition in a mall yesterday. My lovely wife was one of the scary mean judges.
Here are a few snaps from some of the contestants.
 
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