Thứ Hai, 30 tháng 3, 2009

Disney magic














It was a joyful and wonder-filled day at Disneyland. The pictures aren't the best, but they do bring back fun memories - and isn't that the point?

Thứ Sáu, 27 tháng 3, 2009

Pokhara, Nepal al fin

Llevamos una semanita en Pokhara, Nepal.
Después de la caçotica India, esto es un oasis. Solo las aceras ya nos han dado una grata alegría, no tener que tener tu mente dedicada todo el tiempo a evitar vehículos es un relax. Pese a que no hay mucho tráfico.

Estamos viendo todos los días a mi amiguete Nabaraj, que tiene una tienda de trekking y es guia de montaña. En unos días nos iremos de trekking a ver el Himalaya unos cuantos días.

Hoy me he dado un viajecito en parapente subiendo hasta unos 3000 metros de altura. Desde arriba he podido ver, entre otros, el monte Annapurna, uno de los famosos 8000.  Una vista impresionante.

No hacemos más el zoquete porque no se puede. Queremos descansar y pillar fuerzas para seguir nuestro viaje y ver si pasamos a Tibet desde Kathmandu para desde allí pillar un tren a Guanzhou y de ahí un bus a Hong Kong o volar a HK directo desde Kathmandu si hay algún problema para entrar a Lhasa.

Os trendré informad@s.

Beso

Thứ Năm, 19 tháng 3, 2009

Match Day

Today my brother John matched for his residency in Kansas City, MO (his first choice - woohoo!). I managed to be there for the occasion, which was fun - brought back memories of my own match day 11 years ago (hard to believe that - I had to double check the number!). It was a nicer occasion for Buzz, with a nice brunch for all the students and their families and even a ribbon-cutting ceremony. When I matched, we just went to a hospital classroom, got our envelopes and stood around in the hallways talking and taking pictures. The energy was the same though - lots of excitement and anticipation.

I'm genuinely happy for BuzzmeovanaXX (Buzz, Cameo, kids and mystery baby!) but bummed for us personally. Our family has been so lucky and blessed to live near these guys for the past almost 4 years. When I think of my sweet nieces growing up without me there, I start to cry...not to mention not having Buzzmeo around to play games with, stay up too late with, trade babysitting overnights, and hang out with. I've been tearing up on and off today. But I know it is the best place for them to be, and am glad they will have Tim and Tammy there, especially to ease the transition with a new baby coming. Good thing for facebook - I think it will help us all stay connected.

Thứ Tư, 18 tháng 3, 2009

poem for the day

Recently I've been reading some of Rainer Maria Rilke's poems from his Book of Hours. I first read Rilke in a German class in college, but hadn't revisited him until recently, after reading Etty Hillesum's Diaries and Letters from Westerbork (another highly recommended read). Here is one I like (title is in German, the rest is translated by Barrows and Macy):

Du bist die Zukunft, grosses Morgenrot

You are the future,
the red sky before sunrise
over the fields of time.

You are the cock's crow when night is done,
you are the dew and the bells of matins,
maiden, stranger, mother, death.

You create yourself in ever-changing shapes
that rise from the stuff of our days--
unsung, unmourned, undescribed,
like a forest we never knew.

You are the deep innerness of all things,
the last word that can never be spoken.
To each of us you reveal yourself differently:
to the ship as coastline, to the shore as a ship.

____________________________________________________


If anyone knows of a really good English-German edition of the Book of Hours, with both languages present, by a really good translator, I would love to own one. I've read some reviews on Amazon of this translation and they're mixed. I'd like to see what else is out there.

Thứ Hai, 16 tháng 3, 2009

industrial agribusiness rant

OK, this isn't really going to be a rant. However, I've been taking a course through our church entitled "Menu for the Future" which is very thought-provoking. We've been discussing a collection of articles and book excerpts that deal with the issues surrounding our agricultural practices, food production and distribution, ecology, sustainability, and health. I got interested in this after reading Michael Pollan's book The Omnivore's Dilemma.

Taking an in-depth tour of our food supply business is a little like taking "the red pill" in the movie The Matrix. You can take the blue pill and go on enjoying your food in blissful ignorance, or take the red pill and see what is truly going on but your food innocence is then ruined. I love all kinds of food, and it saddens me to find out that often I am enjoying it at the expense of all kinds of wrongs being done - to other human beings, to animals, to the planet, to my own health. At the same time, without our current system, would we be able to feed our growing population at all? I've heard it argued that if we only practiced organic, non-genetically modified, sustainable etc. agriculture, much of the world's population would starve. Not convinced this is true, because the counterargument is that we are using some 50-80% of the world's farmland to feed livestock, not people. Who knows what to think? Anyway...

So in today's New York Times I saw this article pointing out the practice of routine antibiotic administration to animals - and the results of that. He points out that 70% of all antibiotics in the US go to healthy livestock.

"Yet the central problem here isn’t pigs, it’s humans. Unlike Europe and even South Korea, the United States still bows to agribusiness interests by permitting the nontherapeutic use of antibiotics in animal feed. That’s unconscionable.

The peer-reviewed Medical Clinics of North America concluded last year that antibiotics in livestock feed were “a major component” in the rise in antibiotic resistance. The article said that more antibiotics were fed to animals in North Carolina alone than were administered to the nation’s entire human population."


The article goes on to describe the rise of MRSA, not only in our hospitals but now in our food supply. Sheesh. I know the issues are complex here - and this is just one issue among many - but I hope that articles like this will continue to raise awareness and public support to press our leaders to make some positive changes. I have hope that Obama's administration will be more open to changes like this, but the business interests at stake are large and powerful. We'll see.

And now let's go off to eat some healthy fruits, grains, and vegetables! (The above article kinda makes you lose your appetite for pork, doesn't it?)

Thứ Sáu, 13 tháng 3, 2009

Dos meses en Idia, Varanasi, camino a Nepal y piras funerarias en e Ganges

Como pasa el tiempo o qué lento pasa.
Vamos a hacer 2 meses en un par de días, parece mentira, pero por otro lado si pienso en todo lo que nos ha pasado y lo que hemos hecho parece que llevamos mucho más. Está claro que la percepción del tiempo se puede alterar.

Hemos llegado a Varanasi hace un par de días y la llegada no podía haber sido más sonada.
Por casualidades de la vida llegamos en medio de una fiesta que ocurre nada más que una vez al año y además en el día más bestia y durante las horas más salvajes. Que traducido significa que tuvimos que batallar por las calles llenas de grupos de borrachos armados con botes de agua con tintes, pistolas de agua con los mismos tintes, globos petados de la tintura maldita etc, etc... Durante un par de horas que se hicieron terriblemente largas, yendo de un Guest House a otro ya que todos decían estar llenos. El mismo conductor de Rickshaw nos advirtió de que "si vais a esa zona no me hago responsable de lo que os pase". Al final llegamos empapados y completamente teñidos de mil colores a Om Guesthouse, donde nos hemos quedado un par de días.

Varanasi me fascina, está al lado del rió Ganges, o como lo llaman aquí el Ganga. Si te habla alguien de India la imagen que te imaginas es la de la gente al lado del río quemando cadáveres y bañándose en él, pues eso mismo es Varanasi.

Hemos visto las cremaciones de cadáveres y no son para todo el mundo, es la vida tal cual es. Cuerpos cubiertos de flores y telas quemándose. El olor y el sonido de la carne quemándose y los miembros que se resisten a desaparecer el las llamas. También esto va por castas y situación económica, si no tienes mucha pasta no puede conseguir mucha ni muy buena leña para la hoguera donde quemar a tu ser querido. Para eso hay unos señores que se encargan de avivar las llamas y golpear con largar barras de bambú los miembros rebeldes que siguen resistiéndose. Bastante cruda la imagen, pero es lo que hay.

¿Las cenizas? Pues al Ganges, ¿donde sino?

Los niños pequeños si mueren no se les quema ya que son considerados puros, lo mismo para las mujeres embarazadas y los santos, a la gente con lepra tampoco se les quema, pero porque al parecer huelen. A este grupo se les ata una piedra de peso considerable y se les llevas a una zona profunda y se les lanza. Bucear por el Ganges debe ser una experiencia de los más siniestra y bizarra.

Estoy seguro que las razones religiosas para hacer esto de quemar cuerpos y lanzarlos al Ganges esconden otras razones antropológicas por detrás, tipo: mejor quemarlos y lanzarlos al río para evitar la descomposición y posibles infecciones, más económico que un entierro, y alguna cosa más que se me escapa. Pero al convertirlo en un ritual religioso se esconden todas estas razones un poco menos místicas y algo desagradables. La religión tiene su utilidad después de todo ;) aunque en este caso sea un poco cosmética.

¡Que malo soy! Lo que me faltaba, ir también al infierno Hindú...

En unos días no pillaremos un bus que nos lleva a la frontera con Nepal y de allí a Pokhara o Katmandú.

Tengo fotos que no son para todos los estómagos así que pensadlo antes de verlas. Las subo en cuanto pueda...

Ale

Thứ Năm, 12 tháng 3, 2009

"My Grain is Damaged"


Quote of the day:

We have all been fighting a cold at our house. Today at dinner, Alex came up to me and said, "I'm pretty sick. I think it's because I don't say 'please,' or maybe it's because my grain is damaged." :-)

Also, this past week we have made plans to go to my niece's wedding in LA, and the following day I am going to take Alex to Disneyland. Woo-hoo! Bryan and Sam are staying home -Bryan couldn't leave work on such short notice - but I'm sure they will have fun doing boy stuff at home. :-) Alex is REALLY excited. When we told her she was going to Disneyland, she said, "Oh! I've been wanting to go to Disneyland for HOURS and HOURS and HOURS!" :-)

In reality she has been asking us to take her to Disneyland for about the past 2-3 months. She is four and a half and I think we will have a lot of fun.