Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Creating a little more space
Not long ago, I wrote here
about how thrilled I was to visit my friend Sonam’s apple orchard at Khasadrapchu to pluck apples there. Last
Saturday, again, I visited this beautiful orchard along with my friends Pema
and Sonam. This time, it’s not to pluck apples, but to nurture the orchard.
The entire noon, we weeded
the orchard, and added manure and water to the plants. Like a group of
peasants, we toiled in the orchard, digging and weeding. Our limbs were
mud-stained; our faces profusely streaming with sweats.
Meanwhile, we whistled, in
a rustic way, commanding the wind to bring us fresh air. As expected, a strong
current of wind gusted around the valley. Magic works, ah, it really does! The
apple plants started to bend and twist as if they were dancing to the song of
the wind. As they danced, the flower petals of the plants were blown away in
the air, over the valley. The bees, sucking nectars, were also brushed away. It
all appeared to me so truly surreal.
Beneath a handsome tree, we
lied down, talking and observing the loveliness of the countryside. We admired
the lone farm road that climbs way up into a tiny settlement on mountaintop. We
listened to the mysterious sound of the wind too; keenly observing its flow. We
felt it deep inside, breathed it deeper. It’s very peaceful.
We continued working. We continued talking. It’s all about our lives, our little aspirations, our ideologies, our beloved ones and families, and not so much about our works. After a while, we felt sublime, peaceful.
However, the beauty is not
that I could spend my weekend away from Thimphu, but it’s this small moment of
working and sitting together with my friends in such a lovely place. I’m happy
that I’m creating a little more space for them, my soul friends.
Monday, April 14, 2014
My little world, my writing
I feel very lucky to have
found a love of writing. Here, on my blog. Quite surprisingly, this writing has
become part of me, my daily life. As I spend a huge block of my time on writing
here, almost everyday.
But I’m one person who
often writes about my own little life - my world, activities, philosophies, hopes,
and dreams. Because I feel that all other things are being written amply by
pens far mightier than mine.
I absolutely love to write about
these itsy-bitsy activities of my life. They are so little, tiny, mundane,
small, and naïve. Yet, they are part of me. All this together make me, this
very self.
I live a simple life with a
handful of friends. And what I’ve owned and done in my life is little. I know
that no one else would ever write my story. So I write it myself, with thanks,
as ever to e-blog.
My stories, blog posts, are
mostly about my home, my heart, my family and friends, my village, writing,
good books I read, walks, photography, and nature. For, they are what I focus
on the most in my life. For, they are my creative muse too.
And each post I write, there’s
still more to write. That’s the indisposition of my little world, my writing. Insatiable.
Never-ending. Writing here helps me to explore what life is all about, and I’m
always delighted in the discovery and contentment.
So much wrong happen each
day. But writing is transformative, peaceful. As I sit for a small moment
thinking and writing, it’s like I put pause from the routine and busyness of my
life. Sometimes, I put down my feelings and thoughts to get answer in my
writing.
Above all, I write to
remember, and to be remembered. Through writing, I intend to relive each moment
of my life on these pages, briefly, though it’s only about small things.
It’s through this blog that
I hope to live on for a few generations after I die. When my friends, family
members and readers go through this blog, I live on. When they read my stories
of the memories I’ve made, I live on. When they remember my name, I live on.
I am not sure that I could ever
write in the future. I don’t know. I don’t know what pages of my life would
unfurl for me. I don’t know, at all. But I know this…that I am writing here!
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Pink Thimphu: Instagram pictures
I
started loving Instagram so much, lately. It seems like this online photo-sharing
and video-sharing social networking service has been designed especially for
me. Seriously. For, photography is one of my favorite engagements in everyday
life. So much so I love doing it that there isn’t a single day without my
camera clicking pictures.
What
I like most about the Instagram is its photographic filters that we can apply
to our images. And of course, it confines photos to a square shape. For a
person like me who doesn’t use Photoshop, Instagram is simply comfortable and
fun. Just capture a picture, choose a filter to transform its look and feel, use frames if you want to, and share it with my friends and family. It’s very simple, enjoyable, and
beautiful.
So today,
I offer you some of the pictures that I took on Instagram this spring. These
pictures are all the pink peach blooms of Thimphu. Enjoy much!
Monday, March 31, 2014
In its own way, the nature’s way
It was already late evening. And that I was
still in my office. But hey, I’m not an “over-sincere” civil servant. In fact,
I was waiting and just hoping that the rain would stop so that I could walk
home. But it didn’t.
So I pulled out my umbrella and marched into
the downpour, toward my home, clutching my bag to my chest. The moment I started
walking, the rain poured harder. Even the air became damper, chillier. To put
it simply, the March rain is pretty uncomfortable. Because it retains the cold,
that of the winter, unusual cold, isn’t it?
It was almost instantly dark, starkly though. Actually
Thimphu doesn’t become so dark this early in the spring. But that evening, it
was. Maybe – just maybe – it could be because of the heavy downpour, or the
dark clouds that hung so low and held the entire valley in its bosom. To me, it
all appeared like the heaven was kissing the first spring blossom of the year.
The road that I walked was virtually empty.
All shops closed and the people returned to their homes. And as I walked, I
could feel the fresh aroma of the spring in the air, its fragrance all exuded, fluxed
with the rain. I became so intoxicated. I felt as if I were in the company of a
beautiful woman, walking together. Honestly speaking.
The endless droplets of the rain splattered
against my umbrella and against the road. Some drops big, others tiny. And they
produced a rhythmic beating sound with different uneven beats. I stopped
walking, abruptly; however, not to listen to the rain sound.
I started watching the rain tapping on the pink
peach blooms and green leaves that was perfectly illuminated by the streetlamps.
They met so gently, almost playfully. Ah, it looked so passionate, so sensual, and
so surreal. Instantaneously, I was hit by a wave of something – a few questions
though.
Is this how nature mates?
Does nature really make love?
Sorry readers, I’ve no idea what really aroused
me to think about it, but there I was asking these questions. As I continued
walking, the sound of the rain enfolded me and the darkness too. But deep
inside me, it’s these questions that enfolded me overpoweringly.
As I write this post, right now, these questions still buzz beautifully in my head, my heart. I was and still am very much sure that I can’t get the answer, anyway; not even in my writing. But now I can, at least, console myself that all I could see was the mystery of wild, the wonder of nature. Perhaps heaven can make love with nature, in its own way, the nature’s way.
As I write this post, right now, these questions still buzz beautifully in my head, my heart. I was and still am very much sure that I can’t get the answer, anyway; not even in my writing. But now I can, at least, console myself that all I could see was the mystery of wild, the wonder of nature. Perhaps heaven can make love with nature, in its own way, the nature’s way.
Monday, March 17, 2014
Written out in the spring
Last
weekend, I borrowed a book, “Further Chronicles of Avonlea”, from my friend. The
book, a collection of short stories by L. M. Montgomery, includes a number of
stories relating to the inhabitants of the fictional Canadian village of
Avonlea located on Prince Edward Island. One of the stories really touched me,
coz it relates to the spring, my favorite season,
“It
was in the spring that Josephine and I had first loved each other, or, at
least, had first come into the full knowledge that we loved. I think that we
must have loved each other all our lives, and that each succeeding spring was a
word in the revelation of that love, not to be understood until, in the
fullness of time, the whole sentence was written out in that most beautiful of
all beautiful springs.”
Dear
readers, walk around, open your eyes, and be awed by the timely coming of this
year’s spring. Share love, share happiness. I hope you would have a wonderful springtime with your beloved ones!
Friday, March 14, 2014
Special little moments
It was lunchtime. Yesterday.
As usual, I walked out of my office with some of colleagues to buy lunch at my
office cafeteria. By the way, I don’t carry the packed lunch to office. It’s
pretty sad - I know it very well - both for my health and saving.
So then, I went straight to
the counter and put my order. It’s simple one - roti with emadatshi. Tea
too, because it’s still cold here in Thimphu, even at noon. After that I pushed
myself towards right.
On the wall behind the
counter, as always, I spotted a fresh quote. Every day, my office cafeteria
puts up a new inspiring quote on the wall. It’s quite thoughtful of them,
though. It could be, perhaps, this opportunity that I get to read new quote
every noon that I don’t bring my lunch to office, he-he.
And the quote is,
Happiness
comes from special little moments.
However, this particular quote
touched me in a strange new way. It penetrated me deeply. I read the words, reread
them. And I nodded, agreeing to what it has to say, so loyally.
Happiness is not tangible, we
know that. But after reading the quote, I swear I could touch it. And here, as
I type this post, I’m all smiling, still feeling that happiness.
Yes, happiness really comes
from special little moments. Like this, to me, even from reading a simple quote,
even from spending small time with my colleagues over the lunch. And you can
never guess how happy I’m putting down small little moments of my life here on
my blog.
A happy weekend, dear
readers!
Tuesday, March 4, 2014
One of the best youth-related films ever
“Chuut Wai” is the film. Both written and
directed by Phuntsok Rabten. Quite remarkably, at the 13th National Film Awards, the
150-minute long film won several awards.
As I work with a youth agency in Bhutan, I felt
very happy to know about the award and more so that I watched the film. Today
when our country is facing with new social challenges, especially youth
problems, “Chuut Wai” has brilliantly illuminated all the core issues of youth
concerns. And even through films, “Chuut Wai” lauds loudly that we can help address
youth problems.
By the way, the film is thoroughly
entertaining with very original screenplay and music. To be precise, it’s a
real cinematic treat for you - this I don’t hesitate to say. It can make you
laugh, fight with your own emotions, and cry ultimately.
Kuenzang received award for Best Newcomer (Female) |
Last month, I met the film director and I was
quite happy to learn many more things about the film from him. He told me that
“Chuut Wai” is a film adapted from real life characters from our contemporary
times.
‘Chuut Wai’ revolves around Dingay, a disillusioned
young man, who breaks down into depression, drugs and violence after his uneducated
mother commits suicide when her husband divorced her. This is a real life story
of Jigme Yosel Jigme, a recovering addict; and quite interestingly, he played
his own role in the film as Dingay.
As the film unfolds, all along you also walk with
Dingay. You are there in his story, in one form or another. Like him, you start
to loathe his father, and howl in anguish and injustice; and cling to the past
all related to the deceased mother. You become angry with everybody, everything
around you. As Dingay gets into depression and seeks solace in his horrid past
and drugs, you are also filled with a lonely, dark, and helpless feeling.
However, Dingay’s life undergoes a
transformative journey when Jigme, a visually impaired young man, comes into
his life. Even the role of Jigme is the real life story of Jigme Namgyal and he
played his own role in the film.
As the film runs through scene after scene, it
begins to take on a clear form and you can hear the film’s conscience, the
voice. Too loudly. Too clearly. At the end, the film feels like a religious
ritual that can heal your wounded spirits, your errors corrected.
This film is full of comedy; however, the
humours are real, not coarse or forced. You laugh because it happens to you
everyday, anyhow. Through comic scenes, we are enticed to reflect your own
perceptions, feelings and intentions, and rethink some of our own prejudices,
ignorance and stupidity. At the end, you are laughing at yourself only.
At one moment, Phuntsok Rabten explained me
that this film of his takes on the holistic approach to today’s social
problems. I love the resonant power of his message in the film - all relevant,
real and powerful. He has woven all our traditional values and wisdoms in the
film so beautifully. And these are something invisible and beyond our
understanding, yet we can feel them with right attitude and belief. The classroom
education is not enough to fully educate our youth, and solve social problems.
The film also has, for you, unlikely romance
and songs but of remarkable proportions. And it takes you to unexpected twists
and astonishing turns, all the way to a climatic finale. There’s good news for
you, that the film will be re-screened in Thimphu.
Photo courtesy: https://www.facebook.com/ChuutWai
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