Thimphu
has just opened for clear sky after a rainy week. It’s a beautiful day here! I
hope you all are enjoying the bright monsoon day as much as I am here. So, to
treat you, I bring to you, once again, pictures of a handful of flowers that I took
recently from my office garden. Have a wonderful day!
Thursday, June 26, 2014
Sunday, June 22, 2014
The photography lesson
I don’t know exactly since
when I’ve nurtured this passion. Photography. To tell you, I just love taking
pictures of almost everything. One clarification here though; I’m not a certified
photographer. But hey, should one be certified to take pictures?
I don’t know.
Initially, I began taking
pictures of nature. Snow-capped mountain, cerulean skies, the sunset, rain,
prayer flags, leaves, trees, and flowers - so much more. Perhaps all the beginners
do start shooting nature. It could be, at least in my case.
I found divinity and beauty
in nature, and felt feelings, warmth and hope. So I intended to capture and relive
these things on my lens as briefly as possible.
Sometimes I would look at
my own pictures and like anyone of you, I marvel at it. And to my own
amazement, I stand in disbelief. Because some of my pictures seem unreal to me;
it’s as though I had made it up.
However, photography and
writing really complement each other. The digital lens does write stories,
photographs do tell stories – sometimes better than my handful of words. So incapable
of writing forward, for my blog, I look at my pictures and do I derive
inspiration, get stories.
Quite wondrously, it is through
my digital lens that I started to see the world around me differently. And
ultimately I became a nature lover. Most importantly, it helped me to learn to
find beauty and pleasure in the simple things. It changed my life’s outlook,
for better.
Someone rightly stated
about the photography and our life,
The greatest of
inspiration, isn’t it?
I can add here a few lines,
but my own lines. You can, in life, fork out your problems like the way you
crop out the unwanted parts of images. And if you want to make your life more
attractive, learn to apply effects to images of your life. Whew, it’s that simple!
As I’m still learning to
take good pictures, so do I still learning to understand the life’s essence.
Note: Second picture downloaded from google
Note: Second picture downloaded from google
Saturday, June 14, 2014
Thimphu all set for Modi’s visit
I
went around Thimphu City this evening for a casual walk. And wow, I am hugely impressed
with the new looks of the City. The Street and Town look strikingly beautiful
and dazzling.
Thimphu
sets all ready welcoming Narendra Modi, the Indian Prime Minister, who will be
arriving in Bhutan tomorrow. The highway and the Street all dressed in the
flags and posters of both the prime ministers flaring on the poles and
buildings.
Everything
- in and around the City - looks perfectly organized and clean. Flowers well
watered, and all blooming. All waste and trash disappeared. One feels as if you
were in the City of Tokyo and Singapore.
The
security personnel are everywhere. I hope the Indian PM’s visit would be a successful
one and the Indo-Bhutan would last forever, ever stronger.
Wednesday, June 4, 2014
The shopping mecca
Whenever I travel here in
Bangkok, I do this again and again. Shopping. Quite a lot. Actually, I’m not a shopaholic,
maniac. But once I’m here, in the shopping malls of Bangkok, I become a different
person. As I shop like crazy.
Quite surprisingly, this capital
city has quite a huge number of popular shopping malls, centres and complexes
with over thousands stores. Very convenient and attractive, they provide all
kinds of shopping opportunities, plenty of entertainments and artwork.
The amazing thing about the
malls here is that they have almost everything you could possibly want. From fashionable
garments to footwear, home decorations to foods, jewelries to electronics,
craft items to entertainment (cinemas, karaoke, 4D, games, bowling alley).
Like you or any visitors, I
also spend most of my free time running from one shopping centre to another, exploring
new items, trying on different schemes and of course buying. Only once you are
in here, ah, how you wish that you were a rich man.
Interestingly, here, you
can bargain like hell on almost everything and you would be just shell-shocked
at the rock bottom prices they offer you.
Moreover, the city provides
very convenient transportation services and delicious street foods. I just love
travelling by the skytrain and tok tok, always new experience for me.
First picture courtesy: googlesearch
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
Meet up with a fellow-blogger in Thailand
Yesterday evening, I met up
with blogger Dumcho Dorji here in Salaya, Thailand. As you all know, he currently studies
at Mohidol University and blogs about his life’s experience in Thailand and Bhutan. We knew
each other through our blogs; in fact, very well. But we never met before in person.
However despite his busy
schedule, Dumcho found a time for me. He took me around his beautiful college
campus for a walk. And he did treat me with dinner - some juice and foods - on the street.
It's quite surprising and nice to have met a Bhutanese blogger in a foreign soil. More so happy that one could get to sit together over the dinner and talk about our life, love and aspirations, as bloggers and writers.
I am ever so thankful to Dumcho; it is one moment that I can always cherish in my life.
Monday, May 26, 2014
Thai situation is improving
When I landed here in
Thailand last Saturday, the authority of the capital was cleaning and clearing
the litters of the protests at the downtown Bangkok. I was quite nervous of the
political unrest in the country. I was even afraid to wear my red shirt. Moreover,
the Thailand Stock Exchange has been falling everyday. The whole situation of
the country was worrying.
However, as I stay here
longer, I slowly understand the situation, more clearly. And I am happy, enjoying
my stay here, trust me. Though the curfew begins from 10 pm to 5 am, everything
runs as normal - businesses, public services, transportation and airlines. The movement
in the country is not restricted as portrayed in the media.
The situation has become
alright now. The locals and foreign travelers enjoy all freedom to walk around,
do shopping and sightseeing. I observed that protests were well organized; it
engaged only the protest groups and their members in the designated places.
As the Thai military junta
Chief received royal endorsement as Chief of the National Council for Peace and
Order, most Thai people are hopeful that the unrest could be solved. Moreover, they
are showing support to military deployed to enforce martial law and maintain
peace.
All the community leaders
agreed to comply with order of the Chief to remove all signs of red shirts from
public places. The leaders and members of different protest groups have been
summoned and put under trials.
The people of Thailand are
wishing sincerely that the political unrest be settled soon. If so happened
then the national election is going to happen very soon, possibly within next
four months.
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Sunday, May 18, 2014
Mystery of my favourite poem
When I was in my high school, I came across this famous and magical poem for the first time. Alfred Lord Tennyson’s “The Lady of Shallot”. And ever since, it had become my favourite poem, indefinitely. Ever so gracefully, it remained on my mind, too gracefully though.
Still I do remember those
days, of my classroom where I used to sit on my desk, so attentive, in excited
and radiant smile, reciting the poem. If I’m not wrong, this is the first time
I fell in love with English literature and of course started liking my English
teacher.
This is one poem that I
held dear, and its lines, I knew by heart. Again and again I would read the
poem. To put it precisely, it’s crafted in perfect words and emulates
overpoweringly breathtaking images that one would never forget in life.
And the way Tennyson starts
out the poem is simply splendid. I can’t help myself from pulling out those starting
lines and putting down here,
On either side the river
lie
Long fields of barley and
of rye,
That clothe the wold and
meet the sky;
And thro' the field the
road runs by
To many-tower'd Camelot;
The poet portrays the
scenes so magically. And it made my heart lurch, all the more. This is the only
poem that I read not for the exams, but out of the pleasure of words. In fact,
that’s the time I realized the power of words, what the black and white letters
can be.
Above all, it’s the
protagonist of the poem that had absolutely hypnotized me. The Lady of Shalott.
She is described as an absolute angel, “lovely face”, “fairy”, pure, and beauty
who “weaves by night and day/A
magic web with colours gay” in a four-towered castle. She is
like…ah as if I had met the love of my life, my soul mate. The more I read it,
the deeper I fell in love.
Moreover, I felt hugely
heartened when I had the opportunity to learn the poem once more when I joined
Sherubtse College in 2005. We read the nineteen century literature and we analyzed
this poem too. However, the analysis shocked me; left me shaken.
The poem suddenly turned dark. The Lady
of Shalott is restricted and imprisoned in the tower under a terrible curse. Subjugated and lonely,
she is considered as an invisible object, ghostly. Second half of the poem
becomes bloody and mournful. The Lady is doomed for going against the norm. She
cries. She dies.
I couldn’t believe that the
love of my heart, the Lady’s life is one long unspoken sadness and accursed. It’s
unthinkable; it penetrated me deeply. I couldn’t take it. It aroused such
sorrow and grief of the loss of the Lady that I almost burst into tears in the
classroom. I was angry at the poet, I started hating my lecturer, and I grew
disinterested in learning literature.
After almost a decade, today,
I read the poem once more. To tell you…it was a decade of my life filled with
difficult obstacles and decisions, unthinkable loss and fear, and countless
tears and anxiety. But it was also a decade of humbling realizations and
experiences – of love, of joy, of emotional growth, of mental maturity, of understanding
the true essence of life.
As I am already halfway to
this bumpy ride of life; and today, as I read the poem, I have come to
understand it. Its true essence, its beauty, its purpose and the love and grace
in the poem. This world, this human life is all temporary. Vulnerability figures
large all time, and that falling apart happens continually. Accept it or not, all
is not fair or perfect in this world, similarly this favourite poem of mine.
I am excited here that I
may understand the poem further as I grow older, in my old age. Learning never
ends, and this poem never stops giving me new lessons. “The Lady of Shalott” is
a poem for lifetime.
Photo courtesy: google
Photo courtesy: google
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)