To compliment a rather forlorn looking but still beautiful Marylin, Stands Elvis, with a song that suits his style and graceful execution - fabulous build up of vocals...bit fuzzy in parts but you can browse better sound, this performance is top notch stardust !
Saturday, 21 April 2012
Thursday, 19 April 2012
Relevance of religion
Nice speech by The Dalai Lama, the only religious leader to not go on so about their own brand. However, Yellohammer thinks it is the differences in religions and subgroups that reveal answers to further philosophical questions for the more developed thinker - seeking the similarities can be useful to start - to avoid atheism (the biggest box of all) and also fanaticism (that the weak of brain, or ego-driven, succomb to when they think they have 'the key').
The Relevance of Religion
Now, there are two categories of pain and pleasure. One is linked with physical sensory experience and one with the mental level. The sensorial level is common to all species of mammals having five senses. As for the mental level, some animals have that. But, because humans have sophisticated intelligence, they have longer term memory as well as thoughts of the future. This is more than animals have. Therefore, humans have mental pleasure and satisfaction or pain – hope, expectations, fear. So physical happiness and unhappiness and mental happiness and unhappiness are separate things. We can experience physical pain, but with mental happiness, and at other times, our physical level is OK, but our mental level is filled with worry and dissatisfaction.
The physical level is related to physical facilities – food, clothing, shelter, nice sights, sounds, smells, tastes, physical sensations, material facilities. Some people are very wealthy. They have fame, education, respect, many friends. But still, as persons, they are very unhappy persons. This is because material facilities fail to bring mental satisfaction or comfort. Someone with lots of stress, worry, competitiveness, jealousy, hate, attachment – these bring mental unhappiness. Therefore, there are limitations to physical and material welfare. If we ignore the inner level, life may not be happy. Affluent societies have material comfort, but they can’t guarantee that people there have happy, peaceful, comfortable minds. Therefore, we need a mechanism to bring peace of mind.
Generally, religion is an instrument to bring mental peace and satisfaction, mental comfort with certain faith. Many agree that there needs to be a secular way to bring peace of mind, but that I’l l discuss in my public talk. But if we speak about a way to bring peace of mind based on faith, then there are two categories of religion – faith without philosophy and faith with philosophy.
In ancient times, people used faith to bring hope and comfort when they faced desperate situations – problems beyond our control, hopelessness. In such situations, faith provides some hope. For example, there is the threat of animals at night, so more fear in the dark. With light, we feel more secure. The source of light is the sun, therefore the sun is something holy and so some people worshiped the sun. Fire provides comfort when we are cold and so some considered fire as something good. Fire sometimes comes from lightning, which is mysterious, and therefore both fire and lightning are holy. These are primitive faiths, with no philosophy.
Another category maybe includes ancient Egyptian society. I don’t know about that. Egyptian civilization goes back six or seven thousand years and had faith. When I was at one of the universities in Cairo, I expressed interest that if I had more time, I would like to study there and learn more about this ancient Egyptian civilization, but unfortunately I don’t have time. But, in any case, another category of religion includes the Indus Valley civilizations in India and Chinese civilization. They had more sophisticated religions with an ideology. Maybe there was more in the Indus Valley civilizations than in others. In India, three or four thousand years ago there was already faith with a certain philosophy. Thus, another category of religion is faith with certain philosophical concepts.
In this second category, there are common questions. One Jewish friend put them nicely: What is “I”? Where do I come from? Where will I go? What is the purpose of life? These are the main questions. The answers to these are in two categories: theistic and non-theistic.
In India, three thousand years ago people tried to find an answer to what is “I,” what is the self? According to common experience, the body when young has a different appearance and shape than when old. The mind also, within minutes is different. But we have a natural feeling of “I” – when “I” was young, when “I” was old. Therefore, there must be an owner of the body and the mind. The owner must be something independent and permanent, unchanging, while the body and the mind changes. So, in India, a self, a soul, an “atman” – that idea comes. When the body is no longer usable, a soul remains there. That is the answer of what is “I.”
Then, where does the soul come from? Does it have a beginning or not? No beginning is difficult to accept, and so there must be a beginning, like there is a beginning to this body. And so God creates the soul. And as for the end, we come into God’s presence or eventually we absorb into God. Middle Eastern religions – early Jewish, Christian, and maybe Egyptian – believe in an afterlife. But, for Jewish, Christian, and Muslim, ultimate truth is God, the Creator. That is the source of everything. That God must have limitless power and limitless compassion and wisdom. Every religion asserts infinite compassion, like Allah. And God is beyond our experience, ultimate truth. That is theistic religion.
Then, about three thousand years ago, we get Samkhya philosophy in India. And within this, there came two divisions: one believes in God and one says no God. Instead, the latter division speaks of primal matter, prakrti and twenty-five classes of knowable phenomena. So, for them, primal matter is permanent and the creator. So, before Buddha, there were already non-theistic views.
Then, around 2600 years ago, Buddha and the Jain founder, Mahavira, came. Neither of them mentions God, but emphasized instead simply cause and effect. Thus, one category of Samkhya, and both Jainism and Buddhism are non-theistic religions.
Within non-theistic religions, Buddhism says that everything comes from its own causes and conditions, and because of that, one of the very natures of cause and effect is change. Things are never standing still. Therefore, since the basis for the self or “I” is the body and mind, which obviously are changing all the time, and since the “I” relies on them, the “I” must be of the same nature. It can’t be unchanging and permanent. If the basis changes, what is designated on it must also be changing. Therefore, there is no permanent, unchanging soul – “anatman,” selfless. This is the unique Buddhist concept – everything is interdependent and related. So, within the three non-theistic religions, although the other two accept causality, nevertheless they assert a permanent, unchanging self.
So, among religions having faith with philosophy, there are many different traditions. All of them have two aspects – philosophy and concepts, and also practice. There is a big difference in terms of philosophy and concepts, but the practice is the same – love, compassion, forgiveness, tolerance, self-discipline. Different philosophies and concepts are simply methods to bring people the wish and conviction to practice love, compassion, forgiveness, and so on. Therefore, all these philosophies have the same goal and purpose – to bring love, compassion, and so forth.
This is clear in Buddhism. Buddha taught different concepts, often contradictory ones. Some sutras say that the aggregates – the body and mind – are like a load and the self is what carries it. A load and what carries it cannot be the same, and so the self must be separate and must substantially exist. Another sutra says that karma or actions exist, but there is no person who acts, no substantial self. Other sutras say there are no external phenomena. There is just mind and other phenomena are merely the contents of the mind. And mind exists; it truly exists. Yet other sutras say that neither the mind nor its contents truly exist – nothing has true existence, like in the Prajnaparamita Sutras, the Heart Sutra, for instance: “No eye, no ear, no nose, no tongue, no body, no mind.” These are all contradictory, but all of them come from the same source, Shakyamuni Buddha.
Buddha didn’t teach all of these out of his own confusion. Nor did he teach them deliberately to cause more confusion in disciples. Why did he teach like this? Buddha respected that individuals are different and he taught all these to help them. He saw that all these were necessary.
Three thousand years ago there were maybe ten or a hundred million people. Now there are over six billion. So, among all these people, there are certainly different dispositions. We can see this even among children of the same parents. Even twins, their minds and emotions are different. Therefore, among humanity, there are different dispositions, different ways of life, different ways of thinking. These differences are also conditioned by the environment, geography, and climate. For example, Arabia is hot and dry. India has the monsoon rains and so it is different and people there have a different life style. Maybe in primitive times, people were more similar everywhere. But now, because of these differences, it is important to have different approaches. But these different philosophies and concepts don’t really matter. The most important is the aim and goal of all of them, and this is the same: to be a kind and compassionate person in our approach to others.
For some people, then, the concept of a creator, God, is very helpful. I once asked an old Christian monk why Christianity does not believe in previous lives. He said, “Because this very life is created by God.” Thinking like that gives a feeling of intimacy with God. This body comes from our mother’s womb and so we have a feeling of closeness and comfort with our mother. So, the same is the case with God. We come from God and this gives us a sense of closeness with God. The closer one feels, the stronger the intention to follow God’s advice, which is love, compassion. Therefore, the theistic approach is very powerful and much more helpful for many people than a non-theistic approach.
It is better to keep one’s own religious tradition. In Mongolia, missionaries pay people $15 to convert to Christianity. So some people go to them and convert each year, over and again, just to collect $15 each time! I advise these missionaries not to interfere and to let people there stay traditional Buddhists. This is the same as when I tell Western people to keep their own religions.
The best is to have more information. This helps to develop respect. Therefore, keep your Christian tradition, if you are Christian, but gain understanding and knowledge of other traditions. As for methods, all teach the same practice – love, compassion, tolerance. Since the practice is shared in common, it is all right to adopt some methods from Buddhism. But as for the Buddhist concept of no absolute – this is strictly Buddhist business. It is not helpful for others to learn. One Christian father asked me about emptiness, voidness, and I told him this is not good for him. If I teach complete interdependence, this might harm his strong faith in God. So it is better for such people not to listen to talk about voidness.
In short, since all major traditions have the same practice, just different methods and different philosophies, but with the same purpose, that is the ground for mutual respect. So, keep your own tradition. But, if some Buddhist methods come from my lecture which you find useful, then use them. If they are not useful, then leave them.
The Relevance of Religion
in Modern Times
His Holiness the Fourteenth Dalai Lama
Milan, Italy, 7 December 2007
transcribed and lightly edited by Alexander Berzin
I would like to speak about the relevance of religion in modern times. Everyone, by nature, has a feeling of self and, with that, experiences knowable phenomena with a painful, joyful, or neutral feeling. These are facts, without any need to investigate why. Animals have this too. By nature, we all like happiness and dislike unhappiness and pain. There is no need to prove this either. On this basis, we can speak of everyone’s right to have a happy life and to overcome suffering.Milan, Italy, 7 December 2007
transcribed and lightly edited by Alexander Berzin
Now, there are two categories of pain and pleasure. One is linked with physical sensory experience and one with the mental level. The sensorial level is common to all species of mammals having five senses. As for the mental level, some animals have that. But, because humans have sophisticated intelligence, they have longer term memory as well as thoughts of the future. This is more than animals have. Therefore, humans have mental pleasure and satisfaction or pain – hope, expectations, fear. So physical happiness and unhappiness and mental happiness and unhappiness are separate things. We can experience physical pain, but with mental happiness, and at other times, our physical level is OK, but our mental level is filled with worry and dissatisfaction.
The physical level is related to physical facilities – food, clothing, shelter, nice sights, sounds, smells, tastes, physical sensations, material facilities. Some people are very wealthy. They have fame, education, respect, many friends. But still, as persons, they are very unhappy persons. This is because material facilities fail to bring mental satisfaction or comfort. Someone with lots of stress, worry, competitiveness, jealousy, hate, attachment – these bring mental unhappiness. Therefore, there are limitations to physical and material welfare. If we ignore the inner level, life may not be happy. Affluent societies have material comfort, but they can’t guarantee that people there have happy, peaceful, comfortable minds. Therefore, we need a mechanism to bring peace of mind.
Generally, religion is an instrument to bring mental peace and satisfaction, mental comfort with certain faith. Many agree that there needs to be a secular way to bring peace of mind, but that I’l l discuss in my public talk. But if we speak about a way to bring peace of mind based on faith, then there are two categories of religion – faith without philosophy and faith with philosophy.
In ancient times, people used faith to bring hope and comfort when they faced desperate situations – problems beyond our control, hopelessness. In such situations, faith provides some hope. For example, there is the threat of animals at night, so more fear in the dark. With light, we feel more secure. The source of light is the sun, therefore the sun is something holy and so some people worshiped the sun. Fire provides comfort when we are cold and so some considered fire as something good. Fire sometimes comes from lightning, which is mysterious, and therefore both fire and lightning are holy. These are primitive faiths, with no philosophy.
Another category maybe includes ancient Egyptian society. I don’t know about that. Egyptian civilization goes back six or seven thousand years and had faith. When I was at one of the universities in Cairo, I expressed interest that if I had more time, I would like to study there and learn more about this ancient Egyptian civilization, but unfortunately I don’t have time. But, in any case, another category of religion includes the Indus Valley civilizations in India and Chinese civilization. They had more sophisticated religions with an ideology. Maybe there was more in the Indus Valley civilizations than in others. In India, three or four thousand years ago there was already faith with a certain philosophy. Thus, another category of religion is faith with certain philosophical concepts.
In this second category, there are common questions. One Jewish friend put them nicely: What is “I”? Where do I come from? Where will I go? What is the purpose of life? These are the main questions. The answers to these are in two categories: theistic and non-theistic.
In India, three thousand years ago people tried to find an answer to what is “I,” what is the self? According to common experience, the body when young has a different appearance and shape than when old. The mind also, within minutes is different. But we have a natural feeling of “I” – when “I” was young, when “I” was old. Therefore, there must be an owner of the body and the mind. The owner must be something independent and permanent, unchanging, while the body and the mind changes. So, in India, a self, a soul, an “atman” – that idea comes. When the body is no longer usable, a soul remains there. That is the answer of what is “I.”
Then, where does the soul come from? Does it have a beginning or not? No beginning is difficult to accept, and so there must be a beginning, like there is a beginning to this body. And so God creates the soul. And as for the end, we come into God’s presence or eventually we absorb into God. Middle Eastern religions – early Jewish, Christian, and maybe Egyptian – believe in an afterlife. But, for Jewish, Christian, and Muslim, ultimate truth is God, the Creator. That is the source of everything. That God must have limitless power and limitless compassion and wisdom. Every religion asserts infinite compassion, like Allah. And God is beyond our experience, ultimate truth. That is theistic religion.
Then, about three thousand years ago, we get Samkhya philosophy in India. And within this, there came two divisions: one believes in God and one says no God. Instead, the latter division speaks of primal matter, prakrti and twenty-five classes of knowable phenomena. So, for them, primal matter is permanent and the creator. So, before Buddha, there were already non-theistic views.
Then, around 2600 years ago, Buddha and the Jain founder, Mahavira, came. Neither of them mentions God, but emphasized instead simply cause and effect. Thus, one category of Samkhya, and both Jainism and Buddhism are non-theistic religions.
Within non-theistic religions, Buddhism says that everything comes from its own causes and conditions, and because of that, one of the very natures of cause and effect is change. Things are never standing still. Therefore, since the basis for the self or “I” is the body and mind, which obviously are changing all the time, and since the “I” relies on them, the “I” must be of the same nature. It can’t be unchanging and permanent. If the basis changes, what is designated on it must also be changing. Therefore, there is no permanent, unchanging soul – “anatman,” selfless. This is the unique Buddhist concept – everything is interdependent and related. So, within the three non-theistic religions, although the other two accept causality, nevertheless they assert a permanent, unchanging self.
So, among religions having faith with philosophy, there are many different traditions. All of them have two aspects – philosophy and concepts, and also practice. There is a big difference in terms of philosophy and concepts, but the practice is the same – love, compassion, forgiveness, tolerance, self-discipline. Different philosophies and concepts are simply methods to bring people the wish and conviction to practice love, compassion, forgiveness, and so on. Therefore, all these philosophies have the same goal and purpose – to bring love, compassion, and so forth.
This is clear in Buddhism. Buddha taught different concepts, often contradictory ones. Some sutras say that the aggregates – the body and mind – are like a load and the self is what carries it. A load and what carries it cannot be the same, and so the self must be separate and must substantially exist. Another sutra says that karma or actions exist, but there is no person who acts, no substantial self. Other sutras say there are no external phenomena. There is just mind and other phenomena are merely the contents of the mind. And mind exists; it truly exists. Yet other sutras say that neither the mind nor its contents truly exist – nothing has true existence, like in the Prajnaparamita Sutras, the Heart Sutra, for instance: “No eye, no ear, no nose, no tongue, no body, no mind.” These are all contradictory, but all of them come from the same source, Shakyamuni Buddha.
Buddha didn’t teach all of these out of his own confusion. Nor did he teach them deliberately to cause more confusion in disciples. Why did he teach like this? Buddha respected that individuals are different and he taught all these to help them. He saw that all these were necessary.
Three thousand years ago there were maybe ten or a hundred million people. Now there are over six billion. So, among all these people, there are certainly different dispositions. We can see this even among children of the same parents. Even twins, their minds and emotions are different. Therefore, among humanity, there are different dispositions, different ways of life, different ways of thinking. These differences are also conditioned by the environment, geography, and climate. For example, Arabia is hot and dry. India has the monsoon rains and so it is different and people there have a different life style. Maybe in primitive times, people were more similar everywhere. But now, because of these differences, it is important to have different approaches. But these different philosophies and concepts don’t really matter. The most important is the aim and goal of all of them, and this is the same: to be a kind and compassionate person in our approach to others.
For some people, then, the concept of a creator, God, is very helpful. I once asked an old Christian monk why Christianity does not believe in previous lives. He said, “Because this very life is created by God.” Thinking like that gives a feeling of intimacy with God. This body comes from our mother’s womb and so we have a feeling of closeness and comfort with our mother. So, the same is the case with God. We come from God and this gives us a sense of closeness with God. The closer one feels, the stronger the intention to follow God’s advice, which is love, compassion. Therefore, the theistic approach is very powerful and much more helpful for many people than a non-theistic approach.
It is better to keep one’s own religious tradition. In Mongolia, missionaries pay people $15 to convert to Christianity. So some people go to them and convert each year, over and again, just to collect $15 each time! I advise these missionaries not to interfere and to let people there stay traditional Buddhists. This is the same as when I tell Western people to keep their own religions.
The best is to have more information. This helps to develop respect. Therefore, keep your Christian tradition, if you are Christian, but gain understanding and knowledge of other traditions. As for methods, all teach the same practice – love, compassion, tolerance. Since the practice is shared in common, it is all right to adopt some methods from Buddhism. But as for the Buddhist concept of no absolute – this is strictly Buddhist business. It is not helpful for others to learn. One Christian father asked me about emptiness, voidness, and I told him this is not good for him. If I teach complete interdependence, this might harm his strong faith in God. So it is better for such people not to listen to talk about voidness.
In short, since all major traditions have the same practice, just different methods and different philosophies, but with the same purpose, that is the ground for mutual respect. So, keep your own tradition. But, if some Buddhist methods come from my lecture which you find useful, then use them. If they are not useful, then leave them.
Sunday, 15 April 2012
Gone Daddy Gone
sorry re adskip.
Gather round Boys, to the tale that I tell...
[Lakoti Film Productions, someone's finals entry. Check details on you tube]
Country death song, personal fave of Yellowhammer.
Home Bee Habitat
A Status Quo for City dwellers.
A home for bees in your flat ! Is there a honey tap at the bottom >>>?
Saturday, 14 April 2012
Passport to Pimlico
A Film for our times ? Yellowhammer says Stop asking permission and do it anyway !
An amusing trip by Ealing Comedies exploring the why not ? aspects of community living. I have mead to swap for sundries.
And Yellowhammer pays tribute to the ink spots here:
An amusing trip by Ealing Comedies exploring the why not ? aspects of community living. I have mead to swap for sundries.
And Yellowhammer pays tribute to the ink spots here:
The River Wye
High Wycombe takes part of its name from the river Wye, which now runs mostly underground through the town. Pann Mill corn watermill, at the eastern end of Wycombe, is the last remaining watermill on the River Wye. It was originally built in C12th.
http://www.petergoodearl.co.uk/ken/wyemills/wyemills.htm
http://www.petergoodearl.co.uk/ken/wyemills/wyemills.htm
The River Wye in Buckinghamshire is a river in England that rises in the Chiltern Hills of Buckinghamshire. It flows for around 9 miles (14 km), through High Wycombe on its way down to Bourne End, where it meets the River Thames on the reach above Cookham Lock.
It has a network of back-streams and tributaries, including the Hughenden Stream.
The River Wye is one of a number of important chalk streams in the Chilterns.
Chalk streams are an internationally rare habitat and support a wide variety of wildlife, including some of the UK’s most endangered species. A chalk stream in good condition will have a gravel bed and crystal clear water.
There will be good range of healthy native water and waterside plants and fish species.
A healthy river environment will provide suitable habitats for birds such as the Kingfisher and Grey Wagtail.
Gracie Fields
Lancashire Born I believe, Gracie Fields is Full of Gusto.
See Gracie get paraded down the street by dockers in this Gracefully senitmental wartime song : WISH ME LUCK (1939 from film SHIPYARD SALLY)
Dame Gracie Fields (1898 - 1979)
Her rags-to-riches story inspired a nation: from a back street terrace in Rochdale to a villa in Capri, armed with nothing but a glorious voice and bags of personality.
Friday, 13 April 2012
Sunday, 8 April 2012
Yellowhammers guide to Van Living
Not permanently it must be said - These ideas should really be considered as a Ladies guide for up to a week, as living in a van permanently requires additional skills not to be underestimated, including knowledge of:
- Wiring, solar panels, leisure batteries, alternators, electricity, stereos.
- engine and wheel mechanics
- chainsawing, collecting, axing, storing and burning of wood, how to light a fire in the rain and cold with rubbish wood.
- knowing water sources for cleaning up, places to empty chem-loo.
- geographical and seasonal instinct, wide knowledge of safe parkups, and network of friends to stop over with.
- How to deal with trouble and all types of people.
- Having a dog.
- Where to get mail post and parcels sent.
- Preferences of Police and Farmers, Traveller and Celtic customs.
So - here are some general thoughts on going away..
WHAT TO WEAR (-;
A Lady in a van must first do one thing - get a cool hat - this is your drivers cap and acts as extension of the vans image, as well as keeping you warm and covering up bad hair.
A soft wool type cloche hat is perfect for sleeping in, so two hats are better than one. Make sure your hat wont mind being sat on or dropped in the dirt (another good reason to have a separate sleeping hat). A broach, badge or band on your day-hat will ensure it looks stylish even when tattered.
Hats are always considered a sign of confidence, which is something you can use to enhance the channeling of your inner trucker.
Day boots and van shoes are also essential. Dont try and get away with some uggs and pair of plimsolls.
This will result in cold battered feet and ankles.
In colder weather dress to undress - ie wear leggings and tshirt under main clothes so outerlayer reveals sleepwear without late night changing in the cold.
Keep spare socks, and a favourite jumper or coat in the van at all times for use whenever required.
INSIDE:
Decorate your van however you please, yet arrange it for practicalities.
Take twice as much wood and water as you think you will need, water in different sized containers.
Tools/Weapons. Hammer, hand axe, knife - all useful and all to be readily available.
Store long jumpleads, and a tow rope for if you park in the mud like an inexperienced fool and have to be rescued.
Batteries, chargers, torches, towels etc etc
Washing up bowls - one for dirty plates, one for washing in if no sink.
Rug to put down on any muddy floor at night.
Containers for waste liquids, rubbish.
Podcasts/music and way of playing it. Things to do.
A hot water bottle to put in sleeping bag an hour before bed.
Essential oil to sprinkle around or rub into aches.
Toilet. Get one - digging in the dirt at inconvenient hours is no fun for any lady.
Ribbons for tying on nice trees. Incense. Spare lighters and lighter fuel.
Keep van tidy and aired. Have a routine to separate day from night eg Always put bed up and sweep floor out.
FOOD & BEV
It is tempting to live out of tins and eat bread n bacon...but try to pack in nutrients alongside carbs, take some bananas, dried fruit oaty flapjacks, packet of herbs and prechopped veg mix for frying up.
Take a fillet steak, fresh herbs and red wine for first night after any long drive .
Have somewhere to keep cold foods cold - bacon, milk, cheese. Squeezy ketch and mayo is useful in the absence of butter.
Do snack last thing before sleep - hot soup or cocoa and biscuits. It will get you through a cold night.
Drink - always take a bottle of dark spirits - rum/brandy/tia maria. However much you think you dont need or want a drink, you will want one later...or someone else will !
A slug warms the blood after a long walk or cold sit, and can be added to a coffee or hot choc, and compliments a log fire or wood burner very well.
It is medicinal for the blood when exposed to elements more, which is why golfers and hunters take hip flasks.
Homebrew is a good cheap sharable tipple.
THE JOURNEY
Yellowhammer doesnt play music in the front cab, it distracts from
a) getting to know and pleasing your old engine.
b) getting to know yourself and your surroundings.
There is nothing more boring than being confined to the slow lane on the motorway...or is there?
Make sure you have a hot choca-mocha or other beverage, water, sweets and a cigarette to hand before you get on the highway.
Its time to accept that cars are for speed and vans are for journeys. Forget cars and their silent jaunty manouvres..
Despite the pleasure for you of the backways, every diesel engine seems to like a long slow run to ensure everything is circulating smoothly. Driving slower on the Mway also uses less fuel.
Yellowhammer ensures every trip includes a portion on the motorway not only for reasons above, but also because continually changing gear or reading signposts is more challenging than sitting at one speed.
This is where you find what Purrage your van engine likes the best.
[Current Wagon's favourite is 54mph ...It becomes amusing seeing exasperated drivers brake sullenly in restricted speed areas when they are are set at my top speed, and taking a sideways smile at the impatient faces of the over-takers who understand nothing about lugging a 2 tonne truck with a top speed of 60mph about, is also enjoyable]
Once most pleasurable purrage is found by engine, it is a meditative sound that can induce various activities:
- observing the landscape change between counties. Flat fields start to undulate and there are clear differences in trees and passing livestock fields. It is easy to turn head and stare into a deep forest or at the horizon or clouds for several seconds at slower speeds without swerving.
- Try to calculate which way is North and if the weather is turning hot, cold or rainy. How long is it until sunset.
- Practice sitting up straight and breathing, humming or whistling, as driving can induce tension or bad posture. Indeed just talking to oneself and processing thoughts and conversations whilst staring at the endless road markings stretching forward is good.. Break on through the boredom back to a time when life moved at a slower pace. Think Hare and Tortoise. Big life thoughts. Observe other trucks on the road.
Being sociable yet safe is important. Getting plastered and leaving your bag with people you dont know, or sleeping with the door unlocked is a really stupid thing to do and would be difficult to explain later.
Yellowhammer has a hammer (of course), knife and axe - all of these are for practical reasons, but along with torches should be easily available with a rehearsed thought of what to do with them. Just for psychological comfort. (this could be a dark thought for any boring motorway part of journey!)
If you see some people having a fire or wandering about outside their vehicle, it is sociable to go over and say hi, sit with them awhile and swap thoughts. Van tales and music generally ensues.
Observe them first while you brew a cuppa to get an idea if they're ok or not. Move if they're not.
Dont let people in your van just to be polite or because you really like your van. Be firm with weird people. Use your skills of instinct and knowing, but a sociable night can result in much merry making, funny conversation, warmth and music.
Dont let any visitors or dogs get mud/pawprints on bedding esp not pillow. Store away if poss.
Keys should be close at all times, like in a purse belt/pony pack or on a hook near where you sleep.
Have a secret stash place and keep valuables there.
If anyone tries to break in during the night (unlikely unless you picked a carpark on a saturday night where youths like to burn rubber), get into front cab asap and turn on lights and engine, sound horn - whatever you need to do. Camp sites are obviously safe places or pubs with camping.
Happy Wagon Ways to you. Hope you sleep with contentment and awake to birds singing up special sunrises.
Tuesday, 3 April 2012
Pollen, Honey & Mead
Pollen Close up, Bees love it :
Mead and Honey:
Mead is a long story between men and gods.
And bees too.
And also birds.....
..... in the Vedas (sacred books of the Hindus, -1500 to -200) Indra's eagle steals honey from heaven.
For Greeks it is Zeus' eagle who took honey, and for Vikings it is Odin himself in the shape of a bird.
Aristotle (IVth century) in Greece as well as Virgil in Rome thought honey came from heaven as dew that bees gather from flowers.
Honey was seen as a panacea so it was used for healing.
The bible says this in Proverbs 24:13
"My son, eat honey because it is good, And the honeycomb which is sweet to your taste."
Historically, some kinds of mead have also been medicines and the choice of the herbs was related to their medicinal properties.
Although the famous nectar and ambrosia of the gods on Olympus were honey and mead, Greeks made mead using seawater and egg white...Who would drink such things if they were not "medicines"?
Extract from Medieval monk Cadfael:
Cadfael shook his head. "I will give you a little poppy juice mixed in some mead, but no more."
"It's good medicine though."
"It is. however like all medicine it is intended to be used in moderation."
Sipping the mead, and eyes already closing, Hugh simply allowed himself to be drawn into the heavy slumber that would undoubtedly occupy most of the day.
Mead is still a regular part of the Ethiopian tradition, where it is known as T'ej. Ethiopian mead has the bark of a plant called gesho added to it, giving it a somewhat hop-like taste and making it similar to the beer-like mead known as braggot.
Many people trace the English word honeymoon to a practice of fathers to supply their daughters with enough mead to last a month as a dowry.
Drinking this mead throughout the first month of marriage was meant to ensure that the firstborn child would be a male...can't hurt anyway..
In Valhalla, the heaven of Vikings warriors, Valkyries gave mead to the newcomers.
In the celtic heaven ran a river of mead.
Other holidays, such as the Yule festivals, also included drinking mead as part of the festivities.
Man eventually switched to Wine and Beer, but Mead is a hazy afternoon magical sophormorphic beer, or refreshing light pint in the evening setting sun.
Yellowhammer's delicious mead recipe to fill one demijohn
5-7 pots runny honey, warmed in microwave to enable easy pouring.
[Keep Jars for autumn chutneys.]
3/4 carton pear juice
2 lemon slice
Water
~ heat water first and pour in honey as you can to big pot.
~ add irish moss if bringing to boil, but no longer. Swirl and ladel. Give blessings if you like to.
~ remove lemon. Dont stew it.
~ add pear juice. Stir. Lid.
Cool overnight, stir in more cold water (ltr?) to help.
In the morning or when mildly warm to embrace, add :
~ max 1tsp/1/2 sachet champagne (or wine) yeast and pinch of yeast nutrient.
~ Stir with clean spoon very well.
That should be last big dose of air.
Sanitise demijohn well and siphon or even funnel filter liquid in mead.
Airlock DJ with Vodka.
Let it Bubble in dry warmish place until stops, 1-3 months my pref.
Siphon to clean bottles and cork.
...You should get a swig or two at this stage and get initial impression - often yeasty but promising...
Make nice labels and rem date of brew amd potential drinking dates.
Refrigerate only on evening of consumption. If too strong / sweet then use less honey and yeast next time, leave for longer, rack after initial fermentation - or simply serve watered down with tonic or dry cider this time.
Mead and Honey:
Mead is a long story between men and gods.
And bees too.
And also birds.....
..... in the Vedas (sacred books of the Hindus, -1500 to -200) Indra's eagle steals honey from heaven.
For Greeks it is Zeus' eagle who took honey, and for Vikings it is Odin himself in the shape of a bird.
Aristotle (IVth century) in Greece as well as Virgil in Rome thought honey came from heaven as dew that bees gather from flowers.
Honey was seen as a panacea so it was used for healing.
The bible says this in Proverbs 24:13
"My son, eat honey because it is good, And the honeycomb which is sweet to your taste."
Historically, some kinds of mead have also been medicines and the choice of the herbs was related to their medicinal properties.
Although the famous nectar and ambrosia of the gods on Olympus were honey and mead, Greeks made mead using seawater and egg white...Who would drink such things if they were not "medicines"?
Extract from Medieval monk Cadfael:
Cadfael shook his head. "I will give you a little poppy juice mixed in some mead, but no more."
"It's good medicine though."
"It is. however like all medicine it is intended to be used in moderation."
Sipping the mead, and eyes already closing, Hugh simply allowed himself to be drawn into the heavy slumber that would undoubtedly occupy most of the day.
Mead is still a regular part of the Ethiopian tradition, where it is known as T'ej. Ethiopian mead has the bark of a plant called gesho added to it, giving it a somewhat hop-like taste and making it similar to the beer-like mead known as braggot.
Many people trace the English word honeymoon to a practice of fathers to supply their daughters with enough mead to last a month as a dowry.
Drinking this mead throughout the first month of marriage was meant to ensure that the firstborn child would be a male...can't hurt anyway..
In Valhalla, the heaven of Vikings warriors, Valkyries gave mead to the newcomers.
In the celtic heaven ran a river of mead.
Other holidays, such as the Yule festivals, also included drinking mead as part of the festivities.
Man eventually switched to Wine and Beer, but Mead is a hazy afternoon magical sophormorphic beer, or refreshing light pint in the evening setting sun.
Yellowhammer's delicious mead recipe to fill one demijohn
5-7 pots runny honey, warmed in microwave to enable easy pouring.
[Keep Jars for autumn chutneys.]
3/4 carton pear juice
2 lemon slice
Water
~ heat water first and pour in honey as you can to big pot.
~ add irish moss if bringing to boil, but no longer. Swirl and ladel. Give blessings if you like to.
~ remove lemon. Dont stew it.
~ add pear juice. Stir. Lid.
Cool overnight, stir in more cold water (ltr?) to help.
In the morning or when mildly warm to embrace, add :
~ max 1tsp/1/2 sachet champagne (or wine) yeast and pinch of yeast nutrient.
~ Stir with clean spoon very well.
That should be last big dose of air.
Sanitise demijohn well and siphon or even funnel filter liquid in mead.
Airlock DJ with Vodka.
Let it Bubble in dry warmish place until stops, 1-3 months my pref.
Siphon to clean bottles and cork.
...You should get a swig or two at this stage and get initial impression - often yeasty but promising...
Make nice labels and rem date of brew amd potential drinking dates.
Refrigerate only on evening of consumption. If too strong / sweet then use less honey and yeast next time, leave for longer, rack after initial fermentation - or simply serve watered down with tonic or dry cider this time.
Brew now and have 5 bottles for Solstice in June !
Parrot - Colour, Light and Sound
The parrot as a healer would be representative of colour and sound therapy. Rainbows in raindrops.
Parrot is a magical totem that teaches us that the world is full of possibility.
The role of the parrot is that of a linguist opening communication centers.
When parrot totem appears look to see if you need assistance in understanding views that are different from your own but complimentary.
Beware of gossip and hasty conclusion.
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