Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Badgers











I am in Shikoku, the smallest and perhaps least 'developed' of the four main islands of Japan. About to cycle off to the end of the Yashima peninsula to where I discovered a lovely little sandy beach yesterday, from where I can sit and look across to the passing ships and the various islands dotted around the Inland Sea, including Ogijima, which is where, according to legend, Momotaro (a boy born from a peach) defeated some devil or other. At the highest point of the Yashima peninsula is a shrine (number 84 of the 88 that form a circular pilgrimage route of the whole island - a 3-month hike). This shrine is dedicated to a 1000-handed kannon of mercy, and a badger. There are large stone badgers and the tourist shops are full of happy dancing badgers with straw hats. Next to the shrine there is a large marble plaque with the following inscription:

"In the old days when the grand priest Kobo opened the 88 pilgrimage temples on Shikoku, he lost his way in foggy Yashima and met an old man wearing a straw rain coat, who guided him to the peak of mountain. It is believed that the old man was the figure of the Yashima tasaburo's badger's metamorphosis. The Yashima tasaburo badger is noted for being one of 3 badgers in Japan, together with the danzaburo badger of Sado island and the shibaemon badger of Awaji island. It was the messenger of the Senju kannon or the thousand-handed kannon found in the main hall, enshrined preciously because he did a lot of goodness as the tutelary god and was respected as the general head of badgers in Shikoku. The legendary skill of the sophisticated metamorphosis stood unchallenged throughout Japan. The Yashima tasaburo badger was also considered to be a monogamist and is respected as a god of peaceful families, marriages and the restaurant business. Believers who wish to have babies and good luck visit the Yashima tasaburo badger from all over Japan."

You couldn't make it up. It really is extraordinary what piffle we are capable of believing, as long as enough other people around us are convinced, and we are desperate to believe in something, anything that gives us hope. Anything to avoid looking at the truth - ie. in this case, a monk met an old man who showed him the way.

"The legendary skill of the sophisticated metamorphosis stood unchallenged throughout Japan" - how could anyone possibly hope to compete with a 1000-handed god pretending to be a badger pretending to be an old man? Even if he was a monogamist. And compete for what? Being god of the restaurant business? Would that include cafes? Or would there be an opening there for a separate god I wonder? A 12-nosed caterpillar god with 3 arms pretending to be a flying walrus impersonating a barber shop quartet perhaps?

At the foot of the mountain is a museum of sorts, consisting of houses, agricultural in the main part, dating back to Meiji and beyond (19th century), which have been dismantled and rebuilt here - a paper-making hut (washi), where thin mulberry branches were first steamed for hours, then the bark was stripped off and the white inside beaten to a pulp, laid out, dried and Bob's your uncle. A soya factory with its great wooden vats the size of a small room. A sugar cane mill, driven by an ox going round in circles all day. A water wheel. Oddly, a British Victorian (VR) pillar box and telephone box, and some lighthouse keepers' cottages, the sturdiest structures there, built by British engineers, reflecting the importance (to the British) of protecting their ships in the 'opening up' of Japan.

July 4th, Independence Day, 1945, between 02.56 and 04.42, 116 US B29 bombers dropped 809 tons of incendiary bombs on this city, destroying 18,505 buildings (16,103 homes) - 80% of the urban area. Remarkably only 1,359 people were killed and 1,034 wounded. This was one of over 800 such raids on Japan.

I walked up the mountain through the woods, but when I got to the top found that a wide road had been built round the back, bringing coachloads of tourists - hobbling high-heeled girls with fake suntanned boyfriends. There is an aquarium up there. I watched from the road as the Bay City Rollers' 'Saturday' (a great karaoke favourite here) blares out. I can see two grey seals swimming round and round interminably the edge of a small transparent-walled pool, and a large turtle. I walk away in disgust as 'Saturday' starts up again - evidently also on an interminable loop.

Right - time to get the bike out ...

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

My home is in the human race

How many lives can one man live?
How we long for the bonds of attachment
We cling to hope like limpets to a rock
Battered by a sea of random indifference

How easily we accept love
How willingly we throw our hearts open
to the whim of passing strangers
though we know the solid pain

We live a layered myriad of lives
One floats to the surface and then another
Through the flickering shoal we see what we can
and catch a glimpse of the fleeting soul within

A constant maybe, a might have been, a could be one day
living only in this one, this space
peering into and from this face
these faces surround us, these eyes

on the train to Hiratsuka this Tuesday morning
September 8th 2009

The frog in the dark well
waiting for the cold echoing drip
to ripple through his film
gulping while his thin webbed feet
paddle the depths below


http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=15147

Monday, September 7, 2009

The roots of a tree cast no shadow

Touched down yesterday from my mountain home

Now I'm back by the sea

You wonder where you're going, and just where you belong

Take a long look back at where you've been

(A,E)






Heard some wise words on the plane





http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HC5Tjq2Faks





"If you want to know where you're going, you got to know where you've been"





(Bluesman on Scorsese's film)





"The world is a tragedy to those who feel,


but a comedy to those who think"





(Walpole)





Discuss.

Monday, July 27, 2009

The Other

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xns67AVkOeI&feature=related

Nothing is new under the sun

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQqq3e03EBQ

Written in 1948 about 1948, with reference to 1984, .. well - it's here - it arrived a long time ago

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xns67AVkOeI&feature=related

The Foes of Mankind (Axis of Evil)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M0y5CSywIOw&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PLSmj9G0cE0&feature=related

There will be a sad day comin’
For the foes of all mankind
They must answer to the people
And it’s troubling their mind

Everybody who must fear them
Will rejoice on that great day
When the powers of dictators
Shall be taken all away



CHORUS:

There’ll be smoke on the water
On the land and the sea
When our Army and Navy overtakes the enemy
There’ll be smoke on the mountains
Where the Heathen Gods stay
And the sun that is risin’
Will go down on that day

For there is a great destroyer
Made of fire and flesh and steel
Rollin’ toward the foes of freedom
They’ll go down beneath its wheels

There’ll be nothing left but vultures
To inhabit all that land
When our modern ships and bombers
Make a graveyard of Japan

CHORUS
Hirohito ‘long with Hitler
Will be ridin’ on a rail
Mussolini’ll beg for mercy
As a leader he has failed

But there’ll be no time for pity
When the Screamin’ Eagle flies
That will be the end of Axis
They must answer with their lives


This was sung by the same guy:
Satisfied Mind (By Rhodes & Hayes, 1955)
How many times have you heard someone say
"If I had his money, I could do things my way?"
Little they know that it's so hard to find
One rich man in ten with a satisfied mind.
.
Once I was winning in fortune and fame
Everything that I dreamed for to get a start in life's game
Suddenly it happened, I lost every dime
But I'm richer by far with a satisfied mind
.
Money can't buy back your youth when you're old
Or a friend when you're lonely, or a love that's grown cold
The wealthiest person is a pauper at times
Compared to the man with a satisfied mind
.
When my life is ended, my time has run out
My trials and my loved ones, I'll leave them no doubt
But one thing's for certain, when it comes my time
I'll leave this old world with a satisfied mind
.
I'll leave this old world with a satisfied mind
..

SWEET are the thoughts that savor of content;
The quiet mind is richer than a crown;
Sweet are the nights in careless slumber spent;
The poor estate scorns Fortune's angry frown.
.

Such sweet content, such minds, such sleep, such bliss,
Beggars enjoy, when princes oft do miss.
The homely house that harbors quiet rest;
The cottage that affords no pride nor care;
.

The mean that 'grees with country music best;
The sweet consort of mirth and music's fare;
Obscure life sets down a type of bliss:
A mind content both crown and kingdom is.
.

Robert Greene
1560 - 1592
.
.
.

Pomp and Circumstance

Went to an unusual concert the other day, that included among other things 'Land of Hope and Glory' in Japanese.

More offbeat news:

http://www.theelders.org/

http://www.ae911truth.org/info/64

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=14503

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=THYgeETrkPs&feature=related


Morning at Takamatsu by Kawase Hasui