Saturday, March 26, 2016

running with migrating birds



A sweet sky memory from last week: to get to Leipzig book fair, I first took the s-train to Stuttgart
city. The train follows the Neckar River for this passage, and it takes about half an hour. I tried some photos along the way, and then noticed a flock of birds in the air:



I tried to catch a photo while the train started to move again, and then kept looking at them - and they remained "right there", in the window view. Turned out, they were flying with about the same speed as the train, following the same route along the river.



It was amazing to see them, and to "run" with them for this ride. I tried to identify them, but they were too far away. From direction, they came from the East, moving towards West. but then, that's just the river course in that region.

It also made me think again of time and of migration - how since ages, both people and animals followed this river: the stone age tribes, the Celts, the Romans... That rivers are heartbeat lines of civilization in time.

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more skies from everywhere: skywatch friday



Thursday, March 24, 2016

links that touched me: Procrastination, Digging Through, Hayduke, Leipzig liest, Bookfair, Interviews..


When I come across an interesting link / video / story that touches me, I often copy the link to blog about it at a later point. Yet by then, there's already another interesting link that is waiting... to keep the links from vanishing unblogged, I started this "links-that-touched-me" series.
Here's the next part, with a focus on the Leipzig Book fair:

Monday, March 21, 2016

spring!, or: the power of petals + the power of words




just this.
this moment.
this color.
at this time of day.

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Still happy about the sun moments from Sunday. The weather forecast had announced that it would be overcast all day: there was a huge cloud field covering almost all of Germany, and we were at the southern cloud border.  But in the late morning, some first patches of sky started to show. Like with the flight, I hopped into my clothes and went out right away, to take a walk.

Back home, I picked up a book from the library that turned out to be funny and witty and full of life, even though it has "death" in the title. The German title is "Sophia, der Tod und ich" ("Sophia, Death and me"), written by Thees Uhlmann. Here's a sunstruck photo:  

 

As it turned out, despite the cloudy forecast, it remained sunny all afternoon. So good. And so nice to see the spring flowers pop up now, in their bright colous. Spring energy! Today it's back to clouds, but the energy is still lingering.

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Inspired by the sun, and by photofriday's new theme "powerful".... now for a revisited text that connects to powerful. hmmm.... maybe this one? It popped up on top when I tried a google-search of this blog for "power", a note written after visiting the Frankfurt Bookfair in 2009 - it's not one of the best, but fits with the book theme, and with just coming back from the Leipzig Bookfair.
And to go with it, a photo of a revolution:


The Power of Culture

Cathedrals of glass for all those words written
7000 publishers meeting in one place
The number of their books: uncountable

Police guards at the entry, checking bags -
- But who would bring a bomb to a book fair?
- Well...

I dive into hall after hall, into lakes of words and sound
Chinese poetry live, textcontext, forum book,
Prix nobel 2009, du monde entier a-z

Outside, a circusstyle reading tent, cup of coffee for 1.50,
Live words for free: Anthony McCarten: Show of Hands,
Leon de Winter: Recht auf Rückkehr.

In between halls, gateways of thought, words on a poster:
Der Kultur der Macht / die Macht der Kultur entgegensetzen
Contradict the Culture of Power / With the Power of Culture.

Moving on, into other worlds, into installations of ink on paper
I try to trace the line between fiction and fact,
And reach the fine hall of art.

I gather conceptual, (un)monumental
Keys to this world
In lines on paper

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Saturday, March 19, 2016

Finalities, a brain wave, and an unexpected morning flight




For goodbye: A final night-walk through Leipzig City with chance piano music, And dinner in the "Auerbach Keller", where Goethe used to go - a place he even included in "Faust". See the painting in the background? The red figure is Mephisto from Faust.

Then, in the hotel room: some frustrating scrolling through possible train connections - no direct and quick shortcut possible. But in the morning, the brainwave to check flights. 8.30, same price as train ticket, the flight site offered. 

Never before was I so quickly packed and on the way to the airport. Made it to ckeckin with 5 minutes left. Now, the final stops on the s-train that leads from the airport to home. Then a hot shower, and: home weekend breakfast.



Thursday, March 17, 2016

Leipzig moments: daymoon, art cafe, old doors, new ceiling - and a walk along water


Still happy about the weather. Just a day before we arrived it was rainy and grey. Tomorrow clouds might arrive again, but the 2 sunny days now were perfect and brought some good moments, like turning around a corner and seeing this old building, with the daymoon up there.


Or visiting an art gallery, and then the fancy cafe that belongs to it. 


This is the "Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst" - the university for graphic design and book art. Some are still learning the basics, obviously.



An ever-changing view: the sky and fair lake, seen through the glass hall. 

From large to small: our hotel room comes with a nice wooden board, which is now turning into a little flyer gallery:


To see something beyond the city and fair, I went for a short countryside drive this morning, and stopped at "Schladitzer See", an artificial lake that formed in a gravel pit. I had no idea how it would look, or that there would be a sandy beach and this feeling of nature reserve. So nice, to be there for a bit. 

Leipzig Bookfair moments: the day before the start, 24h later, book book and blogger coffee break



The photo the is from yesterday: the whole fair was still in the process of "Aufbau", of getting everything together.

And this is how it looked today:



I was in the Central hall just when the "Leipzig Buchpreis" was announced. more about the prize and the books, online at the international website of Radio DW (Deutsche Welle / German Wave): Leipzig Book Fair Prize rewards three epic works

And two mini moments: "Buch Buch" - "book book"



And a cup of coffee in the book blogger lounge, with blogger book (everything is about books here).

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Celebrating Words - a short history of the written word in the German Library + Book musem


After the trip through recent german history, I took the tram to the National German library. They host an exhibition about the written word. Again, so touching and impressive - the power of words.



Some first moments from Leipzig




Being in Leipzig is moving: so many layers of history, from Goethe memories (he studied here) to esst germam history - the church is one of the main places of the peaceful revolution that lead to reunion. People gathered and walked here every monday, risking their freedom to get to larger freedom.






Walking through the sunny streets made it hard to believe that just some hours earlier, there was snow and rain. Just as it is hard to believe that not so long ago, there was a wall between East and West Germany. 



Monday, March 14, 2016

global reading US: tales, resolutions, winter butterflies, or: thought you might want to see this...




7 continents, 7 books, the next step: from Europe to America, and to #readwomen

My global reading journey started in Antarctica, and moved to Europe from there. In one of those nice coincidences, the first book I read for Europe took me both back to age of Enlightment, and back to a reading initiative from 2014:
"Reading Almqvist also reminded me of the "Readwomen"-initiative, and my own resolution to read more books written by female authors." 
So instead of moving on to move on to the next continent, to a book I had ordered already but arrived too late to take along (Laurence Bergreen's "Over the Edge of the World", which tells the story of Magellan's circumnaviagation of the globe - a journey that also included the Canary Islands, and the idea was to read the book there.)

So instead of following Bergreen's account of Magellan's journey, I browsed books again ... and arrived in the US, with 2 female authors who probably are well-known there, but not so much here in Europe: Edith Wharton and Zora Neale Hurston.



"Ethan Frome" by Edith Warthon
Edith Warthon was the first woman who won the Pulitzer Prize for literature, in 1921, for her novel "The Age of Innocence". "Ethan Frome" is an earlier work, published in 1911. The story is set in the fictitious town of Starkfield, Massachusetts.
Interesting detail: Wharton was always careful to label "Ethan Frome" as a tale rather than a novel. It's a dark story to read, and unlike fairy tales, there isn't exactly a happy end waiting for the characters. Here's more: Wikipedia/Ethan Frome

The story has two timelines, the one of the narrator, and the time of the earlier happenings. Here are two quotes that give an idea of the atmosphere (I was touched by the second one, the butterfly in winter):
"It seemed to be a part of the thickening darkness, to be the winter night itself descending on us layer by layer.”
 “They seemed to come suddenly upon happiness as if they had surprised a butterfly in the winter woods.”
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Their eyes were watching.. - Zora Neale Hurston
The second novel also reaches back in time, to 1937.  Here's the book description, from wiki: "Their Eyes Were Watching God" is a 1937 novel and the best known work by African-American writer Zora Neale Hurston. Set in central and southern Florida in the early 20th century, the novel was initially poorly received for its rejection of racial uplift literary prescriptions. Today, it has come to be regarded as a seminal work in both African-American literature and women's literature. TIME included the novel in its 2005 list of the 100 best English-language novels published since 1923." - more:  Wikipedia / Their Eyes...

The copy I read included a longer foreword, which reads like a tale story itself: that the book for a longer time was on the verge to go out of print, even when the first discussion panels included it. Back then, there were "reading lists" for panel visitors, to get a borrowed copy for 2 hours. And that at one point, Alice Walker went looking for Hurston's grave, and learned that it was unmarked, on the way to be almost forgotten. She couldn't bear this neglect, and took care of the grave, ordering a gravemarker with the inscription: "Zora Neale Hurston - Genius of the South - Novelist, Folklorist, Anthropologist (1891-1960). Both the story itself, and the story about the book is touching. Just like this quote from the book:
"There are years that ask questions and years that answer."
Another tale-like moment: the story leads to a particular place in Florida - to Lake Okeechobee. I was there, at that lake, once. Now I wish I had known about the book back then, and read it there.



So the timing didn't work for the read-at-the-same place, but instead something else worked out in a nice parallel of themes: while I thought about #readwomen, a message from Canada reached me - written by Mary Duffy: "Hello Dorothee thought you might want to see this as I mention your blog and book challenge"... and the link lead straight to Room Magazine, to an interview about Reading habits and resolutions:

Are you aware of your reading habits? - Reading Resolutions with Nikki Reimer and Mary Duffy

  

Such a good surprise. And how beautiful that my world reading challenge inspired a book group to read around the world, and now form a part of those reflections, which again might make other readers look at their reads from this different viewpoint.

The next reading challenge stop... won't be a continent, but an event: it's Leipzig Book Fair upcoming. Really looking forward.

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Reading Links 
Here are some additional links:




Sunday, March 13, 2016

up where we (not) belong, or: H.owl



Wilderness. For me, one of the regions that still feels wild in Europe is: the Alps. There are streets throught he valleys, yes. Some towns, too, and some pass roads - but most of them close in winter. And even in summer, driving along those roads reminds you that the mountains are a different world.

I still remember that road, and the way the clouds moved in, brushing the mountain tops, and bringing some singles drops of rain. There was a parking area, and I stopped to take a picture. Standing there, I noticed a bird. It was huge. And high. Too far away to be all sure, but it probably was an eagle. It was at home there, in the vastness of those mountains.




Still happy about that moment. Nice that photo friday brought that memory back, with its new wilderness theme.

And a wilderness-story to go with it:

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H.owl 
She sat in ant.icipation, watched a fire.fly. It was her first night vigil. By daylight, she had laughed the task away. I’m no cow.ard, she had stated.

She swallow.ed. Fact was, the night had a fourth, fur.ious dimension, there, next to the r.eal river. And just like her, the forest, so calm at noon, now was dealing with its own moving bear.ings.



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Friday, March 11, 2016

march sky + a counterpart memory



Today: driving up to the Alb plateau for a walk. And being suprised by: snow. It's just a 300 meter difference of altitute, but it feels like another season up there.

The sun came out for a bit, and it was good to walk, and let all those themes of the week settle.

The way leads to those two old trees, with a bench - and standing there, I remembered that I took a photo of the place the last time I walked there, too. September, that was. Now I looked for it, and it's the counterpart view, and the counterpart season:



Soon the trees will turn green again...

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more skies from everywhere: skywatch friday

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Structures that Peace - a memory





Today: being a bit nervous about the upcoming health check-up. Should all be okay, but that's the days when the worries wake and sing their song. To counterpart them, I revisited photos and stories, following the current photofriday theme "Structural". which now brought me back to "Structures that Peace".
Here's to a peaceful day~

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A quick update: the checks went okay - all looks good. big sigh of relief. I mean, I felt okay, but you never can really know. So now, hopefully, 3 months of doc-free-time.

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Structures that Peace

A combined memory, inspired by the photofriday theme "Structural"


Katrina reached Europe yesterday. The same weather system that left New Orleans drowned and devastated one month ago, it now arrived here in Germany, shrunken to a thick string of clouds, stepping into Saturday with showers. In the evening, the rains paused for a while, and I walked through the garden, to visit the surprise that waited there since the morning from up-close: most of the flowers are settling for the end of year already. But then there's this one flower that never bloomed before, yet decided that now would be a good time. It grew dozens of buds in the last two weeks, to open them all at once this week and shine in yellow, like a little natural firework. I took a photo of it, it came out like a field of flowers, even though it really is just one flower.

Then, this morning, I woke from a strange dream that came and went with dawn, leaving two scenes in my memory:

In the first scene, I walk along a corridor with coloured windows. It leads to a room with a chair and a neuro-active screen that picks up nameless moods and transfers them into coloured structures. At the end of each session, it gives a cryptic advice, like a zen riddle. I repeat the one I am given, to keep it in mind. When I leave the room, all things that happen from that point on are related to the structures on the screen and the advice given.

Later, in the second scene, I return to the room. Instead of a screen, there is a woman sitting behind a table now, laying cards, sketching the future. I sit down, but there is a device she needs to connect first, and we look for a matching cable. Finally it all is in place, and she says: "I forgot how much slower everything works here, compared to Tibet."

Then I woke, unable to remember either the zen line I repeated, or any account on the future that waits. Yet, almost like the real life version of the dream, I came across Tibet again after the dream ended: first when I looked for a feature on migrating birds in TV, and instead found a film with the Dalai Lama, made in honour of his 70th birthday on the 6th July, and now showed once more. It was about the political progress that might become possible through the Olympic games in China, when Beijing will open the inner and outer borders of the country to let in the world in 2008. Also it featured a study done by the University of Wisconsin that focused on the brain patterns of monks during meditations on compassion.

As it turns out, scientist now found out that brain activities during such a meditation change in unexpected scales. Which would mean that the human brain is capable of being trained and physically modified in ways scientists didn’t expect.

There also was an interview with one of the monks who took part in the study. The monk explained the training that is necessary for mediations by comparing it to the lessons that are needed when you want to learn how to play piano. He said, “a piano player maybe takes 10.000 hours to learn and practice, to become good at playing. And it's same with monks, they take a long time to practice feeling compassion with the world.” He also contemplated on the ability to feel compassion, compared to the ability to play piano, not in a we-know-better-way, more like in seeing the world and reflecting on the different ways life takes, the different tasks people dedicate their life to.

Later in the evening, I watched the news, and it was basically one long feature about the German votes and possible options for a parliament as seen from all the involved parties.



I switched channels. And switched right into a feature on four female monks who had stayed in a town not far from here last week, to create a mandala in one of the public houses. I sighed, sorry to have missed that. But at least I saw it now, in this documentation that showed the way they worked, how the mandala grew every day while people came to see it. One of the monks explained the purpose of their work. "It is good to look at a mandala," she said. "It peaces."

It peaces. For the Buddhist monks, peace is a verb, I thought. They worked and peaced, by adding one piece of the mandala to the next until it was finished. Then they sat down to concentrate. And then - they brushed it all away. Collected the sand. And brought it to a close-by river. To let the sand flow away in water.

"It's part of it," one of the monks said. "To let it go."

It was so strong, their inner energy and beauty. Their concentration. Their compassion.

After having seen that, I didn't want to watch anything else that evening, least of all the news, didn't want to see those moments drown in the structure of the everyday.



Note + Links:
I wrote this note in 2005, not knowing yet that some years later, in 2009, another group of monks would create a mandala in a town just some miles from here, in the townhall - and that I would be able to visit the mandala-in-process a couple of times.

Here's the original blog post from the visit, with photos: The world in a grain of sand.

I am enjoying those weekly theme-inspired revisits more and more. Here are the previous revisits.



Saturday, March 5, 2016

stork is back



This is a photo I am happy about for several reasons: such a good suprise to walk up to this tower in the botanical park, and see a stork there. It's like: "spring is coming, the migrating birds are back". and to be there just at that point, with the stork standing on its nest, just while the dove was crossing.

Seeing the stork brought back memories from another stork moment: in France, in 2013. Sitting outside for breakfast, and looking up, there was a flock of unusual birds. I tried a photo... and it was only later that I figured out that those were actually storks. Normally, in Germany, you see them only single or in pairs. never like that:



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more skies from around the world: sky friday 



Tuesday, March 1, 2016

alone / to a void, or: mirror moments



This weekend, I visited the square museum again - and was lucky, there weren't that many visitors i the upper floor at the time I was there. For some minutes, I even was alone in the long floor with mirror installations. So I could freely walk and look and reflect (in a double sense).

Walking there, I thought of the photo friday challenge "Alone" and snapped a photo. And then remembered the entry lines of a story I once wrote: "Alone in a house in the night..."

The story is included below. And here's a second mirror moment from the exhibition - the artist is Christian Megert.




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to a void 


alone in a house. in the night.
shadows on a wall. on the move.
silence. listening to silence

to avoid the silence turn on the music the song
the song over and over and over

to avoid the shadows turn on the tv the
light the candles the night

to avoid the loneliness
to avoid a void
play

play with motions with the flickers of the flame
with the sound of syllables scattered in sentences

yet you are alone.
alone in this house in this night.

you will be alone, tomorrow night.
you will be alone, the night after tomorrow night.
and the next. and the next.

the house. it has so many doors, so many windows
opening to the outside, letting the light in
the wind, the echoes.

the window in front of you, it is flickering while you type this.
it's the wind touching it.
wind on window.

is that where the word is coming from?

wind. it is the same in German.
der Wind. the wind.
Wind and wind.

not many words that stay the very same.
roses do. eine Rose. a rose.
it even is a rose in France. la rose.

a rose is a rose is a rose.

maybe that is what she meant, after all. Gertrude Stein.

Stein. stone.
lang. long.
Kuss. kiss.
Wort. word.
Ozean. ocean.

change a letter
change the language.

sometimes you try to imagine
what would happen
if you were alone in a house
for a whole month.

just you the house and pencils and paper.
maybe you have to try it
one day

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Links:
- "to a void" was originally published in The 3rd Page
- more themes / stories:  White, Tranquil, Height, Eyes...