"I make mistakes, I am out of control, and at times hard to handle, but if you can't handle me at my worst then you sure as hell don't deserve me at my best." ~~ Marilyn Munroe
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Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Quote of the day: Chinese Proverb
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Monday, July 20, 2009
Kowloon in Second Life
If you haven't been to Kowloon in SL you really need to make the time to see it. An incredible build. Makes you feel like you are really there!
Draven discovered it on a splash page of the Emerald (Greenlife) viewer and showed me around. Lovely architecture and, oh!, the neon!
Sunday, March 15, 2009
Balancing my Tao with my Te
Today was a larger crowd than is usual I suspect, since Corwyn and Suzanne had to put out extra cushions. Suzanne Logan runs the geisha house on Amatsu for which Corwyn acts as "hogosha" or bodyguard. I have met Suzanne before and am fairly sure she has a deep crush on Cor, just by the way she seems a bit suspicious of any woman with whom he hangs out. The irony here is that Cor really is my brother--in RL as much as in SL. Can't blame Suzanne for being jealous of my relationship with him. It is hard to explain. Even Draven was jealous at first (he saw my picture in Cor's profile and went ballistic once) until he got to know Corwyn and saw there was nothing sexual between us. Thing is, Corwyn like most men (Draven included!) is pretty oblivious to how attractive he is to women and how they see him. He treats Suzanne as the best of friends and ignores her overtures. She, being a tactful woman, doesn't press it.
So here I am at this Daoism discussion group. And Suzanne is putting her spin on the lesson. She has passed out three versions of the text in a notecard reader. She has also copied sections of notes from some other sources and is taking a very western and religious approach to the text. Corwyn's friend Taras is interpreting the text in the metaphysical approach, but with a Chinese religious sensibility. So I take the literal path. Not a good move I think. My first time there and I am arguing with both the established teachers, Taras and Suzanne. But that is me. Open mouth, insert foot, swallow. Then to top it off this was a day for typos. But what day in SL isn't. Hard to look like you might have a clue when you always get your numbers wrong and can't type fast worth a damn.
Thing is, in China, especially in ancient times, that threefold approach would make for a lively discussion. The thing scholars do is sit over tea and argue the multiple approaches to a text. But in China there would be no more than 4 people at the tea house table. Here there were 8 other people in the room, all struggling to get a word in edgewise. Even poor Corwyn had to repeat a comment 3 times before it was acknowledged. After a while I decided to just shut up, but by then the session was almost over.
Corwyn had made his bows and departed early as he had a poetry reading to attend. So, at the end, I made bows to all and made a point of especially thanking Suzanne and Taras, but I suspect by then they were just happy to see me leave. Ah well. I IMed Cor to thank him for inviting me, and he said: "You were great!" Which made me feel better. He after all is the one who is important to me here. And if the others are grateful that his pushy sinologist friend had finally left, well, then I can make them even happier by not returning.
I told Cor I will have him and Taras over for tea some day soon and we can have a civilized discussion of Chinese philosophy. If Taras comes over, I will make an effort not to, as Draven says I do, "keep my foot on the gas." I would actually like to get to know him since anyone who chooses a name like Taras Balderdash clearly has a good sense of humor.
Just one parting question: Does the irony of having a serious discussion of Daoism (or Taoism as popular spelling was today) by Westerners in medieval Japan in a virtual world (wearing a mix of clothing from formal Heian to child Neko to Southern Belle to blue skin to my own sing-song girl mini-skirt) strike anyone else as pretty damn amusing?
Saturday, November 8, 2008
An evening in Amatsu Shima

Tonight he took me to see the new teahouse he had built. A lovely little building that could hold a tea master and four guests for a traditional Chado or Tea Ceremony. The landscaping around the teahouse including a beautiful little waterfall, was done by Suzanne Logan, who runs the geisha house and school there.


Thursday, January 24, 2008
Landmarks of Second Life: The Great Wall
The Great Wall of China is one of my favorite places in the real world, so how could I miss a chance to see the Second Life version of this fabulous historical landmark? The Second Life Great Wall is a Linden created landmark that runs the length of several sims, virtually echoing the multi-province "10,000 li" distance of the real Great Wall? (The real GW is actually 6700 km or 4100 miles, more than the distance from NY city to LA.) Of course the real Great Wall twists and turns like a serpent, and the many ups and downs of the hills make it even more dramatic, as well as quite a climb in places.
(These are photos from one of my RL trips there!)

Another difference is in the gates and guardposts. The RL Wall has guard posts and gates placed strategically along its length, the SL one has some pavilion like structures, but there is no similarity in terms of architectural detail. In fact the SL version of a guardhouse defies all architectural principles leaving it with a sort of unfinished and too modern look.
Still, as an RL Wonder of the World recreated in SL, the Second Life Great Wall is definately worth a visit.
Monday, January 14, 2008
Tea at Corwyn's
