Weekly Photo Challenge: Reflections


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The view from our 4 meter high stone wall out across the island to the Saronic gulf.  Every summer I return to this spot, and every summer its different.  I’ve sat here with friends and family looking back, looking forward, or just watching the reflection of the moon on the water.

  1. Rippled by Geese | Lucid Gypsy
  2. Weekly Photography Challenge: Reflection | sukies original
  3. Reflections | Artifacts and Fictions
  4. Weekly Photo Challenge / B4 Retouch: Reflections (Pebbles on the Beach) | What’s (in) the picture?
  5. Weekly Photo Challenge: Reflection​s | Jake Kuyser
  6. Weekly Photo Challenge: Reflections | Tim Wolverson – Photo Blog
  7. Weekly Photo Challenge: Reflections | Ritva’s Art – Photography
  8. Mes stats | Mon univers
  9. Weekly Photo Challenge: Reflections II | Ritva’s Art – Photography
  10. Reflections- weekly photo challenge | pdjpix
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  12. Weekly Photo Challenge: Reflections | Diary of Dennis
  13. Weekly Photo Challenge: Reflections | Pat and Al’s Adventure Continues…
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  16. Reflections on the River Thames, 23.03.14 | Markie’s Daily Blog
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  19. Weekly Photo Challenge: Reflections (III) | Uncle Spike’s Adventures
  20. Weekly Photo Challenge: Reflections – Wilderness Escapades
  21. Weekly Photo Challenge: Reflections | Jinan Daily Photo

Lingering in the Garden of Dreams


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This very pretty bench is the perfect place to take some time to enjoy the sunshine, read a book, or just linger for a few minutes and take in the view. There’s nowhere else like it in Kathmandu.

Literally, nowhere.  Kathmandu streets are dusty, noisy and difficult to navigate.  Motorbikes don’t pay much attention to sidewalks.  And pedestrians have a very loose idea of where they’re supposed to walk.  So both mingle in a continual stream of near disaster and, if you’re not vigilant, you may well be standing in the wrong place when disaster happens.  And if you’re not looking down, you can trip, or twist your ankle or tread in something nasty. There are no benches, public parks or quiet spots, only gaps in the chaos where people dump their garbage.  It ain’t pretty.  Not surprisingly–especially as a foreigner–there is nowhere to stop and take a breath.

Except the charming Garden of Dreams, a paid park close to Kathmandu’s tourist district of Thamel, and a little haven of quiet and solitude amid all the chaos.  Getting out of Kathmandu to the beauty of Nepal is not always possible, but here at least you can escape for a little while.

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Hanging out on the grassy amphitheater at the Garden on Dreams. Here in the dusty dry season, its not so green. But is pretty, calm, and  no one bothers you.

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The park grounds are from the former Kaiser palace and still retain their feeling of Neo-Classical splendor.

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Garden of Dreams

This post participated in the Daily Post’s prompt, Linger

Special places for others:

  1. A Night At Billy Bronco’s | The Jittery Goat
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  36. Until Next Time | Lifestyle | WANGSGARD

Weekly Photo Challenge: Inside


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Po, our Manila cat.  And, ironically, our first “inside” cat…trapped on the 21st floor of a 53 story building.  Just like us, she was forever finding a new home! Here she is inside the apartment, inside the pantry and inside my nested mixing bowls.

This post participated in the Daily Post’s Weekly Photo Challenge: Inside

See other interpretations on the theme:

Weekly Photo Challenge: Inside « Leya

Weekly Photo Challenge – Floating Inside My Mind | Isadora Art and Photography

Weekly Photo Challenge: INSIDE | MAGGIE’S BLOG

Inside Harmony | A Journey Called Life …

Weekly Photo Challenge: Inside | paintedwords

3-14-14 Getting Inside The Weekly Photo Challenge | The Quotidian Hudson

Weekly Photo Challenge : The Inside of Things / Bagian Dalam | bambangpriantono

Weekly Photo Challenge: Inside | 2812 photography

Weekly Photo Challenge: Inside | Spacious Interior | puncta lucis

Inside, Outside, Inside | Mary J Melange

Weekly Photo Challenge: Inside | Witrian’s Photofolio

Weekly Photo Challenge – Inside | Different Isn’t Wrong, It’s Just Different

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Inside view | marsowords

Weekly Photo Challenge: INSIDE OUT | V A S T L Y C U R I O U S

Weekly Photo Challenge: Inside | mommyneurotic

Locked – Forever and ever!

weekly photo challenge: inside | Del’s other stuff…

Weekly Photo Challenge: Inside | Geophilia Photography

Weekly Photo Challenge: Inside | Memory Catcher

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WPC: Inside | dadirridreaming

Weekly Photo Challenge: INSIDE | Captured By Kylie Photography

Hamster babies in a shoebox (Daily Prompt: Inside) | Photo0pal Photography

Inside uShaka | de Wets Wild

inside the light at the end of the tunnel | memoirs of an unremarkable man

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AT HOME – INWARD AND INSIDE | SERENDIPITY

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Flying inside the lines | See Diving

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From Inside the Boston Elevated in San Francisco (Weekly Photo Challenge: Inside) | The San Francisco Scene–Seen!

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Weekly Photo Challenge – Inside – Boil, Boil, Toil and ……..pasta! |

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Logos Compilation | Crazy Art

Uninvited Dinner Guest | Holoholo Girls

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Inside: Who Does it Better than Cats?

WPC: Inside | blueberriejournal

Weekly Photo Challenge: Inside (Ireland under a Rainbow) | What’s (in) the picture?

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Weekly Photo Challenge: Inside | Indira’s Blog

Weekly Photography Challenge: Inside « Minute Moments

Weekly Photo Challenge: Inside | Life Confusions

Inside | Eye of Lynx

Friendship and the Serial Expat


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Thirty years into this mobile life I can truly say I have friends all over the world.  Not international Facebook buddies I’ve never met, but real friends who I’ve known for a while, or in some cases, forever.  Of course with advent of Facebook, it so much easier to stay in touch.   I remember the pre-internet days of typing, faxing or snail mailing letters – or worse –  writing the dreaded Christmas letter, trying to summarize  the major events of the year into one boring laundry list of milestones that were of little or no interest to anyone who receives it.

Or even worse –  participating in the annual Christmas card ritual that become increasingly meaningless to me, much to the annoyance of my husband.  I don’t think I’m alone in dropping the ritual of sending Christmas cards to distant friends, even when its the only method of communication left.  I think its been slowly dying a death independent of my negligence.  I have only contributed to their demise, and others aren’t writing them either, although some might argue that friends aren’t mailing them to us anymore as they’ve  just given up trying to figure out our address!  But I am suspicious that I’m not the only one that feels the drudgery of repetitively handwriting masses of envelopes outweighs the connectivity that they are supposed to bring,  especially when weighed against the personal connection of a Skype call or even an email.

Despite all the meaningless  white noise of Facebook, it does bring me everyday nuggets of trivia that I care about.  Photos of my nephews and nieces growing up, my friend’s new house, details about places and faces where I have lived but may never see again.  These are the kind of everyday minor details that we’d share if we lived across town or even in the same country.  Its trivia, but its meaningful because of the person sharing it.   And with real friends,  we switch to Skype to share real news, to hear each other’s voices,  or to explain important things privately.  Being an expat was much, much harder before the internet.

Yes, real friends are people that you can reconnect with after a long time apart, and that accept you for who you are.  (And, in our case, people who forgive us for completely wrecking the “w” pages in their address book!)  But they are also the people who remember all the crazy small things you’ve shared, and the little things that are important to you.

Sometimes I envy people who live in the same place all their lives, and have a real sense of place.  But that isn’t really who I am or what would really make me happy.  So I’m grateful that, for at least some of the time,  the internet – almost – makes me feel like I live in a global village.

This post participated in the Daily Prompt: Something So Strong.

Weekly Photo Challenge: Perspective


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American Cemetery, Fort Bonifacio, Manila, Philippines. A solo Star of David amid a sea of crosses. The American Cemetery contains the largest number of American dead from World War II with over 17,000 graves.

This post is a participant in the Daily Post’s Weekly Photo Challenge: Perspective.

Secret Jellyfish World


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In Koror, a small island kingdom in the Pacific,  there’s a jellyfish lake. Its water is warm and murky, and gliding in feels like stepping into a warm bath.  Peering below the surface of the water, it takes a few seconds to comprehend the other worldliness of the scene.   Pulsating everywhere around are millions…literally millions…. of jellyfish.  They throb and glide through the water in a psychedelic spiral wave, constantly appearing and then disappearing into the cloudy water beyond.   Little alien brains on a mission for light.

It takes a leap of faith to reach out and touch the first one. I picked a very small jellyfish at first, just to be safe.  Oh, the fear!   It brushed my fingers and I flinched.  But,  just as promised, there was no sting.   Then, feeling braver,  I reached out and touched a larger one.  Scooped in my hand, it felt fragile and vulnerable, and suddenly seemed all it really was- just a lump of jelly.

This post was written as part of the challenge:  Daily Prompt: Twilight Zone

Bicycle Balancing Act


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25 years ago, I used to ride a bike as my only form of transportation along the coastline in the suburbs near Athens.  I cycled along the paralia into town daily.  One morning, laden down with groceries, dog food and dry cleaning, my bike literally snapped under the weight of the load, crumbling to the road and taking it me down with it.  I wasn’t hurt, but my bike lay on the ground contorted, with its neck snapped — fatally wounded with the handlebars still in my hands but joined to the bike’s main frame only by the brake line.  I looked like a freak show.   With my shopping scattered everywhere,  I had to leave the tangled mess abandoned on the curbside to  frantically find a phone and call home for someone to come and scoop me up.   Turns out my faithful bike was a bit of a wimp.

Here in Kathmandu, I remember that experience sometimes when I see  workhorse bicycles passing by,  laden with extraordinary heaving loads. These aren’t wimpy, modern bikes.  But antiqued, sturdy, bone-rattling warriors of the road…which may, or may not, have brakes.   They almost always don’t have gears.  But what they lack in suspension, they make up  for in brute strength.

Sometimes they are so overladen they can only be slowly pushed by their owners, who precariously try to balance their load without being run over by traffic or toppled by the many potholes.  Or sometimes they’re driven by vendors bringing produce from a farm outside the city on a bicycle-towed cart,  or some other creative incarnation of a bicycle that has been cleverly adapted for its owners cargo: the straw broom guy, the furniture sellers or the amazing construction assistants with 50lb bags of cement slung over their handlebars.  I’m awed at what I see ferried around by bike. 

And sometimes I am just horrified.  I see people carrying plates of glass or mirrors,  untethered small children, or horrible breakable, dangerous things that would end in disaster if someone mis-timed or mis-stepped in Kathmandu traffic.  And yet — at least for now — I’ve yet to see that happen.  These guys do this everyday, and are very good at it, and their amazing, trojan bicycles keep them in business.

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This post is was part of the Weekly Writing Challenge, Object ,at dailypost.wordpress.com.

Sign Language: Cultural Context


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I first saw this gate on the first day or two after we arrived in Kathmandu. I did a double take. It was extremely strange to see the Nazi Swastika and the Star of David side by side. Just bizarre really. But moments later I remembered reading that swastikas are all over Asia, but the meaning was very different. However, I had no idea that the hexagram (or six pointed star) was anything other than Jewish….but here they were on the same gate.

The Hindu (or Buddhist) swastika is a symbol of luck.  It bestows auspiciousness on people or things that it embellishes, and that explains why you see it so often on residential gates or painted over shops.  Its so ironic that the Nazis hijacked the symbol so that Western eyes see it as a mark of evil, and yet its original meaning is so different. Slowly, I have become less startled when I see it around.

The Buddhist Shanmukha, or six-pointed triangle, has a similar spiritual meaning as the swastika, so it makes sense that you might see them side by side.

In Buddhism, I understand that some old versions of the “Tibetan Book of the Dead”, contain a hexagram with a Swastika inside. If I see one of those, I’ll let you know.

The post is being revisited for https://dailypost.wordpress.com/dp_photo_challenge/symbol/ as I cannot think of a better example in all my travels.

Works of Art: Murals of Kathmandu


Kathmandu is a very grey, dusty city….especially in the dry season. The problem is compounded by the construction, road works, road creation, road resurfacing and general garbage and mess everywhere. It really is fifty shades of grey (or beige). If something wasn’t grey when it started ….like a bush or a blue car, for example….it soon will be…just give it a few weeks.

But as I glance out from my car window, I do see colour in a few places: the people (especially women with their brightly coloured clothes), omnipresent Coca-Cola corporate red splashed on at least half the small stores and then there’s the murals.

There are a surprising amount of murals all over Kathmandu. And although I can guess at reason why this makes sense, it still always a pleasant surprise when one just shows up on a crumbling wall or hidden away in a corner somewhere. For all its disorder, the city doesn’t have much in the way of ugly graffiti really. But you do see big, bold artistic graffiti, as well as what I’m guessing are carefully crafted, professionally painted political slogans.

Nepali schools are often cheerfully painted bright colours by amateurs to cheer up their grey concrete shells with rudimentary cartoon characters and rainbows.  Advertisers paint whole sides of buildings with giant commercials for cigarettes, coke, or beer.   But then there’s the dazzling display of professionally painted, fantastically creative, murals by real street artists.  Those murals are the real prizes and I am still collecting them as I hunt the city for the next, amazing one.  As I write this post, I’ve researched the concept a little and it turns out there’s a whole informal world of mapped Kathmandu murals….a trail to follow!

Here are some tasters for now….but I’ve a feeling a may return to this subject.  Stay tuned!

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This post participated in the Daily Post’s Weekly Photo Challenge: Work of Art

Weekly Photo Challenge: Kathmandu at Night


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The city seems so calm and quiet at night.

No, this post isn’t about the nightlife — if there is any here — its about the city after nightfall in a place where power outages are scheduled to handle the overloaded demand for power. Load sharing ensures that the power goes out every day at scheduled times, although no one seems to be sure if the schedule means anything. Power seems to go out anytime during the day and at night. For us its just the inconvenience of a one or two second delay while we wait for the generator to kick in. But for most people its a way of life.  Even we have stopped looking up when the power goes out.

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For those lucky enough to have a generator (including us) the night lights remain on. These are the pools of light glowing in the otherwise dark. It reminds me a little of Spetses during a power cut where you can see the flicking light of kerosene lamps from across the valley.

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From the other side the blackout is even greater. Above the skyline of the houses are the foothills with just one or two shining lights above in the blackness. I imagine how dark it must be on the other side of the hill without even the distant glow of Kathmandu to light the sky. I want to go there!

This post participated in the Daily Post’s Weekly Photo Challenge: Nighttime