Autumn Light

Autumn has a salient light. That’s what I noticed when I left the walls of my office and walked with the sun over my shoulder.

It’s the sort of light that would, if you allowed it, pry your soul open with soft low angle rays.

You see, there is nothing harsh or frenetic about fall light. It takes time to lounge, unfurl, reflect. It knows about detachment. It understands the circle.

Even with age, when it loses its hair and teeth, it continues to cast gentle beams.
And it’s power is in posing just the right question–for you.

falllight

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Election Day – Before and After voting

Before you vote, here are a few techniques to make your time in the voting booth a bearable experience:

-Wear something comfortable…but no sweater vests.
-Picture kittens, not white Huskies.
-Meditate on proportional representation…I mean really meditate!
-Recite some Rumi. Like: "Where is the one whose candle burns in the dawn?"
-Hum anything, except Celine Dion’s, "You and I." (It just didn’t work for Hillary C.) Better: Frank Sinatra’s, "High Hopes," or Tom Petty’s, "I Won’t Back Down."
-Give a Twoonie to the homeless guy outside the polling station.
-Finally, gird your loins, and enter.

And then, upon exiting…having done your best at marking an X, relax, and console yourself with this:

While I was in Bangkok the governor’s race was on.Chewit1 Consider: At least we don’t have candidates like Chuwit Kamolvisit.

Chuwit made his fortune on Bangkok’s sex trade–his, "empire of flesh." Having done so, he feels eminently qualified to be Governor of Bangkok. And so he’s financing his own campaign to take on the hypocrisy and deceit that is, as he says, rotting Thai politics.

Here’s some Chuwit candor:

-"Politics is so dirty, so ugly, I would rather sit tight in the nightclub, surrounded by girls, smoking cigars, drinking brandy, champagne. That was the perfect life."
-"Who better to wipe out bribes, than someone who got rich paying them?"
-"I cannot fix the traffic. Nobody can fix the traffic."
-"The sex business is not a problem. If you don’t have sex, that’s a problem."

chuwit07

One of Chuwit’s many billboards reads: Last night I dreamed that Thai people love each other, but will my dreams come true? Now there’s an appeal that has possibilities: A kind of introspective anxious snivel. Ah yes, now we’re back to Canadian politics…save the introspection.

Boonyoung and Bass

slickmephitisIt’s the smell that you take away with you.

I’ve encountered the smell before. It’s the one that assaults, just briefly, as you step over a manhole or sewer grate. I’ve encountered it on the farm too, when feed, water, shit, straw, heat and time, come together to produce a mephitis emitting blue-black slurry.

Here, the fetor gets inside and under your skin. If you live here, Pi-kun tells me, you get used to it.

But what gets in deeper, are the people of the slum. We spent part of an afternoon talking with Boonyoung. She had just come back from shopping–checking disposal sites for things saleable or eatable.

BoonyoungShe’s something of a make-shift grandmother to 12-year old Bass–whose mother she had adopted years before. The mother is rarely around these days and the father long gone. Bass thinks Boonyoung is his real grandmother…and of course, she is. Boonyoung also cares for her ailing 80 year old husband.

Pi-kun and her field workers keep in constant contact with this family. Bass is a strong candidate for a live-in Project LIFE Child Sponsorship Program that–with the successful purchase of a building–should be up and running in the new year.

The Child Sponsorship residence is a short walk from the fetid Ram-2 slum–but a great distance.

Boonyoung2

Back at the "office" I asked Pi-kun about her name. She said her father named her just before leaving her mother. She said she was named after a flower with brown pedals that grows along roadsides and in Bangkok’s waste places. "At night," she said, "It gives off a wonderful smell!"

Boonyoung's house

(Visiting Boonyoung: Muk, Pi-kun and Tika)