Sunday, April 10, 2005
Enjoying Sakura - Day and Night -
These are what I need to go outside and enjoy cherry blossoms in spring: Antihistamine pills, steroid nasal spray and vasoconstrictor nasal spray. I'm sick of them :(
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Here's some more daytime photos of Sakura (cherry blossoms) from another part of Kochi city (near Asahi Royal Hotel). Click to enlarge.
Many people were having lunch under the cherry trees.
I wonder how many cherry trees there are along the small river.
In full bloom....
I was just speechless there...
And night-time ohanami pics. (Will not be enlarged.)
Yes, we enjoy cherry blossoms even at nights. The flowers have another fantastic, dream-like look when lit up by red lanterns at night.
Unfortunately me and my camera are not good at taking photos at night…
So the real beauty of Yozakura (cherry blossoms at night) is not captured in these photos. Too bad!
Tuesday, April 05, 2005
CHERRY BLOSSOMS
Cherry blossoms at a nearby park. Click to enlarge.
“Negawakuba hana no shita nite haru shinam. Sono kisaragi no mochizuki no koro."
This is an old tanka (Japanese thirty-one syllabled verse) by a Buddhist monk about cherry blossoms. I can’t really translate it correctly, but roughly it’s meaning is something like: “If it were up to me, I’d like to die in spring under cherry blossoms in the time of full moon.”
Although it is talking about death, this tanka does not give me any dark image of it at all. Instead, it gives me an image of fulfillment, a readiness to move into another world with a peaceful contented mind. Yes, it is an image of transition in sheer beauty, with a slight touch of sadness. Everytime I see cherry blossoms, I recall this tanka in my mind.
I guess I’m not the only Japanese to feel this way. It might look strange to many non-Japanese people that we have such delicate feelings towards cherry blossoms and at the same time have loud “ohanami (flower-viewing)” drinking parties under cherry trees and get totally drunk. Well, maybe our love of the cherry blossoms is so intense that we HAVE TO be close to them, eat/drink as we view them, and some people just forget about the beauty and elegance of the flowers once their blood alcohol level reaches a certain point and start enjoying him/herself to the fullest :)
Oh well, we are an irrational and sentimental people with contradictions... and cherry blossom petals just fall on us like gentle rain, symbolizing the “transitions” that have always been in this world and will always be.
It’s spring here.
“Negawakuba hana no shita nite haru shinam. Sono kisaragi no mochizuki no koro."
This is an old tanka (Japanese thirty-one syllabled verse) by a Buddhist monk about cherry blossoms. I can’t really translate it correctly, but roughly it’s meaning is something like: “If it were up to me, I’d like to die in spring under cherry blossoms in the time of full moon.”
Although it is talking about death, this tanka does not give me any dark image of it at all. Instead, it gives me an image of fulfillment, a readiness to move into another world with a peaceful contented mind. Yes, it is an image of transition in sheer beauty, with a slight touch of sadness. Everytime I see cherry blossoms, I recall this tanka in my mind.
I guess I’m not the only Japanese to feel this way. It might look strange to many non-Japanese people that we have such delicate feelings towards cherry blossoms and at the same time have loud “ohanami (flower-viewing)” drinking parties under cherry trees and get totally drunk. Well, maybe our love of the cherry blossoms is so intense that we HAVE TO be close to them, eat/drink as we view them, and some people just forget about the beauty and elegance of the flowers once their blood alcohol level reaches a certain point and start enjoying him/herself to the fullest :)
Oh well, we are an irrational and sentimental people with contradictions... and cherry blossom petals just fall on us like gentle rain, symbolizing the “transitions” that have always been in this world and will always be.
It’s spring here.