"We dwell in the shelter of one another". Irish proverb
Looking at the deflated
balloons with an ever shrinking
50 written on them this week got me to
thinking of aftermaths – that unsettling time between events finishing and others starting. I had finished celebrating my 50th
birthday and then a subsequent skiing trip in France when I received the news that I was going to Laos to do an evaluation of an emergency nutrition programme . Endings and new
beginnings – a full moon on the 25th February, the first couple of
months of a New Year, a quickening of
Spring about to start and entering a new
decade – my fifties.
My birthday comes a few days after St Brigid’s Day which is the
1st February . Imbolc, also known as the feast of St Brigid celebrates
the arrival of longer warmer days and the early signs of Spring. The word “Imbolc” means literally “in the belly” in the Old Irish Neolithic
language referring to the pregnancy of ewes. It is one of the four major “fire”
festivals (quarter days) referred to in
Irish mythology .The other three festivals are Beltane, (May Day) Lughnasadh
( August harvest)and Samhain (Halloween)
.
St Brigid's Cross |
This week, my cousins, a few friends and I went to the Riverbank Restaurant in Dromahair, a town near
where I live to celebrate another’s birthday that had also taken place in February and my departure to Laos. It
was a warmly convivial evening with
everyone chatting animatedly – a good old get together. There was a happy buzz
in the restaurant which was almost full and the rising hubbub of conversation resembled
the clamouring noise and activity
accompanying this busy time of year – early Spring. The food was as ever
delicious – gourmet eating at non gourmet prices. I had halibut and seafood
risotto followed by an assiette ( plate) of various mouthful size desserts.
During the meal my cousin’s wife leaned over and gave me a
small rectangular package. I was very
touched as they were a pair of
embossed steel chopsticks and a spoon in
a green, cloth case from her daughter,
my cousin. They were also
very apt in view of the fact that I was
going to Laos in South –East Asia the following week where chopsticks would be
very useful.
My birthday present |
Chopsticks originated in China during the Shang dynasty
(1766-1122BC) as a substitute for knives at the table. According to Confucius a Chinese philosopher, knives
were equated with acts of aggression and should not be used to dine. Chopsticks
then became the eating utensils of choice as neighbouring Asian countries
adopted their use.
Warmed by the chat going on around me at the table I thought
of my impending trip to Laos and reflected back on the many other trips I had
made to countries in Africa and Asia. I
felt the metal of the chopsticks heating up in my hand and thought forward to
how I would be able to chat and
communicate in this new country and culture that I would encounter. It never
ceases to amaze me that despite the vast
differences in countries and cultures throughout the world that there are
common threads that tie us all together. Once you start to unpick those threads,then
conversation becomes easy even if you do not speak the same language.
I started to imagine my
up and coming time in Laos – probably out in a rural district somewhere
with my Laotian work colleagues . Maybe
we would be sitting down to eat – after our first day or so of working together. Maybe the
place would also be strange to my colleagues even though it would be their
country but in a different area to where
they would be from. We would all be
stilted in our conversation. There would be awkward silences, shy glances, heads
down in seemingly rapt concentration. My mind would be racing thinking of all
the work ahead. I would fight the instinct to ask lots of questions knowing
this would be too intrusive at this stage. The food would arrive and my
colleagues would look at me questioningly .Would I eat it? Would I refuse it?
They would be worried as we would probably
be somewhere where there would be no other choice of food and if I did not eat
– I might become sick.... in the middle of where we were with no doctor, no
hospital nearby. I would see these worries reflected in the anxious glances
exchanged between them.
And then I would take
out my chopsticks and survey the food with appreciation as after a busy day of
last food eaten at 6 am or so, I would be ravenous. There would be a quickening of interest and
surprised exclamations of how I came to have a pair of chopsticks seeing as
Westerners normally ate with knives and forks. I would tell them about my cousin
and how she had worked in South
East Asia and how I had also worked in countries such as Cambodia and Korea.
And because of that my cousin and I had
learned how to eat with chopsticks and also developed a love of South East
Asian foods. We would start eating and they would politely compliment me on my
use of the chopsticks despite me dropping more food than I was eating! Just
like in the Riverbank restaurant there would be an increasing pulsation of
warmth and conviviality – the questions would fly back and forth both from me
and from my colleagues. They would ask if I was married, had children, what was
it like where I lived, what food did we eat, what were the towns and cities
like. I would cast my mind back to the soft greens, greys
and lilacs of the Leitrim landscape, the
fir trees, the windmills slowly wheeling in the distance, the pungent scent of turf fires, hefty
dinners eaten with knives and forks from plates as big as satellites .Not the small bowls from
which we were presently fishing out morsels of food with our chopsticks.I would
think of cattle standing contentedly in boggy
fields seemingly oblivious to drizzly days. Then my thoughts would follow on to county towns of Carrick –on –Shannon, Sligo, Enniskillen built over rivers, some, like Sligo surrounded
by a vista of mountain ranges. I would try and describe all this and more to my colleagues.
And once again I
would marvel as I had done so many times before in different countries,
different continents – so different that I sometimes found it hard to believe
that I was on one planet - how in the end we all revert back to common
themes. That, however different one culture or one country or one situation is to another, whether a culture uses
chopsticks, hands or knives and forks to eat, whether one religion believes in one
god, many gods, animals, ancestors, whether the landscape is desert,
rainforest, urban or rural - where it
seems as if there are no common threads - maybe a
good place to start to start the ball rolling
would be with the bit of chat and ..........a pair of
cherished chopsticks.
The Difference Between Heaven and Hell.
There is an ancient Chinese parable about an old man
who knew he would die soon.
He
wanted to know what Heaven and Hell were like. He visited a wise man to ask
“Can you tell me what Heaven and Hell is like?”
The wise man led him down a path deep into the
countryside.
Finally they came upon a large house with many rooms and went
inside.
Inside they found lots of people and many
enormous tables with an incredible array of food.
Then the old man noticed a strange thing.
The people, all thin and hungry were holding
chopsticks 12 feet long and were trying to feed them selves.
But of course they could not get the food to
their mouth with such long chopsticks.
The old man said to the wise man. “Now I
know what Hell looks like, will you please show me what Heaven looks like
The wise man led him down the same path a little further until
they came upon another large house similar to the first.
They went inside and saw many people well
fed and happy and they too had chopsticks 12 feet long.
This puzzled the old man and he asked “ I
see all of these people have 12 feet long chopsticks too,
Yet they are well fed and happy, please
explain this to me?
The wise man replied.... “In Heaven we feed
each other”
Update blog from Bernie
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