Journeys
Words
Images
Cloud
Timothy M. Leonard's books on Goodreads
A Century Is Nothing A Century Is Nothing
ratings: 4 (avg rating 4.50)

The Language Company The Language Company
ratings: 2 (avg rating 5.00)

Subject to Change Subject to Change
ratings: 2 (avg rating 4.50)

Ice girl in Banlung Ice girl in Banlung
ratings: 2 (avg rating 4.50)

Finch's Cage Finch's Cage
ratings: 2 (avg rating 3.50)

Amazon Associate
Contact
Wednesday
Aug052009

Ben & V

Greetings,

Travel long enough and far enough and you become a stranger to yourself. 

The expatriated broken toothed junkie from Laos spent seven years as political prisoner. Or so he said one morning after dawn, walking through an Old Quarter looking for someone to talk to, a permanent change of address.

He was one of the lost ones. He was the star of his very own highly rated REALITY entertainment program. He talked a blue streak. He ranted. He raved. He had his hand out. Looking for salvation. An exit permit. An empty hand holds everything.

Now he lives on the street of dreams at noon o'clock where a dusty grand-father clock strikes 12. Bong-bong-bong-bong-echo.  He jabbered his shadow away, past travel tour shops, bored girls waiting for tourists  and motorcycle hustlers.

Lives of quiet desperation. Hustle to eat. Hustle to dream. Meal to meal. A cycle. Conversations love distractions.

Where are you from? asked a motorcycle guy down at the interesection of Yes, No, Maybe, hoping we'd establish a connection, bonding through need, want and desire. 

I am from heaven. 

He expected a familiar place name like Europe, America, Australia. 

Heaven?

Yes.

Where is it?

I point toward the blue sky. There.

It's about trust here said a Frenchman. I know foreigners who have lived here 10 years and they still express reservations about who they can, do trust. It's a problem. Be careful.

In my neighborhood women do all the work. Selling vegetables, cleaning, giving birth, nurturing, sewing, cutting hair, cooking, serving, scrubbing pots, pans, chopsticks, knives.

Thuy is 47, and a teacher in a public middle school. She makes $250 a month. Her classes number 70. Reminds me of my China teaching days. Long bland cement rooms filled with faces.

She speaks good English. She is married with two daughters, Ben, a bright and lively 20 and V, 10. Her husband is an engineer at the largest paint company in Ha Noi. He speaks Russian. Ben studies Portuguese at Ha Noi University and will go to Portugal this October for 10 months.

V is learning how to ride her bike. She is scared of losing her balance and releasing her small fear. 

The grace of a finger under a white ceramic bowl. This delicate love. What is essential is invisible.

Metta.

Tuesday
Aug042009

The Spiral Foundation

Greetings,

In Hue I saw some colorful woven baskets.

I entered the "Healing The Wounded Heart Shop." Various baskets from Nepal were made of recycled plastic food snack wrappers. Brilliant reds, greens, blues, all the hues. Cool.

The Spiral Foundation is a non-profit humanitarian organization working in Nepal and Vietnam.

Spiral. Spinning Potential Into Resources And Love. 

At the SPIRAL workshop in Hue they make bowls using telephone wires. They work with the Office of Genetics and Disabled Children at Hue Medical College. 

All net proceeds from the handicraft sales are returned to Vietnam and Nepal to fund primary health care, medical and educational projects.

Projects employ 1000 participants with fair hourly salaries not based on piece work. Projects have provided for more than 250 heart surgeries and treatments for children with life threatening diseases.

Metta.

Sunday
Aug022009

MK 75

Greetings,

Here's an audio overview of my recent little adventure to Hue, Hoi An, back to Hue and then train to Ha Noi.

First, I met the Vietnamese grand-parents and their grand-daughter on the train. Born in Ha Noi, she's been studying economics and living with her parents in Czech for seven years.

Married for 50 years he's 76, she's 73. He speaks fluent French and good English. They were funny and friendly, kind.

Then I met Isabella, the Queen of Vienna, her mom and step dad Joe, a famous cello musician. We talked about Edgar, Jackie Du Pre and Yo-Yo Ma's cello mastery. How it resembles the human voice in tonal quality. He talked about the strange feeling after performing a concert and returning to an empty hotel room. Alone.

They are world travelers. We joined forces, exploring the citadel in Hue, (where, interestingly enough we crossed paths with the grand-daughter and her grand-parents after a torrential downpour) Phu Bai (where I arrived last century) then went to Hoi An.

Hoi An is a very cool old city on a river with wonderful Chinese architecture and 500 tailors. Stitch and go. Perfect for dawn light and images. At night we'd have dinner at a cafe enjoying all the colorful lanterns, reflections and fresh breeze. 

They headed south, I returned to Hue to meet with Hue Help, a British based volunteer organization working in the city. After more photography work I returned to Ha Noi. Delightful.

Metta.

MK 75

Saturday
Aug012009

Augustus Firstus

Greetings,

A heavy rain greeted train SE4 arriving in Ha Noi at 0544 this morning. I rolled out of the upper berth, said farewell to the parents with two little girls dressed like elves in purple prose and hit the bricks. The area was swarming with taxi hustlers and motorcycle drivers.

The last 10 days were celebrated in Hue, Hoi An and points in between. The food was excellent; landscapes, temples, pagodas and ancient historical artifacts were inspiring;however, as in all travels, it's always the people, the amazing diversity of characters who make it real, alive and meaningful.

Finished reading The Road...

Now on The Time Traveler's Wife...

I am a time traveler without a wife.

I edit 500 images and journal words.

Follow your heart.

Metta.

Page 1 2 3