Archive for Culture

Exterior Chi: my neighborhood

This will be the first of several reflective articles about my personal feng shui journey.

Exterior Chi: the universe is filled with an unseen force that interacts with our immediate environment creating energy patterns that then work together to shape our own energy. But before this energy can enter our homes and our lives it must first pass through several levels depending on its source. Each level or area affects its type and impact–for example the land surrounding your home and the neighborhood you live in.

My neighborhood is older and originally very community-based. There were new schools being built, senior living communities developed, wineries, parks, crisp and beautiful new homes that tactfully accentuated the rolling hillsides. Everyone knew their neighbors and my neighborhood was filled with young families who, even if we weren’t close, were at least friendly with one another. There’s the Medals with two young children–their mother is a pastry chef–, the Kahermanes with 2 girls and an older son, several families of immigrants next to the Medals, a kindly older couple on the corner, and a very nice gay couple in between who always invited us for BBQs. When we went Trick-or-Treating it was never a suprise as to who lived where and we never had to guess who the newcomers were. Turnover was low, at least at first. It was a nice place to grow up in with children on bikes frequently blocking traffic.

Now however a lot of isolated families keep to themselves, many prefer to associate with their own separate ethnic communities. Plus everyone works–most people are gone from 8am-6pm. 3 families we know still live on the street–the Medals, Kahermanes, and a nice couple on the opposite corner.

Crime began to riddle the neighborhood 5 years ago but has since ebbed. The housing market has plumetted and turnover is high. Houses are not well kept–many are run down with weed choked lawns. Low income extended families now comprise a majority of our neighbors like the family across the street who amazingly have as many cars as occupants. There aren’t a lot of pet owners–we’re the only ones who’ve kept ours for a significant period of time. Not a lot of people walk or jog and children are conspicuously absent. Most nights there is residential quiet punctuated by soft music or someone laughing. I’m thankful there’s a park nearby however where I can walk my dog and see children playing on the swing set.

All of these factors affect the chi that enters my home. It’s depressing, sad, lonely, and isolated energy reinvigorated only by the people who occupy the house. We try to keep a nice yard and most people around us do too but there is a pervading sense of abandonment and carelessness. Trash sometimes escapes garbage bins and I’m left to pick it up wondering why no one else volunteers. I like our neighborhood overall but I’m feel sharp nostalgia for the old days where I could go up to any house on the block and ask for an egg or a stick of butter.

Chinese Medicine

When patients had symptoms of shang huo (rising heat), such as tooth pain, gingival swelling, and a sore throat, they sought ‘purging fire’ herbal medicine from the pharmacy or visited the dentist.

Chinese Superstitions/Beliefs

  • Cutting or trimming one’s nail at night is not encouraged as this practice will attract wandering spirits to one.
  • Dogs are believed to be able to see ghosts and spirits due to the fluid in their eyes. By applying this fluid over one’s eyes, one can actually see ghosts. This is how temple medium see ghosts.
  • When dogs howl for long periods at the wee hours of the mornings, this signifies death in the surrounding area.
  • Babies can also sense spirits. When they sense ‘unclean’ spirits, they will wail without reason.
  • When one dreams of teeth or snow, it means death of one’s parent.
  • Pointing at the moon will result in one’s ears to be cut off. (This belief appears to be most fictious, mainly because the result does not happen. However, parents continue to pass on this belief as they often use this story to scare their children. Jokingly, of course.)
  • In Chinese thought, the world is populated by a vast number of spirits, both good and evil. Such spirits include nature demons (kuei-shen), evil spirits or devils (oni), and ghosts (kui).
  • Evil spirits are believed to avoid light, so many rituals involving fire and light have developed, such as the use of bonfires, firecrackers, and torches. Evil spirits are also traditionally believed to travel in straight lines, which explains many curvy roads throughout China.
  •  Ghost month: Other activities include burying and releasing miniature paper boats and lanterns on water, which signifies “giving directions to the lost ghosts.”
  • They use the twelve zodiacal signs especially to determine the twenty-four seasons of the year. When the sun enters the 15th degree of Aquarius (February 5th) spring begins. When he enters Pisces (February 19th) the rainy season sets in; when he reaches the 15th degree of Pisces (March 5th) insects get excited; when he enters Aries (March 30th) the vernal equinox comes round, followed (April 5th) by the term called “bright and clear”; entering Taurus (April 20th) he brings fructifying rain and (May 5th) the beginning of summer; in Gemini (May 21st) he brings the two terms called “the grain is filling” and (June 6th) “the grain is in the ear”; in Cancer he brings the two terms summer solstice (June 21st) and little heat (July 7th); when the sun is in Leo (June 23rd) the great heat begins and (August 7th) autumn sets in; when the sun is in Virgo (August 23rd) heat is limited and (September 8th) white dew will fall; when the sun is in Libra (September 23rd) the autumnal equinox takes place and (October 8th) cold dew descends; when in Scorpio (October 23rd) frost falls and (November 7th) winter sets in; when in Sagittarius (November 22nd) little snow will fall, and (December 7th) great snow; when the sun is in Capricorn (December 22nd) the winter solstice takes place and (January 6th) little cold sets in; when the sun enters Aquarius (January 20th) great cold sets in; and thus the circle of the year is completed.
  • Norooz

       

        The ceremonial table in front of the banquet hall was piled high with objects symbolizing important values and traditions contained flowering hyacinth, a large mirror propped up behind a goldfish bowl, decorated eggs, plates of sweets, 2 tall candles, & apples. Everyone was dressed up–even the children wore elaborate dresses. There were dancers in flowing, shear gowns–some girls even wore gold-trimmed vests and mustaches. There was a man in an orange robe tied with a thick green belt who gave coins to the children from his cart laden with yellow flowers. Mothers were chasing their rowdy children trying to get them to stand still for a photograph. It was held at a hotel so the food was pretty standard–fish with herb rice and roasted vegetables. Everyone had a good time–laughing and clapping their hands as a band played traditional Persian songs to the beat of a drum.

        Everyone was extremely nice and even tried to speak Persian to me–I’d love to help out again and get to know these people better.

    St. Patrick’s Monday

    I feel all tangled up and knotted today. Nothing seems to go right and I feel guilty for staying at home–I slept the morning away due to a St. Patrick’s hangover lol It’s funny, I try to convince myself that I know what’s best for me and always stay in tune with instinct. But it never seems to be the right response. Why do I need R & R after working anyway? It should be a good feeling and mandatory that I start earning some money for school. I’ll let it slide this week as I always do—but after Easter at the very least I need to start studying again.

    St. Patrick’s day at Rosie McCann’s was fun—a great band played with a humorous guy with a full head of white hair who leaped up on chairs as he sang to couples. It was a mostly older crowd and not nearly as busy as last year (I think they’ve started having the event over the course of 2 days). The pub was suprisingly clean-swept and modern inside–a bit disppointing as the interior looked more like a Victorian house than a pub. And the shephard’s pie, while good, was extremely expensive. But the roaming bag-pipe player and good company more than made up for that. Cassie was fantastically fun and we had one too many drinks in celebration of the moment. Maybe next year we’ll try somewhere else for a more traditional feel.

    Today the first of the garlic chive shoots appeared! Slendar and green like thick grass stalks they peek out from the soil in tiny clusters. And another pea shoot has appeared—the first still going strong albeit a bit slower than expected. It’s such a thick sprout–a tightly woven bundle of first leaves that are delicately serrated. I hope they grow!!

     Another suprise was the woodland wreath my mother had ordered I’d always dreamed of as gracing the center of our Easter table. Pale blue robin’s eggs truffles will go in the center–a delectable and delightful decoration. The wreath smells of warm forest undergrowth with a spicy hint of feverfew, sage, and bay leaves and is nearly two handspans across.

     We still dye eggs, though not nearly as many as when my brother and I were little (4 dozen +!) Thursday is a road trip to Herst Castle–I’ve always wanted to go and can’t wait to take photos. Tomorrow is Easter prep day, and Friday we can hopefully see Maren and Theo.