Happy Thanksgiving !!

With all the commercial hype it is easy to forget the meaning of Thanksgiving. While it started as a protestant religious holiday, Thanksgiving is truly nondenominational: all faiths have a tradition of giving thanks.

After all:

While the Pessimist believes that it can always get worst and the Optimist believes that it can always get better; the realist believes that both are true and that it is important to live in the present and celebrate the gifts of the moment.

Happy Thanksgiving.

Les and Becky

Posted in Blog | Comments Off on Happy Thanksgiving !!

Repairing Broken Links

Ahhhh, the joys of maintaining your own website.

I’ve just spent the last five hours fixing links and page formats.

I’m not certain when things got all hosed up. It may have been during an earlier software upgrade which means that the problems have existed for about a month or more. The lesson is to review content more frequently to verify that everything is okay-dokay.

I apologize for any problems that this may have caused anyone.

Les

 

 

Posted in Blog | Comments Off on Repairing Broken Links

Atocha Train Station

Atocha Train Station, Madrid, Spain 08/2005

On March 11, 2004, bombs tore a commuter train to pieces at the Atocha train station. The multiple blasts occurred as the train pulled up next to platforms crowded with commuters, killing 191 people and wounding about 1800. Security cameras videotaped the carnage. In time, blame was placed on the Basque separatist ETA but questions remain as to whether the ETA was really responsible.

In August, 2005, my wife and I were passing through Madrid on our way north to Burgos. We were taking a train from the Atocha station. About 16 months had passed since the bombing and signs of the physical destruction were gone.

As we stood waiting on a crowded platform, a commuter train, just like the one destroyed, pulled in. For a moment I glimpsed what it must have been like an instant before the attack: the comfortable familiarity of a morning routine without a hint of catastrophe only seconds away.

The photo above is of the station’s central hall with the train platforms accessed through the line of openings  along the walls.

 

Posted in Blog, Photo, Spain | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Atocha Train Station

Ena and Karen and Kyle – Dia de Los Muertos 3

    Ena and Laren, Cafe Ena, 10/30/2011

Here are the last of the Cafe Ena, 2011 Dia de Los Muertos, photos.

Ena is the daughter of the owners of Cafe Ena and its namesake.

    Karen and Kyle, Cafe Ena, 10/30/2011

 

Posted in Blog, Color, Photo, Portraits | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Ena and Karen and Kyle – Dia de Los Muertos 3

Kyle – Dia de Los Muertos 2

    Kyle, Dia de Los Muertos, Cafe Ena, 10/30/2011

 

Posted in Blog, Photo, Portraits | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Kyle – Dia de Los Muertos 2

Dia de Los Muertos

    Adrian, Cafe Ena, 10/30/2011

     Adrian Getting Her Dia de Los Muertos Face

Yesterday evening my wife and I and her brother and his wife had dinner at our favorite restaurant, Cafe Ena. It is a Latin fusion bistro.

Because this is the week of Dia de Los Muertos, the restaurant and staff were celebrating.  It is believed that on October 31st, the dead return to walk the earth and visit their families.

A family sets up its ofrenda 5 days before October 31st. The ofrenda is a work of art, an alter created to honor the departed. It has with pictures of departed family members, friends, cherished heroes such as Frida Callo, flowers, incense, candles, and a myriad of sugar skulls. Then each day until the Dia de Los Muertos, members of the family visit the ofrenda to remember their loved ones and to pray.

As you walk into the dinning area there is an ofrenda.

Another aspect of Dia de Los Muertos is the use of face painting. The staff at Ena’s had their faces decorated in typical Dia de Los Muertos designs: a white undercoat with the eyes, nose, and mouth accented so that the face looks like a skull. Then ornate floral and geometric designs are added. Whimsy is an important element.

While the celebration features lots of skulls and skeletons the overall spirit is one of life and remembrance. Flowers are just as important as the skulls and brilliant colors are used everywhere. Unlike Halloween, where ghosts and spirits are portrayed in a frightening way, Dia de Los Muertos is a festive event where the dead return to visit the living and share in the joys of life and family.

At first, I startled by the Ofrenda and being served by a young woman with a face painted as a colorful skull. Then I realized that it was perfect for our dinner, the night before the day of the dead.

 

Posted in Blog, Photo, Portraits | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Dia de Los Muertos