First Century Before Christ (1st Cent B.C.)

photo right-clicked from Lankan Library Forum, sharpened & lit

…. three favourite poses, sometime, i’ll tell you which ones (poses that ease discomfort), so i researched one of them; turned out to be really ancient.

According to some scholars: this Lankan coin circa 1st Century BC depicts Maya Devi (Buddha’s mother), seated with the soles of her feet together, and that it shows Queen Maya after the  “virgin birth of Buddha” (the research has to be verified).              whaddyaknow…! (some scholars however refer to another female deity, a heroine)

i guess…

like this…?

(the legs have to form a straight, horizontal line, like in Maya Devi’s pose, knees touching the ground, the more you get there, the more it eases your discomfort)

…. for the general readers/ viewers of this blog: this pose is now called “baddha konasana”; “baddha”, Sanskrit for “bound”, “kona” for angle, “asana” for pose.

Gosh, it’s really an old pose, isn’t it. That makes it more than 2,000 years old, an artist’s rendition supposedly of Buddha’s mother. (the research has to be verified.)

i’m guessing, the Hindus, who named these poses in Sanskrit, just gave the pose a generic name (bound angle pose) instead of giving it Maya Devi’s name, a Buddhist icon. Some writers call this Lakshmi’s pose; Lakshmi is a Hindu goddess. This is one of the few poses named after a female deity.

it’s also now commonly called the butterfly pose maybe because the angle of the folded legs make them look like wings; and it’s also more contemporarily called “Cobbler’s pose” because it looks like the way Indian cobblers sit.

renaming it here — calling it Maya Devi’s pose. Sue me.

(well, at least—- there’s less gibberish when i renamed this pose this time, i based it on research, you should be proud of me)

Happy Women’s Day on Monday!


Being one step ahead of the moving-around brownout (advice in this god-forsaken country)

got it — there’s a brownout where i’ll be at 1:30pm to 2pm (i’ll put that as, “take or leave 30 minutes; so 1pm to 2pm). Aside from the daily advisory (which doesn’t contain the specific hours and areas of the brownout), Meralco also texts our administrative officer at least two hours before every power outage in our area can you believe that. She personally gets a text from Meralco. That’s nice. We don’t know how that happened (i interviewed the staff  this morning when i was trying to get the schedule of the rotating brownout, i found out the  AO gets texts from Meralco! and she didn’t have to do anything for it.)

you can evade the “aggravation” and be one step ahead of the rotating brownout by working your schedule around it or by avoiding areas where it will hit. It’s almost like strategizing and planning a guerrilla attack for crying out loud.

Now, i can be placid;  i’ve planned it out– it’s being caught suddenly with a power outage in the middle of your work that destroys your composure; well, it doesn’t really destroy my composure, it just makes you feel helpless whenever that happens. (the things one would do to avoid places where the power outage will hit.)