Showing posts with label travel asia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel asia. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 06, 2016

The Magic of Angkor Wat

"If you still believe in magic, you're subject to enchantment." - Toba Beta

(c) Tita Lilibeth
Captivated, in awe, tranced. Still can't find the right word to explain what I felt when I was there.  Just take a look at my face in the above photo and you'll definitely agree with me.  Thanks to Tita Lilibeth for capturing this "starstruck" moment though kinda awkward for my nganga (jaw-dropping) expression!  Angkor Wat, oh, Angkor Wat!  Bato ka lang (you're only stone) but there's something in you!  "Bato lang ka!" - exclaimed Atsi Ann in our vernacular as we talked about our Angkor Wat experience when we got back to our hotel.  So, what's really in you, Angkor Wat?

Angkor Wat is of course, a temple!  Wat means "temple" in Siam (old Thailand) and Angkor means "city" in Khmer (Cambodia) so that makes Angkor Wat as the "City of Temples".  Temples with the "s" now 'coz it is not only Angkor Wat which is nestled in the complex but there are also other small temples, making Angkor as the world's largest religious monument.  Yes it is religious, one which is a big contrast to my faith again.  However, something in me was stirred and I just can't fathom the depth of my thoughts in this inner chamber.
(c) MM
Around 900 years old, Angkor Wat was built for the "god-kings".  It is a representation of Mt. Meru, the counterpart of Greek mythology's Mt. Olympus in Hindu faith.  Oh, so that explains it!  If Mt. Olympus is home of the gods, then Angkor must be heaven on earth!  I actually walked into the steps of a sacred place as I experienced divine intervention.  It was sensing something extraordinary, conjuring any emotion of what might happened in the past right on that spot where I was sitting.  Now I call that my "Angkor feels"!  But apart from the feeling, apart from the emotion, I started to commune with God.  With my God, the Father Almighty, creator of heaven and earth.  Just for a brief moment, His Spirit was on me, speaking to me that kingdoms rise and kingdoms fall.  Man, in his quest to have a god to look up to, make images and establish religions.  But all these have an end.  No matter how grand a kingdom is, it always comes to an end.  As it is written:  "Heaven and earth will pass away, but My words will never pass away.", says Jesus in Matthew 24:35.

(c) Atsi Ann
So there I was capturing every corner of the ancient city temple.  Point and shoot, point and shoot, that's just how I do it (as always).  But as I was checking my shots when I got home, I realized that I badly need a photography workshop.  It's about time to be serious in this stuff!  However, no matter how badass shutterbabe I'd become, I could never get into the lenses what a place had gone through, all through the years.  The revelries, the battle cries, the solemnities!  I can still actually smell history all over the place, of old, mossy, pungent, rich, kumakausap (speaking right to you).  It's like poking you, telling you stories of the past, making you imagine of knights, princes, princesses, queens, and kings though Angkor Wat is not a palace.  It is instead a holy ground where Buddhists come to worship (it transformed into Buddhism from Hinduism), a dedication to the Hindu gods (originally), and a grand display of Khmer architecture.  If only I could capture the enchantment, I'd bring it to you but it is only God who can speak right to your heart.  So let us take a quick look at the story of Daniel.  Daniel answered before the king and said, "As for the mystery about which the king has inquired, neither wise men, conjurers, magicians nor diviners are able to declare it to the king.  However, there is a God in heaven who reveals mysteries, and He has made known to King Nebuchadnezzar what will take place in the latter days." - Daniel 2:27-28.

(c) Atsi Ann
Hay, Angkor Wat!  You are only stone but it seems like you are alive!  You're more than an architecture, more than a piece of art!  At first I thought that you're comparable to Greece's ruins and Egypt's archaeology (only that you are affordable).  That's why you have every right to be a UNESCO World Heritage Site.  But you are more than just a site, more than just a tourist attraction!  Though you are not nature, a direct work of God's hands but you are handmade, out from the talent, skills, and knowledge God endowed to His people.  You're a living testimony that there is really God, a God all-knowing, all-powerful, and always present.



Thank you, Lord for Angkor Wat.  Thank you for letting me enjoy it with the company of my friends.  And thank you for revealing more of Yourself that it is not magic to encounter You but it is the truth!  As Jesus answered, “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” - John 14:6  With all these, Cambodia indeed is the Kingdom of Wonder!

(c) Tita Lilibeth
Though I turned away and left, I still came back!  Know more about Angkor Wat only here on The Other Side of Mae!  #tosomtravels

Sunday, May 03, 2015

Hoi Hoi Hoi Hanoi!

Finally, Hanoi happened to me one daydream sa pangarap for just $750.  Finally, Hanoi happened to me magaan sa bulsa 'cause it's just $750.  Finally, woah.....  Finally!  


Hahaha!  There goes my version of the very famous Ariel commercial jingle.  And that tells the absolute truth!  I had my recent out of the country trip for only 750 USD!  That's how affordable Hanoi is!  For just $750 all-in, I had budgeted round-trip airfares from Ozamiz to Hanoi via Manila, Makati side trip, Hanoi hotel, hotel transfers, Ha Long Bay cruise with lunch, entrance fees to attractions, food, food, and more food, souvenirs, and pasalubong.  I just felt like a millionaire in Hanoi!  

Hanoi is the capital city of Vietnam.  It is a chaotic city in the northern part of the country being dubbed as the motor scooter city.  Scooters run fast and furious all over the streets that you just have to close your eyes while crossing because they won't come to a halt to give way to you.  Though there are pedestrian lanes and traffic lights, they still run pass to you but not at you.  Drivers are also careful not to run anyone down so just boldly trust yourself and confidently cross the streets without hesitations.  Hehe......



Banyan trees are everywhere in the city.  Such trees are not haunted in Vietnam as what we Filipinos believe and they become part of the tourist attractions.



Anyway, me and travel companion Em-em were lucky that we went to Vietnam not knowing that there was a big celebration going on.  It was the country's 40th Reunification Day on April 30 so the entire city was decorated for the revelry!  Apart from that, the locals were also in high spirits for they had their holiday for one whole week so we were greeted with real good mood in preparation for their festivities.


      
The flowers are a beaut in full bloom around the city's central park which are being well-maintained by the Vietnamese manangs.



Members of an organization in military costume visiting the city gate.  One of them was very warm that he allowed picture-taking with us.


  
Kids having their portraits done by Vietnamese local artists at the park on an easy Sunday morning.



Pretty Vietnamese gals in national costume, áo dài having their pictorial at the parks.  I don't know why they do this but I see them everywhere.  They really hire photographers for this.



Vietnam's flags waving everywhere just like here in the Philippines when we celebrate our Independence Day every 12th day of June.



That's only a tiny fraction of Hanoi.  Stay tuned tomorrow as I take you to the historical sights of the city only here on The Other Side of Mae!  :) #tosomtravels


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