Learning how to surf the waves of time

Growing old–it’s mandatory if you want to stay alive.  Some people do it with more style than others.

Here are a couple of examples to take into consideration.  The first is that of Mick Jagger singing No Expectations. The song was first released in 1968 and was the flip side of Street Fighting Man. The highlight  was Brian Jones playing the steel guitar. The song was never one of my favorites.  That is, not until 2003 when Jagger gave the song, and his voice, pathos.  Thirty-five years had past since the initial version yet Jagger, instead of giving the idea of having aged, gave the impression of having matured.

BEFORE

AFTER

In 1971, Led Zepplin released Black Dog. Robert Plant a.k.a “I’m Sexy and I Know It” loved to sing “Gonna make you burn, gonna make you sting” wearing tight fitting pants and an unbuttoned shirt. Yeah, because singing a song with words like that was pretty sweaty stuff.

Robert Plant BEFORE

Thirty-five years past here, too, and, around 2007, Plant began performing with bluegrass star, Alison Krauss. Once again he was singing Black Dog.  But this time Plant kept his shirt buttoned. Because when you reach a certain age, there’s no need to get sweaty.

Robert Plant AFTER

So what’s the purpose of this post? No real purpose. Just a simple reflection  about growing older.  And about affronting the inevitable change.

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Volver, cats and retablos

Volver

Our cat Volver and friends

A Gemini like my son, on June 6, our cat Volver will be 2 years old. A stray, when he was just a tiny little kitten, Volver would come to our veranda every day and, maybe because we fed him, decided to adopt us.  His name, Volver, comes from the song VOLVER VOLVER.– he just had to come back.

Unlike Mr. Wolf, I’d never had a cat before (although I’ve had 2 important dogs in my life: Hero and Nala). That’s why I couldn’t understand Catmania. But now, because of Volver, I can.

gatos-amigos

“Thanks to the Virgin of Guadalupe the two cats stopped fighting and became friends once again”

I found the above retablo on a Russian site FULL of cat related retablos: Демоны, Святые и коты.  If you like cats, you will love this.

I know that cats were well respected in Ancient Egypt but thought it was because the cats ate the rats that ate the food. However, it seems their popularity was due to the goddess Bastet cult.  That’s why so many cat amulets were made.

Louvre_egyptologie

a mummified cat via

Cat cemetaries with mummified cats were abundant in Ancient Egypt.  But  not because they were loved house pets.  Cats were bred specifically  to be buried: these practices seem to have been encouraged by Egyptian rulers for economic reasons. The ‘sacred animal industry’, supplied considerable employment and also provided tax income to the Pharaohs.

foto of Volver by Chiara Pilar

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Infinitas Gracias …more retablos

Today I just can’t get enough RETABLOS!

And, in edition to the article reblogged (below), here are a couple of other iteresting article:  Art and the Spiritual Realm – Background Part 1 + Votive Offerings +

cliffdean's avatarBirding Walks in RXland

Just up the road from the British Museum. there’s a moving exhibition at the Wellcome Institute of Mexican ex-votos. These are mostly hand-painted tin panels given in thanks for the intercession of saints when called upon in cases of extreme jeopardy from accident, sickness or crime.

In mid-fall from a building, a workman would cry out to S Anthony and would survive with minor injuries. A wife would pray fervently from her sick-bed to the Virgin, a family from their drowning car, a mill-hand as his arm was caught in pre H&S machinery.

The retablos are naive, sincere images expressing the gratitude of ordinary people for the blessings bestowed upon them, but their quaint simplicity distances them from our cosy, secure lives.

In an adjoining room is a wall reconstructed from more recent ex-votos harvested from the walls of a church. These are letters – hand-written or typed – drawings…

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Ex Voto Retablos

Back to Frida via back to RETABLOS:

see also this related post:  The term “ex voto” is translated as “my vow.”  The form represents a vow of acknowledgment and testimony for the granting of a miracle of divine intervention.  Typically these tributes were created and gifted to the community church after a turning-point episode in the life of a community member – whether it be recovering from typhoid fever (as is the case in the first ex voto below) or surviving a robbery at gunpoint as is depicted in another of the images below.    + Mexican Retablos + Retablos: ex-votos y santos + La Guadalupana + retablos, Museo de la basilica de Guadalupe, Mexico + another retablo related post

CARDBOARD RETABLOS

 

Michelle Molyneux's avatarCONTENT

In modern philosophical theory, an acknowledgment of power beyond human understanding is largely absent. Ex Votos however are votive offerings of gratitude for a vow or prayer fulfilled. Votive offerings are given before prayer fulfillment as appeasement or veneration. Depicted are life-threatening or catastrophic experiences and a subject(s). Votive offerings are ubiquitous, these examples are from Mexico and Spain. For more information see: Everyday Miracles.


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Ancient weavings and Chancay dolls

Chancay dolls! Chancay dolls are named after the Chancay culture of Peru AD 1000 – 1476

 

 

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