
# 225 Plikt – Duty (342/365)



Mitt favoritplan – alla kategorier! Den mest fantastiska säkerhetsvideon, den mest underbara personal och den magiska silver fern på stjärten.
En dag ska jag åka dit igen…
My favourite plane – all categories! The most entertaining security videos, the most interesting crew and the magical silver fern on the tail. Nothing beats New Zealand!
Someday…I’ll go back…
So, it was raining and …not at all what we had hoped for. This fourth visit to China. As the days went by I adjusted my mind to the drizzle and the cold. What would I do to rewire my thinking and focus?

I started to focus on people and details. To lose myself in details would most certainly reduce the weather conditions to the margin of my thinking.

And China is a country of exquisite details. Walking into the Forbidden City, I had made my decision – this was not going to be an ordinary visit. My previous ones had been made in great awe and many photos had been taken of the splendour here.

I started to focus on the little things, and not the whole city and its buildings.

I focused on the magnificent marble bridges…

The vastness of the open spaces…

The 9 or 11 small protectors on the roofs…where the Emperor resided.

I saw my chances to for once – not rush, I had been here before – but to enjoy the people too. My chances…not to go with the crowd. ..but to turn around and look at everything they were rushing by.

Endless labyrinths – but my thoughts had made their way out of them.

I went to see the Imperial Garden and its wreathing branches. But the garden was so crowded that I could not walk there. Could not stand under the trees without being pushed and knocked around.
My thoughts…went flying up in the canopy…

…and down again. Restless. I imagined my forest at home. I tried desperately to find some peace, but had to admit that in this garden of extreme beauty, it was impossible.
I think I learned something new this day. Even in trivial issues, it is always possible to rewire, to think new, to accept and find new ways. Being a teacher is the synonym of flexibility and thinking new, but when it comes to traveling, I am not used to this much bad luck with the weather conditions – for so long a time. Maybe easily overcome for an ordinary trip, but for a long journey in a faraway country – more difficult.
I was very grateful I had been here before, seeing this ancient country in all its splendour. So, I recalled the Ditan park back then, in golden Ginko leaves, and the silent morning gymnastics.
It is a very special country, China.
The Ming tombs are a collection of mausoleums built by the emperors of the Ming dynasty of China. The majority of the Ming tombs are located in a cluster near Beijing and collectively known as the Thirteen Tombs of the Ming Dynasty

The site, on the southern slope of Tianshou Mountain, was chosen based on the principles of feng shui by the third Ming emperor, the Yongle Emperor. After the construction of the Imperial Palace (Forbidden City) in 1420, the Yongle Emperor selected his burial site and created his own mausoleum. The subsequent emperors placed their tombs in the same valley.

From the Yongle Emperor onwards, 13 Ming dynasty emperors were buried in the same area. Notice the little animals on the roof – for the emperor, 9 of them.

The third Ming emperor, the Yongle emperor, 14th C, whose statue sits in the hall of the tomb, with money being laid at his feet. In his tomb, had it been opened, should be found the emperor himself, his wife and his 16 concubines. It is said that when the concubines were to follow their master in his grave, they were treated to a giant feast, but most of them could not eat for crying so much. They knew their fate.
In fact only one single tomb of all thirteen Ming tombs has been excavated, and some of the treasures from the Dingling tomb were on display in the big hall at Shangling.

Some pieces made out of exquisite white jade were my favourites. As well as the beautiful Ginkos and the Mongolian Oak trees in the yard.

As the siting of the Ming dynasty imperial tombs was carefully chosen according to Feng Shui principles, people believed that bad spirits and evil winds descending from the North would be deflected. This 40 square kilometer area—enclosed by the mountains in a pristine, quiet valley full of dark earth, tranquil water and other necessities as per Feng Shui—would become the necropolis of the Ming dynasty.
A 7-kilometer road named the ”Spirit Way” leads into the complex, lined with giant statues of guardian animals and officials. Unfortunately we didn’t visit here this time, so the photo is from 2006. (Nice weather we had then…)

Back then, there was no tiny souvenir booth…but I quite like this little one, built in traditional style…

The Ming Tombs were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in August 2003.
For Cee I’m a bit late, but still. A painted ceiling and roof in the Forbidden City, Beijing.
As usual an interesting challenge from Cee – why not join in yourself? Click here.
The Pudong area seen from the Bund, Shanghai.




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