Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Grand Reopening of the Blog!

Welcome to the New Let's Go Take A Look!

As we continue to focus on living authentically, we'll update this blog with our experiences, thoughts and creative output:
  • our most recent adventures
  • the latest artwork
  • new photos
  • musings and observations
  • stories, poems, essays, new constitutions for emerging democracies!
  • music and videos
  • anything else we come up with...!
Ping will post in both Chinese and English--not necessarily the same stuff. Mark will continue to blog as usual--plus all of his artwork, writing and music will now be accessible from here.

In the upper right corner of the screen, you'll find links to our new "Let's Go Take A Look" Facebook site, our YouTube channel, the RSS feed subscription and email. You can also "Like" the posts and share them via Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and more.

Our hope is that by sharing what we learn as we become more of our authentic selves, we'll entertain, intrigue, and inspire others to discover and explore the inner and outer worlds.

You can subscribe to this blog via email or RSS, subscribe to the YouTube channel, and "Like" us on Facebook! Then, please help us share it with others.

Thanks for joining us on our journey!

Cheers!  --Mark and Ping

Monday, August 13, 2012

Getting the Proportions Right Again

I've been drawing a lot of people recently--partly because I was working on the cover for Craig English's newly published novel "Anvil of Navarre." I realized that I had been getting a bit sloppy with where the elements go on the human head. My ears were too far forward and kind of pinched. The eye on the left hand side of the page always seemed to be a bit off, no matter which direction the person was facing, and I seemed to skew the nose/mouth/chin quite often.

Back to the drawing board, as they say.

I found some good links online (like this one) and started mapping out craniums to put things back in order. After a couple of pages of this, I felt a lot better. I still need to keep up the practice, though. It keeps me from getting sloppy.

UPDATE 2/2/2013:  I have been editing my [very long and much evolved] fantasy novel. Along with that work, I've been drawing more concept art, working toward a visual anchor for some of the characters and places. While I was discussing this with Ping, I suddenly realized that after years of trying, I had inadvertently drawn one of the main characters! This is a man known simply as "Ender." It's exactly the age and demeanor I've been going for all this time and could never quite draw.

Sometimes the unconscious mind brings things to the fore that the conscious mind only discovers later!

Friday, August 10, 2012

中文課(一)馬友友 Chinese Lesson 1 - Yo Yo Ma


我們很喜歡音樂家馬友友,曾經收藏過他所有的CDs。因為對他的音樂相當熟悉,所以也理所當然地認為大家都應該如此。

話說有一天在一家書店看到了馬友友新出的一張專輯,當時二話不說,馬上拿去前面結帳。幫我們結帳的是位二十出頭的年輕黑人,態度親切極了。他先“刷”一聲用電子掃描機掃過CD,接著用他黑白分明的大眼睛不經意掃描,突然驚訝地說

“哊!媽媽!(Yo! Mama!)

這是那一種音樂?我怎麼沒聽說過這個人?“

Thursday, August 9, 2012

你們都吃什麼呀?What do you all eat?


我們搬來台灣後最常被問的問題是 你們都吃些什麼呀?台灣人對吃的注重由此可見。

到底什麼樣的人會問這種問題呢?除了少數我們周邊的親朋好友之外,大多數是毫不相干的陌生人。還記得最初幾次被問時我會措手不及,傻傻地愣在那裡,不知從何答起,“雄雄地”想起求學時期受到突檢的惶恐。最近一次是一位在鄰近家樂福服務的阿姨,一邊幫我們切滷味一邊問。她問的時候還有點不好意思,我倒是聽得哈哈大笑。

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

A Drop in the Bucket 一滴水的聯想



As Ping's cousin drove us home from a family dinner last night, the wind and rain lashed the everything in its path. Trees whipped from side to side, bits of broken branches flying off to who knows where. Water washed down streets and through  intersections, adding a slew of new tributaries to the Danshui River (淡水河).

When Mark got home, he checked the barometer. This is the lowest setting we've seen yet.

At 10:22 PM, the authorities made it official: schools and businesses will be closed. We're having a typhoon!

Not much later, Ping announced: "We have water in the utility room."

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Outsourcing Our Kitchen 廚房外包

Beef Noodle Soup! (牛肉麵!)
"So, what do you cook?"

This is a question Ping gets asked all the time when the locals learn that we've moved to Beitou from the United States. As we've mentioned before, Taiwan is all about food, so people are very curious to find out what we like to eat--and, particularly, what kind of food we cook for ourselves.

Monday, July 9, 2012

Always Coming Home 回家


Imagine being awakened by a 6.6 earthquake and having to play Super Mario Cart between [stationary] Fiat-sized boulders on the road and negotiate detours around washed out bridges. Imagine standing on a windy hill at the edge of a massive thunderstorm with thunder rolling loudly all around. Imagine sampling "horse milk wine" in a yurt, and eating more mutton in two weeks than you'd eaten in the previous 20 years combined. Imagine that all of this happens in the space of a couple of weeks...

...because it did.