The Bells of St. Patrick

The Bells of St. Patrick November 6, 2009

Grass blows in the wind above me
Trees, planted on balconies, brave Canada’s cold…

Perhaps the start of a poem. Likely not. Either way, I’ve made it to Montréal, where I’ll spend the next three days taking in as much Buddhism; Buddhist Philosophy; Buddhist-Christian Studies; Comparative Religious Ethics; Philosophy, Religious studies, and Humanism; Buddhist Critical/Constructive Studies, Rethinking Secularism, and whatever else I can find (that’s just workshops and panels for tomorrow and Sunday morning).

It is soooo good to be here.

The studio loft I’ll be sharing with another AAR’er. Just a couple blocks from the main conference center. Lovely. Very modern, with cement floors and open 14-foot ceilings.

Basilique St. Patrick, across the street from us but mostly obscured by more modern architecture. Pitty. Churches here, though, are a dime a dozen it seems. Apparently the city is overwhelmingly Catholic, French Catholic mainly, but enough Irish to have a St. Pattys Basilica, thank Jove.

And, just in case you didn’t think that academics of religion were cutting-edge enough. Our exhibition hall is so advanced, it’s already in the year 2010. Ha.
In addition to panels, I hope to meet up with Brian a new friend and colleague from my China travels this summer, Amod, another friend and fellow philosopher of a somewhat Buddhisty inclination… Oh, yes, and Ven. Yifa, fearless leader of our China escapades. Lastly, there’s the ubiquitous job-search (the grown-up version of the Easter-egg hunt, or so that’s how I think of it) and Monday’s paper presentation (a grown up version of the spelling-bee).

Can you believe I lost my 5th grade spelling-bee on the word “yearn”? I swear the announcer horribly mispronounced the word, something like yoohhh-urn. It totally threw me off. Plus it’s at the end of the alphabet. I had albatross through caribou down cold.

Some things, like 5th grade spelling-bees, you never get back. Easter egg hunts on the other hand, come every year.


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