TOKYODISA (
tokyodisa) wrote in
paradisalogs2013-07-22 10:07 am
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Entry tags:
灯籠流し TŌRŌ NAGASHI
Who: Everybody!
What: Tokyo Day Seven: lantern floating ceremony
When: Monday, 22/July -- evening
Where: Along the Sumida River
Rating: pretty x2
If you're outside tonight, you may see lights floating along the river that runs through Tokyo.
Upon closer inspection, you'll see that they're thousands of paper lanterns set adrift in small boats. Some of the lanterns are painted in bright, colorful designs, and some have names and messages written on them. Some are plain, but they're just as beautiful. In the wider parts of the river, there are even people rowing boats with oversized lanterns inside of them, mimicking the smaller, floating lanterns.
There are some vendors on the street who can sell you the materials to make your own. Or you can simply watch and enjoy.
[Learn more about the ceremony here and watch videos here. No sections this time, just mingle. :) This is the last Tokyo log -- it'll transform back to the castle grounds at midnight.]
What: Tokyo Day Seven: lantern floating ceremony
When: Monday, 22/July -- evening
Where: Along the Sumida River
Rating: pretty x2
If you're outside tonight, you may see lights floating along the river that runs through Tokyo.
Upon closer inspection, you'll see that they're thousands of paper lanterns set adrift in small boats. Some of the lanterns are painted in bright, colorful designs, and some have names and messages written on them. Some are plain, but they're just as beautiful. In the wider parts of the river, there are even people rowing boats with oversized lanterns inside of them, mimicking the smaller, floating lanterns.
There are some vendors on the street who can sell you the materials to make your own. Or you can simply watch and enjoy.
[Learn more about the ceremony here and watch videos here. No sections this time, just mingle. :) This is the last Tokyo log -- it'll transform back to the castle grounds at midnight.]
ota; pretend she has human icons
I hope it doesn't sink...
the cutest tiny human
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She might as well have some sort of closure for all of the things that had happened in her old life. Or rather, old lives. This seems like as good a way as any to lay her past to rest; the past she could never return to.]
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It's been a hard two days of adjusting to being human, to having no voice, and dealing mentally and emotionally with everything that had happened. Having Meg here has made it easier, and the people he's met have been helpful and kind--that's something Castiel isn't used to--so it could all be worse, but it's still not easy.
That all might be why he decides, once he's down by the river, to take part in the ceremony. It's on a sudden whim and he doesn't entirely understand it, but he buys what he needs to make his own lantern, and begins to write carefully on it in his native language of Enochian.
He knows the idea is to guide departed human souls, but it isn't too much of a stretch to extend it to angels.
After he lets his lantern go he finds a quiet place to watch the others, and all the people milling around as well. He's still not too good at the 'not staring creepily' thing, so anyone wandering by might find themselves being studied very intently.]
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[Danny is sitting on the riverbank and watches boats float by.]
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He did not merely serve the Light, but in a very real way he was a part of the Light. He didn't speak about it much, if only because it was a part of his nature he barely had to think about.
Now these little lights were not the Light, but something in this ceremony resonated with him. A smile comes to his lips as he constructs his own lantern. A simple white lantern, with a circle quartered by a cross marked on the side.
It seemed appropriate.
He carefully carries the lantern to the water and lights it.]
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He's perched by the riverside now with the fragile paper of his lantern braced against a book he'd bought earlier in the day. He writes carefully, all his attention taken by the project, in the wobbly handwriting of a ten year old boy.
From above, it looks to be a long list of words, wrapping around the whole length of the paper.]
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