Monthly Archives: February 2006

Love and Marriage in the Year of the Dog? Will it be a Great Dane or a miniature poodle?


Love and Marriage in the Year of the Dog?

Will it be a Great Dane or a miniature poodle? a pure bred or a mongrel?

Lots of Chinese New Year stuff going on in Vancouver now, a radio media producer
called me yesterday and bounced some ideas about people wanting to get
married in the Year of the Dog…  because it is supposedly a good year
for marriage.

I told them that the Year of the Dragon is the best
year for getting married, but are people going to wait for another 6
years?  I got married in the year of the Sheep, supposedly great
for
domestic issue – but it only lasted for two years… but the
relationship had actually started in the year of the Rat.  Did it
make a difference?

When did the
relationship really start?  That should be the year of the
releationship – not the marriage ceremony.  Most people are more
concerned with whether they can get the Chinese restaurant for their wedding
banquet – which ultimately determines the date of the marriage. 

But is the Year of the Dog compatible to the individuals in the
wedding?  The dog year is the polar opposite to the Year of the
Dragon…  bringing out the best and the worst for a Dragon person,
akin to an anathema.  Dog years should be especially productive
and good for people born in the years of the Dog, Tiger and Horse,
according to trine theory… forming a equilateral triangle on the
zodiac wheel.

I was born in the Year of the Rat, and for awhile I emphasized meeting
women born in the Year of the Dragon, a very compatable sign for
Rats.  But although we were friends, the relationships never took
off… and the Year of the Dragon passed into the sunset.  Somehow
my most significant relationships have been with women born in the Year
of the Rooster, Rabbit and Tiger – not the Dragons or Monkeys predicted
in the compatibility tables of Chinese astrology books.

Also
an interesting twist would be the Hour of the marriage.  Do people get
married in the Hour of the Dragon, or the Hour of the Dog?  This would
be like the rising sign or ascendant in Western astrology – the sign
coming up over the horizon the moment you were born.  This is the
personality that you project to the world.  I have learned a lot about astrology from my friend and master astrologer John Rutherford, which I feature on my website here under Check Your Chart.

So… was the relationship born at the time of the wedding or when the couple first met?

John Rutherford tells me that astrology is all about
relationships.  The moment of baby's first breath is the
relationship with breathing and symbolicly linked to life itself. 
In western astrology there are relationships between your rising sign
and your sun sign, now relate this to the rising and sun signs or your
intended, than layer it upon the planetary coordinates of possible
wedding days.  Definitely a complex system, and not to be left to
stereotypes of happy loyal doggies.

Getting married in the “year of the Dog” and in the “hour of the
Dragon,” is
more like window dressing on the relationship.  It is important
for any relationship to be on good foundations.  Wedding
ceremonies, to me, is like “Grand Theatre” – there is a script, there
are the lead actors, theme music, a universal plot.  But then much in
Chinese
culture is symbolic, and about appearances and creating good intentions
– such as long life noodles, and good luck coin beef.

And of course there are “bragging rights”…. “We got married in the
Year of the Fire Dog, in the Hour of the Dragon…”  This is very
important for Chinese grandmothers.  Although I think that my
English speaking 95 year old “Poh-Poh”, born in Victoria BC and raised
in Vancouver, is more concerned that the couple be happy.  But
then, influencing happiness is what planning a wedding according to
astrology is all about.

The story links below show that 2006 will be the year of the Fire
Dog.  But will this be like the year of the Fire Horse (1966),
where many Chinese people did not want marriage or children, because
they would be deemed too spirited?

London Free Press – City & Region – Marriage flourishes in year of dog
lfpress.ca/newsstand/CityandRegion/2006/01/30/1417629-sun.html

Entering the Year of the Wedding – New York Times
Open this result in new window

Chinastic | The Year of the Dog Sees Marriage Rush
en.chinabroadcast.cn/974/2006/01/25/271@45779.htm

Year of Dog holds plenty of promise
www.canada.com/calgaryherald/news/neighbours/story.html?id=34b52a3e-a703-4c95-b5f2-94012de07513 – 38k –

The year of the dog- chinese horoscope – 2006
www.algonet.se/~anki-p/year-of-the-dog-2006.html – 65k – 31 Jan 2006

Chinese Horoscopes – The Dog
www.usbridalguide.com/special/chinesehoroscopes/dog.htm – 26k

People's Daily Online — Year of the Dog 'good for marriages'
english.people.com.cn/200601/25/eng20060125_238135.html – 23k –

Ron MacLeod report: Harry McGrath and Scots in Canada – Roger Emerson lecture for “Scottish Enlightenment”

Greetings, with the annual haggis hunt at an end, the time has come to 
look forward into the future as our politicians are so fond of
reminding us. Here is a report from harried Harry and a note regarding
the February 16th lecture. Regards, the other Ron.
PS for the uninitiated, there is a piobaireachd club meeting Friday
evening, February 10th; contact me if you are interested in hearing the
classical music of the great Gaelic bagpipe.

From Harry McGrath.

Hello everyone and belated Burn’s Day greetings. The end of Robert
Burns week seems like to good time to update you on what has just
happened under the auspices of the Centre for Scottish Studies and what
is about to happen.

A big thank you to everyone who turned out to hear Professor Tom Devine
on the subject of “Scotland in 1773: The Dynamics of Emigration.” It
was very heartening to see such a big crowd for the talk and for the
reception afterwards. Professor Devine also spoke at lunchtime
colloquia at UBC and at SFU Burnaby campus – three different topics in
two days without a note or a prompt of any description. This, of
course, makes it impossible to post the lecture notes to our website,
as many of you have requested, but, for those who could not make the
lectures I would recommend his latest book “Scotland’s Empire” from
which the heart of all three talks was drawn.

Burns week began with my delivering the Immortal Memory to the
inaugural “Over the Sea to Sky Highway Burns Supper” in Pemberton and
ended with an IM to the Vancouver Club/St. Andrew’s and Caledonian
Burns Supper. In between there were addresses of one kind or another to
the Burn’s Club of Vancouver, the History Grad Society of SFU and the
78th Fraser Highlanders. I also appeared on the Fanny Kiefer Show and
took young Alexander Janzen from the Robert Malcolm Memorial Pipe Band
with me. Needless to say, Alexander’s piping delighted Fanny and her
entire crew.

Kenny MacAskill MSP will be in Vancouver from 9-16 February to conduct
research for the book he is writing with ex-First Minister Henry
McLeish on Scottish societies overseas. Thank you to everyone who
contacted me offering their individual stories to Messrs MacAskill and
McLeish but my understanding is that the focus of the book is Scottish
societies, present and past, and those who have been, or are, involved
in them.

I have just delivered my own study on “The Scots in Canada” to a
cross-party committee in the Scottish government. Over 4 million
Canadians identified themselves as being of Scottish origin in the 2001
Canadian census – a matter of considerable interest in Scotland where
the population is expected to fall below 5 million in the next few
years. I also contributed a piece entitled “Simon Fraser – About Whom
Too Little Is Known” to the January edition of Orders of the Day: The
Publication of the Association of Former MLAs of British Columbia.

Finally, the third lecture in our “Scottish Enlightenment and
Emigration” series is on February 16. There is a biography of the
speaker and a description of his subject below provided by our own
Professor Ian Ross.

ROGER EMERSON WILL GIVE NEXT LECTURE IN SCOTTISH ENLIGHTENMENT SERIES.

The “Scottish Enlightenment and Emigration” lecture series sponsored by
the Centre for Scottish Studies at Simon Fraser University continues in
February with a visit by Roger Emerson, Professor Emeritus of History,
University of Western Ontario. Roger Emerson was educated at Dartmouth
College, then Brown and Brandeis Universities. His doctorate in the
History of Ideas at Brandeis was awarded ‘with Distinction.’ He taught
at Western Ontario from 1964, and is a Canadian citizen. He
specializes in the intellectual and social history of Britain,
especially Scotland, in the period 1660 to 1810, and is noted for
outstanding contributions to conferences of learned societies,
resulting in many publications, focused on religious thought, history
of science and medicine, patronage and politics, university
organization, clubs and societies, historiography, cultural change, and
the nature of the Enlightenment movement. The figures to whom he has
devoted special attention include the 3rd Duke of Argyll, statesman,
scientist, and improver, whom some regard as the true father of the
Scottish Enlightenment; Lord Kames, jurist, critic, and patron of Adam
Smith, Thomas Reid, and James Boswell; and David Hume, innovative
philosopher, political economist, and historian.

Lecture at 8 pm on Thursday, 16 February 2006, at SFU Harbour Centre
Campus –
David Hume: ‘Our Excellent and Never To Be Forgotten Friend’
Hume (1711 – 76) is now regarded as one of the outstanding philosophers
of the Western world. Some claim that his skeptical enquiries into the
nature of human understanding, also his claim that emotions are the
basis of our value systems, changed fundamentally our way of thinking
about the self and the world. The lecture will focus on what Hume
accomplished, and how and why this did not seem to his age something it
could applaud. This will involve asking why neither the philosophes of
Paris, not the English men of letters, nor the Enlightened Scots
(except perhaps Adam Smith) could accept what he wanted to tell them
about philosophy, history, politics, economics, religion, or even art.
To be sure, in 1865 a frustrated Scottish follower of Hegel, James
Hutchison Stirling, complained that ‘Hume is our Politics, Hume is our
Trade, Hume is our Philosophy, Hume is our Religion,’ but Hume’s
philosophical reputation did sink under attacks from Idealist attacks,
only to rise to new heights in the twentieth century. These
fluctuations demand investigation of what Hume actually wrote, what his
contemporaries made of it, and why they rejected him.

Professor Emerson’s lecture is the third in a series established to
celebrate SFU’s fortieth anniversary. The lecture is free but to
register please call 604 291 5100.

Ron Macleod report: Gaelic Society presents Youth Celidh + Scots News

Greetings a reminder and a note re GlobalScot. Regards, the other Ron

1. The Gaelic Society presents:
WHAT: Youth Ceilidh featuring the Fraser River Fiddlers, the Stave
Falls Dancers, the 78th Highlanders Pipe Band and singers Kevin Louden,
Leah Fields and Ainsley MacCallum-Reid.
WHERE: Hebridean Room, Scottish Cultural Centre, 8886 Hudson St,
Vancouver, B.C.
WHEN: doors open 7 PM and Concert starts 8 PM, Saturday, February 4th
COST: $12.00; 12 years and under free
OTHER: Tea, coffee and snacks included; bar service; door prizes
CONTACT: Maureen Lyon at 604-536-1367
For those who enjoy fiddle music, you are in for a treat with these
youngsters
ALL WELCOME!

2. Courtesy Bob Fair:
GlobalScot reports the appointment of Michael Corish as Scottish
Development International’s Manager for Canada. Michael has a B.A.
(Honours) in Marketing from Strathclyde University and extensive work
experience in the field of marketing in Britain.
Michael will be headquartered in Toronto. He expects to move there with
his family sometime in April or early May.
Contact: Isobel Bell at isobel.bell@scotent.co.uk or,
globalscot@scotent.co.uk

Sylvi McJang attends Gung Haggis Fat Choy: sends pictures


Sylvi McJang attends Gung Haggis Fat Choy: sends pictures


Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner is as much about the people attending the dinner as the people on stage.  Many people come dressed in a combination of tartans and Chinese silks.  Many people come celebrating their bi-cultural ethnic ancestry, or their inter-racial marriage. 

Gung Haggis Fat Choy is about inclusion.  The Scottish-Chinese thing is just the starting point.  It's also everything in-between, and everything beyond.  Cultural diversity starts in our families.  Our families teach us about our cultural traditions, and hopefully about racial tolerance and respect for all peoples and their traditions.  With Gung Haggis Fat Choy, we integrate from both, and are creating our own.

Below is a letter and photos from “Sylvi McJang” – a great example of Gung Haggis Fat Choy – living and breathing, and well in our nation called Canada.

Hello all,
 
Here are some pictures from last week – what a
great event!!   It was a lot of fun sharing a table with
such friendly people, with beautifully
colourful costumes.  And thank you Todd for organizing this
wonderful evening!   Hope to see you all there next year.
 
All the best,
“Sylvi McJang”
 

 1) Sylvi McJang (Mission, BC) and her mother Helen
MacKay (Grand Forks, BC) pose with the Lion Head mask that I wore for my “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” photo used on the posters, website and business cards.  Jim Wong-Chu (executive director of Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop), organizes the prizes in the background, the only person who has attended every Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner in a restaurant. – photo courtesy of Sylvi McJang

 2) Lorrie and
Tony Breen (West Van) with Toddish McWong.  Red and black always seem to be the prevailing colours at Chinese and Scottish cultural events.
– photo courtesy of Sylvi McJang


 3) Jan and Bill Murdoch (Richmond, BC) displaying their tartans mixed with Chinese dragon designs.  It's impossible to talk to everybody at the dinner but I try to.  I also had talked with Bill Murdoch on the phone prior to the event.  When people ask what to wear to Gung Haggis Fat Choy, I reply simply “ethnic-chic” – anything inbetween and anything beyond.  Some people go casual like the Murdochs above, and some people go formal in Chinese cheong-sam (long dress) or kilt with cutaway tuxedo jacket Like the Breens below – photo courtesy of Sylvi McJang


4) Lorrie and Tony Breen are a lovely couple that I have become friends with.  I first met Tony 2 years ago at a meeting of the Burns Club of Vancouver.  Later that year, Tony organized a fundraising dinner for the West Vancouver Rotary Club at Floata, and invited myself and Pamela Martin to be MC's – photo Sylvi McJang – photo courtesy of Sylvi McJang