Kiss! Kisskisskiss! Kiiiiissss!!
I spent a good two hours of the bus ride from Bangkok to Poipet gazing three seats ahead at the Cambodian mother kissing her sweet baby. Ahh, the flutter of my heart and the patter of that good old biological clock!
The mother would kiss all up and down the baby’s soft, pudgy arm, then go, “Mumumum!” as she nibbled up the tiny caramel-colored fingers. The baby was in heaven, and squealed with delight. She was loved!
I have seen a lot of mother love, but there is something about the smooch-filled adoration of Cambodian mothers with their dimpled babies that brings a glow to your soul.
Perhaps it is no surprise, then, that Cambodian Mother Nature also kisses all over her darling jewels. Yes, I am talking about the trees in Angkor Wat.
Talking with any tourist who has been to more than a few temples in the hundred-building complex of beautiful Angkor Wat, he or she will inevitably emphasize the awesomeness of the trees twisting through the thousand-year structures.
It’s magical: the unearthly glow of the leaves… the intricate, centuries-old carvings peeking from behind roots… the moss-dappled green-gray of the stones embraced by the silvery brown of the trunk… Sometimes you can’t quite tell where the temple ends and where the tree begins (reminding me of the Fallingwater house in Pennsylvania, where nature blends with human structures).
The Angkor Wat maintenance team has cut away the vegetation from a number of temples, but for others they have wisely left it intact.
After all, both tree and temple are reaching for the cosmos!
The author, Lillie Marshall, is a 6-foot-tall National Board Certified Teacher of English, fitness fan, and mother of two who has been a public school educator since 2003. She launched Around the World “L” Travel and Life Blog in 2009, and over 4.2 million readers have now visited this site. Lillie also runs TeachingTraveling.com and DrawingsOf.com. Subscribe to her monthly newsletter, and follow @WorldLillie on social media!
Qiyin Y
Tuesday 3rd of January 2012
The roots are choking the temple. :P The roots are nature with ancient structures, which makes nature structures, and is nature taking its rightful possessions.
Huabao Huang
Sunday 24th of April 2011
The pictures were amazing! The root of the trees looked like fingers over the temple. It's so cool. I loved the picture on the top to the right, it's like a monter hand trying to destroy the temple.
~Huabao
Imported Blogger Comments
Wednesday 26th of May 2010
Luddy Sr. said... Love the pics! Especially the bottom one with the two people by the temple.
December 6, 2009 9:40 AM