• 161 replies
    marye
    Joined:
    If you're a Deadhead in Asia, here's your new clubhouse... Welcome, and make yourselves at home!

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • woodfishtoo
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    China
    Might be a long shot but considering going to China to teach English in preparation fortheir hosting of the Olympics. I read all I can of first hand accounts, impressions, advice, etc. I know 'China' doesn't mean 'all of China', that a place so vast and old must be more diverse and complicated than a 'never been there' person could imagine. Kinda nervous about going there, but almost (or lots more) curious. Mainly, need a job, 57 tomarrow, teaching positions not easy to get, especially at my ripe old (and in the way) age. Definately need to 'reset my clock', find a new purpose for my efforts. Money isn't everything, by a long shot. A place to go and a reason to do, work worthy of my time and efforts are what I seek. Been a teacher forever, special educ., early childhood, etc. Kids grown, time to reclaim my own life and times, adventures, fun, friends, music, purpose...anyway, this being a world- wide forum, expect more info. than I can read. Thanks to those who have written re:China already, as I need to decide, apply for positions, ASAP. Not necessarily wanting to run away from current life, children, etc., but need to put some fresh air in my tired tires, reset my clock, find the 'me' I lost track of during the last 20 + years. Being Dad is good, but peace and quiet in an 'empty nest' is not my desire. Want to regain a view of a future that has become blurry and short in my mind's eye. Plenty of time left, don't want it to be a quick blur. Want ? Need ? Don't really know but gotta go. Further.
  • c_c
    Joined:
    dude
    dude, did you send Columbo to speak with the ticket agent? there is no way the dead wold play in China before they played in a US city... peace. "What's the point of calling shots, this cue ain't straight in line Cue balls made of styrofoam and no-one's got the time"
  • TigerLilly
    Joined:
    Fascinating Trifecta
    I love to hear first had adventures in what is for me unfamiliar territory. The more people who speak openly about their experiences makes the world a better and more tolerant place, I think. And no apologies necessary about "boring Germans". Trust me, I can rant about that very subject for hours, and HAVE on occasion, but I have adopted the lovely French habit of feeling compelled to state an opposite point of view, in order to foster discussion and debate. Is my opinion that German society tends to be very afraid of individualism, and being seen as different; and this fear is a "hangover" of the Nazi days. But again is only my own personal thesis.
  • 00
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Germans
    Tiger Lilly, I must apologize as that statement about Germans being boring is a horrible generalization. China: Yes you do gain an appreciation of Western comforts and the value of individual life after being here. It all depends on the China you actually live in because if you are living in Shanghai and if you are an expat or in an upper income bracket then you can live very well. I could honestly say that I live better here than I could if I lived in the States. Here a made costs about $120-130 per month so you just get a couple of them and they pretty much do everything from cleaning, cooking, making beds, etc. The soft bed had to be imported from England as the Chinese enjoy sleeping on the box spring mattress! For me there are 2 China's, there is the educated class middle - upper class and there are the uneducated classes (peasants) who are the majority of the society. I must say this first, that 99% of Chinese people either upper lower anything are usually nice people. At least from my experiences I have always been treated well and in the most remote parts of China I have received smiles. I also feel safer here in China than I would in the States. There are no guns and very little crime. I can walk anywhere in the City of 24 million people at any time of the night and not have a problem. (From being on Tour I have been to every major city in the States 4-5 times if not more and I can tell you some horror stories! I will save that for another thread.) Of course there could be exceptions, but over all China is a safe place and Children are looked upon as being treasure so your children are safe as well (from kidnapping and sex offenders.) There is crime that involves murder etc but 99% of the time this is internal family dispute etc, but again this is not too common. Little respect for individual life: I agree there are 1.4 billion people here and human life is not worth too much and is very expendable. I have many horror stories some are from my own experiences, some I have read in the English New Paper, and some I have heard from word of mouth. Most of these stories take place outside of the big cities in the country side where the majority of the people live that have very little education. This is where the stories of the orphanage probabley originated from . These places exist and the thought of giving your baby away because it is a girl horrifies me. As I know many Chinese people in Shanghai who have girls and love them very much, I can say that the orphage you mention above does not represent the country as a whole. I hope that I have given you a clearer picture into China. And there were rumors that The Dead where coming to Shanghai and Beijing but it seems these rumors have died out, but if it ever comes true then this would be a good time to come to China!!!
  • TigerLilly
    Joined:
    Farther South
    And I am only 20 minutes from Frankfurt airport-so same goes for me, Trifecta. As for your comment in the Europe thread about Germans being boring, you are basically correct, but also slightly wrong. Are some really wacky Germans out there-but you just have to find them. Or are also a handful where their coolness and individuality are deeply buried, and you have to get to know them to notice-back me up on this Jodester, surely you know what I mean. Was never in China myself, but nowadays alot of the companies in my industry are producing in China, so could be that I end up paying a visit there one of these days. A friend of mine who went there said she gained a new appreciation of Western comforts and the value of individual life when she was in China. Somehow she ended up paying a visit to an orphanage that was full of deprived and unwanted little girls, said was about the saddest thing she ever saw.
  • Jodester
    Joined:
    Yeah, Chang Mai is
    Yeah, Chang Mai is excellent! A lot cleaner, a milder climate, and not such bad smells coming out of the sewer grates on the street corners! :) Didn't have time to make it up to Pei, next time! :) I'm based in Hamburg, just around the corner from where the Beatles honed their craft! It's a great city and highly recommended! If ur passing through at any point in time let me know beforehand so I can show u around! J Are you kind?
  • 00
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    China
    Where in Germany are you living? I travel through Germany about 3 or 4 times a year. (Usually passing through). I hate flying so I only fly Lufthansa (East Africa and Europe) as I feel completely relaxed with a German flying the plane. Anyway, China is complex and there are good times and bad times. Raging, well only time will tell. Thailand, where? Changmai or Pei? and many others. I have been to Thailand a few times, but the most interesting time was in Sept. 2003 when the Queen of Burma was jailed and I was on the Burma Thai boarder and wanted to enter Burma just to say i was there. Keep in mind people that this place is completely off limits just as North Korea is. At that time Burma was this far off isolated place that one would only hear about around a camp fire. I sat with my Canadian friend on a hill feasting on ______ which caused us to miss about 3 days. but when we came to it, there were tanks and armies on both sides of the boarder. So we decided to go back to pei. This was in the Golden Triangle or near it. This part of Thailand/Burma/Vietnam is considered a very sketchy place. Look it up. Now I do good business in Burma and I would never have thought that this country would ever involve me or have anything to do with my daily living. How strange and exiting life is. By the way, the point of the story is go up north.
  • Jodester
    Joined:
    Hi
    I would love to check out China. Was in Thailand three and a half years ago. I love Asia! Here in Germany it's ok! Rainy though! I'm from New Zealand but actually grew up in northern Florida. Sounds like u are ragin' bro'! :) Are you kind?
  • archure
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    ARCHURE International Musician
    Hi: I am right here in the USA, but my Music (online at www.archure.net quick load midi files = 40 sec) has some International variations. When studying music at College of Marin in the 1970's, given a list of sub majors, I chose "International Music", but it's mostly Rock, with some New Age, a trace of Jazz, and even some Western (Country & Western). Back in the 70's as a Music Major, I used to see some of the Dead around, at parties. I used to have these "Neptune" parties, and "Full Moon" parties (and Venus and Jupiter too). And I gave the Dead some Astrological advice, before their European tour (1977?) providing them with a list of good days based on the chart of their first performance (since lost record of chart data). I also did Stevie Nicks chart, and tried to persuade her to stick with Fleetwood Mac, she knew my girlfriend (at a different time) Kris Karlson (Artist: she painted me a Teripin Turtle, but she kept it), and Stevie knew my good friend Marcus McCallen III (Musician), who knew Bob Wier (and all the rest undoubtedly?). . So I am trying to corner the International Market, with Rock and an International, Flavor. www.archure.net (quick load) or even quicker load time http://archure.net/music/songlist.html (no gifs no graphics, the whole page loads quicker) -Archure (Chris Holley) Music for the New Millennium by ARCHURE reg tmrk www.archure.net Music for the New Millennium by ARCHURE reg tmrk www.archure.net
  • 00
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    China
    Very nice i must say. This is the perfect forum to find heads all around the world and not only in the good old U S of A!!! I am really looking forward to hearing and meeting other Deadheads in China and Asia in general. I have been away for a bit traveling and i am actually going back to the US at the end of July. New York City here i come!!! It has been 2 years since i have been back in the States so a curious to see how things are because........ I can go on and on about politics and current affairs. Anyone interested? Greg
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
If you're a Deadhead in Asia, here's your new clubhouse... Welcome, and make yourselves at home!
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Is a mood where you feel plucked from one reality to another and both are simultaneous and real.
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

Has been a wonderful travel log! really really brilliant! ********************************** By trying we can easily learn to endure adversity -- another man's I mean. Mark Twain
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

14 years 5 months
Permalink

anyone out there? I currently live in Qingdao....probably moving south to Fujian province later this summer. regards, will
user picture

Member for

16 years
Permalink

Motivated deadhead down here in Okinawa, Japan. Blessed being here, seen so many good bands, all kinds of different styles and players. Having said that, I'm missing the states and the summer festies, wishing I could be back now. Oh well... I never am to far from the dead with the net, archive or sugarmegs or podcasts like deadpod or through the years... Would love to find a dead cover band out here, would be some crazy dream come true... What makes the grass grow?...
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

14 years 2 months
Permalink

Hi All, From Pi here, the country probably rings a bell to you guys, coz of the news that had spread around the world, and literally about 'dead' people, may they Rest in Peace. And hopefully no one will condemn people from my country because it's not our fault, and it could really happen to anyone anytime and anywhere. Peace to all.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

The Chinese people are not to blame for what their unelected leaders are doing/did in Tibet. It can happen to anyone, anywhere. It may even be happening to people in the US right now. Dead people rock in China, Korea, Japan!!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 6 months
Permalink

May the Creator be with all. Smiley dave not so smiley with so many hurting. Do For Other's You Will Feel Better. Guaranteed!!!!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 2 months
Permalink

Hey now, how is everyone doing during this wonderful holiday season. tela Tela jewel of Wilsons fowl domain. Lullaby the breezes whisper… Shanghai China
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 2 months
Permalink

hey bro have been here for sometime, Shanghai is my base. i always love the title "deadheads in china?" as i tend to write this pretty often. not too many so i hope our paths cross.
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

...With the Kathmandu Blues again! It's been real folks. Really feeling my age at 51. I think I really tweaked my kneecap doing a 30 day Tibetan-style Buddhist retreat. Hurt like hell and the only pain meds "over" the counter are tramadol abd codeine and under the counter?? You don't want to know -- Jerry's favorite. Guess I'll stick it out and home to the family for Chhristmas and the regular Doc for real advice and the legal shit! Ouchhhh, hurts like hell. .
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

14 years 2 months
Permalink

your in where katmandhu seriously and chasing the coedine dragon,any temple ball about if so pm me seriously its good to hear from you take care
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

take care and heal up!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

nice to see you back in these parts...
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Made it home today through the fiasco at Heathrow. Somebody seriously has my back - waliked in and out with standby-tickets and go on! Unbelievable! So was the trip. I said "No" at the seriously correct time or would still be there chasing the dragon (and everybody knows tHAT is nowhere)... saw it happening o a lot o other good heads in the tourist trap called Thamel. The hash was unworldly if you just poked around but I even did very little of that. My knee is seriously fucked up and looks like operation time. Well, the wear-&-tear was os of good use. I feel like I could die today and be dead without fear and then be reborn to follow most of this same path. Hey, it's better than money, I can take it with me!! Want to take the time &pleasure to wish all my friends out there a pleasanrt holiday, Please enjoy and cherish what you have in your life ! Lobten
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 10 months
Permalink

Konnichiwa y'all!! I have been sitting here in Japan for almost 3 years without any heads to hang with. Is anyone out there living near Nagoya, Japan who wants to get together occasionally to shoot the shit? Hippydave in Japan
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

Hey Cats, I've up and made the move outta Europe, and on to Thailand. So if any of ya' all happen to live here these days, or are just passing through, do send me a message. I'll be keeping a look out here on dead.net in the Asia forum. Cheers..!! :D ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Are you kind?"
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 3 months
Permalink

Hey Now,Just arrived in Seoul 3 wks ago to work but been here before a couple times. I miss my jam friends back in Canada and while I have lots of friends here I dont have anyone to jam with, especially meandering-song-linking style we all know n Love. So I'm lookin to meet some people who'd like to get together and make some music. I'm never concerned with ability but rather spirit and a desire to make interactive music,,,well, thats what we're all about in'it? : ) I'd also like to meet ppl who dont play but would like to hang out n maybe catch shows. All is good : ) Please either respond to me here or at celticlhadie@yahoo.ca
user picture

Member for

14 years
Permalink

watch the show on iTunes 40th anniversary special (free) between midnight tonight and August 1
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I saw that on the big screen back in the day. HIghly recommended!
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

Haven't seen any Koreans posting here. I was in Korea 3x but never did the club scene. If no one helps you out here, assuming you speak Korean, get on the internet and start looking or if in Seoul get out to the bigger colleges and U's and have a look around, ask around. Seoul is huge. Don't tell me that town ain't got no heart! ~ Just got to play your part! ~
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 2 months
Permalink

hey friends how as everyone been! jodester where in thailand are you? Today was a wonderful day and i am so happy to be listening to the dead right now and just feeling at peace.
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

I'm in Bangkok these days bro. Got a Dead cover band started up here. Things are going well. Decided it was time to bust out of the European scene for a change. I'll be knocking around in Asia for quite a while I reckon. I think u said u are based in China if I remember correctly, or? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Are you kind?"
user picture
Default Avatar
Permalink

More like Venice these days with the floods.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 1 month
Permalink

Greetings from HK! Jodester - I get to BKK now and again. Tell me more about your band. I do my own Dead and Jerry routine with musicians in Beijing mainly. Recently played with Melvin in SF. Guitar, bass, vocals and some keys. Happy to fill in if there's a need in Thailand. And let me know if you ever come to hk or Beijing. Joesimone@me.com Ps : though about playing the Phuket blues festival in the spring?
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 2 months
Permalink

jodester, cool let me know when you are playing, i have a place down on koh chang island and i am through BKK often. Yes in Shanghai but these days spending more time in South Florida. I have tickets to DSO in Fort Lauderdale in March, i have not seen them since 99 or 2000, looking forward to hearing some GD.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 2 months
Permalink

Happy New Year to you all!!!!! Looking forward to a new year as last year completely drained me, the good and the bad,(I had a hard run.) I still believe there is more positivity out there than negativity. I believe that there is more ying than yang, but somehow the ying and the yang always equal out to be about 50/50. I have lost more friends this year, but as you grow older this becomes a common occurrence. Unfortunately i am only 36 and my former circle of friends knew, and still know how to run it hard. I have learned more and covered more ground this year , but the year of the rabbit will not have run its course until mid January. I will miss my fellow soldiers of the night who have fallen in 2011 and in the former. Me I am still on the road and heading for another joint and have a cocktail in hand and the music is most likely too loud. Have been spending some time back in the States in south Florida on the water, any heads in the Fort Lauderdale area? Strange being back in the States after being away for so long, I was in Myanmar for the last week and I had a similar feeling, but there is no place like home. Happy New Year!!!
user picture

Member for

12 years 6 months
Permalink

I live in India now - HI to everyone !! Lets create a topic - deadheads underwater, about divers - what do you think guys ?Visit my blog -http://best-diving.org and you will understand what i am talking about !!!
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

Well, I'm here. Singaporeans are a delightful people, but it is hot! How hot? Damn Hot! & humid too. Can't imagine there are deadheads here but in the strangest of places -- I know down under and \I ain\t far from there...
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

If you've been here before you know this is a beautifully landscaped city near the equator. The people are very jolly and the easily laughing sort. Singapore is extremely neat and orderly. But not in the German sense. You don't even jaywalk here. Litter or spitting on the sidewalk results in a few lashes with the cane fine. I ain't kidding. We're talking draconian!. Well, it's nice to see a place you've never been before.
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

Ka-ka-ka-ka-Kathmandu! ...as the old song goes. It's monsoon, the mood is grim in this city of the concrete jungle (Jungle!) family to see, things to do. I would especially appreciate ANY deadheads here in the Valley to PM me. Lots of temples to see!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

we'll be glad to hear your reports from the field. And the summit.
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

You know me, I'll give a bit of travelogue to anybody who cares to read a serial. In this here concrete jungle called Kathmandu the Hindus rule the Mongolians. The Mongolians have been making a revolution since around 1990. They got rid of the King and monarchy in 2006 and Maoists (Maoists! Can you believe it?) came to power a few years after. The mainline democrat and republican establishment Hindu parties and the government bureaucracy (composed of 90% Hindus) went into total noncooperation. The mood is grim here. The old Maoist government was finally toppled by changing the Constitution, which hasn't even been written yet. The Chief Supreme Court Justice now runs an interim government until new elections can be held, which a large minority don't see as fair. The US and other European countries, of course, want elections. Including the Carter Centre who wants to monitor them for fairness. Fairness? In a place where most of the people are illiterate and there are hardly any roads in most of the country. People can't even register to vote. This morning I woke up in a room where a young man had left his country to pursue his engineering degree. His parents had to get him out because he was part of the revolution. Next to a picture of him on the wall was a screened drawing of Che Guevara. Che! Goodnight Che! Good morning Che! The Mongolian Nepali descent people here are like niggers in America. They will not stop until they have equal rights, resources and representation. And I don't blame them.
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

Strange trip it's been! The Tibetans are tense at their main place in the Kathmandu Valley (Never mind being tense in Tibet). It seems as if there is a plan afoot to wipe them out of Nepal, though they still throw some weight because of capital infusion from Westerners (Buddhists, tourists mostly) who visit them. There are now surveillance cameras at the Boudhanath Stupa. They don't want anymore self-immolations by Tibetans. We should thank Snowden for cluing us in. Besides the Utah NSA facility there is one in Britain, 5 in Australia and 1 in New Zealand. This is the corporate Anglos getting ready to "contain" China, along with the rest of us. WAKE UP EVERYBODY!
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

It is hot, and then it rain, and then there are rainbows. In an endless pattern as old as the earth itself and now being changed by global warming. Namste, all!
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

If yu've been to Asia then you know this story: A poor person wants to do some menial service for you like shine your shoes for what amounts to a few cents. They speak English more or less and invite you to their home. Their home is down an alleyway and across a street and down another twisting road through a rice paddy until you reach a slum of such unbelievable proportion it makes you want to break down and cry right then and there. The whole slum is built from plastic and sticks laid out in squares like a former UN refugee camp. But these people have been living there for years. Of course, you had to be courageous enough to believe nobody was going to waylay you. But all you encountered were smiling people greeting you warmly in the middle of this squalor. So you pull what amounts to ten dollars out of your pocket and give it to the guy and his family and you cry for humanity all the way back to your air-conditioned hotel. His wife smiles tears of gratitude as she holds their baby. Life is too real some times...
user picture

Member for

14 years 10 months
Permalink

At the holiest shrine for Buddhists in Nepal, the Boudha Stupa in the Boudha district of Nepal, another Tibetan has self-immolated. Deadheads who are not Buddhists might recognize the Seeva foundation's symbol of the eyes. These eyes are actually representations of the Buddha's eyes that are painted on this famous monument of the Buddha's enlightenment in the 4 directions of the dome-shaped monument (with a square top) to the Buddha's enlightenment. At this famous World Heritage Site on August 6th, the following was reported in The Himalayan Times: "A 38-year old monk called Karma Ngedon Gyatso died after setting himself on fire at the Boudha stupa in Kathmandu, Nepal, yesterday (August 6). Karma Ngedon Gyatso, who was unable to walk due to a severe disability, had arrived in exile from Tibet in October, 2011. Tibetans who knew him describe him as deeply religious. It is the second fatal self-immolation by a Tibetan monk in Kathmandu this year after Drupchen Tsering set himself on fire in February, also at the Boudha stupa. Although I was there in Boudha at the time I was busy moving from my hotel to my relative's home a few miles away. Many of my relatives own shops selling religious paintings around the stupa and I usually do my kora (circumambulation of the stupa) every morning around this time. The Government of Nepal had announced a few days earlier that is had finished setting up surveillance cameras in the area aftere the first Tibetan self-immolation at the stupa. From what I could see two cameras were visible that only covered the main internal entrance to the monument. I'm sure that will change. The Nepali government is under tremendous pressure from the Chinese Government (who have ruled over and subjugated the Tibetan people since about 1950, driving the Dalai Lama into exile in 1959). It is not too strong a statement to say the Chinese are trying to assimilate the Tibetan culture and failing that will finish the job with genocide. The afternoon of the fifth I found a Free Tibet sticker in my suitcase and stuck it in a window in one of the monasteries that form the circle surrounding the ancient monument. I came back a few hours later with some tape to make sure it stuck there. Somebody had already taken it down. The Boudha monument has become a focal point for Freet Tibet demonstrations in Nepal. The shopkeepers want to keep it a tourist area and World Heritage Site so they can continue to profit from the many tourists who visit every year. The Nepali government wants to keep the aid roiling in from the Chinese who don't like Free Tibet demonstrations, never mind control the Nepali government to such a degree they don't even allow the The Dalai Lama to visit. Well, it was a sad end to a beautiful visit and I yet again am reminded of places in this world where people will do anything to flee authoritarian governments where the oppression is unimaginable. Unimaginable means that the people are willing to self-immolate in protest because they have no other method to reach the rest of the world with their message. This pathos is too much to bear. Will it end when there are no Tibetans left as a separate ethnic identity?
user picture

Member for

14 years 5 months
Permalink

Greetings from Okayama, Japan! I have some land in the countryside of Okayama prefecture on which I have built a small stage, have a generator and can host large groups for camping and live music. Hope t o hear from some other heads in Japan! contact me at reddsoxx@mac.com
user picture

Member for

14 years 5 months
Permalink

Actually I was there for about six weeks in 1990 and got the most incredible acupuncture treatments for my lower back. But other than that I found the place to be a loony bin. S$500 fines for not flushing (who doesn't!?) a public toilet. And the speech by Prime Minister Lee Kwan Yew when I was there in which he said,''We as Singaporeans have to take this idea of having fun very seriously.'' Yowza! That's when I knew it was time to move on. Much happier here in Japan!
user picture

Member for

14 years 5 months
Permalink

Sad to say that Yukotopia, a great bar and venue in Tokyo where I once had the pleasure of playing one night, has just closed down as of April 1st. Sorry to see you go, Yuko! 頑張ってね!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 2 months
Permalink

Dear All, Walk me out in the morning dew my honey..... Just want to say hello to everyone, I have not been on here in some time. I am back in Shanghai for a couple of weeks and then heading back to South Florida. Just want to say hello and wish everyone positive emotions and lovely memories.... Lets keep on making memories my brothers and sisters!!!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Great to see you! I hope you can stream the shows where you are...
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 4 months
Permalink

At the holiest shrine for Buddhists in Nepal, the Boudha Stupa in the Boudha district of Nepal, another Tibetan has self-immolated. Deadheads who are not Buddhists might recognize the Seeva foundation's symbol of the eyes.