Monday, May 20, 2013

Headed to Bhutan this week


Ever since watching Jonathan Harris' TED talk on "The Web as Art," I've wanted to go to Bhutan.  He created an interactive art project on happiness in the last Himalayan kingdom, which I found incredibly memorable due to Jonathan's powerful use of symbols.

Here's the introduction to his project:

"In Bhutan, happiness is no laughing matter -- academics study it, spreadsheets track it, billboards tout it, conferences debate it, and every year, foreign intellectuals flock to Thimphu  to share their ideas about what exactly makes a person happy.  Instead of "Gross National Product,"  Bhutan uses "Gross National Happiness" to measure its socio-economic prosperity, essentially organizing its national agenda around the basic tenets of Buddhism.


Bhutan's fourth King, Jigme Singe Wangchuck, invented the idea in 1972, to give his tiny country some international clout and guard against potential future invasion by its two mighty neighbors (India & China).  Given the seriousness with which this topic is treated, I thought it would be fun to do something a little bit silly, so in late 2007, I spent two weeks in Bhutan, handing out balloons.  I...

Asked people 5 questions pertaining to happiness: what makes them happy, what is their happiest memory, what is their favorite joke, what is their level of happiness between 1 and 10, and if they could make one wish, what would it be.  Based on each person's stated level of happiness, I inflated that number of balloons, so very happy people would be given 10 balloons and very sad people would be given only one (but, hey, it's still a balloon).  Then, I wrote each person's wish onto a balloon of their favorite color.  I repeated this process for 117 different people, from all different ages and backgrounds.  On the final night, all 117 wish balloons were re-inflated and strung up at Dochula, a sacred mountain pass of 10,000 feet, leaving them to bob up and down in the wind, mingling with thousands of strands of prayer flags."















You can listen to the 117 powerful stories here.  I'll write up my experiences after I return.

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