A candle in Auckland

During every holiday trip, my mom and dad will light a candle in some church they encounter. A few days ago, they lit a candle in St Patrick’s Cathedral in Auckland, New Zealand. To be grateful for our family and everything we have.

So why a church?

It’s hard to say how religious they (or ‘we’) still are. I think ‘believing’ is something you do in a community, as a village or a neighborhood. Even though we (our family, our friends, our neighbors) were brought up religiously, I’m sure most of us no longer believe in an eternal supreme being; a god to pray to. But it’s also stupid to reduce religion to just that. We’ve all grown up in that kind of culture, the lessons, ethics, and traditions of a Christian society, and there’s moral value in those teachings. But come the 2020s, I think we’ve mostly learned not to take the Bible literally. That however, is not the end of religion.

Religion in the first place isn’t about culture, but about the mystery of life, of which we ourselves are an expression. Even though we’ve slowly removed ourselves from the church, that mystery and the exploration of it still remains.

So again, why a church, and a candle? I’m just guessing here, because I haven’t asked my parents. But for one because it’s silent and you can come there for some introspection. Some prayers you whisper not to a god, but tell yourself in a moment of quietness. Also, churches are usually a place that always has candles available, and light.

(We’ve also taken up this tradition, here’s our candle in Aubel, Belgium.)

Latest

Passing on the Baton

Passing on the Baton

Day 2876 in Shanghai and I’m walking with Hasse on Dongdaming Road (东大名路) in the Hongkou district. In 2018, I lived next to this road; here I registered my first Chinese bank account, bought my first baozi in a FamilyMart, and it’s here that I photographed so many random things because Shanghai was all new […]
April 13, 2026
Arriving at an emotion

Arriving at an emotion

Before moving to China, I wondered what it’d be like to live in an entirely different environment — and it was the same for holidays like Cambodia or Vietnam, or when Hasse was born. You try to imagine these things and how they’d make you feel, how you’d react, or what they’re like. But everytime […]
April 10, 2026
People of Nantong

People of Nantong

I’m carrying Hasse around in Nantong (南通), in the historical block surrounded by the Haohe River (濠河) — while Eva in the hospital visits a sick relative. Hasse, being a seven month old baby, is a true 显眼包 (eye-catcher), so dozens of bypassers turn their head or want to touch her (which I quickly have […]
April 4, 2026
Cozy market alleys and pot stickers

Cozy market alleys and pot stickers

We’re in  Zhuqiao Village (祝桥镇), again. I love these old streets, filled with market stands or scooters and trikes parked everywhere. These alleys are so full of life, devoid of big brands with their uniform protocols and brand guidelines. And because the whole scale of it is smaller than modern shopping malls, everything feels so […]
March 31, 2026