Bella Su announces marriage six years after losing Godfrey Gao
Sharing the good news on social media on 18 March, Bella posted a photo of her and her husband without naming him, and wrote, "I've always believed in letting life unfold as it is, trusting that everything happens in its own time. I never searched for certainty or tried to force things into place - I simply followed the path as it came. But what I never expected was to meet someone who would not only walk beside me but also challenge me, reflect my growth, and connect with me in a way that feels almost beyond words."
Bella said that with her new man, it was more than love. It was a deep understanding and a connection that feels grounding and expansive.
"And so, with a full heart, I want to share this special news: I've married the person who is willing to walk beside me through every chapter, every challenge, and every joy. He is my greatest support and my deepest anchor," she expressed.
"Over the years, your kindness and support have meant the world to me. Many of you have shared your own journeys - your struggles, your growth, your dreams - and it's been an honour to be part of that. Today, I just want to say thank you. For being here, for allowing me to share my life with you, and for celebrating this new chapter with me."
Bella was dating Godfrey prior to his untimely passing in 2019 while filming a Chinese variety show. He was 35.
(Photo Source: Bella IG)

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Forbes
an hour ago
- Forbes
Rock Band Cardinal Black Recommends Welsh Travel Sites
Welsh rock band Cardinal Black poses triumphantly after their first concert in New York City at a sold-out Gramercy Theatre. Cedric Perrier Most American travelers are unfamiliar with the riches of South Wales Valleys in Wales. They are very familiar, though, to the members of Cardinal Black, a Welsh rock band that performed a stellar debut concert in New York this month before a sold-out audience at the Gramercy Theatre and then embarked on a U.S. and Canadian tour that ends Aug. 30. 'It's a picturesque part of the world with a strong national identity and an abundance of character, history and heart,' says Chris Buck, Cardinal Black's super-talented guitarist who, like all the band members, hails from the region. 'There'll be a welcome (for Americans) in the hillsides.' There are several can't-miss sites in South Wales Valleys, Buck says. The region, located north of the English border and Welsh cities Cardiff and Swansea, extends about 60 miles from Carmarthenshire in the west to Monmouthshire in the east. 'Even though I've been there innumerable times,' Buck says, Big Pit, our national coal museum in Blaenavon, always has a profound impact to see the dangerous, claustrophobic conditions that my grandfather and great grandfather worked in for most of their lives. There's also the Roman fortress in Caerleon, one of the best-preserved examples of a Roman amphitheater in the United Kingdom.' The South Wales Valleys, according to the Welsh tourism website offer 'big green spaces that are perfect for walking and mountain biking.' The website suggests a visit to Aberdare, a town dubbed 'Queen of the Hills' that sits 'at the base of a wide and grand valley.' The town has quaint cafes, restaurants, pubs and bars and is 'the cradle of the British film industry,' where filmmaker William Haggard produced more than 30 films. Members of the Welsh rock band Cardinal Black take in the sights at Newgale Beach in Pembrokeshire, West Wales. Lewys Mann About 23 miles south of Aberdare and just south of South Wales Valleys, Buck recommends a visit to St. Fagan's National Museum of History in Cardiff, Wales' capital and largest city. The museum is located four miles west of the city center. 'It has dozens of meticulously relocated historic Welsh buildings,' he says, 'including a cenotaph commemorating, amongst others, my great uncle who was shot down and killed over Berlin (in World War II) in 1945.' Cardiff Castle is 'a notable part of Cardiff's history and skyline, reportedly first commissioned by William the Conqueror and with remains from the Norman and Victorian eras,' Buck says. 'It's also a pretty epic place for a first gig, as we found out in late 2021! Maybe we should go back!' Caerphilly Castle, about a 20-minute drive north of Cardiff Castle, is the biggest Welsh castle and worth a visit, Buck says. It also was a good place for a high school prom, he adds. Buck and his wife had their wedding reception at The Skirrid Inn in the Brecon Beacons mountain range adjacent to South Wales Valleys. 'At nearly a thousand years old, it is Wales' oldest pub and one of my favorite places in the world,' he says. 'It has a slightly macabre history, having been frequented by the infamous Hanging Judge Jeffreys, who presided over the execution of seemingly every petty criminal in Wales in the 17th Century. The subsequent rope burns are still visible on the wooden beam in the pub's stairwell, and, perhaps not surprisingly, it's reported that the pub is prodigiously haunted. Granted, it's not your typical tourist destination, but it's fairly indicative of Wales' varied and sometimes dark history.' Brecon Beacons National Park includes four mountain ranges, according to and is 'full of grassy moorlands, heather-clad escarpments and old red sandstone peaks, softened by weather and time.' The park has more than 2,000 miles of footpaths and is a favorite of mountain bikers. Outside his home region, Buck has other recommendations for travelers to Wales. 'West Wales, particularly Pembrokeshire, has always been a firm favorite for family holidays, not just my own, but pretty much every family east of Swansea!' he exclaims. 'Joking aside, it's an extremely beautiful part of the world and home to St. David's, the U.K's smallest, quaintest city.' Members of Cardinal Black (left to right), vocalist Tom Hollister, guitarist Chris Buck and drummer Adam Roberts, stand behind the Welsh flag in West Wales. Lewys Mann Since starting his own family, Buck has a newfound appreciation of Tenby, a town known for its harbor and beaches about a tw0-hour drive west of Cardiff. 'Although fairly touristy, it's a quirky, incredibly pretty little seaside town,' he says. 'Further north (more than a three-hour drive from Tenby), Snowdonia National Park is stunningly beautiful and home to Wales' highest peak. The Wye Valley on the Wales-England border is also incredibly scenic and home to Tintern Abbey. For all its beauty, Tintern Abbey will always make me think of overhearing someone in an adjacent pub inform children that the Luftwaffe was responsible for its state of disrepair, despite Henry VIII having beaten them to it by some 400 years.' Laugharne, about a 90-minute drive northwest of Cardiff, was the home of poet Dylan Thomas, and visitors can see the Boathouse where he worked. 'I'm convinced that, at some point on the drive into Laugharne, you pass through a portal that takes you back into 1950,' Buck says. 'You're transported to a simpler, bygone era replete with charming cafes, bookshops, pubs and Dylan's Boathouse and writing shed. Browns Hotel may not be the dingy, smoke-filled boozer of Dylan's era, but Laugharne still has a character and charm uniquely its own.' Browns Hotel was Thomas's favorite local pub. When he lived in New York, he loved the White Horse Tavern, which apparently reminded him of the Laugharne pub. Cardinal Black's visit to New York was brief—the band headed to Toronto a day after its sold-out New York concert—but Buck noticed some similarities between the Big Apple and Cardiff. 'Obviously, they're world's apart in terms of scale,' he explains. 'New York's a global metropolis; Cardiff's a small capital city of a country with half the population of New York City. I only had a few days in New York City, but I got a feel for a similar sense of local pride in its identity. 'I spoke to no end of New Yorkers excited to tell me about their city and offer advice on where to visit,' Buck continues. 'You'll encounter a similar enthusiasm for their city from someone from Cardiff, especially around (soccer) match days or gigs in the stadium. Oasis recently opened their comeback tour at Cardiff's Principality Stadium, and the atmosphere in Cardiff around that show was electric. There was definitely a vibrancy and energy around Cardiff that I sensed, however fleetingly, in New York.' Cardinal Black concludes its North American tour Aug. 30 in Camino, California, and, heading back to the United Kingdom, Buck will have fond memories of New York City. 'I fell head over heels in love with it,' he says. 'Admittedly, a truly memorable sold-out show at the Gramercy Theatre probably predisposed me to like the place a little more, but there's something so impactful about rounding a corner and being confronted with buildings and places that you've only ever seen in films. It's truly iconic and awe-inspiring. I'm looking forward to going back when we have a little more time to actually soak in the city and not run around collecting backline (equipment needed for a live show). First dates of a tour are always a little hectic, and it's a shame those dates fell while in a city that I'm so desperate to see.'


National Geographic
2 hours ago
- National Geographic
What do your dreams reveal about you? It depends where you're from.
Lu Chin's mid-16th century painting entitled "Zhuangzi Dreaming of a Butterfly." Zhuangzi was an influential Chinese philosopher who lived around the 4th century BCE during the Warring States Period, a period corresponding to the philosophical summit of China's Hundred Schools of Thought. Photograph by CPA Media Pte Ltd/Alamy Stock Your dreamscape is the land where anything is possible. One minute you're walking through a beautiful meadow—and the next you're falling to your death over a cliffside. Your teeth may fall out for no apparent reason, or you may see a snake slither out the corner of your eye. The average adult spends roughly a third of their life asleep, which means there are plenty of opportunities for our minds to experience these personalized dreamscapes. But do dreams actually mean anything? That depends on who you ask. 'Anthropologists say that if you understand what a given group believes about dreaming, you have understood their whole [culture],' says Robin Sheriff, an associate professor of anthropology at the University of New Hampshire. Western psychologists like Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung have popularized some of the most well-known ideas about dream interpretation, but these doesn't necessarily align with how experts in fields like anthropology and folklore understand dreams. Here's what you need to know about dream interpretation and how your culture may influence what a dream means to you. What is dream interpretation? Dream interpretation can be traced back to ancient Rome and ancient Egypt, but Sheriff says the practice likely has roots in prehistoric cultures without written records. Before dream science, also known as oneirology, was developed, dream interpretation was a cultural practice that could connect people to cultural ancestors or spirits. 'Dreams held deep significance in traditional Chinese culture…particularly within a supernatural worldview where ghosts, spirits, and ancestral souls were believed to actively participate in human affairs,' said Ze Hong, an assistant professor of evolutionary biology at the University of Macau who has researched Chinese dream interpretation from an evolutionary perspective. Dreams were often regarded as meaningful channels of communication from the spiritual realm, capable of revealing hidden truths or predicting future events, Hong says. In ancient Rome, records show that dreams were seen as divine communications from the gods, and dream oracles played an important role in interpretation. Hong says this kind of practice also existed during China's Zhou Dynasty, which lasted between 1046 B.C. to 256 B.C. Hong explains that oneiromancy, the practice of divinatory dream interpretation, became widely used to provide insight into personal relationships, illness, and even political decisions. However, this practice has declined in popularity over Chinese history, said Hong, particularly by the end of the Imperial era in the early 1900s. The connection between dreams and the spiritual realm is something that anthropologist Roger Lohmann also found while studying the dreaming culture in Papua New Guinea. Though Westerners might view dreams as purely metaphorical, Lohmann, an associate professor of anthropology at Trent University in Ontario, Canada, says dreams in Papua New Guinea can be interpreted as a parallel journey that your soul went on while you slept. This meant that dreams could be interpreted as being prophetic or revealing hidden information, Lohmann said. He recalls sleeping in a village near the border of Indonesia and waking up from a nightmare about his research notes catching fire. (This is the story of the world's oldest nightmare.) 'I interpreted that [dream] as an expression of my anxiety about that something going wrong with my computer,' he said. '[But] I told the story to a man who was visiting me that morning and he said 'Oh, you better watch out. Be very careful with the fireplace,' because he interpreted that dream to mean something that's likely to happen in the future.' The guidelines for interpreting dreams in Western cultures today typically come from psychologists Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung. The father of psychoanalytic theory, Freud wrote in 1900 that dreams represent the dormant wishes of our subconscious and could be a way to carry out repressed instinctual, or even hypersexual, desires. Over the next six decades, psychologist Carl Jung proposed his own interpretation of dream theory that says dreams might be a conversation between our conscious and subconscious selves. Jung, who had a complex friendship with Freud, believed that instead of revealing repressed desires, our dreams are meant to process our waking problems and find potential solutions. (The brilliant women of psychiatry who were overshadowed by Freud and Jung.) Jung's dream theory also includes the idea of a collective subconscious, which suggests dreams can be interpreted in a symbolic way through distinct archetypes, such as the hero, the mother, and the trickster. According to Jung, these archetypes could be found across cultures and had universal meanings. However, this theory is quite different from what anthropologists have found when studying the importance of dreams and their meaning across cultural contexts. Interpreting dream symbols across cultures Depending on what culture you are dreaming in, common themes or symbols can have drastically different meanings. Take a snake, for example. In Western cultures familiar with Freud, dreaming of a snake may be interpreted as something potentially sexual, Lohmann suggested, or Jung himself wrote of snakes as representing power or danger, declaring that a 'state of instinctual hell is represented as a snake with three heads.' Hindu interpretations, however, suggest that dreaming of snake could foretell wealth and fertility—if you're eating it in the dream, at least. Hopi and Pueblo tribes in the American Southwest also link fertility to snake dreams, although particularly in relation to agricultural cycles and the fertility of land. On the other hand, Pentecostal Christian communities in Zambia may interpret that snake in your dreams as proof of the devil. There isn't a set interpretation of snakes in the traditional Chinese practice, said Hong—Chinese dream interpretations were more likely to be concerned with more culturally significant symbols such as dragons or suns, signs of divine favor. But some historical documents suggest that a pregnant women dreaming of snakes once would have predicted the birth of a son—or, contradictorily, also a daughter. Do dreams mean anything? A person will have countless dreams in their lifetime, but that doesn't necessarily mean that all dreams are equally important. By the end of the Imperial period, which was right around when Freud and Jung were forming their dream theory, Hong said that it became popular to view the origins of dreams as supernatural and related to a person's psychological state. 'For instance, dreams caused by 'overthinking during the day' were often dismissed as uninterpretable and meaningless,' he said. (You can learn to control your dreams with lucid dreaming. Here's how.) In the Western tradition, how much or how little a dream means is up to the person having or interpreting the dream. 'Dreams, like poetry and art, offer ways to think about human experience,' Sherrif said. 'There may be better or worse interpretations or analyses but we have no objective means of ascertaining their accuracy.'


CNN
3 hours ago
- CNN
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