Hm . . . so, I seem to have been locked out of my most recent blog. Until I get that situation rectified, I'm going to go ahead and post this (written last week) on here. My first post in . . . well, a long time.
It's day five of my new, African,
adventure.
My last few months/weeks in the States
(if one can discount the packing) were pretty glorious. Attending my
“little” brother's graduation from the Coast Guard Academy, going
on a Caribbean cruise with the family, seeing wonderful cousins and
uncles and aunts in Minnesota, spending some time on the Oregon
Coast, watching the World Cup, attending a dear friend's wedding in
New Mexico, and getting to spend time with special people all along
the way.
As a last hoorah of our year of living
together, my amazing brother and sister-in-law took me into Portland
the night before I flew out. We ate delicious Thai food, swam in our
hotel pool, and got up super early to make my flight out of PDX. And
if that wasn't enough, they sent me off with a packet of goodies
ranging from tealight candles to pictures to snacks (not to mention
some utterly epic princess band-aids).
[At PDX with my travel buddy and my bag of goodies]
So off I sailed from old things to new
things, feeling very loved.
My next stop was three days in the UK –
a wonderful transition, both in terms of jet-lag and the extra time
to catch my breath, but also as an opportunity to reconnect with some
beloved people and places before undertaking the process of
connecting to all things new.
And then I arrived in Africa, on the
night of the 21st, only to be met by a herd of zebra
crossing the road. My drivers laughed and shrugged: “Welcome to
Africa.”
Or, as one of my friends pointed out,
“welcome back to Africa,”
for this is the continent of my childhood, and even though the
expanse of the Sahara separates the now from then, there
are plants and trees I
recognize, though it is all so much more here.
I'm
living in a small apartment (a bedroom, a toilet and shower, a living
space with a kitchen) on a compound that is very much a slice of
Eden. So many colors, so much growth and life outside my windows.
And my own private corner in which to drink coffee, read my Bible,
and watch the birds.
My
landlady is Swiss, and grows vegetables as well as flowers, telling
me I can feel free to pick what I would like (herbs, and spinach, and
white radish, and so much more), saying that she always offers the
invitation, but no one ever takes her up on it (the implication
seeming to be that young people these days prefer fast food to fresh
greens) – I assured her that there is nothing I love so much as
vegetables and fruit, and I have already helped myself to some of her
basil and chives.
So if
nothing else, I think I will love living here, in my own space, with
a garden, and an awesome next door neighbor who took
me hiking on Thursday to Mt. Longonot, where we walked the ridge of
the volcano and I drank my first Stony and saw my first (non-zoo
enclosed) giraffe. It was a glorious day.
And
yesterday I had an adventure of a slightly different caliber, walking
to the store on my own for the first time. I think I am slowly
gaining my bearings, and discovering that yes, indeed, I can live
here.
Though, please, don't ask me to drive.
1 comment:
Sounds amazing! Please send us a zebra to keep in the garden.
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