• About

everydaysubway

everydaysubway

Tag Archives: travel writing

In My Element

10 Saturday Mar 2018

Posted by KP in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Buddhism, oneness, travel writing, water

I like pictures of my toes. I have them from all over the world: my toes on the steps of a temple, my toes squishing into black volcanic sand, my toes covered in dust from a way-too-long ride down a dirt road on a Chicken bus. But I think my favorite pictures of my toes are the ones I take only with my eyes as I float in foreign waters. Most of my travel, at some point, involves water. It might be an ocean, or a sea, or a cenote, or even a pool. I love to float on my back and watch my toes, the things that usually ground me to the earth, float and bob at the place on the horizon where the sky meets the water. It is my favorite souvenir of each sojourn, this image I file in my memory of me supine and levitated with the most ordinary part of myself merging two vast expanses.

I’m a Pisces and I feel at home in water. It’s an oft-referenced joke in my family that the first word I ever spoke wasn’t Mamma or Dadda, but rather Fish. Yes my mother used to rock me to sleep in front of a fish tank, whispering the phrase “watch the fish,” “watch the fish,” as her hushing lullaby to me, but I like to think maybe my first word was me knowing and declaring to the world where I would be most at home; where I would be in my element. I think about water a lot, about how it differs from the other elements. Earth holds you up, provides a resistance to move from, air and wind move past you and rush away, brushing the surface of your skin but never sinking in. Fire, well fire seems aloof not wanting much to do with humans, by nature it throws heat and sparks to keep us away. We can look but never touch. Water, now water touches all parts of you, every bend and fold, and water can hold you, caress you, carry you, it even becomes you soaking into you from the outside in. It can also move from the inside out, the barrier is permeable because really we are one with water. Scientifically we are water, for the most part.

I was on a plane flying back from my latest adventure where I had another chance to look at my toes while I floated in teal blue waters, and as I paged through the magazine in the seatback holder, I came upon an image I filed into my memory alongside the mental snap shots of my toes. It was a woman in the middle of an aquamarine pool, treading water looking directly into the camera, with small ripple rings of water emanating out from her body caught by sunlight. The thing that intrigued me was in the background around the sides of the photo you could see the edges of the swimming pool she was floating in the middle of. I started wondering if maybe one of the reasons I like to float so much is because I’ve spent so much of my life pushing off from the edges of a pool, from the edges of a lesson learned, from the edges of a failed relationship, the desire to move and grow spawned by desperately wanting to not be in the place I am. I’ve actually gained a lot of momentum and growth from pushing away from things in an attempt to move forward. Yet lately, finally, I’ve started floating. As I grow older, and more content and possibly a little more evolved, I find there are fewer things to push away from, and my decisions are made from the middle of the pool. I can move in any direction I choose. I have to admit pushing away from something or someone is sometimes easier because the choice of direction is easy: opposite and away. Starting from the middle, from floating is a little more difficult and requires more personal effort, more responsibility, more intention and decision. I know these are all rewards of adulthood, but sometimes feel heavy to hold above water and slow my movement. Thank goodness water is there in the middle, holding me, knowing me, supporting me in whatever I choose as my next direction.

I have been studying Buddhism recently, sitting silently in front of orange swathed monks each week, listening, searching, trying to understand the divine nothingness they speak of as the sacredly empty pinnacle of their practice. I enjoy the silent time, yet I have to admit I don’t think I will ever be a good Buddhist. Maybe I’m too Western, maybe I like language too much and trying to build an understanding of nothingness with the building blocks of words is a failed endeavor at inception. I just can’t find divinity in nothingness because I can’t understand how oneness can be in nothingness. I was speaking to a Monk about this, looking for some guidance, and admitted I can almost get there if I picture divine nothingness as divine everything. A place where everything merges and connects, where everything is touching everything and the edges fall away and all boundaries are permeable. And I think of floating in the middle, and being the woman in the water, and the direction I want to move next is down, slowly swirling into the silent depth of sacred connection, where everything merges into one, and the sea and sky and the blue of your eyes converge and move like I Am.

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

Crushed

10 Saturday Mar 2018

Posted by KP in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

crushes, grape harvest, travel writing, wine country

I went for a walk in the wine country today and of course it was beautiful. I wasn’t sure where I was going exactly, I just knew I wanted to go up, to higher ground, in search of a view of the valley and the green yellow rows and rows of vines below. It had rained last night, and the wetness made everything glisten glossy in the slanted morning sun.

I am not from the wine country, a friend lives here, and my outsiderness was a great asset today as I walked. I could smell the earth, distinct and herbaceous, like wet spongy green moss though it was just wet black dirt. Intermittently I could smell the damp eucalyptus, caught in a breeze and delivered to me, fresh and healing, enticing me into deeper breaths like the Vic’s Vapor rub I use when my sinuses hurt. California gold finches played around me lighting and flying, I felt a little bit like Snow White sans the evil queen and sans any saving kiss.

It’s Fall here, post fires, post harvest. At the tasting rooms and restaurants you can hear the locals talking of harvest, of the fires, of who got their fruit up, who made it to crush. It was a disaster, some made it through and some didn’t. Fire and wind are unpredictable and indiscriminate. But it’s calm here now… the work has been done and it’s time to wait for the grapes, newly crushed, to turn into something amazing. I keep thinking about the crush, wondering how it’s done, what it looks like, if there was anything about it similar to the way I got crushed last night.

The reason I’m in the area is I had a workshop in San Francisco this weekend, and I’ll tell you workshop is an understatement. I paid a lot of money to spend 12 hours a day, 3 days in a row, with a group of people all in search of having our lives transformed. I am somewhat of a gypsy, a seeker, and I will always long for transformation. It’s in my DNA, which according to new research is also always transforming and changing as well which I am happy to hear. I left the weekend to unwind in wine country, transformed with a freshly minted vow of authenticity and commitment to courageous integrity. To speak up, to speak out, to connect and try not to hold secrets like humans hold, to not hold my secrets, one of which is a long-standing crush on the friend I am visiting. After tasting rooms and wine, and meals and wine, and wine and wine watching the sideways Fall sun set turning the valley of yellow-leafed vines dark, I decided no better time than the present to actualize my transformation and commitment to honesty, and reveal my crush to my friend. Well……. Crushed. It didn’t go the way I imagined in my wine softened mind. Not reciprocated and disruption to a long and beautiful friendship not really appreciated. I thought when you forged into new and evolved territory, when you committed to living life to the fullest and being the best version of yourself possible including truth telling and authentic confessions, the universe would at least have your back and provide a shiny new world, or at least a soft and tender landing. Yeah, that didn’t happen. I’m not sure if I feel more betrayed by the unreliability of my own mind and what I thought was real, or the universe for allowing me to drop flat on my face.

So today as I am walking, and thinking about the vineyards, and the grapes, about the smoky-sky apocalyptic harvest as the hills burned and neighbors helped neighbors. I keep thinking about the crushing and saying a private prayer that I can be a grape. That I can sit, post crushing, and if I wait, and if I am attended to by the friends I shared my disaster with, and I let the lesson set and ferment, to steep and change inside me, my own personal crushing will someday transform me into something amazing. Years from now I will be known, and celebrated, tasted and someone will take a long slow drink of me and tell me all the perfect components were present the year of my crushing.

 

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

Step Forward

09 Thursday Nov 2017

Posted by KP in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Ambergris Caye, Belize, birth, Buddha, travel, travel writing

I learned to negotiate randomly placed crab holes with crutches this vacation. As if crutches in sand aren’t hard enough – crab holes can be wicked – one wrongly placed crutch-end suddenly six inches down a crab hole can send me and my 9 stitches vaulting pommel-horse style into a hammock, into a thatched roof hut, into a thicket of palm fronds, hopefully landing on my one good foot and sticking the landing al a the best Olympic athletes…

Sometimes you just don’t know what is coming. The day started innocently enough, we rented a golf cart to explore the island of Ambergris Caye in Northern Belize. I absolutely love driving golf carts on sand roads, it’s some sick tropical obsession I have. First we drove south past the air strip, the catholic church with its sun-faded Madonna, past the tortilla factory which was really two old women working side by side in silent unison, past the dump, down a path, past some iguanas until we ended up dead ended where the road washed out in a puddle I was too chicken to gun it through (yes, I’ve both drowned a golf cart and watched one go up in flames on previous adventures). We had an unexpected guest who joined us at some point on our explorations – 13 year old Ivan who appeared in the back of our golf cart like the ghost holograms who ride in your cart at the haunted house at Disneyland. I have no idea how long he was stowed away when I noticed him, but he was pleasant and answered our questions about this building and that, about the island. I treated him to a Coca-cola, and then was gone as silently as he appeared.

After South we explored North, past the German-expat bakery stop for an amazing sandwich, over the steel bridge now mending an old hurricane cut to the island, past the odd new modern Cinema building playing some movie from last year, to the Palapa Bar for fresh coconut water drinks, and finally back towards town. Really, the day was perfect.

That’s when I decided we should stop for a quick swim and ocean style bathroom break. I was only about 4 steps into the water – knee deep? thigh deep? I don’t remember, when I stumbled on something under the water. I stuck my foot out to brace myself and I didn’t feel sand, but something large, coarse and sharp. I could feel my foot being cut, sort of in slow motion, aware it was happening but unable to stop the action. The salt water burned, and when the pain didn’t subside in a few seconds, I knew it was bad. When I lifted by foot up and saw the 6 inch fillet-style slice and the blood running down my foot into the ocean I knew it was really bad. Thank god I have a strong survival instinct because the next 30 minutes were like an action packed movie.

I stumbled out of the water and started screaming to my friend to give me her T-shirt to make a bandage (I have no idea why I thought to do this – girl scouts, first aid training, too much TV?). Good thing Gap sells nice clean white V- necks for only $12.00 as hers was now sacrificed as a make-shift bandage. I got into the golf cart and started to drive while yelling simultaneously to some slack-jawed passerby “Where’s the doctor’s office! Where’s the hospital!” I have no recollection as to the answer, but I started driving there, trying to figure out what to do with my foot and the growing blood situation. Elevate, elevate – I tried to put the bloody thing up on the dash but it wouldn’t stay and only made a huge blood smear across the lower windshield. The sand in the floorboard began to turn pink as we drove the three blocks, five blocks to where stunned pedestrians pointed or said the doctor was.

When I saw the white sign with neat black writing “Dr. Gonzalez OBGYN” ahead on the street I had a brief moemnt of “you’ve got to be fucking kidding me” but I needed a doctor, any doctor. I whipped the golf cart to the side of the road, began hobbling up the sidewalk through the dirt front yard, all the while yelling to my friend to lock the golf cart – the guy said they get stolen a lot. Yes, strong survival skills. Now it’s lucky I’m no stranger to clinics and doctor’s offices in developing countries. Volunteer work and time spent south of the border had prepared me for the modest – or should we say meager – cinder block house with cracked tile floors, folding chairs, rusty-bladed oscillating fans, stacks of this and that in plastic bins behind the counter, and really bad bare-bulb overhead lighting. I made it up the sidewalk to the open front door, and the last thing I remember seeing was a row of about 5 pregnant brown Mayan women sitting in folding chairs against the wall. And then I passed out cold.

It’s not embarrassing to pass out because you don’t really know you have and you don’t really remember, but it is embarrassing to think back later about what you may have looked like while you were passed out. Here I was, almost 6 feet tall, blonde, white as any first-day tourist, in a swimsuit and T-shirt, passed out cold with my legs inside the clinic and my body and head on the front porch, my Gap bandaged foot creating an ever increasing pool of blood at the feet of these stoic faced, pregnant women. They were sitting like 5 golden brown Buddhas in meditation growing the secret of life in their bellies when I passed out, and they were sitting exactly the same way when I came to.

Dramatic tropical fainting and lots of blood is also a way to get to the front of the line at a Belizean OBGYN’s office, and when I came to I was quickly ushered to the back room which I think was probably a delivery room, but for me was going to be a 10 heinous lidacane numbing shots in your foot before we stitch you up room. I’m sure Dr. Gonzalez was as gentle as possible, but I proceeded to scream like a banshee when he started jabbing needles into the bottom of my foot. I writhed, I screamed, I bit my friend’s arm, and I cursed like a peg-legged pirate before I was sufficiently numb. 9 stitches went in. Personally I thought I did fairly well on the hysteria scale – minus the fainting and the permanent blood stain to the waiting room tile grout. Dr. Gonzalez was as stoic as the 5 pregnant Buddhas through the whole thing, and all he said to me at the end was, “you should try having a baby some day,” and walked out of the room. I was left in the care of his robust nurse Evelina who kept shaking her head and saying in island style English, “it so big, so big. I never see one so big.” I think she was trying to be sympathetic in a seen-way-worse but won’t tell you type of way, but I had to tell myself it was my size 10 foot she was talking about and not the massive slice on the bottom of it that was the biggest she had ever seen or I would have fainted again.

I spent the rest of my week learning to use crutches in the sand, accepting gifts of codeine and other pain killers from strangers (other guests at our resort, don’t worry), and laying by the pool with my leg propped up trying to convince myself the novel I was reading was as fascinating as nurse sharks and sea turtles and all the cool things my friend was seeing while she snorkeled one of the longest reefs in the world. Things I learned were: how to get in and out of a dock-side boat on my hands and knees, how to maneuver a mosquito net with one leg propped on a pillow, how to make soda water and lime juice feel like a cocktail, how to get from crutches into a hammock and back out again, and basically how to enjoy 7 days in a tropical paradise with no walking, no cocktails, no snorkeling, no swimming, no diving, no more exploring, and no more adventures. This was not the vacation I had planned and I didn’t understand why this happened.

A friend told me a story a few months ago – I was telling her how I felt ready for change in my life, like something big was right around the corner. I didn’t know what, but I could feel it – yet I felt frustrated waiting for this big change, this life evolution – especially with all the little daily crap and incidents that kept coming up. Like it was time for something big, yet I was having to deal with an inordinate amount of annoying minutia. She told me there is a Buddhist myth that when something beautiful, something significant is about to be born, the Universe distracts you with little annoyances, the minutia of human existence, so the beautiful mystical golden gift can be born in peace and perfection. We are purposefully distracted from ourselves, so something much better than we ever could try to control or conceive can be brought into our lives.

Maybe it was no mistake I ended up at an OBGYN, with 7 days of supine contemplation I didn’t expect, with simple tasks becoming feats of stamina and balance. I still feel that change coming, growing inside me. And when I try to imagine what it might be, what life has for me next, all I can picture are 5 golden pregnant Buddhas sitting in a row with the hum of a dime-store fan in the background. Serene, unmoved, waiting – patiently. I feel it inside me too – something sweeter than tropical mango, something wanting to be birthed in peace and perfection, in calm, filling me with golden light ready to emerge in flawless divinity when I least expect it, when the time is right. In the midst of my raw humanity – with blood and screams, fear and chaos – I know it is there, waiting, just waiting, to quietly step forward into my world.

 

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

Surf’s Up

01 Saturday Apr 2017

Posted by KP in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Hawaii, savasana, surfing, travel writing

I’m a doer. I keep a list of things I want to do before I die, and I actually do them. It’s my bucket list of course, but I don’t want to carry them around in a bucket. I want to do them, as often as I can, mark them off the list, and then plan another. Recently I marked off “Learn to Surf.”

I practiced a lot before the big surf lesson outing, getting in shape, doing pop ups on a line, balance, yoga for surfers. I wanted to be prepared to make the most of the adventure. My surfing career up to that point had consisted of one crazy crash-and-burn ride in Costa Rica years ago, with my last image being from the top of the water mountain looking down the shaft of a super long board as it nose-dived straight into the ocean, me following, tumbling, sputtering, and somehow ending up with a nose full of sand and only half a swimsuit. I did not want a repeat.

I have to admit, carrying a surfboard is fun; in my mind I think it makes me look hot. It is the perfect beach accessory to look athletic and cool, and also cover a not-as-flat-as-it-once-was midsection. I was fairly content to just parade around in the sand carrying the mid-section concealing board, but my instructor had other plans. After a short briefing on the shore, a couple practice pop ups on a beached board, and an overview on the lay of the land (well water actually), my instructor and I set out for the first run. I was feeling somewhat confident but nervous, excited, and mostly just praying I could actually get up on the board knowing full well I had no idea what to do next if that happened. As we paddled out to our starting place my instructor turns and calls back to me, “oh, and if you see any giant sea turtles don’t worry, they might nudge you but they won’t bite.” Seriously, a giant sea in my path is about the last thing I need to be worrying about, especially because with my level of skill there won’t be a damn thing I can do about it. Turtles please beware. Thank God you have a protective shell.

I catch a few waves for short-lived rides, sort of get the feel of the water lifting and pushing me, my balance, sweet spot on the board, and finally I catch a wave, for real. The ride is amazing, exciting, I can feel the adrenaline rushing, I’m going long enough to be cognoscente of the feeling, adjust my feet to go a little faster, and I can hear my instructor’s fading cheers behind me. This rocks! Adrenaline is surging and I paddle back out as fast as I can to do it again, and again, and again. I feel high from the forward movement, the ride, and the real-time achievement of something new. I’m a badass surfer chick rocking it out wave after wave. And then I start to get tired. I realize on my next round I’m watching the waves a little longer, getting pickier about the sets, enjoying the sun on my shoulder as my instructor and I start shooting the shit a little. Talking about travels, adventures, passions, life. And the funny thing is, maybe I shouldn’t admit it, but I sort of like the floating as much as I like the surfing. I grab another wave or two, but somehow now the rides are the interruption to the real endeavor which is just being, just bobbing there in the ocean, feeling the waves, noticing the currents, the birds, the pink-blue sky, the connection with it all and the person I’m with. I start wondering if surfers surf for the high of the rides, or really for the chill of the time waiting?

In yoga they say the real work is done during savasana, after the pose when you are lying on your back, completely relaxed, doing nothing but letting the last stretch, twist, contortion, sink in. This is when your body starts to know the work, during the quiet time. Two different types of knowing; one for your brain, and one for your soul. I notice this too with my acquisition of the Spanish language. I can study study study but it is always months later, after a drink or two, when words I struggled to recall so many times in class have sunk from my brain into my being and magically appear on my tongue. My body knows, not in the moment of effort but in the lazy calm of being.

Maybe I am telling myself all this because I’m in a personal savasana right now, and because I’m a doer, it’s hard sometime to find value in not doing in the outward way I’ve been taught to measure achievement. I’ve been on a big wave of learning, of growing, a wild adrenaline filled ride forward, and now I’m just sort of bobbing, lying still and waiting for the next set. I’m also becoming pickier about my waves, and less interested in the big ride than in the simplicity of the still beauty in-between. I am finding joy in the way the afternoon light plays through the trees and glitters on the floor, or the ripening of my second tomato, or the soft cooing purr of a settled kitten. These things cannot be noticed from the top of a roaring wave.

I sat with some surfers at the bar after my first big day out, it was Triple Crown time and waves at Pipeline had been huge. They talked first of the waves, the rides, the wipe outs, and then once that was done the conversation softened to just an understanding of the sea, of the lifestyle, of hours spent bobbing and waiting, of unspoken knowing, of contently waiting for the next set, for the next ride forward and the savasana to follow where the lessons of the ride will truly be learned. I want to put this on my list, “Learn to Be,” chill, enjoy, find beauty in the simple, and it troubles me there is no place to put it. These are the things of being and they don’t get a line on a list. Yet as I sit and contemplate my silly to-do record, I realize being has been there all along, it’s the space in-between, the blank white savasanas which separate my rides. I won’t make a mark near these places as the space is too sacred, but now when I look at my list of “achievements,” I know where the real work is done.

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Pinterest

Like this:

Like Loading...

Subscribe

  • Entries (RSS)
  • Comments (RSS)

Archives

  • March 2018
  • November 2017
  • April 2017
  • July 2015
  • July 2014
  • June 2014

Categories

  • Uncategorized

Meta

  • Register
  • Log in

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Follow Following
    • everydaysubway
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • everydaysubway
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
%d bloggers like this: