Monday 28 July 2014

auckland | vancouver

I don't think I'd give this up for anything. 
There are moments of doubt. Moments when I'm loathe to roll out of bed..
Then I think of the people I've met, the experiences I've had, and the possibilities that lay before me... And I wonder how it took me so long to attempt this.

Saturday wasn't one of those moments [of doubt]. Though, I knew something was wrong the instant I awoke at 5:29am, seconds before my alarm could sound. Promptness on my part carries with it a definite sense of foreboding. If I'm early, packed and ready to go, it means something is going to throw a wrench in my day.

This wrench manifested in the form of a missing combi. Unbeknownst to me, it hadn't had enough passengers to make the ride home to the village the night before, and was postponed for two days—pay day is the last day of the month, and the demand for transport lessens as people run out of cash.

When I moved to Africa, asking people for rides was difficult for me. We don't frequently hitch rides with strangers in America. Especially women. We're forewarned against the practice from birth. Now.. I'll pester anyone in sight if I need to be somewhere.

I had to be in Rundu. It was required. For my sanity. A farewell party for group 36 volunteers closing out their service in Namibia. You never know what shenanigans will arise. Or what will, inevitably, be broken [or the mysterious manner in which they are broken].. Or who you might meet.

It worked. Forty minutes later we were on the road. I had cajoled a Bulgarian construction worker, who had otherwise planned to sleep that morning, into driving me, and other stranded villagers, to the Red Line so we could hike north.

I made it with time to spare. We had a house for the night... A little privacy is always a plus—where we can be loud and boisterous without being completely on display. Just a little break from being representatives of the States.

Between conversations, I fed myself fistfuls of couscous and apple cake in the kitchen (in my party dress, but not quite breaking a previously stated resolution). And eventually the excited and, frankly, loud conversations died down... After the few who wanted to go out dancing had abandoned us, and I'd taken a power nap and consumed 16 ounces of coffee—I got my second wind. We lowered the lights, relaxed on the couches, were serenaded by a few of the musically inclined—even if we couldn't remember all the words. 

At some point I made a new friend—a nomad and a writer—who tells [bad] jokes on request, and can speak with an easy earnestness that makes you forget you've only been acquainted for a couple hours. I only felt a minor twinge of guilt that we kept others up by talking.

And I felt no guilt for waylaying him the next day on the premise of repairing his guitar case. The bottom panel had been completely ripped open on one side, and I did have my sewing kit.. But I also just wanted a few more hours. Even if he had a long hike ahead of him, and should have started out at dawn.  I didn't let him out of my clutches until noon..

Moments, and people, like this... They disrupt your [occasionally low] expectations and add the colour to your experiences and memories. See you in Malawi, maybe. See you in Israel, definitely.


Now playing (on repeat): 
1 Album | 14 songs | 60 minutes, 37 seconds

Disclosure | Settle