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Syria Needs Us

 

P1030893

Calling All Angels

 

One of my first stories ever published was in a now-defunct magazine called Travel, Etc. I sent it in as a contest entry and was thrilled to  win a suitcase. Ah, yes, the glory days …

I have printed the story below because it still means so much to me. Of all the countries I have ever visited, it is the Syrians I found to be the most welcoming and hospitable. Which is why what is happening there now fills me with such hopeless dread.

At the bottom of the story, I have included a link to the Avaaz petition that will be taken to the international meeting taking place in a few days. Please, take the time to sign the petition. It’s not much, but at the least, our friends in Syria will know we care. The story follows:

The Kindness of Strangers

The women are languid. The steaming marble baths are filled with the scent of lilies lit by the amber glowing candles. I walk past the bathers, past the foggy glass walls, looking, hoping, for the next empty bath. Finally I am led to the last room. I slide back the door and there is the tub. It is chipped, cracked and filled with rocks and sand.

I wake up and remember. I’m on an iron cot in the middle of the Syrian desert. There have been no baths. There will be no baths. We have been traveling on an open truck with nineteen others for just over a month and all I long for is a tub.

London-based tour operator Encounter Overland billed this trip as a great adventure. Nine and a half weeks traveling from London to Cairo. Our big orange truck left London at the end of March roaring across Europe in just over a week. We spent two weeks traveling down the Turkish coast. It is now near the end of April and we have arrived in Syria.

Syria – Aren’t the Syrians supposed to be terrorists? Or at the very least hate Westerners? The women are unknowable in their head-to-toe black drapings. The men all sport red-and-white checked head cloths a la Yasser Arafat. It seems as though I’m looking at National Geographic and have tumbled into one of the magazine’s incredible photos. Turkey had been a huge contrast to Europe but this scene made Turkey look European.

People begin yelling at us as we arrive in our conspicuous truck. Through the cacophony of horns and traffic, we can finally understand what is being said: “Welcome, Syria!” They smile and speak the only English most of them know. We have arrived in a land of gracious hospitality. The people we meet can’t welcome us enough. Everything we had heard regarding the Middle East was wrong.

A few of us wander about trying to find a post office. We hold our little Arabic phrase books firmly in hand and look hopelessly lost. We stop a man and show him the Arabic line that makes sense of what our mangled attempts at the language can not. “Aeynae akrab maektaeb baerid?”

“Aeywae,” he nods, motioning us to follow.

We walk in a direction that we are all quite sure is taking us away from the post office. He stops beside a car that appears abandoned. It is covered in a faded automobile blanket. He gently removes the cloth, folds it in neat squares and ushers all four of us into the car. We drive for about ten minutes over ruined roads. He smiles and nods. We smile and nod. The car stops. We are in front of the post office. Money is refused. Each hand is shaken and he is gone.

I have never met so many kind people in one place. We truly had a grand adventure. I just wish I could have had a bath.

 

Please click on this link to sign the petition. Thank you.

 

Messed Up in Mexico

Longhorn

I lost two days somehow…

I think Michele is sick of me asking her if today really, truly is Monday. How did that happen?

This morning, as we wandered around San Miguel I assumed that I wouldn’t be putting up a blog post because it was the weekend. But no matter how many times I ask her, her patient reply is always the same; Monday it is.

Which means the conference ended last night on SUNDAY. (I’m getting it now!)

We are now free to do anything at all…for some reason I don’t have my usual urgency to explore every nook and cranny, maybe because I’ve been here before, but partially because I feel like I’m ready to just get to work and that means sitting in one spot and getting at it.

I spent most of last night restructuring my book, adding in scenes, deleting others and in between all the frantic thoughts, I told myself to meditate and let it be. Ha! Good luck with that plan.

Meditate. Schmeditate. I’m on scrambled brain mode. I’m guessing my brain resembles a bad fiesta with guacamole spattered on the walls.

Thanks for nothing San Miguel Writers’ Conference and Literary Festival 2012. I’m truly messed up.

Papayas and Ideas in Mexico

Night in San Miguel

Papaya and pineapple and melons..this is what I love when I come to Mexico, all this amazingly ripe and fresh fruit, most especially the papaya. I’ve been eating my weight in the stuff at the conference buffet each morning.

I’m beginning to think I simply came here to sleep. We’ve both been in bed by 10, or 11 at the latest, and I’ve been barely able to drag myself up by 8:30.

Is it the elevation, the ongoing insomnia, the two-hour time change or the way my head feels stuffed full of so many ideas that I’m completely knackered by the time my head hits the pillow? Maybe it’s just the papaya and all those good-for-me enzymes.

This morning, it was the same crack-of-8:30 start. However, we decided to skip the morning speaker and hustle down here to the land of free WiFi at Starbucks. If I move fast I can be back in time for my first workshop at 11:00…It sounds like fun.

The description for the workshop reads, “…within the creative act of writing, or composing with words – NO RULE is the rule! …collaging cut out words, inventing words, playing with sounds, destroying syntax…”

I’m not quite as excited about the agent’s pitch session, since I am still not sure exactly what I’m pitching. They advise coming in to the pitch session with a one-page outline to leave behind.

Hmmm…Might just have to finish writing the thing first. And then I would have to find somewhere to print it…

I think I’ve decided to just consider it practise. Yeh, yeh, that’s it…I’m practising for the future.

My BFF – Miz Margaret Atwood

Jardin Principal

 

Forgive me Father but I think I want to take up smoking and wearing a beret and whiling away the day watching the parade of Life.

I loved San Miguel de Allende when we came here 15 years ago. I love it even more now. This ancient city of colour, light and art is stuffed full of art galleries, studios; the talent is quite endless.

I find it funny how I already feel like I have too much scheduled and all I’ve signed up for is the basic conference package.  I just want to sit and feel the old stone walls around me.  But right now, I’m in the old stonewalls of the Starbucks. Yes, yes, I know. Shallow Alert!

But here’s the thing…Starbucks has WiFi that works and it is housed in an ancient building with walls that are at least four feet thick. In my defense, I could never have loaded that picture you see above without Starbucks.

I met two older American women at the buffet breakfast this morning. Both are living full-time in various parts of Mexico. One of them showed me her new Mexican citizenship card and said, “It is simply astonishing how cheap it is to live here and to live very well.”

I remember this story from last time we were here. We ran into all sorts of ex-pat Canadians and Americans who were extolling the virtues of living the Mexican life.

But now I need to get off this WiFi and get writing. Because tonight my Best Friend Forever, Miz Margaret Atwood is giving her keynote address entitled, “Writing and Hope.”

I’m hoping she throws me some.

 

San Miguel Writers Conference 2012, Mexico

San Miguel

 

It’s official.

I booked it last week.

I’m flying to Mexico City, staying overnight and getting on the bus, Gus, and heading on up to San Miguel de Allende.

It’s all Michele Peterson’s fault. She emailed a while ago to say she was going & we could share a room.  She knew I wouldn’t be able to say no.

I’ve looked at this conference over the years and thought it sounded like a fine, fine idea.

And now I’m going. 

It’s a great impetus to get writing. Like really, really writing.

After all, I’ll be hanging out with Margaret Atwood. I’m sure Peggy will want to go for drinks or something so we can discuss the literary process. Yeh, yeh, that’s it. Me & Pegster, hanging poolside.  

I’m sure that’s how it will go.