SUMMER DAYS

P1030925Feeding the boa always drew a small crowd. My dad was the nature counselor. He educated the campers on the local plants and animals, took them on hikes, and cared for the rodents and reptiles kept in cages and tanks.The boa he fed with live frogs and mice. Nature was tamed between these walls, but the garbage collector, who lost two fingers of his right hand to a raccoon, was a warning of the wild just beyond.

In June, a day or two after school ended, my family would pack up “Big Red” our much loved convertible Impala and drive to a camp in Honesdale, Pennsylvania. We left the city behind.

My first six summers were spent there. I was the youngest child at the camp and enjoyed considerable doting. Once I was given a huge, swirled, multi-color lollipop, so beautiful, the size of my face, I dared not taste it.

But my treasures were the raspberries, blueberries and blackberries ripe for picking, the Golden Rod, Queen Anne’s Lace and purple thistles perfect for bouquets, the grass and yellow buttercups that tickled my bare ankles, and the jewelweed that popped when squeezed just so.

That last July Fourth was an endless day yielding to a star filled night. All of us gathered around the lake and watched a display of fireworks my father helped ignite. We sat on blankets craning our necks to take in the entire spectacle while the still bright embers extinguished into the near, dark waters below.

NEW HAVEN

imageThe town offers a clear divide between those affiliated with the University and those who aren’t. It is easy to spot who is who. T-shirts and other items with the name printed boldly notwithstanding.

A few blocks from the gothic architecture, Apple store, and J. Crew, I walk by pawn shops, liquor stores, car repairs, braiding hair salons and the Family Dollar. I am looking for a hotpot.

“I hate to send you elsewhere, but we don’t have any, just those large crockpots and that’ll do you no good. No, you need to go over to Stop n Shop is where you need to go,” the manager said.
“I’ll have to come back to buy something else then.”
“That’s what I want to hear.”

Outside Stop n Shop a young woman wore eyeshadow, tiara, white ruffled cocktail dress and a sash. She was standing behind a table with a jar.
“I am Miss New Haven and I am here to raise money for children in the hospitals so they can have quick cures.”
“Quick cures?”
“Yes, as Miss Teen New Haven, I am raising money so sick children can have quick cures.”
I put a few dollars in the jar.

Stop n Shop had no hotpots. I crossed the street to a CVS.

In the aisle I sneezed once, and sneezed again.
“Two sneezes is enough for anyone.”
A small older woman without pause continued.
“My daughter doesn’t like cats, but my grandson adores them. So I keep the cat at my place and he comes over to play with it. I’m not much of a cat lover. But my grandson he adores that cat.” She continued on about her family a little while longer.

A young worker brought me to a shelf. “If we had any hotpots, they would be right here. They were right here a few days ago. We must have sold them all.” I looked three inches over to the left:hotpots.

“Here they are.”

“Oh, we must have moved them.”

Bringing the hotpot to the register I noticed a five-dollar bill fall from the pocket of the same older woman. She accepted it only after I insisted it was hers.

I walked a few blocks back to the world at Yale.

METRO TRAIN NORTH TO NEW HAVEN

image

The train from Grand Central Station to New Haven was the last before peak prices kicked in. It was filling quickly.

I chose a place in a six seat compartment. One man was there. He had slipped his bag beneath his seat and I did the same. Soon a tall man sat facing us.
“We need to put those bags overhead. I need my leg room.” Both of us looked at the high rack with concern. The tall man placed the bags above. We learned his destination was before ours.
“I’m getting off at the last stop and can help you with those.” A young man said from across the aisle. The short man and I thanked him.
We settled in for the two hour ride.
“Can you use your inside voice?”said the long legged man to the same young man some five minutes later.
Soon our seating area and the entire car was full. Some people were standing. Others sat on the floor. Snacks and drinks were passed back and forth between friends and family sitting apart.
“Would you move your arm to the left?” said the tall man to the business man sitting by his side. The man adjusted his arm to the left without a word.  The tall man put on his head phones and opened his book. His shoulder crowded the woman beside him.

ISABELLE EBERHARDT QUOTE #2

“For those who know the value of and exquisite taste of solitary freedom (for one is only free when alone), the act of leaving is the bravest and most beautiful of all.” Isabelle Eberhardt

Thank you subscribers and readers for taking the time to visit my blog!!

If this is the first time you are visiting the site, welcome to the tales of a woman solo traveler and thoughts to make today the start of something new.

Although I take a break during the weekends, I’ll be back on Monday and would be delighted, in the meantime, if you would look through my previous posts. Perhaps you missed a few or will reread one with a new perspective.There is a list of all the previous posts by title and date.

Since the configuration of the site may differ on your browser, perhaps you have not noticed the tabs which offer some additional information:Why this blog?, Images, How I Began, etc.

You can search certain posts by category: Practical Advice, Thoughts on Oneself, Snapshots, etc.

All of these may be at the very bottom of the posts.

While traveling I may not be posting each day. To be notified when I have written a new post please subscribe-of course its free.
I would be delighted if you would sign up.

I hope you find information and inspiration in the text and images and join me in my quest for growth, wonderment and self-improvement.

Here’s to new discoveries near and far!

Enjoy the days.

ISABELLE EBERHARDT QUOTE #1

“Now more than ever do I realize that I will never be content with a sedentary life, that I will always be haunted by thoughts of a sun-drenched elsewhere.”
Isabelle Eberhardt

Thank you subscribers and readers for taking the time to visit my blog!!

If this is the first time you are visiting the site, welcome to the tales of a woman solo traveler and thoughts to make today the start of something new.

Although I take a break during the weekends, I’ll be back on Monday and would be delighted, in the meantime, if you would look through my previous posts. Perhaps you missed a few or will reread one with a new perspective.There is a list of all the previous posts by title and date.

Since the configuration of the site may differ on your browser, perhaps you have not noticed the tabs which offer some additional information:Why this blog?, Images, How I Began, etc.

You can search certain posts by category: Practical Advice, Thoughts on Oneself, Snapshots, etc.

All of these may be at the very bottom of the posts.

While traveling I may not be posting each day. To be notified when I have written a new post please subscribe-of course its free.
I would be delighted if you would sign up.

I hope you find information and inspiration in the text and images and join me in my quest for growth, wonderment and self-improvement.

Here’s to new discoveries near and far!

Enjoy the days.

ART vs DEFACEMENT vs ART

P1030034New York City’s subway cars and walls brandishing spray paint was not uncommon in the 1970’s and 80’s. To some it was artistic expression, to others an eyesore and emblem of urban blight. Later campaigns triumphed and virtually eradicated remnants of these exploits. Although some of the artists enjoyed illustrious careers, the stigma attached to the artform remained.

Traveling through certain cities in South America I noted a markedly different attitude. Townspeople were embracing these painted walls with pride.

Now certain neighborhoods in New York City are rethinking the past and tempting residents to create and appreciate similar works anew.

PEACE OF MIND AT WHAT PRICE

I was struck by an article I read recently. It was a man recounting his move to Hawaii at age thirteen. This was back in the 1960’s. The moment his family arrived at their new home, a cottage near the beach, he ran off, surfboard in hand to test the sea. Thirteen? Surfing without adult supervision? It seems few children in the U.S. and elsewhere experience that kind of freedom today.

I was well into adulthood when I heard the words,”play date” placed together and inquired the meaning: Parents organize the place and time for their children to play. This was an entirely new concept for me.

I had a curfew as a child and there were certainly things I was not allowed to do, but within these boundaries the days were mine. My best friend and I spent untold hours riding our bicycles discovering, exploring, venturing out on our own. There was no telephone to be tethered to and our judgement guided the way.

Are children safer today? Do they venture into unknowns with confidence? Can they plan and fill their own day?

Are certain attempts for their safety coming with a price too high?

SIMPLE IS, SIMPLE DOES

P1030883Traveling makes me particularly aware of what I take for granted at home.

Here an outpouring of water is available with the turn of a faucet. Hot or cold is determined with ease.

Many places require other means. Large containers of water are often brought from distant sources. Animals, machines, adults and children may play a role in the task. But the lack of pipes need not deny residents of its flow.

FITTING IN

IMG_3868Expats live all over the world and I know very few, but the ones I met in Nicaragua did not seem unique. Many of them were retirees coming from the U.S. primarily to stretch their pension dollars. The men and women had already been in this country for years, some as many as ten or more. They lived in a separate community amongst themselves. Very few spoke more than a few words of Spanish and explained that they had little time to learn. Others stated that the residents who came to clean their homes, shop for them, and provide other services preferred it that way. These expats did not seem to have any Nicaraguan friends.

Knowing I was traveling alone, they warned me about going anywhere after dark (the sun set at 6pm) and to take precautions in all I do. Their fear was palpable.

I later met a woman, also from the U.S., who chose not to live with the expats. She spoke fluent Spanish, and had been living happily there for years without incident.

I stayed in this town only three weeks, but spoke often with the locals and engaged in their daily routines, never feeling fear. I made an effort not to succumb to the ignorance and paranoia that inflicted others. Instead I did my best to fit in.

MAKING THE EFFORT

IMG_4021When I was a child, learning to play the guitar, I was disappointed that I didn’t immediately sound like the musicians I listened to on the radio. It didn’t occur to me at that young age that certain accomplishments can take time.

Many things in life do not come easily. But effort often reaps satisfaction.