One of the reasons I hate to relax, hate to stand still, is that when
I do a dark part my unconcious mind starts talking. I knew this would
happen when I was told last Wednesday that I would be in Olinda through
the weekend. I dreaded it, and nearly broke down. Then I started thinking
of how to survive the next few days.
I try to fend off the subconcious by turning up the volume on the
concious. This is sort of like saying "LA LA LA LA I CAN'T HEAR
YOU!" (but of course you can.)
I read books voraciously. Since arriving in Olinda I've read two books.
The first is "A World Full of Gods" by Keith Hopkins. It's
an excellent (albeit uneven) early history and analysis of Christianity.
The second books was "The Heartsong of Charging Elk" by James
Welch. It's beautifully written, but a bit homophobic. Gay characters
are portrayed as being 'evil' to the Lakota protagonist, whereas Lakota
actually revered gay members of the tribe as being closer to god. (Next
book: "'salem's lot" by Stephen King.)
I would also watch TV or go to films, but those two options aren't
available to me here. Television is incomprehensible. Daytime TV seems
to consist mainly of game shows featuring transvestite hosts, or wildly
overacted telenovelas. The current 'hot' show is "Uga Uga!"
It features a city man who gets lost in the Amazon and saved by a beautiful
Indian woman.
For some reason he's lost all of his clothes but his underwear. Naturally,
she's wearing a bikini. He speaks Portugese, she speaks something else.
Zaniness ensues. This is intercut with something happening in an art
gallery involving a serious handsome young artist and a beautiful but
boozy older woman. The gallery segments seem to be as weepy as the jungle
segments are zany.
American films are generally in English with Portugese subtitles,
but I haven't gotten up the initiative yet to find a theatre. There
doesn't appear to be one in old Olinda. Recife is a US$15 cab ride away.
Tomorrow I may explore new Olinda, which is within walking distance
(3-4km) and is more commercial.
But I can't read and hang out in the cinema all of the time. And when
I'm walking the streets of Olinda, the thoughts come up from the back
of my head like dark moths. Am I doing the right thing? Am I a loser,
a quitter? Will Jeanne and Tyler hate me for abandoning them? Will Dan
still love me?
I think about these things over and over, and I still feel like I've
made the right decision. I cannot imagine being happy if I continued
the journey. My melancholy would have poisoned the entire group, ruining
the trip for them as well. And when I consider my decision, I feel like
it was actually a pretty brave thing to do. It takes a certain amount
of courage to admit that you've made a mistake. I still intend to make
this journey, but I want to do so under different terms.
Of course, the sub-concious doesn't pay attention. There are also
a few people on the trip discussion mailing list who are apparently
on the payroll of my super-ego. Though it may not be pleasant in the
short term, these sorts of trials help us grow and know ourselves better.
I've definitely learned some things about myself on this trip, some
very surprising (though not unpleasant.)
Ron