Sunday, December 1, 2013

The Anthroplogist Who Tried to Meditate in Cartagena de Indias


I haven't written here in a long while. My second year at seminary was a blur of church work, school work, sweat, tears, sleeplessness and falling in love. This autumn semester I have been able to take a hiatus, blessed be, and accompany my love in the strangely historic and forgetful city of Cartagena, Colombia. We live by the sea, supposedly, but the most I see of it on a daily basis is the rust from the salt and the mold from humidity. I wrote a poem recently and remembered that I have a blog. Perhaps this will be the start of a more internet-prolific phase in which I discuss matters of dislocated spiritual cultivation and sundry lived realities in Latin America.

The Anthropologist Who Tried to Meditate in Cartagena de Indias


I.
Some days she woke up when everything was already covered
in a film of sweet, sticky sweat
before the swampy dew of the night
had yet dried off clotheslines out on the patio.
Some days she set an alarm
and rose from the damp mattress in the dark
with an almost religious fervor.
She would get up and run down a dusty four-lane highway
that smelled like sulfur and dead animals
where buses had special horns to whistle at women
and vendors pushed their wooden carts
to God knows where at six in the morning.

II.
She would lie down on cool white linoleum tiles
that she swept daily of their dirt
until the wooden broomstick broke in half.
She tried to meditate with the subtle,
vibrating unity of the universe,
as she listened to the rhythm of flip-flips shuffling down the street
and electronic music blasting out of nightclub-sized speakers
that the neighbors on the corner would drag out front
to make the whole block jump as they walked.
Heavy bass beats made for grinding hips and genitals together
replaced her rhythmic breathing methods
with music to help you forget about oppression and love
and anything else that makes humans go to sleep at night
with the will to wake up the next morning.

III.
She walked to the corner store sometimes
to buy tomatoes, onions, or panela, the dark blocks
of condensed sugarcane that she had never needed in her diet
until she came to Cartagena de Indias with her boyfriend
and all her grant money ran out.
In this place she was only granted the privilege
of walking to the corner store to buy a few spare things
and to try not to look at anyone,
as if this would deter them from looking at her.
She finally learned what it is like not to study people,
but to be studied by them.
“Are you from Bogotá?” “Nena, do you play an instrument?”
She learned to be the exotic other that must be decoded.

IV.
Her boyfriend would come home from work in Flower of the Field,
the neighborhood where freshly rotting meat
and fermented sewage bloomed in the streets,
where the people were even poorer and had even larger sound systems.
He would tell her about the homes he visited
to take down data for microcredit loan groups,
where people evaded his questions with their winding tales
and gave him sticks of frozen juice and little cups of coffee.
Where tiny boys made lewd sexual gestures at tiny girls.
He told her about the carnivalesque parade
with the girls in shimmery dresses on handmade floats,
the songs beat out at last with the organic sounds of voices and kitchen utensils.
He told her about the children menacing with sticks and buckets of scum
to extract coins from him on every street corner.
She never went to see these things—for fear, for laziness, for absorption
in quiet, solitary work, as she reminisced about a culture she had studied one day.
Maybe in reality she never knew how to integrate herself into communities
or how to observe people with discernment and empathy.
She could not feel the vibrating unity of the universe,
much less understand people who spoke in a slurred cacophony of speech
and taught their children to go door to door dancing doggie-style
so that people would give them money
in the vicious euphoria of patriotic festivities.

V.
She found a man who sold bread
and who was very kind to her.
She found a woman who ran a little restaurant called “The Hand of God”
and who gave her all the panela water that she wanted with her lunch.
She found a woman who took power walks at six in the morning
and asked her enthusiastic questions about her life.
She found little pieces of humanity that she could thread together
loosely in her jumbled mind as she failed at meditating.
But she felt guilty that she never went out walking
just to look for the strange unity
that moved with a rhythm like breathing
between everyone and everything
in Cartagena de Indias.