Fall is leaving — is the waving flurry of a thousand goodbyes, their deciduous mortality decided long ago, a long downpour in endless succession, like the energy of life has packed up to find a new home. Fall is leaving, is that label, “homeless.” I should have known she’d be gone too soon, had I only known how to read her face, imprinted in my mind, but my illiterate hands wrote no note of goodbye. I thought “I’m leaving” was a sappy try for extra treats, a threat to punish my consequence. The girl who asked if I knew how…
The woman sitting across from me holds a mug of steaming tea and decades of resentment. Years ago, a priest convinced her father that a woman could have no reason to pursue medicine, to become a doctor, and she could never forgive that priest or the church behind him for ripping away her dream. Traces of bitter disillusionment still eek out in her words. What answer do you even give to a story like that? I nod, mutter, “I’m so sorry,” and listen clumsily. I try to give my presence to the pain. The only response I can offer to…
Voices can ring loud in the mind, unchecked for years on end: Too slow. Too awkward. Too dumb. Not good enough. Those refrains have dripped into me like a mental Chinese water torture. I encountered them first in a weak moment, powerful and overwhelming amid that earliest brush with depression, and they’ve trickled into my consciousness in the years since. Even in the best and healthiest seasons, they’ve never fully disappeared. It didn’t matter that I got my first full summer job at seventeen and have been asked back to every place I’ve worked since then. It didn’t matter that…
When I walked off the airplane, nothing could’ve reminded me I was really back in Texas like the Buc-ee’s t-shirt in the customs line right in front of me. With that first sudden plunge back into the United States, reverse culture shock began. Trashcans are everywhere… and they’re huge. People all around me are mostly speaking English. The only meal I can buy for $2.50 is a McDonald’s hamburger. For those first days back, every ten minutes, every place I went, every direction I turned, I slammed into reminders that I was not in Ecuador anymore as I started relearning…
[April 2017] There’s this eerily creepy scene in The Little Mermaid where Ariel trades her voice box for human legs. In losing her voice, her main power of communication, she loses her ability to define herself to the world. She can no longer explain where she came from, elaborate her thoughts and feelings, offer her insight, convey her needs, or share where she’s going as she wants to. Without her voice, she’s at the mercy of the perceptions of whoever happens to be standing around her. And Ariel turns out to be one of the lucky ones, because out of…
[March 2017] It’s a five-minute walk to the biggest store in town, with fresh greens, live tilapia, toilet paper, and sandals all lining the walls of the open-air room. Another two minutes and you hit the big blue Catholic church; two minutes more and you reach the school on the right, the sports court on the left. There’s a soccer tournament held on that turf every weekend, and families gather to watch mothers, uncles, sisters, and cousins show their skill. The air’s buzzing with activity as my program friend and I join the families cheering on their players. A kid…
I spent a week in the Galápagos and brushed against the infinite — or, since you can’t exactly brush against something that has no boundaries, you might say I sort of wafted into it. How do you describe the exhilaration that rises over you as the sea and sky blend into a single blue that looks like it just might be the edge of the world? It enveloped me like the sand between my toes and the clear, cool salt water on my sunburned skin. All around, this blue. The color of trust. The color of faithfulness. The color of…
The calls of birds – they called me wide awake, though I had left my bed some hours past, their world awash with green, the sun to take inside those leaves, that life might grow and last. The air filled rich and damp into each lung – the clouds to permeate my very skin, replenish life diverse, from water wrung, throughout the forest, harmony within. I stepped into this realm but as a guest, the system’s balance well complete. I come – oh, let me enter not disturbing, lest I, careless, trample equilibrium. To witness, tend, protect,…
It’s election day in Ecuador. Long, thick lines of people round the contours of the streets, with crowds ebbing and flowing all around them. Vendors sell sodas, snow cones, sandwiches, hats, bracelets – you’d think there was a festival going on. The entire country is out today. That’s hardly hyperbole; voting is compulsory here. There’s a heavy uncertainty stirring the nation, a deep turbulence far beneath the superficial resignation at the top… an uncertainty over what to do, and an uncertainty over whether the choice even matters. Ask anyone who they think will win, and they’ll tell you: Lenin Moreno,…
“So this bus does go to the North Station? For sure?” I asked in Spanish, again, glancing out the window at the unfamiliar surroundings. “Yes, yes. Certainly,” the man responded. But by the time the bus pulled into the final stop, I wasn’t too surprised to step out and find myself at the wrong station, one I had never seen before. I’d been in Quito less than a week – little enough time to take the wrong bus and have no clue where I was going, but long enough to realize that I was in a completely new part of…