Broken Foot, Schizophrenia, and a Krishna/Jesus Retreats
We were going from one beach to another by bus and, as is proving to be characteristic in Brazil, the bus personnel forgot to tell us when we reached our stop and we rode on down to the end of the line. Because both of us hate backtracking, and we never have any place to be at any given time, we decided to keep on going South and took a boat across a river to board another bus. When we arrived at the terminal, they informed us that there was a bus leaving right theat second, and as we hurried off to catch it, Nati took a bad step and went crashing to the ground. This was the third time I´d seen her fall this way, each time largely attributed to bad shoes and a backpack bigger than she is. The first two times she got up scratched and bruised, but basically okay. This time she got up broken.
We were lucky enough to make two, new friends on the bus though, that directly and indirectly saw to it that the next few days went a lot easier and a lot more free than they could have, though those days were not without certain challenges. First there was Paulo who, upon finding we had no place to go, invited us to stay at his home in Aracajú with his family. He´s 33-years old and married with a child, but he still lives at home with his mother. The wife and child live with her mother, though they´re still ¨together.¨ This is only the beginning to the disfunction. Paulo´s mother and father are separated, but the mother lives with her sister, a schizophrenic with a lot of talking to do. They basically spend most of the day in the house, Paulo painting ceramic statues that he buys to sell in craft markets, his mother cooking and cleaning (all day), and the aunt wandering from room to room, checking things out and speaking her mind. Usually its nonsense, but occassionally there´s a gem or two of wisdom. I learned that she´s in her 60´s, a virgin, and has interesting ideas about univeral love.
To add to the madness of this small home, Paulo´s sister and her four children were all visiting from Salvador. The mother occassionally talked about wanting us out for lack of space, but it was clear over time, that she enjoyed our company as we were the only ones that ever listened to her. She took it to extremes though (I think she´s going a little mad herself) and kept us up until all hours showing us her doll collection, photo albums, and broken antiques, one by one, for hours, like a child showing off her toys, constantly saying that she was tired and going to go to bed. But we ate well the whole time we were there, Paulo drove us all over town to take care of Nati´s broken foot needs, and as it was the heart of Carnaval, the mania was tolerable to save on the high price of a hotel. But we had to escape and, the first chance we got, followed the other connection we made on the bus.
Roberto, (or Colores if you want to call him by his Rainbow name) had been travelling with the Rainbow caravan for over a year, but he and his lady friend decided to stay behind at a small community outside of the town where Nati broke her foot. It is a part of, for lack of a better term, a cult that appears to be a conglomeration of faiths. We attended a few services at their store/meeting area in Aracajú, to get to know our hosts and were surprised to find pictures of Jesus and Krishna in equal measure. We also took part in a healing ceremony that was essentially Reiki. Everyone was very nice though and it didn´t feel creepy, so we went out to their ¨compound¨ to soak up some nature and relax.
It was on the side of a beatiful river and covered in mango trees. They have kayaks, a library, and areas to meditate, produce honey and various artesan crafts, eat three delicious vegetarian meals everyday. The day starts at 5:30 with Tai Chi, followed by a talk about universal love, and the day ends with more Reiki. It was all very nice and it soon became apparent that they mostly just use Jesus to reach the heavily conditioned local people. They rarely talk about him, though he comes up in almost every song they sing.
Nati decided that it was best for her to return to Buenos Aires and so we left our new found haven and returned to the city. She caught her plane and I will miss her terribly, but such is this life of travel. And now I´m on my own for the first time in the entire trip. It´s a little scary, I can´t lie, but it´s exciting too. I caught a bus to Salvador after I dropped her off at the airport, and here I sit. More to come.
We were lucky enough to make two, new friends on the bus though, that directly and indirectly saw to it that the next few days went a lot easier and a lot more free than they could have, though those days were not without certain challenges. First there was Paulo who, upon finding we had no place to go, invited us to stay at his home in Aracajú with his family. He´s 33-years old and married with a child, but he still lives at home with his mother. The wife and child live with her mother, though they´re still ¨together.¨ This is only the beginning to the disfunction. Paulo´s mother and father are separated, but the mother lives with her sister, a schizophrenic with a lot of talking to do. They basically spend most of the day in the house, Paulo painting ceramic statues that he buys to sell in craft markets, his mother cooking and cleaning (all day), and the aunt wandering from room to room, checking things out and speaking her mind. Usually its nonsense, but occassionally there´s a gem or two of wisdom. I learned that she´s in her 60´s, a virgin, and has interesting ideas about univeral love.
To add to the madness of this small home, Paulo´s sister and her four children were all visiting from Salvador. The mother occassionally talked about wanting us out for lack of space, but it was clear over time, that she enjoyed our company as we were the only ones that ever listened to her. She took it to extremes though (I think she´s going a little mad herself) and kept us up until all hours showing us her doll collection, photo albums, and broken antiques, one by one, for hours, like a child showing off her toys, constantly saying that she was tired and going to go to bed. But we ate well the whole time we were there, Paulo drove us all over town to take care of Nati´s broken foot needs, and as it was the heart of Carnaval, the mania was tolerable to save on the high price of a hotel. But we had to escape and, the first chance we got, followed the other connection we made on the bus.
Roberto, (or Colores if you want to call him by his Rainbow name) had been travelling with the Rainbow caravan for over a year, but he and his lady friend decided to stay behind at a small community outside of the town where Nati broke her foot. It is a part of, for lack of a better term, a cult that appears to be a conglomeration of faiths. We attended a few services at their store/meeting area in Aracajú, to get to know our hosts and were surprised to find pictures of Jesus and Krishna in equal measure. We also took part in a healing ceremony that was essentially Reiki. Everyone was very nice though and it didn´t feel creepy, so we went out to their ¨compound¨ to soak up some nature and relax.
It was on the side of a beatiful river and covered in mango trees. They have kayaks, a library, and areas to meditate, produce honey and various artesan crafts, eat three delicious vegetarian meals everyday. The day starts at 5:30 with Tai Chi, followed by a talk about universal love, and the day ends with more Reiki. It was all very nice and it soon became apparent that they mostly just use Jesus to reach the heavily conditioned local people. They rarely talk about him, though he comes up in almost every song they sing.
Nati decided that it was best for her to return to Buenos Aires and so we left our new found haven and returned to the city. She caught her plane and I will miss her terribly, but such is this life of travel. And now I´m on my own for the first time in the entire trip. It´s a little scary, I can´t lie, but it´s exciting too. I caught a bus to Salvador after I dropped her off at the airport, and here I sit. More to come.
1 Comments:
Oh brother. Sorry that happened. You can come to Vienna if you want. We'll be living smack-dab in the middle of the city. Shit is expensive here though. Lucky for me I have a lady that goes to work everyday. Don't forget, you have to be in Arizona in November.
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