Saturday, September 13, 2008

baking magic

SATURDAY: a pictorial representation (with a few of those word things too)

YES. WE. CAN (bake bagels)!!!!! I have not felt such joyous pride in a very very long time. These are the eight babies birthed on a Saturday morn. 4 have onions and garlic on them.
Want to bake along? Click here: Mmmmm

The most spectacular array of brunch munchings that mine eye has ever seen (or my tongue tasted). We forgot the lox and cream cheese, but cold cuts will do when this far from home.

The proud bakers
D: juggling/lounging on the only patch of grass on UB's campus

Anna enjoys the sunshine as much, if not more than, the next fellow.

The products of an afternoon.
Seb the drum man - doing his thing with Berman and his band.
Maitisong Theatre, Maru a Pula: Exodus Live Poetry show

Behold, the conjoined banana twins! (a real live natural phenomenon, purchased at the River Walk Pic n' Pay.)The much anticipated peeling of the banana (s)a successful operation. one banana, became two bananas, became four halfs, became none. mmm mmmm mmm.

I would write more, because I have more to write, but I have those strange Sunday eve pre-test jitters. Thus, I think it best to rest till tomorrow.

Friday, September 5, 2008

a bunch of (red) delicious

Sebastian’s Surprise Party: A success! Anna, Daniel, Khwayze, Mex, Labo, and I all secretly collaborated to throw our baby Seby a 20th birthday bash last Saturday night. Anna and I spent the day searching for silly gifts and purchasing cake materials, and worked into the evening mixing and prepping a polka dot topped cake and some extra special chocolate cupcakes (nutella covering, of course.) The fellas acquired massive quantities of various beverages, and Mex graciously hosted the whole shebang at Mexyland. Labo blew up balloons and hung a pink toilet paper “SEB” sign in the studio waiting room, and almost all of the international students arrived around 8 pm to help with the birthday cheer. Despite a few slip ups and obvious hints, Seb was completely surprised by everything, and the night was an incredible concoction of sweet treats and loud beats. Dancing, spontaneous jam sessions, and a copious amount of happiness all put me to sleep rather early (I wandered into dream land while curled up beneath a desk in the studio – despite the noise) and Daniel and I left on the high notes of Rafa’s improvisational piano magic.

Return to Kamogelo: Wednesday morning, after my nine am class let out, Seb and I hopped the usual pattern of combis on a trek to Kamogelo. I wasn’t sure if school had started yet (I knew it was sometime in September,) but we decided to take the chance and see. Luckily, we were rewarded with the amazed stares of the children (who probably thought I was gone for good) and the happy “Dumela!”s from the teachers. It was an incredible rush to have the kids pile on top of me again, and I was overwhelmed by how much I had missed them.

It was also astounding to see how much some of them had changed in a month. Chris proudly stuck his tongue through the gap where his lower front teeth had been, and Francinah was babbling like a brook. Whereas her stares had been silent before, she clung to my hand and gazed adoringly throughout the afternoon, mumbling giddy chants and engaging with the other children in completely natural ways. The teachers had always treated her as if she was mentally challenged, but now she shows almost no signs of difficulty with comprehension. Her fluttering eye lashes and mini seizure-like moments are still visible, but otherwise she seems so much happier and active.

Hopefully, I will be able to return to Kamogelo for at least two hours every Monday and Wednesday – an addition to my schedule that I think will help break up the monotony that I sometimes feel looming.

Penn: I miss it. I miss each and every stone on Locust Walk, that crazy back-to-school excitement, the night outings and loud reunions and comfortable CLICK of a perfect place. I knew that being gone for a semester would be hard, and it is. Facebook doesn’t help me forget how much I’m missing in Philadelphia, and no matter the wonderful things I find here, I can’t help but yearn a little for Elmo and Houston and food carts and the Green.

Muffins: Now that Anna and I co-own our very own muffin tray (a cake pan too!) we have embarked on a glorious baking binge. Last week we made killer whole wheat banana muffins, and today we’re going to try a variation on the recipe, adding dates. Oh, the wonder of molded cooking trays! The possibilities are endless. We are self-sufficient. We are bakers.

Red Delicious Apples: I CRAVE. I dream. I spend at least 20% of my 24 hours salivating and fantasizing about the crunch of a bigger-than-your-hand, perfectly ripe, juicy, sweet, shiny red apple. Of all the food that I miss from back home, this Delicious tops the list. The thought of four more months without once sinking my teeth into this tree-grown treasure is really devastating. Yes, there are kiwi. There are pineapple. There are even pears. But apples? Johnny Appleseed didn’t make it this far, at least not with the good ones.

Michael Dignake: Thursday morning, Seb and I were treated by a two hour lecture/Q&A by Michael Dignake, a Motswana who was central to the ANC’s struggle against apartheid, and who was jailed with Mandela at Robben Island. Our Politics of South Africa professor (a baller himself,) had invited Mr. Dignake to speak, and it was an incredible opportunity to hear a first person account of events we’ve been learning about.

The Fresh Movement: Wednesday evening, Seb, Anna, Arnhild, and I attended a meeting of the UB Writers Workshop, otherwise known as “The Fresh Movement.” It was held in a big conference room, and I was surprised to see the group grow to over fifty people (maybe more). What was usually a group forum for writers to present their work and receive critique, this night transformed into a two and a half hour open mic session. The room was charged with energy, and all sorts of people and poets stepped forth to sing a song, drop a rhyme, or read some prose. There was a lot of hilarity (I don’t know where some of these acts came from), and also a lot of breath-holding moments (AIDS, heartbreak, disappointment – subjects that poetry begs to hold). I stood up and read something of my own as well, and it was a great feeling to introduce myself to new people, not just by presenting my face, but my words as well. Each day, I become more and more convinced that this is a nation of poets and emcees, because it is a rare circumstance in which I can’t find one, two, ten, or fifty present.

Finally: I’ve been feeling guilty lately and I think it merits a confession: Despite all of the above and before, I haven’t fallen in love with Gabs. When I walk around in the sunshine, my skin tingling with the heat, staring down at the glass speckled sand and measuring the length of the shadows cast by plants passed, I have the urge to apologize to the things around me. “Little cactus,” I mumble with dry lips and thick tongue, “I’m sorry that your green isn’t enough for me.” And to the birds that chirp in the still morning space between the freedom of darkness and the harsh rays of day, “I am sorry that I don’t always sing along.” It is strange for me to feel so disconnected from the earth, the very ground on which I walk, and the flora that buds gawky and sharp and brittle. But perhaps I need not apologize – I’m sometimes more than certain that my feelings are reciprocated, that this cracked land isn’t satisfied with me either. The grass has never padded my step or embraced me in a breezy fold, nor have the trees ever graced me with a rain of petals. It is me and the earth and we are not exactly cooperating. I haven’t passed judgments or pronounced ultimatums – I understand that all relationships develop differently. However, I’m hoping that a greater sense of place and comfort develops sooner rather than later, because this feeling of situational disconnect is both new and disgruntling.

mine

The majority of last Friday night was nothing but laughter. It started off at the Gaborone Dam (as most Friday nights now do), with drinks on the sun-warmed rocks at the water’s edge, the hard sloping surfaces still radiating heat as dusk fell. It was Caitlin and the Penn Nursing students’ last night in Gabs, and the mood was slightly festive as a result. Khwayze, Ngozi, Mex, and Labo had joined our international exchange student crew, and in addition to Brianna’s spontaneous trimming of Daniel’s hair, (the strands were then burnt for fire,) rock adventuring, and mock photo shoots, a good amount of alcohol helped to keep the night bright.

After the sun had dropped into the cradling dip of the distant hills, we called some cabs and shifted the party to 25 degrees, an Indian restaurant at River Walk. The group population exploded as we merged with another bunch of exchange students, and sat down to feast at a twenty person, taffy-stretched table. People were up and down, in and out, bouncing around the restaurant and patio to smoke and chatter and engage in the type of hilarity specific to youth and unspecific to circumstance. Between bites of sweat-inducing curry and the flurry of glasses that shifted and lifted and landed in kaleidoscope patterns, everyone let loose.

It was only natural then, when the bill had been paid (an adventure in itself) and the stomachs massaged, to move on to the clubs. After quick stops at UB and Mexyland, where various revelers peeled off to deposit their bones in a bed, those that remained drove to Lizard Lounge. It seemed quiet for a Friday night (at least according to Mex,) but we were all itching to keep the hours flowing, so we entered anyways. Daniel and I were escorted inside for free, thanks to Mex’s smooth talking, and immediately the shutterbug half of our duo began to click and snap like castanets. Daniel had brought his professional camera along to do some publicity work for one of Mex’s clients, DJ ONKZ, who was playing at the club and for whom Daniel has been making cover art.

With everyone jiving in the green glow of the patterned lights, red lazers wiggling between bent backs and swinging arms, the atmosphere was thick and pulsing and entirely expected. The crew I rolled in with (Seb, Anna, Daniel, Mex, Ngozi, Kwayze, Labo, Brianna, Celene, and Franka) stuck close together, and despite a few aggressive men and the rebukes they necessitated, I didn’t feel threatened or unsafe. We all shifted between lounge area and dance floor, and Daniel continued to work the room with his third eye.

However, sometime in the swirl of the post-midnight darkness, as I eyes-closed my way across the terrain of rhythmic mountains, I felt Daniel’s hand on my shoulder and turned to see a panicked look in his eyes. “My camera’s gone,” he exhaled, and immediately dashed towards the bouncers at the exit, head twisting to scan the faces around him. The word spread like wildfire from one mouth to the next, and we all mobilized immediately. The panic of loss and violation and fear and anger welled up in everyone and it was evident in our sharp movements and frantic inquiries. The manager blocked all exits and told the guards to check everyone who left, and Brianna (a one woman wonder) began to interrogate everyone she encountered. Mex, Seb, and others dashed into the parking lot to find out if anyone had seen anything, and Anna, Ngozi, Kwayze, Daniel and I continued to scan the club and hover, with eyes wide, around the exiting patrons.

As if the horror of what had just happened wasn’t enough, things began to deteriorate within the club itself. It was around 3 am, and by this point the majority of the people inside were sufficiently intoxicated. While most who attempted to leave were only mildly annoyed by the bouncers’ pat-down policy, a few men got belligerent. In two or three cases, the bouncers began to smack them with open hands, pulling out nightsticks and beating them across the back. The exit space was dense and as each wave of violence hit, panic would ripple back through the crowd, shifting the amoeba of packed bodies away from the epicenter of the commotion. Occasionally, after someone was pushed outside and the doors were re-barred, we could hear the dreadful shattering of bottles hurled against the thick wood. The constant, violent banging from within a locked closet where two handcuffed men had been shoved, was also unnerving, and I found myself paralyzed with morose anxiety, flitting between Daniel and the safer interior of the club. I realize I’m lucky to have never before witnessed such physical violence, and this first bitter taste left me shaken. The sound of hard wood colliding with a man’s flesh, and the thwack of palm meeting face had me choking on my own passivity. The impulse to lash out with fist, to throw yourself at the prospect of blood and pain and bone crunching blows, is something that I will never understand.

To top the experience off, a succession of men attempted to latch onto me and dance as I stood against the wall near the exit, waiting for any sign of the camera. One in particular roughly grabbed my hips and began to shake me, leering drunkenly, until Seb quickly stepped in and pushed him off. The disgust and revulsion that I felt in that moment are unparalleled in my emotional memory – too great to prompt action or outcry, just silent loathing.

After a long tense period of searching and waiting and cross-fingered, cross-toed, cross-souled hoping, we piled into a cab and left the club. Exhausted and weighed down by disbelief, there was nevertheless the sense of true camaraderie and group injustice. Daniel said it best, in that if it takes an event like this to showcase the beauty and merit of friendship, then in a way we’re all lucky. The comforting arms of Anna, Ngozi, and Brianna, not to mention the genuine concern of everyone present, were incredible.

To add insult to injury, it turned out that my keys were stolen as well (they were in a pocket of Daniel’s camera bag since I hadn’t brought a purse out.) However, this inconvenience was more in the vein of dark humor, as there is nothing that a thief can do with my keys, except unlock the imaginary door that keeps out fear. Congratulations sir, you have made me feel vulnerable.

As a result of the loss of my keys, I was locked out of my room (bereft of phone, money, clothing, medication, etc.) until Sunday afternoon. I found out the hard way that the University of Botswana does not have a master key for the dorms (or, if they do, it is in S. Africa with an employee on leave – this was never cleared up) and cannot quickly or easily get yours replaced. Successive phone calls and desperate pleas for help will not do much good, because it seems that no precautions are taken for emergencies that occur on the weekends. FYI, if you plan on having a problem, schedule it for before 4:30 on Friday afternoon.

Thus, these words bring me to the word: possession. Daniel’s camera is one of his most cherished means of communication, and tool for creative production. It is valuable both monetarily and sentimentally, and its loss is an incredible blow. However, it is not a limb, a life, or an irreplaceable item, and we all recognize that. So what stings so much?

Perhaps is it the fact that someone, with disregard to Daniel’s feelings and circumstance, decided to deprive him of something that mattered a lot. To place your needs over those of another, particularly a complete stranger, has always struck me as particularly callous. Yes, the thief may have a family to feed, ARV’s to buy, etc. However, it is also just as likely that he stole Daniel’s prized possession so that he could in turn purchase something equally prized for himself. How is this justified? Are we right to mourn the absence of an inanimate object? How could we not? What is worth mourning?

Even before this incident, I had been meditating a lot on the nature of possession. Coming here, I’ve found myself lacking a lot of tangible, material conveniences. I no longer “possess” a washer/dryer, a printer, a bag of yarn and knitting needles, a house with a staircase, a dog, a car, a pile of sketchpads, a bookcase of books. Being away from these things that I tend to call “mine,” has made me realize that unless it’s inside of me, it’s as much my possession as it is not.

This has been a hard mental adjustment, and it has really forced me to examine the extent of my materialism. Living on a campus like Penn, it has been easy to leave my consumer habits unchecked – in fact, the environment encourages excess spending and a blind eye to true need. Over the past three months I have realized that there are aspects of this upper-class “American” culture that I really miss – the comfort, the fun, the ease, the care-free bubble. I would be lying if I said that I was truly willing to give up these things, because they add a certain cushion to life that can be quite nice. However, I believe I have come to more easily differentiate between personal desire and necessity, and this is a good thing. I have also come to realize that my definition of “self” has been greatly influenced by what I have perceived as uniquely “mine.” It is becoming much more important to me to think about what I am beyond the traits and tangibles I can display, because each day makes it more apparent that most of these are transient.

Perhaps, in the end, the only thing I can justifiably claim any true, consistent possession over – if I choose to - are the meditations, musings, and spontaneous flows of emotion that run through my head. And yet, when I finally close my eyes for the night, I think I’m more content to offer these forth to the ones I love, than to hold them all to myself. I’m as much the product of a group effort – a continuous flow of influence and nurturing – as I am the product of my own will and wishes, and these dual forces within me deserve recognition. As I have been blessed with the most spectacular people, I am happy to feel the pinch of their gentle molding. Clay is clay is clay, but the shapes it can make are more than the material itself can imagine. Although I still fear relinquishing my possessions, and myself, I’m slowly starting to realize that the less I’m afraid of losing, the more I can enjoy what I have. It seems that my continuous anxiety about losing an object, or a piece of me, always striving to maintain my “identity” through the objects or traits I have determined it by – it all just stops me from allowing more influences to affect me. At this moment, it is only the communal possession of connection, the other end of a bond, a group ownership of emotion and friendship and trust that I am most grateful for, and grateful that it can’t be stolen or lost or forgotten.