25 July 2009

Act 14 | Jamaica

I ended up in Jamaica by accident really, as tickets were booked in order for me to do some volunteer work that didn’t transpire, which kinda left me in Jamaica without a plan (as it wasn’t a country I’d included in my original itinerary); I made arrangements to get to Cuba for a fortnight (much much more about that in the next act) which left me with six days in Jamaica, three on either side of Cuba.


Rather than risk my life in Kingston (which has more murders per capita than any other city in the world) and pay big money to stay in the worst hotel in town (accommodation in the Caribbean is Expensive with a capital $E), I chose to base myself at the Jamnesia Surf Camp some 8 miles east of Kingston, which is run by a beautiful Rasta family.


It was a very good move, living there was like living in a butterfly house (hundreds of little yellow butterflies would rise up with the sun each morning) in which cats and dogs alike slept peacefully in the serene surrounds.



And it so happened that the wife of the family (known as Maggie Mystic) worked in a health clinic located in one of the poorer parts of Kingston, that had recently closed down an eye service, because nobody knew how to use the equipment that was sent to replace an instrument that had stopped functioning.


I hoped to be able to identify the new machine and train a staff member or two how to use it; but alas, the ‘new instrument’ was something of an antique that requires a high level of technical training to be usefully manipulated – the new instrument was technologically more primitive than the old instrument.




Scene 1 :: Pre-Cuba: :Inspiration

The surf camp is presided over by the father of the family, Billy Mystic, a local legend who is famous for being a Jamaican professional surfer, an international pop star, and (presently) a lead character in Jamaica’s very own TV soap opera (pictured sitting by my right elbow in the photo below).


I happened to be at the camp at the same time as a great bunch of guests from the States.


It didn’t take me very long to fall in line with the beautiful daily rhythms that orders life in Jamnesia:
A quick cup of coffee (from the blue mountains up above us) before an early morning trip to wherever the waves were.

It was slightly embarrassing to have to explain to everyone that I was a non-surfing Australian staying at a Caribbean surf club. (I’ve actually never lived close enough to waters warm enough to learn in.)

We’d return home for breakfast followed by a musical jam session …

In the afternoon there was time for napping in the hammock and coconuts from the guy with the big knife and bloodshot eyes across the road (who made it very clear that he was not happy having his photograph taken) …

… and little tasty fruits harvested from the trees at the back of the camp site.

We returned to the ocean to swim and surf as the sun set beside us turning daytime into twilight.


This is Mark, America’s next top tattoo artist (if they turn the pilot into a TV show), he deserves special mention because it was he who towed me to shore one afternoon when I couldn’t swim out of the spot the ocean had moved me into, thus confirming his good-guy-saviour status. (He also painted a wicked mural on the side of the house.)

The nights were spent eating delicious food (including fresh snapper caught by one of Billy’s sons), conversing on matters of import, and listening to live music …


… and in the late of night, Billy would become a Rasta preacher – another activity he excels at.

Then, and only then, was it time to close the eyes and end the day.



The camp site is also open to local youths who want to come and learn to surf; As such Billy, and his wife and family, play host to a large number of kids from the neighbourhood who then have something positive to do with their lives each day (that being surfing) and a clan to belong to. (The camp site is governed by rules and breaching them can land you in camp court where – if found guilty – you can put out of the community for a time, after which you are accepted again and given another chance to live positively).


The place also attracts local musicians who are given a stage on which to perform every second Saturday night at one of the Jamnesia Sessions, a free concert open to all.


As such the place has great vibe – live fresh music, young kids learning to live right, good food and conversation – it’s a stimulating and attractive environment to be in, and I was inspired by what I saw during the three days that I should have spent getting myself better prepared for Cuba.




Scene 2 :: Post-Cuba: Rejuvenation

On returning from Cuba I decided to put the plan to head up into The Blue Mountains of Jamaica aside for a couple of reasons: 1) I was little under the weather with a number of niggly ailments; and 2) I was really just wanting to be around the Surf Club again, as the place and its inhabitants had become an unexpected experience of family and connectedness for me - I didn’t want to leave a place that felt so much like home.


Choopsy is one of the three peeps that I spent most of my time hangin' with while back at the camp. (No one is known by their real name if they've been around Jamnesia for a while, instead they have pet nick names that speak of intimacy and the affection they have for one another).


Flee – who is ‘a drummer, not a fighter’ – was also fine company.


Lei Lei, Billy’s only daughter, is probably the most impressive high school graduate I’ve ever met (and I met a whole lot while I was responsible for the university students associated with my last church); she is perceptive, creative, sporty, organised and like all Jamaicans, she oozes cool. (For all these reasons she was the one I trusted the most with my recovering ears.)


The weirdest encounter I had in Jamaica was reading a booklet of Lei Lei’s poetry which she had printed out in my own handwriting (yep, I have my own font, called ‘arkascrawl’); reading someone else’s carefully expressed thoughts in your own handwriting is quite arresting.





So I really can’t say that I’ve seen Jamaica, but I can claim to have soaked up plenty of Jamaican culture; Turns out I wasn't at the surf club for the good waves - I was there for the good vibes.


I felt the love and I won't soon forget what I saw and experienced; I hope that my own life is directed in such a way that I also get to live with a family in an environment where lives young and old are being lovingly and respectfully renewed on a daily basis as people simply go about their business.

(I’m not sure that I’ve yet accepted that I may never get back there, I guess you never accept that thought when applied to a home.)

17 July 2009

Act 13 | Belize

A week of volunteer work was promptly arranged for me in Belize after the Guatemalan plan fell through; Jerson was able to join me for the first half of the week (before returning home to the States).



Our arrival coincided with the weekend (how ‘bout that?); which meant we had a couple of days to kill before the earnest work began.


We spent Saturday in the city - which looks every bit as poor as it is.






The next day we went to Caye Caulker, a small island with a coral reef just off the Coast.


We broke two boats before we were out of sight of the city; the third boat made to it to the island but not before the first half of the day had passed away.


It rained heavy in the afternoon which didn’t worry us at all because we were already as wet as we could be.


It was a bizarre sensation to be in the warm sea water having much colder drops of rain failing on my head.


I was in the right place at the right time to see a Manatee (sea-cow) underwater, apparently I didn’t get close enough to see the udders (it must be hard getting the milk in the bucket while submerged).


The day of snorkelling also presented me and all the other gathered snorklers with the opportunity to forgive the sting rays for what was done to one of Australia’s finest ambassadors, Steve Irwin.


I took my turn at hugging a sting ray after Jerson.


Having reconciled with the rays I thought I'd try my luck at riding one like a magic carpet.



The work that was arranged for me to do was really ideal; I was travel around the country with Freddie, a young local optometrist, and mentor him.


I also straightened out some of the equipment that had become crooked.


I am preferring teaching to practicing while in these parts, I like the fact that when I involve myself in training others all my knowledge doesn’t leave the country when I do.



Working in other countries often gives you the opportunity to do things that you don’t get to do in your own context, like wearing a cap backwards at work (and sticking a needle in a mans eye).


Jackie organises the lab where the glasses are made and is a seemingly inexhaustible source of energy and insight; She also double dared me to eat gibnut …


… A gibnut is a large rodent and a local delicacy (which they tell me they served to the Queen last time they she was in town (being treated like royalty in Belize is a little different to being treated like royalty elsewhere)), it tastes like beef.

10 July 2009

Act 12 | Guatemala

The transition from the US down to Guatemala also saw me transitioning from the very pleasurable and easy Second Phase of my year-long travel plan (which involved spending extended time with old friends in new places) into the move difficult and lonesome Third Phase (which involved travelling solo (most of the time) and volunteering my services as an eye specialist in places of need); I needed to change gears, which was difficult, because being pampered by friends in their homes for so long had made me reluctant to fend for myself in foreign environs; I wasn’t feeling that great about the second half of the year (which sounds like such a long time when in that state of mind).



A DAY IN DALLAS

Enter Nelson Rivera, Co-Ordinator of Latin American Region for the International Centre for Eyecare Education (ICEE) organisation, which is helping to arrange most of my volunteering opportunities this year.


Nelson pretends to be an optometrist by day (and I believe he is convincing in the role), but this front conceals his real talent, which is booking flights and accommodation in any part of the world you care to be in; It took just one (long) night in Dallas for the two of us to book all the flights I needed to get around the Caribbean Sea, which was a huge relief; In the process Nelson must have saved me around a thousand US dollars with his knowledge of the local airlines and their bizarre online booking antics. (Even now he is watching over my movements like a wingless guardian angel with a blackberry.) In one night he restored my enthusiasm for Phase Three.



GUATEMALA

Another reason for feeling blue about Phase Three (before Dallas) was that the volunteer work I had lined up for Guatemala had fallen through (at the last minute) on account of my inability to speak Spanish.


I made a visit to the clinic anyway and discovered that they were well equipped, well staffed, and extremely well organised – they didn’t really need my assistance at all. (The privately owned vision centre caters for both ‘private’ and ‘social’ patients; The private patients enter through a door on one side the building and get charged much more for the same services that the social patients, who enter through a door on the other side of the complex, are charged much less for (hopefully the people with money will never find the other side of the building or discover Robin Hood hiding beneath one of the white coats)).



An upside to not having any volunteer work to do was that I was totally free to visit the local zoo with all the sparkly new friends I had just made in the hostel.



Spider monkeys are probably the most entertaining animals on the planet.


While at the zoo I worked out what I want for Christmas …


… a tiny little marmette will make me the happiest kid on the planet (they’re no bigger than an adult thumb and they are super-cute).



Two of the people I met at the hostel had recently been assaulted, so I knew from me second day in Central America that the crime was 'really real'.


Note the blood stained chucks above and the knife wound in the leg below.




In direct defiance of the danger, I took a bus into town so as to sightsee the streets of Guatemala City (in broad daylight and not for too long).









I was reunited one evening with the amazing Gabriel, a friend I made on my first ever trip to NZ (an organised tour which was a 21st birthday present from my parents), who has recently moved back to his homeland (Guatemala) and who is going to incredible lengths to ensure that the city his children are growing up is a good deal better than it is now.


The conversation we shared was inspiring and his willingness to sacrifice for the greater good is extraordinary – he is one of my (major) heroes.



I was joined in Guatemala by Jerson, who has set his sights on becoming an optometrist so as to be useful in areas of need around the world, he is a friend of a friend (also named Luke) who heard about the trip I was making and organised to join me for a leg of the journey after reading this very travel blog.


Because there was no eye work for us to do in Guatemala, we had time to do see some of the local attractions, including a day trip to the active volcanoe ‘Pacaya’.


There is nothing like a real live lava flow to invoke bona fide childlike excitement in a grown man.


Marshmallows never tasted so primal.


Coming down the hill was made thrice as much fun by the fact that there were two little French girl who had but one father to help them both down the mountain, which triggered my paternal instincts; I can still hear them giggling ('ooh la la') as we ran through the loose shale (before it poured down with rain and those of us who weren’t wearing plastic got absolutely saturated).




We also saw the nearby township of Antigua, which is something of an anomaly in Guatemala.





We also headed deep into the jungle to see the ancient Mayan city of Tikal.





On the way back through Guatemalan (after Belize) I had the good fortune of meeting Jamie, another inspiring (semi-)retiree, who is choosing to live in Guatemala City (rather than in America) and offer his assistance to a State run childcare centre that caters for children with severe developmental issues (which I briefly visited).


His positive can-do attitude is seeing positive changes being made for staff members and clients of the centre alike.