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Friday, June 22, 2012

landing.

As the plane prepared for landing in Dar, I looked out the window. For some reason, mostly on the merit that it was in possession of an airport, I was expecting to see something slightly resembling a regular city.  But I didn't. Just chaotically packed shacks with rusting metal roofs twisting along  dirt roads. I thought--This is it--and I got a little nervous.

We landed--and I filled out the landing form just like everybody else and I stood in the middle of a jostling crowd just like everybody else. We were all trying to get our Tanzanian visas, and there was no real rhyme or reason to the line. I asked the only other white girl there what we were supposed to do. She told me we would just have to wait.

So we waited. After a while, a uniformed worker came out and started shouting for passports and money. He said that it would expedite the process. I watched him take a couple other people's passports and cash. And when he got to me, I gave him my passport, 100USD, and crossed my fingers that everything would go smoothly.

I got my picture snapped, fingerprints taken, passport re-obtained, and I walked out of the airport to see an African holding up a sign saying EMILY DKAM

The African was actually a taxi driver, who didn't speak any English. But he took me to an Indian, who did indeed speak English. The Indian was Arafat, and as Arafat could speak both English and Swahili, he was a lifesaver every time we came to Dar

Arafat asked me if I wanted dinner. I didn't. So we went straight to Safari Inn. The traffic was horrible--and I clenched my jaw more than once thinking we were going to get in an accident. There were tall, rundown buildings, street stands selling cassava chips, people sitting on the street curbs. There was a lot of honking and a lot of poverty. It felt chaotic and it felt a little dangerous. I usually don't have a problem going out on my own, but Dar was one city that I would never go out around on my own to explore. 

Arafat dropped me off at where I would be staying. I was spending my first night in Africa alone, but I was so tired that I didn't care. I went straight to my room and collapsed on my bed.

My room was a lot nicer than I was expecting it to be.
view out of my window.
The next morning, I got up at 6:00, showered, and ate a breakfast consisting of toast, a plantain, and some juice. Jeff had sent me an email earlier telling me the fruit juice was the best fruit juice ever. And yeah, it was pretty good.

Arafat and I had agreed to meet each other at 7:00 the next morning, where he would drop me off at his place where I could wait until he picked up Sam. I waited in the lobby. He arrived a little before 9:00.

That was the first and last time I expected things to run on schedule in Africa

That is lesson #1 to learn if you want to have a good time in Africa.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

back.

Flying back is always interesting. It's just that it's so exquisitely different than flying there.


Flying back means I've reached the end of some chapter, of some sort of adventure in my life.  

And I kind of hate that. 

Mexico was my first adventure. I think that's where I learned how to really live life passionately, how to put some "azucar" in everyday exeriences.I learned I loved going out late at night, listening to street musicians, talking to the locals, dancing, playing with kids. I also learned about drug trafficking, poverty, and corruption. But more importantly, I figured out how to see past all that--to see the glory in a building covered with graffiti, to see the loveliness in a culture hidden behind stereotypes. My last day there I was about 98% convinced that that summer had been and would be the best summer of my life. 

Europe was the second adventure. At the end of the school year that year, I felt like my fuel tank was this close to being empty. But then I walked around Europe and it was just so full of beauty. I wish I could capture it in pictures or words, but nothing even comes close. I experienced everything in a way that just touched and filled my soul. Plenary lectures, old bookstores, looming cathedrals, intimate performances, formal halls, Les Mis, winding cobblestone streets, flowers, glorious art, food. I figured out a lot of things that summer. A lot of things about me and a lot of things about what I wanted. I can't even tell you how much I did not want that summer to end. 

I flew back from Africa three weeks ago. I've been putting off blogging about it. There's just so much to say. 

As we were rushing to get to the airport on my last day there, my mind flashed to that morning. It had been miserably humid. Because of course, there had been rain. 

We had walked from our hostel in Stone Town to the ferry that would take us back to Dar. We waded through tiny streets swirling with ankle-deep water and filth. We got on the ferry, and the next two hours we spent on that ferry were probably the two most miserable hours I spent in Africa. 

We got to Dar. I didn't like Dar es Salaam, never had. It just felt dirty, chaotic, dangerous. And the traffic is terrible. Always.

So I thought, you know, I think I'm ready to leave now. I think I'm excited to leave now. I miss clean bathrooms, not having to buy water, sleeping without a mosquito net, and air conditioning in vehicles. Plus, I would kill for a decent hamburger and something besides fried chicken.

But later, when I was actually looking out the plane window, and I saw Dar es Salaam get smaller and smaller, I realized that I wasn't excited to leave, and I especially wasn't excited to leave now. Hopefully, I'll get around to sharing some of the experiences that made it like that in the next couple of days. It's hard to explain. I was excited to go home, but I wasn't excited to leave. 

Driving to one of the schools in Zambia.
Homes in Zambia.
It's why I'm hoping to go back someday. Mount Kilimanjaro is calling my name.