Thursday, November 10, 2011

The Magical Quietness of Coloring


The celebration of Eid al Fatr is the holy celebration that breaks the month-long fast of Ramazan (in some places called Ramadan) found in Islam. For at least two days, the women of every household are running around preparing the feast to be laid out on the dastarkhon,  a tablecloth which is set out on the floor, for the steady stream of guests that will stop by briefly to have a cup of tea and say prayers for the family. Among the dishes set out are boiled meats, homemade pastries and cakes, fresh yogurt from the family cow, seasonal fruits, a variety of flat breads, halva - a dish made from flour, oil, and sugar, and candies –individually wrapped chocolates bought from the local shops. A bowl of broth soup is brought fresh for each guest. It is a big feast and a great social affair in which everyone is out, dressed in their Eid best.  Each year I also follow the tradition, accompanied by a few local friends and colleagues from work that make sure I don’t commit any cultural faux pas during this ritual. I am grateful to be included in the celebration, and the families warmly welcome my participation. 


For the celebration in Garm, we spent three days making the rounds. There is a special emphasis to call on homes in which a member of the family has died during the year, but not all homes visited have suffered such a loss. As is customary we eat a bowl of soup in each home, sample the sweets and pastries, say our prayers, and then move on to the next house.   I spent two days visiting the homes of 14 other friends and families further away.  On the third day, I finally visited the home of my neighbor, who also happens to be a former colleague of mine, Aminjon.   I  saved his as the last in the house-visiting ritual that comprises these holy days.   


After the few days of snow and rain, the earth was soaked and slippery with mud.  It was cold outside, but the coal stove in their dim room burned so hot that sometimes the door had to be opened to let in a fresh cool breeze.

After the government started enforcing the use of energy-saving light bulbs, families were forced to use the only type of bulb available in the market - spiral, fluorescent bulbs that glowed obnoxiously white and struggled to cast their light into the smallest of rooms. In Aminjon’s house the bulb hung from a dirty electrical wire about three feet from the ceiling, looking somewhat like a small, coiled snake. Despite the bulb, the barren room was dark, but the short rays were unable to hide the discoloration along the bottom third of the walls. Many years of floor-dwelling guests and children had worn away the light blue paint and bits of the mud bricks peaked through. The small round iron stove burned along one wall, with a bright orange ring glowing in the center from the heat of the coal.  It is said that some of the best coal in the world comes from this region, and the hot glowing ring was proof.  

There were six young children in the room, a woman who was mother to only three of them, and the grandmother who sat on her bed with her back to all of us. She was reciting prayers and slowly separating prayer beads, one by one, with her crippled and severely arthritic hands. She prayed the whole time I was there breaking from her prayers only once in a while, mostly in response to the children’s bouts of loud or unruly behavior.  In this home, as in most others in the region, elders are central to the family, and thus Grandmother was placed along the wall close to the center of the room, and she was the first person visitors saw  upon entering. 

Two families totaling 13 people surrounded her, including her two sons, their wives, and their nine children, aged three to 16.  That is a lot of people at any given time, but in the winter, when only one stove is lit during the day to provide warmth, it becomes a veritable sardine can crammed with highly energized children and very little room to expend their energy.

Aminjon works as a guard in the office I previously managed and his brother is a local Mullah, which is similar to a priest in Catholicism. He is responsible for giving the five prayers a day at the main mosque in town - his only job, which is a volunteer position. That places the burden on Aminjon to be the sole breadwinner of the whole family.  He makes around $275 per month.   This scarcity of income is reflected in the remains of two former toys that could be found in the house – the wheels to one toy car, and the top to another, both of which were entertaining the three year old, Aisha, the youngest girl.  Clearly, they were hand-me-downs, already used up and virtually destroyed by her older siblings.  Nonetheless, Aisha was deeply engaged with them.

The room also had an old TV in one corner, the single bed where grandmother sat, and a pile of stuffed and aging cotton mattresses, called kurpachas, that were stacked against the far wall. Although old, these kurpachas brought the room to life with their wild floral and abstract prints displaying a bold array of the brightest colors imaginable, just short of neon. Every household in Tajikistan has a similar stash of these pliable mattresses, usually covered by another colorful and sometimes hand crafted piece of material. That stash is the supply to draw from in the event of company, when they’ll be laid out on the floor around the dastarkhon. Other than these few essentials, the empty space took up more room. This sparseness of belongings and yet fullness of family is characteristic of every household in this remote mountain valley.

I sat quietly on the dastarkhon, drinking  green tea and contemplating which pastry I would try to eat on top of the hundreds it felt like I’d already eaten that day. The only reason I even considered eating another thing was because the women, in a fashion typical to this region, cannot accept an idle guest around the dastarkhon; one must constantly be eating and drinking tea. Stuffed as I was, I continued to snack and found myself content to take in this typical family scene. I felt privileged to be part of it. The experience starkly contrasted my small family gatherings in the US; there are no grandchildren, and my mother – our elder – lives alone. 

A couple of the boys were seated on a kurpacha at the end of their grandmother’s bed, watching a program on the TV, even though they were unable to understand the Russian language being used. The oldest daughter was coming and going bringing other treats from the outdoor kitchen, and the younger children were crawling all over each other restlessly. Like busy little ants, they ran in and out of the house, opening and closing the door, sometimes fighting, sometimes laughing. Their grandmother would occasionally shout to them to be still and quiet, but to no avail. Cabin fever had settled in and they were not to be stilled.

Suddenly, I remembered that I had purchased coloring books and colored pencils on my last visit to the capital. I had been waiting for just such an occasion - winter and a collection of children - and here they were.  I excused myself, ran home and ruffled through my plastic bin full of art supplies, found the collection of books and pencils and ran back, thrilled that I had something to give to the kids. 

When I arrived bearing my handful of coloring books, the children gathered around me with curiosity. They watched intently while I selected a book and then gave it away to one of them. Each child was waiting to see exactly who would be receiving a book – as if only some would be lucky enough. The collection of blank looks made it obvious that they didn’t expect to each receive one. But as they realized they would each get their very own book, blank looks shifted to wild excitement. They grabbed and held on to their new prized possessions tightly so they couldn’t be taken away. One by one they found a spot on the floor and, sharing the colored pencils, began coloring intently.

For the next hour quietness filled the room as the children slowly studied their books, carefully choosing the first illustration they would color. The oldest, a girl of 14, helped the younger boys and Aisha, who I noticed was the only one to combine colors, creating multi-colored balloons.  The grandmother paused her prayers, turned to me and said, “You couldn’t have brought those over earlier?” with a slight hint of sarcasm in her voice. I laughed, although I knew she meant it. Her relief at the quiet was palpable.

After awhile, I got up to leave. I was full, and ready to sleep. Now that the children were ensconced in coloring, and their mother and the oldest child were equally engaged in watching them, there was not a whole lot left for me to do. As I got up to leave, grandmother was still praying, and the children barely noticed me. Their mother prompted them to say goodbye and without looking up, they all yelled, “Khair Janees”.  I left feeling content at the richness of my visit – so simple, yet deeply connected and meaningful. Walking home, I made a mental note to remember to get more coloring books, and to visit my closest neighbors more often.  They were, after all, like second family.












Tuesday, November 08, 2011

Guilt, the Joy Killer


As I was walking from my living room into my bedroom to retire for the evening, I shut off the lights and uttered the words, "thank you" from a genuine place of deep gratitude for this day; for life; for being alive.  I was grateful to have been able to spend most of the day with people: my neighbors down the hill; the boys that came to my house for English class; the neighbors and their kids right next door (with whom I took up coloring using the colored pencils and coloring books that I gifted them); and Qadrubullo, the caretaker of the land.  As far as accomplishing anything towards my bigger goals, i.e., towards the business, towards some form of financial freedom, towards marking anything off the long list of things to do - I failed spectacularly. But there are days when who you sit with - including the children - is far more important than another task crossed off the list.  

Or is it?

When the feeling occurred, it emanated from a true place of joy, but as I wrote the above, guilt crept in and I started questioning whether I was simply justifying not having accomplished anything?  Am I singing the "life is too short" song to try to exonerate myself?  And where is this coming from?  When I was employed, I never achieved the work/life balance.  Ever.  I came closer to it in the winter when I would spend the weekends at buzkashi matches.  But the rest of the week and the rest of the year, outside of winter, was spent laboring in the harsh, driving madness of work.  

So ...

Am I wasting time and just making excuses?  Or am I, in the longer term, accomplishing the work/life balance?  Or am I now in the struggle to accomplish the life/work balance?  You see, it isn't that today was the ONLY day that I have spent with people.  Today just happened to be a day when I truly felt the joy of it and gratitude for it.  And when I was finally able to feel the joy of that, as soon as I wrote it down, I started feeling guilty.  

What is wrong with this picture?  Have I been conditioned so effectively to an eight-hour workday (more like 11-14), where achieving or accomplishing is of more import than just enjoying a day being alive and being with people? I’m not sure I like that.  


Guilt is a joy-killer.  A true, pathological, serial, joy killer.

Sunday, November 06, 2011

Shifting Tunes


Melancholy is a tune in a minor key
The notes in the minor keys vaporize inside my chest
Through the vapor the mountains crescendo
Can I scale them
And sing a song of triumph
In a major key?


Sunday, October 30, 2011

Seven-Story Mountain, by Railroad Earth

Here I offer lyrics to one of my all-time favorite and deeply appreciated songs by Railroad Earth, called Seven Story Mountain.  17 minutes and 17 seconds of wonderful bluegrass, fiddles, drumming, and crescendos, with poignant and timely lyrics, given my current wintry introspection:  
... to see a light, but fail in strength to follow ... got to find a light and fill my heart again.  Yes. Yes.  A resounding YES!


Oh Lord to see a light, but fail in strength to follow
Sometimes it's hard to let it go
Oh Lord, to fail in heart and each day grow more hollow
Sometimes I just don't want to know


But the road that led me here
Is begun to disappear
Sometimes I wonder where I am


Oh Lord, to hear a voice but let it fade and wallow
Sometimes its hard to let it go
Oh Lord to find the words but keep them in and swallow
One day the top is gonna blow


But the road that left me here
Is begun to disappear
Sometimes I wonder who I am


Oh Lord to stumble blind for years without knowin'
Sunrise has burned my eyes again
Oh Lord to crumble quiet watching from the silence
Sunrise has burned my eyes again


It's a seven-story mountain
It's a long, long life we live
Got to find a light and fill my heart again


It's a seven-story mountain
It's a long, long life ahead
Got to find a voice and fill my throat again

My version is on the album Railroad Earth Live Sampler.  There is also a nice audio version here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EAsGbdqdYk0

Friday, October 28, 2011

Leaping off the Great Edge

Leaping off the Great Edge, where will I find myself?  
Where will I lose myself?  
Like the caged bird, I must die to be set free.  
Dying to myself is a welcome proposition.  But what will follow?  
Who will be The One to Come After? And from where will she come?  
I pray she be stronger, fearless, more disciplined, more deeply compassionate, an expanded visionary.  
It already IS.  
She already is.  
But where?  
Where is She? 

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Solitary, but not Alone

Sitting on the Roof of the World, thinking to myself that it's a damn fine view. I did not grow up in the mountains so I can't put my finger on why they magnetized me so, but sometimes all I can think about is being up in them; walking, riding, sitting, and gazing at the magnificence and perfection. Seriously, it borders on obsession.  That might not be such a bad thing.


This extended journey provided stupendous weather as we traveled through the high pasture lands in the eastern region of Tajikistan.  The pasture lands - called ailoq in Tajik and jailu in Kyrgyz - are nestled up in the mountains anywhere from 2,500 to 4000 meters (8,200 to 13,000 feet).  In this district it is the women that are the primary occupants, mostly living in yurts and caring for the livestock of their village.  A young man will take the flocks of sheep and goats during the day to graze, but the cows and their calves are driven away from the homestead in separate directions, only to return in the evening on their own.  That is the advantage of bovines - the mothers and their young will return to each other in the evenings, whereas the pesky goats will lead the sheep over hill and dale and never return, if they had their way. 


On this particular day Quvatbek and I enjoyed a leisurely walk, past all of the yurts and up to the 4,600 meter-high peaks (> 15,000 feet). Tajikistan lays geographical claim to one half of those peaks, while Kyrgyzstan claims the other half.  I wanted to walk up to this (seemingly theoretical) borderline and put my toe over it, claiming proudly (if not tongue-in-cheek) that I walked to Kyrgyzstan.  Granted, I did make the climb (or most of it), but it was not treacherous and exhausting (like last year's three-day trek over snow-ladden mountains); however a gala, or herd of horses with one jealous stallion prevented our final claim to fame by protecting his mares aggressively.  Our young stallion would have been no match for him, so while Quvatbek and his horse kept their distance, I took up a place on a rock closer to the herd, sitting very still with my camera taking photos and videos of them.  True to their nature, they slowly and curiously came in close, interested in me and the camera, and then, curiosity satisfied, meandered off to continue grazing.  I felt so blessed to be surrounded by these semi-wild, spirited creatures in this wondrously and palpably spiritual landscape.  To be here by yourself is not to be alone. If you look, listen, and hear - not with your tactile senses, but with your heart, you surely understand that you are not alone.











Friday, September 16, 2011

Life above 3000

Life above 3000 meters, or nearly 11,000 feet can be harsh, driving, spiteful even, but in this setting, the beauty can overtake you and bring you to tears at the feel of the closeness of God.

One lone yurt sits at the base of a 7-year old avalanche of glacial ice. Yakub and his wife weather the elements, the bears, and the wolves and watch over their village's cattle for the summer months. Not many reach this remote place and when we showed up bearing rice, carrots, and onions, they lit up, beaming with excitement at the prospect of something more diverse than bread and the endless supply of dairy products they consume. "If only all guests were like this" they said, laughing. My hats off to them ... or, as they say in Tajik, my hands up. Ofarin!

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Caught Between Worlds

I have a theory that I was a fish in a past life and that I'll be a bird in a future life. I sometimes feel an awkwardness in my body, like I'm caught in between the two other worlds and contained by a life on land.


Thursday, July 07, 2011

Acting on inspiration



It's the strangest thing, though, how I struggle to actually get things done. In a guest-loving culture, one eventually has to play host. Repeatedly. I have to admit, I'm not nearly as good at being a host as I am at being a guest. Partially because I don't have my team of adept men and women in the background daily facilitating and implementing the 'open house' policies and procedures of every household in this valley and beyond. Its impressive. Impeccable. Admirable.
So I'm not sure how it is that one without a job can end up being so busy that nothing is accomplished in the end. Mysterious. Perplexing. Ironic. I think the lack of a forced schedule plays into this dilemma. I find when I am under pressure I actually accomplish much more, although I also forget a lot more too. And speaking of forgetting ... wait, what was I going to say? That's my daily quote now.
On and on the idiosyncrasies bloom when one is free and open. I welcome them. Its like getting to know a whole new me. The lack of boundaries makes my spirit and energies and thoughts fly beyond the usual limits ... soaring sometimes in distinct patterns and at other times staccato; bravado; or just plain out of sight. There's an accompanying expansion, if one is not too careful ... and not too careful is exactly what we're after. Too careful might carry a hint of fear and these are the days to bury fear six feet under or further. These are the days for plowing straight through anything that happens to appear on this path; not thoughtlessly or carelessly, but also without even a nano-second of hesitation.
My mantra for this epoch: I will not hesitate to act out of inspiration. Have you ever had one of those fleeting moments where your heart is so profoundly moved by something that you absolutely see clearly what act you need to accomplish? Those times that you fail to act on them, or, let's keep this personal, those times that I fail to act on those inspired moments I always feel a twinge of regret. As much about the failure to act, or rather at the second-guessing that stopped my actions, which is what is really going on and, if I stop and think about it, both are the result of fear. Thus, bury the SOB fear as close to the burning, churning core of the earth as possible, stand up straight and ACT. ON. WHATEVER. INSPIRES. YOU. NOW!
Hey! Who stole my soap box? Show's over. 'Night, 'night.

Tuesday, July 05, 2011

Sweet moon. My moon.

Saw the moon last night again. First time in awhile. I breathed a deep sigh of relief, combined with familiarity, gratitude and a comforting calm.

Oh the moon. Sweet moon. My moon.

Life is good when she comes around grinning at me once a month ... those months, at least, that I am fortunate enough to glimpse her. Those months that she has not become so shy that she covers herself with a cloak of clouds. She was waiting for me last night as I walked out of a world of a different kind and into the connective light and smile of her warmth and grace. My heart soared up to meet her suggestive light and deep feeling of love.

Thank you escaped my lips in a breathy expression. Thank you a thousand times. It is good to be reunited with you.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Home Sweet Home



















I just realized recently that I had not even posted a photo of our beautiful Rasht Valley. I love this place to the core of my being. Don't know if I can even explain it articulately or poetically, or any other way, but it is now in my marrow. The picture on the top is the town I live in, Gharm, and the one on the bottom is looking up the valley towards Kyrgyzstan.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Bee-ware



I finally had my first meeting with 10 honey producers to discuss the merits of starting a honey cooperative. This will be my first foray into this world of business and I may just end up stumbling blindly through each process until and unless a number of angel helpers step in to guide my way. I am excited beyond measure or words. I think the potential for our success is enormous. Rasht Valley honey is, beyond a doubt in my mind, some of the BEST HONEY IN THE WORLD. And, according to a honey report I read today, "Demand continues to outweigh supply for honey in the world market. Prices remain very strong for all the available honey." Bee-ware world, here we come.


Friday, April 08, 2011

The Golden Light

Sometimes life feels like this picture - a dark ominous cloud hanging over head, following us around like a little ship on the wide expansive sea. But, there's this golden lining here - the light. We have to reach for the light and keep reaching, stretching out of the darkness. Focus on the light. Focus. On. The. Light.

Friday, March 25, 2011

I have a tendency towards purple or hues thereof. Speaking with my Spanish colleague Emma one lazy day, we were discussing this bold visual blast. Emma states, "I don't like the color purple" in her sweet but sassy Spanish-accented English. I look at her and state emphatically, "Emma, purple ain't a color, it's an attitude!"

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Fire on the Mountain

On top of the mountain with my horse, Fire. Sun is shining gloriously. Spent the night under the gazillions of stars. Fasting from sunup til sundown. No food. No water. Drinking in the sunshine and eating up the views communing with God in nature.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Tapestries

All the myriad paths we take add to the tapestried map of our lives; the multi-colored, multi-textured, multi-layered and patterned weaves of cultures, languages, ideas, people, emotions, beliefs, humors, loves gained, loves lost, hearts broken, bad decisions, good intentions, wild adventures, and on and on and on. In the end, if I were to die tomorrow, I'd say it's been a good ride - a wild ride and not one without radical ebbs and flows and ups and downs and vicious circles and tender memories. I'd like to share it all some day. Perhaps I'll start soon.