What's This Blog About?

Pacific Grove is nearly an island - it is in the minds of people who live here - "surrounded" on two sides by the blue cold ocean. In a town that's half water and half land, we're in a specific groove where we love nature but also love to leave and see what the rest of the world is doing. Welcome along!

Friday, February 11, 2011

Where Possibility Lives

The trip across town early this morning for my swim workout was dark, of course, as the swimming begins predawn.  Street lights were still bright at that hour, and the air was cold.  Later when the sky faded from indigo to pale blue, it was evident that the day would be clear and promising.

I made a second trip later back to the college, where the farmer's market is located.  The sky, ocean and everything in between was glistening as if it had just been scrubbed and polished.  The workout had been good, and I was hungry afterwards.  Even a bowl of oatmeal and some fruit did not keep the hunger down for long.  The market, I hoped, would fill my shopping bag with more satisfying fare.  

The market, as it is in the "off months," was peaceful and calm, and vendors spent time in conversation with each other and passersby, and many basked in the sun as they wiled away the time between 10 and 2.  If you'd have heard a loudspeaker playing a gentle melody, it would have fit between the conversations and rounded them to a point of ripeness.

A covey of four-year-olds arrived, guided by patient teachers who had brought them on a field trip to see the market .  They gathered around the Zena Foods booth, eyes dancing, looking for free samples of what might be offered.  They had been coached to keep their hands off of things, but the table top was only four inches below their noses, far too tempting for anyone that age.  Ahmed, attentive and enthusiastic, kept busy giving small triangles of pita bread to the small extended hands.  He spotted us and exclaimed that "Egypt's president is finally going away."  Mubarak was leaving his office, he said, much to our surprise.  We had not heard the update of the news, so we talked about it for a few minutes.

The children, never still for a moment, lost interest in the food and began to drift away.  They all waved good-bye and moved away in a wriggling cluster of energy, and the market gradually quieted again.  They had been a surge of controlled chaos with no intention except to move into the future where they might change it simply by arriving en masse and knocking the usualness of the past aside.

"This is a very good day.  Very good for Egypt.  Good that the people have made their voices and can make their own minds."  He shook our hands and said "We will talk again next week, eh?"  

In the middle of the day when the sun was at its highest point over the southern hills bordering our bay, we met a dear friend in Carmel and were again dazzled by the sparkling splendor of the day.  This is no winter; it is something particularly fine.  Heaven perhaps or the place where possibility dwells.  She had not been to Dametra Cafe, she said, when we suggested it.  Nor had we for some time now, so it became our destination.  Faisal's brother (just as hospitable and about 6 inches taller) was host and the servers were our warm-hearted friends in a matter of just less than a minute.  They dispense hospitality as if it were on sale.

As we had hoped, the oud was pulled down from the wall and the cook pulled from the kitchen to sing a romantic and poignant song to everyone, which he loves to do.  The tall and swarthy host, a man from the Middle East with a warm and charming smile, played the instrument that looks so much like a large brother to a mandolin and walked slowly between the tables.  Everyone was prompted to sing and clap in time to the chorus, which we did with gusto.

On television this evening I saw that Egyptians were washing and cleaning the streets of Cairo, proud of their city, the city they claim as their very own, wrested from the hands of an authoritarian ruler.  Egypt, said one young Egyptian, has lived through a wrenching change that was the will of the citizens, and it will be felt for fifty years now.  The light in his eyes was a reflection of the city lights around him, which shone in the night air while voices sang in the distance.

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