Category Archives: Adventure

A Little Piece of Perfection

Yesterday was a pitch perfect day, and one I relished, after so much frustration with the computer and desk-based part of my research. I have been spending untold amounts of time indoors right now, finalizing decisions about my research plan, timeline, and most importantly, field sites, hovering over three topo maps of Kaski District (in which Pokhara and the Institute of Forestry are located), for more time than I’d like to admit, with less to show for it than I expected. I wasn’t down, per se, but I needed a good day. And that is exactly what I got.

At long last, I feel like I’m starting to get there with my fieldwork prep, and am hoping to spend much less time on my laptop and indoors as of late this week, when I’ll head into the field to do a practice run on my sampling methods, and see how it goes, how long it takes, and what I need to change. The forests are so close I can taste them. Kind of.

Yesterday started out pretty normally, what with me being forced out of bed by the intense and oppressive heat, which seems to seep in through the windows and under my door shortly before 8 am every day. I generally try to begin my day at 7, so as to maximize my time before breakfast at 10. Everyone else calls the first meal of the day “lunch,” but since it’s all daal bhaat all the time, you may as well call it dinner for all it really matters. Despite two fans going at all times, sucking up Nepal’s limited electricity and spitting it back at me in the form of regular waves of warm air pulsing in my direction, I haven’t managed to stay in bed past 8. The sun comes up at around 5 or 5:30 in the morning, so the day is bright and well-begun by the time I can bring myself to roll out of bed and under the showerhead, where I briefly rinse off before beginning my day. Most of the Nepalis have by this time been up since the dawning of sun, and many will have gone for exercise, walking or jogging through the streets of the city while they’re still quiet, or to the little temple adjacent to my building, for Puja (prayer). Sometimes both.

I spent a little bit of time posting two excessively long old blog posts, answered some email, and downloaded a proposal I’d promised to edit for a professor friend here. I am becoming quite the editor of various faculty and administrators’ writing, and as I type there sits next to me on the table what I understand to be a newspaper article, titled ‘Agriculture in Nepal,’ which awaits my review. I’m not spending an excessive amount of time doing this editing, but it seems to me that to help with something that comes so easily to me is to do a very small favor for a community of people who have welcomed me very warmly. And so, I edit. A lot.

After daal bhaat (and it was paneer daal bhaat, which means a type of cheese – score!), I returned to my quarters and did a bit of editing, becoming restless (and sweaty) as the morning and the heat proceeded, hand in hand. I was thinking about how I needed to find somewhere else to go to do writing and work, sometime soon, because as it is now when I stay here in the guesthouse apartment to do work on my computer, I am attached to the wall by ethernet cord (an unfamiliar feeling for an American), making me feel glued to one particular seat in our common area, which in turn makes me even more agitated than I might otherwise be. The tables here are short, coffee-table-style, so there are few good ways to set up a computer for typing, and I often end up with my laptop on my lap, which is simply torturous for the amount of heat the thing gives off. Way to go, Apple.

But yesterday, shortly after completing the proposal review – on which I think I did a very good job, to be truthful, and through which I realized how much I’ve learned this year – Professor Singh-sir, one of the professors who has been kind and accommodating in helping me out around campus, came by and helped me think through my field site selection a bit (I am looking to sample twelve different forests, and they have to be of approximately the same species composition, facing the same compass direction, at approximately the same elevation, and reasonably close to one another – no mean feat), which was exactly what I needed as I sat struggling to push through a mental block in my thinking on sites. Professor Singh-sir helped me outline my next steps and filled in the blanks on who I would need to talk to to do so, and then invited me to a gathering at his house at 5 (by which he meant 6 in Nepali time) of the academic community’s “women’s group.” He made clear to me this wasn’t a gathering of the students, but of the women of the community – mostly professors’ wives, but with a few professors and female staff members thrown in as well.

I was touched and pleased to be invited, as my own company has been a little redundant, at present, and decided that since almost all of the professor’s wives would be wearing kurta suruwal, the traditional dress of a long shirt (it goes to mid-thigh), balloon-like cotton pants, and a scarf worn backwards over the shoulders (so the ends are both hanging down your back and the middle curves around your neckline, almost like a necklace made of wispy scarf material), that I would, too. I had purchased three kurta suruwal the last time I was in Nepal, so that I could wear them in the villages while doing my field research. I’m unclear at present as to whether this is a necessary and beneficial step, but was relieved at present to get out of my sweat-soaked jeans (which I’ve been wearing rolled to just below the knees, for propriety), and into some billowy cotton fabric which would breath much more easily. I had been contemplating wearing kurta suruwal for days, but the students here dress very much like students would in the contemporary US (with the exception of a “New Kids on the Block” t-shirt I caught sight of in the cafeteria this morning – a little behind on the times) and the young women do not themselves wear kurta. So it seemed a little bit bizarre to wear one myself among so many young women who dress like me, the bideshi.

At the appointed hour, then, I donned my very pretty aquamarine blue kurta, pinned up my hair, matched a set of earrings that were a gift from Kathayoon for my birthday, and quite self-consciously strode out and down the little row of professors’ and staff apartments, which are arrayed as condos would be along a narrow street, each constructed after the same exact model but enhanced and adorned by the owner’s plants, motorcycles, and children playing in the yards. As I went I was very conscious of the members of various families stepping to the front doors and windows to see the campus bideshi wandering down their way in her kurta, probably wondering how I had come across one in such a large size. I kept my shoulders back, and head up despite my slight self-consciousness, and met Professor Singh outside his apartment, where he helped to re-connect me to one of the young women scientists here, who is very, very good at what she does, and whose father is on the staff at IOF. It was very nice to see her (although I felt a bit goofy and oversized in my American-size kurta), and with Professor Singh-sir’s encouragement, we both made our way into the women’s group event, which turned out to be a mothers’ group.

Mothers’ groups are ubiquitous in Nepal, particularly in the villages. Becoming a member (and thus a mother) is a point of incredible pride in Nepali culture, and in fact the word for “woman” is traditionally not applied to a woman until she is married. So if you never marry, or you marry late in life, you would traditionally still be referred to as a “girl.” The same goes for men, who are boys until they marry. So you can have a 35 year old “boy” and a 16 year-old “woman,” but I, who have been referring to myself as a “woman” since a particularly thoughtful decision when I was 23 or 24, am still a “girl” here. I actually took the time to explain to my friend Deepak (a boy) the other day whereabouts the line is between “girl” and “woman” in western culture, and why calling an independent, confident, competent woman like myself a girl is a little bit insulting, when it happens in my own country. When it happens in Nepal, though, it’s obviously just fine.

So with little ceremony but a lot of jittery nerves, Neeru and I stepped out of our own shoes and past the large pile of shiny flip-flops and sandals that mark the doorway of a women’s gathering, and stepped into a dherai garmi (very warm) room fully of happily chatting, kurta suruwal-clad women, sitting on the floor with legs folded, leaning up against one another’s knees, and generally sprawled throughout the room in a little grouping of happy motherhood, catching up with one another and chatting animatedly until we entered, and the room fell silent. It was a little like being adopted by about twenty “aunties” at once, as I looked around and saw to my relief the familiar and friendly faces of professors’ wives I’d already met, including three I know somewhat well. Neeru shepherded me towards a seat on the fringe of the group, and very kindly took questions from those who had not yet met me, to give me a moment to gather my thoughts (and speaking skills) before debuting some pretty mediocre Nepali in front of all of these wonderful, beautifully dressed older women.

But debut those mediocre Nepali skills I did, and stammered through a weak introduction of myself in Nepali, while they all sat quietly listening and observing, until Neeru very generously took over, and added the relevant details I’d neglected to mention, like that I’m a graduate student, I’m here for research, I’m from “Ale University,” etc. The women there were all very warm and friendly, and as I watched and normal conversation resumed, they took turns making contributions to a fund they use to do charitable works and to learn crafts, writing each contribution down into a large book, and putting their 200 rupees monthly donation ($2.60, or half the cost of a full day’s work by a field assistant) into a plastic bag at one woman’s feet. It was pretty interesting, to tell the truth, and I honed in on as much of the Nepali conversation as I could.

Adults in Nepal are much more flexible than in the United States, easily and comfortably sprawling on the floor or leaning up against a seated friend’s knees while sitting in a group. Nepali men and women, boys and girls, are much more touchy-feely than Americans are, which I think is tremendous. Boys here walk around holding hands, or, cuter, with their arms around each other’s shoulders and waists, as a sign of friendship, as do girls. Men and women would generally not walk holding hands or arm in arm unless they were married, but they do so extensively with their own gender. It seems like it would make friendships within your own gender closer (try arguing with someone you just had your arms wrapped around, or were holding hands with), and probably fills in the gaps in touch and human contact that Americans fill with lovers and boyfriends before marriage. I find it really nice, and was always really grateful when Kanchan would take my hand in hers in Kathmandu before we crossed the street. Without that hand to hold, I may well have taken a taxi to the other side, my first few days in Nepal, and would definitely have risked being hit by one of the dozens of motorized and quasi-mechanized conveyances that Nepalis employ. Beyond safety, though, its just nice. Human contact is never really a bad thing.

At the women’s event I sat quietly next to Neeru for awhile, making conversation and straining to catch the rapid-fire conversation of my Nepali hostess and her friends, which turned out to be the problem of disposing of plastic, and how to manage garbage here. A subject after my own heart (ah, garbage!), it is always great to hear people talking about how to resolve environmental issues in their own communities, and it was a lot of fun to kind of “listen in” on. While we listened and chatted we were brought little metal plates called thali full of all kinds of Nepali khana (food): a kind of beaten rice that ends up dry and crunchy, about the size of popcorn; a thin, dry, papery bread akin to what you’d have in Indian food restaurants, which is my favorite because it is surprisingly flavorful; three totally American-style store-bought cookies with vanilla frosting in the middle; and a final small Nepali item that eludes me at the moment. It was a lot of food, and was accompanied by sliced mangos (of which I ate a whopping five yesterday!); ciya, or tea with milk and more sugar than I care to acknowledge; and glasses of “juice” that were really water with something akin to Tang mixed in. It was absolutely lovely, and I ate all of it.

After a short while I filled the women of the community in on Rajesh, one of my peers and a friend from the Forestry School, who had emailed me that he had shaken the hand of Hillary Clinton at Yale’s graduation. We had a funny moment when I asked if the women gathered knew of Hillary Clinton (as I knew they must), and everyone looked confused until Neeru “translated,” affecting a Nepali accent and translating ‘Hillary Clinton’ from English, to English. Upon which everyone smiled knowingly, and proudly. I was glad to be able to share news with them about a member of their community of whom they are so proud, and it has been fun to see how everyone here and there is connected. Another friend from my class is half Nepali, and one day I was eating breakfast at the house of a faculty member here, and he said he went to the University of Maine Orono, where that classmate’s father is on the faculty. On a whim, I asked him if he perhaps knew a Professor Pendse, or his daughter Sabina, and fifteen minutes later I was staring at a very current photo of my friend from the US, who I later emailed at her internship in Italy to tell her I’d seen the picture, and that I’d met the family. It is indeed a small world, after all.

After eating at the party Neeru and I took a walk to a lookout point that I don’t know how to spell but which is pronounced “Too-toong-gah,” a deep gorge formed by the Setikhola (Seti river) carving its way through Pokhara. It’s a pretty lookout point at which many people gather as the day ends, and we sat there happily talking about field research and field inventories in our kurta suruwals, connected by our dorky passion for measuring trees. Neeru is a pretty, diminuitive woman with nervous eyes, who absolutely comes alive while discussing forest science. This woman is so capable. I am in awe of her, and many of the other students here. She pulled facts, measurements, dimensions, and tree species out of thin air, is familiar with the Village Development Committees (VDCs) managing the community forests all over the valley, and just really knows her stuff. It’s an amazing thing to watch someone who has really found their space in the world as they so completely own it, and I am incredibly glad for her guidance and companionship.

As we sat there a younger male student named Bishwa came along, who had invited me to that same spot earlier in the day, but who I assumed had forgotten to call me before he came, when in fact he was just operating on Nepali time. Bishwa looked perhaps a little bummed I hadn’t accompanied him to see Tootoonggah for the first time, but cheered up a bit when I asked him to join us in the sitting, and inquired as to how he liked his new American music. A day or two before Bishwa had traded me a pirated copy of ‘Caravan,’ a gorgeous movie filmed in Nepal that was, as any Nepali you bring it up with will tell you, nominated for an Academy Award (as well it should have been). I in turn gave Bishwa some funky music (Aretha Franklin and Ani Difranco) and some of the pop I’ve gotten from Kathayoon this year, because he kept asking me questions about American bands and pop culture I hadn’t heard or listened to since high school – Linkin’ Park, anybody?

I gave him what could easily be termed the “Anti-V-Day playlist,” for those who know what I’m referring to, which is to say a mix compiled for a party the girls of my house threw this past Valentine’s Day. It’s a saccharine sweet, pop-princess meets electronica mix that’s fun to dance to, which I thought would suit his tastes well (Bishwa told me he likes Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, and I think Celine Dion when I first met him – I really didn’t know what to say in response). I exercised just enough tact not to pass along such 827 favorites as “I Kissed a Girl” and “Take Me on the Floor,” but did give him a sampling of Lily Allen, including “LDN.” And let me tell you, it’s an unfortunate moment when a sweetheart of a Nepali kid (he’s 22) asks you to translate the lyric, “fella lookin’ dapper when his sitting with his napper then I see it’s a pimp and his crackwhore.”

Regrettable lyrics aside (thanks Lily), it was a really pleasant, nice ending to an enjoyable afternoon, and I was delighted to be reunited with Neeru, and to have coincidentally met up with Bishwa. Upon returning to campus I headed off to the cafeteria to catch the tail end of dinner, and met up with Professor Abadesh Singh-sir and his wife (my hostess in the afternoon), and walked with them in the cooling air, a distinctly Nepali habit. All the professors and their wives (who dress up for the occasion) go out walking in the evening, strolling through the campus and sometimes out onto the main streets as well, to get some exercise and enjoy the air. Professor Singh-sir had that day gone to the locksmith to get me a set of keys to his program’s office, which was created with Yale’s support, and where I am now pleased to be able to work.

And the night went on this way. From Neeru I had joined Professor Singh-sir, and from Professor Singh-sir and his wife I encountered the M.Sc. students who are my level and who dined in the cafeteria at the same time I did. We’d just begun to become friends when they’d invited me to stop by earlier this week, to my great delight, and on this night I ran into Deepa, one of the women, and two of her male friends. I felt a little bit nervous because I was still in my kurta and they were in a tshirt and jeans, but they said hello and told me my kurta was nice. I told them I had wanted to wear one of the kurtas for days, but felt silly wearing one when they themselves didn’t, at which Deepa came over and took me by the hand, and told me they had just been discussing how beautiful I looked, like a proper Nepali. And my heart just soared. Not because of looking beautiful in a kurta, or being a proper Nepali (okay maybe a little about being a proper Nepali), but because it was just the most wonderful day from top to bottom. I feel so at home on this campus, where I so obviously was not actually at home in the least, and so glad to have ended up here.

From Deepa and her friends I went to the cafeteria, and the cafeteria ladies I had met earlier in the day greeted me with excitement about my kurta, asking me where I had purchased it, telling me it was very nice, etc. It was such fun. After a quick dinner of daal bhaat and a few more kind comments from the cafeteria staff (who think I am either very, very, funny, or a little bit weird – perhaps both), I headed back to my guesthouse, where I was met by Deepak, who had been calling me to no avail, as that particular kurta was sewn without pockets. He called into my open door while I was washing some clothes in a bucket in the bathroom, and when bid to enter came in to encounter me there, sweaty, doing laundry Nepali-style, and clad in a kurta, and was, suffice it to say, very surprised. He told me I made a “Ramro Nepali keti” (good or nice Nepali girl), and we decided on impulse to take his motorcycle for a ride in the dark (very slowly, he promised) and go buy some beer to bring back to the guesthouse.

Fifteen minutes later we were gliding slowly through the dark of night, stars clear in the sky above, motorcycle creating little cooling currents of wind, me in a kurta suruwal, and it was all I could do to think, “Is this really my life?” I put my head back and looked up at the stars as we rolled around through the dark of a rare cloudless night in Pokhara, cool breeze blowing through my hair, passing looming pipal and bari trees, under which the people usually come to rest and talk,. Cows slept, huking dark masses along the sides of the streets, dogs barked lazily in the lanes, and the occasional other motorcycle passed quickly through the dark. It was, suffice it to say, absolutely perfect. All I could think while on the back of the bike was how much I wanted to hold onto the perfection that was that afternoon, and savor it as a memory worth coming back to time and time again.

-M-

…And Then I Dyed My Butt Blue

Truth be told, the title says it all. I almost don’t even know where to start on this post, if only because I still don’t quite understand how I did something so foolish. So bear with me…

The days have been hot. Stultifyingly hot. An entire campus of nappers sleeping through the afternoon, shirts and clothes drenched in sweat as their bodies give up the ghost and sleep it off, hot. And I have been wearing jeans. Everyday. And they make me (more) hot.

So in a moment of not-so-quiet desperation, I decided that I would go to Lakeside, aka Tourist-ville, and see if I couldn’t find, in this country of modestly dressed women, a pair of shorts. As I have mentioned before, one of my greatest oversights in packing was putting aside a small black pair of mesh shorts, which have made every trip before and will now make every trip in the future, because I decided at the time that they were potentially indecent and too…well, short.

What I forgot in that moment at 4am, when I put them aside, was the value of black soccer shorts for two things. The first, for calling them bathing suit bottoms and wearing them swimming with my sportsbra (and now my secret’s out! The shame, the shame!), and the second, for sleeping in. Especially in countries where the weather can get hot. Cue the memory of me looking up the mean monthly temperatures for Pokhara, Nepal, and apparently not understanding a thing I read. Because lordy, it is HOT. And I could have used those shorts.

So I decided that in Lakeside they would perhaps sell pairs of shorts, if only for swimming, on the relatively cheap. Lakeside’s prices are outlandish in Nepali terms, but I find that sometimes in the middle of negotiating a final price for this or that piece of clothing, I realize that the question is of whether it will be $2.50 or $3.00, and am surprised enough to pay the higher price. Lakeside seemed like a safe (and my only) bet for shorts, and so off I went, to track some down, on a day when I had more legitimate errands to run there as well.

But as it turns out, Lakeside is still chaste enough to only sell skirts, and not to sell any that run shorter than just above the knee (which is still pretty inappropriately short here). After a good deal of sifting through faux North Face jackets and strangely humorous Nepali takes on western-style clothing (which I totally plan on going back to buy later for the FES Box ‘O’ Fun), I eventually came upon a very basic blue wrap skirt, which the Dai (older brother) told me was rupees 300, or $4 US. I bought it right then and there, thinking that at least I could wear something shorter and thinner than my cumbersome, stupidly warm jeans, and that at worst I could use it as a kind of easy to grab wrap, in case someone knocks at my door when I was sleeping, and under-dressed.

Pleased with my purchase, and my Nepali, I made my way home to Ban Campus and, I’m embarrassed to admit, put the skirt right on, wearing it for the rest of the day, despite the fact that I knew deep down that the thing was just a tad too short. I was too hot for perfect propriety, I decided, and resigned myself to bending one rule of cultural adherence only on the days which exceeded 100 degrees – which has been most of them, as of late.

Back on Ban Campus I wore my little skirt that first day, and then wore it again the next, although both times with a proper top – never with a tank top alone, for example. Always with a shirt with sleeves, and never one that alludes to the presence of breasts. I wondered as I dressed on several of these days if when I returned to the US I would dress in that much more chaste of a manner, and if I’d ever be able to wear a tank top as a regular shirt without feeling self-conscious, again.

At this point the heat was so horrendous that I and many others had taken to wearing a soaking wet piece of cloth around our necks during the day, to cool the body and also use to wipe off the face every few minutes, lest it start to drip. And so as I sat and typed on my computer in my little skirt, water droplets began to fall into my lap, and onto my skirt. I noticed after a little while that the colors of the skirt where the water droplets hit had run a little bit, but paid it no mind. I was cool, and that was what mattered.

And so later that night, as I prepared to head towards bed from my shower, I wrapped the little skirt around me and tied the knot, donning the now-customary soaking wet tshirt I’d just taken from under the showerhead, and making my way into my room. I sat on the end of my bed for a moment, and then in turning to grab my laptop from the other side noticed that there was now a large, fluorescent blue wet mark under where I had been sitting – like I had peed the color of a highlighter. And I realized in that moment that if there was that much dye on my bedsheet, where I’d been sitting for a millisecond, it was pretty likely that there’d be some long-lasting bright blue dye somewhere else. And oh.my.goodness(!) is there.

I went straight into the bathroom and took the skirt off, looked at my hips and behind in the mirror, put the skirt back on, went right back into my room to get a camera, and returned to the bathroom. There is simply no other way to say it – the skin of my ass, and a thick ribbon of flesh around my waist where the strings “wrapped” most tightly, were a fluorescent, glowing, aquamarine blue.

About twenty-minutes of scrubbing and a lot of muffled laughter and washed out digital photos later, the skin of my lower half is now closer in hue to my well-worn and washed-out blue jeans than to the fluorescent sign over a Miami nightclub, the skirt is taking a long soak in a large bucket of water, and I…am sleeping once again in my cutoff sweatpants, under which if you checked, you’d see a peculiarly colored bit of blue bideshi butt.

Oh Nepal. You do keep me on my toes, don’t you?

-M-
[Editor’s Note: Five rinses in an entire bucket of water later, the skirt finally stopped leaching fluorescent blue the color of food dye. Good thing I didn’t sleep in that sucker, eh?]

‘Out of Africa,’ Into Nepal

I am reading Out of Africa in Nepal. I realized this morning that it seems to be a habit of mine to read books about Africa while in other places, beautiful places which, were it not for the book, I would otherwise be intensely focused on.

I finished Barbara Kingsolver’s Poisonwood Bible (an excellent book) in Yosemite National Park’s Tuolomne Meadows several years back, in the days when I lived in a tent in the Sierra, and worked for the Forest Service. I remember how at the time I had to literally pull myself away from the end of the book as I sat on the bank of a little river there, separating myself from the work with a great shuddering inhalation of revival as I tried to come to terms with what the story had meant to me, and the way in which it had ended. I very clearly recall my surroundings – I had hidden myself away on the low, sandy part of the bank, so that casual viewers from the road would be unable to see my sitting along the side of the water, tucked down just low enough to become only a bump in the landscape. I recall as well exactly what the sky looked like, bright blue with low, rounded cumulus clouds as white as cotton against the sky.  As I regained awareness of my own presence and geographic place in the world, I raised my head and looking around me saw that I was, in fact, still in Yosemite. I appreciated how much more clearly I saw where I was and the opportunities that lay in front of me, back then, and Out of Africa has had much of the same effect on me in Nepal.

I brought several books with me this summer, many of which spent their year in a “to read” pile on my futon in New Haven, waiting for a day that never came. A few (including Out of Africa) I went out and bought specifically for this trip, knowing and hoping that I would encounter technology-free downtime, and that when sleeping outdoors or in places of modest accommodation, they would the perfect little gift to myself, a pathway to sleep and also to distraction, if needed. Among those I’ve brought from the futon pile but not yet read were Eiger Dreams, Pedagogy of the Oppressed, Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes, and an autographed copy of Vandana Shiva’s Water Wars. Each made the cut for the trip for a different reason, each one included in order to serve a different purpose. Eiger Dreams, a collection of stories about mountain climbing was a gift from Cristi, prescient in its subject matter, which seemed an appropriate read for someone so close to the Himalaya; Pedagogy of the Oppressed was recommended and loaned by my friend Gabe from Yale after a late night of debating social change and politics over glasses of wine; Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes was assigned (whoops!) for my Social Science Theory and Methods class in the fall, but didn’t seem relevant to my own work until very recently; and Water Wars I bought from the author herself when the Progressive Student Union I worked with as an undergraduate hosted her as a speaker, but I had previously put it down after beginning to read it because I didn’t know enough about the geography and places being referenced in India. Almost five years later now, I do know them, and am perhaps incidentally very interested in the subject of water access and availability in South Asia. And so it came along too.

The books I purchased for the occasion were of the same vein, in that there was no discernable central theme. Michael Pollan’s Omnivore’s Dilemma was supposed to be Botany of Desire, because a friend reading it at a research site years ago (I can no longer recall whether it was in Minnesota or California) raved about its contents. But when I opened Botany of Desire in the bookstore and saw one of the first chapters was all about apples, I simply didn’t feel it was what I was looking for, on this particular trip. I remember the first time I heard about Omnivore’s Dilemma, when my friend Emily at National Geographic, who I loved to pieces for our rapid-fire intellectual give-and-take, sent me an email one morning containing only the excerpt the NYTimes published, along with her thoughts on his dietary recommendations, which went as follows: Eat Food. Not too Much. Mostly Plants.

Everything Michael Pollan has written has come highly-recommended to me, over the years, and Omnivore’s Dilemma thus seemed a nice follow-on to Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, which was an incredible and thought-provoking book that I read last summer. My mother, in fact, probably still has it on her bedside table, where she left it after getting bogged down in the decidedly slow first chapter (which I warned her would happen…mom!)

Bird by Bird, which has a subtitle along the lines of Stories on Writing and Life, has come into and out of my life so many times that I considered it a matter of fate to pick it up, and laughed at the irony of it all when it came out of my backpack simply masticated by the sheer volume of things I had crammed in there with it. ‘Shitty First Drafts,’ Anne Lamott’s chapter about getting started as a writer, and the necessity of writing crap to get to the good stuff, was assigned to me in my undergraduate Writing Colleagues seminar, and five years later I’ve trucked the little paper photocopy all over the planet with me, trying to provoke myself into writing down some of the things I think as I experience the world. I brought it to Costa Rica last year hoping that I would take the opportunity to do some more substantial writing, and instead stumbled across the entire book on a bookswap shelf in a local coffeeshop, one lazy afternoon last summer in Puerto Jimenez, Costa Rica. I had no book with me I was willing to swap, however, and since the swap terms were clear and firm, I instead sat in place and read several chapters, becoming increasingly enamored with the work and the author until I left town, vowing to acquire my own copy in short order.

Out of Africa was a little bit different. I saw the end of the movie version of Out of Africa over one of the fall or winter holidays at my parents’ house this year, and was immensely moved by the story, the incredible, adventurous, determined, strong woman of whom it told, and the bittersweet ending to her experience abroad. I was moved as well by the relationships she shared in the Ngong hills of Africa, both with an array of other foreigners, and with the local tribes she comes to know, understand, protect and respect. Few movies affect me so deeply, and I found that in the weeks and months afterwards my thoughts often returned to Karen Blixen, and my desire to read her full story, in her own words. I knew the moment the movie finished that I would buy the book and read it closely, and find now that while I read it, as I did with the Poisonwood Bible, I often take leave of the book for a moment, closing its covers with a finger in place to hold the page, and clasp it unconsciously to my chest with a gasp, I am so moved by her story. The descriptiveness of the imagery, and the self-identification I feel with the narrator, rivets me, despite not being half the woman, or having half the courage, that she does.

When Blixen writes of standing and watching Denys Finch-Hatton (who I believe will become her lover, but I’m only on page 236 so don’t tell me!) in the dark after he’d shot two lions, and of how her hands had shaken while holding the torch guiding his rifle, despite her desire to be brave, and the way he gently, dryly, teased her for it later, the writing was so lucid I felt as if it were I who was in the moment, and could feel exactly the energy and affection with which she must have looked over at Denys, thrilled by the kill and the moment they shared there together, as true equals in the dark of an African night. Such gorgeous writing, and beautiful, inspirational, larger-than-life people.

It moves me too to think of how they must have felt leaving for a life in Africa, struggling to make a living and earn enough to keep their farm estates, while friends and family back home blazed forward in the comfort of the Industrial Age, never completely understanding what it was that they had experienced. Blixen writes of how her peers told her they felt a little bit like they had abandoned their country and communities at home, but were in fact fellow exiles, to her mind, and again I can relate so closely that it gives me pause, to let my mind wander a bit, and think about the choices we make in life, before returning to my reading. I think it is an important part of spending time abroad to wonder where you actually fit best, and to question whether there’s a culture or a place in the world that suits your nature more closely than the one you are born into.

Such a fantastic, thought-provoking book, and one which even as it pulls me into Africa gives me cause to think more deeply about Nepal, and about the way people of different cultures and expectations interact with one another when brought into the same small spaces. My experience in Nepal is sixteen and three quarters of a year shorter in duration, and drastically different than that of Blixen in Africa, but I take great solace in the small parallels between our experiences, and in her articulate, poetic expression of sentiments I could myself only stammer out, if I could articulate them at all.