Saturday, August 30, 2014

Balcony

The walls are somewhere between mint green and sea-foam. The kitchen is tiny and has no drawers, but the little fridge and gas stove we bought used at a bargain fit in just perfectly. The calendar full of family pictures that my sister made me months ago finally has a place to hang. It’s one of the first things I put up.
We don’t have any furniture yet so we are just eating on a trunk and sitting on a bunch of colorful mats, but the carpenters who work on the side of Ggaba road say the beds, couch, table and chairs should be here by Monday. (Inshallah, I say to myself, just in case.)

The hot water heater works brilliantly and the electricity hasn’t been off once since we have been here, even with a couple of thunderstorms. The bathroom in the master bathroom is a little on the tacky side, a chrome modern look that wasn’t quite pulled off. But the house has lots of windows, and despite being full of nooks and odd tucked away spaces, it feels bright and airy and open. There is a guest room that is currently functioning as my private gym, the first space in months that is big enough for me to do my “Ten Minutes Pilates Solutions” by Laura Hudson without kicking over a suitcase or Pack N’Play. Oh Laura…She has literally, literally been about the only constant thing in my life beside Bryan these past five years. The places she and I have been….

My favorite place in this house is the upstairs balcony. It overlooks our small patch of private green grass and some of our neighbor’s grass too, a quiet and incredibly friendly Canadian family with shy little boys. (They have probably never heard so much screaming wafting over the wall in all their lives.) From here I can see out over our crumbly little urban neighborhood here in the heart of Kampala – potholed dirt roads winding between the columned houses with tall gates rimmed with razor-wire and the rusting tin dukas selling tomatoes and stale biscuits through cut-out windows. Several houses are unfinished and on the grey half-walls of one, a graffiti artist has painted portraits of Nelson Mandela, Tupak Shakur, Gollum from The Lord of the Rings and the words, “One Love.”

Beyond our neighborhood there is only the rolling skyline of Kampala, deep green pushing up between slabs of cement and glass, roads, buildings, markets and slums, life teeming under the weight of the city, bursting out of every breathable crack. In the warm breeze that brushes past me I hear the hum of all great African cities – the purr of a thousand motors perforated with the screech of car horns, whistling and hammering intermingling at a nearby construction site, the wail of a street preacher undercut by a mournful call to prayer, chickens, dogs, goats and ducks all competing with the thump of an R and B artist’s song tumbling out of a passing bus. And most prominent of all simply because he is right outside the front gate, the nasal ebb and flow of a knife-sharpener’s cry accentuated by the chime of his bell and clatter of his tools on the stony road. All of these sounds blend together and soften each other’s edges creating an almost constant buzz that I find inexplicably soothing.

From the balcony I can see a cell tower about half a kilometer away. Every evening two or three figures are perched at different heights on the angled rails, some of them dizzyingly high. At first I thought they were maintenance workers or repairmen. But they are there every evening, different people at different spots, and I have come to realize they are just people enjoying the time of day and a bird’s eye view of the city too. I like that. I wonder what they think about up there, if they are the same kind of things I think about up here.

After eight months of living in guesthouses and other people’s homes, we are finally unpacking our bags. When Bryan came out of North Africa this last time, something inside me broke a little and I knew I needed rest, the kind that only comes from living in a space where you can cook and laugh and yell at your kids and make love and cry and wrestle with your babies and dream out loud as loudly or quietly or happily or sadly as you need to. I wanted that place to be North Africa. I still do. And I am still holding out hope that it will be.

But until it is, this is where I will be. In a little green house in Kampala cooking in a tiny kitchen and praying on a pleasant balcony. We are hoping it will just be the home we can rest in when we can’t be up North, the place with familiar sheets and our brand of tea in the kitchen cabinet where we can plug into life and work and community when gunshots or rumors force us away from the home we most want to be in. A place that keeps us safe and sane, and yet close by, watching and waiting for that door to crack open again so we can shove our foot back in it. A place that keeps us grounded and thankful.

Of course, it isn’t exactly that right now.

The new sheets aren’t in fact familiar and I have yet to find my favorite brand of tea here. I can never remember which light switches go to which lights and I haven’t learned to subconsciously maneuver around the trashcan just inside the kitchen door so I won’t knock into it every time I step inside. When I wake up in the middle of the night starring at a high white ceiling from my mattress on the floor in takes me a minute to remember where the junk I am (and I am talking, like, which country we are in, not what part of the house).

It isn’t home yet.

But as I wash new cups in the sink after breakfast I think about how we picked out these cups by ourselves, plastic and cheap though they may be. They are ours. I think about how I chose the brand of dishwashing soap and the crust I am scraping off of the bottom of that pan is from a meal I cooked and served my hungry family as we ate it together alone.

And all of that, silly though it may be, makes me think that though it isn’t exactly home yet, hopefully it will be soon. Maybe my secondary home, maybe not. Who knows. Only time will tell. But a home nonetheless. And though it may not be the most familiar place to me now, it has given me the gift of shallow roots and a sense of gratitude.


It is with both fear and hope that I suspect that everything else will follow in good time.      


My loves eating supper in our current dining room

Monday, August 11, 2014

Nose Ring



I’m not sure if it was dealing with the knowledge that Bryan was sitting in our house in North Africa hearing our market being hit with heavy artillery from the army barracks down the road, or simply managing two toddlers for two weeks completely by myself that made my desire to do something “crazy” so uncontainable, but about this time last week I was weighing whether I should chop all my hair off, get a tattoo or pierce my nose. The itch for something new and different was eating me alive. After weighing my options I decided that, in light of how much my husband likes my long hair and how uncommitted I was to any particular symbol to permanently place on my body, I would go with the nose ring. 

So I did it. And I love it, (though for the record, for a woman who has had two babies without epidurals I was shockingly near fainting when the lady shoved the needle in my nostril). And best of all, unlike every other secret of my life, I was able to keep it hidden from Bryan for a full week of late night phone calls. I tell Bryan everything, whether I want to or not, whether he wants me to or not. I couldn’t wait to see his face when I got off the plane in North Africa (where incidentally, every third woman or so has her nose pierced too).

On Sunday night the girls and I took our regular evening walk around the neighborhood here in Nairobi. I was going through the list of things I needed to do before the girls and I flew out – packing and weighing cargo, dropping it by the hangar, buying a few more solar lights for friends, getting a yellow-fever shot for Mikat… As we walked I continued what has become a habit by now, looking up at the tall apartment complexes and cozy urban duplexes and wondering which ones were available to rent, what kind of plants I would put on the veranda if I lived there, whether or not I would hang a wind chime. I am so hungry for stability these days and a home we can actually live in, I have taken to internally rearranging people’s furniture in their houses, mentally scooting coffee tables and rehanging pictures to suit my own tastes while politely sipping tea and nodding at small talk. While we walked that afternoon, I prayed a prayer that went something like this: God, I am so homesick right now that my common sense may not be enough to keep me out of North Africa. Tomorrow I am emotionally all in as I start blasting away at the last few things I need to do to get there. If you don’t think that’s a good idea, and I don’t mean to be pushy about this, but I really need you to make that very, very clear. Like, before tomorrow morning.

Ten minutes later my phone rang and I got my answer. A merciful, heartbreaking answer. For the first time since this wretched war began, fighting was taking place in our own town. Bryan could hear the gunfire, see the women and children running to the bush, smell the chaos and fear in the air.

So on Thursday, instead of the girls and me tumbling off the little 206 onto our dirt airstrip and making our way down pock-marked dirt-roads to our cinder-block house where the girls have a bedroom freshly painted pink, my scruffy husband stepped out of a taxi idling in the paved driveway to the shrill delighted squeals of his daughters. He dropped his dusty pack, kissed me and then said the nose ring looked beautiful.

That night after the girls were in bed Bryan and I talked for a long time. He gave me updates on our friends in neighbors in North Africa – Mahmoun has a new baby girl, Jamal Musa married an Ethiopian; he filled me in on some new Arabic words he picked up while he was, you know, speaking almost exclusively Arabic for two weeks straight. My favorite was Gisma which means something like an unearned blessing, or good fortune. He brought me up to date on the current political landscape in our area. I in turn basically filled him in on what foods Annabelle has decided are no longer appropriate for human consumption, what parts of the floor MaryKat has had potty training mishaps in. 

We were still talking as I got out of the shower that night. At which point I absently-mindedly put the towel up to my face and yanked the nose-ring right out of my nostril. 

I promptly panicked. 

There were all the stories of peoples whose piercings healed over before they could get the stud back in, (“Baby, I really don’t think it healed over in 45 seconds…”), people left with grotesque scars or complicated infections. I sat in front of the mirror for 30 minutes digging at my nose as I tried to get the corkscrew stud back in while regaling the man who hadn’t enjoyed running water in two weeks with these horror stories and cursing my carelessness. I was so frustrated.  

Finally, completed defeated and with a tacky fake-gold mushroom earring of my grandmother’s keeping the hole open, I crawled in bed with my husband for the first time in two weeks and bawled my eyes out. I snotted up his chest crying harder than I had in a long time while he told me that everything really was going to be ok, that I hadn’t ruined our reunion, that I was his gisma. After ten minutes of red-eyed hiccupping I turned to him and said, “You know, this isn’t really all about my nose ring. I think I am crying about everything that isn’t going like it’s supposed to.”

He looked at me with an honest-to-goodness attempt at not smiling (I appreciated the effort) and said, “I kinda figured.” At which point I started crying again.

I think what I hate most about trying to make a difference in a freaking complicated part of the world is how it makes horrible things sometimes feel like a relief and turns good news into a disappointment, at least for those of us who have the freedom to come and go at will. When bullets are flying in your market, there is a certain clarity that you shouldn’t bring the kids up, no matter how badly you want to, and the ease of that decision is a relief. When you hear news that everything has calmed down and it is safe to go home, there is sometimes a belly-ache of anxiety under the joy. How long will we be able to stay this time. What might my kids witness when we go back? 

It’s also really complicated to articulate all of this clearly and honestly to friends and family back home. Sometimes I want to weep and wail on the phone to a dear friend about how messed up it all is and how bad things are in our area. But then I am in danger of creating panic when we announce that the coast is clear and we are so happy to be going back, which we really are. Similarly, I sometimes push back against the media narratives of a dark continent with imagery of a beautiful place and our own local security to the point that a Facebook status update saying we have been evacuated to safety doesn’t make sense. But you said everything was fine in your area...

Not to sound like a Chinese philosopher, but the truth is, all good news carries a whiff of danger and all bad news has a hint of promise. Hope and fear are always lurking on the horizon, gracefully taking each other’s place in line as the seasons change. And what is so hard about this season is that nothing is clear cut. This is not the end of our time in North Africa. But neither is it the beginning of years on end of being settled in our home there. This is a dip on a wide and choppy sea.

We are thinking through ways to introduce a little more stability into our lives. I know you are not supposed to be a very good judge of your own mental state but I think we have a good feel for our own pulse right now. And mine is saying I need something new, something that brings just a bit of fresh air as we keep sailing forward. I’m not sure exactly what that will be yet. I do know, however, that it will not be another piercing.


Okay, mine is not remotely as impressive as the my North African friend in the top picture (can you even see mine in this picture?!) but if you look close there is a little silver freckle on the right.