Tuesday, January 29

Out for a stroll...



Yesterday David and I took a stroll around town. We walked the ten or so blocks from our house, across the very busy street Periférico (whose name I mention because it’s so sing-songy to say) to the Zócalo, the city’s main plaza. 

For me it’s a very intimate experience to walk through the streets here. The sense of space is much smaller. You brush up against people. You brush up against the old walls of cantera, a greenish stone, its quarries now exhausted. It distinguishes Oaxaca’s oldest buildings. You brush up against the telephone poles and the corrugated tin gates as you try to go with the flow of people, stepping into the street to pass a couple, smooth-stepping to avoid the careening motorcyclists. You smell the people: smoky, sweet, grungy, fruity. You smell their goods, their produce, their fresh fruit juices and their slivers of mangos in plastic cups. 

A man drives by on a bicycle with a large rack on the front. He’s selling botes, giant 5 gallon jugs of water. A young man with a beard, wearing a poncho, rides by with a basket on the back of his bike, full of blankets. The wind catches it and you see the heaping mountain of meat beneath the blanket. A flatbed truck toting canisters of natural gas circles the block blaring the recording of a bellowing cow. Somewhere it sounds as if a train whistle blows. It’s a vendor with his portable oven, roasting sweet potatoes and bananas, the steam escaping his oven, whistling.  You hear a firework go off. You stumble , forgetting for a moment how atrociously uneven the sidewalks can be. Is it more from the earthquakes or lack of maintenance? A boy peddles by with his tamale oven, he calls tamales, tamales, tamales through his megaphone. 

You pass the papelería – a shop that specializes in paper, making copies, selling notebooks, pencils, etc. Maybe 15 by 5 feet in size. You pass the carcinería – the butcher shop where you see wide folds of meaty skin hanging from a bar above the refrigerated case. You pass the miscelánea, a convenience store more or less. 12 by 12 feet the patrons crowd in to get a 1.5L bottle of water, a banana, credit for the cellphone, a small bag of chips. 

Beneath your feet there are puddles of soap suds from a woman cleaning the sidewalk in front of her shop. She throws out another pail of water, perilously close, as you pass. There’s dog shit. There are meat scraps that someone puts out for the dogs, in the same spot beneath the lightpole halfway down Xochitl street almost every day. Xochitl, you ask yourself, How the hell am I supposed to pronounce that? There are ripe pomegranates lying busted in the shade, ants scavenging them. 

People are always talking, to one another, to themselves, to you. Men cry out from bus stations, letting passersby know the destinations being departed for. You hear a firework go off. Men whistle. Incredibly short women, indigenous?, try to get you to buy wooden mixing spoons, bookmarks,  necklaces, plastic roses painted all colors of the rainbow. Vendor tents and stalls are on every corner and along every block near the city center. Doughnuts fried on the spot, any type of candy imaginable, corn cobs roasted and coated in salt, lime and salsa, popsicles, warm, sweet cinnamon drinks made of corn, fruit – so much fruit.

Children run and scream and laugh and try to get you to give them a peso by making a human pyramid. An old man plays jazzy eighties music from the same bench every day. His brown saxophone bag, all dusty and worn - like an old shoe, gapes open for tips. You hear a firework go off.

5 comments:

  1. Great post! I feel like I was there.
    -Jere

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  2. Beautiful writing. You have such a way with words.
    -Amanda

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  3. Your posts are so atmospheric...I feel as if I were with you and David on this stroll. I look forward to our next adventure!

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  4. Hi, David and Shane. I've read all your posts, but until today could not figure out how to make comments (duh!). I've thoroughly enjoyed reading about your experiences, which are clearly memories to cherish. Funny how the discomforts and frustrations are what you remember most vividly afterward--and make the best stories. Some of your descriptions are especially wonderful. I love the sense of place they give me. The panoramic photograph was great and so were the others--so much color and unique architecture. I feel like I've been traveling along with you on this big adventure. You two are very brave; the language immersion part alone would scare me off, though I really love Mexico. What a rich experience you're having. I wish you smoother sailing from here on, but in any case if you guys keep writing, I'll keep reading!
    --Uncle Rick

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  5. Thank you for taking me there through these wonderfully descriptive observations! I can't wait to read more.. xo Carrie

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