Cool Sunday mornings seem to lead one to contemplation. There is crispness in the air that relieves a
significant amount of brain fog and creates a desire to find something creative
and inspiring to fill the day. It may be
finding just the right piece of poetry, an essay that touches the soul, or
looking up to see where the sunlight hits the edges of the leaves as they are
wind tossed.
I never know what these days will bring. I want to do more than I feel capable of at
the moment. My spirit wants to climb a
mountain, paddle down a river, or ride a horse across a field. My body wants to crawl back in bed under warm
blankets with a hot water bottle and a furry cat. My travels these days seem to be limited to
where books can take me. Right now I am
living in India during the time of the Buddha.
Last week I was in Albania, Syria, and Turkey at the time of the
genocide of the Albanian people. For most of July I was in Boston and its
surrounding areas solving crimes with Rizzoli and Isles. This coming week I am planning on going to
the mythical land of Westeros. I will be
coming late to that party. I haven’t
read Game of Thrones yet for the same reason I never did heroin. I am afraid I would like it too much.
This next week I am physically traveling to New Orleans for
a conference. Unfortunately that means
that most of my time will be spend in a hotel conference center. I hope to arrive early enough to be able to
take a walk along the river and maybe to the French Quarter. The New Orleans I want to see doesn’t really
exist, though. I want to walk through
graveyards and visit a voodoo queen. I
want to dress in red and attend a mulatto ball and walk the streets with the
characters from Isabel Allende’s Island Beneath the Sea or see one of Ann Rice’s
vampires in the shadow of a cathedral.
Reading has been both a blessing and a curse in regards to
travel. I went to England in 2005 and
realized the London I wanted to visit was long gone, the blood of Anne Boleyn
and Henry IIIV buried beneath the double decker buses and Mark and Spencer’s. In 2007 I was able to see enough of Tibet to
get the feel of what it must have been like to live there before the Chinese
occupation, but Lhasa was merely a ghost of its former self. Alexandra David-Neel would be heartbroken to
see the Potala palace surrounded by Chinese military and tourists shopping for
Western goods in gated shops, as was I, and is the Dalai Lama. I am so grateful to those writers who
chronicled their experiences during those times so I am able to be there whenever
I pick up a book.
What does that mean about these times I live in now? Will anyone ever want to read about the experiences
of a woman living in the late 20th and early 21st
century? Will they find my experiences
so compelling that they would want to time travel here and be a part of this
world? I don’t know. I can’t imagine why unless they are
interested in a political environment that is so divisive that I only wish I
could travel into the future to see how this all ends up. Or do I?
It is frightening. Or would that
glimpse into the future give me the hope I need? Would a poor woman, black or white, from the
world of the American south in 1840 wonder at my complaints and tell me to get
a grip and appreciate that I am able to make choices that they never had?
I guess that is what reading does. It gives another perspective. It may be fiction, fictionalized history, or
one person’s view and interpretation of an era.
There is no real knowing. It is
just the reality of the individuals and the expression through the lens of
their point of view.
On this Sunday morning, that is what I contemplate. My reality changes from one moment to the
next. My history will only be known by
me and may be interpreted by others, but no one will truly know my story. When I do tell it, I will only tell what I
want known, what I feel is of value, and I may leave out bits and pieces in
order to make myself look better or tell it all in order to explain all of who
I am. But then who would really be
interested? It doesn’t have to be
everyone, just enough people who want to know what it was like to be someone
like me in this time, at this place. But
it will only be my story. No assumptions
should be made that my story is the same as any other woman during this time in
history. It’s just mine and even my
viewpoint changes from time to time, making my story different on one Sunday
morning than it would be on another.
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