Sunday, July 26, 2009

Day Length

Our home in Papagayos rests south of the Tropic of Cancer. In the summer the sun passes north of being directly overhead at mid-day, but the day lengths vary only about an hour through the annual cycle of seasons with the average day about twelve hours long. Nearly equal amounts of daytime and nighttime.

During our visit in Fairbanks, Alaska, in early July we got to experience the "land of the mid-night sun." Actually, Fairbanks is a little bit south of the Arctic Circle, but the daylight to dusk cycle fills each day at mid-summer.

For some reason I awoke at 1:30 in the morning on July 6th. I peeked out of the closed blinds in our camper and I could still see the green of the cottonwood leaves and the grass nearby. All nature called me to walk to the Chena River that flows past our campground.

The thrushes chanted their mantra to call the sun back for another long-in-the-sky day. It was not the spiral song of the Vermont veery or the heartaching beauty of the wood thrush, but their own sweet Alaskan melody. The mosquitos dive bombed my head using my ears for bull's-eye targets. A fish jumped to catch an insect for breakfast in the swift tannin filled waters. Two gulls flew upstream in their sleek flight jackets in contrast with the ragged shoreline white spruce trees.

By 3:00 AM there was color rising in the eastern sky, a blush of rose, and the sky overhead was brightening to blue with the approach of morning. There was plenty of natural light to read and write without using electric lights. The smell of damp cottonwood filled all the space between the water's edge and our camper as I headed back to the screened refuge of our traveling home.

Friday, July 24, 2009

Diversity

As I steered my cart down an Anchorage supermarket aisle on a quest for ketchup, I saw a young woman intently studying the jars of spaghetti sauce. Something about her manner told me she was feeling overwhelmed by the display.

I said hi and that was enough to give her permission to ask for help. “Please,” she said, with a wave of her hand that encompassed the hundreds of jars of spaghetti sauce. “For this?” and she pointed to a cellophane bag of pasta lying in her shopping cart.

I nodded as I took in the variety of brands and styles available and imagined what it would be like to choose one if I couldn't read English. “¿Habla español?” I asked, just in case that would make our communication easier, but she just stared at me blankly. I tried a different tack. “United States,” I said, pointing to myself. Then I pointed to her with a questioning expression on my face.

“Azerbaijan,” was her answer. I don't even know what language people from Azerbaijan speak, but I was confident my Spanish wasn't going to be of much use in this situation.

I surveyed the spaghetti sauce choices quickly and found a row of jars that featured pictures of the main ingredients. One variety showed garlic next to the tomatoes, another basil, another cheese. I did my best to indicate that any of the several hundred jars would be a good choice. But it wasn't my place to decide her menu for her.

We parted, but a few minutes later I ran into her again in the detergent aisle. I never thought about how many choices there were for someone who simply wanted to wash some clothes. She indicated with her hands that she only wanted a little detergent, but she was confused by the small boxes of dryer sheets. As well she might be. I tried to explain that those boxes were not soap and steered her attention to the smallest liquid and powdered detergent choices available.

We didn't develop much of a relationship in the few minutes we spent shopping together. But it was enough for me to reflect on the human diversity that makes my life so interesting and rich.

Back in Papagayos, everyone except for Laurel and me is Mexican, and in my mind our neighbors' collective characteristics define what it means to be Mexican.

However, my image of what someone from the United States is like is a little more complicated. I have a picture in mind based on the dominant culture as I understood it from the vantage point of my childhood. But my image is so often wrong that I'm ceasing to be amazed when I see that my fellow countrymen and women come in so many skin tones and speak so many languages. It makes me proud.