We live in Yangon, Myanmar. These are some stories and photos of our lives here.
Friday, September 19, 2014
Farmer-to-Farmer volunteer program still going strong - 30 years later -- feature story for Devex "Doing More"
Farmer-to-Farmer still rocking after three decades - Devex story by Tim May
Associated Press pipeline story on HuffPo Green
Fracked gas pipeline across Mass - Story by Tim May
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
CSMonitor "Modern Parenting" post
Christian Science Monitor "Modern Parenting" blog http://www.csmonitor.com/The-Culture/Family/Modern-Parenthood/2014/0409/The-youngest-babysitters-African-youth-aptly-care-for-baby-siblings Post by Tim May
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Photos from my Abyei trip
https://www.flickr.com/photos/enoughproject/10330794983/in/photostream/ from Tim's Enough Project assignment
Monday, March 31, 2014
Shared housing story in Christian Science Monitor's weekly mag
Went out to San Francisco to check out some cool "co-living" houses, here's link to the story in CSMonitor http://www.csmonitor.com/The-Culture/Family/2014/0330/Shared-housing-The-sharing-economy-gives-roommates-a-new-image - By Tim May
Thursday, March 27, 2014
Abyei piece in the Sudan Tribune
Link to a piece about Abyei, published in the Sudan Tribune in October 2013: http://www.enoughproject.org/blogs/sudan-tribune-op-ed-abyeis-anticipated-referendum - By Tim May
Monday, March 24, 2014
No Country For Young Men: A generation of Lost Boys returned to help build a new South Sudan. Then war found them.
Piece by Tim May in ForeignPolicy.com about the Lost Boys of South Sudan: http://www.foreignpolicy.com/ articles/2014/03/19/no_ country_young_men_rebuild_ south_sudan_lost_boys
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
London for Cheapskates Part 3: Spit, Iron and Gold at the British Library
Above: a statue of Newton in the courtyard of the British Library. |
I arrived early enough to look around before my tour.
The library provides free wireless Internet for visitors and has a nice café,
with a few hundred small tables scattered around large open spaces. In the
middle of a weekday, every table was occupied, and not by latte-sipping
tourists taking a break from shopping, like me. These people seemed to be working – actively writing or engaged in what sounded to my
unpracticed ear to be serious adult conversation. Were they
actually discussing literature and writing, books? I swear on
the Gutenberg that I witnessed several people writing longhand on paper with
actual pencils. I saw a man and woman scrolling through a document on a Mac and
speaking in a very animated way about something important to them
– a thought, idea, word? Apparently there are still places in the world where the physical
presence of books serves as a magnet for imagination, sucking people in for research
and review and provoking face-to-face discussion. All around me, intense, private conversations were humming in hushed library tones, and I
had the feeling that for many of these fellow pilgrims, simply being under the
same roof with 16 million books was contributing to a powerful creative flow and
sense of collective possibility. With no literary masterwork of my own in which to invest brainpower, I contented myself with a coffee and then strolled through an awesome special exhibit of Mughal art and literature, as well as a free exhibit showcasing the most famous and inventive mystery writers since the genre was invented. At 2 p.m., I found my way out back to the Conservation
Centre.
We are ushered inside by Robert Brodie,
Conservation Team Leader, after being instructed not to take photographs, touch
anything or disturb the lab techs. Purses and packs are checked at
reception. Today we are especially lucky, Brodie informs us. The lab’s gold
leaf finisher happens to be working on some restorative work, re-embossing
spines of very old and valuable books; it is a rare occasion in a place of rare
works. As we enter the one-story lab, a door opens from a subterranean
elevator shaft. A pair of techs emerge pushing a cart of large dusty tomes bearing
the title “Near India Office Records.” We step aside as the patients are rolled slowly into the south-facing
workshop, designed to enable an elite corps of craftsmen and women to take advantage
of daylight streaming in through large windows. The setup reminds me a bit of
a newsroom – open and casual, people working with their heads down, hardly
taking note of those entering and leaving – except there are no computers on
the desks. Instead there are stacks of Japanese mulberry bush paper,
parchment paper, leather strips and buckram; special glues made of sturgeon; thick
books and manuscripts jumbled among strange and well-worn hand
tools, along with wooden vises, presses and small wooden structures called
tappers, loaded with dead weights, that resemble miniature looms. Here,
someone is working on the original notebooks of Virginia Woolf. There is a
collection of rare Soviet political leaflets requiring restoration. On that
desk, the papers of William Trumbull, circa 1635 – the most expensive section
of the most expensive archive ever purchased by the library. On that desk is
sitting an original work of the Georgian poet Lascelles Abercrombie.
Across the way, an expert bookbinder is using a large needle and a technique
called French sewing to re-bind very, very old sheets of music. The lab is a beautiful mess, a rehabilitation centre for priceless literature and written works of art, littered with yellowing, rusting, moldering relics representing some of the most culturally and historically important work of mankind.
Above: the King's Library looms overhead as scribes and scholars take advantage of one of the most important collections of written works in the world. |
Brodie's conservators are in such high demand that the Centre uses an estimating and bidding system, in which the curatorial staff from various departments annually submit their priorities for restoration, logging the information into a database. The database has a scoring system agreed upon by the Heads of Collection that includes factors such as the condition of the book, its rarity, level of use, and whether the item is part of the National Published Archive. How often is the damaged work actually read?
Is the work scheduled to be digitized? How extensive is the repair required? Is
the book or object scheduled to be included soon in a special exhibit? “To
guard it, fold it, bind it, it could take us 300 hours,” Brodie says. “Six
people in a unit here can do 5,194 hours of work in a year.” Once items are scored, an estimate is provided of the length of time the work will take, balanced against the work capacity of the conservators. “I have 50 people. They are the rock
stars of conservation,” but they can only do so much work in a year.
Next, we head over to talk to Doug Mitchell, a gold leaf finisher who is working alone in his own secure lab. Mitchell has been a bookbinder for 40 years. He uses albumin glaze crystals, 23-and-a-half carat gold and false gold foil to make the mix he needs. Right now, he is re-numbering in gold leaf a set of large, leather-bound historical volumes known as the Portland Papers. He uses his own spit to test the heat on a miniature iron hot plate, which is heating up a tiny branding iron he will use to press the numbers. “If there are no bubbles it’s about right,” he says. He preps the leather first by rubbing it with a clear liquid to fill the leather’s pores, then quickly presses his tiny iron into the spine in a series of strokes as he retools the binding, finishing up by swiping a solvent called Hexane over the numbers to gently polish the new gold work on the spine. Spit, iron and 23-carat gold. “Done it this way since the 1400s,” Mitchell says.
Next, we head over to talk to Doug Mitchell, a gold leaf finisher who is working alone in his own secure lab. Mitchell has been a bookbinder for 40 years. He uses albumin glaze crystals, 23-and-a-half carat gold and false gold foil to make the mix he needs. Right now, he is re-numbering in gold leaf a set of large, leather-bound historical volumes known as the Portland Papers. He uses his own spit to test the heat on a miniature iron hot plate, which is heating up a tiny branding iron he will use to press the numbers. “If there are no bubbles it’s about right,” he says. He preps the leather first by rubbing it with a clear liquid to fill the leather’s pores, then quickly presses his tiny iron into the spine in a series of strokes as he retools the binding, finishing up by swiping a solvent called Hexane over the numbers to gently polish the new gold work on the spine. Spit, iron and 23-carat gold. “Done it this way since the 1400s,” Mitchell says.
Dizzy and famished by my prolonged exposure to so many books, I headed out of the library and into the Tube again in search of gustatory nourishment, emerging this time in Soho for an early dinner at the hottest cheap restaurant in London, an Italian bacaro on Beak Street called Polpo, located in a building where the Venetian painter Canaletto once lived. Polpo showed up on everybody's lists of the top 10 cheapest gourmet eats in London, so it was an easy choice, though I was worried I might not be able to get a table. At 630 pm, I had no trouble finding a seat at the bar, though by 730 the tiny eatery was jammed to the gills. This busy little gem serves really good early wines and delectable, simple Italian fare at easy prices. I ordered a glass of Valpolicella Classico La Giaretta, 2011 (11 pounds) with a bowl of spicy pork and fennel meatballs (6 pounds), followed by a plate of mackerel tartare, horseradish and carta di musica (Mediterannean flatbread) at 7 pounds and a glass of Barbera Riva Leone 2011 (9 pounds), and that was enough for me. A swanky dinner out in Soho, wine included, for under $50, not bad considering I skipped lunch and spent nothing at the library, except for a coffee. I tubed back to Battersea and collapsed, Day 1 of my London trip in the books.
Meatballs, mackerel and a couple of Italian reds at Polpo, in Soho, provided the perfect finish to Day 1 of London on the Cheap. |
Saturday, May 11, 2013
London for Cheapskates -- Part 2 - Thrifty Lodgings, Food and Outerwear
“To be alone among the confusion is perhaps the single most
piercing emotion of any stranger in the city.” – Peter Ackroyd, London: A Biography
I stepped outside the dry cleaners into the cold London morning,
accompanied by a small plume of starchy-smelling steam. A few yards in front of
me, rush-hour traffic moved slowly down the wrong side of the street in
Battersea Park, a suburb south of Chelsea across the River Thames, over which I
had just comfortably and affordably glided in a huge red double-decker bus, accidentally
getting off two stops too early. I consulted my small black moleskine notebook,
which contained detailed scribbled notes and directions for my self-suggested
three-day itinerary for London. Out of the dry cleaners, I had instructed
myself to turn right, then right, then right onto Prince of Wales Drive. My
destination: a ridiculously inexpensive $66-a-night Airbnb flat located inside the
opulent-sounding Albert Palace Mansions in Lurline Gardens.
I found it easily: a red brick-faced building, four stories
high, embedded in a stolid bank of similar buildings fronting a narrow one-way lane
lined with cars, with inset courtyard entrances spilling over with shrubbery
and overwintered flowers. It is an apartment complex today, but like everything
in London, Albert Palace Mansions started life as something else, and, like
everything in London, has an interesting history. These buildings, I later
learned, were once part of a massive late nineteenth century indoor/outdoor
amusement complex, the centerpiece of which was the famous Albert Palace, a
magnificent iron-and-glass structure originally built to house the Dublin
International Exhibition of 1865, and then dismantled, shipped to London and
rebuilt on the edge of the gardens next to Battersea Park (which actually is a giant, municipal park). The central
part of the palace comprised a 473-foot nave for a permanent orchestra, with a giant
organ and concert hall at one end and a tea room at the other. Indoor
attractions included exhibition booths, an aquarium, picture galleries and
bars, as well as an “Indian village” featuring silk spinners, a sitar maker, singers and snake-charmers; there also were
cat, bird and flower shows, and the Viennese Ladies Orchestra had a standing
gig. Eventually though the enterprise went under and the land and buildings
were sold to developers; over a century later, this vestige of Victorian
recreation is filled with middle-class Londoners living in two- and
three-bedroom flats, such as the one I now trudged up four flights of spiraling
stairs to temporarily occupy.
To my relief, the
apartment was just as advertised: clean, neat and bright, high-ceilinged with large
windows and transoms over thick wooden doors. There was a tiny but functional modern
kitchen, a tidy tiled bathroom, a light-filled living room occupied by a piano,
comfy couch and a large TV, with some handsome antiques scattered about. My
bedroom was cozy with comfortable goose-down bedding and a large armoire,
carpeted and quiet. That’ll do, pig, I thought to myself. Hmm yes, for three
days in London, that’ll do quite nicely.
It was only 9
a.m. and though I had just traveled 24 mostly sleepless hours from East Africa,
taken a long train ride from Heathrow and then a bus to find a dry cleaners and
lodgings, my adrenalin was pumping. London. London! Rapidly, I unpacked my
backpack, containing just enough clean clothes for three days (I had previously
checked my big suitcase at the Britishly-named “Left Baggage” concession at
Heathrow) plus my laptop, iPad and toiletries. After a shower and change of
clothes, I was back outside, having consulted my moleskine, along with a
detailed London map left for me in absentia by my thoughtful Airbnb hosts, both
of whom were at work. There were no Tube stops close by, but an overland rail
station, accessible to me with my Day Pass, was just up the street and would
get me to Victoria Station just one stop away, from which I could access the
Underground. First though: food.
Just across the
entrance to the rail station, a whiff of fried sausage drew my attention to a
stream of fluorescent green and orange-jacketed police and workmen heading in
and out of a tiny diner tucked under a dingy brown trestle. Busting out my
Sherlock, I made a deduction: police and workmen = always hungry + usually in a
hurry + budget-minded = high probability of cheap and tasty food, fast. By
Jove, I was not disappointed. For under five British pounds, I soon found
myself scuppering a lake of English breakfast food that made the Grand Slam at
Denny’s seem like a foul bunt. Twenty minutes later, after a few baked bean burps
washed down with the last sips of an OK café-au-lait, I was on my way, re-provisioned
and ready.
Above: a working man's breakfast at Bridge the Gap, Battersea Park. Below, the always-bustling Victoria Station.
First stop: the
British Red Cross Thrift Store. With my sub-Saharan wardrobe of tee-shirts,
thin cotton dress shirts and summer-weight trousers, I was ill prepared for
London in late winter. Research revealed a number of highly-touted second-hand clothing
shops in the vicinity of Victoria Station. I lucked out at the Red Cross store,
where, after trying out a Rod Stewarty full-length black leather trench, I
found a thick, down-filled parka with enormous snapping pockets and plenty of
room to secret an iPad Mini, moleskine and ballpoint pen, sunglasses, wallet, fat
London street map and a digital camera, in just the right size. Yes, it smelled
a bit like another man, but not in a
bad way, and it only cost me 40 pounds, or about $61 USD – a little more than
I’d wanted to spend but hey, this is London and proceeds would theoretically go
to a good cause. And on Saturday, I was scheduled to be sitting and/or standing
outside for hours, exposed to the natural elements and potentially, showers of
soda launched by hooligans in the crowd at the Chelsea match disappointed in
the performance of one squad or the other, and I was sure I’d be glad then of
my 40-pound purchase.
I stopped next at
a touristy knick-knack shop and picked up a cheap knit hat and pair of fleece
gloves, unaware until that evening when I emptied my pockets that the cheeky
storekeeper, who cleverly pegged me for a dumb American, returned my change in
Mexican pesos. At the time, though, I felt extremely satisfied with myself for
successfully locating the dry cleaners, checking into my Airbnb flat, finding a
good local breakfast dive and obtaining inexpensive winter wear, all before
lunchtime on my first day in London. Congratulating myself on my adroitness as
a traveler on the cheap, I jingled pesos in my coat pocket as I walked to the
Tube station in advance of my next adventure: a behind-the-scenes tour of the
clandestine conservation laboratory at the world-famous British Library in St
Pancras. I was about to meet the global rock stars of book conservation in
their seldom-seen command centre, and it wouldn’t cost me a peso.
Above: The BL's Centre for Conservation: the Langley of the secret world of book and manuscript preservation and restoration
Saturday, May 4, 2013
London for Cheapskates - Part 1 - The Importance of Hazle Dry Cleaners
By video, I tried to justify tacking
a three-night solo romp through London onto the end of a nine-week rotation at
the close of my contract in South Sudan to my wife back home, who was selflessly
taking care of our two little bottomless pits of need, though I would be
freshly unemployed while touring one of the most expensive cities in the world at
a time when money would matter more than ever.
Me on Skype: “Did
you know there are now SIX Premiere League teams all based in London, and one
of them (Tottenham) has TWO Americans? Did you know football (I can’t bring
myself to say soccer anymore, I am too worldly now) was INVENTED in England?’’
Tahra on Skype: (No direct response, busy mediating dispute between the girls.)
Me on Skype: “Did I tell you that my good friend Henry Chu, London bureau chief for
the Los Angeles Times, is there? Yeah, he’s a great guy. We can hang out.’’ (In
fact Henry and I hadn’t spoken directly since 1995.)
Tahra on Skype: (No response – video screen shaking violently,
moving fast, as in The Blair Witch Project, unintelligible girls snarling, something
related to a fairy doll, Tahra trying to negotiate a trade involving millet
crackers.)
Me in South Sudan: “Tahra? Tahra? Hey. You ok? My plan is to write
a travel piece called London On the Cheap -- I bet no one else has thought of this
– and then I can offset my trip expenses by selling it freelance. Yeah. I still
have some really good newspaper connections. I could probably make fifty bucks.”
Tahra in Massachusetts: “Sorry. I’m back. Of course you should do it,
you may never get another good chance to
see a soccer game in London. We can all wait another three days.''
My husband antennae, often tuned to
the wrong frequencies, detected some wifely encouragement - was it real? I wasn’t
sure until she went online and somehow bought me one of the last remaining tickets to see Chelsea,
the reigning champions of Europe, winners of last year’s Champions League and
one of the most elite football teams in the world, playing at their famed Stamford
Bridge home stadium on the weekend I had penciled in for my London stopover.
What a wife! Until that point, I wasn’t really thoroughly committed to going,
and was a bit anxious about the implications, repercussions, funding and what
have you. But now, with my bodacious soulmate’s blessing, having somehow
finagled me one of the hottest tickets in town for a certain weekend in one of
the oldest and most famous cities in the world, it would be unconscionable NOT to
go – who could waste such a perfectly excellent (and non-refundable) opportunity,
even if I am actually a Man U fan? Well then, it’s settled.
First up: plane tickets. The company
would pay for my trip home to the States from Juba, per terms of the contract. Usually
they send me Juba-Nairobi-Amsterdam-Detroit-Albany. But this time, I boldly asked
if they could arrange a multi-city return ticket with a three-day stopover in
London during the weekend of the Chelsea game, and a red-eye out of Nairobi so
I wouldn’t have to pay for an extra night of lodging. Miraculously, the company
obliged me, and I further arranged to depart Juba and get to Nairobi in the
morning on a Wednesday, leaving me with enough time to cruise around Kenya’s
capital before the late night flight out. Upon arrival in NBO, my plan was to
hire a driver, buy some handmade beer cap toys (the girls, especially Ursula,
really like them) and something nice for Tahra at a Masaai market off the
Mombasa road, grab lunch with my soon-to-be former colleagues Phylis and Judy in
Westlands, and make it back to the airport with plenty of time before my 11:30
pm flight to London. (Author’s Note: Kenyans can make just about anything out
of discarded metal beer caps and scavenged wire. But is a lunch box made out of
beer caps inappropriate for a kindergartner? I guess we’ll find out.)
Another, more pressing question:
where to stay in London? I tried looking online for inexpensive inns, something
small and preferably luxurious, English breakfast included, in the center of
the action maybe in Soho or Chelsea, say for under $100? Or a quaint cob
cottage with a thatched roof, something hobbitty, serving greens from their organic
English garden aside the bangers and mash? But no such thing existed, and I
wasn’t quite prepared to go hosteling. (Eleven years ago on my first night in
Key West, I had to throw wasabi soy nuts at the face of a big snoring drunk across
from me on a lower bunk. Packed into a warm room with five other off-gassing, respiring
cheapskates. Worrying about my valuables.) My London friend, Henry,
electronically laughed when I asked if he knew of any nice but cheap places to
stay, and quickly snuffed out any notion I might have had about crashing with
him. Ordinarily, he emailed, he’d love to have me, but he was moving to a new
place in Clapham that weekend and it wasn’t a good time, but we should
certainly meet for a drink at least; send a text. I decided that even if he was
fibbing, I couldn’t blame him, as I hadn’t been in touch with him regularly for
18 years; possibly I had developed poor hygiene in the interval, or become an
acolyte of Tony Robbins with big plans, or a Republican. But I didn’t think it
was a fib. As I told Tahra during my London pitch, Henry is a great guy.
Then I remembered a website called
AirBnB. It enables ordinary humans to post short-term rooms to let, with good
rates, pretty much everywhere in the world, a sharing-economy kind of thing for
travelers looking for something different, on a budget. I was staggered by the
number and variety of places available in London, many at prices around $100-$150
per night or lower. I narrowed down my search to an area not too far from Henry’s
new pad in Clapham, and not too far from upscale Chelsea (which is where J.R.R.
Tolkien once lived, FYI). I found a clean-looking and tastefully decorated flat
offering a one-bedroom, bathroom and kitchen shared, owned by a young married
couple in Battersea Park, south of the Thames, close to Battersea Park rail
station, straight shot to Victoria Station, easy access to buses and the Tube.
Sixty-six dollars a night, uniformly excellent reviews from previous lodgers.
It was available the nights I needed, and when I informed my hosts that I’d be
getting into Heathrow very early, could they accommodate a morning check-in,
they said sure no problem, they both had to go work early and would be gone
when I arrived, but would leave the keys for me, a complete stranger posing as
a writer working on a piece about London On the Cheap, at Hazle Dry Cleaners,
around the corner from their flat. And so they did.
Hazle Dry Cleaners, Battersea Park, London. An unlikely point of entry, but when traveling on the cheap, one must allow for the unexpected.
I took a bus to Hazle Dry Cleaners, I think it was the 452 from Knightsbridge, after taking the Tube from Heathrow. Bought a Day Pass, allowed me to travel around very cheaply.
One of the first things I learned about Londoners: they only allow humps inside specific zones, in contrast to the No Humping policy on Amtrak trains back home.
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Viral By the Nile
I finally got sick in South Sudan.
Before you come, everyone and everything you read warns of it, such that it seems inevitable: disease and suffering. You cannot work in the poorest country in the world and expect not to contract something exotic and possibly deadly. Parasites. Amoebae. Killer mosquito and insect-borne viral infections, cerebral malaria, diarrhea, dysentery, fly bites that cause comas; beetles that secrete skin-blistering toxins. A few weeks ago my boss quietly sent me to the World Health Organization headquarters in Juba to check on reports of a possible viral hemorrhagic fever outbreak up north, in an area where we have staff. The disease is also known as Ebola, named after a river in Congo, next door to South Sudan. People were bleeding from orifices and dying, but it turns out it was probably something else, my WHO contact said. They were investigating and would let me know.
And then I took ill. It started with upper back pain, followed by a pink rash, on the same sore part of my back. The pink turned to bright red, and clear white blisters popped out and marched toward my underarm. The back pain intensified and moved under and down my right arm, girdling me, radiating into my chest. The blister rash spread along the same front, and I began to worry. I knew it wasn’t malaria – there’s no rash involved and I assiduously take a malaria prophylaxis every day, even though hardcore aid workers out here make fun of me for it. Better to get malaria occasionally and gut it out, they say, than spend the money on expensive meds which mightn’t work anyway.
Before you come, everyone and everything you read warns of it, such that it seems inevitable: disease and suffering. You cannot work in the poorest country in the world and expect not to contract something exotic and possibly deadly. Parasites. Amoebae. Killer mosquito and insect-borne viral infections, cerebral malaria, diarrhea, dysentery, fly bites that cause comas; beetles that secrete skin-blistering toxins. A few weeks ago my boss quietly sent me to the World Health Organization headquarters in Juba to check on reports of a possible viral hemorrhagic fever outbreak up north, in an area where we have staff. The disease is also known as Ebola, named after a river in Congo, next door to South Sudan. People were bleeding from orifices and dying, but it turns out it was probably something else, my WHO contact said. They were investigating and would let me know.
And then I took ill. It started with upper back pain, followed by a pink rash, on the same sore part of my back. The pink turned to bright red, and clear white blisters popped out and marched toward my underarm. The back pain intensified and moved under and down my right arm, girdling me, radiating into my chest. The blister rash spread along the same front, and I began to worry. I knew it wasn’t malaria – there’s no rash involved and I assiduously take a malaria prophylaxis every day, even though hardcore aid workers out here make fun of me for it. Better to get malaria occasionally and gut it out, they say, than spend the money on expensive meds which mightn’t work anyway.
I didn’t think it could be diphtheria, tetanus, typhoid,
yellow fever, polio or meningitis, either, because I got boosters or vaccines for all six
of the above before my first trip out, two years ago. Which also makes me a
wussy, I guess, if a fairly well protected one. I hoped.
After three days I was worried enough about the rash and internal pain, which now included headaches, to consult my
Kenyan friend Esther, a professional masseuse. I showed her the angry rashy
wasteland that was my upper right torso, and told her about the stabbing nervey soreness bubbling underneath my skin, on top of the bone.
“Nairobi fly bite, I think,” she said before turning to
leave, quickly, in case it was something else, catching. I looked it up online and
yes, there is a black-and-red flying beetle, common in Juba despite its
eponymous name, that excretes something called pederin when touched that leaves
a nasty bright red painful blistery rash.
I was secretly delighted.
A Nairobi fly bite,
imagine that! Mom and dad
will be horrified and tell all our relatives! I can blog about it and impress
everyone! Tahra can shock our friends with the news at PTA.
I wanted a second opinion, though, so I showed my boss. She’s
been here a lot longer than me and is from Bangladesh, which has its fair share
of third-world health problems.
She poked it.
“Does it hurt?”
“Yes. When you poke it especially.”
“I think it could be Nairobi fly. But why don’t you go to
the clinic and get it looked at, instead of just complaining about it?”
The next morning I presented myself at Unity Clinic, a clean
and efficient Aussie-run shop in Juba that few people other than ex-pats
can afford. They take only cash, only U.S. dollars, and it costs $125 just to
get in the door.
A Scottish nurse with a clipboard and a stethoscope asked me
about my problem.
“Two people have told me it’s probably
Nairobi fly,’’ I said, hoping to influence her diagnosis.
“I don’t think so,” she said after a quick
look.
Oh man, it could be something
juicier! Maybe they’ll have to Medevac me.
“It’s a virus called shingles. It’s related to chicken pox, which you must have had as a kid." The virus stays in you, it turns out, and can erupt when you're stressed or tired. My wife, who is a very skilled Web-based medical sleuth, had arrived at the same diagnosis a week ago, though I rejected the suggestion that my illness, contracted in South Sudan, could be so un-exotic. Also -
“I thought that’s for older people?” I asked the nurse.
"Generally."
I got some pain meds and anti-virals. Apparently I’ll be
better in two weeks.Saturday, January 12, 2013
What's Upstairs
I got in from Nairobi and reached Gate F5 in Schiphol Airport a bit earlier than
usual for my next flight from Amsterdam. Went through the X-ray machines
and handed my passport and boarding pass to a young KLM lady behind the
counter. She scanned me in and I saw red text blinking on her screen: “SEAT
CHANGE * SEAT CHANGE’’ and number 75J pop up. Whereas I had previously
carefully selected seat 11C, an aisle seat in Economy Comfort toward the front
of the plane, for the long leg to the U.S.
I hope you’re not changing my seat, because I reserved an
aisle…..
Yes sir. You have been upgraded to Business Class.
Gulp. I admit, as much as I travel, until that moment I didn’t really know what Business Class was.
Certainly I had HEARD of Business Class. I knew they didn’t ordinarily let
people like me sit in Business Class. I don’t own a briefcase. I never took Accounting.
Sudoku scares me, and I don’t have an iPhone. All I knew was this: the Business
Class people always go first on the plane, I think even before people in
wheelchairs and moms with babies, and then you don’t see them again, ever, and that
when they walk by the rest of us sweaty impatient Economy people massed near
the door, we hush down and step aside, and they walk coolly past on their cells, selling off chip-maker stocks and smelling of expensive lotion while we stare
and wonder how they came by so much money.
I didn’t want to appear over-anxious, yet was the first
passenger on the plane. I could feel the lowerclasses staring and wondering at me as I
boarded. They think I am an American Internet
wizard, that’s why my face is unshaven and my clothes are cheap….they likely think
I am friends with Mark Zuckerberg. Perhaps they think I am an actor – several people
have said I resemble Rick Moranis. I feel sorry for them. They will not be on
the plane first and they will be so cramped, poor things. Umm....
Imagine my surprise when the flight attendant, instead of
pointing left or right, pointed up the stairs. Business Class as a metaphor for
heaven? WOW. Never have I been upstairs on a plane.
At the top of the stairs I turned left, and beheld a scene
of great comfort. The seats were as large as Aunt Joanne’s and Uncle Reggie’s
La-Z-Boys back in West Virginia – possibly larger. Grey wrinkly soft leather,
or it could have been really nice fake leather that was just as comfortable as
leather. Real arm rests, roomy and flat, with space for two or three cocktails
at once – no elbow fights up here. The seats all had something that looked like
levers sticking out of them on their right sides, at about head-height. I wasn’t
sure but guessed they had something to do with turning the seats into beds. It smelled comfortable, too. Maybe they filter the
air, or just do a better job cleaning the bathrooms, but there was not the
usual stuffy urine-tinged-and-many-other-nervous-people plane smell that is common
among the commoners – I mean, in Economy. Hey CHECK OUT THE HEADPHONES! After
figuring out I didn’t have to pay for them, (they looked like you should have
to pay for them), I sat down in my cavernous aisle seat and tried to reach them, new-looking and packed in plastic in the back of the seat in front
of me. I had to get up, though, because the magazine holder in front
of me was so far away. Is there such
a thing as too much legroom?
I began experimenting with the lever sticking out of the seat by
my temple. I yanked it up – nothing. Yanked it down – nada. Tried
rotating it gently in clockwise and counter-clockwise motions. Maybe it was
broken – nothing I tried with the lever would turn my seat into a bed. After puzzling over it for several minutes, I
realized it was a reading lamp. So I turned it on and pretended I knew what it
was all along, as I explored the 10-button electronic seat massage system.
They give gifts, too, in Business Class. First I got a
spiffy black pouch filled with toiletries including a tiny tube of toothpaste and a
toothbrush, as well as warm soft socks and a silky sleeping mask. But the coup de grace was the tiny Delft ceramic
Dutch rowhouse replica, about the size of a saltshaker, containing a shot or two of expensive
Dutch gin. When the stewardess came by with it, I had no idea what was happening. She looked at me, and
I looked at her, so she positioned her tray a little closer to me, expectantly. I picked up the small house, looked at it, and put it back on the tray.
It’s very nice, I said.
She waited.
Is it...for me? I asked.
Yes. It is a gift.
What is it?
It is very good Dutch gin in a tiny Dutch house. You can collect them.
Of course. My kids will love it. Thank you.
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