To the untrained
eye, the farm looks like a hot mess.
Actually first,
I must confess something. I am not working on a farm per say, but rather a chacra. I don’t
even know how to describe it in English. Field, maybe? Like, think field meets
untamed wilderness meets food and a few bunnies. The greenery is overwhelming.
It dresses the fruit trees and sloping hill that leads to the central home with
comfort and grace. I like it because it is neither clean nor neatly maintained;
there is always something composting, adding to the cyclical nature of life.
The chacra rests in Tiquipaya, which
is a smaller town on the rural outskirts of Cochabamba. Tiquipaya is famous for
growing miles of white flowers and potatoes to be later sold in the market, La
Cancha (here, you really can find anything you could ever want).
The days on the chacra pass timidly and winding. Without
access to Internet, I have become an obsessive daydreamer- a little splash of
the past and just a pinch of the future. The rest of the time, I am happily the
chacra’s bitch. To illuminate my role
as ‘bitch’, here is a small taste of my myriad adventures harvesting fruit and
herbs:
manzanas (apples)
A thick neon
green net rests on the branches of the apple tree. I am instructed to get all
of the ‘red ones’. I climb the wobbly wooden ladder with my basket in tow. As
it is the season de la lluvia in
Bolivia, the branches drip dollops of rain. Most of the ripe apples hang from
the tallest branches, so I balance one foot on the highest rung and reach toward
the sea of red. I reach, and I am so close to grabbing my first apple, so very
close… The net stops me. I press harder, but my hand falls inches from the
fruit. I take a deep breath, leaning my face fully into the net. My features
stress in this full-fleshed half-grimace; my left eye can only open a
millimeter. I lean further. I extend my right hand while swinging my left arm
up to maintain my balance. At the last moment, I grab ahold of the apple. The
ladder shakes harshly to the left, and in my shock, I grab a branch with my
left hand. Unfortunately, I grab the branch a little too hard and so, the whole
top of the tree falls toward me- pouring buckets of rainwater all over my head.
I let go of the
branch. The apple slips out of my hand. Geronimo The Horse eats it.
how it will later be worth it a.k.a how
it will enter my stomach:
flaky apple pies, crunchy salad topping, mid-afternoon snack, warm cinnamon
cider
capuli (to be explained)
Capuli are sweet tomatoes that come enclosed in yellow petals. You
open the flower to find the orange fruit inside, and they grow hanging from a
vividly green bush. The only way to harvest capuli
is to lay flat on your stomach under the bush. It is the worst. I lay on my
stomach in the mud while feeling all too vulnerable to the outside world. My
head is stuck in the undercarriage of the branches as I hunt for the ripened
fruit. As the cold mud seeps through my clothes, I pour the piles of fruit in
my basket. I haven’t been able to exercise my perfectionist streak since my
study abroad program ended back in December, and so, it makes a fierce comeback
here. I squirm in the mud until every last sweet tomato makes it into the
basket.
how it will later be worth it slash how
it will enter my stomach:
a warm capuli and carrot bread heated with melting butter drizzled on top, a
capuli-banana jam, a lovely cake topper
frambuesas (raspberries)
So the
raspberries demand a bit of a backstory: my family back in the States lovingly
and ferociously calls me Bad Luck Aly (at DU, this name has taken off as #bla interestingly enough). I am known
as Bad Luck Aly because well, my life always seems to turn out awkwardly. Just
a bit off kilter. I like to think this bad luck has created a witty and
attractive charm that makes me only the more irresistible- an awkward cutie
pie? Maybe? No? Okay.
Anyways, I bring
up Bad Luck Aly because of the raspberries. Back in December, I first fell in
love with this chacra because of the
endlessly expanding raspberry bushes. Raspberries are my absolute favorite. I
am so hopelessly and breathlessly and permanently in love with them. Just the
other day, I went with my host mother to harvest the berries and as we walked
along the bushes, we came across nothing. After a half an hour of exploring
through the viciously spiky vines, we finally reunited defeated. Puzzled, my
host mom told me that this is the first time in 15 years that there haven’t
been dozens of raspberries spreading sweetness amongst the bushes. I look down
at my empty basket.
The damaging
effects of climate change or Bad Luck Aly? You decide.
how it will later be worth it otherwise
known as how it will enter my stomach:
*tear*
oregano (um, guess.)
The most
relaxing part of my work here is organizing oregano. I sit at the kitchen table
with a cup of tea and my favorite playlist, pulling the leaves from the dried
strands. I sing to myself while the aroma of fresh oregano grows. As I pull the
oregano, I again take notice of my horrible posture. My shoulders curve deeply,
so deeply that it appears I am spineless. I try to sit up straight.
Within a few
minutes, my back has curved again into its horrible bend. As I pull leaves, I
can’t help but see that my posture is bent like I am a walking question mark. If
you were to look at me from the side, my shoulders would embody the quizzical
curve, and my calves would straighten as the lower base. I walk as a question
mark.
I read something
recently that said life is composed of all the moments in which we try to
relate with phenomena. I think the author wrote this to describe the beauty of
natural phenomena, but for me, phenomena erupt in thousands of faucets.
Phenomena are social and romantic and political epiphanies in life- a blurred
reality in the distance. I think that we all have that phenomena we are
searching for. We direct ourselves and we dream ourselves into various
phenomenal spaces. And of course, we all dream of different phenomena. The
phenomenal future could be an escape to the mountains or the power of change or
a happy life at home. Whatever the phenomena, we all spend moments buzzing for
something greater.
And while I think our searches for the phenomenal are important, I falter because we always seem to think
of the phenomenal as a thing or a destination or a rupturing inner thought. When
we relate with phenomena, we relate with something.
We try to make something of
ourselves. We place so much emphasis on defining the phenomenal as things. And
I must say, that I don’t even know what my fucking phenomena are- yet, I have
somehow curved under a phenomenal weight.
Maybe a lot of
us have become these walking question marks. We shoulder unfathomable dreams of
greatness on small spans of shoulders. We can’t breathe fully nor can we see
ahead. We are so much less than what we dream to be and we are all walking question
marks and no one will admit that this is very much too much to handle. It is so
much that we not only walk as question marks, but also as omni-euphemisms. We
try to chase these things we call phenomenal, but alone, we are forced to
bundle within ourselves so that no one sees our brilliance. We shoulder
uncertainty just where our voices should be screaming radiating blows of
beauty.
I think we have
curved because we are so caught up in finding the greatest phenomena that we
forget the greatest phenomena might just exist in the people around us. We are
often so driven that we envision the future phenomenally alone. I am often a
walking euphemism, but you know, I want to be a confidant and a lover and a
relisher in my mistakes and a little crazy and a light spun out of control.
More than
anything, I want to be elation on edge.
This
questionmarkcurvedtoohardbentoutofshapepressured back is overwhelming. Most
times, it seems too crooked to fix. But then I realize, in the simplest shadow
of my oregano, that we have the answer to all this within us. In fact, we have
known the answer since we were kids. Of course we know that the best way to
straighten a crooked back is to have a friend grab you around the waist and
hold you tight until you hear that snap of relief. Your friend wraps their arms
around you.
We know that
your friend holds you as you become whole again.
No comments:
Post a Comment