Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Más o menos

Posted by emily morgan thompson at 7:25 PM 0 comments


During my first afternoon in Granada, there was a parade.  

It reminded me of a snake, but a gentle, intoxicated one - consuming slowly the streets of the city until its belly bulged.   The celebration held me captive for two hours, observing the dancing and the warm smell of food cooked on hot-plates on every curb, and the rustling of beaded dresses that swept the cobblestones.  It was all color and history I had no history to relate. 

I was in Granada for a week alone, on break from leading mission trips in other parts of Nicaragua. I would spend mornings and evenings in a warm classroom off a school courtyard with my Spanish instructor, a girl slightly older than me with a quick grin and kindness.  We’d fill the room with the stumbling over of words – on my part – and dust from chalkboard erases correcting my mistakes.  Each time I would answer and ask, timidly, “¿correcto?” she would laugh a quiet Nicaraguan laugh and say “si, Amelia – Más o menos.”  And I would more or less feel pride and ineptitude both at once. 



During the days, I was alone with rented bike, carving my way through the city, pass open-doorways where there were family meals and Central American soaps on TV.  I’d weave around horse-drawn carriages and lean against slowing taxi cabs around the corner bends, until the maze of Granada felt smaller and smaller.



I’d eat ice cream cones of Eskimo before dinner because I could, and write poems in a café off the center square that was filled with palm trees, and bike along the water.  I’d climb to the tips of dusty, magnificent cathedrals and worship over the entire city, and grin and small talk in Spanish with street vendors and visit art museums. I’d stay outside until the sun was as heavy and low as it could be before giving way, and head back to my rented room.



I was, in all things, utterly alone.  I’d go full days speaking no English, only silently to myself, feeling like a tiny alien in a new world that was beautiful and lonely.  I was inconsequentially alive, it seemed, for all of that week. 



At the end of these days of Spanish and wonder and loneliness and joy and a sickness for home, I’d lay spent on the mattress, half covered in fan-wind and moonlight.  In the quiet, I was aware of the particularities of translation – it wasn’t true of me, my being “more or less”. 



I was a girl made and created, alone but important, an observer and a dreamer. In the silence of those moments, I was so much more than I had imagined.  And in the grandness of the city and the beauty of the world, I learned, graciously, that I was also less. 
 

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