Shake,
Rattle and Roll
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
That was some
rattle-my-bones earthquake!
When the
shocks reached me, I was sitting at my computer, working on my Spanish.
Immediately my chair became a rocking chair. Instantly I knew it was a quake.
I could see
the light fixtures swaying over my stove and sink. The twenty-litre bottle of
drinking water threatened to jump from the ceramic holding jar. My mind erased
everything I had learned about quake safety.
All I knew
for sure was that I wanted to be outside in the open area, not in a brick house
beneath a tile roof. I couldn’t move. I could not rise from the chair and I
tried.
I was not
paralyzed by fear. I don’t mean I wasn’t scared. Of course I was scared. But I
was not afraid to stand. I physically could not stand. When I tried to stand,
the quake slammed me back into my chair.
The quake of
any size that I’d previously experienced in the Seattle area lasted only
seconds. This one did the hokey-pokey in lateral slip-slide motion for more
than a minute while I was nailed to my chair.
Outside my
window the long pipe wind-chimes continued their rackety song and dance, the
last to subside and settle.
Finally I
was able to stand upright and walk outside, once the danger had passed. I’ve a
gift for that kind of delayed reaction.
Josue rushed
over to make sure I was okay. Janet from next door showed up within a few
moments. Michelle from Oconahua called to ask the same. She had been working by
their pool and watched water slosh over the sides.
One of the
first things I thought of was that just the day before I’d been bragging to
Pat’s brother from Hawaii that we here live in an area that experiences no
extremes. (Pat is my cousin-in-law.) Every time I make a rather pompous
statement like that, I wonder if it will turn and smack me in the face.
No, I did
not cause the earthquake.
We are
definitely prone to quakes in Mexico, but up here in the mountains seldom feel
them. It took me the remainder of the day to get that quake out of my stomach. I
cannot imagine being south of us in Colima or Michoacan experiencing the brunt
of the quake waves.
The rest of
the day, while waiting for after sharks to attack, I thought a lot about Place,
about how if one is so inclined, any place is a Paradise and every Paradise has
snakes in the Garden.
If one is
inclined toward the Fiery Regions, well then, there you are.
When bad
things happen, we like to blow them up into worse than they are. A common
trait. So I turned my mind to Puerto Rico, another Paradise place, slammed by
disaster after disaster. More than Place, I thought about the People, People
who know real loss, real pain.
The more I
thought about Place, the more I thought about People. This morning my friend
Kathy and I were talking about living in Mexico. We agree, first we fell in
love with People and then we fell in love with Place.
I’ve been
fortunate to live in a lot of places and, always, I’ve found good people.
Lest you
mistakenly think me a Pollyanna, I’m not blind to my own and other people’s
dark sides. I love Mexico, more so after these several years. People and Place.
Mexico is
still, it seems to me, a place where one can still live more simply in all
ways. In that simplicity, goodness stands out, is more easily seen. On the flip
side, so does the bad stand stark. Yin and Yang. Plain to see, out in the open.
Living side by side.
Yes, some
days I sound like a cheer-leader. Let me assure you, most days I am the Greek
Chorus.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
September,
2022
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
No comments:
Post a Comment