Thursday, April 23, 2009
And at the Center of the Web Lies a Pickle
Lately on long bus trips I have spent too much time thinking. This is not a surprise.
But I never thought I would be the kind of person to ask these questions so literally. Such as, hey, fuck: what is the best way to live a life?
I think I maybe have an answer, but you might not like it. It's kind of simple.
It doesn't require more time in a university, and it doesn't involve me writing a book.
But perhaps the answer is: a deli.
Think: have you ever spread grainy mustard on a good piece of bread or made a vinaigrette that, in turn, made your day? I could do that. I think so. Repeatedly. In My Deli, I could play music. There would be pickles, and lovely little things.
Some kind of business that sells little things that contribute to something generally good - I'm not sure what - and yet cannot be included in the industry of Selling Stuff that No One Needs That Clutters Houses and Minds and Lives. A bakery. A cheese shop. A soup shop. A taco cart where there are no other taco carts. A hardware store. I don't know.
You eat a sandwich, it goes into you. That's it. My mom will tell you one of her favorite meals was eaten in a parking lot on Hillhurst, and it was a pibil taco and a root beer.
I am a cell in the tourism industry.
I used to be a cell in the health care industry, although that certainly didn't feel like an industry. That just felt like high cortisol levels, ridiculousness, some off-color humor and the crunchy sound the brain makes when it tries to think in a manner that could aid someone's survival. It felt good too though, it felt useful. That was never in question. I could do that again, for a while.
And now I bounce around between borders and it's fun, don't get me wrong, and I've never been happier in some ways, and I'm glad to not be visiting morgues and I'm glad to be out of the North and it's Ways, but it's frivolous and I don't know who I'm helping.
I mean I'm helping a German go from Palenque to Merida, OK.
I'm helping confused Britishers understand the difference between arrachera and cerdo, horchata and jamaica, and to the Canadiasn that chicken is pollo, not po-lo, ok?
Maybe I stand in line with someone and translate for them at the bank. Calculate tip. Make small talk and repeat the same stories. Tell them a little (because I really only know a little) about the places through which I am leading. If I help in any other ways, I don't know what they are.
And you could say that running a deli might not really focus that any better - who am I helping by selling thinly sliced salami?
But at least a deli would let me interact with a wider spectrum of people, instead of just the sick, or just travelers. The sick, well, they couldn't help it, chaos and all, that's how we met each other.
But travelers (including myself) are people of luxury, though most would never admit it. I think the very possibility that you can travel in these places, where the people of those places will never travel themselves, makes you one of the idle rich.
It's ok! Don't feel guilty. Just know that this is true.
Know that it is true that the Mayan baby over there will never grow up to wander through the halls of the Louvre and marvel at the quaint beauty of the French countryside, or eat street food in Bangkok then go back to the hostel to shoot the shit and have that Hostel Conversation with a bunch of red-faced Aussies. I wish it weren't so. What would that even look like? And why is it funny to even think about, a busload of Mayans being dropped off at the Eiffel to take pictures. It is funny because it is highly improbable, because it points to an invisible shittiness that feels FUBAR. That is a jacked thing that I can't fix. Some people think tourism can level the economic field for the poor. I've thought long and hard about it. I have thought, yes, tourism will always be there, it's jacked and its not going away, so how can I make it the *least* jacked? If I could find a solution to ethical travel, I wouldn't berate myself so much for being involved in this industry. I too lazy to do the math.
But then other times, I wonder if people are meant to stay where they were born. This might have worked out better for the world and its people if say, Columbus had stayed at home and been a bankrupt business man and sucked it up. Imagine! Modern day, there would be no Cancun, there would be no factories in China where toddlers sew "Guatemalan" sweaters for conscientious backpackers and group travelers to buy in the highlands of K'iche.
So maybe I stay at home (wherever that is), and travel moreso via my deli goods (Iranian pickles!)than by bus, and heal people with pastrami. Maybe I will one day stand behind a counter full of those pickled things, play good music, make big salads, have a baby or something, drink wine, be a good person, and go to sleep.
[This rant has been brought to you by: too much time off]
[That is a Kool Aid pickle, if you were wondering]
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4 comments:
Hi.
I'm a new reader so I'm sure in time I'll have caught up, but right now I'm a little fuzzy on something. You USED TO be a nurse and now you work in the tourism industry? I probably got it all wrong, cuz I'm just baffled that you'd go through all the trouble of getting your RN and just walk away from it.
Why did you leave nursing? From what I have read it seems like you have a great personality for the nursing lifestyle. It requires a lot of balancing and an easy going lifestyle. Hopefully you go back into it.
Some people just moves out to have a different way of living. Interesting topic you got here.
Try to visit our site for better health wellness.
Thank you
Hey! If you ever decide to go back to nursing, you should considering working in one of these high paying nurse states
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