NEW BEGINNINGS
by Sienna
Some years back, Jamaica was unknown to me, other
than being a 'pretty' name in the atlas, a country
in the Caribbean that was on my list of 'someday'
places to visit, based solely on that meager
criterion. When the opportunity came to make the
trip, I found myself not wanting to know a whole lot
about the island before hand……following the typical
pattern of my travel style…..I would rather explore
as I go, instead of having a long itinerary before
hand. I have always found it easy to get the rough
layout of a place first, then go back for a second,
in depth trip if desired.
I did go to the local public library, and found a
well thumbed through, five-year-old travel guide on
the country. The focus seemed to be on
all-inclusive resorts, and I almost immediately
began to doubt my destination choice, but flipped
through the book long enough to pick up some general
geographical information. What appealed to me were
the opposing coastlines. I knew I wanted to see
Kingston, the educational and cultural center. I
knew I wanted to get up into the mountains, and I
wanted the wide sand beaches and turquoise waters of
the west coast.
On that first trip, I wound up spending twenty-four
hours in Montego Bay, until the urge for the open
spaces became overwhelming. An unexpected meeting
with someone who worked here long ago netted a ride
east to Ocho Rios. Dinner in that town, and I felt
the pull toward the west coast so strong I was
willing to walk there if needed. Luckily, and
unbelievably, the next day brought a ride all the
way into Negril, and I immediately felt at home. A
week later, I found myself sending a telegram back
to the States, with the basic message that I would
be home when the money ran out. I did wind up going
back a week after that telegram, not that the money
was gone, but I knew that I wanted to get back in
order to start saving for the return trip. There
was still so much to see, and in some way, I knew
that this country would be calling me back for more
exploration.
Since that first trip, I have made many return
visits, each time lucky enough to spend longer
amounts of time, investigating each of the areas
that first caught my attention, as well as other
places. Except for a 10 day stay in a small hotel
last summer, I have always stayed in guest houses or
with families willing to share a spare bed, if not a
whole room. I have long been fascinated in the
economic discrepancies of the island, in the people
of the countryside, in the seemingly never-ending
hope and resiliency bolstered by pride, patience,
determination and belief in a new and better day, no
matter the circumstances, or lack there of.
This past year has been
one that blessed me with
time enough to spend a bit less than nine months on
the island, with a short stay back in the States
midway through, to handle some business affairs.
It was on my last sojourn here that I decided that a
future trip would mean forgoing the tourist towns
completely, and instead, settle in to a local
community for the duration. It seemed to me that it
would be the best way to begin discovering the
answers to the questions and curiosities I had. It
was in this way then, that I came to be here in
Little London, a small "suburban" community halfway
between Negril and Sav-La-Mar, the capital of the
Westmoreland parish.
People who come to Jamaica and drop their
travel-agent fed fears of talking and mixing with
locals rapidly learn that Jamaicans can be some of
the most gracious and sharing people, and sometimes,
those with the perceived "least" to share, are the
most giving. Close and long enduring friendships
are not uncommon, even when it appears that the only
thing in common between the parties is the fact that
all involved are people of the Earth, with hopes and
dreams, the desire to not just be heard but be
listened to as well, and to be respected for whom we
are, and not just for what we do or do not have.
And it was two
trips back that I met the individuals
that would ultimately become the host family for
this particular long-term stay. It was through them
that I have worked out a trade, whereby I live
rent-free in a little house in exchange for
organizing and running the newly revived family
shop, and sharing 50 % of profits generated. As
with any business, it is starting slowly, but has so
much potential, I can see the possibility of
expansion in so many different areas. Naturally,
you need money to generate money, and that is where
I fit right in with the Jamaicans in the countryside
- that one commodity (cash) is what we are all
lacking, but it gives me a fairer understanding of
some of the issues I have been interested in
exploring.
Now, for a few details to give you a visual
description (knowing full well of course, that you
will probably declare me certifiable for enjoying
what I have here, but it's just one more case of
differences being what makes the world go round.)
My house is considered
to be pretty much hurricane
proof, as it is made of "unfinished" (unpainted)
concrete, rather than wood. I really do love the
wooden houses best, 'boardhouses' as they're called,
but this one will do. As far as houses go, it is
pretty much close to perfect - one room, about 12 by
15, screenless louvered windows, a side door, a
front door, and a zinc (tin) roof, my favorite for
being under when it rains - the water beating down
on the tin provides music that ranges from a gentle
drumming to an impossible-to-talk-over roar,
depending on the intensity of the storm. I have
discovered that possessions can definitely be kept
to a minimum, and what isn't necessary in that one
room, just isn't needed at all. It is ou!
tfitted with the basics - a bed, a shelf of boards,
bricks and stone to hold odds and ends, a small fan
and a radio. Perhaps the only luxury that I am
missing is a mirror. I do have one, but it is
smaller than the palm of my hand, and doesn't do
much to give the overall idea of how I've managed,
IF I've managed, to put myself together each day.
Most days, I don't
mind, other days, I find that
using the reflection caught in a car's window will
do. And then again, there were those days when I
stopped in at the beauty shop next door to use the
phone, I caught a full length view in Christine's
mirror, and wondered who it was that stared back at
me with such startled eyes. My favorite room is my
shower - beautifully rustic. It is outside the
house, an add on to a cement structure that will be
the 'real' bathroom someday. A few boards nailed to
the trunk of a tall stately thatch palm, some
overlapping, rusted pieces of zinc, two bricks to
stand on so that the mud stays off t!
he clean feet, a curtain made from a feed sack……….
When I first got here, I was given a hose to snake
over the zinc wall, connected to a water system in
the yard that pumped in plenty of clean, cold water.
The hose was shared by any number of other people,
at various times during the day and night, and
lately, I find that I am content to deal with more
traditional Jamaican bath preparations…….set my
plastic laundry tub on the bricks, trek in 5 or 6
juice pitchers full of water, (the bucket that would
haul more never seems to be where it's supposed to
be when I want it - but "no problem" as the popular
saying goes….) then, stand in the tub, soap down,
and rinse with the final pitcher. It is most
beautiful at night, the roof overhead simply the
interlocked fronds of the thatch palms, and the
black velvet sky, glittering with the most vividly
colored stars I have ever seen, in numbers more
numerous than I ever imagined. The cold water jolts
life back into the skin and I seem to spend long moments just staring skyward.
I'm sure by now, it has been noticed that my house
lacks one room everyone considers important but me -
the kitchen. I did notice with surprise these last
couple of days though, that I am looking forward to
my own cooking area, which may be installed, in the
next month or so. The typical country kitchen is
also outdoors, most often a board lean-to attached
to the main building, and is equipped with a cutting
table and a propane two burner stove top, and a tall
bucket for water, which is used for cooking, and
washing dishes. Someone here in 'the yard' always
cooks the day's meal, and the portions I am given
feeds two, so I am hardly starving. That, plus any
snacks or drinks I want for the day are free from
the shop so this is probably the first time I will
return home with some extra padding, (unless my
willpower gets stronger - you know I have to sample
every new sweet or salted snack food I decide to
carry and have developed an even stronger liking for
salted banana chips!
and Guinness, if that's possible.)
As for the shop, it too is probably different from
what you imagine……At the moment; it consists of two
rooms. The first part is about 10 by 20, wooden in
structure, with a refrigerator, a counter top, some
small shelves, and a little glass display case under
the counter top. A Jamaican style "slot machine"
and a portable wooden table for domino games
completes that portion. The second portion is what
seems to me to be a "huge" room, although it is
probably only 15 by 25 feet. Two bamboo walls, (the
other is the adjoining shop wall, the fourth side is
open and faces the yard) a zinc roof, a badly
ruptured, eroded red concrete floor, another wooden
table……….and that's that. The room was originally
built as a "Go-Go" club ("exotic dancing" in polite
terms), and there has been a lot of public interest
in a renewal of the same operation. However, this
is not the way the family here has decided to run
it, and the planning/brainstorming stage is still in
progress. At the mom!
ent, morning business is quiet, with a few people
stopping in for snacks or cigarettes before they
head off to work. The second wave includes school
children who drop by after classes for a cold drink,
or a sweet treat of some sort. Then, finally, it
becomes a neighborhood 'hang out' from late
afternoon/early evening, sometimes with people here
long into the wee hours of morning….three times in
the past month, due to rather intense poker and
domino games, the last customers didn't go home
until eight or nine the next morning.
I have been asked by family,
friends and Jamaicans
alike why I chose to live like this this, to spend
my time like this, as it is not the 'typical'
vacation activity, it is not luxurious, and at
times, it is not even easy. I suppose part of the
reason is because I feel I have moved beyond the
"vacation mode", even though there is still a lot of
the country I have yet to see, but plan to, one of
these days. The other reason is because I have
always been curious about the country - how it can
have so much to offer but seem to fall behind rather
than forge ahead, how the people survive at the
grassroots level, how a positive outlook in the face
of hardship is maintained, how doing with less can
bring more peace, or if nothing else, place focus on
what is really important.
Life is a classroom, full of opportunity for
learning, and I am willing, at this stage in my
life, to gamble, to take a risk, to enroll in this
new course.
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