The American School of Marrakesh Is A New Adventure

The American School of Marrakesh Is A New Adventure

The great teachers fill you up with hope and shower you with a thousand reasons to embrace all aspects of life… The world of literature has everything in it, and it refuses to leave anything out. I have read like a man on fire my whole life because the genius of English teachers touched me with the dazzling beauty of language. Because of them I rode with Don Quixote and danced with Anna Karenina at a ball in St. Petersburg and lassoed a steer in Lonesome Dove and had nightmares about slavery in Beloved and walked the streets of Dublin in Ulysses and made up a hundred stories in The Arabian Nights… —nPat Conroy, author and former teacher

Robert Frost, Sylvia Plath, Maya Angelou, J. R. R. Tolkien, C. S. Lewis, J. K. Rowling, William Golding…writers who were also teachers. The latter based his classic, Lord of the Flies, on his classroom experience. The Harry Potter creator began her saga as an English teacher in my now-neighboring country, Portugal. (So almost did a legendary songwriter from my home in Nashville, Kris Kristofferson, who after studying literature at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar, took an English position at West Point. Though he resigned to move to Music City it’s a fun fact for me to remember that he and Conray have Southern accents, too.  I first worried about having the only drawl on staff until some of my new coworkers told me they like it.)

I have to remind myself that despite the demands of teaching, there is no excuse not to keep up with blog posts. As Joanne Harris, author of Chocolat told me in an interview when I asked how she managed to teach and write: “The way anyone finds time to do what they most want to do. The time is there. It’s just a matter of priority.” By the way, she taught at the school of one of two of my brilliant new English department colleagues, who, like the rest of the faculty, work really hard daily and care deeply about our students.  One of the many firsts this new school year is being the only female and non-Brit  of the department.

IMG_5417 I’ve been teaching as long as I’ve been writing.  After elementary school each day, I’d run from the bus to play teacher to my sole pupil, Granddaddy Ladd.  My grandmother, Mama Lou, had taught in a one-room schoolhouse before she married, at a home for special needs children after my grandfather died, and in an elementary school until she was eighty.  She gave me my father’s book, The Arabian Nights, from which I’ll teach a story this year alongside The Alchemist, a book that inspired my move to Marrakesh. Although I’ve been at this teaching-thing more than thirty years, the first day of inservice I felt like a kid again. Like a first grader, I had little idea of what to expect, and not since a ninth grader had I boarded a bus for school.  Most of the teachers live in the same complex and ride the bus into work daily.  Our stop is just around the corner.  Since our school doesn’t have a cafeteria, teachers who don’t pack lunches pop into the hanuts to grab fresh baked bread or snacks for the day on the walk to the bus stop.  I either take leftovers or, more often, though I’ve never been much of a bread eater I find myself stuffing a loaf into my backpack and pinching off pieces throughout the day; that, a Fanta, and a 1.5 liter bottle of water are plenty for me in summer heat.IMG_5489 IMG_5399 IMG_5415

Cindy McCain Southern at American School of Marrakesh
I feel like it’s my first day of school — ever.


My thirty-minute commute has rendered many firsts — passing a neighborhood mosque,  posses of pigeons in parks,  donkey-drawn carts of chickens, weary workers gathered around tea in an alley before work (we leave for school at 7:15 AM–an American school schedule that lasts till 4:30–atypical of Morocco where families eat dinner/sleep/open shops later). Terra cotta apartments topped with satellite saucers give way to suburban living– villas and turnoffs into spas and luxury hotels along a boulevard lined with bushes trimmed into poodle tails, palm trees, olive groves, and walls laden with cascading bougainvillea.  As we turn off the now-country highway, the guards swing open the huge wooden gates.  Our bus driver parks, we gather briefcases and bags and walk through the school’s orchard.  After two weeks I still marvel at the beautiful building and massive grounds– the arched doorways, long stone hallways, private alcoves, scrolled iron balconies, and olive trees on the playground tempting children to pelt each other with olives.

Our headmaster reminds us we’re one of only five schools in Morocco recognized by the US State Department.  We discuss the Mission Statement which begins, “The American School of Marrakesh is a multicultural community of learners.” True.  My colleagues from Morocco, France, England, Scotland, Singapore, the Philippines, Russia, India, Canada, and many US states and assorted countries do work and life together, whether interpreting for the French and Arab teachers at faculty meetings;  discussing curriculum on the bus or movies or vacations together at our Friday night rooftop gatherings; cheering on a colleague’s son who rides his bike without training wheels for the first time in our complex courtyard; or taking a coworker’s daughter home so Daddy can play Friday afternoon soccer after school with the faculty and staff. Like many 21st-century schools, ASM strives to “foster excellence through critical thinking and creativity; build resilience and character; promote responsible, global citizenship, and encourage lifelong learning.” But unlike most international schools, students are expected to not only master English and their native language but also become fluent in French and classical Arab (different from Darija, the local language). Lunch area at ASM     ASM

American School of Marrakesh
Lunch areas at ASM
Basketball court and rose bushes at American School of Marrakesh
Basketball/soccer court and rose bushes outside my room at ASM
The American School of Marrakesh
View from my room at ASM
American School of Marrakesh
Roses in the desert at ASM outside my room

We meet off the courtyard for in-service where most of the children eat lunch.  Our headmaster reminds us we’re one of only five schools in Morocco recognized by the US State Department.  We discuss the Mission Statement which begins, “The American School of Marrakesh is a multicultural community of learners.” True.  My colleagues from Morocco, France, England, Scotland, Singapore, the Philippines, Russia, India, Canada, and many US states and assorted countries do work and life together, whether interpreting for the French and Arab teachers at faculty meetings;  discussing curriculum on the bus or movies or vacations together at our Friday night rooftop gatherings; cheering on a colleague’s son who rides his bike without training wheels for the first time in our complex courtyard; or taking a coworker’s daughter home so Daddy can play Friday afternoon soccer after school with the faculty and staff. Like many 21st-century schools, ASM strives to “foster excellence through critical thinking and creativity; build resilience and character; promote responsible, global citizenship, and encourage lifelong learning.” But unlike most international schools, students are expected to not only master English and their native language but also become fluent in French and classical Arab (different from Darija, the local language). Lunch area at ASM     ASM My room, which I now affectionately call “the annex” has its own private entrance.  It’s beside the basketball court and has its own rose garden!

IMG_3383 Last summer I made posters for “windows to the world” using my travel pictures to entice students to read world literature and embrace global citizenship.  They want to know where I’ll take them and when, and I’ve assured them class trips are being discussed.  My students are high energy–most movers and shakers (kinesthetic learners and/or highly motivated), social and warm–and they all greet me each period with a “Good Morning/Afternoon/Hello, Miss!” and bid adieu with a, “Thank you and have a nice day, Miss!”  I really like them.  I have 15 in my 9th Grade Advanced, and a dozen in my 10th Grade Standard, 11th Grade AP, 12th Grade Standard.  I also teach an elective, Journalism.

American School of Marrakesh
Windows to the world that look in and out at ASM
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Old friends from home and the ASM library
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I love this.
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ASM Library
President Obama's photo in ASM library
President Obama’s photo in ASM library
American School of Marrakesh
Morning break at ASM

The library is full of classics and other interesting reads.  Teachers check out books regularly for pleasure. During inservice we were treated to hot mint tea, pancakes, and pastries, and catered lunches of traditonal Berber tagines served on china.  Yesterday we celebrated our first week of teaching with a high tea–mint tea, chilled strawberry and avocado drinks, pastries, and assorted almonds and other local nuts.

American School of Marrakesh Morning Tea and Soccer
Mint tea and pastries for Morning Break
My desk

IMG_3393 - Version 2   IMG_5428   American School of Marrakesh   And though my first couple of days the temperature was 108 degrees and I wondered how we’d ever manage without AC, the weather has dropped to the mid-90s and become bearable.  In fact, the mornings have been 70 degrees and I love preparing for my day, windows open to nothing-but-green– soccer field in the front, flowers in the back– as my daily visitors, wee birds, fly in, land on the floor, and say hello.  It also helps in a new place to be surrounded by not only new friends…but old ones, like Bronte and the crew, as well. IMG_3400 IMG_3401

ASM Soccer field and olive grove
ASM Soccer field and olive grove


    As students and teachers we get two new starts each year–one in January, the other now.  Then again, we all can learn something new everyday for the rest of our lives.  From the land of oranges, pomegranates, and figs, here’s to a fruitful year. Maya Angelou  quote in Marrakesh

First Week in Morocco: Part 2

First Week in Morocco: Part 2

The only real failure is the failure to try – and the measure of success is how we cope with disappointment – as we always must. We came here – and we tried – all of us in our different ways. Can we be blamed for feeling that we’re too old to change – too scared of disappointment to do it all again? We get up on the morning and do our best – nothing else matters. But it’s also true that the person who risks nothing does nothing. – has nothing. All we know about the future is that it will be different. Perhaps what we fear is that it will be the same. So, we must celebrate the changes, because, as someone once said, ‘Everything will be alright in the end. And if it’s not alright, it’s not the end.’    The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel

I get up in the morning and I do my best.  So the turtle guy from the previous post was upset with me for not buying more.

“But I gave you a presentation and let you take my picture.”

“Yes, but I didn’t ask for the presentation.  In fact,  I asked you for the prices of the spices and you said I needed to allow you to practice your English and give me a full presentation before you could speak about price.”

I am learning to be more assertive.  My friend, Dana, who taught in Casablanca, said the most important Arab word I need to learn is la which means no.  She said as a Southern girl,  she became stronger in Morocco.  I get it. Starting with the full-court-press-souk-salesmen, I am learning not to confuse assertive with being rude.  Not to be talked into something I don’t want.  To walk away if the price is too much.  To buy from the guy who doesn’t push, who will take a fair price.  Not the guy who pushes, then acts offended when I don’t buy.  In the souks you can see how leather goods, textiles, many home goods of quality craftsmanship are made. I’m learning the difference between the real deal and the imitation.  And rule-of-thumb is start by offering 1/3 of the price they ask.  Dealers expect to haggle and will finally ask for you “final price.”  If they want too much, walk away.  They will usually follow and offer a better price.  Thankfully I was warned to agree on a price BEFORE shooting a picture of the snake charmers. 54 I left the souks on Friday after one of the five calls to prayer.

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The Kautoubia Mosque in the medina (old city)  holds 20,000 people for prayer inside and 20,000 outside on its plaza.  Many of that number were exiting as I caught a cab.

Many have asked me, “Where is Morocco?”  Slightly larger than the state of California, it is located in North Africa. The country borders the Atlantic Ocean at its west and the Mediterranean Sea in the north. Approximately 31 million people live in Morocco, of whom 99% identify as Arab-Berber. More than 98% of the population identifies as Muslim.  There are over a million people in my city. Following the Arab conquest of North Africa in 788 BCE, Morocco was ruled by Moorish dynasties for centuries. Marrakesh, known as the “Red City,” was founded in 1062 as Morocco’s capital of an empire spanning from Spain to Senegal.   Moroccan sovereignty steadily declined beginning in the late 19th century, when Spain occupied northern Morocco and instigated a European trade war. France ultimately dominated, and imposed a 44-year protectorate over the country. Morocco regained its independence in 1956. Today, the country is a constitutional monarchy. The Moroccan dialect of Arabic, Darija, is commonly spoken, though Modern StandardArabic is the official language. Much of the population also speaks French. Many Moroccans also speak a local dialect of Berber. In the 1960s the city became known as the “hippie mecca” which attracted music legends like The Beatles and The Rolling Stones.  Today my city, consisting of a walled imperial city (the medina), and an adjacent modern city, known as the “Ville Nouvelle,” is the main tourist attraction in the country. After hours in the souks, I checked out the Plaza–the new city shopping district a 10 minute walk from my home in the Guéliz district.  I didn’t buy anything since prices here are “American.”  Just wanted to feel comfortable moving through my new city solo.

IMG_5360 I followed the scent of grilled meat to my neighborhood and had brioche and the ubiquitous french fries.  Funny that I had always thought of “french fries” as not French, but American fare.

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43 My lunch companion napped under my chair.  Cats are EVERYWHERE here but dogs are few which is why I left my darling Ella (rescued yellow lab mix) with Mom.  Living on the third floor (technically 4th since the ground level is floor 0) and my work schedule (gone until 4:30 PM) would not have been best for Ella.  She and Precious the Persian are getting royal treatment with my mom, and Mom’s doctor told her today they are good medicine for her. 40 So after Cindy’s Amazing Adventure–first day on the town solo–I went home to my apartment, a cool oasis in the city. 18
I recovered the Moroccan couch with a piece of fabric I bought in the souks.  I was hoping to buy a pre-made cover and pillows to match but apparently the fabric is sold and tailors do the sewing.  This is my living room. 62 64     So far CNN is the only channel I’ve found that has tv in English. Below is  the view from the balcony off the living room.  On a clear day I can see the Atlas Mountains. 66     My neighbors below have a pool.67This is the balcony off of my bedroom.  I look forward to adding flowers and a chair once the weather cools off enough to enjoy it. 6869I pretend I’m Diane Keaton in Something’s Gotta Give writing with a view. 70 71Cooking with propane gas indoors is a first.  I like it. 85 My friend, Pablo, friend and DJ at my Bon Voyage Party wanted me to remember my hometown. 87 My first experience with the washing machine involved two hours and a lot of soap suds for one item of clothing.  I couldn’t read the buttons so had to wing it.  I look forward to decorating the apartment, but with a long time to do it, I am taking it slow, adding only what I love. Maybe a Moroccan wedding quilt or silk comforter…artwork…lanterns….many possibilities in the miles of souks. bedroom 2 brom Saturday the school provided a tour of the souks and other landmarks. Below, our Moroccan guide showed us the Jewish quarter and explained that Muslims in Morocco have lived at peace with Jews and Christians for centuries. In fact, only one Koranic school of learning still exists in Morocco to avoid conflicts over religious belief; it is in Fez. 99   Berbers, considered the “first Moroccans” wear traditional dress in the Square. 91     Spice souks in Jewish quarter 103   100 101   We took a tour of the Bahia Palace and gardens.  Built in the 19th Century by a sultan for his harem, it is still a royal residence when the king chooses to use it.  Morocco is a country lush with spices; lime, orange, and olive trees. 104 105 106 IMG_3328IMG_3325IMG_3322IMG_3348IMG_3343 IMG_3349 IMG_3342 Our guide took us through the souks IMG_3341 to Ben Youssef Madrasa, a former Islamic college founded in the 14th century.  It is now a historical site.  Built of cedar, marble and stucco, the courtyard is surrounded by small windows of dormitory cells for students who lived there. IMG_3352   IMG_5382 IMG_5379 profile Below is the Shell of Santiago, a Christian symbol of St. James’s spiritual journey (Camino de Santiago) and Jesus as explained by the Quran– a prophet of Virgin birth but not the crucified son of God (thus, no cross). IMG_3354 After the tour I had lunch with the Woods family at a cafe down the street from my apartment and around the corner from the plaza.  I went alone to the mall area as I had done on Friday to buy a purse to hold my hat (a must for me here), my camera, my small purse.  I didn’t feel like a tourist anymore.  All the women I’d seen shopping the day before had chic purses and clothes; the neighborhood was built by the French and the French sense of style is big here.  I found one I liked for a good price so I strapped it across my body for the walk home just to be safe.  I was feeling all Gigi- in- Paris/Audrey- Hepburn- Happy when two guys on a motorbike drove up on the sidewalk straight at me. They cut across me and it seemed they hit me in the throat as they yanked my purse.  I realized later from the red strap mark I had been clotheslined by the purse strap. Thankfully I yanked back and they didn’t get it.  I screamed as they zoomed off out of frustration, anger, fear.  I looked around and saw only one other person–a man stopped at the corner on a motorbike.  He stared at me and I wondered if he was with them, if he’d circle back and rob me.  I stared at him, then started walking home, looking back to let him know I was watching him.  He drove on.  I was shaken but felt protected. IMG_5396That night I didn’t go out.  I went up.  Tomorrow I’d take a cab to the plaza and buy a picture frame so Taylor and Cole would be on my desk as I wrote.  I’d get a shade for my bedroom ceiling light, a pitcher and glasses.  I’d take the suggestion of a colleague who also loves spicy food and eat at Wok to Walk.  I’d get teary eyed when the American music they play is a song my daughter loves.  But that first Saturday night, one I’d normally spend with friends or family, I’d take the elevator to my apartment complex’s rooftop to watch the sunset.  To thank God for protection.  To look at this city He loves, and as the Call to Prayer sounded around me, pray I’d see the good and the bad through His eyes.  That I’d learn valuable lessons.  That I’d grow stronger and come to love this new place, too. 10532891_10153119090119466_342789021798609900_o

First Week in Morocco: Part 1

First Week in Morocco: Part 1

All we know about the future is that it will be different. But perhaps what we fear is that it will be the same. So we must celebrate the changes. Because, as someone once said, everything will be all right in the end. And if it’s not all right, then trust me, it’s not yet the end.

The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel

 Never lose your childish enthusiasm and things will come your way…Unthinkably good things can happen even late in the game. It’s such a surprise.Under the Tuscan Sun

I am in Marrakesh. I arrived Tuesday on Royal Air Maroc. As I waited for take off from JFK last Monday, tears flowed. For the first time since April, my To-Do List was done. I’d packed up my classroom of almost three decades. I’d cleaned out, made improvements, and boxed up the home my children and I lived in for 21 years. I’d weighed my luggage obsessively and completed the immunizations and paperwork required to live in Africa. I’d said goodbyes. Hard ones. The kind that make you wonder why you started this journey in the first place.

It seemed the pain of leaving loved ones was too great, our bonds too strong for me to take flight. As I texted my sister the final farewell, tears dripped into my lap. I resisted all that was already set in motion, but the plane, stronger, thundered into the sky.

“I know how you feel,” the beautiful lady sitting beside me said softly. “I cried all the way from Miami to New York. My son is in university there where I have been visiting him.”

“My son is in college, too; and my daughter is starting a new job today. I hate leaving them.”

She understood. Completely. She, too, teaches in an American school. She is from Rabat, and her husband, a university teacher, is from Marrakesh. The next morning she helped me get through Customs  and we exchanged information as colleagues- now- friends.

In the seat in front of me was another kind stranger. While texting my sister my glasses had fallen from my lap and someone had stepped on them while boarding the plane. While he and his wife were busy juggling three small children he found them, bent with a screw missing, in the aisle. He tried to fix them for me though he had his hands full–literally.

When I landed Tuesday morning, my driver, Younes, took my luggage and led me to the van. With the enthusiasm and smile of Sonny in The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel he welcomed me to Morocco: “You are not a tourist. This is your home. What do you think?”

I saw the bluest sky, palm trees swaying in a slight breeze. I said it didn’t feel as hot as everyone warned. He laughed, “That’s because we’re in Casablanca near the sea. Marrakesh will be different.”

We rode about an hour and I learned he worked for a tour company and had led excursions throughout Morocco. He spoke multiple languages and previously worked as an entertainer for Club Med. Among dances he performed and taught tourists was salsa. We stopped at a rest stop where he bought me a coffee. As we sat on the patio surrounded by Moroccan families on holiday, the school called to say a colleague’s flight had changed and we needed to go back for him and his family. Something told me they were my neighbors from the seats in front of me. I was right.

And to quote Bogey of the family I spent Week One with and our new city… “I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship.”

Younes took us into the heart of the city--the medina--that first night. Jemaa el Fna--the largest square in Africa--is a hub of world food. I had chicken and couscous, a staple Moroccan dish.
Younes took us into the heart of the city–the medina–that first night. Jemaa el Fna–the largest square in Africa–is a hub of world food. I had chicken and couscous, a staple Moroccan dish.

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(from left) Courez (14 months), Tesha, Steve, Coulter (4 years) Starr (2 years) was asleep in stroller. Coulter has the inquisitive mind and energy that my son, Cole, had at his age. Starr, like Taylor was, is a talker and little mom.
(from left) Courez (14 months), Tesha, Steve, Coulter (4 years) Starr (2 years) was asleep in stroller. Coulter has the inquisitive mind and energy that my son, Cole, had at his age. Starr, like Taylor was, is a talker and little mom.
Wednesday, Day Two, I slept in until almost 11--a first since my early salsa days. I walked around the corner and had comfort food, Italian pasta, for a late lunch. The Woods joined me and we next braved the grocery.
Wednesday, Day Two, I slept in until almost 11–a first since my early salsa days. I walked around the corner and had comfort food, Italian pasta, for a late lunch. The Woods joined me and we next braved the grocery.
Acima is just a couple of blocks away.
Acima is just a couple of blocks away.
Starr was my helper.
Starr was my helper.
Day 3, Thursday, we had lunch at Dreamland. I had a tuna panini and chips (french fries served with most every dish). Meals in our neighborhood are typically $5 American dollars. We watched locals rush to work.
Day 3, Thursday, we had lunch at Dreamland just around the corner. I had a tuna panini and chips (french fries served with most every dish). Meals in our neighborhood are typically $5. We watched locals rush to work
and trot.
and trot.

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We hailed two petite taxis and set out for Marjane–the Marrakesh version of Walmart– to set up households.  An inner mini meltdown began somewhere between the cookware and cleaning supplies aisle.  I’d cried on the plane and a couple of times those last weeks before the flight wondering why I’d leave such a great life–family, friends, and a home I loved.  I’d given away and packed away a lifetime of household goods.  I’d embraced the book on minimalism my brother-in-law, Jeff, gave me, Everything That Remains.  So why was I now buying the very things I had taken out of my bags because of weight restrictions–the very things I already had?

More than that, I feared I wasn’t ready for a new home.  I’d watched the first half of Under the Tuscan Sun the night before and like Frances, was wondering what in the world I was doing.  As we left Marjane, crossing the massive parking lot and streets to check out Kitea–Marrakesh’s Ikea–my doubts melted.  Because I melted.  Forget Frances.  And forget the looking- like- Kristin- Scott- Thomas- in- The- English -Patient-thing I’d envisioned, all gorgeous in the Sahara, sheer veils flying behind her/me in the breeze.  In that heated moment I longed for her cool cave but instead was Ralph Fiennes, trudging along beet-faced across the desert.  We all fell into taxis and headed home.

Hours later I was in another movie, the movie of Morocco.  (By the way, I chose Morocco as top of my Bucket List for many reasons–a colleague which had taught here and loved it; a school with a vibrant academic, collaborative, close community; expenses paid to allow saving money; a history dating back to the first century; the souks; the camel excursions/campouts in the desert; the proximity to Spain where dear friends live and affordable travel to all of Europe via its Ryanair hub; the food and friendly people; the French influence; the creative culture that drew the Beat Poets and music legends of the 60s.  And then there are all the legendary movies made here: Indiana Jones, Star Wars, Gladiator, as well as parts of Captain Phillips, Inception, and Sex and the City II (filmed in the souks and the Taj Palace).  The Marrakesh Film Festival, which has  honored such actors as Juliet Binoche and drawn icons of Hollywood, is second only to Cannes in these parts.)

We’d freshened up and ate where our colleagues recommended at the end of our street, Casanova’s.  And while I love all-things-Italian, it seemed more like Rick’s Place.  All was right with the world again.

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Lamb chops and amazing sides

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Ready for the walk home
Friday, Day Four, I grabbed a taxi and headed for the souks. I had breakfast at a French cafe before entering the square.
Friday, Day Four, I grabbed a taxi and headed for the souks. I had breakfast at a French cafe before entering the square.

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Ladies do henna here.

 

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I was given a textile tour by a nice man. Though his carpets aren't magic, he explained the the story behind them.
I was given a textile tour by a nice man. Though his carpets aren’t magic, he explained the the story behind them.

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After Berber women marry and leave their homes, they make a carpet to send as a gift for their families. The weave speaks its own language, explaining whether the woman is happy or not with her marriage.
This one is identical on both sides.
This one is identical on both sides.
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Carrie Bradshaw loved the shoes in the souks. The film was made in the Marrakesh souks though the movie setting was Abu Dhabi.

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Mud used for hammams in spas. These are like Turkish baths, once Roman baths, which Moroccans enjoy weekly. Beautiful skin is a priority here.
Mud used for hammams in spas. These are like Turkish baths, once Roman baths, which Moroccans enjoy weekly. Beautiful skin is a priority here.
In this Berber pharmacy a student, wanting to practice his English skills, was quite the salesman.
In this Berber pharmacy a student, wanting to practice his English skills, was quite the salesman.
He had natural remedies for mosquitos, cellulite, weight loss, and stuffy noses. He asked me to sit in front of the fan for the demonstration and wanted me to hold this turtle--no idea why. When I declined, he placed it in my lap.
He had natural remedies for mosquitos, cellulite, weight loss, and stuffy noses. He asked me to sit in front of the fan for the demonstration and wanted me to hold this turtle–no idea why. When I declined, he placed it in my lap.

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Pigments for painting--would love to paint again while here.
Pigments for painting–would love to paint again while here.
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I bought spices called Chanel and Atlas Mountains. They look like square cakes of soap and can be worn as perfume, used in drawers with clothes, or used in a room for fragrance.

Time to stop now because tomorrow I start school.  New teachers will be picked up on the school bus (a coach tour companies use in the US) for inservice.  More on my apartment, the weekend, and my first day of school later.

The Road to Morocco

The Road to Morocco

My move to Morocco morphed from surreal to solid a couple of weeks ago when a plane ticket to Casablanca arrived. On August 18th I leave Nashville for New York, then Africa. When I land on August 19th the school’s driver will take me from the airport to my new home, an apartment in the Gueliz suburb of Marrakech.
Much has happened since January 28 when I flew to Boston for the SEARCH Associates international job fair and entitled my first moleskin journal (bought at the Charlotte airport), “The New Adventure Begins.”

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That winter day, as I had in my first travel journal ever– a spiral notebook my mother gave me when, as a fourth grader, I went on my first flight to see cousins in Atlanta– I knew I needed to record the journey. Something new brewed.

At nine I wrote of climbing on marshmallow clouds, splashing on Six Flags’ Zoom Flume, cheering for the Braves, and learning to like iced tea. Soaring solo, I felt very grown up and alive. Now I look forward to climbing the Atlas Mountains, splashing on white water rapids, riding a camel across the desert, and learning to like hot mint tea. Four decades later, I feel very young. And alive.

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Last January, I had no idea I’d be moving to Marrakech. In fact, I wasn’t sure the time was right to move anywhere. I’d signed up for the job fair last fall thinking I’d check out recruiting schools’ presentations and network so that when my son graduated from college in a couple of years, I’d be ready to make my move. But by Christmas I’d mentally shifted from fact-finding to job yearning. For months I’d open my eyes and reach for my phone to check daily emails announcing just-posted job openings. I’d researched almost thirty schools in fifteen countries, and felt ready to walk through whichever door swung open and proved right.  For me, “right” meant a place where I could learn, contribute, grow.  A move that was best for my family, future, finances, faith and freedom.

I have been happy in Nashville— great colleagues and amazing family and friends—but I’ve always wanted to try on the expat life.   For years I was set on Italy, but I became open to international schools from the Americas to the rest of Europe, from Malta to Morocco–the latter where a colleague had taught.  She taught French in my room last year during my planning period, and I loved her stories of living in Morocco and France. We became good friends.  Wednesday she leaves for Taiwan.  She understood my desire to teach abroad and became an inspiration and mentor in making it happen.

While boarding my connecting flight in North Carolina, I unknowingly hit the Kindle app on my phone. Open was a page I’d highlighted in The Alchemist, Paulo Coelho’s story of Santiago, the Spanish shepherd who sets off to realize a lifelong dream to see the pyramids. The passage glowing in fluorescent yellow read:

Looking around, he sought his sheep, and then realized he was in a new world. But instead of being saddened, he was happy. He no longer had to seek out food and water for the sheep; he could go in search of his treasure, instead. He had not a cent in his pocket, but he had faith. He had decided, the night before, that he would be as much an adventurer as the ones he had admired in books.

I identified with Santiago. As a mom it is hard to make this move, but I realize my son and daughter, 21 and 24, no longer need daily “tending.”  They have their own lives, are close and competent, and have always, ultimately, been in God’s hands, not mine.  As they first left home for college a few years ago, I will leave for school, too.   As a woman born a romantic, adventurer, teacher and writer passionate for travel and other cultures, I realize the time for a new story is now.

As I flew over NYC on my way to Cambridge, an English teacher who sees symbols everywhere, I saw the Statue of Liberty and felt freedom. Though I hadn’t interviewed for a new teaching position in years, though I’d been content as a high school department head and college adjunct instructor, a new challenge felt exciting, liberating. As I saw ice and snow on the sea below,

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I had no idea I’d land a job in a place where people ski in the Atlas mountains by day and cross the Sahara Desert—as Santiago did—by night.

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The fair was an adventure, partly because I’d never been to Boston and an old friend living there showed me where to get seafood from the fish market to Little Italy.  It was a lobster lover’s dream.  Before flying home I took a tram to Cambridge and spent Super Bowl Sunday at Harvard.


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The job fair initially provided opportunities in China, the Middle East, Madagascar, Central and South America. I returned to Nashville and as I did every year taught Robert Frost’s “The Road Not Taken,” a poem my seniors relate to in making their college decisions. This spring as graduation neared, I, too, had a big decision to make. Choosing between two (or more) equally good paths—each rendering a different but satisfying life– is confusing. I considered three job offers—one in Dubai, another in Bolivia, and the third in Morocco. The school in Dubai was near the gorgeous Persian Gulf beaches and iconic hotels, and the person who interviewed me was born in my home state of Kentucky.

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The school in Bolivia offered a community in South America (a place I love) and immersion in Spanish. The person who interviewed me Skyped from a welcoming farmhouse kitchen on a sunny Sunday morning. Growing up in rural Kentucky and longing for a more simple life, I could see myself happy in such a naturally beautiful country.

Each choice provided “the road less traveled,” and would have, no doubt, made in my life “all the difference.” In the end, I chose Morocco. Next I’ll tell you why.

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First Solo Trip to Puerto Viejo, Costa Rica Rocks My World

First Solo Trip to Puerto Viejo, Costa Rica Rocks My World

Puerto Viejo Costa Rica
Puerto Viejo, Costa Rica

What a difference a day can make…and a year…and a decade…and a destiny.  In August I move to Morocco.

A year ago I was in Costa Rica.  Below is the piece I wrote last summer of seismic shifts and a sarong song started in the Caribbean.  I realize now I have been moving toward this life shift since childhood.

My love for travel began when I was little and my grandmother would fly me to Paris via the arm of her rocking chair.   We’d eat lunch in sidewalk cafes– TV trays set up in front of her sofa.   In her living room and in my heart, God planted the dream to travel and fertilized it with the gift of believing all things are possible.  I knew–most days–that my deepest desires He planted would be fulfilled.  And that with hope and faith,  all our dreams can come true.   Though F.Scott Fitzgerald and my Mama Lou never met, he seemed to model Jay Gatsby after her because she, too, had “an extraordinary gift for hope, a romantic readiness such as I have never found in any other person and which it is not likely I shall ever find again.”  My grandmother loved love, beauty, and adventure.  So do I.  

Before she died in 2000, she told me I was destined to do something different, something great.  She said God would use my sorrows as well as my strengths.  No doubt when I was tiny He sowed in me a big dream… to live in a faraway land.  That dream sprouted in 2005 in Italy, budded in 2013 in Puerto Viejo, and in a few months, it seems, will begin blooming in Africa.  Still I know, the longest, richest journey is the one traveled within.

Three decades-deep in graduations—none my own– I returned my cap and gown to my closet, grabbed my backpack, and boarded a plane. Most Mays the first day of summer vacation launched educational tours or service trips where I’d led students from Europe to Ecuador. But May 2013 was different. I called it my No Fear Tour. The plan was to travel solo to a jungle beach house in Costa Rica’s Caribbean to test the waters for an expat life.

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Puerto Viejo offered Pura Vida where I’d shed stress, brake for sloths and speak Lizard. I vowed to live-like- a -local, sleeping under a tin roof and mosquito net by a window open to a world of hibiscus and butterflies.

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I chose Puerto Viejo for its diverse culture—Afro-Caribbean, Tico, and Bribri— rustic character (no electricity until 1986), and laid-back vibe. I’d slow down and take the road less traveled alongside global yogis, surfers and seekers. My gypsy soul trapped in a Southern body would bust out the bathing suit and become one with Salsa Brava and Bob Marley.   At last this Baby Boomer Babe was migrating from the picket fences of the Bible Belt to perch for awhile in the Land of Boho. There I could sing “Freebird,” scout a life for the future, and relax in the now. white picket fence puerto viejo beach

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Wave-watching for world-famous Salsa Brava, the biggest break in Costa Rica

I had vowed as a single mom when my kids left the nest I’d fly away, too. My son would graduate college soon, so I’d explore Costa Rica (Rich Coast) to find fertile ground for my inner flower child to bloom. As a helicopter parent, I’d taught in the suburban school my kids attended K-12, been a soccer mom, and driven a Volvo station wagon.

But I’d also simultaneously modeled life-in-motion for students and my children in other ways. Chanting “Carpe Diem,” I’d learned Latin dance, wrote in support of immigration reform and international arts, and played a scene in a movie filmed about Nashville opposite a Chilean Johnny Depp. It was time to take my own advice to the next level–to cease straddling two worlds and seize the day.  I wanted to go-all- Thoreau and live the life I’d imagined.

I concur with Howard Thurman who said: “Don’t ask yourself what the world needs. Ask yourself what makes you come alive, and go do that, because what the world needs is people who have come alive.” Travel makes me come alive.  Since summer 2005 when roosters roused me to misty morning walks on a vineyard-flanked road, I’ve known I’d teach abroad again. Though I taught English to adults at an Asti agriturisimo only one summer, the Italian students who became dear friends changed me for good. Over meals and conversations that lingered for hours, they taught me that La Dolce Vita can be tasted anywhere I embrace the moment, am grateful, and seek rich relationships.

English Camp in Italy 2005 and return visit with my daughter in 2006
English Camp in Italy 2005 and return visit with my daughter in 2006

I returned and began reading and rereading books by expats…Hemingway’s A Moveable Feast, Marlena de Blasi’s A Thousand Days in Venice, Frances Mayes’ Bella Tuscany, Laura Fraser’s An Italian Affair.  I couldn’t watch Under the Tuscan Sun or The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel without crying because it seemed living abroad– for a year or a lifetime—was my calling. But what if it was merely a siren’s call? If I settled down in another culture, would the honeymoon wear off? Would I “find myself” living beyond borders, or feel more alone leaving family and friends in Nashville? Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat, Pray, Love, sought guidance from a medicine man in Bali. I turned to masters of reinvention in Costa Rica. I’d followed the tales of two bloggers—Lisa, beach house owner/former Montana mom, interior designer and mural artist and Camille, yogi/former Seattle single girl and triple-career-professional.  I contacted both, asking to meet with them in person to get their stories, to get inspired, to get a new life.  Both had left careers, family, friends, and stilettos to make Puerto Viejo home. I’d interview them on simplifying their lives. They had chased and caught romance, beauty and adventure in an affordable paradise.   I was ready to shake up my life, too.

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Camille

I’d read Lisa Valencia’s blog for over a year and her book on starting over in Puerto Viejo.  I’d read reviews of her Hidden Jungle Beach House and the area and talked with her by phone.  She seemed like an old friend; she, too, was mom to a grown boy and girl.  Our shared love for our kids, dogs, and salsa sealed the deal.  On my birthday I booked my flight while she arranged my stay in San Jose when I landed.  The trek to the jungle was five hours, so I’d stay the night with Lisa’s friends, Isabel and Norman, owners of Vida Tropical near the airport in Alejuela.  Two weeks later I discovered This American Girl on Pinterest and wrote the author, Camille Willemain,  that I’d be in Puerto Viejo in May.

A couple of months later, plans became reality as I stepped out of the taxi under an umbrella Isabel held.  I checked in to this new adventure, the afternoon shower evaporated, and the sun escorted me down unfamiliar streets.

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Vida Tropical

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my room

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Lisa had booked the interbus to transport me from the B and B to the jungle the next morning.  Tired from the flight, I was happy to wander through the small town, meeting Norman at their restaurant, Jalapeño Central Tex Mex, who seated me for dinner. tex mex

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Reluctant Groom

I checked out gardens, bakeries, and a church where I sat a spell in thanksgiving for colorful canaries carousing in trees outside. church

The next morning, I had breakfast with other guests from Canada and Washington, DC, and told Nicolás I’d return to his house the night before I’d fly home. nicholas

On the ride to Puerto Viejo, tucked between banana plantations and pineapple farms, roadside rest stops looked like lush resorts. I was in Wanderland and imagined napping like Alice under a super-sized tropical leaf. bananas

rest stop When I arrived at Lisa’s, backpack

she had just screened my bedroom window–a lovely surprise for me, a grievance groused by her cat. cat

She gave me the tour of the house and pointed me toward town–just a five-minute walk away.   That first day Puerto Viejo seemed a cacophonous party of reggae and revelry, motorbikes and SUVs, taxi drivers and street vendors, clubs, and karaoke. moto

It was finally summer break, my day planner was closed for the season, and I was in paradise where the only decision I had to make was which table gave me the best view of the sea.  Gathering for Happy Hour, people laughed all around me.  Why wasn’t I entirely happy?   As I feared, I felt… alone.

The self-talk began:  Wasn’t the point of this trip to be alone…to assimilate…not to tour but to dwell?  Didn’t I have work to do…to come up with a life plan, to write?  To relax?  Later I’d realize relaxing would be impossible while simultaneously pressuring myself to decide on the rest of my life and start writing the Great American Novel. Though I was seeking a new life in a different place I was operating as usual–setting unrealistic expectations for 13 days to  justify the trip. I’d realize later that  what scared me even more than not “producing” was sitting still–allowing sadness to well up with the tide– grief over lost relationships, which meant lost versions/blueprints of my life.  That first day in Puerto Viejo I didn’t realize I carried grief.  That my friend, Kim, is right.  That with change–even positive change such as dreams realized– there comes loss.  I just knew I was lonely. happy hour in Pureto Viejo Costa Rica

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Soccer game in the surf

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Mojito at Salsa Brava Bistro

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This was a nice town, but it didn’t feel like my town.  I forgot that I’d had the same uneasy feeling 13 years before on my first day on the Irish sea.  And decades before at summer camp. Those experiences proved to be rich,  but I’d traveled both times with at least one friend.  This felt different, and at dusk my mood darkened.  This feels a bit unsafe.

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Playing Hemingway in the tropics

That first night I was grateful to be back in my room, the jungle insulated against all but natural noises—the crooning of frogs, the rhythm of the surf, the howling of monkeys.  I fell asleep to the sound of rain on the tin roof. Although the day had steamed, the moon’s rising cued turning off the fan and pulling up the blanket. Morning smelled of bananas cooked in coconut oil and coffee brewing in the coolness of the communal kitchen.  I’d fancied that trying on the expat life meant writing for hours on the porch, peering perceptively into the trees, then writing good stuff.  Lisa’s dogs would be my muses.  Then, I decided to let go of all ideas of what the trip “should be.”  In fact, I needed to let go of a lot of things.   Muses

Before I could be Hemingway-writing-in-the-tropics I needed adventures, as he did, to fuel my memoirs. I decided I could write later.  And as for deciding if, where, and when to move abroad, I needed to focus on experiencing all I could in this place–cooking classes, snorkelling, mountain hikes to waterfalls, yoga, volunteering at the local school, visiting the animal reserve, and meeting new people. Another ambitious list to replace the first one. Rather than feeling so intimidated by my new surroundings, I was rested and ready to check out the Saturday Farmer’s Market and have breakfast with Camille.  Lisa had invited me to go dancing salsa that night, and I was thankful that rather than just exploring on my own, I’d spend Day Two in PV with women who called it home.  The day was full of promise. And it delivered. farmer's market

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Farmer’s Market in Puerto Viejo, Coasta Rica
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Breakfast with Camille at Bread and Chocolate

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Chocolate to die for at Caribeans

I met Camille at her favorite breakfast place, Bread and Chocolate, where she gave me her must-sees; and when we ran into one of her friends there, she invited me for a must-taste.  He was headed to Caribeans, where she and other expats/locals gather daily.  Since she was on her bike, he invited me to jump in his jeep and meet down the road for a chococcino. She showed me the tasting bar where I fell in love with 3 Kings (72% dark chocolate with cinnamon, cardamom and nutmeg) to melt in my drink.  There are no words.

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Camille of This American Girl blog

After salsa with Lisa and friends that night, I  beach-hopped the next day.  At Playa Cocles, I biked by Camille who was working reception at OM and blogging.

I pedaled to Playa Chiquita and Punta Uva, stopping to watch some Sunday afternoon soccer and to play in the surf. surf boards Costa Rica

deserted beach in Costa Rica

beach food  Puerta Viejo
Beach food in Puerta Viejo

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Life was great.  I’d ridden solo all day and enjoyed it.  I felt as brave as Kate from Lost as I’d explored deserted jungle roads in a new world that was feeling more familiar each day.  I was all about the journey, not just the destination.   Whether or not I’d move to Costa Rica longterm, I felt affirmed in my decision to be there in that moment.  I was gaining confidence each day for a bigger move in the future.

As I’d hoped, this trip was rocking my world.

Day 5 at 4 AM, a 5.8 earthquake with an epicenter 18 miles away rattled me from bed. Grinding seismic shifts muted my Bohemian Rhapsody as I hurried outside with my barf bag. I’d gotten sick since the night before in a restaurant restroom.  Housemates had hustled me home, and I’d hoped to sleep it off but had been in the bathroom hourly all night. Online reports said a tsunami warning might be issued, and I heard waves pounding the beach. I’d seen The Impossible, fancying myself the fearless mom played by Naomi Watts. My shaking bed and spewing vomit morphed me into The Exorcist’s Linda Blair. I called my sister, asked her to pray, and trembled in the dark.

The quake ended, but by noon, fever and dehydration landed me in the Emergency Clinic.  As the doctor started my IV,  he said I’d probably gotten sick from bacteria in tap water–that though I’d been drinking bottled water when out and purified water at Lisa’s, some restaurants use tap water for ice.  Later I remembered running out of bottled water when beach-hopping by bike. Trying to cool off, I’d swallowed a gallon of ocean when a riptide pulled me into a spin cycle faster than I could close my mouth. A sand and seawater cocktail was not what the doctor would have ordered.  Nor, probably, was grilled meat I’d eaten on the street.  He told me to eat bananas, prescribed antibiotics, and said I’d be sun-sensitive.

Foggy from meds, I felt my emptied stomach now packed with emotional baggage.  Even if I could eat or swim again, the $280 medical bill (though, thankfully, far less than an ER visit in the US), ate up my cooking class and snorkeling cruise.  Volunteering, hiking, yoga might not happen. I realized I had needed this trip to be a victory. It was my way of fighting back my greatest fear—being left behind. I’d always thought by the time my kids left I’d be remarried. I’d been single since they were three and six. My ex had remarried the previous fall, but I was still alone. My best friend and I had made a pact we’d move to Italy and buy Vespas should neither of us find love. I’d been her maid-of-honor that spring. I knew princes don’t rescue us, but I did want a life partner, too.  Until then, I worked hard to find happiness and contentment solo.

Still sans glass slipper, I strapped on my Chacos to plant my feet on foreign soil because travel had always made me feel alive. But that night I felt sick and sad.  I berated myself.   My trip was a test and I’d failed. How could I have made the rookie mistakes of not being more careful with what I ate and drank? Then, I made the biggest bad move of all.

Spiralling, focusing on the negatives, I criticized myself for following my heart–for wanting something new. Something different. Conjuring a mental movie of my trip thus far, I edited all the good scenes. Cut was my Technicolor trek to Puerto Viejo over glassy rivers.  Cut was the conversation with Camille started at breakfast and continued into the afternoon.   Cut was Saturday night salsa and Sunday afternoon wine shared with Lisa as we enjoyed her amazing rooftop view. Both women were authentic, the real deal–different but the same in sharing their joys and challenges as single expats.  But the night of the earthquake and illness I couldn’t shake my tremors.  Fear darkened my vision, temporarily blurring the beautiful sarongs for sale blowing in the breeze or rainbow boats bobbing in Puerto Viejo bay. boats bobbing

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PJ

I wasn’t Costa Rican cool. I was Lucille Ball ludicrous… minus Desi. Sloshing coffee down the plane’s aisle when my backpack burst. Perpetually paranoid since arriving in Puerto Viejo because the US Embassy and locals warned I should be on guard against theft. Indignant when a stray dog trampled me on Playa Negra, leaving black sand paw prints across my back. Seeing girls my daughter’s age at The Lazy Mon, and fearing I was too old to begin again. Lazy Mon

And, ever the romantic, I was disappointed my only vacation crush was the ER doctor.  I fell asleep watching Twilight in Spanish.

Oscar cutting a coconut with a machete in Puerta Viejo
Oscar cutting a coconut with a machete in Puerta Viejo

I awoke to sunshine and roosters crowing. I threw off my blanket. The jungle had simmered down and so had I. I drank healing coconut water thanks to Oscar, Lisa’s gardener. He’d returned with his machete to cut more fruit and happily called: “Hi Cindy! You look much better today!”

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Coconut water to hydrate
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Tonja, my German housemate in Puerta Viejo
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Back in action after a sick spell

He showed me pictures on his phone of creature encounters with frogs, snakes, bats, lizards, and hummingbirds. Later in town, he waved to me as he pushed his son’s stroller. Tonja, my German housemate, wave- watched with me from Salsa Brava Bistro’s porch. I braved a plate of white rice. Nothing ever tasted so good.

Beach in Puerta Viejo
Beach in Puerta Viejo is the road less travelled

I passed Doc who didn’t recognize me, then grinned. “Ah! You look like a new person. Remember, no dairy!” That night in Lisa’s kitchen, Tonja, who had taught Latin dance in Hanover, showed us merengue moves. The rest of the week I was back in the saddle.  I beach-hopped-on-bikes again, this time with Tonja, and  I finally took Camille’s advice and bought a sarong.  No longer weighed down by my wet beach towel, fears or insecurities, I’d never felt more light, more thankful, and more free. Cindy McCain Southern Girl Gone Global in Beach in Puerta Viejo

Cindy McCain Horseback Riding in Costa Rica with Raul
Raul takes Lisa and me on a ride in the jungle and on the beach.
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Cindy and Amazing Guide Raul

I went horseback riding with Lisa and Raul, a Nicaraguan who spots everything in trees from almonds to iguanas.   We started in the mountains and weaved through jungle along the beach.

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Lisa and Raul
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Lisa and Raul
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Monkey on Beach in Puerta Viejo beach

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Giant tree
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Priscilla tells me about the BriBri culture.

Priscilla, a BriBri, taught me how to make chocolate. She cut the cacao from her yard and introduced me to her mom.

Cindy McCain learns about BriBri culture in Puerta Viejo
Priscilla’s mom
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Priscilla and her mom’s home
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Highly recommend Mopri’s fresh cash

I ate the fresh catch at Mopri’s.

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Banana Azul in Puerta Viejo is a Must-Do
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Banana Azul fish

Breaking my live-like-a-local rule, I accepted tourist treatment when I ate at Banana Azul and waiters offered me the pool and a thatched umbrella over a beach lounger. I watched children play in the surf, made a new friend, and saw the sunset.

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Banana Azul
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Banana Azul is a place to truly relax.
Southern Girl Gone Global at Banana Azul
I love it here!
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Lunch at Banana Azul
Path to the beach at Banana Azul in Puerta Viejo
Path to the beach at Banana Azul in Puerta Viejo
Precious little boy plays in the surf at Banana Azul
Precious little boy plays in the surf at Banana Azul
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A friend drops by and hangs out

Precious little boy plays in the surf at Banana Azul

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Pina Colada Costa Rica
Pina Colada gets no better than in Costa Rica

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beach at Banana Azul I learned there are tears in paradise because some things we can’t escape. Nature’s beauty broke me open to grieve relationships lost that had promised life as it “should be” and to recognize courage gained by embracing instead “what is.” I was not living a Plan B life.  I was living Plan A.  Divorce and being single again had been terrifying territory but it forced me to make new friends, to pursue new interests, to see new lands. I saw the importance of community wherever, whenever we skid off the grid, at home and in faraway places. busy boy sweeping street in Puerta Viejo

I was welcomed into a Mayberry of reggae and revelry, beards and dreads. Like Camille said: “Puerto Viejo is a town of misfits. You can be anything and no one will judge you. They’ll cheer you on.” They did. So did family and friends via Facebook. Wherever you go, there you’ll be. More than finding the happiest place to live, I wanted to prove I could live happy anywhere. I don’t’ know if I’ll flee the country for a simpler life, but I know now that regardless of geography, I’ll be fine with God as my guide through the most familiar and sometimes scary territory, the Land of Me. I stopped justifying the trip as a mission and pressuring myself to scout, to decide, to plan the next move or the next year. I learned to just enjoy. To just BE. Marley’s mantra, “Every little thing, is going to be alright,” became my own.   Life is too important to be taken seriously. Costa Rican sign

In the pool that last day, for the first time in my life, I floated on my back without my feet sinking. I’d been told the trick is to relax—something I’d never done before. Toes above the water, heart afloat, I did it. pool

Past, Present, Future Dickens of a Christmas

Past, Present, Future Dickens of a Christmas

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He went to the church, and walked about the streets, and watched the people hurrying to and for, and patted the children on the head, and questioned beggars, and looked down into the kitchens of homes, and up to the windows, and found that everything could yield him pleasure. He had never dreamed of any walk, that anything, could give him so much happiness. 

I will honour Christmas in my heart, and try to keep it all the year. I will live in the Past, the Present, and the Future. The Spirits of all Three shall strive within me. I will not shut out the lessons that they teach. —A Christmas Carol, Charles Dickens

A highlight of celebrating this Yuletide Season was Franklin’s “Dickens of a Christmas.”  Until last week, my sister, brother-in-law, and I had not done the annual event since first moving to Nashville.  Walking Main Street took me back to many-an-afternoon on Hoptown sidewalks spent window-shopping with Mama Lou–a time before Internet Wish Lists and a place when it was ok to spend a day “just looking.”  We’d stop in to see Mama Sargeant, Bookkeeper at J. C. Penney, have a banana split at the soda counter, and then head home to launch other adventures by way of Christmas classics.

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Both grandmothers loved books, so I met Mr. Dickens early in life. I loved Mama Lou’s Christmas Ideals (the book and her lifelong wonder found in simple things).  Brimming like a stuffed stocking, its pictures fed my imagination with conversations between Santa and Mrs. Claus; carolers in velvet, hooded capes; and children and dogs dallying in the snow.

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Ideals

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On December 15, as cold as the Decembers of our childhoods, Penny, Jeff, and I met Kim and Andy, Franklin residents and newlyweds, in the Franklin Square. On our Sunday stroll I felt fully alive, proven by our breath misting in the streets. Inside stores twinkled with lights and all-things-pretty–cozy bedding and tulle gowns worthy of wearing by the Sugar Plum Fairy and waiting for Santa himself. Though we bought only kettle corn and sugared pecans, we savored sweet Christmas past and present.  I don’t know what Christmas Future holds, but I am confident in the One who holds it.  All is calm, all is bright because as Dickens said:

“For it is good to be children sometimes, and never better than at Christmas, when its mighty Founder was a child Himself.” —A Christmas Carol

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Puckett’s Boat House

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Merry Christmas and
Merry Christmas and “God Bless Us, Everyone!”
Happy Thanksgiving

Happy Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving, made a US federal holiday by Abraham Lincoln in the midst of the Civil War, is still a day set aside to stop the striving, shopping, doing (unless volunteering to feed the hungry and shelter the cold) in order to JUST BE…with family, with friends, with our Creator from whom all blessings flow.  The older I get the more I am determined to gush with gratitude—the reason I started this “Rich Life” blog—because being thankful in the moment, for the moment is one of life’s greatest blessings.

I’m watching The Macy’s Thanksgiving parade where I just saw a Broadway performance of ” Sixteen Going on Seventeen” from The Sound of Music.  At sixteen I was performing there with my school as my Mama Sargeant and Granddaddy watched from Hoptown, Kentucky.  Earlier I was also thinking of all the years my mom, dad and sister ate Thanksgiving dinner at Mama Lou and Grandaddy’s, then watched The Sound of Music, an annual tradition. My favorite song was “My Favorite Things,” and while I’m no Julie Andrews, I’m about to sing praises for the past year…

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Cooking for Company

Coc au Riesling

Ok, so I was going to write that tonight I am cooking and eating with Frank.  No lie, I have shared more time in the kitchen with that boy, Sinatra, than any male I know.  But to be truthful, I’m hanging with the whole Rat Pack.  Dean Martin, fav of my sis and Mama Sargeant, is singing right now as I eat my new Dish Darling—Coq au Riesling. I just made it the cover shot of my Pinterest “I Fancy Food” Board.  (Need I say more? For all those who know my go-to cliché, “long story short,” the answer is, of course, I will say more.  Always.)

Coq au Riesling renders the best “sop” I’ve ever had, and coming from a Kentucky-Turned-Tennessee-Girl raised on buttermilk and red-eye gravies, you can trust me. And Ella.  I never allow my puppy “people food,” but tonight I slathered the creamy concoction over her Iams.  The little lab mix lapped it up.  I varied the recipe by using rosemary and lemon thyme from my deck rather than parsley, and to prevent family feuds, I used all legs rather than equal parts of legs and thighs.  My Mama Lou called legs “drumsticks,” and she and my dad preferred them to any other part of the chicken.  So do my kids and I.

You can also trust my rave review because I’m about to go all gut honest and still raw…again.  First of all, like my dad who called “Izod” shirts “Izog,” and my mom who makes Walmart and Kroger plural, I did a brain switch on the name of the chef, Nigel Slater, who created Coq au Riesling.   When I pinned Alida Ryder’s blogpost in which Nigel’s recipe was reprinted,  I thought the name read  “Nigella Lawson.”  I hadn’t seen the brunette British bombshell in years, so when I Googled “Nigel Slater” to see what she was up to, I discovered she is a he. Both are food gurus, but they are very different people.  So technically, tonight the Brat Pack welcomed Nigel, not Nigella, to dinner.  Though I didn’t dream up the traditionally French dish, my oversized imagination transported me to Paris where I sat, not at my kitchen table, but as a Parisian sidewalk cafe.  Mama Lou taught me how to do that when we’d fly to France via her rocking chair and then move to the couch where tv trays were tables at Maxims.  And as I did last month when in Paris for real, I, of course, snapped a picture.

Which brings me to a bit of a struggle due to the Facebook/Pinterest Effect.   While we were once frightened by 1984 or The Truman Show, we find ourselves teetering between putting on a positive face/showing gratitude and living in a “Look How Great My Life Is” photo shoot (ie) trying to cook like The Barefoot Contessa while looking like Giada; resisting Instagram Envy when our travel pics aren’t from the Great Barrier Reef or Bali; missing realtime conversation because we’re distracted checking in at cool concerts, restaurants, and social events which, in turn, makes someone else feel “How Sad My Life Is” because he/she wasn’t invited; feeling pressured to book the next  Richard Avedon for  engagement/wedding/firstborn’s first birthday party pics before even dating anyone.  But I’ve decided I can say life is good, and simultaneously wish someone special was sharing this meal with me.

I knew the day would come when my kids would leave home, so I tried Match as an insurance policy against an empty table.  After a not-fun first date several years ago, the angry guy who drove me home sneered,  “Oh yeah, all you women are soooooo happy with your lives.  But you know what?  You aren’t all that happy or you wouldn’t be on Match.”  His bitterness scared me.  The truth is I have much to be grateful for.  Once a coworker compared me to Ally McBeal: “You have to love her.  You are both the ‘Queens of Angst.’” I remember mentally depositing him, Ally-like, into a curbside dumpster.  Probably because he was right.  I’m happy to say I’m no longer as full of angst as I once was, but as I discussed with friends, Kim and Cheryl yesterday, life is about seasons.  As for Ally,  I love that she was honest.  Though good at her career, though independent, she wasn’t afraid to want more. Wanting a life partner didn’t make her weak.  It doesn’t make me weak either.  Admitting it makes me real.  When he joins me for Coq au Riesling one day, I’m sure Frank and Nigel, though not Ella, will gladly scoot over.

Fall Weather Back Home

Fall Weather Back Home

girl by wall-lake

This week in Nashville we had our first snow flurries.  It was even colder than a month ago when I stepped off the plane in The Netherlands to a twenty degree temperature drop. On my fall break trip to Europe I was forced for the first time since May to exchange flip flops for close-toed shoes. I also broke out the scarves, a fleece and my oversized Blarney Woolen Mills sweater.

I bought the classic, the color and comfort of oatmeal, in Dublin in 2000.  It was the first trip of several where I would learn to depend on the kindness of strangers.  I’d met eleven church members once at a meeting before we left; two years later my roomie, Amy, would ask me to be in her wedding. We stayed in an inn— four-to-a-room in bunk beds—where the showers were icy but the egg salad sandwiches with salt and vinegar chips divine.

In that Greystones fishing village I met each morning with God, prayer journal in hand, on a cliff over the Irish sea.  Each night I saw the sunset at 10 as we walked home to the inn from the pub.  During my stay I saw U2’s studio, sang in beautiful churches, and hiked by the lake in the greenest of parks. On our free day I left the group and hopped on a bus alone to explore the next town down the road. Traveling with locals, anonymous, felt strangely exciting –something I’d do on future trips every chance I’d get like in London in October when I went to the British Library and finally saw the oldest transcript of Beowulf. Looking out the bus window I believed for the first time I could by happy teaching in a foreign land because it didn’t seem foreign at all. I could see my kids playing in the rural, rolling hills of Ireland, much like I had in the small Kentucky town where I was raised. The Emerald Isle also reminded me of Lexington where I was a college bride on a horse farm.

Since returning to my life I’ve been self-soothing with comfort food– Irish beef stew.  I’ve missed that balmy June of 2000…felt restless with the change of seasons… simply wanted more …and savored the simple pleasures of enough. I’ve made three visits to McNamara’s– one with friends, one with my son, one alone. I might not be a Galway Girl, but in cold weather it feels like Ireland…and like home.

Irish Beef Stew recipe–I roast in the oven potatoes, carrots, onion, garlic and herbs, then add to the stock.  I also use 1/2 can of fire-roasted tomatoes rather than tomato paste and red pepper for heat.

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Beach House

Girl on Rock, Lake

house by Ocean

Casa Rustica

Girls line dancing

Patrick O'Kelly

Group Men in front

Group on a log

Poppies

Mountain Lake

Sign-Greystones

stone Silo

stream

waterfall

Lake Sunset

Love’s Eternal Summer

Love’s Eternal Summer

moni 1

Today is the 2nd Wedding Anniversary of  my friends, Monica and Alessandro.  I Skyped with Moni this morning—they now live in Vigo, Spain– and neither of us could believe that two years have passed since the day they said “I Do.”

wedding (1)

I met them in Nashville:  Alessandro at the first-ever Mad Donna’s salsa night five years ago and Monica a couple of years later at a birthday party at a restaurant on Old Hickory. We learned we lived and taught high school in the Donelson area.   We bonded over hikes on the greenway where we walked miles in each other’s shoes.  I found this journal entry I wrote two years ago:

Today I was the sole witness of the wedding of soul mates— Monica from Spain and Alessandro from El Salvador.  Sprinting to deliver the bridal bouquet, I forgot money for the courthouse garage. Though I fancy myself Ms. Salsa in the City, I couldn’t handle Carrie Bradshaw heels in Nashville heat.  My feet swelled, then blistered.  After the ceremony, I leapt, then limped, across sizzling sidewalks barefoot — shady spot to shady spot– to Regions to withdraw the ransom for my car.

No matter.  Tonight I’m still smiling at the beauty of simplicity.   I was honored to see them stand before the Justice-of-the-Peace.  Though their wedding costs were minimal, the way they looked at each other as they exchanged vows and treat each other daily makes the couple one of the richest I know.

Monica returned to Spain three times after I met her—when her father died, when her teaching visa expired, when her holiday visa expired.  Despite the miles that separated her and Ale, their relationship grew even stronger.  Two years after they married, I still hope to have  what they have.  Love.  Fun.  An ease that comes from respecting each other and enjoying “the life.”

Though Skype keeps us connected, I miss my walks and talks with Moni by the Stones River.  We gave them a send-off which was bearable only because I plan to visit and, more importantly, they have each other.  I will miss them both at Mad Donna’s 5th Anniversary Celebration on Saturday—the place they met.  But I remembered just last month when we were all three at Summer Solstice parties—me on a farm in Tennessee and them at bond fires on the beach—that we were welcoming summer under the same moon.

Moni 2

Salsa at Mad D’s…where the Happy Couple and so many of us met.