A wink at the intersection

Bringgg, bringgg, on the cot beside me. Like a little bird trapped in the sheets. A banner across the top of my phone “Malaria Meds”.

She looked up briefly, disinterested, professional, and carried on.

I giggled, only I knew the absurdity.

A little intersection of two parts of my brain, high-fiving in the red-light district alley. The horny, fresh haircut traveler finally giving in and the recreational germaphobe fresh from exploring un-sanitized regions of the world.

I’d gotten all my shots before Africa. Typhoid, Diphtheria-Tetanus, give me a lollipop. Careful with malaria, take Malarone daily, and seven days after you leave. I was by then several days past that window.

She keeps going, I look around the room at the low lights, feel the heavily scented air. Fiddle with the phone volume briefly.

Health abroad is one of my forever vigilances. The first mis-timed sneeze and I’m at the corner pharmacy. Paying a grinning doctor way too much to give me a Z-pac and send me back to the dusty streets.

Bringg, Bringgg. I grab the phone, finally silence it. Exhale.

She looks up at me, “Don’t worry, I’ll make sure you finish.” Maybe she thought it was my wife? Or the cosmos was randomly chiming in to wrap up this unsavory encounter?

I had strolled the Red-Light district a few times, a couple 50 euro notes burning holes in my pocket. Got back to the train car hostel, pop my pill, wondering when I was going to slip behind a curtain.

The two currents weaving through each other, health freak, horny guy, shadow selves in the forest. Never noticing each other until they were face to face.

Oh hey. They shake hands. My Id family reunion at the brothel.

We’re always at the intersection of some neuroses, fantasies, laundry.

Adrift in a Pacific garbage patch of junk food and overstimulation, or riding a swift current trying to keep a newborn alive, ignoring every other force for the moment.

The more you push one down the weirder places they pop up.

I’d googled all the rigorous health protocols that prostitutes undergo there, felt reassured. I made some loops, found different alleys.

The red glints on the cobblestones, foggy air, laughs of the high British tourists stumbling around with Heinekens. Churches from 1640, austere, having to look down at the oldest human desires they couldn’t wash away.

Eventually, I caught the eye of the most animated lady: big fake tits, easy smile and laugh, warm eyes. I felt like she cared. Rapport matters, in any business.

I walked in and she closed the curtain, triaged me like a field medic. Faint conversations of passersby in the alley.

“It’s more to touch,” she said, watching my eyes drift.

Now the phone reminder’s off, but the alarm echoed in my head.

I didn’t have a reminder that told me to go to a bar and try to chat up a cute traveler, or one in the busy hostel.

No alarm that said chill the fuck out you’re not going to get malaria 2 weeks after from a mosquito that got stuck in your carry-on.

Just these stale pathways rooted in me, twisted by loneliness, travel fatigue, adrift with my own paranoias, crossing paths.

What current pulls you? How many secrets up your sleeve don’t make it past the grocery line conversation.

Get a note that grandma is in the hospital while you’re chuffing up a mountain feeling alive.

Think you’re writing a novel in a coffee shop but you’re really just aura flirting with the girl in yoga pants. Wallowing in self-pity at a drive thru when the cashier with the Chia Pet hairline asks how your day is, and you stop to actually take a look.

Riding one wave until another knocks you back to center.

Horny/hypochondria. Odd bedfellows. They briefly winked at each other as I sat in that brothel. You realize how absurd you are right, Guy? See you soon.

This Pig Will Ride

 I’m sitting in an air conditioned room of white and wood and concrete. Mid day and the jungle is beckoning to come in.

It’s been a lonely 4 days in Nicaragua. Wake up, check surf, maybe surf. Sit and read. Sit in AC. Get up and pee and start sweating and go back to AC. Scooter around for a bit. Walk the beach hoping to catch eyes with the beautiful German girl with the impossible figure. I first saw her and her friend having a very serious sounding conversation over corn and beans at a hostel restaurant.

Much of the world here is sun scorched, mangled, wrinkled, crushed plastic bottles on the highway. On the shoreline you see  her light blue eyes,  and perfect pale moon butt with thong riding right up it. The image cuts through the scenery like it should never have been here.

I’ve surfed 2.5 days. Today I ran in without thinking and got caught in a minor rip current.

I spent 15 minutes trying to zig-zag paddle in staying completely stationary until I decided to angle towards the rock where the current was weaker.

I looked to the shore and saw a surf instructor in his chair who couldn’t have given less of a shit. I waved a couple of times and pointed as if to ask where to go, panting and arms going numb. He looked straight ahead.

The guy who rented me the board today had pink eye from eating too much concha.

He seemed spiritually disturbed and  couldn’t sit still, so he decided he would go out and surf too, to cleanse his soul. Quickly leaving me to get my board ready.

Surf guys never like me at first. The random vacation gringo hate is palpable.

I’m tall, thickish, bearded. These are little shrimplets with shaggy hair and blackened tans smoking weed, watching YouTube, occasionally giving lessons to white girls on foamies.

The girls love them and I’m a bit jealous.

But they never like me. My first day I showed up to beginners bay full of coffee and eggs. I watched those little peelers in the early morning light and the colorful surfers already bobbing in the waves.

I put on my zinc sunscreen and asked if there was a bathroom. It’s a small bay with a couple surf shacks, I figured there might be one.  I told him I had to shit, he pointed me to a well with an enormous iguana hanging on the side. I  asked another girl who said there aren’t any. As the knot dug deeper in my stomach  I had to rush back home to not shit my pants.

When I got back somebody called me cerdo, “pig”.  I could hear the snickering.

They always come around. I’ll fuck up something, make a joke. Speak pretty good Spanish and ask slightly above  basic bitch questions. Then I’m in. It’s happened before.

In Ecuador I noodled on their little rusty guitar, and they showed me a riff. Then we played volleyball, and he gave me a haircut.

In Costa Rica my Spanish was lacking so it was mostly just sitting on the wood and nodding when it seemed appropriate. One guy said I had good style,  he would be watching me.

The non-auspicious start is a given. Nearly shitting myself scrambling around in face paint while they laid in hammocks.  But it only takes one good joke to see that little glimmer. They realize there is depth.

 However, when I was watching the waves, The pink eye guy pushed me aside and put a bucket where I was standing, signifying he wanted to do pull ups on the branch above me. I moved over, he huffed and just kept walking towards the ocean. I don’t think there was any winning him over in his state.

Other than him, I make slow inroads until they love the cerdo.


Post shit, I paddled out and caught two little peeling shoulders to  get back in the spirit.  Feel the world of ocean creep up and thrust my board. With that thrust I push down and rise up into the green, listening to the crash behind and around me as I trail off and turn. That indefinite moment of glide that feels so epic. From the shore it looks like a pig rolling down a little hill.

That short glide, and fall, and return to the sea. I flailed about, I was accepted, I was spit out in the white wash. I got back on my board  and joined the carousel again. This pig will ride.

Choose your American Dream

It’s 9:58 pm Saturday night at a restaurant in downtown Nashville. The restaurant closes at 10:00 pm. A couple walks in wearing Savannah Bananas gear (the comedy baseball team). The lady is a tiny pixie haired shrew, and the man looks somewhere in the middle of Jabba the Hut and the Mucinex man. His poor knees buckle as he shuffles his belly to sit like a pregnant mother. I, the waiter, run over and tell them the kitchen closes in 2 minutes, so we’ll need to get their order as soon as possible.

This brings the dirtiest look I’ve ever seen from the man who complains to my manager he’s being rushed. She offers a free dessert and an eye roll when she walks away.

Instead of getting ready to close, the servers groan as the man settles in, drinking his sprite with diabetic fingers and a knowing grin.

Meanwhile, in the open-air kitchen 30 feet away from sloth and gluttony another drama is unfolding. There have been recent Immigration raids in the area, ICE is stopping foreign looking people at random and asking for papers. There had been 100 arrests, many already on the road to deportation. Panic is setting in amongst the undocumented kitchen staff.

This had been escalating for a few days. They’d been carpooling with white people, sneaking in through back doors. South Nashville (majority Latino) was a ghost town. All the recreational spaces were shut down, no more football, dance clubs, pop up celebrations. Just eerie silence and waiting. Word reached us that ICE was two streets away doing stops.

In the back of the kitchen was a mother and her son, a middle-aged woman from Guatemala, and 3 cooks in their 20’s, all with families. The sous chef paces back and forth to the front window looking out at any passing police cars. His eyes are welling with tears but he’s holding them back. A stoic leader is vital right now.

You can feel the silent terror just sitting on them like a blanket. They’ll be ready to run out the back door any minute. These people are working 14-hour days, living with 6 others in a house. The chef hasn’t seen his family from home in ten years. They risked their lives to get here to just scrape by and sacrifice so their kids might have a chance.

Out front, Jabba is eating his pizza thoughtfully. He considers the crust, shuffles his gut forward, asks for more ice and another sprite please. His casual tone broadcasting his inalienable right to comfort and relaxation. He side-eyes the chef when he comes up to look out the window. They’re the last table in an empty restaurant, still ordering food.

The front of house is standing there with eye daggers pointed at him.

The man had come from a comedy baseball game, the purest American form of leisure and absurdity. He came in entitled and ready to sit for as long as his bloated legs would hold him, savoring the opportunity to punish us for rushing him.

The 14-year-old dishwasher in the back, weighing all of 90 pounds is eating scraps, checking his mom’s phone. It took weeks for him to make eye contact, just the occasional wry smile. His worst fears were confirmed when his cousin was arrested last week. He and his mom took a few days to hide in their house. Now they can’t leave with customers here, can’t go outside while police lights blaze across the windows.

The Irony of the American dream playing out with vivid contrast. An entitled beast coming from a baseball game, not a care in the world. Eating himself to death because he’s allowed. A kitchen full of people working 60-hour weeks for minimum wage, clinging to each other in fear they’ll have their life swept away any moment.

Labored breath from both parties, 30 feet away from each other. Ask them what they think they deserve?

Okay with not understanding

The dough-eyed love birds in Aladdin gear drift through alleyways under the looming Andes mountains and ripping winds. They sound like patchouli wind chimes, walking hand and hand, Arabian scarves over their mouth. Today isn’t a Tuesday- it’s day three of a Kambo cleanse, in the dry season, during a retrograde. Tomorrow will be a nice Temezcal to wash it down.

I walked by their tents by the river a number of times, the most bizarre display of new colonialism I’ve ever witnessed. French and Greek and German wanderers congregated on this “free” patch of land off a road to set up life.

Up a mountain road, amongst scrub brush and piney trees a small river runs under a bridge. The Wanderers took planes across the world. They packed buses, shuffled their hairy feet, and did piggyback rides giggling to arrive at this stream. They found the perfect grassy patch, stripped and hung their clothes up. Sometimes you’ll catch a breast glint in the sun, hear them howl at the moon on clear nights.

During the day, Peruvian construction workers on the road watch the Wanderers stumble out of the woods to slink down to the town for a day of spiritual loitering. The workers are are plowing and graveling that turn to ensure smooth passage for the local cholas going up and down with their goods. The workers barely look up as the Wanders move past.

They’re perfectly tanned, rustic body-odored, bowing as they squeeze into the town bus. Little Peruvian babies stare up at them from their mothers’ laps. The bare skin, the trinkets, their disarming smiles are completely new sights.

I always wondered whether the Pisac Wanderers were as happy as their ostentatious greetings to one another. Sometimes the most elaborate weddings are because the marriage was never meant to work out, performance art. Kissing, soul gazing, hugs last so long they seem like soldiers returning from war.

However, I couldn’t fault the singing kirtans where they all congregated once a week. They were such joyous events. Bundled together on pillows, singing in unison, making sure to always touch. Watching them I saw youth and hope and unfiltered joy that’s hard to find in America sometimes, so I was probably jealous.

I tried to extract meaning and depth, to see them as young hedonistic Theroux’s living the way we were meant to. They have tan and the crust of earth in every orifice of their body, except their perfect teeth. There had to be deeper earthly wisdom to accompany that. But so many conversations I found myself lost in platitudes, spiritual puff.

They would be delivering a monologue of the previous night’s ritual chemical unwinding, the drama and beauty and unimaginable smells. I’m nodding but lose track. I continue to eat my apple, watching a dog look for somewhere shit in the alley. Mhm. Let’s hug, transfer good energy and carry on.

What was left after the exploring the daily chemical rabbit holes and astrological visions?

I was the sober, slightly older guy enchanted by their bounce and vigor, but I usally felt a bit lost and alone at the end of the day. My bananas would end up missing, somebody didn’t flush. I imagine they may have felt the same disillusionment were it not for the cuddle puddles and living in tents together.

Sometimes they got a little too deep.

One night an older couple came over for a rapé ceremony (pronounced “rah-peh”). During this, my friend  would blow a very strong tobacco powder through a horn directly into their sinuses. It induces a temporary but powerful head rush, sometimes vomiting, sometimes deities.

The couple arrived as my friend was setting up the space. They were grey, late 50s, smile lines all over, with Quebecois accents. They had deerskin or other woodland creature clothes, feathers in the hair. These were lifelong wanderers of the cosmos not recent converts. They had the patient, knowing grin that you hope to have at some point in your aged wisdom, without letting it become a scowl.

They sat upon their pillows. The candles were lit and intentions were whispered. My friend began by reading a short offering. Then the woman positioned herself upright, signaled she was ready. The horn went directly in her nose, and a loud “whoosh” sent the powder flying into her brain.

What ensued would have been considered a psychotic break depending on where and when it took place. She began shaking, in a wave from stomach up to her head. Fits that seemed to go up and down as the powder settled in her cavities.

Then began the voices. Glossalalia as they call in Southern Baptist traditions. The woman sat inches from my friend chanting a completely unintelligible language, but with all the inflections and tone of a deep confessional. 30 seconds of rabid speech, followed by a pause, then an inflection. Then on she went. We sat in silence.

I was just told there was a community dinner tonight. I should have known better. I was at the dinner table with 2 of the other girls, admittedly giggling like them. They looked to me for reassurance but I was dumbstruck.

For minutes she sat carrying on this conversation with my friend. Her eyes were closed and my friend held her hand and just kept nodding her head, not daring to turn back to look at the stunned group behind her. I couldn’t gauge whether she was freaking out, or found herself some sort of prophet to get this reaction. Head to head, hands intertwined they sat cross legged locked in this communication.

In the midst of this, 3 faces appeared at the window. Two guys and a girl of the tribe had just finished a day long peyote journey walking through the mountains. Inti, the bearded leader, came in and sprung to action. He sat next to my friend and rubbed the older lady’s back reassuredly. The other two came and sat with us, similarly amused and terrified.

Eventually it subsided, the lady and her husband spoke for a moment in hushed voices, a quick hug and that was that.

From ages 21 to 60 in this room together, witnessing an utterly bizarre spiritual /demonic moment together.

Being clear-headed is an alienating experience. But there’s being sober at a bar with drunks talking about football. Then there’s sitting at a kitchen table in the mountains of Peru with mostly strangers from all over the world, watching an elderly woman speaking in tongues. Here they elevated the game.

The Wanderers arrived fresh faced. They get older and snort spices that make them speak in tongues. They fight against the Urubamba winds and travelers gut until the money or motivation runs out, then they’re kicked up with the dust and carried away. Like clockwork the next group will creep out by the riverside. The Peruvian road workers will see them and have a puzzled look, but it passes in a second and they continue moving the gravel. They don’t give it another thought, perhaps they’re on to something.

As I write this, across the busy main street is a man with his pants around his thighs, sitting on the sidewalk sideways with his balls draped over the curb. Cars are zooming by in both directions. People to his right can’t see his sack, but my angle from the coffee shop across the street somehow offered this blessed view. Next door to him at the laundromat, theres a little kid running around outside next to her dad. Ballsack man waves, the dad waves back.

Maybe it’s better not know. Maybe I just take awareness too seriously. So I travel to a random mountain town In Peru, watch my elders snort spice, and my brain tries to put a nice bow on an otherwise inexplicable family drug dinner night. Awareness costs more in the end.

The Peruvian Road workers don’t try to figure out why the Wanderers are there. The dad is too tired to walk by the homeless man and see his balls taking a siesta against the curb. I’m sitting somewhere in the middle with the same choice. Maybe it’s better not to ask.

Laura

In Montanita, Ecuador I hit a lull. Doing snoopy walks at sunset hoping to catch the glance of a cute female, or slough off some energy from the Brazilians playing football in the sand. I was quite in my head, surrounded by a majestic beach, green cliffs and jungle in the distance.

Still sunsets and nights were tough. You see people get closer as the day dies, and I’m just a lonely gringo shuffling through the sand daydreaming.

But one night I was sitting and a girl I’d seen up and down the beach came along.

She was 5 feet tall, with long hair light that was considering whether to dread itself. She wore beat up sandles and a scarf dress. As she got closer though I could see her beautiful dark eyes and quick smile.

People often compared her to Shakira, which she hated (loved). She ambled up the beach toward me holding an empty paper towel tube around which were wrapped little bracelets and necklace type things.

She waved and walked up to my chair, standing to my right while the sun sank behind her and the surfers made their final cuts in the waves. I noticed her thick legs and round butt.

Her name was Laura, she was from Bogota, Colombia, and she had been a lawyer working for indigenous rights, but became disillusioned with corruption, an uphill battle that seemed futile in her country. So, she quit her job, sold everything, and found a band of roving South Americans and decided to just travel and survive.

She sold little bracelets on the beach that probably took ten minutes to make, but her personality was the selling point.

All 5 foot of her was built with ancestral sass, no nonsense, however tinged with a sentimental side. She told of her fight to help people and how it had inspired a tattoo that covered her entire right arm. It was the chronological history of Colombians, from the indigenous onto colonialism and independence. The heroic figures and battle scenes all etched from her shoulder down to her wrist. She had tattoos up and down both arms.

As she talked, I picked up her tongue ring and choker necklace. Every man will notice, daydream, then return to conversation. Details that are planned and can’t go unaccounted for.

We ended up chatting a few minutes, but I didn’t have any cash, so I grabbed her number and we decided to get together soon. She flashed her smile and carried on down the beach.

We eventually got dinner and she told me about Colombia’s sordid past. We sat at a meat griller, smoke and yells flying around us. Me shirtless, eating pounds of chicken, staring into her eyes while she recounted how the government would kill farmers, dress them up as guerillas and broadcast on the news that they had taken out some anti-government force.

They used the poor as pawns in a raging battle against narco-traffickers that effectively controlled the southwest portion of the country. As she spoke a I watched a street performer just outside who was her friend. He was a quiet Peruvian man who never spoke but dazzled with an acrobatic show perched perilously close to the numerous grills lining the street. This nightly circus just became the norm. When he finished and came around for a tip she glared at me, I noticed and popped a coin in his hat.

When I said something dumb, or made a joke, she called me the n-word but pronounced “eegah”. It made me so happy to hear this sassy Colombian from the street influenced but unencumbered by American slang. Try saying that in Chicago my dear tiny Colombian.

At the chicken grill she delved into her past. Her father was a cop, fighting the same corrupt system that she was. He was the prototypical shut off Colombian man, hardheaded, unable to show affection. She fought for his approval, worked her ass off to become a lawyer, and gained all the trappings of success that one could hope to find.

Eventually, as the corporate grind does, you find yourself in a sweet apartment overlooking a city filled with destitution that you haven’t made a dent in, and a government that will never truly care about its people. She sold it all, grabbed a few trinkets and headed south to Ecuador.

And now she lived in a commune with 6 other wanderers, sleeping in a hammock, cooking group dinners at 11pm listening to Argentinian rock. She was happier than she had been in a long time, and she didn’t have to convince me.

There are certain people you see walking by that can paint a vivid picture in your mind without every meeting them. Thankfully at that sunset I got to open this wild book for a little while. A glimpse into a vast universe I’d never be aware of. Hopefully she’s off lecturing another gringo in a smoky chicken shop while the restless beach town churns around her.

Manuel

Sit in the ocean, facing the rhythmic pulse from the horizon, pelicans swoop along the cresting waves. They always head north, up the endless green coast. Fishermen grunt when they roll out of their hammock, get in the boat, and finally again when they settle back in 12 hours later. Rhythms.

Maybe you’re only born with, or only capable of exacting so many motions. You have 1000 micro habits, tics, subtle machinations of your body and psyche that you can use in endless iterations throughout your corporeal life. I remember when I was really high at basketball camp trying to explain this theory to my friends.

You only get a fixed number of moves; like a chess piece with a certain range of motion that you aren’t fully aware of, but is hardwired in. This walk, this greeting, these 25 steps to the store. Open door and smile, ask if they have the cake today?

Some people exert way more, build up a scary arsenal. Others have considerably less, out of lack of necessity, or they just excel with their small amount.

Fishermen: Wake up, grunt. Bead of sweat wiped off forehead, pee. Back hurts. Step outside and feel the first rays of sun slant down onto the dusty street. Hack open coconut, have a drink. Put on pants, hop in the back of the truck speeding down the road. Get on the boat, squint up at the gulls.  

Day- Night—Party—Day—how many motions were required? How many minute synaptic calculations fired to send him through the day? The grid was laid out early and he plods along it day after day. The same environment the same maneuvers, recreated like a sentient zombie. Snapshots carried over.

I understand how they’ll do the first prototype of AI robots. Manuel, the fisherman. He’s programmed away in the vaults of the highest security Pentagon laboratories. Created as a middle-aged Ecuadorian tio.

He’s somebody’s uncle from Guayaquil who had a daughter, got laid off, then moved in with family in a tiny brick house on the coast to find work. No one in that family had ever met him but welcome him without question.

He has the distended gut of beer, tropical fruit, and hammock time, but the worn hands of the fishing lines and scars from accidents at work or drunken quincinieras. He has just enough teeth. On his head a plume of black hair, the pride of his lineage, he keeps that full bush well into his stooped over days. He sleeps in his hammock in the living room, plays cards under the buggy lights at night.

He poses for pictures at his nieces graduation party which is on the street outside the house. There is a display of roses and pictures plastered against the wall for everyone to pose in front of.

Is he like anyone else? That crooked smile is tired but warm. A lovable program plopped into the heat and rhythms of the coast, bound to carry on the traditions, the celebrations, the noise.

In his small town all life takes place on that 3-foot strip between the wall and the dusty road, pushing boundaries of plastic chairs and crates and tables filled with fish bones. These often spill well into the street for birthdays or football matches.

In Montanita the party rituals are more ornate. One warranted renting huge speakers and a blow-up pool put directly in the middle of the road, yelling and cumbia music going until around 3am. Another hired a clown and put 30 chairs in the middle of the street so he could perform at midnight to a crowd of bored mothers and kids running around. It’s only a party if your ears are being blasted off by the shoddy equipment, makeshift carnivals at a moment’s notice. Walking by a 5-year old’s birthday in a parking lot, a full PA system is blaring Miley Cyrus to a circle of girls in chairs twiddling their thumbs.

The piece de resistance was the man across the streets 70th birthday.. I should have known walking home at 9pm to see them just starting. 2 huge speakers, no doubt brought in by the wild cousin from the city who’d made a backhand deal. He’s got an earring and perfume so strong the neighborhood dogs cowered away. 70 years old represented some sort of impending spiritual death for my potbellied 5-foot-tall neighbor. There were the holy speakers, the pavilion was filled with streamers, somebody conjured up a mixing board that intermittently broadcast “feliz cumpleanos, es tu dia vamoss..!!” along with other unintelligible hype. My window was directly across the tiny dirt road, full volume.

 By 12am it was picking up steam, I peeked out to see the corpulent tias hooting as they nimbly stepped to the beat. By 4 am, with no change, I walked out in the road in my boxers and stared at them, only to have the birthday boy stumble over to tell me he’s on his property, there is no issue, have a drink.

I lay awake plotting how to cut the wires, throw a rock, file a complaint with god, eventually 9 am rolled around to no volume change, and a look out the window revealed 5 men passed out drunk in a circle. Mission accomplished.

Song, and noise in general is an important ritual. There is no silence, so however you can fill the void is how you participate in the journey.  I was delighted to find there are no scheduled times for the garbage truck, but rather a tune blared from a speaker on the truck signifies that it’s time to take the trash out. Every time I’d hear it, 7am, 4pm, I’d hustle to find the source and sing along. I picture the moms’ ears perking up from making food while holding a baby, spanking her older hijo, ven, sacalo! And he scrambles out with the enormous bag barefoot into the street.

Noise is celebration, part of the rhythm, but it ebbs and flows. The quiet rainy nights are for reflection and watching plumes of smoke sift up through the dim light. The dawn where the gulls swoop along the waves, crabs skitter around the incoming tide, and the breeze comes across the awakening sea offers a brief reset. Once the garbage trucks sound, the store fronts are swept, and dust kicks up, the silence gives way to another round of life, another crashing swirling sequence of everyone’s programming, predictable but beautiful in its synchronicity.

The heat pulses down and sweat blends with the smells of the tiendas and fruit stands, rusty trucks accelerate down the highway at the edge of town. Nothing was planned, but by the time the music dies off, the street dogs curl up, and all you can hear is waves, it all gets done. Manuel is in his hammock watching the kids playing silently.

Somebody delivered a palm tree to be planted but it sat on the pavement for a week until the roots dried up. It was just a sad teeter totter, so people scurried around it and kids kicked soccer balls off it under the moonlight. It found it’s place in the noise.