Thursday, September 10, 2009

My Soggy Soul Bursts Forth

Today it rained.  And hard.


It's been a dry month, two months, three months.


Is that right?  Yes, it hasn't really rained since I got here, and that was three months ago.  I've watched the hills become half-brown.


But today, water for my soul, a downpour, lightning, my hair on end, the thunder, my mind alight, body sliding into ease and slurping up the moisture.  I feel like I can grow again.


Now the grass will grow, too.  I've really got to hire that gardener.


Since this was the first rain in my new (for me) Burundian house, I ran around like a madman looking out windows to see where all that water was going after it drenched onto my roof, my patio, my hillside backyard.  No one has gutters and downspouts here, you must understand, so it's all waterfalls of rain cascading off of roofs, splattering onto concrete, churning away in dirt or cement channels.


And thankfully: no big pools of water, no roof seepage, no sudden stream splashing in beneath the back door.  Whew.


Sat on the porch, then, to feel the windy spray; gave a small shiver of delight.


With a freshly soggy soul - praise for downpour-ous thunderstorms! - I've been thinking about the blessings of Burundi.  A small (and by no means comprehensive) list:


Bite-size USB sticks from U-Com that get me, most of the time (well, half of the time), internet anywhere I have cell phone reception.


Motorcycle taxis that whisk me around town for cents, hair blowing in the wind.


Local cheese from Boucherie Charcuterie Nouvelle, Bujumbura's meats-and-lots-more food-ery.


Strawberries piled for sale on little round rattan mats outside Dmitri's, pineapples from the central market, avocados from street-side vendors, mangos getting ripe on the tree in my backyard.


A made-to-order desk I put together using a hand-made door laid on top of four tall hand-made stools; it's been over six months, you understand, since this writer has had a desk on which to spread out his papers and prop up his feet (imagine big smile here).


Standardized electrical outlets.


A foot-and-a-half tall, blue-and-white statue of the Virgin Mary that sits on the corner of aforesaid desk (at the business/craft fair where I bought it, my friend was holding the statue for me, and a guy came up to her and said, "I see you have a Mary, would you like to buy a Jesus as well?").


The scent of palm oil and roasting peanuts on the mountainside air.


Passionfruit juice, locally made and packed into little brown bottles of sweet goodness.


Inviting stretches of beach beside the now blue, now green, now gray and wind-whipped lake.


The view of said lake from my newly-outfitted home 'office.'


And, of course, orange dirt roads running through green hills, just waiting for me to pedal them whenever I wish.


Oh, right, they'll be naught but mud-paths now...  Hmm, perhaps time to forsake the desk and get my now-soggy soul dirty, too.


1 comment:

lymartin said...

"I'll see your Mary and raise you a Jesus. . ."