Words are all that is left. Over the course of my trip I wrote all over my bike. I usually do and it was a source of amusement for those that could read English, as well as giving me something to think about . . . here is a selection.
"devotion frees"
"the production of too many useful things results in too many useless people" - Marx
"normality is death" - Adorno - a simple phrase with a multiplicity of meaning
"is life not a thousand times too short for us to bore ourselves" - Nietzsche
"life is too short for soft porn" - New Yorker cartoon - it is not really about porn children
"go on get out last words are for fools you have not said enough" - Marx - good advice
"abandon hope" - Buddhist saying that is not meant to be depressing . . . think about it
"anything too stupid to be said is often sung" - Voltaire - witty guy
"the rich will do anything for the poor but get off their backs" - Marx - I thought of this after meeting many rich kids volunteering to help the poor while on vacation . . . maybe they should just write a check to the poor?
"you don't know you are having fun until you fall down" - I always say this and I fall a lot.
"we must have a pessimism of the mind and optimism of the will" - Gramsci - thought of this while doing things hard
"gracious one, play. The universe is an empty shell werein your mind frolics infinitely." - a tantra and good attitude to cultivate
"Pierce some part of your nectar-filled form with a pin, and gently enter the piercing." - tantra that I contemplated while crossing the Atacama because it seemed like a good escape. I thought of you, Dave Y, because I know you really like this one . . .
"Put attention neither on pleasure or pain but between these." - while climbing 1000's of meters yet again
"Roam about until exhausted and then dropping to the ground, in this dropping be whole." - that is just what I was doing, usually dropping fast asleep before I even ate dinner
4.19.2011
4.18.2011
Elvis the Sheep
"Feel an object before you. Feel the absence of all other objects but this one. Then, leaving aside the object-feeling and the absence-feeling, realize."
more to come . . .
I finished up this post while I watch the brothel across the street empty out of its last customers, girls go home, and the red light went out. I will be continuing to post the last of my travels.
4.15.2011
wet cold windy wet cold windy then Ushuaia
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4.08.2011
4.07.2011
Chasing Rainbows . . .
of course that means rain. The rain rarely lingers clouds race across the sky on the wind the landscape raked by shadows and sun. Trees leave little doubt as to the direction of the prevailing winds - thankfully they point in our direction.
Pto. Natales was a pleasant rest stop at the Erratic Rock hostel full of folks doing/done one of two trekking loops in the Torres del Paine, the W or the O. Matt considered it, I never did but we heard enough discussion of the trek to feel like we did it thrice. I have plenty of exercise and cold dampness in my life at the moment - besides I heard it is in the 70's in Buenos Aires and I have a plane to catch. The afternoon started wet leaving in a steady cold rain, Mat and I were braced for a little misery but when we dropped down onto the Llanuras de Diana the clouds started to break up.
Llanura means flat plain which connotes 'boring' to my mind and everyone said it was going to be a dull monotonous ride. The ride was beautiful passing a succession of estancias with essentially one climb, other than rollers, up the Cordon Arauca over looking the Llanura de Diana.
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The winds drove the rain clouds before us producing a continuous series of retreating rainbows for the 250km into Punta Arenas.
With the approaching darkness we started looking for a place to spend the night out of the inevitable wind and rain. Thankfully the paradas (bus stops) have shelters with doors and appeared every 20km - we just needed to find one with windows, a solid floor, and not used as a bathroom.
Home sweet home for the night out of the raging wind and driving rain - stylish architecture too. Truckers honk to us roaring north and south as we sat on the bench in our sleeping bags cooking dinner and drinking box wine by headlamp.
Accommodations were a little tight but we could stretch out - just barely.
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The morning dawned promising with rain blowing ahead, we had a big day of 160+km into Punta Arenas - hopefully the winds would stay to our backs . . . but we knew that was not to be. Initially we motored down the road at 40-50kmph then the road angled west and we were blasted from the side. Pushing down the road leaned over into the wind shoved around by gusts that made standing hard. A woman tending a small store told us the day was relatively calm . . . The riding was hard but occasionally relented when we turned easterly, however I was finally able to get close enough to Rheas, or Nandus, to take their photo crossing the road. We also saw thousands of sheep along with the usual assortment of birds and Guanacos.
The day was long. Matt and I got separated. I rode into Punta Arenas on a US style four lane highway in the dark . . . with two lanes closed for construction - not much fun weaving back and forth across the unlit highway over barriers on dirt frontage roads to arrive in an unfamiliar downtown chilled, hungry, and wind burned. I ducked into an internet cabina located a hostel, got my bearings, then tracked down Matt after a shower, beer, and food. Matt and I met up at 11pm for second dinner. Here we are at 54 degrees latitude in the largest southern most city in the world . . .
Tomorrow we cross the Straight of Magellan by ferry to Tierra del Fuego.
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