Archive for the 'On the road' Category



Halfway

We left our house in Kabul like we did the last three times, with in the back of our mind the possibility that we cannot come back because something had gone horribly wrong. Hopefully we are lucky again, two weeks from now.

We closed the door behind us, said goodbye to our daytime guard, Rabbani from Badakhshan, piled all the food that needs to be consumed before we come back on trays in the refrigerator for all our staff. We also left them envelopes with, in my best Dari script, the wish ‘Eid Mubarak’ (عید مبارک) written on them, my attempt to spell everyone’s name correctly and some cash inside for the upcoming holydays.

In Kabul the weather may have turned but in Dubai desert temperatures prevailed. When we landed at 8:30 PM it was still 37 degrees Celsius; we know this because we had to leave the terminal and go outside because the baggage systems of Safi airlines and KLM don’t connect.

We had to enter UAE, pick up our baggage and turn around and check our bags and ourselves in again. It was good we had about four and a half hours to do this because the route from arrival back to check in was rather circuitous. The place is not set up for people doing this.

During our last trip we had signed up for UAE e-Gate, an electronic entry and exit system that is supposed to help avoid lines. So far it has come up short on promises. As it turned out that was a good thing. Since the card and fingerprint reader did not recognize me I was manually entered upon arrival (Axel was electronically recognized).

After we had checked in and had to leave the country again I had to be manually exited as well. For Axel there was a problem. You cannot exit electronically within 6 hours of entering electronically. They don’t tell you those things when you apply for the e-gate pass. It is supposed to let you in and out quickly. Axel told me it was a classical example from Jeffrey Moore’s The Chasm, a treatise about the big divide between the nice idea of a new technology and getting it right with the early adopters so that late adopters will be enticed. I am not sure we are early adopters but our experience is unlike to attract any kind of adopters in our circle of friends.

And now we are in Amsterdam after a fairly smooth ride in our economy plus seats – extra leg room (the kind that used to be normal) and in a quiet part of the airplane (except for two screaming children) for about 140 Euro extra. We splurged and congratulated each other on the relative comfort.

In Holland the weather is like fall. We didn’t bring any clothes for that so, instead of going into town (any town) to pass the six hours of our transit time, we settled in the KLM lounge, took a shower and caught up on stuff.

Travels

We left warm and damp Manchester, chauffeured to the airport by Woody. The plane was overbooked and we lucked out – Delta moved us to the first row which meant that the Atlantic crossing was a cinch. We woke up just in time for landing.

But then, as if to illustrate the concept of a zero-sum game, you win one, you lose one, we flew the second stretch in the backrow of KLM’s full plane that seemed to have been designed for children, as evidenced by the amount of screaming children surrounding us.

We arrived in our Dubai hotel feeling dirty and exhausted. Too late for the restaurant we had a bar dinner with our last cold beers in a poorly designed lounge watching Argentina beat Greece.

And now we are on our last leg(s).

Home-bound

It’s a beautiful humid summer morning in Manchester; the humidity is of the kind that makes arthritic joints hurt. This is one good thing about living in high and dry Kabul, my right knee is OK there most of the time.

We celebrated Father’s Day with all but Jim in a restaurant that looked out over the Gloucester wetlands – a breathtaking landscape that makes you want to reach for your watercolour kit. Our own watercolour kit has remained unused despite all our best intentions and will travel back with us to Kabul.

The vacation was hardly a time to rest and relax as it was filled with too many obligations, to others and to ourselves. I remember this phenomenon from when we lived in Lebanon, then Senegal. It’s a common problem for expats.

We know that our next ‘vacation’ here won’t be much of one either, what with the wedding and another short stay. The real vacations won’t happen until the end of this year and the spring of next, when we go on our regional R&Rs, regional meaning India or the Emirates, or wherever we want to go further in our central Asia neighbourhood.

Last night we said goodbye to Sita and Jim, after an unsuccessful attempt to meet with all sets of parents to talk about this wedding that is supposed to be low key and simple. We are getting vibes that this may not be the case but it is too late now. We are leaving and this is now in other people’s hands, primarily our daughters, it seems.

After my first swim of the year in Lobster Cove, with thunder clouds and lightning threatening on the horizon, we understood that our boat trip to Gravelly Island was off. Instead we went for a spin around town in Woody’s old model T Ford, a car bought by his mom in the 40s and kept in pristine condition.
Manchester, at this time of the year, and seen this way is even more beautiful than ever. We completed this farewell to our town with G&Ts overlooking the cove and that is when we both got sad.

I tried to remove the sadness with only partial success by walking for an hour at dusk while Axel and Tessa reviewed the financial aid application for her (hopefully) last year in school. She has reached the age at which she is (at least according to the IRS) no longer part of our household.

I had my last acupuncture session with Bill. He had come to the conclusion that way too much of my energy is in my head and so he stuck several needles in there to let some of the excess energy out and also to connect me with the chi of my ancestors. I told him that I wasn’t sure that would be very helpful since my ancestors along the female line were also very much in their heads. Still, it was another great session that was accompanied by the music of Ali Farka Toure. I emerged from the session in a better psychological state than going in and now feel quite ready to face the long trip home and the return to work.

Turning corners

Over the last 7 years I have developed a ritual at OBTC, which is the writing and reciting of a poem that chronicles the conference from beginning to the (nearly) end. It arose spontaneously one year and since then there is a bit of an expectation that I do this each time. For 6 years in a row I have been more or less successful at this. The poem slowly writes itself as the conference progresses. On Friday’s talent night it is ready for the microphone.

This year I was too preoccupied with my own sorry self state and the muse was not able to cut through the stress. Cheryl said, it is OK, you don’t have to do it, but I saw Jerry sit with his sign up pad and he indicated there was a spot for me. I surprised myself when I did not feel any of the self-imposed pressure I am so good at generating.

The appearance of the hummingbird on Thursday morning, the focus on design, the invitation of possibilities brought the muse back. What emerged was not your ordinary detached chronicle poem but rather a poem about turning a corner, the process of letting joy back in. I marvelled at the resilience of the creative process and surprised myself (and others) when the finished product emerged.

I knew some form of stress is important for any act of creativity but I didn’t think on Thursday that the tangle of my emotions could let anything creative through. But it did and with that I place my final step across the watershed.
And so, at the last day of the conference I finally began to enjoy being where I was and let in the new ideas that are to nourish me for the coming year, inform my practice and guide my sense making. Late, but not too late.

By the time Peter Vaill showed up, on an immense video screen, I was wide open to receive his wisdom about learning, co-inquiry and practice. Addressing an audience of academics he spoke about practitioners and in doing so he spoke directly to me.

Feeling, judgment, sense, proportion, balance and appropriateness – he kept repeating the words over and over, like a strange hypnotic mantra. Together they form the essence of Practice. He compared it to the dark matter without which the universe would disintegrate. In this case the universe of practitioners, that what holds it together in the face of the daily onslaught of emergencies, tangled relations, unspoken expectations, pressures, strong emotions and other messiness that need to be acted on, one way or another, or else; amplified in my case by the cross-cultural experience of living in Afghanistan and the stress of knowing what can happen in that place.

It was a very comforting image, this dark matter: allowing for feelings, judgment that draws from experience, common sense (is that what he meant?), relationship to the whole (not too big, not too small), balance between me and them, here and there, now and then, and appropriateness, this is Afghanistan I live in, not the US.

I left the conference more (though not completely) centred so that I can enjoy the last two days of my vacation, and get that coveted rest and recuperation.

After a day of flying East I was picked up by Axel in a small shiny black car – the result of a trade in of our tired old Blubaru that is nearing its quarter million mile anniversary. This one has only a tenth of that and should therefore be able to serve our household for the considerable future.

At home I found everyone plus some enjoying a fire on the beach, making music and enjoying the cool summer night, bathing suits and towels scattered all over the place, the remnants of lobster tacos and, by our bed, a small gift from our offspring that we would not have tolerated in their bedrooms 12 years ago. It made me repeat, in my mind, the question, so often asked, why the heck did you move to Kabul? Indeed. I will have a fairly good answer to that later this week.

Joy-ish

I was up in the middle of the night trying to arrange Axel’s flight back that would match mine, now that his passport was returned (mine not yet but on its way). If ever I needed to travel with my best friend it is now. Some people said, why, he can just take another route. But they don’t understand the extent to which I need him by my side now, all the time.

But the flights that were available yesterday were not in the middle of the night and I panicked. A nice Delta gentleman helped me out and was able to find exactly what I was looking for. When I woke up in the morning I discovered that my own ticket was bought for another route. More panic, more rushes of adrenaline, emails, phone calls, and finally peace. Everything is settled now. We are flying together back home.

When you are stressed out it is hard to exit. I could hear people think, com’on, snap out of it. The problem with stress and depression is that you cannot. It was a good reminder about one of the real tragedies of Afghanistan, namely that millions of people are stressed and traumatized. If my relatively small stresses affected my functioning in such elementary ways, one can wonder about those who are traumatized. I think life throws us these life lessons, so we can be better helpers, listeners. I know the acts of others towards me in this last week that were helpful and those that weren’t. And I certainly remember those that added to my stress.

I went to a session about Managing as Designing Activity that helped me get out of my funk. The trigger sentence was this: design invites collaboration and invites possibilities. Design is about ‘how can we make this reality happen, together?’ It was the magic phrase that lifted the clouds and provided the door through which I could get out of my fog. The opposite is ‘Managing as Problem Solving activity’ that is about constraints and limiting views. I had gotten a hint about that yesterday during my own presentation but I wasn’t able to pick it up then. Now I was.

As part of the session we were sent outside to scout the magnificent UNM campus for design principles: rhythm, balance, contrast, variety, patterns and then use what we saw to reframe our management challenges.

When I left the classroom I saw a small hummingbird. Years ago a Native American woman identified the hummingbird as my totem. I don’t get to see it very often, certainly not in Afghanistan, but it has shown up in times of crisis and stress, and so it did today. Hummingbirds are about joy, an element that had been rather absent since I landed a week ago. Some benevolent force in the universe sent it my way.

In rather inexplicable ways the hummingbird let me to a Rumi poem that had a few lines that resonated deeply – I am excited to go back to studying my Dari so that one day I can read Rumi in his own language:

[…]
Be with those who help your being
Don’t sit with indifferent people, whose breath
Comes cold out of their mouths
Not these visible forms, your work is deeper
[…]

Pseudo R&R

People at the conference ask me what new skills I am learning. I finally have some down time to think about this question in ways I have not before. I think I am much more aware of the American cultural biases in our work and in the ‘solutions’ that are proffered to Afghanistan from the West. I also think that I need to learn better coping skills, better stress management, exercise management and all that. Coming home from Afghanistan is stressful in ways that is different than living in Afghanistan. It has something to do with coming down and turning off.

During my flight from Boston to Albuquerque I tried to sort out my return trip, and Axel’s, in the presence of way too much ambiguity (will we get our passports back in time, for example). I realized I was like a tightly coiled spring. By the time I landed in Albuquerque, late because of high winds here, I had missed the kick off dinner, and was ready to crawl into bed and have a really good and long cry. I felt rather sorry for myself; this is not how I imagined passing my R&R. I don’t feel like I am resting or recuperating quite yet.

I think my final R&R will start when I get on the plane. We are not doing something right. And, given the wedding event at our next R&R, I am not sure how to right this during our next trip.

Seeing old friends last night at the conference opening activity got me out of my funk. I had a late dinner in a more authentic Mexican restaurant that the one we lunched at in Beverly on Tuesday. I had a real taco that looked and tasted better than any I had before. Magid accompanied me and we talked about working in a Moslem society and how our life has changed.

This morning, responding to the exhortations of my new acupuncturist, I rose at 5 AM and went for a walk around the campus. It takes exactly 45 minutes. It was a sensual delight, in the quiet pink dawn and the cool air. Given the (mid day) heat, dryness and altitude this could have been Kabul. Given the absence of razor wire, blast walls, sand bags and armed opposition groups, it could not.

joy and unjoy

How to keep a balance between vacation and managing one’s affairs is more than a challenge this ‘vacation.’ Managing our affairs includes a wedding in less than 3 months, and, more urgently, our return trip to Kabul. There is a computer crisis at the Afghan embassy in Washington and, this may not be unconnected, no one answers the phone anymore. The problem is that they have our passports. This is a source of stress.

Weddings are notorious sources of stress, even when it is meant to be a low key one. Luckily Tessa is on top of things and we got a few of the wedding to do list organized: a clambake/Essex River boat ride for the immediate family and two tickets to Barcelona for a well deserved R&R for the newlyweds.

Roger called us in the morning, in between toot and shoulder doctor appointments, that there was a moral imperative to go out on his boat, so beautiful was the weather, finally. We joined him only after the teeth were looked at (OK for me, not OK for Axel, requiring another appointment, yuch), the shoulder was checked (as good as it can be and will probably ever be) and an appointment with the virus doctor from MSH to stop the flow of 100s of error messages that seem to be able to slip through my (clearly defective) anti-virus software. After several checks they still slip through and won’t be fixed until I am back in Kabul.

But then we had a bout of vacation – in breakneck speed up the small zigzaggy creeks through the Ipswich wetlands, upstream only to be able to float silently back downstream. We went hunting for edible grasses (Glaswort (sp?) and something else that looked that the ancestral wheat that got us into farming and eventually into modernity).

When going out into Ipswich and Essex wetlands timing is everything. If you miscalculate you need to stay in the marshes until the outgoing tide comes in again to lift your boat. This happened last fall to Axel and our friends when they pulled up their anchor too late. It was nice in hindsight, but not great when you have other appointments in your book.

We returned to dry land in time and had another lovely dinner with our best friends in Essex, collectively cooking a wonderful meal in the big St. John’s kitchen. The marsh greens we had collected earlier made it into an asparagus dish (the lemony one) and a green bean dish (the salty grains), enhancing both dishes.

Back home the stresses of the immediate future pressed forward again, as if they had lain in wait to catch us upon our return. It included packing for my trip to Albuquerque, monitoring the cost of all possible routes for Axel’s return trip (but no purchase because of the missing passports).

When morning came around I was able to squeeze in another Acupuncture session with Bill. He aligned my kidney-heart axis, a powerful one for people who have to be on (that would indeed be me as I have a conference presentation tomorrow that I have given little attention so far); he also doctored with my temperature using needles which left me cold and then hot. And finally he paid special attention to my arthritic knee that has been bothering me in the middle of the night. It was a long whole body experience that left me calm first and then tense again when I realized we had to rush to the airport to get me on the plan to New Mexico. I am half way there now.

Checkups and tuneups

Axel has his hearing back, at least with his hearing aid on. It was something mechanical in the fancy hearing aid (too fancy for dusty Kabul no doubt) and it is fixed now; he was sent home with a spare of whatever was broken.

These are the days of tune-ups and checkups for our bodies. They need this. Yesterday I had a vertigo attack again, a mild one but still. I took the pill they gave me at the George Washington Hospital emergency room and was drowsy most of the rest of the day. It’s still the same diagnosis, mild positional vertigo. Today teeth and shoulder doctors are on the menu as well as prescription refills.

We had bad Mexican food for lunch which was amply compensated for by a superb Malaysian dinner at Sook and Roger’s house with our closest friends.

The rest of the day was too much about arranging our return trip to Kabul and back in August, and taxes, how to limit the potentially enormous tax bite out of our earnings while in Kabul. It is all very complicated but our tax advisor thinks we are on the right track.

And in the meantime it is wet and cold most of the time. I am starting to look forward to my trip to Albuquerque tomorrow. There the temperature is more like Kabul’s, in the 90s. I have the right clothes for that; better than that as I don’t have to cover myself from head to toe in cloth. Sook had gone to Saudi Arabia and demonstrated her head to toe outfit which, we decided, made her look like a Chinese nun. At least in Kabul I don’t quite have to wrap myself up like that.

With the rain clouds gone, today is the first day that I am hearing and seeing the small planes from the Beverly Flight School overhead. I had some hope I would be flying but that is beginning to be rather unlikely with the days to departure dwindling rapidly. Flying will simply have to remain on hold for now.

Vinyl

Early morning we took off for western Massachusetts to see the couple-to-be and their new house in Easthampton. The town is the poor, vinyl-siding-clad, cousin of Northampton, the town of students, frou-frou shops, and over-priced houses. Sita and Jim did well to land in Easthampton in their (yes, vinyl-sided) house with its large piece of land and more rooms than a starter home is supposed to have.

The house is kludged together like our first house was in West Newbury; nothing that sweat and the right tools (and yes, some money) cannot fix over the next 10 years. The rooms already have their signature Sita paint coats: bright pink in the dining room, aqua in the kitchen, a yellowish green where the stairs are, lavender in the bathroom.

The cats Mooshi and Cortez have the run of the furniture – it’s all theirs to chew and scratch; as a result all the chairs that should be comfortable are too sorry to sit on, with their stuffing hanging out and a thick layer of cat hair covering the seat and what’s left of the armrests.

We recognized various items formerly from our house, furniture, lamps (no problem) and vinyl records (we are paying attention).

After we made a tour of the estate we had brunch in Northampton and then disappeared into a delicious bookstore of the kind we miss in Kabul (and Manchester for that matter). We all came out with piles of books that would make a Kindle jealous.

We discussed the wedding and then got lost in the much more exciting honeymoon plans, pouring over maps of Spain, the selected destination. Sita downloaded Spanish language flashcards that would help them ask for directions (if spoken slow enough).

And then it was time to drive back home and start dealing again with all the things that need to be done before we leave again. We had been able to hold these at bay until then. So it was a very good day.

Body and mind

Letting go and easy breathing needed some help yesterday – it is as if my mind is still in Afghanistan and my body was not getting the right signals. So I eased into bodywork with a pedicure, accompanied by Tessa at the Vietnamese nail place in Beverly. It was nice but not enough.

We then stepped things up with an acupuncture tune-up, highly recommended by Tessa. What convinced us to go there was that Tessa’s Steve had subjected himself to the treatment and was happy with the results. For him to have any body work done that isn’t surgical or dictated by a (real) doctor, is rather extraordinary. It was probably the best recommendation we could get.

And so we presented ourselves at 3 PM to Bill who looks like he just graduated from college. He worked on us in two adjacent rooms, sticking what felt like a thousand needles everywhere.

That he knows his stuff was clear right away. Without knowing us he read our bodies like an open book. That too was comforting. He ended both our treatments with something that looked and felt like scraping our skins (my back, Axel’s arm that was damaged in the accident) with a Chinese soup spoon. I thought he was scraping my skin off. It was rather painful but felt wonderful afterwards.

Now, more than 12 hours later, Axel’s arm looks like he was in an accident again but his fingers feel better than ever, without the tingling and tightness in his arm. My back is all blotchy red; it looks like I have been severely beaten. I wouldn’t dare to show it in public. But I too feel that much of the tension I carry there has been scraped away. We felt so good afterwards that we made another appointment.

Back home we plucked asparagus out of our garden and cooked the traditional Dutch/Belgian asparagus meal with ham (yeah!) and eggs and new potatoes, drenched in much butter.

This morning I explored what is available on iTunes university related to learning Persian (a lot) and lectures from Ivy League universities (a lot). One can even listen to all the major commencement addresses. I downloaded the entire Betty Crocker cookbook, including coupons, on my i-Touch, all that for free. What a wonderful world we live in!


January 2026
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