Monday, November 21, 2011
And They’re Building It
While on a trip up past Makeni there was a moment when something caught both my eye and the eye of my companion, a set of tracks that had seemingly cut its way through the road. An ordinary sight back home but here it was something to behold. Curiosity took hold of us so a quick flick of the wrist and turn of the handlebars and we were of down some unknown dirt road. Some ways there was a feasible ramp up the large berm to our right. Up the hill we went until it plateaued to a gravel top where the tracks had snacked their way back to us again. From there we could see it, a large train with little men scurrying around it. The sound of power tools and hard labor rattled its way through the steel beam that lay on top concrete railroad ties. We walked some ways to reach them but when we did we could see the hard sweet and labor that was being but in to the laying of these tracks that before had seemed to slither its own way through this land. As we watched them pull, heave, weld, and grind these steal beams into the glorious promise they were to be, believe me once placed what we would call mere metallic rods become more that just a place for a train to sit. No, their work for more than just a train, it is for a better tomorrow. Those tracks represent what is happening all over this nation. From their cities al the way into that middle of nowhere my companion and I found ourselves. From shore to boarder they are rising, they are rising.
How Can I Describe This
There is a term that is thrown around between the NGOs and other foreign aid workers. It is used to describe aspects, more often than not of a ridiculous nature, of this place that have no correlation or equal to any place we call home. This term would do well to some up some things like: Seeing 6 men pilled on one bike riding down the road, or a car with its roof packings being larger that the car it’s self. Seeing a man with a bike riding on the back of another bike. When your riding on the back of an okata reaching in to your pocket to pull out a few coins to throw on the ground and you take a moment to ask yourself how it is that 4 small boys with 5 sticks can set up a toll and make you pay to drive on “their” road. Now I would like to make it clear that Africa, at it’s core, is just like any where else it the world, and it’s people, at their core, are the same as us. That said there are some things distinguishably different, and when faced with these situations that give you pause in your day there is only on thing to say…T.I.A.
His Joyous fury
It was a somber mood I found myself in as I walked up those steps on my way to open air and night sky. Yet when I found myself at those portals to the outside world there was the torrent of gods fury. Lightning without thunder streamed across the night sky and rain, witch by some form of miracle or other did not fall upon me form above but rather for every other angle, rain of the likes I have never before seen. I walked upon the top deck contemplating for a moment what it might be that has made god so angry this evening. I spotted a few of the more adventurous couples taking in torrential down pour. Not a minute past when from be hind me shot a large blur streaking across that glistening grass green metal floor. Once the spray of water settled I fond myself looking upon the chief stewards manager, my boss of bosses. He had been using deck eight as the world’s largest slip-n-slide. It was there, in the middle of slip-n-slides, adventurous romances, and the horrendous fury, that I fond joy.
Once Again
We had to say goodbye again. This time it was some of our own. For most of the crew life seems to move on just as it did before, but for those of us who do more than roam these hallways, the absence is felt. We miss her smile and her joyous laughter that filled these halls with a sense of joy. When I return to my room at the end of the day this absence is only felt greater. The four of us that called this 15 by 10 foot space home have now become two. I will admit I do appreciate the extra room, but there is an emptiness. These are just the beginning, a mere taste of the great exodus that is to come. Before the end of our time here in Sierra Leone we shall lose 200 more, half the crew. It’s something strange to lose those you have grown close to so often. I mentioned once before that this ship is alive, and like all life it changes, evolves if you will. This constant shifting has given me a strange realization, given that most of my life has been one chaotic change after the other. Change sucks
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