stories of travel, medical missions, and more

Month: January 2020

Kinvara, County Galway

Dunguaire Castle

Travel Journal, 49

Rolling green slopes of wet grass lead up to the tiny castle. Is there such thing as a tiny castle?

Appears so.

As castles go, this one seems on the small end. But somehow, its tiny size makes it all the more beautiful, haunting. Stones lay around its base. Perhaps one day it rained stones and hailed rocks in place of the incessant drizzle that makes the grass ever so green. Compared to monstrous castles throughout this wide world, its two towers look like cut-stone milk cartons, standing alone by the ocean. A stream rushes beneath the towers.

The light rains and mists from the light grey clouds make this, as the locals call it, a “soft day.” Dark and rainy it may be, but far from a bad day. This is a fine, soft day.

Cobbled stone road, narrow and unchanged for centuries, leads southward, toward Tralee. But long before that, it meanders through tiny villages, and by the wild Atlantic.

The stone walls on either side act like a chute, spilling you into the harbor town of Kinvara in County Galway.

A guesthouse on your left.

Dressmaker’s shop next to it.

A veterinary surgeon’s office next to that.

You walk across the road to the light red building on the corner. The sign above you says Keogh’s of Kinvara (food served all day).

The air is dry and warm, inviting. With a shake, you unbutton your rain-jacket and lean your umbrella against the wall near the entry. The two people seated at the counter turn and look, but turn back to their tea.

“Morning. Y’allright?” asks the man behind the counter.

And with a smile, you sit and wait for your tea. To your right, a tiny-but-mighty wood-stove shakes with heated excitement as the owner stuff another log inside.

The drizzle hits the window, but you don’t mind. A bowl of soup and a piece of brown bread show up shortly after your tea.

Cold and rainy outside, but warm and hearty inside.

A fine soft day, indeed.

 

anthony forrest

Mountain Meditations During Spring, 2007

Blue Ridge Mountains in Maryland, March 2007

Blue ridges of an evening’s fall

In timeless contentment do you sleep

Kind and soft—yet above them all

And even secrets you have, and keep

Your trees climb daring!

High!

Tall!

But touch not the sky

Yet higher than any

Higher than all

Your spirit cannot deny

Hills of peace, sing you songs

 

anthony forrest

One Mexico

Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico 2002

Travel Journal, 48

Over the past 20 years, I have spent quite a bit of time in Mexico. Anymore, I hear about it when friends go to Puerto Vallarta or Cabo San Lucas. But Mexico is so much more than beaches and all you can eat shrimp ceviche.

I first ventured south of the border in the summer of 2002. A group of us piled into a 15-passenger van and drove the bajillion miles from Wyoming (my home state) to Nogales on the Arizona border. Our destination was Hermosillo in the Sonora desert. We spent a week helping out a mission by painting walls, doing sketchy plumbing, and handing out Bibles and other spiritual materials. I can still taste the cabeza tacos and apple soda (I think it’s called Mundet, if you can find it). Each person I met bubbled with kindness. And it was a safe place to visit.

For the most part, Mexico loves America. Other than the US itself, Mexico is the biggest consumer of American goods in the world. And no matter your political leanings, Mexicans make up an enormous populous of the US workforce.

But the black eye that we don’t want to talk about it the drug situation, on both sides of the border. Not that long ago, Mexican cartels consisted of many smaller, unorganized groups of drug traffickers. Harmless, they were not. But for American tourists, crossing the border and enjoying the Mexican culture was very safe. Over the years, cartels “consolidated” into just a couple of factions. Drug violence, trafficking, and a renewed drug demand fueled by the US Opioid Crisis, all contributed to a volatile geopolitical temperature in parts of Mexico.

This bleak second Mexico is hard to figure out.

In the middle of November, 2018, my wife and I landed in a little plane in a small village in the northernmost part of the Sierra Madre Mountains. I hadn’t been to this part of Sonora since 2002. We drove our truck up a curved dirt road. At the top of the curve sat a sparkling, huge (brand new) SUV. Standing coolly at its side was a sharply dressed young man with designer jeans, sunglasses, a polo shirt, and an AK47. He chatted nonchalantly into his radio as our truck meandered the along the narrow ridge. It took us two hours by Cessna 182 to get to this place. And this guy is driving a behemoth SUV, in designer jeans, mind you. But we passed without problem. The local charity we served benefits the community greatly. So, the cartels left us alone.

Our visit went off without a hitch. But not without contrasting stories and experiences:

The local cartel leaders force the young men into work by saying they’ll kill their family if they don’t.

We walked on trails with the locals and shared time with wonderful people.

We heard stories of people being kidnapped; gone forever.

The charity work down there is thriving. And so much good has been accomplished.

And to top it off, I had the best tortillas in my life in that village. They were freshly made of local, blue corn.

See what I mean? So many contrasts. Mexico sits in political darkness. But you’re not reading this to better grasp my political views. And there isn’t two Mexicos. There is one Mexico. Mexico isn’t just cartels and violence. It’s also Cabo and kindness, ceviche and sangria, friends and warm, warm family. And it is wonderful, wild, free, friendly, frightening, unbalanced, and oh-so-much-more than I can handle.

So, if you’re wondering, “should I go to Mexico?”

I say, with all my heart, “yes.”

 

anthony forrest

King

 

King reigned upon throne

Of change

Upon throne of truth raging

Hands-in-the-sky praying

Asking God for grace to rain down

Soak America and drown

All evil hate

The Good Doctor prescribed

The Word of life

To a Nation deprived

Of the love of Christ

From a throne of change

He spoke of the One True King

Giver of life

Ender of strife

Maker of all things

In the eyes of Whom all men are equal

 

anthony forrest

Looking Glass Series, part 4

Of Public Bathing and Barriers Unbroken

Travel Journal, 47

The watch on my wrist said 11:40 p.m. They lock the hotel doors at midnight.

“I have time,” I thought as I hurried off the Keikyu train at Heiwajima station in Tokyo, Japan. The hour was so late that the Tokyo Monorail was no longer running. The commuter train got me to my station, but barely in time. It was late and I was tired. The only thing that I wanted was to wash away some of the travel funk and flop ungracefully onto bed.

The bed I procured for my one-night stay in Japan was located in a Capsule Hotel. Japan captured my heart upon my first visit. It’s everything you think of and more. Between the iconic aspects of traditional countryside and the energetic throes of downtown Tokyo, Japan leaves the traveler wanting more. One iconic hotel experience is the Capsule Hotel.

And it is what it sounds like.

A capsule. A friend describes it as a coffin. Rows and rows of coffin-like spaces are built into the wall. Each has its own TV, air controls, and privacy curtain. And at around 2700 yen per night ($26), it makes for a great option traveling on the cheap.

I weaved in and out of smallish alleys and under neon glow promising pachinko and ramen. Finally, I stepped into the doorway with five minutes to spare. Immediately, I knew that I may have a bit of trouble. The hotel was clearly not ideal for English-speaking travelers. Everything here oozed Japanese. It was clearly a place for the Japanese salaryman.

I took my shoes off and put on a pair of sandals at the door. The man at the counter was very gracious and patient, though he spoke no English. I placed my shoes in a locker in the entryway and collected my complementary PJs, which made me look like a really disheveled, poorly trained, and pasty-white ninja.

The elevator took me to the fifth floor and I found capsule 2027. Exhausted, all I wanted was shower and sleep. The facilities were on the next floor up. So, I collected my things and made the journey.

But as I walked up to what I thought was the shower room, my attention was drawn to a sign that said, “大浴場.”

Enter Google translate.

I actually knew one of the characters, and I was worried. And my memory was right. In essence, it was a bath. Then it hit me.

This hotel has no shower.

It has an Onsen.

A public bath.

“Well, it’s late,” I told myself, “who could possibly be up and using the public bath.”

I entered the room to find a minimum of seven naked, sprawling Japanese men soaking in all the luxury of a quiet bath.

Japan is famous for public baths. It’s a part of the culture that will never go away. The locals swear by soaking in the natural hot springs that bubble forth from the ground. I’m told that once you start using an Onsen, you just can’t stop. But something like this suddenly makes the traveler feel very foreign. Public bathing are two words Americans never use together.

But I’m a pro, right?

I can do this.

I took a big gulp, trying to swallow my midwestern pride.

Heads began to turn my direction.

I felt my heart thump.

Then I turned and walked away.

“Chicken,” I said to my prudish self.

Not every wall easily falls. I still have a few barriers of my own. And one day, I will step into the looking glass and conquer each of them. And the reward will be great.

Maybe one day when I’m on another jaunt into Japan with a group of friends, we’ll brace ourselves with camaraderie and gently slip into a hot Onsen. And perhaps all of our concerns and preconceptions will float away.

But until then, I bathe by myself, thank you very much.

anthony forrest

For those of you interested in exploring a crazy website, here is the link to the hotel. Try using your browser’s translate feature. http://www.mizho.net/

Other Looking Glass Stories:

Part 1, Of Blood and Barriers 

Part 2Of Strong Hands and Reservations 

Part 3, Of Cats and Coffee

The Ritual

he awakens (barely) by a new day drive

to live new moments and thrive

for the pursuit

of passionate living

stumbling and giving

his best

or at least not worst

during each day’s test

and so begins a morning ritual

anthony forrest

Looking Glass Series, part 3

Of Cats and Coffee

Travel Journal, 46

Terengganu, Malaysia

Early morning

 I rubbed the bleary look out of my eyes and walked into the living area. My flight back to the States was in a couple of hours. Chris entered the room, cup of coffee in his hand.

“Here you go.”

I took a sip. Neurons fired, senses awoke, and life slowly entered my body.

“This,” I muttered, “Is probably the best cup of coffee I have ever had.”

A few moments later, Chris produced a bag and I gleefully stuffed it into my backpack. I finished that cup of coffee in the car ride to Sultan Mahmud Airport. I jotted these words into my journal as the rain hit the car window.

Malaysia ends in monsoon rains

Another flight

Another cup

Another road traveled

Golden riches gained

For the soul

Poetry-inducing coffee: the best kind of coffee.

Two days later

“Any food with you today?”

Well, I thought, you don’t eat coffee.

“Nope.”

The US Customs agent handed back my passport. I walked over to the connecting flights TSA checkpoint and threw my bag on the counter.

The beat-up backpack gently rolled into the scanner. The red and black bag smelled of curry and too many nights away. It’s been with me for nearly 15 years. It’s carried me through a spectrum of circumstances, each crazier than the last. And half the time, it’s covered in mud, blood, ramen, or coffee. In fact, I was a little worried about the coffee buried in the bottom of my bag. As the rollers paused, I guessed in my mind what would happen next. Sure enough, the TSA agent pulled me aside. I made it easy for him and pulled out a one-pound bag of coffee. I had already been a little less than truthful with the Border Patrol and Customs agent. But I doubted the coffee would be an issue with TSA.

“Just a bag of coffee,” I said.

“Oh yeah? Is it any good?”

“The best in the world,” I said slowly, hoping not to sound snobbish or condescending.

“This is coffee from Sumatra,” I glowed, “It’s 50% Kopi Luwak, 25% red wine cured, and 25% natural bean. It’s open. You can smell it if you’d like.”

The agent popped open the seal and took a sniff. He seemed pleased. But then he said the sentence that I hoped he wouldn’t say; a sentence I hear a couple times a year.

“Luwak? Isn’t that the cat-poop coffee?

I hung my head and sighed.

“Yeah”

Whenever I hear this sentence, the entire conversation become unredeemable. I could explain that the Asian Palm Civet is not a cat, but a cute little mammal called a viverrid. I could also explain that it eats the coffee cherry, in which resides the green coffee bean. The cherry passes through the civet because it cannot break it down. I could then conclude in saying that farmers retrieve the cherry, clean it, and harvest the bean, and use it to make the world’s most expensive and delicious coffee.

But it’s no use. He’s still hung up on poop.

And it’s true. Kopi Luwak may forever be the butt of jokes (apologies for the pun). However, most coffee drinkers may never have the opportunity to try it. Kopi Luwak is far too expensive and unavailable in the States, though prevalent in southeast Asia.

“Cat-poop” coffee may be a barrier that many people never cross. But what about other strange food items. Nobody thinks twice about eating an egg, produced directly from the back end of a chicken. And don’t get me started on hot dogs.

A good cup of coffee can vitalize your day, bring a smile to your face, warm you up, and bring friends together. And if a good cup of coffee can do that, what happens when you try the world’s best coffee?

You’ll just have to break down the “cat-poop” barrier to find out.

anthony forrest

 

Other Looking Glass Stories:

Part 1, Of Blood and Barriers 

Part 2, Of Strong Hands and Reservations 

Pause and Think

Robe of righteousness and peace

His grace to me shall never cease

The love He gives remains kind and true

And in His word refreshes me anew

Oh! How I see my filthy sin

And how I commit them o’er and o’er again

Yet forgave Him me when on the cross

Died for my sins and perhaps now you’ll pause

And think about His death on the tree

And how He pardoned all sin for both you and me!

 

 

anthony forrest

Looking Glass Series, part 2

Of Strong Hands and Reservations

Travel Journal, 45

Would you like to hear a confession?

I had never had a massage. I’ve heard tell of two-hour-long massages. A complete stranger touching a rubbing my body in a calculated and meticulous way just hasn’t ever attracted me. And then when they’re done…you pay them. Paying for a massage seems a little, shall we say, illegally scandalous?

But this story is not about preconceptions. It’s about stepping into and through the looking glass, breaking down barriers. It’s about trying strange dishes and going strange places.

It’s about strong hands.

I walked into the house and found my dear friends from college (eons ago) speaking with their language tutor. As they chatted, I disappeared to shower away the travel-blues and airplane funk. Even more than sleep, I find that a cup of coffee and a hot shower cures most ailments and alleviates most travel woes. But if I was asked to nail down one negative aspect of travel, I would immediately reply with, “back pain.” Sitting knees-to-chest on a plane and sleeping in all manners of positions wreaks havoc on my body. And though the hot shower helped, it had been nearly 8,500 miles of airplane travel to get here.

After cleaning up, I joined in on the English side of the conversation.

“You okay?” I was asked, upon sitting. I must have winced.

“Oh yeah,” I lied.

“Are you sure?” My poker face could use some work.

“I’ll be alright,” I confessed, “my back just gets sore when I travel.”

Translations ensued and bilingual discussion commenced. It was decided (for me?) that I should get a massage. But I have never had a massage, said I.

No matter, said they. I needed a massage—but not just any massage.

No.

The only hands with power enough to lift the dark discomfort from my body were the hands of the great Pak Omar. Who, you might ask?

“His hands are like magic,” said the local language teacher. But finding him could be difficult. And for the next several days, we tried getting in contact with him, to no avail.

I was not sure if he even existed—this magical remover of back pain. Was he a legend? A name whispered in the wind? Was he a story fathers with aching backs believed in, like a pain soothing Santa Clause?

But finally, one day, we received news of his whereabouts and an appointment was set.

We pulled up to the small home to find Pak Omar waiting for us. We removed our shoes and he led us into the house. A couple of wooden benches lined the wall and two children watch a television on the floor. Omar disappeared and reappeared wearing what looked like a nicer, new shirt. I took his hand and noticed the sheer strength in this elderly Malaysian man (who, by the way, is greatly respected in his community).  My friend communicated my back-pain. He led me into a small room with a little wooden table, a pillow on one end.

Face-down, I laid on the cold wood and Pak Omar went to work. With those powerful hands he poked and prodded and whittled away the knots. Sometimes it felt like a waterfall of relief. And sometimes it felt like he was running me over with a large truck. But after twenty minutes, I knew I was a different man. Not only did I find relief from my back pain, but I now understood massage. But then he sat me up and looked at my shoulders.

With grunting, we tried communicating. He told me to turn my head from side to side. I did. Then I told me to reach and touch my toes. I did that, too. But he was not pleased with my performance.

Soon he put me on the floor. And before I knew what was going on, he sat behind me, wrapped his legs around and under mine and used an English word that frightened me.

“Relax” 

And with little notice, he started cracking my back and shoulder like twigs and branches. I stood up in a daze and Pak Omar went to work on my shoulders and neck.

I must have gotten the premier package, thought I.

But when all was done, I felt like a little Lego man who had been disassembled and then put back together. And boy did I feel great.

We shared a cup of tea and, without any language skills, talked about nothing. We just smiled and grunted back and forth.

Both my friend and I got massages that day. And it cost us 12 US dollars, for both of us. If I lived there, in the beauty and wonder of Malaysia, Pak Omar would have a steady client in this weary traveler.

 

anthony forrest

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