Travels with Penelope

Travel, Food, Wine, Spirituality and Everything Else

Category: Everything Else (page 6 of 6)

March 12, 2014 Mind Clot

Still in the OC

I took my swollen, pained toe to the Laguna Woods Urgent Care Office. With my doctor five hundred miles away UC seemed the best of all alternatives.

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I arrived to an empty waiting room.

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The sweet receptionist handed me a bevy of forms and as soon as I filled them out a tall fortyish man with a boyish face appeared and beckoned me to an examination room. This would be a snap.

When my toe began to swell within hours of a pedicure, I assumed I had a minor infection. Dr. Ribble agreed that likely an infection, but “could  possibly be a blood clot.” This guy not one to take chances, picked up his phone, called a vascular unit in a nearby building and ordered an ultrasound. “Just to make sure!”

Dazed by the thought of a clot, I walked to the center, took an elevator up to the third floor, and walked down a long, sanitized hall to a large office filled with several people waiting for ultrasounds. A receptionist handed me another set of forms to complete, I took a seat and surrendered to a long wait.

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That’s when the struggle began.

I could handle a blood clot. I knew how to reiki myself, visualize healing light, do mantra and appeal to the deities all at the same time. Why by the time I got in to have  the ultrasound the clot if I had one, could be gone. I began with a slow, silent OM and imagined my toe surrounded by clear, white, healthy light.

I should have visualized the Medicine Buddha, Tara or Mother Mary, too, and because I did not my mind that rational scoundrel, jumped in and created other images: mind photos of friends and family members who had lived with blood clot issues.

I had heard their stories. The upshot for some of them is that long flights in airplanes are not recommended. Was I about to meet the same fate? Abruptly, my travel list and all the plans I had been making slid down a narrow tube-like, black-whole drain. Aghast!

“Penelope, get a hold on yourself, you can handle this.” That voice.

I had heard it said that the new drugs do wonders. In six months, blood clot dissolved, I would be back on a plane. Maybe. Or, perhaps this was the beginning of a serious problem. The thought that I could do road trips offered little consolation.

“Stop this nonsense; do your reiki, Om your toe.” The voice again.

What was it Merton said? We struggle with our minds not our bodies? In this case, both seem to be conspiring against me.

The voice warned, I must get a hold on myself. As a last resort, it should have been my first, I pulled a mala out of my purse, visualized the healing Buddha and several goddesses with medicinal powers. I asked Pope Francis for his blessings.

With my call to the poverello, another dimension opened. In the space between my eyes I saw a door to infinity and as quickly as not, I found myself sitting on a mesa overlooking Tsankawi. In spite of the speed of the trip I managed to hold on to my mala and continued to Om.

What is it about some sites that haunt us until we return, if not in the third dimension, at least in the realm of the creative mind or that of virtual reality? Tsankawi is a locus I had visited many times. As with Spider Rock, when I heard the call like a gentle heart murmur, singing come home, come home, I responded by making a trip to Tsankawi.

New Mexico had been my second home for fifteen years before I discovered Tsankawi. One late spring afternoon during a visit to the Southwest I felt called to head north.  As I drove up 285 out of Santa Fe mesmerizing vanilla swirls of cumulus clouds hung over a horizon wider than the eyes could see. Chiseled, red sandstone ridges that divided land and sky were the only thing that kept me grounded. As I passed Nambe Reservation, followed by Camel Rock to the west I felt a pull away from 285. I made a left turn on to Highway 4 heading towards the San Ildefonso Pueblo.  Black Mesa, the flat top mountain sacred to the pueblo flew past. A sign indicated that the road  would lead to Los Alamos, site of the National Government Laboratory.

The drive was magnificent, but I had miles to go before I slept and decided that dilly dallying along less traveled roads was not a luxury I could afford that day. I found a place to do a U and as I turned around I noticed a few cars parked in an obscure area off to the right of the road. A sign posted on a non-descript fence read Tsankawi National Monument. A few days later feeling the call, I would return to explore my discovery in the Bandelier National Forest.

The Anasazi’s, the ancestral pueblo people had established Tsankawi in the Bandelier National Forest on a mesa in the canyon country just north of Santa Fe in the late 1100s. I climbed their carved rocks and and rope stairs until I reached a mesa with a sweeping vista. As I took it all in I wondered how, the natives survived in the parched, sparse, severe, but beautiful land that lay before me?

One answer: surrender. It is believed that the pueblo people depended entirely on their environment for their needs.  They held the native trust that the Earth as our mother has everything we need to sustain us.  They honored and respected her, and used her resources with gratitude.  Native legends tell us that Tsankawi sustained its inhabitants for a while, but then as happens when the earth needs to replenish, resources grew scarce, or rainfall decreased. The inhabitants moved on.

Save for the rubble of ruins, a few faint petroglyphs, and narrow grooved trails – used to this day, physical signs of the Anasazi disappeared long ago. Now, open—unbounded space, Tsankawi is a virtual paradise for sky gazing.

Someone calling from a distance. Three calls before I recognized my name. Tsankawi disappeared as suddenly as it has appeared and I returned to the waiting room. A technician motioned for me to come to a back office for my ultrasound test.

What a trip. Had I a clot, it turned out I did not, I now knew there would be no end to my travels!

December 31, 2013 A Dozen Stories Waiting in the Wings

It took two full days to return from Vietnam, one spent having lunch in downtown Tokyo between flights. Followed by a long sleep mid-air, we arrived in San Diego on Christmas Eve at 9 AM. Now that the holidays have had their due I can reflect on the haiku-like thoughts streaming  through my mind as well as the many stories left to tell.  In the meantime here are some of the thoughts and photos that  captured my attention.

Ok, so I could not build on my manhole collection, but check out the wiring systems in Vietnam…there’s an art-form!

 

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Like a canopy at night…..

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Motor scooters seemed to have mastered it: unbound wholeness

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Tis the season in Hanoi, Saigon, Hoi an, not of a savior, but rather of saint santa creating illusions, delivering on fantasies…

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While in the Mekong, Buddha laughs his head off

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The simple life

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Hanoi teaches surrender: renunciation and capitulation

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War destroys and war builds: victims of agent orange trained in the ancient art of lacquer painting become artists.

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Trickery of the mind creates illusion of privacy; the street reveals all.

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It’s finally coming to Saigon

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New friends in their one room home on a fish farm in the Mekong Delta

 

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Time to take a break and relax

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12-3-2012 The Street

 

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In most areas of Hanoi,  the old quarter, the historical quarter, the French quarter, everything happens on the street.

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12-1-2013 First Impressions

Two young lecturers from the University of Mining and Technology picked us up in an SUV at the Hanoi airport. Yes, we made our connection. SUV’s are a rare site on the streets of Hanoi, but I did not know that at the moment. The two men had interacted with my partner when he taught at the university two years ago. Friendly, inquisitive and chatty, they held an ongoing conversation on the hour-long ride from the airport to the Golden Sun Suites Hotel. A radio program broadcast in Vietnamese played as a backdrop to the lively conversation. Broadcast in Vietnamese it took awhile to recognize a sporting event. Our hosts informed us how excited they were by the football game between the UK and some other team. After our twenty-hour flight, I quickly forgot the name of the other team. “Unbounded wholeness” continued to reel through my mind

The streets were quiet, dark and with dimmed lights the petrol stations and cafes seemed to be closed. . It may be midnight, I thought, but it is Saturday night. After adjusting to the lights I noted shadows of people sitting and sipping in outdoor bars.

When the driver turned onto Hang Quat Street, I noted to my partner how wonderful that we were residing on such a quiet street. Saying nothing, knowing how tired I was, he did nothing to dispense my short-lived ignorance.

The next morning breakfast, the best I have ever had in an east or west hotel, was served by a friendly staff, all of whom looked like teenagers. Not that they are, it’s just that they look so young.  Jack the chef appeared and we complemented him on our first and fine Vietnamese meal.

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My awakening occurred after breakfast when we exited from the hotel onto the street for a walkabout. Hanoi, yes, we made our connection in Tokyo, is a place where everything that could possibly happen happens on all levels at the same time rather like a cultural, historical systems theory set in motion in the material world. Signs of modernity sit side by side with signs of various past epochs.

The margins of our quiet street framed a fast moving river of taxis, trucks and motor scooters, bicyclists, and pedestrians including old women carrying baskets full of this and that items for sale, across their shoulders. Metal doors on what I thought in the darkness of the past evening  were houses had been raised to reveal retail shops.  Retailers sat on low benches waiting for customers. Teddy bear shops abound along with picture frame shops, shrine shops full of Buddha’s, bakeries, hardware’s, clothing, knock-off (famous brand) shoes and purses, you name it; it’s here, even a chain store called K-Mart with a small CVS written in the right hand corner of the store sign. We headed out into the noise and bustle slowly taking in this amazing, ancient city.

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