Sunday, July 20, 2008

Bom dia (a Portuguese hello)!

Temperatures have warmed up a bit. A week ago I was walking about the house clothed in 3 layers and a blanket for a cape downing copious amounts of hot chocolate in efforts of warming myself and now I sit outside in the half sun in a mere t-shirt (and pants, of course, rolled up in capri-like fashion, secured in place with the ever-functional safety pin). Apparently, it's quite humid here in Maputo, given its ocean-side location, though I never notice it the level of humidity until I don new clothing in the morn - clothing that's always a smidge on the damp side (NO, there's no mold lurking in the crevices of my clothing - but sand, YES!) In the shade it's always cool, in the sun refreshingly warm. It gets dark about 5:30 pm (it's winter) and reportedly light out around 4ish am. No idea about the latter. Getting my beauty sleep in while I can.

Btw, I'm 2 for 2 in converting Brits to hot chocolate. Imported Nestle is quite the seductive, magical mix... if nothing else, hot chocolate will be my footprint left on Moz's red, sandy soil.

So I alluded to the popularity of rugby in my last message. Expect many more such allusions as I am now on a Moz rugby team. Ha, ha, ha... (nervous laugh). Apparently, my history of bruises, severed bones, junior high flag football scars marks me as the optimal rugby player. I merely went to watch a game on the beach and found myself in practice at the crack of dawn the next morning. Seriously, I do not exaggerate. So now Saturday mornings find me practicing lateral backward passes whilst dodging wayward, curly-haired children and seaweed clumps along Maputo's seascape. Our first big (female) tournament game is in Durban, South Africa in 2 months. Local co-ed games take place 4pm every Friday. Girls-only TBD. I'll likely arrive home shy a few teeth. But the rugby crew is a good one. A kaleidoscope of ethnicities - South African, Zimbabwean, Irish, American, Mozambican, British... etc., etc. So playing is a comedy of errors. Yesterday, a South African kept shouting, "Ford, Ford" and finally I had to stop the game and ask what the heck "Ford" was (given the context, the automobile definition seemed unlikely). Apparently, "Ford" is "forward." Haha, oops... Sorry, guys, someone has to keep the "stupid American" stereotype prospering.

So it would probably be a disservice to you guys if I continually painted a pretty picture of life in Maputo...Mozambique... Africa. Don't misunderstand me, I am enjoying my place here but like anywhere there are pros and cons. Being that I reside in a city of 2 million people, a city surrounded by barrios of poverty, crime is on the rise. I spent much of last week exploring the city with a sketch-of-a-map, keys, and phone in pocket only to find out over the course of the weekend through acquaintances that Maputo isn't the safest place for such traipsings. So while I survived a summer hanging in Over-the-Rhine (with subsequent paranoia), I will have to be a bit more cautious gauging the distance of shadows before me and perhaps (ok, will) curb my independent spirit. And take my host fam's big white dog with me on morning runs. This said, the Mozambique natives are very friendly, often saying hello and offering an even bigger smile when you respond. And the street vendors, beggars here are like no other I have encountered. All you have to do is say no and they leave you alone. None of this following you like a puppy dog nonsense. Why the other day some guy tried selling me sunglasses (what's a city without the token "bona-fide Oakley" seller?), which I didn't want. Instead, I was searching for a taxi and told him as much so he directed me to where I could find one, kindly leading the way for a block-and-a-half and then upon seeing that I was safely in a taxi, he returned to his sunglasses-selling-stand.
A city of contradictions.

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