Showing posts with label Life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Life. Show all posts

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Gilberto Gil, I love you

Dear Gilberto Gil,

I'd like to tell you about last Thursday, if you don't mind.

It was one of the last days of my internships. I say "one" because the last "last" day keeps being postponed. And now Monday, the day before I fly back home to Texas, will be my last day. I'll be hanging up kid's photographs in Santander Cultural, giving a presentation to a juvenile court judge about my impressions of the juvenile justice system here in Porto Alegre (!) and then hightailing it back to the Módulo Partenon for one last goodbye to the Pro Jovem Adolescente youth group.

Anyway.

G., one of the "social educators" at the Módulo Partenon, had asked me, "So you're leaving, Libélua Azul? Tell me, did you get to spend much time in the communities?" And by "communities," he meant vilas, aka the neighborhoods that people are afraid of entering if they do not live in them.

And I said, "No, unfortunately. I visited one vila briefly, but I haven't really been inside them."

"You have to," he said, "You can't leave here without doing this."

And so we made plans for him to take me on a quick "tour" on Thursday morning of the vila Conceição where many of the center's clients reside. Of course Thursday morning was also officially my last morning with my supervisor, M. I was supposed to be with her during interviews with kids in conflict with the law complying with their juvenile probation. But, I thought it would be ok. I could give her my gift. We could chat. I could say goodbye to the kids I knew. And somewhere in there I could carve out a little time to go to the vila.

Only that this Thursday morning was absolutely jam-packed with kids waiting to see M. Too many for her to be able to see them all. So, she asked me to meet separately with some of them.

I met with a few kids.

And there was one that I had never met before until now. I started asking him some basic questions about his life, who he lived with, what he liked to do, what he wanted to do in the future. These questions were really hard for him to answer. He squirmed even about what he liked to do. He stopped going to school years ago. He didn't work. At one point I asked him, if he'd ever tried drugs. He said yes, but just pot. How much did he smoke, I asked. Was it a lot? Like every day? He laughed. "So," I said, "You get up in the morning? Do you smoke then?" Yup. "And in the afternoon?" Yup. "And at night?" Yup.

I've never thought about marijuana as a very serious drug, but I gotta tell you when you meet kids who smoke it 24/7 and can't tell you what they like to do and can't tell you what they'd like to learn how to do, you start to wonder. Obviously, there's other things playing into this too, but marijuana is seriously helping them self-medicate and almost numb themselves to everything else. It's a survival mechanism I imagine, a way to continue existing through all the hard stuff that just doesn't go away. And it breaks my heart to see a youth without passion for life coursing through his/her veins.

He admitted to me that he didn't like talking, he didn't like conversing. I thanked him for putting this much effort into speaking with me, given that it wasn't easy for him. I asked him what he did to calm himself down, or what he did when he was feeling angry or upset? Did he have people to talk to? Nah, he said, what he did was smoke pot. His friends were okay, but then again, sometimes it sucked to be around them.

And I told him that in his next meetings with M. that she wouldn't be forcing him to talk. But, that perhaps he should start thinking about things that he likes to do, things that he might like to do, maybe even going back to school. Because these would be things that she'd bring up. These would be things that she could help him with. He nodded.

He left. I watched him walk away in his brand-name powder blue sweatshirt.

And in the end, there was a sliver of time for a "tour" of a vila Conceição with G.

G. had grown up in this vila and knew everyone there. He walked us around introducing us to everyone, to the cooks in the community kitchen, to the group of woman sharing chimarrão on the sidewalk, to the drug dealers counting big wads of cash on street corners. By drug dealers, I mean young men, probably all under the age of 20. The views that this vila had of the rest of the city were incredible. The colors of their houses were bright and cheerful. Dogs roamed the streets. Streets that were tight, but could sometimes fit a car.

Children played on their father's parked motorcycle making vroom-vroom sounds and giggling.

Laundry hung out in the sun.

A man in a wheelchair sat in the middle of a stone road.

A child dashed by.

G. pointed out a day-care center.

We came across a second group of drug dealers counting cash openly in a corner. The scent of marijuana wafting through the air.

Different dealers for different drugs.

G. introduced myself and E., the manager of the social service centers where I've been interning. And I saw the blue sweatshirt of the kid I'd been meeting with scarcely an hour earlier. He looked me in the eyes with a slightly startled, slightly bemused, yet subtle expression.

"Oi," I said to all of them.

G. said that in the late afternoons, traffic picked up. There were lines of people waiting for drugs.

So, really that kid did work. Just not the kind of work that he wanted to tell me about. 

G. took us to a memorial for a woman who had been murdered in a situation of domestic abuse. A spot with a plaque where people left offerings. A spot intended to speak out again the victimization of women. A spot overlooking the corrugated rooftops of the vila houses and the tall buildings of the city in the distance. 

And so we left. I think E. was crying.

"You don't have to be worried about danger when you're with me," said G.

"I could tell," I said, "I wasn't worried."

But that wasn't entirely true. There was this strange shiver that went through me, walking through that group of kids dealing drugs, our backs to them as we walked down a tight road. But feeling their strong presence behind us.

What I think what it was though was this feeling of wow, this is all so big. How do you begin? Here I am leaving. Here I am done with my internship. And everything I have seen is nothing. How do you work within a community for change? You can't just be on the outskirts. You have to be inside. But, how. And what do you do when dealing drugs is a more viable, lucrative alternative then going to school and getting stuck with a minimum wage job which pays you a barely livable salary that will get you nothing and nowhere. How do you work with this? How do I work with this back in Texas?

Scratching the surface, really. So many little steps to get anywhere. A moment of feeling utterly overwhelmed.

And in the late afternoon I was at a court proceeding. For a kid utterly enmeshed in the juvenile justice system for years now. A kid who keeps getting last chances. A kid who just got another last chance. And the question is, what will he do with it? Can he manage it? Or will he end up in kiddie prison for another year of his life? Sweet kid. I'd met him a few times when he'd been locked up. We hugged and kissed each other on the cheek, because that's what you do here. [Sidenote: I really appreciate the politics of touch here. They're so much more humane, so much more sensitive.] "This is the last time I'll see you," I said, "But, when I talk to my supervisor, V., I want to hear from her that everything is going great with you." He winked at me and nodded, "Ok," he said.

"Tudo de bom," I said wishing him everything good in life.

And then I left. I ran out of the court house because I wanted to be done. Done for a little while. Waiting at the bus stop. Just being. Riding on a crowded bus. Just there. Not thinking. Because this is my life. This will be my life. No matter what, no matter who I'm working with. My life involves fervently believing that all of us have the right to discover our true potential and trying to build and be part of the community of people necessary to help individuals and communities find their true potential. And it involves strongly hoping that people can grab onto those little chances that life gives them and start finding that true potential. Some people unfortunately only get a few chances, unlike someone like me who practically gets served these chances on a silver platter...And it involves seeing all the times when this doesn't happen, when the chances don't come, or when, for whatever reason, people don't grab onto them. When life is unfair. Because life is most definitely unfair. And it involves continuing to hope and believe and struggle for something better.
...

So, Gilberto Gil, you're probably wondering what any of this has to do with you. It does, I promise.

You see on Thursday evening, my colleague and artist friend T. invited me to go see you perform at the Brasil Rural Contemporâneo event going on downtown. Of course I accepted.

I was wearing painful shoes, but I hardly noticed. You were amazing. Simply amazing. I understand now why you are an icon. Your presence alone is fantastic.

Gilberto Gil

And your music frees the soul just a little bit. I felt in love. I felt transported. And it was evident that the rest of the crowd felt the same way, as we swayed and danced and smiled and grinned and cheered and clapped and sang. I have no idea how the security guards, who had to stand with their backs to you, their eyes on the crowd, could do it. 

Thank you Gilberto Gil, for the reminder that life is full of contradictions, at once searingly painful and unjust and at once painfully beautiful and full of so much goodness and love.

Obrigada,
Libélula Azul

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Being Here

Right now, in this moment, I feel over-tired, over-caffeinated and very content.

Life has been this wonderful whirlwind lately where I have been happy to go along for the ride (and not just bus rides). In a way it feels like a humble surrender to the flow and to the unknown. Except that the unknown doesn't make me quite as nervous anymore. In other ways it feels that all the effort I have been putting in since my arrival over three months ago has been so very, very worth it. All of my time here has been good in its own ways, but it hasn't always been easy either. I can't say it's "easy" now, but I can say that it's awesome.

So many stories deserve their own blog post but life is speeding up and I am busier than ever. Instead, I'll try to share some pieces and some moments of the last week.

One of my favorite moments during my professor's visit was during the free time we had between meetings. We ate a healthy lunch, hopped a bus downtown and meandered in the general direction of our next meeting. In a cute little plaza, a shoe shine man offered his services. Now, I don't wear the kind of shoes that require shining (perhaps I should?), but my professor does. We had time to spare still, so we shrugged our shoulders and said, "Why not?" As my prof says, it's in these interactions with folks where there is all this time to talk that you can learn so much. This man had been shining shoes in this plaza for over 20 years. He had lots to share and lots of questions about the US of A too. And he left my prof's shoes nice and shiny.

Shoe Shine Man

And here is a photo of the most delicious, rich grape juice I think I've ever tasted. Yummy! I'm salivating just recalling it. A Friday afternoon and the manager of where I intern whisked me away to see another social service center in the southern part of the city. It had such a relaxed vibe that I felt like I was on vacation.

The Best Grape Juice EVER

And the street art knocked my socks off. Oh yeah, it did. Or it would have had I been wearing socks.



 A

And then I'm back at the center and I hear the sounds of capoeira. They're practicing rhythm and singing today, not martial arts. They make room for me in the circle and I join in for the next hour, clapping until my hands are practically numb. There's a lovely breeze wafting around us as we stand and sing in the shade of ancient trees. Young children, teenagers and young adults. Where else would a person want to be on a Friday afternoon?

That evening, as the sun set over the rooftops, I ended up with my colleague trying "Active" meditation for the first time in a center. In Portuguese. 1/4 vibrating, 1/4 free-form dancing, 1/4 sitting on a cushion in a traditional meditation, 1/4 lying savasana-style on a mat. Fifteen minutes earlier I had no idea I was going to do this and the spontaneity made it the perfect experience.

The next morning, I went with the flow and let a hairdresser totally cut the heck out of my hair. I'd seen myself in photos, my hair pulled back and I thought, "My God, I look far too serious. I don't feel that way so why am I presenting myself that way." So when he showed me a photo and said, "How about something like this?" I said, "Sure." And I didn't even flinch that much seeing half my hair on the floor being swept away.

Self-Portrait with Haircut

Oh right. And then there was the meeting I had that afternoon. At a museum downtown about possibly getting to show the kids' photos from the project we're doing with them. I am working with two different youth groups on this project. With one of them, I am collaborating with the awesome T. and this was all his idea (and a fabulous one at that). I thought that the both of us were going to meet with one of the coordinators at the museum for a little chat. We get in there and find ourselves in a room outfitted like a lecture hall. "So," says T., "You'll just have to speak for a few minutes."

"I what?" I say.

"Just about your experience last year when you did a photo project in Texas. This is a class they're giving and the director would just like you to share a little before the photographer gives her talk...I didn't tell you this?"

So, I have a good laugh about that one, looking at T., raising my eyebrow at him and then just cracking up. And not long later find myself with a microphone in front of a room of 30+ educators and artists saying, "Well, this is definitely the first time I've talked in a language that is not my own in front of so many people."(And yes, there's a wall in the basement next to the cinema where we're going to get to show our kids' photos!!!)

And then there was Sunday when I got on a bus and rode it to the end of the line. I was going to meet with Nati, one of the fantastic coordinators of the other youth program. We were going to plan out the project together and because she just had one of her wisdom teeth removed, I offered to make the hour-long trip out to her. I stared out the window the whole time. The mother in front of me drank a beer, gave her young daughter a banana and chatted with the friendly bus clerk. We drove past Inter fans arriving at the stadium for a game. Past houses and beaches and green trees and arrived in another part of the south of the city with a pervasive air of tranquility. And we drove more. And more. I was entranced and loving the scenery of the world rushing past me out the window.
 
Finally the bus driver advised me it was the end of the line. The clerk who collected my money got off with me and accompanied me to a nearby bar to ask where the street was where Nati lives and pointed me in the right direction.



Later Nati said that she'd gotten the text I'd sent when I got on the bus. She said she started imaging how the trip must be for me, going to some place that I had never been before, how the feeling must have been so nice of moving through a mostly new environment and just going with it.

"Yes," I said, "You're right on. It was exactly like that." And not only did I have that lovely bus ride, but then I got to enjoy an afternoon in a cute red house with sweet people and delicious food. I rode home through the darkness later that night with a happy stomach and a smile on my face.