Thursday, June 7, 2012

Epiphany on the Hike From Hail


The sun’s rays sparkled across the small pond, across the back porch, and into the windows of the cabin. The day was bright in Fairbanks, singing the tune of summer with clear skies and chirping birds. It seemed like a shame not to be out there, reveling in the glory, so I took to the streets in the belly of the “Bomber,” a term so fondly given for my friends’ indestructible Alaskan Sable (being Alaskan because it has survived enumerable winters). I decided to head to Wickersham Dome to hike Summit trail, a path I had previously been unable to finish due to the latent winter residue. But today, on such a clear day, I was sure to succeed

As I drove along happily with not a care in the world except for whether or not the Bomber would make the forty-five minute drive, I couldn't help but notice the black blanket unfurling across the skies, overshadowing Fairbanks with an ominous gloom. Determined as I am, I pressed on to conquer the trail. And since the weather in Alaska changes every hour or so, I assumed that the skies would again turn to my favor and make for a delightful afternoon.

I arrived to the trail and began my ascent just in time for the skies to descend. Hail the size of peas speckled my head, fleece, and exploded onto my pants, dousing me completely in a matter of fifteen minutes. The muddied trail from the recent snow-melt turned to sludge that I trudged through as I persevered through the elements. Nothing was going to stop me; I was determined to make it to the end.

The hike through hail was more than just my afternoon workout: it was a representation of the last three months of my time in Alaska. I arrived here just a short while ago to what should have been the most favorable of conditions. I had a job, a place to stay, and the potential for nothing but adventure this summer. However, upon arrival, I quickly came to see that uncontrollable conditions and unpreventable “hailstorms” were going to dampen my spirits, forcing me to consider turning back on numerous occasions.

I kept going even at the first hint of ankle-deep mud, lightning, thunder, and never ending hail. For an hour and a half, I pushed forward, thinking to myself that the weather just had to break. The sun had to come out. It was supposed to be a glorious afternoon and an exhilarating hike. But it wasn’t. The lightening flashed around me and the hail continued raining on my uncovered head. After one step too many in the mud and rain, I finally decided that it was time to turn back.

After three months in Alaska, I've decided the same about being here and working in Denali. The hike that day was everything that my time has been—isolation, bad conditions, hail on my head. It has taken me three months to realize that some situations in life are not meant to be endured. It is only wisdom to see it in time to seek shelter.

I made it back to the warm Bomber in record time, just as the sun was peaking through the clouds. I had been drenched, but I felt more at peace than when I began. I left the trail and my own internal battle that day with the resolution to leave Alaska.  It has been nothing that I anticipated and more than I could have expected for shaping who I am.  

Monday, April 16, 2012

America's Last Frontier

People aren’t kidding when they call Alaska an America’s Last Frontier. It is wild, untamed, and fraught with all sorts of mischief. I’ve managed to explore a few places in the first weeks that I’ve been here, and I have yet to be disappointed with all that Alaska claims to be.

I arrived on March 27th to unexpectedly frigid temperatures, normal to Alaskans and an utter shock to novel visitors such as myself. I had been forewarned about the cold, but nothing could equip me for minus 2 degree temperatures and snow banks as high as my shoulders. Without transportation, walking was my only means for getting around and getting around was what I did: on my rear, hands, and sliding feet. My first run in downtown Fairbanks landed me face-down in the middle of the road, quickly teaching me for the next time around: don’t run outside.

However all of that passed within the last week with the onset of what Alaskans call, “The Break-up.” Fondly referred to as the heralding of spring, it’s the period of the year where streets flood from the dissolving snow and the icy river literally cracks to reveal water below. A few weeks ago I walked on the Chena River not even aware that it was a moving body of water. Now, the river is a melted, slushy mess. Really I can’t complain at all with temperatures now at 60 degrees Fahrenheit; what a welcome relief that is!

With the change of season and increased mobility, I’ve been able to take part of all the outdoor adventures that Alaska has to offer. I’ve taken a dip in Chena Hot Springs while it snowed, watched the Northern lights snake across the sky in the middle of the night, and explored the inside of an abandoned gold dredge. I even took a day to travel out to Denali National Park, where I will be located, and saw the breathtaking remote beauty of the Alaska Range. I leave Fairbanks the first week of May and head to my new home for the next 6 months in Healy, Alaska, located ten miles outside of the park.  I’ll be driving buses of every sort, shuttling passengers from place to place, and making sure they enjoy Alaska as much as possible. In the process, I hope to absorb as much as I can of the beauty and adventure.

Its strange, but sometimes I wake up and think: “Where have I landed myself?” But then I look out the window of my seven story hotel room where I can glimpse the skyline in the morning or the brilliant setting sun; it is then that I am reminded why I’m here. It does my soul good. 
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A Glimpse of the Railway in Denali

Friday, April 6, 2012

Loneliness

There is this snaggle-toothed ghost that haunts my steps and shrouds my thinking whenever I least expect it. My forward motion propels me with the unabated thrill and excitement of life, but this thing beckons me back to the shore of my own deficiencies. This beast is called by many names, but I know it as only one: loneliness. It came to me during my first week in Fairbanks, leading me to pen the following words:


I am alone, dark, and caught in the light of a fading sunset
The carpet is the color of sickness, wood, and moldy cheese.
Home furnishings beckon to me, but I’m on an endless adventure.
Of solitude, I belong though inwardly I crawl
Toward a community that will embrace as only fat women do
It is warm, squeezing, and smells slightly of baby powder                 
A touch I have seldom known since my own mother’s sanity passed.

This room is a cacophony of silence; a tomb of a life lived in one.
Even if the snow melted and spring sprung, it is here that I become
I am one with no noise, a tight wad of sadness
The moments encroach and offer nothing, no one, and nothing.

To wish for something different is to dream of another life.
That is not what I live for though it pains like a burning slide
The looming metal kind I delighted in climbing as a child
Until the fateful descent left my rear scalding and tears in my eyes
At the bottom, embarrassed, and wanting to conceal

It is here that I hide though I long for someone
Fated it seems in the spaghetti mess of life to find a thread all my own
Though lost in the slated, slanted, and sliding, I find no one
I find myself, alone, and I am not undone.
It is here that the adventure continues with me, one passenger beside.

I believe we all grapple with loneliness, however we choose to name it. But each time I find myself face to face with it or gripped in its vice-like grasp, I am more connected to life. It brings me to my knees, forces me to clarify my current place, and ultimately reminds me of my own need for connection with others. I'm not undone in that loneliness because my outlet is alive and very active; my outlet is my faith in God who faithfully treads along with me. I may be the passenger on the adventure, but He is the driver. Therefore, I am not fated alone to journey onward; that is a sweet reminder to come to in the midst of loneliness.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

All Good Things End

All good things come to an end...and all good things begin anew.

So I officially left India a month ago to the very day and it feels like a lifetime ago; almost like I was never even there. Its tragic how memories recede like a wisp of smoke or sand caught in the wind; really there is nothing to hold onto. Some people's memories are vivid while other's blur together. I find myself in the latter which makes my love for writing so valuable; I can retain a memory with words and revisit it at any time.

So the blog will continue though I debated whether or not to continue my soliloquizing. Maybe I would have refrained if the journey didn't take me into an equally awesome and ironically opposite direction: Alaska. That's right. I'm currently residing in a hotel in Fairbanks, Alaska, where I will be training for the next month to be a tour guide driver.

But let's be serious for a minute folks: can you see me behind the wheel of forty foot bus? I didn't think so. Nonetheless, some unsuspecting and fortunate guest will get the pleasure of being hosted by yours truly! With that said, I have to admit that I'm rather pleased with my present situation.

But, lest I ramble on that vein, I will simply state that the blog lives on with my thoughts, ideas, and even poetry at times. I am quickly learning that Alaska is equal to the inspiration I found in India only in a different way. So I will write. I will share. And if you should stumble upon this blog, you will hopefully read and find something to amuse you. After all, what's living without sharing life with others?

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I landed in Anchorage a week ago before flying to Fairbanks. Final Destination: Denali



Monday, February 20, 2012

Indian Parents


Despite all of the countless times that I’ve moved, shifted, relocated, and transitioned in my lifetime, it never gets easier. Gearing up to leave a place you have come to love is all the more painful when you consider all of the wonderful people you will be leaving.

Joshua and Anita were two people with which I formed the most unlikely of attachments. They were the host family for my friend, Jen, during her three month stay in Chennai, so it was destined that we should meet during my first few weeks in India. For our introduction, they invited me to join them and Jen for dinner and, after a few weeks of hostel food, the invitation was a welcome reprieve. The spread was chicken lollipops, fish curry, chapatti, rice, vegetable sides, fresh fruit, and ice cream. After skipping meals and subsisting on peanut butter and jelly sandwiches my first few weeks in Chennai, I was in heaven. I left well-fed and nourished by the homey environment.

After about two months, Jen’s time in India reached its end and I anticipated the same for dinner times with Joshua and Anita. But I was wrong. They continued to invite me over for weekly dinners along with my friends, Rose and Joseph, so that we could continue to share meal times laughing over stories and seeking to understand each other’s cultures and all the differences therein. The night before Christmas Eve, we gathered around their upright piano and sang Christmas songs, holding lighted candles as we remembered the meaning of the holiday and its significance for each of our lives. It was like a picture on a Christmas card of family singing carols; only in this card, I stood out from the group externally. Within, I felt no different.

Joshua and Anita have dubbed themselves as my “Indian parents” and embraced me as a friend and daughter. I cherish the times I’ve shared with them, singing songs and encouraging one another in our faith. So, to give you a picture of the times we shared, I’m providing a link to a video of Joshua and Anita singing “Country Roads.” I love this video which I secretly filmed while they were serenading each other. There is no other word for this memory than precious. 

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Sunday, February 12, 2012

A Few of My Favorite Things

I've decided that the very best way to begin concluding my India interlude is to post various clips and pictures of some of my FAVORITE memories, people, and things I’ve gathered during my time here. 

So without further ado, click on the link below to see one of my favorite memories in India...

Dadi's Poem

What you have just seen is something actually quite incredible. My friends' grandmother, Dadi, has just recited the only English she knows in the form of a poem she learned in primary school. During the time Dadi went to school; women in rural areas generally were not allowed to advance in education beyond the primary level. Education was deemed as frivolous because the societal expectation for women was simply to marry, have children, and tend to the household. So Dadi was taken out of school completely by around thirteen years of age and given away in marriage by the time she was fifteen.

While still attending school, Dadi was so eager to learn that she stood outside the door of a classroom to learn English even though it was forbidden for women to study. All these years, she has remembered the simple lines of this little poem:

“I have two hands and I can see;
The book that is in front of me.
The wall, the ceiling, and the floor…

She trails off on the last line of the poem, but this is unforgettable nonetheless. 

Dadi had an amazing impact on me in the way she loved each of her children, grandchildren, and other family members. The entire family doted on her like a queen, showering her with kisses and care. She worked hard throughout her lifetime with very little opportunity in education, but she has raised a family of men and women who are making incredible strides in education and business. To me, it all began with her tenacity to learn by standing outside the classroom as a little girl. 

She is simply unforgettable.
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Dadi 



Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Animal House

I am not sure that many people would pass over a pool party to go to a research lab. I know I probably wouldn't if the options were laid out openly for me to choose from. But as with most of life, things are not always clear up front and you just have to go with it.  This is especially true in India…

This past Saturday morning, I was relaxing over a leisurely cup of tea at my friend Lullu’s bachelor pad. Lullu is 47 years old and, by choice, has never been married.  She is sort of a Renaissance woman in India and a world traveler to boot, so we always have a good time swapping stories and laughing together.

During this particular conversation though, Lullu was spending an exorbitant amount of time trying to convince me to skip a pool party that some German friends had invited me to in favor of a picnic venture to the outskirts of Chennai. The plan was to take a nice drive through the country and grab lunch along the way. Lullu mentioned we would also stop somewhere which had something to do with some sort of research, but she sort of glossed over that.  An alarm went off in my head at her evasiveness about the destination, but she pleaded ignorance when I pressed her for more information. In the end, I buckled under the pressure and out of sheer curiosity.  I don’t really like pools anyways.

The car arrived with Lullu’s friend, Arun, in the driver’s seat. He is a Herculean sort of man with a booming voice and billowing stomach. After introductions, I climbed into the back seat next to a pile of law books and settled in to enjoy a much-needed retreat from the city.  The reprieve literally lasted one minute before my thoughts were jarred by bullet-like questions directed at me from Arun’s seat. He wanted to know what I did, where I worked, my general tasks, how much money the project used, etc. etc. etc. After 20 minutes, I was exhausted and began to wincingly regret my earlier choice to skip the pool party. But when I found out that he was a civil lawyer who consorted with all sorts of politician on India’s frontline, my intrigue perked and I came to learn some fascinating aspects about India’s political system along our drive to the unknown destination.

Alas, the political lecture came to an end once we pulled into a gated compound where stark white buildings surrounded a central courtyard. On the ride, I learned that the “research thingamagig” that Lullu mentioned earlier was actually a non-governmental organization called IIBAT; this was our picnic destination. Arun inherited the organization from his father and intended to give us a tour of the facilities. 

The tour began with being led into a small, dark room where I immediately detected a very strange and offensive odor. The four walls were white with tinted glass all around, and the air reeked of a humid donkey-like stench. My first thought was that my close proximity to Arun was the reason for the odor, but it was too strong a smell to come from any person. I’m not one to follow social etiquette at times by holding my tongue so I asked him what the horrendous smell. To this, he replied:

“A cow.”

"Excuse me?" I gasped.

That was when I came to know that I was standing in the middle of a research lab that tests various chemicals and toxins found in products and the environment on little animals of every sort. As a recovering vegetarian, I was appalled and the P.I.T.A. within me balked at being on the premises. But “Bill Nye the Science Guy” also had a major role in swaying my horror towards a developing intrigue.

Arun led us through the lab where the affects of chemicals commonly found in products and the environment were tested on animal so that the results could be examined from the skeletal to cellular level to assess the potential damage to humans. IIBAT functions as a regulatory organization that keeps both foreign and national companies from releasing harmful substances into the market. Only once a product has passed their thorough inspection can it then be released into the market with government approval. It was fascinating stuff! So Lullu and I were led into mosquito breeding rooms where mosquitoes with malaria were studied. We entered a worm lab where two tons of worms were processed each year to test soil and the effects of chemicals on the environment. We watched the brain of a mouse be dipped into wax, sliced into thin sheets, and then placed onto slides for examination. We met doctors, lab technicians, and researchers who all did their best to explain to us the complicated scientific processes.

However, my intrigue ended with the last stop of the tour.

Arun led us out of the compound and into a tree grove where plants were also grown for testing. Along the path, Arun said he was taking us to the first and oldest “animal house” ever established in all of India. Don’t get me wrong; I like animals. A lot. As a little kid, I begged to go to pet shops and would have, in my childish excitement, been thrilled at the prospect of seeing something called the “animal house.” However I was too keenly aware of the purpose of the animal house based off of the labs containing slides, skeletons, and samples of various animals that I had just seen. Lullu and I began to protest seeing the animal house, but Arun insisted.

So Lullu and I put on doctor’s caps, covered our shoes, and were led docilely through an air shower to enter the facility while Arun waited outside.  Two men showed us into a room adorned from floor to ceiling with cages where the Cadbury bunny is kept. Opening a random cell, a giant white rabbit was hoisted out by his drooping ears and placed on a metal table for us to pet. I obliged by stroking the quivering animal and silently wishing him a quick death. The next room contained a breeding room of white guinea pigs that frantically scattered to the furthest corner of the room from us. Their little beady red eyes watched us cautiously as they formed little protective huddles of white fur. The next few rooms were more of the same blur of white fur, red eyes, and frantic animals. It was so incredibly sad and traumatizing. Once we were outside I breathed the fresh air but could still somehow feel the animal’s scent clinging to my skin.

On the ride home, I came to know that the entire afternoon was a set-up by my darling friend as an interview for a possible internship with IIBAT. Lullu said that if she had told me the real purpose, I wouldn’t have come (which is probably true). Arun, who thought I was aware of the interview, stated that he wondered at my apparent lack of knowledge about IIBAT and why I hadn’t read up on the organization before touring its facilities.  I was flabbergasted but couldn’t help laughing at the way the afternoon had turned out aside from the animal house. I think I'll have nightmares about that one for a week!

So my Saturday went from pool-side relaxation to an animal house. Who would have ever thought? 
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Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Chortle Weaponry

What kind of sense of humor does one need to survive the international field?
 One that stretches beyond all of the usual lines of humor and wit.

According to Wikipedia (take that graduate studies): “The hypothetical person lacking a sense of humor would likely find the behavior induced by humor to be inexplicable, strange, or even irrational.” Dear Wiki, never a truer word has been said.

Without generous amount of humor paired with the ability to laugh at oneself, the “inexplicable, strange, or even irrational” undercurrent of life in India would nearly drive you bonkers. Humor has come to be the only way I can function day in and out in India. It is my “fundamental weapon in the cognitive arsenal” to wield off the more surprising events and comments occurring daily at a surprising rate.

Just today, while sitting at my desk, one of my coworkers walked into the room and after taking one look at me said:
“You are looking very white today.”

As opposed to purple, green, or fuschia? I’ve never received such a greeting in my life, but something tells me it was meant as a compliment. My response to him was:

“Thank you?”

These kinds of comments are quite frequent, but they never cease to surprise me.

You have to learn to anticipate anything, and I do mean anything, when it comes to living in India.  A few weeks ago, I was shopping in a grocery store with one of my friends. I stopped to look at a rather pretty stuffed animal peacock with my 7 year old niece in mind. While debating the purchase, I felt a rather abrupt bump on my left arm from a woman in a sequined sari standing with two others. I’m used to being jostled to some extent and didn’t think much of it even though we were standing in an aisle entirely empty of people.

I then felt something rather awkward being hoisted into my arm that was like a gangly sack of potatoes. Looking over, I saw these gaping, kohl-lined eyes staring back at me a few inches from my face. Apparently, I had not been jostled by a woman just eager to look at stuffed animals but because she wanted to shove her small, diaper-less child in my arms so that she could take a picture of us. With lots of cackling and enthusiasm the woman and her friends gathered round me and the baby, snapping pictures with their camera phone. My friend was pushed off to the side where she stared wordlessly with her mouth hanging open.

I started cracking up and directed my smiles towards the woman with the phone though I usually make it a rule never to pose for people in pictures (the fact that I even have to say that is laughable!). But apparently my smile didn’t suffice because the women pulled and pushed my arms to readjust the baby on my shoulder and closer to my face. At that point, the line between horror and humor began to blur, and I could feel my face getting more flushed by the second. I smiled for one more shot and then handed the baby back to the mother so I could escape the increasingly awkward situation. My friend and I dodged into the next aisle where she assured me that she had never in her life seen something like that happened. We doubled over in laughter at the absolute strangeness of the event.

Though that’s one of a few times where more noticeably humorous things have occurred, I have more than enough reasons to chuckle ever day. Just in the past two weeks, I have been chased by a three-legged dog that ended up just eager for love. I have walked towards a little girl who suddenly squatted on the sidewalk to make a deposit before resuming her jaunt. I’ve had a crow skydive at my head to grab my hair. The list goes on…

All in all, I am having more than my fair share of amusement in every form and facet and am learning to always arm myself with humor no matter what happens. It’s a good thing that I love to laugh.


Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Sounds of India

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The ceiling fan was churning at a million miles per second, generating a whirlwind that beat the thin sheet against my legs as I tried to sleep. Outside, the sound of the rooftop pigeons chirruped and tweeted their songs in a pleasant, cooing fashion. I lay there with my eyes closed, trying to absorb the sensations of sound I sensed in the midst of my futile slumber.
Outside, the knell for the Muslim call of prayer must have sounded, sending waves of their eerie prayer all around me. There is something about their songs and prayers that creates a sense of reverence in the air. Whatever I may be thinking in that moment ceases to be; all I can hear is their praise.

The ability to hear in India is probably one of the most exhilarating aspects to my time here. The cackle of the shop sellers bartering with customers; the echo of horns disturbs the air; the conversations of two men speaking any of India’s many languages with arms draped around each other’s shoulder in friendship. All of these sounds flood my senses and enliven me.

While walking through the slum area later that day after my futile but peaceful nap, three little girls caught sight of me as I passed their corrugated, metal shack. My peacock earrings attracted their attention, and they began to chase after me shouting the Hindi word for peacock (“Mor! Mor!”). Two of the girls ran together with arms around each other’s shoulders; the girl in front catapulted herself through the air on a giant stick, casting shy smiles towards me as we walked.

Later that evening, I sat round the dinner table at the Salvation Army officer’s home listening to the lilting accents of the family’s mix of Tamil and Telagu as I feasted on the spicy fish curry, rice, and vegetable dishes. In quiet, simple moments like these, I am my happiest in life. Sometimes it doesn’t take much.

I think most people tend to be overwhelmed when they first arrive in India with all of the olfactory sensations. But I’m learning to separate the senses with the more time that I’m here, cherishing each aspect of this magical and stunning culture as I discover it. In all of it, I never cease to be amazed…

Friday, January 6, 2012

Ganga Aarti

Standing on the river bank of the Ganges now floods me with a sense of awe. I am about to observe a Hindu ceremony called ‘Ganga aarti’ in which prayers are made and lights set afloat on a river that Hindus believe to be a goddess. The priest have soaked the grounds with sacred water from the river’s mighty flow and roped off the section for the ceremony. Rishikesh, or the Gateway of the Himalayas, is the purest place of worship at the Ganges because this is the place where the river meets the plains from the mountains. However, it is the Mother Ganges herself who is the source of purity, so followers gather nightly at the shore to wash their sins away and pay her homage.  

To enter the holy banks of the Ganges in this purified place, you must remove your shoes and ring a bell to herald your humble approach to the gods.  The sound rises in a cacophonous pattern of clangs, dings, and hums. Eight small tables containing puja, or a form of worship, are placed in perfect symmetry to each other with towers of unlighted candles upon each. The sound of praise from the crowd commences with the sound of the bells, welcoming all to hear, join, and praise. The crowds raise their hands together as the priests in their ankle length skirts carry the flaming towers to the holy water where they wave the mounting flames to and fro. The crowd cries out a sacred chant to commemorate their gods and bring their praise to the Mother Ganges. Their hands are pressed and raised to their hearts as a symbol of dedication. While observing all of this, I realize that I’m standing too close to the bell so that my ears are now ringing loudly and temporary deafness is setting in. But the sight is incredible and unforgettable.
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The priests raise the flaming towers one last time and then carefully carry them back to the small tables. They begin to sprinkle water from the holy river on the gathered crowd to include myself and then distribute small carnation-like flowers that have been blessed by the priests. The aging woman in front of me eagerly beckons the priest to give her a blossom before the others, but he bids her to wait her turn. The smoke from the candles is intoxicating and I can no longer hear properly from my left ear.  Though I’m temporarily deafened from the bells, all of my senses are alive.

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I've just been given a blossom by a man in a turban which I accept with the palms of my hand brought together and facing the sky. Though I consider saving the flower to press it in this journal, I realize the ceremony calls for me to cast the blessed flower into the rushing river. I throw it in and wash my hands in the pure river bed as those around me do. A priest then approaches with a flaming tray carrying blessed sweets and a flaming candle lit from the ones used for the ceremony. He bids me to wave my hand over the flame and eat the white round sweet that he pours into my hand. It tastes like pure sugar and crunches between my teeth.

My conscience is stricken in this moment as I only wish to observe the ceremony, not participate. However, somehow, I am always pressed by the overwhelming crowds to partake in the various ceremonies I have observed to include this one. Lest I offend, I mimic their motions in a holy observance of rituals that mean nothing to me.

The flaming candles illuminates the faces of eager followers who reverently place their clay tray containing puja of sweets, flowers, and a lighted candle into the water.  The floating candles either hover on the banks of the water or rush away in the river’s vibrant current. Together, the pinkish glow of the retreating sun along with the flickering, floating candles diminish into the night against the backdrop of the mountains.

Curious followers of the ceremony observe my frantic writing as I seek to preserve this moment with words. I’m sure that I’m as curious of a sight to them as their ceremony is to me.