
This morning, the generator kicked in at the construction site across Hamilton Park.
Perfectly normal, this sound of a generator at the crack of dawn.
For Murchison Falls, that is. For Paraa, the small village I spent the summer in back when I was optimistic and in love.
Except I wasn't, because that's not really someone I am capable of being. I was close though. It was unequal (his territory) and awkward (his friends), but still romantic.
It was June of 2005 when I went over to Uganda. The man I'd met in the final chapter of Stalking the Wild Dik-Dik had an international development job there, and I wanted to be in Africa to write a book about Africa, so off we went to Uganda.
The ending of the story was one of those heroically horrific romance-gone-terribly-wrong stories, but the last few months were spectacular. Events that left me needy and in the hospital were to his terrified mind the catalyst for a breakup, or rather a runner, as it produced a vanishing act better than any magician could conjure up.
But before that, we laughed along the Nile. He slept through the heat of the day while I photographed warthogs on the carport. The hippo trundled by our bed nightly, sounding like a less-benign Snuffleupagus.
That's when I started this blog. I called it "No Hurry in Africa" then. And now I'm looking at home, feeling spectacularly average against a backdrop of overachieving New Yorkers. Now is the time for routine, for joining in the Habitrail of employment, eating, and sleeping.

And then I think: "Eh, who cares? Live alone and like it."
2 comments:
I love how a sound or a smell can evoke memories like that, taking us back somewhere in an unexpected way. And remember that it's most certainly HIS loss. You deserve SO much better!
Uh, Marie - that's is a tough one....
Pernille
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