Love, and guerilla art installations, can be fleeting.
This charming couple appeared on February 14.
Then seemed ready to prematurely celebrate Martes de Carnaval on February 15.
Only to vanish without a trace on February 16.
Gayle Brennan Spencer – sending random thoughts to and from South Austin
What could a purse mean to a gringa
who can stay in a house on a hill?*
A house with more bedrooms than people,
if maid and gardener count little.
Three-hundred and twenty-five pesos?
Food for the family to the native;
so little to the graying gringa.
The journal with illegible garble?
Trash to the native;
irreplaceable to the writing gringa.
An iPad demanding a code to enter,
rendered impotent in a house with no wi-fi?
Trash to the native;
legions of lost words to the writing gringa.
That plastic card bearing a name
obviously not of an hombre Mexicano?
Trash to the native;
precious lost time to the aging gringa.
Cancelling the card and requisite changes,
all those shopping links and autopayments.
Unimaginable repercussions to the native;
in his eyes, a victimless crime.
And maybe so,
compared to such a hardscrabble life.
Loss of trust means nothing
to someone with no reason to trust life.
And what’s 325 pesos to a gringa
who can stay in a house on a hill?
The hopeful arm stretching out the driver’s side window
failed to snatch the satchel clutched tightly to her chest.
No food for the table of the native;
unrecoupable words saved for the writing gringa.
*Apologies for this format, so awkwardly written by one unaccustomed to verse. Blame it on poet Ellen Bass. Emerging under the spell of her reading during the Writers’ Conference in San Miguel de Allende, prose seemed prosaic. But the awkward prose to which followers are accustomed will resume after sleeping off her influence.
Tulipan Africano. Towering trees covered with magnificent orange blossoms visible from far away and showering the sidewalks below them are the most striking plants in the midst of the urban landscape of Oaxaca City.
Yes, more Oaxaca leftovers.
These range from cacti and agave of the Ethnobotanical Garden of Oaxaca adjacent to the monastery at Santo Domingo to a pot atop the patio of our apartment.