Showing posts with label places{and}travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label places{and}travel. Show all posts

29.7.13

The Tepui Chronicles: South America, Part III

DOS·PIES·EN·EL·SUELO: idiom \dos-Piēs-en-el-Suēlo\ both feet on the ground

He was a reticent, I could tell. He demonstrated a subtle kind of panache, a cool sort of sobriety, sitting a row above the group of chattering maestros engulfing two American girls.

Jess and I had landed in the heart of South America with little more than a touchy four wheeler, two battered suitcases and a bag of foreign coins. And finding ourselves at a local soccer match with new friends, in an exotic, mountainous village 200 miles into a thick, lush rainforest, we swore we had found paradise.

They were teaching us the rules, speaking rapidly in heightened animation. With each phrase we mimicked came an ejaculated si, si from our new friends. Phones were passed hand to hand, pics snapped absent-mindedly, and an intermittent cheer for the goalie.

Words, it became clear, were useless — unnecessary, even. We resorted to other means of communication: hand motions, gestures, a game of charades and a repeated vamos, a word that had come to encompass so many more meanings: yes. now. go. act. move. pursue. ascend. fly.

He was taller than the others and, I presumed, older. He stood apart, speaking only when probed for a translation. He knew english, and had overheard Jess and I when we assumed ourselves beneath the guise of a language barrier.

The way he knew the words both sides needed to communicate but withheld them, gave him an ascribed sort of power, an esteem among the others. Something about that, his insinuating silence, captured my intrigue. I had to make him out.

I entreated delicately: an imploring question — direct, yet subtle. He returned. It became an inquisition: a play of the cards. my draw, then his. a move and a response.

They wanted to treat us to our last night in Monteverde, they said, as we stepped away from the arena. We followed. He kickstarted his bike, calling my name. I jumped on and we flew across the bumpy road of that small, uncharted rainforest. 

I could see the pull of his veins as he held the handlebars of the old motorcycle with familiarity. He weaved in and out of jungle terrain, flying past large, wet foliage and ducking beneath low-hanging bunches of bananas. I lifted my eyes to see a sky full of stars, splattered across the sky like diamonds unstrung. He eased off the gas and I brought my arms outward. 


As he put on the brakes and I beheld a view that made my pulse quicken. There, at the peak of Monteverde, a panorama of a magnanimous jungle stood before me, cocooning the distant chattering of monkeys and whoops of playful birds below the settling mist. A dense, humid wilderness wild with life, with a pulse, its own heartbeat. 

The top of the world, he said easily.


How loosely rang the rhythmic cadence of his tongue in the presence of his own, but here words were sparse and chosen with care, as if the telling itself would cheapen all that the silence suggested.


Words were unconfined by the jurisdiction of a definition, each infused with new meanings and connotations that challenged the mediocrity of commonplace words. Lacking access to verbal communication made it so much the more tantalizing. We were fraught with the need to share, to tell, to let loose the billowing surge of something from within.


I told him I didn't want to leave this place. He said he never intends to. And there in the silence, I
 laughed. Then he laughed. There was no reason. No witty aphorism or comical remark to warrant it, but there we were snickering into the vast magical darkness purely as a release of uncontainable awe amid such splendor. 

Perhaps the impermanence of it made it all the more magical. And I fell all over again, for not a man but a people on this night in which so much was said, but so little was spoken.




Rachel LowryThe Tepui Chronicles Part III
Image via

15.7.13

The Tepui Chronicles: South America, Part I




Te·puí:

noun \a-ˌyän-tā-ˈpwē\ Land of the Gods

We were mapless.

Chucking our battered suitcases in the back of a touchy four wheeler, my Aussi friend Jess and I whizzed down the streets of Ipis, Costa Rica. The lush, humid air was so dense it felt as if it were combing through our hair. 


Flashes of green bombay shoots whooshed past as I veered along the winding, crooked streets of this model-like village. Locals walked along the mossy canal waterways, disappearing into close-quartered colored houses. 

It was the beginning of our love affair with South America.


We were sitting cross-legged in a small seafood shack on the corner of the street, catching glances and sometimes smiles from passerby's as we feasted on crab legs and calamari. And I realized that this was it. Wholesome living. Caught in the fear of missing out, I had forgotten that at the root of it all was something as simple as deep breaths, fresh food, human connection and, if necessary, words. 


The rest of the night was a blur of faces and spanish phrases didn't understand. It was a mingling of conversation over hymnals sung in a local cathedral, followed by stops at exotic fruit stands and latin dances with men whose hips shake better than any lady I've ever seen. And then I again took the wheel. Where to? The wind would be our compass, our intuition our guide. 


As the miles under our wheels increased, time was measured by thoughts rather than minutes. We ventured into the rainforest terrain. It was pitch black, but beyond our car window there seemed to be a vast unknown something — something that seemed to suggest we were cradled in the palm of some mysterious, immense natural wonder. We drove through tall vegetation and across what had to have been towering bridges. Under the guise of nightfall, the vast rainforest was untouched by the prying eyes of tourists. And at that moment I swear we were in an undiscovered ocean of foliage that was neither East nor West. 


I felt a sense of possession. I wanted to lay claim on it, call it my own, without the dictates of paperwork or the convention of bills. 


The road took us completely across the country in one night, to the Pacific Ocean, where we ran headlong into the waves. We breathed in salt that stung our noses and cleansed so much more than our air passages. We fell asleep in our car, to the gentle lap of water at the edge of this continent.


We had determined it would be our little secret, this place that remained hidden from a cheap brochure. This place touched by the gods — or rather, as I would believe, one God. 


Rachel LowryThe Tepui Chronicles Part I
Image via

12.9.12

your own being


i wish i could show you when you are lonely or in darkness the astonishing light of your own being
hafiz

© 2012 by Rachel Lowry. All rights reserved {photo via sabino and burrs&berries}

21.10.11

A Secret Garden

@ 2011 by Rachel Lowry. All Rights Reserved {photos via and pinterest}  


5.7.11

San Diego

This summer I spent some time in San Diego for my sister's wedding, as well as some follow-up research work on my thesis. It was wonderful to return to my home away from home. 


14.6.11

Rush Hour




They are my rivals


and yet -
also my comrades.

Each one of them,
boldly making their way across
the battlefields of the home-bound.

Bumper against bumper,
cheek-to-cheek.

Notwithstanding the trappings of
our own tires,
we press on.



Against the peril
of waning time,
we persevere.

Despite the dangers of
our wielding the wheel,
we march forward,

foot
to
pedal.

We are the unclaimed front-liners,
left to our own thoughts.
{for some, a treasured rarity; for others, an unsolicited terror}

We are the absent subscribers,
unaccounted for upon the first step before the front door.
{when the moment has at last come upon us}

We are the unsung lovers,
waiting for the moment of remittance,
{against the crude barriers of a road block}

We are the flightless birds,
lingering restlessly in a sea of frozen schedules.

We are the presumptuous cretins,
who have the audacity to dare defy the dimensions, the breadth of this world.

Mock us, if you will.
But you do not know us if you presume we will lose grasp of the wheel.


@ 2011 by Rachel Lowry. All Rights Reserved {photo vi.sualize.us}

23.9.10

One Hundred

I've reached my 100th post. I suppose it's a bit of a monumental achievement in the blogging world. Let me just say what a wonderful outlet of expression this little blog (created on the whim of a rainy Tuesday) has been.

It has really altered myperspective, seeing me through the highs and lows of college life, giving me a reason to see the beauty and charm in the ordinary and make sense of the world around me. It has helped me realize how perfectly lovely the little things are, and helped me to see that each destination, each pivotal landmark we reach, whether small or great, is, truly, beautiful. Inspired by two awesome bloggers, Kitty and Naomi I have listed 100 things that make me terribly happy.

1. Conspiracy theories
2. How perfectly lovely I feel when wearing a sundress and ballet flats
3. Tea parties in pubs or in my living room
4. Worn hardwood floors
5. Jumping in giant rain puddles with red galoshes
6. Nights with girlfriends when I laugh so hard my tummy hurts
7. Shopping at thrift stores
8. Receiving mail
9. The grace of the french language
10. Dancing while mopping the floor
11. red velvet cupcakes
12. Playing the piano as fast and as loud as I can when nobody is home
13. Romanticism
14. Sweet, stolen kisses
15. Barefoot summers
16. The security that being wrapped in a blanket three times my size brings me
17. Reading for hours at a coffee shop
18. Twirling
19. Aviator sunglasses
20. The sound of the beach
21. Being twitterpated
22. Peppermint tea
23. Heels
24. Confessions
25. Cooking in the kitchen with my Mom and sisters
26. Old tree swings and treehouses
27. Having freshly painted toenails
28. lilacs in the springtime
29. Midnight phone calls that last for hours
30. Vintage photographs
31. Picnics in the living room
32. Dancing and singing in front of the mirror when I'm getting ready with my roommates Sunday morning
33. Knowing someone misses me
34. Wedding photographs
35. A special glance
36. Good conversation
37. Waking up and realizing you still have a few hours left to sleep
38. Making new friends
39. Spending time with old ones
40. Boots. Boots. Boots. How I love me some city boots
41. Knowing you’ve done the right thing, no matter what others think
42. Finishing a paper I know is well-written
43. Metropolitan ideals
44. Photobooths
45. Pretending I am legit enough to twirl en pointe
46. Audrey Hepburn movies
47. Public transportation
48. A beautifully-packaged box of Godiva chocolates
49. A smile from a stranger
50. Travel
51. Dressing up for an occasion
52. Dressing up with nowhere to go
53. Sand volleyball in the summer
54. Clean sheets that still smell like laundry detergent
55. Disney movies
56. People watching at the airport
57. Muddy Buddies!
58. The freshness of newly-vacuumed carpet
59. The thrilling moment before the curtain rises with you behind it
60. Keeping secrets
61. A contagious smile
62. Messenger bags
63. Farmers markets
64. Making lists
65. Crossing items off the list
66. Change (Good change)
67. Musty, multi-leveled bookstores with rows and rows of old books spilling from the shelves and scattered upon the floor
68. The feeling of invincibility after a good run
69. Reading beside a crackling fire while snow falls gently outside my window
70. Laughing. Uncontrollably
71. Every romantic delicious and artistic thing about Europe
72. Jane Eyre
73. The satisfaction of reading the last page in a really good book
74. Cookie Dough. MMMMM. The following cookie-making step rarely happens
75. Unexplainable mysteries
76. Enrapturing conversation that leaves me in the highest of spirits and with newfound epiphanies
77. Organization
78. Degas’s ballerinas
79. Cathedrals
80. Lemonade stands
81. The way my heart rises with the resonance of a bow across violin strings
82. Pretending to be grown up
83. Playing with children who remind me that I don't always have to grow up
84. Tea shops
86. Fingering the strings of my beautiful guitar {whom I haven't been able to name yet}
87. People who are passionate about life
88. cruising with the window down and the music up
89. Waking up to a thunderstorm
90. Journaling
91. Daydreaming when I should be doing something I deem to be less significant
92. Vintage anything and everything
93. Sweet dreams
94. Long heart-to-hearts with Mom
95. Cold, creamy milk
96. Hot showers
97. The climax of a good song
98. Raspberry picking
99. Cherry blossoms
100. Writing, writing, writing

@ 2010 by Rachel Lowry. All Rights Reserved. 

3.9.09

Little London Town Isn't So Little After All


I have arrived in London. Nestled between two gold-lined flats just off Kensington Gardens stands 27 Palace Court. Here I will live for the next five months. Seven of us share a large room with windows that open onto the street. It seems more like a film set than a utilized locale. We dropped our bags and headed out because, well, we little care if our shampoo is in the shower or if our shirts are on hangers. We're in London.

We got lost on the Tube and meandered through the entanglement of small streets. I don't mind getting lost here; I enjoy getting all mixed up in it, and within hours, I have already developed a heartfelt adoration for this bustling city and historic gem. It is funny how a place can feel like home though you never before set foot there.

I dare say it will be nearly impossible (also with the little resistance I will employ) to return without a little bit of that thing we call class. One can hardly spend five months in a country such as this without learning something of propriety and poise, especially considering that we will be delving into studies in Shakespeare, painting, Victorian literature and religion.

Until further word, I bid adieu as your adventuring pen(wo)man.


13.7.09

Maps & Things

Apologies for the absence, folks. I traveled to Chicago on a road trip across the states this month, where I learned things like greeting people as 'folks.' My sister and I endeavored to travel across half of the states in the U.S. old school, with just a map. The result was many u-turns and some wonders off the beaten path.