Spanish Diet

in all street cafés
freshly prepared mariscos
cheap and delicious

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Streetwise

a memorized map
cannot capture the beauty
of Spain, our new home

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Freshly Made

paella in Spain
palm trees, tavertine sidewalks
worth all the worry

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The Top

Doubt and stress have plagued me for months. You may think I am different from you, a standout among your citizens. But I am just like every other American, fighting my way to the top, working, working, working till there’s nothing left to work for.

There is a difference, though. I am working for a different top, a different experience, one that cannot be achieved by sitting on my back patio and complacently watching my children push each other on the tire swing.

The blood, sweat, and tears I’ve put into my version of the top are not much different, though, than any MBA-proud corporate employee climbing his way up the ladder to the corner office, the brightly lit view of downtown, the paycheck that buys his family all they’ll ever need or want… His presence not included.

I want a top where we’re all there, watching the moon rise in the still-light-at-8-o-clock twilight, our tired eyes too overwhelmed to accept the shift that has moved us from one continent of thought to another.

It may look the same. There are maples and evergreens, dry plains and rose bushes, mountains starving for moisture. Just like home. There’s a Burger King, McDonald’s, Starbucks. They’re right there, along the same boulevard that leads to the king and queen’s palace, the plaza mayor, the Roman built museums and churches. Even along the highway, you might think you’re driving in Kansas, as one wind farm after another pepper the landscape, propellors spinning languidly in the heat that has followed us across an ocean.

Let’s try some fast food, shall we? It’s inside this tiny restaurant with tables on the sidewalk. Tortilla de patatas, sardinas con aceitunes, cafe con leche, langosta pequeña, tastes that pop in our mouths, that burst with whole ingredients our American stomachs can’t quite identify. We will sit for hours, Spaniards sharing their stories, asking about ours, lingering over a meal with so many small courses that we fear it may never end. Each time another platito comes out, we hear, “Muy tipico de España.” I want to say, “Us? We’re very typical of Americans.” But I know it wouldn’t be true.

I didn’t even need to leave the airport to shed, after a walk down marble steps into a heat-filled baggage claim, my typical American view of stress, doubt, fear, loss. We’d been traveling for twenty hours, loaded down with three girls, eight bags, and all our dreams. To move from one gate to another in the Toronto airport, we had to stand in line, fill out declaration forms and get our passports stamped (I thought we were buds with Canada?).

But in Madrid? Six empty windows with sharply-dressed, handsome Spanish police officers stood waiting for our arrival. I swallowed, ready to answer twenty questions, ready to declare all that they could ask of me, ready to complete an array of paperwork with my broken linguistic abilities. Instead? One officer took our five passports, opened them up to the page with the visas, stamped them, handed them back, said, “Bienvenidos a España,” as simply and suddenly as he’d taken them in his hands. Not a question, not a form, not a single complication.

I’m still fighting my way to the top. It may look a little different, linger a little longer on the realm of success as seen by others. But my version of the top began in that moment, the moment I realized that things don’t have to be as complicated as we make them out to be. We could, for a year at least, immerse ourselves in the relaxed Spanish view of the world. Will I be able to reach my dream, to reach for the top? Perhaps, perhaps not. But whenever I feel myself falling off my ladder of success, I will open my passport, look at that stamp, and remember what it is that I came here for.

One Moment at a Time

Well this is it. Today is the day we have been waiting for for months. We’ve packed up, weighed in, taped together, distributed and redistrubuted, and said our last good-byes. We’ve stood in line, ridden on trains, boarded planes. We are on our way, on our way to Spain.

If only I’d be jumping high in the sky like I thought I would be when I imagined this day a year ago, ten years ago, fifteen years ago… instead I am filled with apprehension, so much that it burns my belly a bit more like dread. I want this to be an amazing experience, one in which my children will become fluent in Spanish and taste a culture that is uniquely amazing, so different from their own that they might be different human beings when we return. Is that too much to ask of a six, eight, and nine-year-old?

Not only has the program been cancelled and my position cut to a salary that’s barely a livable wage for one person, but we are also entering a country whose level of unemployment equals the Great Depression. Times are tough, way tougher than anyone in the United States right now could possibly imagine. This will be a year full of challenge and turmoil, poverty and financial choices my husband and I are not accustomed to making. All the same… will we not come out on the other side, penniless and jobless, with a greater appreciation for what we have in this life?

After two and a half hours of restless sleep and airports that will haunt my dreams, I feel I am living in a surrealistic version of reality. Like I am taking a vacation, one in which we will return in a few weeks. How much difference is there, in the grand scheme of life, between a few weeks and a year?

Now we sit in the Toronto airport, our passports freshly stamped with our first port of entry, and my girls’ concerns of the day have moved from wanting breakfast to saying goodbye to family and friends to intense interest in the mostly-unfamiliar plane-riding experience to… wanting to watch Grease on the iPad and pausing at “the butt part.” I listen to them giggle on the gray carpeted floor while Bruce sleeps, oblivious to the bustling of planes, trains, buses, and people, and it all seems so simple: live just one moment at a time. First be grateful that you got the breakfast you wanted, then cry a little bit when you say goodbye, then jump up and down when you board the plane, then find yourself thrilled by the land “where mini people live,” then beg and plead for a dinner you’re so appreciative of when it’s on your plate, and move right on along to the next moment, finding joy in a movie you’ve seen a hundred times.

You never know… the world would be so much simpler, easy to go along with… easy to enjoy. And isn’t that what going to Spain is all about? Enjoying this short life, sucking the marrow out of it until it gives us all we want, all we ask that it offer us, while in the same moment offering up ourselves?

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Fuel

i should have so much to say tonight
i should be writing poems left and right
i should be bleeding out all the pain
as we place ourselves upon a plane

my words were lost in early morning
my dream lost to another mourning
you’re going to Spain! they shout at me
as if these four words could set me free

i lost that freedom’s choice months ago
when they transformed their yes to a no
i want to shout upon the rooftop
the dream i had that they couldn’t stop

instead i listen to today’s muse
my fire out, in search of a fuse
one that will light up all my desires
and fuel my courage when faced with fires

Small Shadows

on the hill of our last hike,
in sweet drinks at one last happy hour,
their voices and eyes are glazed with joy

somehow they haven’t seen
the hurt hovering around every corner,
their small shadows ghosts to
the darkness they’re blind to

i watch them climb Boulder’s boulders,
skip through the sprayground,
stand fearlessly at trail’s edge,
the steep mountain no match for their courage

if you could gather up their joy,
swallow it with angel’s rays
that stream through Colorado clouds,
if you could see the light they always see

then you’d know–
you’d let their small shadows stomp out
the hurt that hovers,
you’d be free, full of life,
ready to shake up the world.

Flood

i wanted to write
because words flood me
a dam broken
irreparable
and water washes over
water moves into my blood
calming the soul that searches
that questions
the dream that seemed so easy
when it was just a dream

how do we
moving through this life
make meaning
out of broken dams
out of flooding
when water
our source of life
cannot wash our weariness?

Turning

just remember his wheels
turn this way without one drink
that homeless man’s eyes
burning through tinted windows
at midnight in my sparkling city?

this will carry me there

this night and the four of us
reliving our everlost youth
reliving our everlost youth