San José de Chimbo, my Ecuador Mountain Home |
The lady who sells roast guinea pig isn't out yet, and some
stores are closed, but most doors are open while women sweep away the night's
grime, or hose down the sidewalk. I wave
to the man with the enormous mustache across the street, and marvel that the
guy who hand-builds sofas is already at work; he finished two yesterday.
There's confusion at the corner as a pickup-for-hire waits for a box truck, even though the pickup has the
light. By the time they resolve this impasse,
a motorcycle has raced up from the other side.
Not for the first time is there nearly an accident due to people being
too hesitant.
Slow food |
I put off navigating the intersection by sitting down at the
open-air joint on the corner where a lady with a long silver braid makes
cheese-filled tortillas with exquisite slowness. The coffee is sweeter than teen romance.
Crossing to the plaza, I run into the young guy with the
white cart full of syrups who concocts drinks and snacks out of what looks like
an array of potions and powders. He
always greets me warmly even though I've never bought anything.
The shoeshine men have already erected their yellow-awninged
high chairs, but they let me go quietly, even though my shoes are filthy--just
as well, because I'm short on coins and time.
The litter-collector is circulating with his broom,
long-handled dustbin, and oil drum-on-wheels.
I don't see any of the gardeners, but they're probably at work
somewhere, evening out the grass with hand clippers, pruning the flowers, and
running endless hoses that create vast puddles while leaving the grass dry.
Too close for comfort |
I might get a stare from one of the taxi drivers, who are
lined up and waiting, the one in back vigorously toweling down his spotless
yellow Hyundai, with the hood up and the doors open, the radio blasting cumbia.
No one ever yells at me ("Gringo!"
or something), and by now almost everyone knows who I am--no longer the strange
foreigner, but the foreigner who works at the cooperative.
The taxis congregate below some of the loveliest balconies in town. All the more charming for being crooked and cracked, some are meticulously painted in contrasting colors--white and teal, salmon and fuchsia, beige and chocolate--while others are fading and flaking down to raw wood. Always vacant, they seem to await Romeo and Juliet. Once I say a girl toss a key down to her boyfriend just like in Life Is Beautiful.
"If I profane with my unworthiest hand. . ." |
"Good pilgrim, you do wrong your hand too much. . ." |
Vicente, the security guard at the cooperative, greets me with a smile
and a firm handshake, and I go through the daily ritual of signing in. Today is an office day, which means I'll be
inside at a desk from 8 to 5, writing up borrower verification visits, working out APR calculations, monitoring repayment reporting, assessing loan volume and projections, examining social performance metrics, translating videos, interviewing the Kiva
Coordinator, and uploading photos, with a one-hour lunch break. Accustomed to the pacing and room-changing of
teaching, I find it very hard to sit still for so long. Yet somehow I end most days exhausted.
The light is fading by the time I leave the office, and it's
cool enough that I no longer mind my blazer.
Though my phone predicted daily thunderstorms, and locals complain
regularly about the "cold," Chimbo enjoys almost perfect
weather--never colder than 60 or warmer than 80, and even in
"winter," it only rains a few times a week, usually for less than an
hour. Instead of worrying about
raincoats or umbrellas, people either wait it out, or dodge the drops by
walking under the generous eaves that protrude from almost every building.
Just past my hotel is a corner store where Dalton, a little old bespectacled
man, sells me a Coke in a glass bottle out of his antique mustard-colored
fridge. Always thrilled to see me, he calls me by name and once again asks, "How long are you here for?" Few can believe that a foreigner would last a
month. I stroll back to the plaza and
claim a bench. At this hour I
practically have the place to myself, yet by 7 pm it'll be almost crowded, as
it can be early in the morning. No
matter how I nurse the Coke, it's always too soon for The Simpsons when I get back to the hotel.
Colorful and delicious |
At 7 pm I go to Doña Bernadita's house for dinner. (I went there for lunch too, because there
are virtually no restaurants.) For two
dollars a meal, she welcomes me to the family table like a son. Tonight she serves beet salad to accompany
the ubiquitous rice and chicken or pork, and I'm so excited by this rare vegetable that
I take a picture of the plate, which her husband, Don Rodrigo, finds funny yet
flattering. They both urge bread on me
as if it were the elixir of life. A locally
produced sitcom on TV plays hard on stereotypes of indigenous culture, buck
teeth, short men, and fat women.
Jazzercise? Zumba? Let the good times roll! |
Ice cream the old-fashioned way |
Poor man's Taj Mahal |
Wandering back down to the plaza, I pass several declarations
of love spray-painted onto buildings--graffiti has replaced greeting cards
here. Since it's Wednesday, things are
pretty quiet: small groups of women stroll arm in arm while a watchman
circulates to scold toddlers away from the edge of the fountain, or the
grass. Lone men sit on benches checking
Facebook or Whatsapp thanks to the free WiFi piped in by the "Illustrious Municipality
of San José de Chimbo, Autonomous Province of Bolívar."
Old men congregate in groups of two and three on benches at
all hours, looking like sages or holy men except for their fedoras and flat caps. Everyone over sixty wears a suit. On Saturday nights young men race up and down
the main street--the only flat spot--on unmufflered dirt bikes, trying to catch
girls. Children hoard coins to buy popsicles or gum, and teenagers pool their
resources to buy a giant bottle of beer and a few cigarettes, laughing and
gossiping around the car they've parked with the doors open, salsa or reggaeton blasting out.
After circumnavigating the plaza a few times I amble back to the hotel and try to get some writing done. A symphony of car alarms, fire alarms, delivery trucks, people yelling, dogs barking, and smoke from the guinea pig lady keeps me from getting bored. Almost on cue around 10:30 everything goes quiet, and by then it's cool enough for a cozy sleep and dreams of hand-churned ice cream, or the view on a clear morning almost to Chimborazo, and another quiet day tuned to human rhythms.
After circumnavigating the plaza a few times I amble back to the hotel and try to get some writing done. A symphony of car alarms, fire alarms, delivery trucks, people yelling, dogs barking, and smoke from the guinea pig lady keeps me from getting bored. Almost on cue around 10:30 everything goes quiet, and by then it's cool enough for a cozy sleep and dreams of hand-churned ice cream, or the view on a clear morning almost to Chimborazo, and another quiet day tuned to human rhythms.
Enough for the week? |
You can pay tribute to the beautiful people of Chimbo by making a Kiva loan of your own at www.kiva.org.
To support the microfinance organization where I'm working (Cooperativa San José, San José de Chimbo, Ecuador), click here.
Very nice portrait with some vivid details. It feels very small-towny. Guess I'll look up the actual population. Can you guess at how things would go if you actually moved there? Would the charm endure? That’s what I keep asking myself about American towns that look great as I drive through (yes, I realize you’ve done much more than driving through).
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