When birds need passports

When I walk across the arc around 6:00, there are dozens of crows feeding on the pristine lawns.  One friend compared this daily descent to a scene from The Birds.  So far, though, these birds don’t seem as bent on world domination as Hitchcock’s were.   I watch one sip from an irrigation pipe, and another carry a piece of gravel in his beak.  I wanted to see what he was going to do with it, but then I got self-conscious about my very public birdwatching and continued on my way.

Animals are a frequent subject in break time conversation.  That, and food.  (Recent topics: the healthiness of peanut butter, the popularity of Nutella in the US, and how the effects of eating pomegranate vary by your blood type.)   But let’s stick with animals.

The other day, one of my colleagues was telling us about a talk ‘Abdu’l-Baha gave in California to the Materialists Club.  According to the dictionary, the philosophy of materialism holds that “nothing exists except matter and its movements and modifications.”  Or, that “consciousness and will are wholly due to material agency.”  Basically, to my understanding, it denies spirituality.  So, ‘Abdu’l-Baha joked with these materialists that while they had spent decades thinking and studying and researching to arrive at the conclusion that there’s only a material world, cows know this from birth.  To paraphrase, “The cow is superior!”  He recommended that a cow be brought to give the club a lecture. The audience roared with laughter.

Then the break time conversation turned to birds and the freedom they represent.  While human mobility is limited by national borders and natural boundaries, birds can transcend that all.

Or can they?  I had to be a contrarian on this point and relate a story I heard from an Israeli zoologist, Avinoam Lourie, when he gave a talk in Madison.  There has been an effort to reintroduce vultures into the wild in Israel.  The challenges to this project abound.  For instance, farmers will lace the carcasses of livestock with poison to kill the predators that attack their flocks.  Vultures, as they eat carrion, find these carcasses, consume this poison, and die.  The zoologists track these birds with little computers strapped to their bodies.  Now, as has been pointed out, birds don’t respect national borders, and these vultures have a habit of exiting Israel and entering neighboring countries.  I don’t have to tell you about the less than friendly relationship between Israel and its neighbors.

So, some vultures, winging their way into diplomatic history, flew into Lebanon, where their suspicious-looking tracking devices were spotted.  The Lebanese assumed these birds were spies for Israel, taking aerial footage, and shot them down.

So do we smuggle ourselves through customs, or what?

“So do we smuggle ourselves through customs, or what?”

 

It’s a reminder of how pervasive our system of borders has become.  The walls, the security forces, the bureaucratic obstacle course to crossing–well, don’t get me started.  But someday–yes, someday, vultures won’t need passports to take a trip north, and bovines will earn tenure in philosophy departments.

Equinox

I was told that on Yom Kippur, the streets would be absolutely desolate.  The Day of Atonement is a very solemn Holy Day for Jews, who keep a 25 hour fast.  Yet, a few cars pass by.  Kids shriek as they play on their bikes and toy cars.  And there are a lot of firecrackers.  When I first arrived, I was unsure what to make of the sounds of explosions that punctuated the evening.  I mean, it didn’t exactly reassure me about the security situation here.  It turns out that the people here use a lot of fireworks to celebrate engagements, which, given how many fireworks get set off, means that there must be hordes of fiances filling this city.  But Yom Kippur and fireworks don’t go together so well.  Two theories were circulating about why the day was so noisy.  (1) The Arabs were trying to annoy the Jews or (2) the Jews were celebrating their atonement.  Somehow I find the latter a bit less likely…

***

Even though I spend most of my time under fluorescent lights in an air conditioned office, I can tell the air is changing.  I no longer fully thaw out on my walk home.  The highs are only in the low eighties.  Yesterday, some clouds hung over Mount Carmel, promising rain with their gray underbellies.  Nothing yet.  When I was walking across the Arc at sunset, I paused to take in the thunderheads poised above the bay, edged with pink.  I wasn’t the only one impressed; I passed two others who pulled out their camera phones to record the sky.  I gave up on using the camera in my phone as it blurs everything, so I try to capture the vista in my mind.

Yesterday I stood on grass for the first time in a while.  It was a small patch of lawn in front of an apartment building.  I rarely have the opportunity to leave the pavement or the gravel paths I take through the gardens to my office.  I need to find a quiet city park and just lie in the grass for a while like I sometimes do, close to the dirt and the bugs and the earth.  Humility, from humus, soil.  Getting close to the soil.  Walt Whitman knew the sanctity of those leaves underfoot:

A child said, What is the grass? fetching it to me with full hands;
How could I answer the child?. . . .I do not know what it is any more than he.
 
I guess it must be the flag of my disposition, out of hopeful green stuff woven.
 
Or I guess it is the handkerchief of the Lord,
A scented gift and remembrancer designedly dropped,
Bearing the owner’s name someway in the corners, that we may see and remark, and say Whose?
 
Or I guess the grass is itself a child. . . .the produced babe of the vegetation.
 
Or I guess it is a uniform hieroglyphic…
 
Read more!

The carnivore

I just killed a fly.

See, with insects and really all creatures, I usually follow an ideology close to the Jain tenet of non-violence.  I remember hearing about how Jain priests sweep the ground in front of them as they walk so they won’t harm any little animals in the dirt.  Ok, so I’m probably guilty of accidentally crushing a few ants as I walk, but there was a time when I couldn’t even bring myself to slap the mosquito indulging in my O-negative.

Those days are over.  I grab a pack of baby wipes, which is the best flyswatter I can locate in our kitchen, and smack that fly hard.  The fly gives up the ghost and falls into a pan soaking in the sink.  After staring at the floating corpse and muttering “ew” repeatedly, I fish it out and dispose of it sans eulogy.  I’m just not cool cohabiting with flies.  Besides their dirty little feet, I’ve heard too many horror stories here about maggots found growing in jars of Nutella.  The Haifa climate is a great nursery for all sorts of bug babies.

This willingness to murder flies must be connected to my recent forays into the world of meat.  While I’m not a vegetarian, I usually eat meat only a few times a week, and almost never beef.  I read Ruth Ozeki’s My Year of Meats when I was eighteen, and that turned me off to the meat industry.

Plus, I’ve been warned about the chicken here, which reportedly has preternatural powers to expand one’s waistline.  “Stay away from the chicken,” they say.  “My sister came here, and she gained 25 kilos in a year.  It was the chicken.”  Apparently Israel pumps their birds full of hormones.  I shrug, a little insulted that Israel is trying to outdo the States in unethical meat practices.

Love handles?

Love handles?

Yet chicken is the only raw meat I’ve brought myself to cook.  I’m still terrified I’ll poison whoever I’m feeding by thawing or cooking it wrong.  Honestly, I don’t think I’d ever fully observed chicken being cooked before I attended an Indian cooking class here.

Now I find myself preparing  butter chicken for eight guests, wondering if eight departments will find themselves one staff member short tomorrow morning.

Butter chicken

 

Please note that not only did the chicken turn out to be non-poisonous but also delicious.  Can you see the almost-tadik on the right side?

Maybe I should learn to cook tofu–or better yet, seitan.  I like seitan, I think, despite it consisting of “high protein wheat gluten,” which sounds like “nutritional yeast” and other weird vegan products I’m not alt enough to touch.  The word is Japanese, and I don’t really know how to pronounce it, so I call it “satan.”   As in, “I bought satan today.  I put satan in the freezer, and later, I will cook satan.  Have you tried satan before?”  Well, have you?

Office star

Dear rock stars of the world,

While you might feel pretty cool shredding your guitars onstage, I’m rocking out admin style, shredding these papers…like Jagger?

Love,

Layli

Actually, when it comes to office tasks, I’m anything but a star.  A simple trip to the shredder reminds me that while my Mount Holyoke BA covered everything from the epidemiological paradox to sestinas, it failed to educate me on the finer points of office supplies.  So I find myself once again repeatedly jamming the shredder with an overload of documents.  The shredder chokes for the fifth time in the past four minutes.

I kneel down and tell it, “Hey, you should know I’m not such a dunce–I graduated summa cum laude, alright?”

The shredder considers, wondering how my fancy diploma would taste, and how it would look digested into strips of Latin.

A colleague asked me how I was doing with my new duties.  I hesitated, considering how much time I had spent struggling to fix a stapler or to coerce the photocopier into submitting to my will.  (It won.)  Or how difficult it had been to find that room where according to legend there would be stacks and stacks of bond paper.  After wandering around one building, asking everyone I encountered about “the room with lots of paper,” I found one sympathetic soul who joined me for my quest.  Up the elevator, down the stairs, I got my first thorough tour of this building.  It was an actual paper chase.

Does anyone know where I can find the big boxes of bond paper?

“Enough with this Socratic nonsense.  Does anyone here know where I can get ten reams of bond paper?”

There are these simple tasks that aren’t so simple for a newbie.  And then there are the bug traps–or, as Catchmaster calls them, “adhesive pest control products”–and the unfortunate lizards that stroll inside.  I saved that first one, yes, and a few more.  One of them I only partially saved, as in his eagerness to escape me, he abandoned his tail, which flailed around on the ground in front of me until I tossed it into the bushes.  But there are those tragedies when I’m too late.  Or the ancient bug traps I’ve found when I explore the creepier passages of my building, that were set out years ago and have been collecting diverse little bodies since.  I enacted the story of Pandora’s box with one such trap.  I just had to know its contents, so I unfolded the box cautiously and found a desiccated gecko and what I swear was a fossilized tarantula.  Shiver.

Oh, Pandora...

Oh, Pandora…

But these brushes with kingdom animalia have endowed me with a certain prestige in the office.  One day I was doing something administrative, possibly wrestling with some staples, when I heard a cry for help: “Is anyone here not afraid of lizards?”  Already excited, I stood up: “I’m not!”  My colleague led me into the ladies’ washroom where a tiny lizard was hiding behind the toilet.  I got down on the floor and after a little graceless scrambling around caught it by its tail and, cradling it in my palm, took it out to the garden to release it.  When I returned, the women I had rescued greeted me as a hero.  Literally, “You’re so brave!  You’re our hero!”

Really, folks, it’s nothing.  All in a day’s work.

Qahwa Rock

Considering that my closest coworkers are in the age range to be my mothers or aunties, I’ve received surprisingly little maternal advice from them.  Maybe it’s my “professional demeanor”–I seem like I’m thoroughly put together.  They told me I always seem so calm I make the people around me feel calmer.  A peaceful aura, a mellow soul.  I’m glad I cover up my neuroses so well.

But today, I’m alone with one colleague in the break room, taking the morning cup of coffee that I drink seven days a week around 10:00 AM.

She inquires politely whether I drink coffee every day, and how many cups.  Then she suggests I try to cut it out of my routine and limit myself to drinking it socially.

I’m not addicted, I assure her.  Dependency’s not for me.  I explain that I know the medical issues behind my daily cup.  For example, I know the half-life of coffee is five or so hours–which makes it sound radioactive.

But maybe I am a coffee addict?  I picture a grizzled alcoholic, clutching his bottle of gin and slurring out his defense to the bartender: “I’m not addicted.  I just drink it for the flavor.”  Yeah, right, buddy.

Do I believe you, or...

Do I believe you, or…

…do I believe you and your blushing face?

After viewing these images, I finally know why I’m confused and pale.

So, what do I like about coffee?  The caffeine, the heightened energy when I return to my desk?  The slightly bittersweet aftertaste on the back of my tongue?

Or maybe it’s all the happy memories it evokes.  You know who you are, the coffee drinkers I love.  The coffee milk you made for me when I was a kid and disliked the flavor of plain milk.  The cups you made me when we lived together sophomore year with all your equipment lined up on our bookshelf, worthy of a barista.  The sludgy Nescafe we drank in Santiago.  The mochas and lattes I got with you every Friday at the Thirsty Mind.  The cups I watched you sip first in wintry Massachusetts and finally in summertime Wisconsin.

So it might be a social thing after all.  I’m never really alone with my cup of joe in hand.

Taking candy.

After lunch, I bump into two of my friends, Isabelle and Diana.  I love these eighteen-year-olds, who exude energy even when they’re clearly exhausted.  One of them, Isabelle, who is from Eastern Europe, offers me a hard candy.  I don’t really like hard candy–while my sweet tooth is tusk-sized, it prefers dark chocolate and homemade baked goods (preferably involving chocolate)–but I accept.  It’s a Mentos, one of those fruity flavors that tastes nothing like fruit.

Isabelle watches me chew on the candy.  “What do you think of the–” she pauses, contemplates, then mimes sucking on a candy by pushing her tongue into her cheek.

“Mm, it’s nice,” I say.

She doesn’t seem satisfied, and turns to my other friend.  “How do you say–” Then she points to her tooth.

Great.   I must have some embarrassingly giant herb wedged between my teeth.  I need to start carrying floss.

“Um, is there something in my teeth?”

“No no no!”  She says something to Diana, who is attempting to translate.

“An ulcer?” Diana offers.

No.  Please no.  I arrived in Israel with two open cold sores on my lips, which didn’t help with my natural self-consciousness.  I felt like I should have worn leper bells.  Had they recurred already?

“I have an ulcer on my face???” I ask.

“No no no!”  After another moment of consultation, she arrives at the word: flavor.

“Do you like the flavor?”  she asks.

“Mm, it’s nice,” I say.  Then I head out to check my teeth/cold sore situation.

Huh?

Lost

A very friendly woman asked me to get lunch with her, and I’m hoping (still on the friend hunt) to make a good impression.  We set our trays down on a table and she notices there is no salt shaker.

“I’m going to get one from another table,” she says.

I smile, and somehow manage to come up with an impossible tongue twister in response.  What I wanted to say was, “There seems to be salt shaker shortage.”  What I actually say is more like, “There seems to be a shalt saker sortage–shalt shake–salt sake sort–”

She remains unruffled, smiling through my stumbling, and agrees that there was indeed a shortage.  Despite my tongue being in a hopeless twist of sibilance, our lunch goes well after that.

***

I’m in a study group that meets once a week to discuss the Kitáb-i-Iqán, the Book of Certitude, which is one of the most holy books for Bahá’ís.  For whatever reason, the majority of the group is IT guys.  It’s a funny group.  I have to confess that my stereotype of programmers involves social awkwardness and thick glasses.  While there are some thick glasses in our party (mine), these guys are surprisingly chatty and even constantly wisecracking.  Like, constantly.  And with computer science allusions galore.  The facilitator studied computer science so she picks up on their references.  Me, on the other hand–I know a few HTML <b>codes</b>, but when it comes to real programming, I haven’t got a clue.  I console myself by thinking that if these men were to find themselves seated in a college English seminar, they’d be as lost as I usually am with them.

This particular day, we’re discussing progressive revelation, which Bahá’u’lláh explains with an analogy involving the sun.  There’s the concept that all the Manifestations (Abraham, Jesus, Moses, Muhammad, Krishna, etc) are the same, yet distinct.  He explains that it’s like the sun–I could say that today’s sun is the same as yesterday’s, or I could say it’s different.  Either statement would be true.  The sun is fundamentally the same sun, but it’s undergone changes since yesterday, so it’s also new.

“It’s kind of like object oriented programming,” one of the guys says.  Everyone laughs and agrees–“That’s a great comparison!  Progressive revelation and object oriented programming!”–while I lean back in my chair.  Well that clarifies things, I think, letting my mind wander back towards the humanities.

***

He’s on a ladder in the women’s restroom, and I am peering up at him.  I’m the contact person for problems in the building, including this case of the restroom door shutting too loudly.  It really is quite thunderous, but that’s mostly due to the acoustics of marble floors and bare walls.

So this young repairman/engineer is here.  I let him in and explained the issue to him, and now he’s set up to work on the hinges.

“Is there anything else I can do for you?” I ask.

“I need you to get out,” he says flatly.

I stare for a moment, my friendly admin smile still on my face, wondering why my presence is so obnoxious to this friendly guy.  Then I realize: “I need you to get out” means “I need you to help me get out.”  My building has limited access and lots of locked doors.  I laughed, explained my interpretation, we laughed together, and then there was nothing left to do–I got out.

So shiny

We’re on the roof of a building in the Abdullah Pasha compound in ‘Akká.  It’s 7:00 PM and the sun is setting over the Mediterranean, painting sky and sea.  Viewed through the chain link fence bordering the roof, it becomes a gleaming mosaic.   A mosaic in a Mosaic land.  If I had brought my camera, I would have indulged in some shutterbugging, but I try to take “photos with my brain” instead.  Although I could really use a better memory card.

At least someone remembered their camera!

At least someone remembered their camera!

So we’re on the roof for our weekly reflection program, a change of habitat from our usual multipurpose room.  The group is singing the song we always sing, “Unite the hearts,” when the call to prayer rings out from the nearby mosque.  I find myself wishing church bells would start tolling and the worshippers at a synagogue would start harmonizing in an interfaith mashup.

The previous week, a member of the Universal House of Justice talked with our group about the spiritual prerequisites for success.  I had the (nerve-wracking) honor of introducing him (I cut the word “prerequisite” out of my intro after its multiple R’s proved hostile to my pronunciation) and sitting beside him for the duration.  The scent of his attar of rose permeated the air.

I made a card to thank him for joining us.  It was the first time I’ve painted in quite a while, and losing myself in the watercolors for a few hours reminded me why I love making art.  The line written in the lower left corner comes from the 28 December 2010 message of the UHJ to the Continental Board of Counsellors, which discusses upholding Bahá’í values and nurturing good habits of thought:

May every one of them [youth] come to know the bounties of a life adorned with purity and learn to draw on the powers that flow through pure channels.

Card

I can’t help but notice a resemblance to an earlier painting…

Watercolor - Forest Meditation

Five years have elapsed, and my muse remains the same.

I want to be your friend

A few years ago, one of those hipsterish Brooklyn bands released “Friend Crush.”  Despite the song’s fairly innocent content, with “I want to be your friend” as the main sentiment, it has a distinctly creepy undertone.  Innocent but creepy… like me when I’m trying to make friends.

You see, Mount Holyoke was my ideal friend-making environment.  At the risk of idealizing my alma mater, I arrived in August and by October I had both a bestie and a friend group that more or less persisted all the way to graduation. As firsties, we were all terrified of ending up alone, so we glommed on to our hallmates or classmates and clung on for the ride.  At least I did.  The way my friend Addie tells it, I was so shy upon meeting her that I wouldn’t even make eye contact.  I beg to differ, but it is true that it takes me a long time to get comfortable with anyone, with few exceptions.  My friends steamed me out of my shell like a recalcitrant oyster.

Having a friend group, even a small one, means living in a sort of adopted family–a family with divisions, conflicts, and even the occasional estrangement–yeah, a real family.  We didn’t share any blood, but what we had in common was that we were all uncommon women (or womyn if you’d rather).

Now that I’m out of the res hall, out of class–now that I’m in the adult(ish) world–I see that my friend situation those four years was unique.  My instinct now is to try to aggregate a friend group in the Mount Holyoke model, a gaggle of diverse folks who all love each other and attend weekly brunch together.  I do see some friend groups in the lunchroom here.  There are the high school grads who clean or garden together; the orientation group that stuck together; the office staff in their mid to upper twenties.

Thus far, I have not received a formal invitation to join one of these groups.  To take a page from Zora Neale Hurston, it astonishes me that anyone would want to deny themselves the pleasure of my company.  I mean, I wear cool blazers.

So, too shy to gatecrash a preexisting group, I’m on the friend hunt.  I don’t go about this in the normal way; I strategize like a bounty hunter.  I locate my target, then attempt to construct our friendship regardless of their consent.  First, we shall get lunch together; then, we must hang out outside of the workday; and finally, you will be mine.  Normal people seem to do more of, “Hey, you seem cool, let’s chill,” and things progress naturally.  They don’t have an endgame, but then again, they aren’t Layli.

When I say I’m on the friend hunt, that’s primarily a female friend hunt.  The men… I mean…

Dorothy

Toto, I’ve a feeling we’re not in Mohome anymore.

Basically what I mean is simply that there are men on campus.  Gasp.  See, you put me in conversation with any dude 18 to 30 years old, and I promise things will get awkward, stat.

For instance, there was the kid who generously explained his style of dress for me.  He pulled out his phone and showed me a photo of him in skintight jeans (possibly jeggings?).  “Back in Germany, I like to wear my pants this tight,” he informed me.

Or my friend who texted me, “Do u like roses?”  This struck me as an odd question. Does anyone dislike roses?  I take it as common ground with the rest of humanity that we all like roses.  So, I replied in the affirmative and was delivered a somewhat flattened red rose.  From his explanation, he had tried to press this rose in a book.

Or that poor fellow who worked up the nerve to leave his front row seat–at a talk on preparation for marriage, no less–to come sit next to me.

“What’s your name?” I said.

“Haven’t we met?” he said.

I racked my memory.  Had we?  I had no recollection of ever seeing this guy before.  My bad.  After we got through our (re)introductions, we had the most stilted small talk possible, then lapsed into silence.  You ever come to a point in a conversation where you can think of absolutely nothing more to say?  I was there.  He must have caught sight of my feet and spotted a way to revive our moribund interaction.  “I like your shoes,” he said.  This was unexpected.  I contemplated my feet, purply skin strapped into girly sandals with metallic weaving and big fake stones.  “Oh…oh, thanks,” I replied, “yeah, they’re very…shiny.”  I don’t remember if anything more passed between us, but I jumped out of my chair and ran away when the talk ended.  Afterwards, I was kicking myself for my callousness.

I mean, I didn’t even think to look at his shoes.

Feet: icky.

Feet: icky.

Resettling

I have a new abode.  The daily commute got to me, so I checked out some open flats, chose one, moved, and now live under ten minutes away from my office.  In fact, the view kitchen/dining room looks onto the lower levels of the International Teaching Center.

I like my new little nest.  When I first stepped in to assess it, I felt like I was in a well-loved space.  Maybe it was the combination of houseplants and the framed illustrations, done by one of my new flatmates, that fill a bookshelf.

There are things about living in the stratosphere that I will miss…

View

The incredible panorama from my previous flat.

But I have a new view.

Foreground: roof of next door apartment building Middleground: High rise Background: Mediterranean and infinity

Foreground: roof of next door apartment building
Middleground: High rise
Background: Mediterranean and infinity

Ever the obsessive planner, after I found out I had a week to move out of my old flat and into my new place, one thought consumed me:

I have two big suitcases.  My new apartment is not on a street but rather on a staircase.  And the flat itself happens to be on the top floor of a building that has no elevator.  How am I going to get my things up there?

This question made me realize I need to befriend more muscular young men.  Eventually, utilizing all my networking powers, I assembled a move crew.

My visions of struggling to heave my suitcases upstairs until I was bathed in sweat and tears proved false.  It took only one trip to get my possessions from the car to the flat.

After I thanked my helpers with some ice cream, I noticed how, er, well-loved my new room was.  Besides the dust of many weeks, there were some odder substances, like the sticky, honey-like drips that ran down the wall behind one shelf.  Based on cleaning the room and purging her kitchen cupboard, I pretty much know everything about the previous inhabitant, from hair color to cooking habits.

When I first started dusting the wardrobe shelves, I noticed a shard of glass buried a corner, then spots of blood on my rag.

Five minutes of cleaning, and already injured?  I hadn’t even felt any pain.  After washing and bandaging my cut finger, I got back to work.  I figured it might be wise to dust the top of the wardrobe, and to my horror discovered a decade’s worth of dust up there, soft and thick like gray velvet.  From desk to bookshelf I climbed until I had enough altitude to reach the entire filthy surface.

Oh, did I mention my second injury?  I had the ceiling fan on, mostly because I couldn’t figure out how to turn it off, and was kindly reminded of its presence by a smack on the back of my head.

Don’t worry, my skull is intact.  After this interaction with the fan, I took a moment to thank God that despite my utter lack of common sense, despite my tendency to zone out and step out in front of oncoming traffic, to leave ovens on until they nearly melt,  to use deadly cleaning chemicals and home pesticides without any protection–to do countless foolish things–He’s kept me alive for twenty-two years without so much as a broken bone.

room

At long last, I have my new room clean and in order.  We’ll see how long the “in order” part lasts, but for now…

In my bedroom, I found a masterpiece of folk art already installed on the wall. Let me describe it: in the background, a sunset glows above green hills and a blue lake. If that was all, it would not be so remarkable, but in the foreground, an admixture of mysterious symbols float ominously, stacked on top of each other: a burning candle, a red plant, a blue amorphous streak, and a green face. The face bothers me a lot, as well as the blue streaky thing that looks to me like a headless woman bending over. But the face. Depending on whether you view the jaw as extending beneath the hills, this person either has the features of Gumby (explains the green skin) or a lantern jaw that makes Jay Leno look weak-chinned.

But until I can find enough acrylics to paint over this canvas, it shall remain, silently watching my doorway, waiting for the arrival of some connoisseur of clumsy symbolist art.