For anybody who doesn’t know, I got to go over to Ireland
with my family. Ireland, Scotland, France and England, actually, all made
possible by my parents. Specifically my mother who has spent the last year
planning and scheming (in a totally legitimate, non-subversive way, of course)
and coordinating the perfect execution of a nearly three week, four country
tour of the British Isles and beyond. Most of the expense of this trip was
covered by airline miles and award points accumulated carefully and meticulously
through a strategy so complex and precise, that I would imagine even the
spreadsheets were outwitted. My mother is a master in the art of thrifty travel
and making things happen. I am in awe.
The first half of our trip was spent all over the rolling green
hills of Ireland, touring the three Cs – Castles, Cathedrals and Cliffs. Then
we spent two nights in the fairy tale town of Edinburgh, Scotland, where I felt
certain I had stepped into Diagon Alley and was watching carefully for
Ollivander ‘s Wand Shop. After Scotland, we spent three nights in France, along
the Normandy Coast, visiting beaches where thousands of Allied Troops
disembarked in June of 1944. Then it was on to jolly old England for two nights
in London listening to Big Ben announce the imminent arrival of our departure.
At no point, as I wandered through these long-lived lands,
did the dizzying knowledge of Someone Before escape me. How many places that I
stood had seen death, revolution, romance and intrigue. Thousands of years of
history happened beneath my feet in these spots, before the New World across
the sea was even imagined. Cities haunted by the superstitions of generations,
faith that hangs in the air as thick as the ghosts that it tells about –
stories whisper out of every wall about the destinies that came and went from
these places.
I got to put my hands on ancient stones that have known the
light touch of Mary Queen of Scots and the hard fist of Oliver Cromwell.
I got to bury my feet in the once blood-soaked sand of Omaha
Beach.
I got to look out the window of Anne Boleyn’s bedroom.
I got to stand on rocks that could tell the stories of
people more ancient than we have even discovered.
I leaned against walls that saw the death-slumped shoulders
of chain-mailed knights, and bricks that held up generations of legend-drunk
Irishmen and their singing heads.
I sat on benches that were grazed by the silk of fine,
corset-ensconced ladies and where war-tired noblemen held their aching heads in their hands.
My feet got to travel the paths of age-old monks, following
their trail of knowledge and faith throughout history.
I got to look up into the ceilings of castles and cathedrals
that held secrets of conspiracies to thrones, illicit love stories and
religious turning points that defined the destiny of the New World across the
oceans.
I got to see the armor that grew to enclose the graduating
form of Henry the VII as he evolved through his legendary reign.
I got to feel the cold salt water waves of the hard Irish beaches that hold a thousand stories of sailors and soldiers and saints.
I got to walk the same worn-smooth cobbled streets as
witches and kings, abbots and invaders.
I got to stand beneath the floating feathers of Mont St Michel as they drift weightless in the still air, the suspended remnants of the archangel’s battle with the dragon of evil.
I got to lay eyes on the sparkling crown jewels of a Tiny
Island that have been the reason for countless murders and wars and changes in
religious trends.
I got to bear witness to centuries of traditions grafted
from native beliefs onto imported rituals, a melding of spiritual, physical and
legal forces compelling the people to their prescribed faiths.
I got to hear the story of religion used as a political
vehicle over time, in turn redeeming and condemning followers, offering
salvation and grace one minute, only to take it away at the whim of a ruling
monarch and replace it with judgment and death.
I got to visit churches that swung wildly between different
observations of faith and fell mercilessly on the people beneath them, seeking
refuge. Places of comfort that became places of torture, and vice-verse.
I got to experience breathtaking landscapes, Kincaid
cottages, adorable villages, intimidating fortresses, cozy chateaus, ancient
metropolises, and in many places, the awkward clash of new and old, mixed up
together in a land that still seeks to reconcile the bloody past with the
enabled present. Elevators in 700 year old castles. Flushing toilets in rustic
rock cottages. Glass Office Buildings alongside thatched roofs. These places
know where they’re going but they’re careful to not forget where they have
been.
These are dichotomies that we see rarely in our young
nation. Old is torn down to acquiesce to new, and progress is not halted for
tradition. We are the melting pot of the world, and rather than learning from
our mistakes, we scorn them as erstwhile products of some other entity, and we
start from scratch as though our slate was clean. We deny our torture chambers
and internment camps and legacy of slavery.
We hide our face from the shame of bad rulers and poor legislative
decisions. Granted, we have not the luxury of centuries to ease the pain of
embarrassment, but the failures of our nation are carefully erased and
tactfully avoided in polite conversation. And with the avoidance comes the
perpetuation. Without looking back it is difficult to look forward, and we stay
forever locked in our “just fine” state of being where equality is a trendy
word and not a trend. So much we could learn from our cousins across the pond
of adding the new to old and retaining the beauty that comes from gradual
change through time. But we are young, we are impatient, we are
revolutionaries. We’d prefer to knock down the whole tower of blocks and start
over if it wasn’t constructed according to our tastes. We see no value in the
experience of those who have gone before us, either for their successes or for
their mistakes.
I have no idea where that ramble came from... sorry. But anyway, I feel like a pretty lucky girl for all the stuff I got to do, and I've got a lot more to write up
I have no idea where that ramble came from... sorry. But anyway, I feel like a pretty lucky girl for all the stuff I got to do, and I've got a lot more to write up
If you have got something to perform, you should not worry, just create a certain list and follow it respectively.
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