It’s morning in Guanajuato. The opening chords of an
enormous symphony rise. Some cocks crow: first one, then two, then, perhaps -
after sotto voce conferences all around the ciudad - an agreement is reached
and dawn is declared with bird-brained conviction. The cacophonic warble of the
first movement is in place.

The campanero sighs.
Clank. Clank. Clank. “Damas y caballeros, I have done all I can do. I am
weary to my bones. You are now in the hands of the great bells of the templos.
They are younger and they will insist, not coax. For them, God wears a watch and he awaits. Go in peace.”
BONG. The templos
commandeer the ether. BONG. “You
there, get thee hence.” BONG. You there, Christmas is coming
there is work to do. BONG. “The
floors need sweeping, children must be off to school. What is the trouble? BONG. BONG. BONG. BONG. We can and we
will do this all day…GET UP!”
And so the days begin and the mountains flame and blaze and
the lion of the city roars.
But just last night, the cacophonous barking, bonging, and
roaring ceased for a moment. The city drew its breath. Then, fully awake and redeemed, it burst
into harmonies of light and sound.
In candlelight, we walked the Posada. Christmas here is not
a day or an exchange of gifts per se, though those elements are there. It is a
short tour through another dimension that does not require a specific doctrine
of faith or philosophy, but only a candle and a song and a walk. For the next
few weeks, smaller posadas will flow in neighborhoods.
Pinatas will be hung
from trees for the youngsters to pummel, adults will gather for songs, prayers and
ponche (a tasty and mysterious warm fruit drink).
The priest calls, the procession answers as we wind down
into the city joined at every turn by more candle lights, more voices, more
disembodied faces floating over the flames. The priest and the children,
perhaps a bit bewildered by their hour on the stage, spin and sway, struggling
with their, for now, solemn aspects resisting the lights, the music, the candy.
All in due time.
A few days before…
Ah the familiar unfamiliarity of it all! It has only been a few weeks since we
went thought the“tube” – taxi, airport, plane, customs, taxi, skidding to a
halt in front of our B&B in Guadalajara. After rattling our way through
lockboxes and gates and stairs and more locks and doors, we are flummoxed by
ONE LAST LOCK on a door that simply refuses to yield. What’s more,
inexplicably, it pushes back at us with a clunk, clunk, clunk each time we
twist the key in a different direction. What the hell? Is someone inside? Hola?... nothing. Finally the door opens
to an empty apartment save for one playful black cat – Azul who apparently was
enjoying great sport with us on the other side of the door. We shrug in unison,
that’s Mexico. We tumble into a tiny Maya-sized double bed and expire for the
night. Our plans are to spend two nights here before a five-week stay in our
rented casita in Guanajuato to be followed by a week in Puerto Vallarta. Muy bien!



By the next day, the signs are gone from the buildings, the protest marches ended. The University president and a dean of students have resigned, and discussions are underway about how to better protect the students.
Attention now turns to
preparations for El Dia de Guadalupe which honors the patron saint of Mexican
families. All at once, the parades
begin, church bells clang, and fireworks boom and crackle above. The tragedy of
the young woman is not forgotten but rather blended into the celebrations.
There are tables with petitions to sign, pictures and sketches of her likeness
in the windows and many small remembrances of her loss woven into the fabric of
the celebratory day.

Certain streets in the city fill to bursting with
families. There are stations along the way where children, boys dressed as
campesinos (complete with drawn on beards and mustaches) and sumptuously
costumed girls as dancers folkloricos, can be photographed with a life-sized
fabric painting of Guadalupe – somewhat akin to our department store Santa
scene. We find ourselves swimming
in a river of colors, noises, and smells. We pause to watch a huge parade of
marching bands, beating tattoos and blatting out stirring martial music as they
carry their favorite saints along on huge tapestries held high.
After the parade passes, we join the throng shopping in the
mercado, the tortilla shop, the bakery, and the (most excellent) roasted chicken
place, slowly wending our way home up, up, up, our long, climbing street. Too
narrow for cars or trucks, where everything must be carried - just as it would
have been a hundred years ago. We stop in the perfectly situated plazas for
gasping sessions and for rest on the mercifully shaded metal benches as we try
to acclimatize to the 6,600 ft, altitude. We are growing old, our bodies remind
us.
By the next day, wrestling with the usual bouts of physical
weirdness that seem, inevitably, to plague us now at the beginnings of our
trips, we resolve to locate the language school that is supposed to be nearby.
We stop in the neighborhood plaza and turn on the Mexican GPS – asking one
person after another how to get to such and such a place. In the process, we come
across a well-dressed Mexican gentleman reading a newspaper on a bench at the
shady corner of the plaza. We greet him and endeavor to make our request
understood. While we fumble, he smiles and says, in perfect English, “Let me
check my computer.” He breaks with the tradition of sending us close but not
quite as per the norm and instead gives us perfect directions. On the way back,
he is still there so we thank him and strike up a conversation that, since
then, has become a friendship. He is Rogelio, a customs lawyer who has returned
awhile back from a stint in the US (in Ashland, Oregon, no less). He has
returned to Guanajuato for the quiet and to oversee his Mexico City-based
practice from afar. Kind, affable and interested, he is a fountain of information
who is equally happy to converse in Spanish or English, as we choose. After a
long conversation ranging from interesting local customs to the pros and cons
of current government policies, we set a date to meet for lunch or dinner.
We will have more to say about our attempts to take a hike in Mexico (read Eric’s Hell
March) and further adventures with Rogelio in our next blog. For now we want to
wish everyone the best Christmas ever, despite all the political troubles.
Light a candle in the darkness, as will we. May they burn brighter than the
sun.