20 Feb 2011

The Moneda Crisis and Life's Other Curiosities

I sighed with that familiar exasperation as I opened my wallet and realised I only had 60 centavos in it. Now I would have to buy something just to get some change. Coins in Buenos Aires are like pens or plastic bags - you either have so many that you start to get careless about where you leave them, or you find yourself rummaging through your nightstand drawer, fishing out 5 cent coins from the fluff and dust.

Is there another place on earth where loose change is like gold dust and you would rather give a beggar a note instead of 10 cents because you have to keep hold of your change? Without coins in this city you are rendered immobile and simply cannot circulate; sometimes you can’t even buy things because the store owner is unwilling to part with valuable pennies for the sale of a cereal bar. He does the math and decides that it’s simply not worth selling it to you of it leaves him without change for the next client who will probably spend a bit more. A beaming smile and feminine charm get you nowhere when it comes down to this, trust me.

A little girl stopped me on my way to the bus the other day, her ragged clothing and disillusioned stare awoke a deep sense pity inside me. She asked if I could help her out with a “monedita” (a small coin). My heart broke as I looked at her, realising that if I parted with just one coin I wouldn’t be able to get the bus. She understood my dilemma and we began to search for a solution together. I ended up giving her my bottle of water; I could buy another one, but there’s nothing worse than finding yourself penniless and stuck in the middle of a derelict avenida late at night.

It’s just one of those integral and widely complained about, yet resignedly accepted malfunctions of Buenos Aires. The moneda (coin) crisis has been going on ever since I’ve been here and seems to have no resolution. The subway is only useful if you happen to live near a stop or don’t mind walking several blocks out of your way. At some point, if you have no personal transport, you will have to take a bus. I’ve wasted quite a considerable amount of my life waiting for and sweating inside tightly-packed busses as they creep across the city, spluttering black exhaust fume and driving too close to pedestrians.

Allow me to explain, to board a bus in Buenos Aires you have to pay with coins, dropping them into the slot machine with dexterity and skill as the driver accelerates on purpose while you have one hand on your wallet, the other on your carrying bags and no way of supporting yourself as you crash into the passenger next to you.

This need for coins on busses has led to a city-wide shortage and people are fiercely protective of them. It’s more likely that a stranger will give you their shoes than part with their loose change. Well, perhaps not their shoes, but maybe their bottle of water. There have been some solutions offered to resolve the crisis. I think extra coins were fabricated at one point but it didn’t seem to ease the shortage; some blamed the Chinese mafia for hoarding them and charging desperate store owners a hefty percentage for rolls of 1 peso coins. A few bus lines began implementing a swipe card system, which seemed like an obvious solution to me, however, the reality is that most of these have been incorrectly installed, don’t work, are vandalised, or simply haven’t arrived yet; the plans still stuck on the drawing board after more than 5 years of conception.

I walk past a little supermarket and desperately think of something I need so that I’m not simply wasting money just to get a few pennies. I know it seems ridiculous but this is a daily problem. Let me reinforce, unless the stars are aligning for you and you’re having an exceptionally lucky day, no one here will actually change a note for coins, so you almost always end up buying something cheap just to get a few pennies back. This is more of a strategic purchase than it might sound. You can’t buy just any old thing, and certainly not something with a rounded-off price tag; paying 5 or 10 pesos will only use up one note or get you another right back. Then you’re left with something you don’t want and still can’t get the bus home.

I look for a useful item for less than 5 pesos that suits my budget and needs. I scan the aisles, checking the prices and at last come across some rice cakes for $4.40. I am curiously addicted to these disgusting things and 60 cents will get me home. I approach the counter and the po-faced Chinese lady hands me a 50 cent coin and a boiled sweet. I look at her questioningly but she fails to respond- “but what about the other 10 cents? I need the 10 cents.” She shakes her head gruffly, grunting something I can’t understand and gestures towards the sweet. I hate getting my change in sweets. What good is a boiled sweet to me when I’m trying to get a bus? I sigh and walk back out onto the damp streets, slippery with the summer rain, rice cakes in hand and just enough for the long ride home.

Somehow this absurd city and I are strangely intertwined. This bustling metropolis that recompenses people with candy is tied into my DNA. It’s rather a volatile relationship and we fight constantly. Sometimes I end up crying with frustration, other times I am mean and prickly right back but somehow we always seem to make up again and for as much as I try to leave, it keeps on pulling me back. Arturo’s step-dad calls this city the “pulpo” (octopus) because it seems to suck people in with its tentacles. I certainly know a considerable amount of people (myself included) who have come here for a few weeks and ended up staying for years, all trying different and creative ways to scratch out a living in this chaotic yet curiously appealing urban jungle.

For those of you who follow my blog, scrap everything I said in the last post. Except the part about loving life because you never know what it will throw at you. I had no idea on Monday morning that this would be another a life-changing week. I still didn’t know where we would be staying at the end of the month but at least we had the country defined; project Uruguay was firmly in motion.

In a few short days that’s all changed. The universe connected me with two special people who run an exciting online music distribution business and have kindly asked me to work for them; after an interview of course. Technically, writing and account management you can do from anywhere as long as you have internet. In reality however, getting this job has halted our plans for moving to Punta del Diablo. Living in the middle of nowhere with an internet connection that crashes for a whole morning because a sea bird is sitting on the line probably isn’t all that smart.

So the upshot is I finally I have a fixed address from which I don’t plan on moving for at least the next few months. I have a sofa bed, a garden and lots of room for visitors. Our future home is literally an oasis of calm in the middle of the swirling, relentless insanity. Angel gets back from Uruguay next weekend and we will move there at the end of the month. Plan Buenos Aires is back on track. It’s really not surprising that we just did a complete 180 – our move to Northern Spain ended up with me being sent to Honduras. Latin America isn’t in my blood like it is in Angel’s, but it’s certainly in my soul.

At the end of the day the old adage is true; everything happens for a reason. I don’t believe in coincidences. You get back what you put out, pure and simple. I can literally feel the positive vibes radiating from me from months of hard work that have finally paid off. I have more clients, I’m finally getting published and I’m developing my writing skills in ways I never imagined. For anyone who is interested I just finished a very informative article about cupcake and cake ideas for boy scouts. There’s also one about tips for preventing plagiarism; we all have to pay the rent.

But finally after so many ups and downs and periods of nerve-crunching instability, I’ve found my balance once again and feel more like the old me; the one that helps old ladies cross the road and laughs when the heel of my shoe breaks or my skirt blows over my head in a sudden gust of wind. This week I held out my hands and received a fantastic job, an ideal place to live and, rather more curiously, a gold bracelet. The latter was definitely the most random and unexpected of all. I arrived home from lunch today and went to take the garbage out. There was a man sitting slumped upon my door step with dirty fingernails and a small mirror in his hand from which he had just snorted some crack. He raised his eyes to look at me and asked something I didn’t really understand. Most of his teeth were missing and he had dry white saliva in the corners of his mouth. His shoes were ridden with holes and his young face already etched with wrinkles and a deep scar on his cheek.

His name is Esteban, and Esteban by profession is technically a cartonero. This is another inherent cultural element that I’m not really sure exists outside of Buenos Aires, but is basically all about recycling. In more developed and regulated countries, garbage is separated and recycled at the plant (at least we are told that it is) and the garbage trucks come and take away what you’re allowed to throw. What you can’t, like sofas or fridges or toxic waste, depending on how good you are, you take down to the dump or deposit on the street late at night when no one else can see.

Here the cartoneros basically manage the city’s recycling system. You see them fishing through the garbage bags and extracting materials that can be exchanged for cash; cardboard, plastic, clothes. It may not be the most efficient system as the poor cartoneros have to rummage through sack-fulls of rotten food and waste and the streets usually end up full of discarded litter, but at least they are able to make some kind of a living from the stuff that other people ultimately don’t want. It’s a hard life being a cartonero and you see them, the successful ones, pulling a large cart behind them, sweating in the heat, loaded up with boxes and recyclable materials. The smaller players, like Esteban, just rummage around in the hopes of getting lucky and finding things they can exchange for food, or drugs, or alcohol to numb the desperate biting harshness of their daily lives.

It’s generally accepted that you don’t interact very much with the cartoneros and certainly don’t engage in conversation. I think a lot of people believe that if they ignore them long enough then they will eventually go away. It reminds me of when I was in Alice Springs, a bizarrely hostile town in the dead centre of Australia, probably the strangest place I’ve ever been to in my life. The Aborigines just hung about the plaza or underneath the shade of a tree whilst the predominant white population just pretended not to see them, carrying about their daily activities as if they weren’t there. The sad truth is that most of us don’t care that much about anyone else until they have penetrated our outer layers with a smile, a stare, or some sort of communication that forces us to drop our guards and let them in.

I’m the first to admit that Esteban and I probably don’t have much in common, but what right do I have to deny him a few moments of my time? At least have the decency to acknowledge his presence on my doorstep. Most people in Latin America don’t give money or time to street tramps, beggars or charities, believing they will put it to bad use in buying more of whatever substance they need to get them through the day – and in most cases it’s probably true - so there is a tendency to look away when people jump onto the subway and start to ask for money.

Yesterday a little boy, maybe about 5 years old, began to speak loudly, engaging the commuters with his commanding voice. He took out 4 balls from a large sack and began to juggle, catching a few in the nape of his neck and throwing others under one leg and over his shoulder. Despite the gripping performance and spectacular efforts of this marvellous child, you could almost see the discomfort radiating off the people whose eyes remained fixed on the floor. He finished his act and I began to clap as he pleaded the silent people for applause. What level of separation from strangers have we reached that we can’t even praise a little boy who should be playing football with his friends that is instead juggling balls in a crowded subway car? I told him he was “fantastico” and his chubby face burst into a smile. Of course he wants money but even more than that I think he just wants to be acknowledged; like this cartonero in my doorway.

Staring at me in his drug-induced state, Esteban asks me where I’m from; apparently I was even harder for him to understand than he was for me and we limped our way through a stilted conversation. His eyes were rolling slightly in the back of his head. I couldn’t help but wonder if anyone can really find their way back when they reach this low in life. I have to hope that they can, I need to believe that it’s possible. Life is unpredictable. I ended up giving him a few pesos and a printer. I thought that maybe he could do something with the spare parts as the machine that I had stopped working long ago and has been taking up space in my living room.

He smiled and pulled out a shiny gold bracelet from his pocket “this is for you”. I lit up with a smile – “are you sure?” I asked him as he nodded his head again and rather painfully attempted to fasten the fragile clasp around my wrist, whilst swaying from side to side. I can only guess at the past life of this little trinket. A stranger didn’t give me shoes today, but a stranger gave me a gold bracelet. If we just let our guards down for a moment and remember that we are all human after all, amazing things can happen.

8 Feb 2011

Punta del Diablo

I have come to the conclusion that being a professional writer is far more arduous and tedious than I thought. Instead of enthusiastically opening my notebook at a fresh page, the speed of my fingers barely keeping pace with my mind’s restless desire to record every detail and bring to life the sights, sounds, and smells that surround me, lately I have been writing about the benefits of certain statistical software products as managerial tools, the definition of a torque angle (I had never heard of it either) and the obligations of good Muslim women. The latter, I have to say, certainly interested me more, but the technical writing and stiff format requirements of the articles tie my hands. There’s nothing like observing real people, trekking into the wild and luring outback or listening to the softly lapping waves on the shore to get your creative juices flowing.

Today I am allowing myself the guilty pleasure of up-dating my long-abandoned blog. For my few followers, I apologise for leaving you without reading material for so long. Since arriving back in Buenos Aires, all my efforts have been focused on launching my professional writing page (www.christinacomben.com – for those of you who haven’t seen it yet) and working on my first novel, of which I’m about 55 pages in.

It is Sunday, although you wouldn’t really know it. There is little to distinguish one day from the next in a popular beach resort in high season. I decided to take a leisurely stroll over the dunes and to the quietest beach, playa grande, which actually has quite a few people on it today. I’m used to seeing nothing but the waves breaking on the sand and the trees and shrubs that pepper the hills tumbling in the breeze.

I love this beach. Once we bathed here at 2am, splashing in the tepid waters brimming with a shining star dust that had us mesmerised by its glow. Shimmering layers of what seemed like fairy dust lit up our naked bodies and danced around in our hair. I thought they were little bacteria that lived in the water, but it turns out that my star dust is actually a scientific phenomenon called phosphorescence. It occurs when lots of energy is absorbed by a substance and released slowly in the form of light. To witness it and swim in the turquoise froth of a wave at night under the light of the moon, leaving footprints in the wet sand that sparkle back at you like gold certainly doesn’t feel scientific. It feels like magic.

That summer night last year here on playa grande, the beach was ours alone. We lay back nestled from the wind by a sand dune, staring up at a sky bursting with stars. Apparently it’s not possible for two people to see the same shooting star, but we did. “Quiero estar contigo para siempre,” (“I want to be with you forever”) Angel whispered to me, staring deeply into my eyes, which were glistening with tears. We’d only known each other a few days but somehow it felt like a life time. Remembering that night has carried me through many a stressful and heart-racing moment. When we were separated and I was in Honduras, I closed my eyes and thought of the beach; when the gunshot rounds in the night were frequent and unnerving; on the day our car span off the road whilst journeying back from San Pedro to Tegucigalpa and we nearly crashed into a horse, a few opportune reeds and plants luckily softening our landing.

On that particularly frightful episode I actually wondered if I would see any of my friends or family again. I just prayed and prayed as I’ve never prayed before to make it home alive, knowing that we still had hours of journey on a treacherous mountain highway ahead, followed by a loop through the poorest and scariest neighbourhood in Honduras at the onset of darkness, searching for a way out of the rat’s nest of chaotic streets and dilapidated buildings. I certainly wouldn’t have believed that a few months later I would be back here on this beach. But then that’s the thing I love most about life – you never know what’s going to happen or what twists and turns of fate will throw you off your path without warning. Here I am, looking out to the horizon, one year later... engaged to my dark-eyed Uruguayan and anticipating yet another move.

Punta del Diablo in the Eastern tip of Uruguay, almost at the border with Brazil has such a special energy that, if you connect with it, it will draw you back time and again. I reconciled my relationship with my sister here, fell in love, bought land, and got engaged on this very beach. There is a magic in the air that radiates from the rocks, the forest that fringes the perfect sandy beaches, the honey-sweet smell of the flowers and the wildlife that hums in the distance. Apart from the phosphorescence, we’ve seen many a curious insect here. If you’re located too close to the forest then the mosquitoes can be ferocious and the frogs and crickets that throb in the undergrowth like a musical chorus, will keep you up all night with their incessant shrill, should one unwillingly enter your house.

Last year after a huge storm that shook the foundations of our cabin, my sister and I awoke to find a horse in the garden. I’ve shared my room with a species of moth-slash-butterfly-slash-bat so big that it froze the breath in my throat. The locals affectionately call this “batman” and it has a wing span greater than that of both my hands together. When it was fixed to the wall without moving I could just about live with it, but when it made its flapping and erratic darts about the thin wooden walls, terrorised shrieks were provoked in me. We’ve seen snakes and miniature dolphins, a local species of shark, crowds of sea birds that gather together on the rocks and fireflies with large green eyes that light up the night with their beams.

If you can learn to be at one with the omnipresent natural life that abounds here, slow your rhythm down to the rolling movements of the tide, and learn that nothing is ever planned in advance, then this might just be a little slice of heaven. At least that is what I am hoping. Angel and I have decided to move here permanently (I say permanently in the Christina sense of the word). I have actually lost count now of how many houses, apartments, shelters, hotels, tents and countries I have lived in and I have a passport with 87 stamps and half a page of space free that doesn’t expire for another 5 years.

We still don’t have our house defined, as it’s only the 6th of February and looking ahead to March is about as alien a concept to the people here as planning your wedding when you’re still in primary school. We were joking with some local friends about this just last night. I will always have my English (mostly my father’s) impatience to get things done and plan in advance. Maybe not to the same extent, but a diluted version of the wanting everything now and not leaving things up in the air to see what happens. When I spoke to him yesterday he told me that they had already sent out invitations to their anniversary party – in JULY – I don’t even know where I will be living in three week’s time. It’s just a different world.

It is going to be an experimental year. I’ve spent most of my adult life residing in chaotic and vibrating cities with throbbing nightlife, street culture, public transport, pollution, noise, bars, restaurants and a 24-hour kiosk on the corner. Can my accelerated and restless spirit be contained and calmed here, in this corner of this tiny South American country miles from any real civilisation? When the winter bites and the harsh, Sothern wind blows and the cold invades my lungs, the carafe of gas has run out and there’s no delivery until next week... how will I react?

The truth is... I don’t know. But I’m willing to find out. I can work from here. I can write. Perhaps I can even find the peace and time I need to complete my novel and inhale pure air. I wonder if I can cure my insomnia and shake of the layers of stress that I’ve been carrying around for so long. I never mention it in my blog, but so much constant moving can be a little, well, unsettling.

I will miss dining out, sipping on pisco sours and hanging out with my friends. Dressing up and straightening my hair, strapping high-heeled shoes around my ankles and feeling glamorous, taking pilates classes, tennis, and massages; just generally being in the city. And the food here is certainly no luxury; the only healthy alternative will be to eat at home. Having a chef as a fiancé comes in handy here as in the main, Uruguayans are certainly not gourmets, at least not in this part of the country. Perhaps in the swanky, 5-star resorts further south or the better areas of Montevideo, but in the rest of Uruguay their idea of a glamorous meal is serving it on a ceramic plate instead of a plastic package and the only way to cook is with a deep fat fryer.

Almost everything here is fried. Milanesas (meat in breadcrumbs), empanadas (Cornish pasties), and a kind of sweet fried dough known as tortas fritas (fried cakes) are all specialities. It’s amazing the people here are not obese with the amount of hamburgers, hotdogs, and general junk oozing with fat that they eat. The Uruguayan chivito is the equivalent of a heart attack on a plate and comes stacked with meat, ham, egg, fries, potato salad, lettuce, olives, cheese and a few other food groups I’m failing to mention, all smothered in mayonnaise. In a country where they eat and appreciate every internal organ of the cow and do creative things with intestines, liver and kidney, I will certainly miss the sophistication of Buenos Aires cuisine.
But for now at least, I am hanging up my heels and my hair dryer, putting always my jackets, skirts and makeup and trading my cocktails for mate and biscocho. My next few blogs will be posted from a small fishing village with a year-round population that doesn’t exceed 1,500. I’ve been to cinemas with more people than that.