When you come to the city, don’t enter the gate....
Jemaa el Fnaa image by Sam Rogers on Flickr |
A few
weeks passed beautifully exploring Marrakesh, sorbing the Moroccan culture, the colors, the patterns. Taking in this gateway to Africa and the diversity of
people of so many colors, races & costume. The first week we spent most nights roaming the
Jemaa el Fna and mornings on the rooftop cafe where
we met interesting travellers, often with tales to tell about the way ahead to the south. Dakar, Timbuktu, Tam Tam...the names of places once almost mythical, now so temptingly within our reach. The middle of the days we just chilled in our room, relaxing, all the time planning
our trip down the Atlantic coast to the west.
I felt loved, cherished, appreciated. Tom seemed to be the ideal travelling companion and nothing happened to give me any second thoughts about going alone into a remote place with him. My mind was far from my brutal husband, but the memories of my baby tortured me all the time, giving Tom a lot of reasons to comfort me more and more in the way he knew best. Although he wasn’t always as nice as he could have been. His teasing was often too much for me, but then how could he have known the hell of torment and betrayal an abused wife, who has had to leave her precious baby to that abuser, goes through. I got through the walls of grief and pain in meditation, writing, playing music and yogic dancing. OK, I didn't get through, but that's how I dispersed the energy, turning the thoughts from negative to positive where I could.
I felt loved, cherished, appreciated. Tom seemed to be the ideal travelling companion and nothing happened to give me any second thoughts about going alone into a remote place with him. My mind was far from my brutal husband, but the memories of my baby tortured me all the time, giving Tom a lot of reasons to comfort me more and more in the way he knew best. Although he wasn’t always as nice as he could have been. His teasing was often too much for me, but then how could he have known the hell of torment and betrayal an abused wife, who has had to leave her precious baby to that abuser, goes through. I got through the walls of grief and pain in meditation, writing, playing music and yogic dancing. OK, I didn't get through, but that's how I dispersed the energy, turning the thoughts from negative to positive where I could.
Green memories of the sun merge into
evening’s mauve veil.
Suffering the reality of your absence
the empty hollow of my shoulder
moulds again her small warm head
and in my shame your angry eyes keep me
insane
Georgy Porgy rubs salt into the wound,
laughing
Clever clever Georgy Porgy
But
Tom too was growing. He had had a few of
his “Son of God” raves printed up and with all the tunnel vision delusion of
the iconoclastic drug guru was now certain he was the coming Avatar.
He handed his raves out when he sold the
God’s Eyes in the markets. He became an
“event’, part of the nightly circus in the Jemaa
el Fna. I’d often have to elbow my
way in to get to him through the crowds he attracted. He had to spread The Word about Love, Peace,
Beauty and the Magical Kingdom of the Insighted Vision. And how the Native American Indian Church
embraced all cultures in Truth. We had
both become very spiritual, determinedly remaking ourselves. We wanted the world to be a good place, not
the war-ridden, destructive hell of lies and deception we found at all
levels. Deluded idealistic fools that we then were, we wanted Heaven on Earth,
Utopia, Nirvana, Shambhala and the rest of the dreams of the dreamers that
encapsulate the need to find a better reality, or escape this, since the
cultures started giving us back our reflections, showing us our overview as a species. We decided if it was to be, then it must come
from within us and began that immense struggle of the mind, the soul, the
spirit, to conquer the evil within in order to be the good manifest in the
external world.
God's Eyes |
Above
all I wanted enlightenment; I wanted to understand the nature of existence, who
we are, where we came from, where we are going.
I didn’t, and don’t, believe in the God the Father myth, the friend upstairs, and Tom still
did. It was part of his whole scenario,
in which he was the Christ I guess.
I
understood both of us were reacting to the full 60’s revolutionary political
climate as conservative forces tried to quell the free thinkers, of women
seeking freedom from male oppression, of the Vietnam War, and to our own lives
having “gone wrong”. He had lost his
mother and left home and been alone, unloved, and I had left a husband who
thought love was some sort of slavery by females to males and if they didn’t
“behave”, then you show them who is boss with the law of the fist. (Somehow the fact that he was the misbehaving negative role model
had escaped him). Tom and I had found love in each other in our joined wish for
peace and non-violence, of the woman and the man as complimentary parts of the
whole, the Yin and the Yang, always moving in interplay. We wanted to spread it
around to those others who had seen the light, sensed the way or who wanted out
from the hell. There were plenty of
eager takers of all nationalities ready to listen.
Looking back I think now he saw our proposed donkey walk as his "40 days in the wildness", removing himself from society to allow a certain introspection. Reculer pour mieux sauter.
Looking back I think now he saw our proposed donkey walk as his "40 days in the wildness", removing himself from society to allow a certain introspection. Reculer pour mieux sauter.
In the
darkening twilight of our room, I would sit on the bed listening to the
deafening evening call to prayer from the minaret next door booming out over
all around, absorbing the intensity of it.
Normally I would have hated such a racket, but somehow, there, it was
wonderful to me. Even today I enjoy
hearing the wailing Allah akbar allah allah illah allah and the memories of so many
wanderings in Muslim lands come flooding back.
That call to holiness, lifting the believers’ minds from the daily grind
to a higher spiritual plane. The reinforcement of a mass brain washing.
The
courtyard of the house with its’ fountain provided a communal gathering place
for the occupants of the house and visitors.
There we did our cooking and washing and sat around sharing experiences
while these domestic mundanities were attended to, waiting for water to boil,
or someone to finish with the bathroom facilities. The Danish women had a lot of friends and
were always bringing new people in to meet us all.
One afternoon I returned to the riad to find an itinerant musician sitting playing a
primitive stringed instrument, a guimbri; it seemed to be no more than a shoebox with a broom handle stuck
in it with three catgut strings. But
the sounds he produced from this were magical.
I was intrigued. Then he played it for us and sang an ancient traditional, yet universal, folk song.
The great mendicant musician Omar Arafa with his guimbri |
“When you come to the city, don’t enter the gate.
If you enter the gate, don’t drink the water.
If you drink the water, don’t talk to the
people.
If you talk to the people, don’t accept an
invitation to a house.
If you accept an invitation, don’t stay the
night.
If you stay the night, don’t stay a week.
If you stay a week, don’t ask the daughter to
marry you.
If you marry, don’t have children.
If you have children, don’t have
grandchildren.
If you get old there, don’t die there,
If you come to the city, don’t enter the gate”.
I sat
contemplating the message, having made the man a cup of tea meanwhile. While he drank I smiled at him, vibing. He was ancient, wearing faded patched robes, leaning back on a cushion made of a carpet rolled around his belongings. In my twisted crazy mind I felt he was some
angel messenger from the psychic otherworld. With a message from the Gods, for me.
He turned and brought out another instrument, a scaled down version of his guimbri, from his carpet roll and handed it to me. He said was a lotar. It was even more rudimentary, with only one string. I plucked it, surprised to
find it come alive in my hands. I sat
playing it, coaxing music from its slow rather dull string and eventually
started singing a song I had been turning over in my mind over the past weeks.
“Drifting
down the river, rising high on the tide, floating gently downstream on the
mainstream of the river, on the river of my dreams”.
It
suited the instrument’s basic sounds, a simple song. He picked up my rhythms and played along with me, although I was more just the bass and he the melody. Meanwhile Tom had fetched down his drums and our flutes and we passed an hour or so making improvised music until the light faded and the sahn became busy with others and their evening chores around us.
Wordlessly the old man thanked me for the tea and gathering his bags together, rose to leave. I offered to buy the lotar and he was happy to part with it for a small amount of cash. I took my prize up to our room. It was my first "ethnic" stringed instrument. A child could have made it. But to me it was the beginning of a musical voyage of discovery which found its’ blessed isles when I began playing a sitar in Benares and beyond, in India.
Wordlessly the old man thanked me for the tea and gathering his bags together, rose to leave. I offered to buy the lotar and he was happy to part with it for a small amount of cash. I took my prize up to our room. It was my first "ethnic" stringed instrument. A child could have made it. But to me it was the beginning of a musical voyage of discovery which found its’ blessed isles when I began playing a sitar in Benares and beyond, in India.
I
began to have problems with my periods.
Sporadic bleeding. I didn’t have
a proper period, just burst of blood in irregular spasmic events. One morning after an unexpected early morning
flood, I came down to wash my panties out at the communal washstand in the
courtyard, feeling out of sorts and very self-conscious. Strange how periods make a woman feel
secretive. You always try to conceal the
evidence, like an animal will consume the umbilical cord after birth, so I
would clean up every trace of blood and make sure no-one saw me in the
act. Why I never fathomed. We all have
‘em, so what’s the shame, the cringe?
Bia
and two of her beautiful Danish friends were squatting behind me across the
courtyard, stoned stupid, laughing and sniggering in Danish, behaving like
silly girls. I
couldn’t understand a word, but I just smiled and covering my activities with
my back, went about washing the blood out of my little white panties. I felt quite “queer”, very paranoid, very
psycho. I felt as if they were entering
my mind, reading it, controlling my thoughts.
The blood revolted me and my thoughts were negative. My baby - would the brute harm her - I felt
lost, stretched with period tensions, uncomfortable, down. Needing to curl up and cocoon in our quiet little nest. I finished washing the pants and heard Bia
say “put it UP” and I found my hand take the wrung-out panties, as if on the
command, and put them up on a pipe above the washstand as I bent to wash my
face.
The
cold water jerked me into conscious awareness. I straightened up and looked at
the now clean pants as if they had the meaning of life in them. Blood, blood. I
was shedding all my hunched defences, my fear, the nonsense that had been going
on inside me, released.
“Put it UP!” I parroted, standing up to face the women, who
had transformed back from the three alien superwitches of the psycho
phantasmagoria of my tortured mind and now were just three giggling girls. They looked a bit stunned.
I
laughed and said it again and they laughed too. Yes, put it UP, I thought as I
took myself back up to the room. Put it
UP. High. Elevate thoughts, don’t let low thinking
interfere with the higher self in its’ search for Truth. I must be objective if I was to overcome this
subjective lower self. I wanted to be
high, to be free of the load of care and woe.
High was joy and bliss. High
allows me to see far and wide. High was
the key. To get high I had to put it
up. My whole being embraced the Danish
women in a rush of intense love and gratitude for having shown me my way
forward. “Put it UP” became a joke
greeting every time we met after that.
Later,
as I sat in this state of inner revelation on my bed looking up at the high
snow-covered Atlas in the distance through the filigree window, I thought: “I
don’t think they said it at all”. I
reasoned that I had invented it in my own mind, a sort of resonance on their
Danish patter that transformed into some kind of message I needed at that time
to rescue myself from madness. I was
going psychotic. I kept hearing a
strange “click” noise in my head. The stress of being separated from my baby,
my period, the drugs, the strangeness of it all in this strange land. So far from anyone or anything familiar. Mad Tom my only link to a world I once knew. “Got to
get a grip. Got to get a grip.” I
saw I had been locked in subjective inner reflections and had come out into
objectivity. It was a major coming to
awareness of my workings and I held on to it like a lifebuoy whenever I felt
engulfed by the mad episodes which consumed me again and again. Objectivity was external reality and clarity, subjectivity was my inner world, turmoil, confusion. My task was to bring both into harmony. I realized my talk with the man who wrote The Divided Self had been my saving. The reactive psychosis of the battered wife
syndrome. Unrecognized then, but clearly
seen now. How many blamed and shamed
women have succumbed to that madness and been categorized as unfit mothers by
their aggressors crowing their victory as a defense for the droight de seigneur of the brutal
husband. Pushed over the edge and then
blamed for being in that unfit state by the very one who did that to them. Cute move eh !
Tom
was still asleep. He had a message, I
thought, but he didn’t have the method of achieving the desired result. His holy man trip was amusing and people
liked to deride him but his comeback usually had them off skulking and biting
their tongue in mortification, it rang the bell of their truth and opened their
eyes to themselves and the nature of human compassion and togetherness. The main thing was he inspired otherwise
disempowered people to enjoy life and try to improve it, and of that I
naturally approved. Who wouldn’t! Empowerment of the underdog is part of the
democratic process. We were both born
of free democracies with a tradition of personal enterprise, so one thing we
both agreed on was the right to personal freedom of ideas, speech, and
lifestyle. In Morocco that was
tantamount to heresy for some. Of course now democracy has been revealed to be
as open to corruption as any “system”, but then, in our naivety, we were
believers.
But
how were we to turn the tide of human self-destruction? What was the recipe to save us from
ourselves? How do I, you, we, open the
minds to truth and love and stop the brutality ?
I felt
I had found a starting point. By
elevating my own thoughts, not thinking bad thoughts about others, trying to be
a better person, not lying, to myself or others, that would be my own personal
start. By being a “good” person I could
change the world, I thought, I could create a world of goodness around me, into
which no dark horrors could penetrate.
Ah yes, so naive I was then, so innocent. But I was alone, despite my crazy companion/lover. Alone and adrift in an empty alien
world. This revelation came into my sad,
dark mind as if it had suddenly been flooded with light. An awakening from a bad dream. The force of it seemed so correct, so very
“right”, undeniable, irresistible and it felt like falling in love, its’ warmth
permeating every cell of my body with a nourishment I had never before
experienced, a cosmic bliss.
I
found myself in meditation, sitting in lotus position on a cushion on the
floor. I stayed there quietly allowing my mind to assimilate this experience,
my first real enlightening experience, a coming to a higher awareness. I felt blessed and accepted as a true
aspirant of “The Way”. From now on I
would be defended by this aura, this shield of inner light. Or so I thought, then, in the warmth of my
new inner fire.
After
this experience “turning on” had a different meaning to me. Every time I smoked kif my mind automatically went into a mode of higher thinking. All the small talk became like housekeeping,
you did it to maintain the vessel on its’ journey, but in a Zen state of “work
in no mind, no mind in work”. The real function of this mind had to be kept
clear and high, away from the little time-consuming impedimenta of the mundane
world. The captain of my ship delegated
responsibility to the crew in order to not be diverted from the captain’s
job. I was in control (the captain) but
I was multi-faceted, polyschizoid (the crew).
When I wasn’t under the influence of the THC I kept myself as high as I
could, meditating, sightseeing. But the stress of my personal problems made it
hard, and I found myself locked in depression and distress, not enjoying the
extraordinary life I found all around me. So I began to stay stoned on a
full-time basis. That, I now see, is the
danger of this drug. It provides you
with a lalaland mindstate in which you can be happy, but the real problems of
life slip past, compounding errors which should have been rectified, like
leaving my daughter with a brutal husband.
But it was done, and I was an innocent, schizophrenic, a distressed
abused woman entrapped by the philosophy of seeking and finding salvation.
Turning away from pain and horror, seeking beauty, love, light, and peace in
the only way I knew how. Like so many
like me who have reacted to the violent awakening from the beautiful dream and
found the cruel despicable side of human nature the hard way.
Late
one afternoon I was sitting in the rooftop café drawing, watching the people
gathering for the evening craziness in the Jemaa
el Fna below when someone touched my shoulder. Turning, I was amazed to be
looking at myself! A young woman so much
like me in every respect I was completely stunned. Speaking in a low vibrant accented English
she said she was curious as to what I was drawing. When I recovered enough I
introduced myself as Ayesha, as I now used that name all the time, and asked if
she was aware how alike we were – mirror image twins! Altho now she was sitting
across from me I could see some differences.
But the overall effect was still my first impression.
She
said her name was Talitha and felt she had to meet me as she had been quite
amazed to see her doppelganger. She said she was with some friends and
indicated a larger table of about seven Western hippies, most of whom were
wearing variations of Indian/Arabic/hippy drag and all so cool man. Talitha
herself was a vision in a glorious saffron sparkling caftan with a red and
white embroidered light burnoose thrown back off her shoulders. Her lively eyes were heavily kohled eyes and
her busy expressive hands were hennaed with a wrist to finger design. Each
finger had a gold ring set with amber stones on it. This was a grand hippy of
the rich international set, everything about her said style, glamor, money. I may
have looked similar to her superficially, but when it came to “compare the
pair” I was hand-spun cottage kitty to her palace panther. She murmured that
she would love to get to know me and asked me to come to her house later
tonight as she was having a soiree, as she put it, pressing a card with the
address into my hand and squeezing it, radiating a genuine friendly warmth and
irresistible charm. “There will be many
people there, so bring friends if you like, and instruments if you like to play
music.” And as quickly as she’d blown in she was up and off in a haze of
sandalwood. I looked at the card. It said: “The Pleasure Palace”.
This
was a large riad in the grand palace style.
Latticed screens of intricate inlay divided the rooms with the patterns
repeated on the high-domed ceilings. A
gentle warm breeze lifted the thirty-foot high white silk curtains away from
the arched door leading on to an intimate balcony, beyond which a palatial
garden of palms and jacarandas and a gurgling fountain could be glimpsed,
enclosed by an ornamental wall. Delighted to be in such opulent surroundings we
gathered in among about thirty or so other hippy travelers, reclining on
cushions on a floor covered in beautiful carpets around some large brass
inlaid bowls of kif, into which we
all dipped our s’bubsi’s. Needless to
say everyone became very stoned. We
played our flutes and drums and others joined in, clapping, dancing, and having
a high old time, as they say.
But I
began to get very paranoid. I began
looking closely at my companions.
Argentinean twins. A Negro
dwarf. And next to me, to my greatest
stress of all, a man who was stick thin, about eight feet tall and albino. I felt I had landed in Freak City. It was a trial.
“You are one of us, we are all one” said
the dwarf, handing me a cup of mint tea. But the probably well-intended smile
turned into a sinister mask, behind which was an alien from the spaceship
waiting to load me up so I would become a lab-rat, a human genetic experiment
for breeding stock for a deep space asteroid mining camp. The effect of the
drug had taken hold. I freaked out.
Of
course, being “cool” I didn’t show it.
After all we were all “freaks”, it was the common argot of hippiedom, a positive affirmation of being a “head”, the
confirmation that we had transcended “straight” and become one of the
chosen. But inside all my values were
being challenged. The reality of the
word for those who had to live it in real-time all their lives struck
home. I was no freak in that sense. How did I cope with the weirdos, the
societal rejects, the ones who weren’t of the perfect mold?
I
found myself locked onto the albino who seemed to be sucking my life-force, like
some demonic Frankenstein. The trap of
politeness, I couldn’t get away, fascinated by this creature of a kind I had
never encountered before. I had to
accept him if my values were to stand the test.
He fawned on me, telling me how it was to be him, a reject,
unwanted. He told me he was from New
York and was never going back because he was treated so badly there.
“Everyone hates me, help me.” he
sobbed, laying his unfortunate enormous skull head on my lap, trying to wrap
himself around me like a demented octopus the long white skeletal limbs
clutching at me, the octopoidal elongated hands seeming to encircle my waist
three times around. From an initial revulsion my inner freak-out turned around
and I located my inner sanctum. I was love.
Empathic. Unconditional. Healing.
Giving. My whole being went out
to him in this warm rush, letting my love flow, one being to another. I held him, noting Tom, alarmed, intensely
interested in our little scene, across the circle. I signaled to him it was all right and just
held this unfortunate man, rocking him to and fro like a baby.
Eventually
he sat up and apologized and I told him I had no idea what it could be like to
be him, that no one can take away the suffering of another, and that he had to
find his own salvation, to find the Love within, his own source, but that if my
physical cuddles could help, then I would give him my love on that level. I suppose, as well as my own test, it was
the test of the Doctrines of Tom. Seeing
if this Universal Love, coming from within, would actually work to transform
misery in the world at large. And the test of whether my own recent
illumination could rescue this sad creature from his pit and elevate him to the
higher plane I sought to maintain.
Breaking
the spell I jumped up and started
playing my flute and dancing, moving fast, twirling and whirling among the too
cool, unsettling everyone as I passed, dipping and leaping, possessed with all
the craziness of a houri. Others joined me, dancing, clapping, singing, as we put
a lunatic overlay on a rhumba snaking all thru the riad and out into the garden, scattering the peacocks, splashed by the fountains, hilarious and out of it, ecstatic.
Later,
outside, walking back under a moonless sky with the universe above sparkling, I
looked up at Sirius, the Dog Star, wondering if there was some weird thing
happening on another level, coming from that star. I was so stoned that my mind
was fantasizing a channeling beam coming from some core of intelligence, of
which Atlantis had been the earthly manifestation and which was now occupying
my body in order to bring the understanding of the Greater Truth to a planet
devoured by barbarism. Bia saw me fixed
on it and said something, I forget what, but I replied that I would get to that
star and she said “Good luck, you’ll need
it”, in a voice that seemed rejective to me, but I clung to her as we went
back to the pensione, my world was
upside down and I felt shattered, drained, adrift. I was bleeding again.
Marrakesh
became a familiar place to me. I met
Luca, a vivacious old friend from Sydney, who had also been in London, working
in Biba’s and among the antique markets.
She was there buying silks and carpets and exotic finery to take back to
trade. She had acid. Luca, her guy Phillipe, Tom and I took the
trip, my first. Osley acid. Little blue pills. Pure LSD.
Nothing like the nonsense speed stuff the kids quaff back like Smarties
these days. We took off into the mazes of the Marrakesh soukh, everything weird
and wonderful. Color jumped at me from everywhere.
My senses sought and were saturated with the intensity of the colors I began experiencing. And music. I soon lost the others and went into a world of my own, resonating on music and color. I wandered in an ecstasy of delight among the fascinations of the markets, looking at light changes through the filmy gauzes of beautiful colored scarves, reveling in exotic embroidered fabrics; exploring the dye markets, saturating myself in the sumptuous piles of the strong reds, saffron and oranges, blues and greens; sorbing indescribably subtle tones of the high piled spices, fruits, vegetables. I sat for ages just watching the metal beater punching out old cans and making beautiful filigree lamps, while his little four-year old son learned by his side.
Wandering the soukh
courtesy Joel, Flickr
My senses sought and were saturated with the intensity of the colors I began experiencing. And music. I soon lost the others and went into a world of my own, resonating on music and color. I wandered in an ecstasy of delight among the fascinations of the markets, looking at light changes through the filmy gauzes of beautiful colored scarves, reveling in exotic embroidered fabrics; exploring the dye markets, saturating myself in the sumptuous piles of the strong reds, saffron and oranges, blues and greens; sorbing indescribably subtle tones of the high piled spices, fruits, vegetables. I sat for ages just watching the metal beater punching out old cans and making beautiful filigree lamps, while his little four-year old son learned by his side.
I returned via the sun-striped lanes to the Jemaa el Fna and found myself dancing to
an imperative drum with a troupe of fierce white-clad, maraca-brandishing
negroid dancers. A cute French guy, who
seemed very fey too, latched onto me after the drum diminished and introduced
me to the art of eating snails. Being a
vegetarian it took quite an effort to overcome the initial revulsion, but I
forced myself and convinced myself they were quite a valid food.
Wandering
back into the soukh towards home base
a squatting blond woman with a negro child looked up at me, offering me beaded
necklets. I sat with her, watching her
skill as she wove beads onto nylon fishing line, the little boy passing her the
bottles of the different colors. Two
red, one yellow, three red, two yellow, two blue, two red. The numbers of the
pattern moved in my mind’s matrix, the intelligence stirring in my acid
stimulated synapses.
I
found myself weaving patterns and pictures in my mind’s eye. 2r3y2r4y2r2b2r. A carpet, a tapestry, a crochet pattern, a
planet. Design. The way we approach a chaotic jumble of
disparate objects and find similarity, then we assemble like things together
and produce a pattern by taking 2r3y2r4y2r2b2r and changing the next subset
to 2b1y4r1y3r2b , then sequencing them
until a picture of regularity emerges, pleasing to the eye, meaningful or
simply decorative. I thought of the
Muslim religion and the patterns they used.
No other forms than plants and geometry permitted. How it held them in a vice of limited
expression. When the whole cosmos was the Divine Creation, by any reasoning of
a Creator of It All, why limit the expression of it to the geometry and
geometrically expressed botany? To them
it is a coda, the visual translation of an inner fixed universe.
I saw
how freedom of expression, so fundamental to the vitality of a culture, had
been mine by birth right in the culture I was born and raised in. I felt so thankful to be a free woman, not
born to slavery and repression as these people were, to me, then. But I wasn’t judging. Was I more free, less of a slave? There was no right or wrong here. No “me better than them”. It is all life process evolving on the planet
and the reasons they lived in this system were far beyond any simple analyses
on my part.
I
wandered further into the sun-striped lanes and found a bead-seller.
The skeins of vibrant strong colors were irresistible. Cobalt, chrome, scarlet, orange, turquoise, black, white, viridian. I bought a good selection and made my way back to our room in the riad. As I sat weaving the colorful patterns into the Hopi Indian God’s Eyes, my own meditation coda, the mullah mounted the next door minaret and I was saturated with the wailing Allah, Allah, Akbar, the Maghreb evening call to prayer . Through the arched Mashrabiya window with its filigree arabesques the sunset colors infused the distant snows on the High Atlas with apricot pink of the approaching sunset. The half-moon and Venus sending messages to the faithful as they turned towards Mecca. Mind myths and reality.
The skeins of vibrant strong colors were irresistible. Cobalt, chrome, scarlet, orange, turquoise, black, white, viridian. I bought a good selection and made my way back to our room in the riad. As I sat weaving the colorful patterns into the Hopi Indian God’s Eyes, my own meditation coda, the mullah mounted the next door minaret and I was saturated with the wailing Allah, Allah, Akbar, the Maghreb evening call to prayer . Through the arched Mashrabiya window with its filigree arabesques the sunset colors infused the distant snows on the High Atlas with apricot pink of the approaching sunset. The half-moon and Venus sending messages to the faithful as they turned towards Mecca. Mind myths and reality.
Later,
lying back on Luca’s roof garden couches, dreaming as the dome above turned from violet blue to a star-filled indigo
African night sky above the silvery Atlas Mountains, I again felt that
inner call, that indefinable destination that had “Atlantis” on the cover, but
which promised to be so much more. No longer a gentle whispering murmur, it was
firming to an unsettling need, an itch I had to scratch…soon. It was time to be
moving on, on to what, I did not know, except I knew It was calling me in. It was time to find Atlantis....or....not.
Marrakesh rooftop Atlas Mountains view
Next: Blog #12 Kastellorizo
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