I hesitated to call this post a 'great navel-gazing post'. The learning and observations don't seem profound enough to be classified navel-gazing. Maybe navel glancing at? Navel casual observation of? Contemplation. There. That is a nice reflective word that does not carry quite the heavy import of navel-gazing.
So here are my observations of both what we saw and did and our continuing evolution as aging travel junkies.
Mexico was so comfortable - It took so little time to get into the swing of things in both Guadalajara and Mexico City. They were different sure. Foreign sure. But not so different that there wasn't a degree of ease with which to adjust. I have thought would that have been true if we had come here in 2012 before we truly threw ourselves into travel? I doubt it. I think all the experiences during our three Asian adventures plus going to places like Albania and Jordan changed our own confidence and perceptions. So in comparison, coming to Mexico seemed very comfortable. I fully expect more travel to Mexico in the future. This was the first place we have ever visited where we felt no one was looking at us. I mean for crying out loud we are so obviously NOT local, so obviously tourists with our cameras out all the time. Yet in both cities I never once felt people were looking at me. It was like we were part of the local environment. That is not typical of our travels. And the weather, at least in winter, is so like the Med weather we love. Yes, we will be back.
Cuba, so interesting but not so comfortable - We took more pictures in Cuba than we have taken in any country we have visited. The colors, the contrast between things locked in time and new, the whole vibe was incredible. Having our wonderful guide
LÍvan made a huge difference. He was a window into Cuban society we would not have had otherwise. But boy, hard for an American to visit. The political situation making us have to use cash all the time. The lack of internet. And I really dislike the dual currency thing. I would encourage anyone to go especially if you could have a guide like our Wij in Cuba folks. But I am not sure I would go back soon unless things change. Unlike Mexico which I guarantee is now on the list of places like the Mediterranean coast as a place we love.
17 days as good as 6 to 7 weeks - When we started our travel adventures, I was convinced I needed to be gone for long periods of time to break out of the workaholic mode that had defined my last 14 years in business. And I probably did. But no more. This trip was just a tad over two weeks. It felt as full immersion as any of our longer trips. We were totally into it. I looked at my posts going back to our first days in Guadalajara and was amazed that I couldn't even remember how much we had done there. This is a good thing. Just as with our driving/improvisational tour of the Deep South, I think we are getting more and more flexible about where we will go, how long we will go and when we will go.
We have a system down pat now - We clearly now have our system of how we like to travel. If it is a fairly developed country (like Mexico), we have no problem just arriving and having the confidence that we will be able to figure out things fairly quickly and make the place comfortable for us. If it is a more difficult environment (like Cuba), we just retain a private driver/guide tour and that takes care of it for us. Booking flights, accommodation, tours, etc. we know what we like and want and we have our channels for finding them. We are planning a trip now that leaves in early April and will take us to 6 countries, 4 of them new to us. It is taking us so much less time than it used to. And the improvisational nature of dealing with things when we get there. We have accepted that we will never see everything that there is to see in a place. And we are equally confident that we will find all kinds of things that are interesting no matter where we go.
Wife has me as her photgraphic acolyte hook, line and sinker - Each and every trip I am as excited to get the camera out, wander wherever we are going to go and look for those visual delights that seem to only show up on an image. I still look at my photography as function of my storytelling but more and more, with each photographic workshop we take, I find that the photography aspect is more and more enjoyable.
The growing and developing continues - There were trends that came out of this trip and our last trip to the Deep South which indicate to me that Wife and I are continuing our development and growth. Like our use of our new 'Travel Blogger' business cards. What a difference it made in how various people interacted with us. Even Wife is handing them out now. There are some significant new developments in our travel life that are coming up very shortly (I will leave you hanging on that for a couple of weeks). Let me conclude this post by saying that the last thing I expected as I entered my 70's was for life to be so dynamic, with so many opportunities for growth and learning. Truly Wife and I are blessed.
Monday, January 28, 2019
Sunday, January 27, 2019
Mesoamerica 2019 - Day Sixteen, Mexico City Finale (Actual)
On our last day in Mexico City, one of my primary objectives were to see two museums that featured the work of the two great muralists - Diego Rivera and Jose Clemente Orosco. I took enough pictures to make an entire separate post which I will present here. It was really hard to understand all the themes that were being exposed because most of the information was in Spanish only. I probably should have done some of the research I did afterwards beforehand...but that would be so NOT in keeping with my philosophy of just going and discovering whatever it is we run into as part of our travels LOL.
"In 1946, architect Carlos Obregón Santacilia
proposed to Diego Rivera the creation of a mural for Del Prado Hotel's
Versalles dining room. The subject for the mural was the Alameda Central,
considering the closeness of this park. The artist made a fresco of
4.70 x 15.6 m and it was finished in 1947. The mural shows more than 150
characters, some of them are protagonists of the history of Mexico:
Hernán Cortés, Benito Juárez, Maximiliano de Habsburgo, Francisco I.
Madero, Porfirio Dia In addition, characters of everyday Mexicans from
different social classes appear as vendors of cakes, and as
revolutionaries. It also shows Frida Kahlo and other spouses of Diego, as well as some of his daughters; finally, the Alameda Central park can be seen at the bottom.
The painter said: "The composition (of the mural) are reminders of my life, my childhood and my youth and covers from 1985 to 1910. The characters of the walk all dream, some sleeping on the benches and others, walking and talking ":[5]
Museo Mural Diego Rivera
This museum was built to house one of Rivera's major works that was in a building damaged in the 1985 earthquake in Mexico City.
Here is what is written in Wikipedia on the Mural
The painter said: "The composition (of the mural) are reminders of my life, my childhood and my youth and covers from 1985 to 1910. The characters of the walk all dream, some sleeping on the benches and others, walking and talking ":[5]
In the same museum was a temporary exhibit about the influence Mexican artists and particularly muralists had on Chinese art from the 1930's through the 1970's. So the photos here are from a Chinese mural but which have images of Rivera and Frida Kahlo in them. Unfortunately I was not able to find a specific description of it
Finally these last ones are from the Antiguo Colegio de San Ildefonso and are the works of Orosco
This is a MASSIVE set of works and dripping with symbolism and emotion, none of which I could quite understand at the time as there were virtually no descriptions nor did we get any kind of a guide in English
HOWEVER, for you, here is a link to the Wikipedia page that goes into much more detail than we had at the time (scroll down to the Escuela Nacional Preparatoria section)
And finally there are murals by Jean Charlot, a French citizen who was a major participant in the Mexican art and mural movement and contemporary of Rivera and Orosco
Whew!
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