And here is Ritchie's side of the story:
self-right·eous [self-rahy-chuh
adjective
confident of one's own righteousness, especially when smugly moralistic and intolerant of the opinions and behavior of others.
charly [cha-rr-lee, not self-]
beauty, empathic, benevolent, caring, brave, German, drunk, antithesis of the self-righteous, feller of bitches.
ritchie [per-sch-un-ru-g, inanimate-]
noun
noun
carpet
The orphanage offered a home to 19 kids between the age of 4 months and 9 years with half of them being under 18 months young. All of these little souls not really being orphans but either abandoned by their parents or taken away from them due to abuse or worse. Four amazing young women from Peru and Argentina worked at the orphanage full-time, two of them 24/7. Their whole life revolved around the orphanage and the children.
Volunteers helped out in two shifts, one beginning at 7am and the other at 1pm - both shifts lasted five hours with vastly different responsibilities and duties. Charly's first day started early and when I woke she had been at work for at least four hours. Because of its name, 'orphanage', it is endowed with certain realities - one being the tight margin of everything: money, material, people resources, against the staggering excess of human tragedy.
However, in comparison, working at the English school only had one shift which started at 3pm and went for three hours and as I found out, had a different relationship with fortune - four volunteers for three students who were in their early twenties and had never been abandoned. The classes were held in a catholic school in one of the back dungeons, presumably behind the mead-vault, where they taught science or mathematics for one hour a week - just enough to keep rationality under the carpet. This room was dark as hell, cold as hell, dank as hell and the acoustics would challenge every big bastard empty cathedral on the planet for amplifying sound... or sinful thought. The walls of this goddamn (literally) room had a hide on it - 1cm thick paper-mache: 20 years of successive generations of religious paraphernalia - doing its best to indoctrinate whoever had to spend time in that dungeon? A most uncomfortable room where no amount of adjusting or manoeuvring will negotiate a truce with the awkwardness - only repenting, flagellation and 2000 hail Mary's, prescribed by the local witch doctor/pastors will give relief. At one stage, Traveller not Tourist asked the school if it was possible to move the English class into one of the rooms which had more sunlight. The answer was, "Oh ha ha, of course not my child. The warmth is reserved for studies of the truth. It won't be wasted on faithless sciences or your lessons of tongues..."
“Well all hell broke loose,” Charly explained, “and now she’s banned.” As it turned out Miss Wyoming had raised some money in the U.S to donate to the orphanage – good for her, I raised nothing. Really, good for her. When she arrived, her sensibilities must have been slapped because all she did was complain about the filthy state the orphanage was in and then spend most of the money on cleaning products. Lets get one thing straight, I was not there, so my opinion is somewhat grafted from Charly’s but considering the filth Charly has had to put up with while living with me, I really bank on her opinion that the orphanage was not that bad because her idea of filth has been well calibrated. Charly continued to explain that the tías, the women who live and work at the orphanage, the people who know what’s what, said that baby formula was always expensive and that they nearly run out of money each month to buy it and any money donated will be prioritised for food… Funny that food business, I remember thinking. It mustn’t seem that important to a highly evolved-worldly 22 year old from well-fed Wyoming or wherever the fuck, who is taking a break from her sociology degree to come and ruff it up for a few weeks. I could hear on the edge of every noun that Charly was fanging for confrontation and I feared she was going to get it at the weekly volunteers meeting which was that night – where the worldly 22 year old Miss Wyoming would have her day in court and Charly was her judge and executioner.
Traveling
takes its terrible toll quickly when you’re constantly on the run. The
most tiring aspect is being unfamiliar with everything, so we decided to
plant some shallow roots for a few weeks in Arequipa, to regain some
kind of normality and also to take a break from chronically being on the
edge of crisis. We had met some girls in Bolivia who had volunteered at
a local orphanage in Arequipa - enthusiastically explaining the
situation and the conditions: I knew instantly from the humming energy
riding on the back of Charly's frantic questioning, that our journey
would take an honest detour, probably in Arequipa…But, for how long, I
didn’t know.
Since
the Bolivian job, Charly’s maternal instinct had switched gears –
sweating out estrogen by the liter, swooshing most of her thoughts and
influencing her judgment. This process on any usual day is a force to be
reckoned with but with the added jolt of altruism made it almost a
chapter in the bible.
I
became emotional with Charly's abrupt need for an answer and deflected
the situation by saying that I'll decide while we were at Machu Picchu.
Well, several days evaporated and in a heartbeat we were back in
Arequipa with the same pressing matter: do you want to volunteer? Shit
man, I don't know! I never considered being confronted with such
pressure while on this trip after working to the ends of my chromosomes
on my masters, trying to blast that ugly bastard into outer space. I
figured I had made enough commitment for one life time. At every
opportunity Charly would, not so subtlety, point out that I was more
fortunate than others, maybe not in appearance but more in opportunities
- especially in this town. Especially in this continent, I thought but
my opinion weighed nothing facing an anxiously motivated Charly who was
frothing at the mouth to help something... “Okay, let’s go and talk to
these people,” I said. Charly squeaked rapidly and off we went.
On the way to the office of the organisation Traveller not Tourist, I had developed a righteous sweat because of what I might commit to, or what I might donate. In the past, several multinational charity organisations had planned their business models around the philosophy of hunting me down, because they knew that I had no natural defences to their frontal assault on street corners or the foyers of shopping malls. "Excused me sir, did you know...", "Jesus Christ, of course I know about the rubella kids of Nicaragua or the bile bears of China or the plummeting literacy rates in sub-Saharan Afric! Just tell me what I need to do to remove this damp feeling of guilt!" Their tactics especially potent if they were attractive. We went to the local office and were met by a white jail-like door, with some of the paint chipped off exposing the grey metal underneath. We peered through and softly sounded, "olah" into the disserted room. A woman came from behind a partition, still chewing on her breakfast. We introduced ourselves and Charly announced her desire for information. The woman introduced herself as Daisy, she unlocked the heavy lock, opened the door and offered us a seat. There was only one seat, forcing me to kneel on the ground - 30cm below the others. It's OK man. Feeling inferior is logical right now, I thought. Your answer is still your answer and, for shit sake, keep your goddamn guard up.
On the way to the office of the organisation Traveller not Tourist, I had developed a righteous sweat because of what I might commit to, or what I might donate. In the past, several multinational charity organisations had planned their business models around the philosophy of hunting me down, because they knew that I had no natural defences to their frontal assault on street corners or the foyers of shopping malls. "Excused me sir, did you know...", "Jesus Christ, of course I know about the rubella kids of Nicaragua or the bile bears of China or the plummeting literacy rates in sub-Saharan Afric! Just tell me what I need to do to remove this damp feeling of guilt!" Their tactics especially potent if they were attractive. We went to the local office and were met by a white jail-like door, with some of the paint chipped off exposing the grey metal underneath. We peered through and softly sounded, "olah" into the disserted room. A woman came from behind a partition, still chewing on her breakfast. We introduced ourselves and Charly announced her desire for information. The woman introduced herself as Daisy, she unlocked the heavy lock, opened the door and offered us a seat. There was only one seat, forcing me to kneel on the ground - 30cm below the others. It's OK man. Feeling inferior is logical right now, I thought. Your answer is still your answer and, for shit sake, keep your goddamn guard up.
The
options were either working in the orphanage or volunteering as a
teacher at an English school. Charly knew already what she wanted. Hell,
she knew in Bolivia, probably even before we left Australia, maybe even
before puberty but I sure as hell didn't. By my judgement, it seemed
incompatible for me to contribute to anything socially - given my
toilette paper-like immune system and my incessant allergies towards
peoples’ personalities. "Suck it up, princess", Charly snapped. He'll
volunteer in the English school. So that was that… Never before had my
throne on the passenger seat felt so uncomfortably comfortable.
The
only two obligations for joining Traveller not Tourist was that it was
mandatory to show up to work when you are asked to and to attend the
weekly meeting. Simple enough... The weekly meeting was held every
Wednesday, in the volunteer’s house where accommodation was cheap.
Charly wanted to stay there but I had my usual suspicions about things I
don't know, so I vehemently opposed the idea (not so passive now) – and
luckily they didn’t have space for us anyway. We walked through a hilly
neighbourhood, a sort of gated community with a random security guard
every 200m, armed to the teeth and casually swinging a billy club
around. We arrived at a house/compound not too dissimilar to one in
Pakistan – in the Abbottabad district where Bin Laden met his grim end –
a high wall, with broken shards of glass mortared into the top bricks
surrounded by thick trees. A lonely street light shone its meagre 15w
orange light to illuminate the heavy welding on the door. The buzzer on
the door to the compound was jammed and it took your whole shoulder to
push that little bastard and when it popped a goddamn tuning fork
slammed rapidly against some kind of hollow-metal vessel alarming
anything with ears from Buenos Aires to Moscow. A gruff buzzer followed
shortly after and the heavy door was remotely opened. We entered and
were met by Daisy, who was at this stage the personification of
exhaustion - the kind of exhaustion you only see on the faces of parents
of ADHD demons or in the arguments of pro-embryonic stem cell
lobbyists.
Entering
the house, the mean age of the people (21) slapped us in the face and
it was obvious that they had lived together for some time. The
atmosphere was on the precipice of nuclear fission where each witty
remark was the catalyst for the next- all of which was driven by one
wayfarer-spectacles wearing, ironic, witty referencing malformed hybrid
between human and hyena – talking in code, communicating by referencing
TV shows or movies. Oh Jesus! I can't stand that. Irony and witty
referencing is the lowest common denominator when it comes to humour and
intelligence -especially when it replaces all other avenues of
expression. I don't do it, I'm not into it, I'm not encouraging it. If
anything, I'm trying to eradicate this personality surrogacy.
Superficially tunning into the conversations, I could already tell that
rough seas lay ahead between me and the mob.
Daisy
screamed over the general noise to corral everyone into a room to
initiate the meeting so that she could get home to her six year old boy.
We sat next to Daisy while the others sleuthed their way in. The noise
in the big room was now the noise in the smaller room - which was
sadistically designed like an amphitheatre, acoustically funnelling the
hyena banter directly to a focal point… my right ear.
Daisy
asked us to introduce ourselves with where we came from and where we
were helping out. "Hello, I'm Rich from Australia and I'll be helping at
the English school." "Hi, I'm Charly from Germany and I'll be helping
at the orphanage." We realised as did Daisy that the group wasn't paying
attention and continued to cackle like a congregation of speed freaks.
"SHHHHH!!!!" Daisy hissed. The room went silent but not for king-pin
hyena man, who had to finish his Sheldon quote or some other obscure
pop-culture reference I'm barely familiar with or interested in. The
first two people to introduce themselves were an Irish couple, Luke and
Sophie. I found Sophie particularly interesting because she was of
Chinese decent - barely 155cm tall but had one of these thick-foggy
Irish accents that can only be found in the farming districts of Cork or
Drogheda, but after a while, it seemed to suit her. The next to
introduce themselves were five 19 y/o girls from England who were
giggling hysterically to a point where the intervention of a priest
seemed warranted. The giggling seemed to have its origins in an event
that took place the night before which king-pin hyena kept pointing out
in a roundabout non-descript way. I somehow figured at least two of them
were unaware they were pregnant. With what, I didn't know... Human?
Hyena? Peruvian? I will never know. But what was certain was that the
more I heard hyena man and the five easy girls from England cackling,
the more I wanted to turn that place into a blood bath - blasting a
corpse through the window and fleeing with Charly and Daisy through the
void. The last to introduce themselves were the reference spitting Hyena
from New York (where ever the hell that is), a 19 year old girl from
Wyoming (where ever that is), a 22 year old girl from Gloucester U.K and
a very pleasant young lady from New Zealand: Annabel who was also
experiencing her first meeting in shock.
The
meeting was never not interrupted by giggles or banter and Daisy looked
like she had either had come to grips with exhaustion and was in
survival mode or dying - she ploughed straight through the rudeness and
headed for freedom. Towards the end of the meeting it came time for
formalities, to say thanks and goodbye to those who were leaving. And on
this night it was the ironic, reference spitting Hyena from New York
(where ever that is). Daisy corralled everyone for a group picture and
the hyena was yelling at the tops of his lung for everyone to pose like
James Bond… I wonder how he would have felt if he knew my inherent
reaction to forced posture in photos is wholesale violence. The group
was going out that night to celebrate his departure and asked us if we
wanted to join. I fundamentally objected to the idea as did Charly, so
we made our excuses and fled.
The next day it all began...
The next day it all began...
The orphanage offered a home to 19 kids between the age of 4 months and 9 years with half of them being under 18 months young. All of these little souls not really being orphans but either abandoned by their parents or taken away from them due to abuse or worse. Four amazing young women from Peru and Argentina worked at the orphanage full-time, two of them 24/7. Their whole life revolved around the orphanage and the children.
Volunteers helped out in two shifts, one beginning at 7am and the other at 1pm - both shifts lasted five hours with vastly different responsibilities and duties. Charly's first day started early and when I woke she had been at work for at least four hours. Because of its name, 'orphanage', it is endowed with certain realities - one being the tight margin of everything: money, material, people resources, against the staggering excess of human tragedy.
However, in comparison, working at the English school only had one shift which started at 3pm and went for three hours and as I found out, had a different relationship with fortune - four volunteers for three students who were in their early twenties and had never been abandoned. The classes were held in a catholic school in one of the back dungeons, presumably behind the mead-vault, where they taught science or mathematics for one hour a week - just enough to keep rationality under the carpet. This room was dark as hell, cold as hell, dank as hell and the acoustics would challenge every big bastard empty cathedral on the planet for amplifying sound... or sinful thought. The walls of this goddamn (literally) room had a hide on it - 1cm thick paper-mache: 20 years of successive generations of religious paraphernalia - doing its best to indoctrinate whoever had to spend time in that dungeon? A most uncomfortable room where no amount of adjusting or manoeuvring will negotiate a truce with the awkwardness - only repenting, flagellation and 2000 hail Mary's, prescribed by the local witch doctor/pastors will give relief. At one stage, Traveller not Tourist asked the school if it was possible to move the English class into one of the rooms which had more sunlight. The answer was, "Oh ha ha, of course not my child. The warmth is reserved for studies of the truth. It won't be wasted on faithless sciences or your lessons of tongues..."
The
Irish couple, Luke and Sophie were running the English programme and
when I arrived, Sophie already had full command of the class. She
attempted to introduce me to the class and it was easy to see the
brewing confusion in the three students’ eyes. My beard posed a deep
metaphysical question because the only other white man to ever be seen
with a beard like mine in Peru was plastered all over the walls in that
cold hollow room and probably many other rooms just like it. A rift was
swiftly developing within their conscience and I was afraid of the
responsibility and the consequences of it, so I jumped on the front
foot. "Hi, my name is Rich," I stated. The three faces were blank.
What's a Rich, I could see them wondering...Sophie interjected and
prompted a few questions - she knew their capabilities. One of the girls
stood up bravely and hooked her hands together near her sternum like an
opera singer and roared, "what do you like to do!" Yikes, I thought,
the truth will have me combusting in this room - better not be too
honest. "I like to travel", I replied. All three girls quietly looked at
each other and then nodded with some sort of acceptance, then silence.
Feeing that momentum need to be carried I replied with, "what do you
like to do?" A pencil dropped, tinging an echo around the room before
the three girls erupted into cackles. "Oh, I'm afraid that's too complex
at the moment", Sophie explained. She went on to describe how poor the
program was working, due to its sheer dependency on volunteers who
seemed to be always leaving - making it hard for the 'curriculum' to
snare a footing. "When we got here, six weeks ago, they couldn't even
count and they've been coming to these classes for six months, but watch
this", Sophie said excitedly. She ordered the three girls, each to a
separate corner and asked them to start counting to 50. With their
excited faces they rushed to the corners and began counting: one, two,
tree...wait what? Eleven, twelve, terrteen... Again what? Twenty tree,
terty tree, fortie tree...Fifteh!
Sweet
Jesus, this can't be! In a bizarre twist in the natural order of
things, in this small room somewhere in Peru, three Peruvian girls were
being taught the Irish derivative form of English... I stood there with a
semi-aneurism gaze, forcing a smile, but I couldn't help but think of
the broader consequences. For centuries the Irish dialect had been
essentially marooned or quarantined on that cold-wind-swept island in
fear that babbling in limericks or random useless pieces of advice would
spread. In
the advent of the collapse of the Irish economy millions of Irishmen
were forced out of their dank-dark pubs and into the further reaches of
the globe. But what for? Potatoes probably – considering that the potato
originated from Latin America and had some 200 more varieties – made it
a likely hot spot for Irish migration and possible conquer. And here it
was, in full flight, the initial stages of the second round of Latin
American conquest, not in the usual form with pestilence and
enslavement, but rather with more subversive measures like; St Patrick’s
day, horrible black beer and the misnomers of red hair and luck. I
could picture it already: bastardly drunk-red-headed-lucky bastards
stooging every corner from Colombia to Tierra Del Fuego, overseeing the
mass exportation of the potato-loot back to Ireland, leaving behind a
culture of... well, let's face it, feudal-superstitious-drunks. "Well
done", I cheered for their girl’s accomplishment, while thinking it
could have been much more vicious... It could have been a South African
accent. Since there were four volunteers for three students, my presence
was not needed, so I sat up the back and thought about deeper things.
Later
that night, back at the hostel, I arrived home to meet Charly who was
exhausted and smelling funny. The type of funny where the smell computer
inside your head wants a reboot. I asked her about her day and heard in
great detail the reason why she smelt so strange. She asked me how mine
went, but even if I exaggerated the details it still wouldn't have come
close to what would be considered 'effort', so I just said, "tiering."
For the next few weeks a groove of a routine was routed out in Arequipa, where Charly would wake up early and leave, work hard and come home smelling like something between watermelon and a Petri dish. And I would wake up late, do nothing and around three go to the school and do nothing there. The only notable event to occur in my time at the English school was one day another student appeared – sitting with others, although she was not like the other flock - not so God-fearing. The lesson went as usual: I sat up the back while Sophie and Luke instructed the class. Two hours in, Sophie and Luke were jonesing for some nicotine, so they asked if I could take over for 20 minutes. "Sure no problem", I replied and with a spring in my step I jumped to the front of the room to head my first class. Oh yeah! Wait till Charly hears about this, I thought, my time to shine! We could hear the heavy gate outside clanging behind Luke and Sophie as they left and just as I was about to write my first sentence on the blackboard, the new girl asked behind me, "What's fucking?" Now I don't have the same adrenal function as everyone else – it mostly works independently from the rest of my autonomic nervous system, and therefore reacts unpredictably in different situations. It seems lately, the stimuli for a response needn't be too different to evoke a reaction between a light sweat or all-out war. Regardless, those little fat bastards sitting on top of my kidneys pump elephant adrenalin through my veins too often and the initial stages are always the same: metallic taste and then there is the fear.
For the next few weeks a groove of a routine was routed out in Arequipa, where Charly would wake up early and leave, work hard and come home smelling like something between watermelon and a Petri dish. And I would wake up late, do nothing and around three go to the school and do nothing there. The only notable event to occur in my time at the English school was one day another student appeared – sitting with others, although she was not like the other flock - not so God-fearing. The lesson went as usual: I sat up the back while Sophie and Luke instructed the class. Two hours in, Sophie and Luke were jonesing for some nicotine, so they asked if I could take over for 20 minutes. "Sure no problem", I replied and with a spring in my step I jumped to the front of the room to head my first class. Oh yeah! Wait till Charly hears about this, I thought, my time to shine! We could hear the heavy gate outside clanging behind Luke and Sophie as they left and just as I was about to write my first sentence on the blackboard, the new girl asked behind me, "What's fucking?" Now I don't have the same adrenal function as everyone else – it mostly works independently from the rest of my autonomic nervous system, and therefore reacts unpredictably in different situations. It seems lately, the stimuli for a response needn't be too different to evoke a reaction between a light sweat or all-out war. Regardless, those little fat bastards sitting on top of my kidneys pump elephant adrenalin through my veins too often and the initial stages are always the same: metallic taste and then there is the fear.
The
other girls were giggling vehemently in response to the new girl’s
question - which echoed its insidious nature – knowing exactly what was
at stake. The
new girl was biting her bottom lip, staring right at me and looking for
a reaction. I had to fight back to establish that I was different from
all the other sex-tourists – I was here to help not to be helped! I
managed a stumbling cascade of vowels and responded with the equivalent
word in Spanish but that wasn't enough for this harleton - hell-bent on
the damnation of both of our soul. As she started to bite the nail of
her index finger she replied with, "No entiendo, I don't understand." I
paused momentarily to sample the air for searing flesh but I only could
detect sinfully-sweet oestrogen. The giggling continued as did my
adrenalin flow. This was a pissing contest. I didn't know who this young
woman was or her motive, but the resolution of this situation needed to
be tactfully driven because everyone knows, especially my high school
science teacher Mr Rosendale; allegations stick like shit! Whether
you’re innocent or guilty. And who knows how an evangelical Peruvian
supreme court judge would react to a western-heathen, who was thought to
be corrupting the spiritual innocence of anything – especially in a
goddamn catholic school. I figured not well, especially after a public
outcry and show of discontent – mass rallies burning horned-effigies in
the street outside of our hostel – demanding my carcass slung onto a 3m
rose wood cross and dragged through the streets. International attention
to the matter would further dilute the willingness of both of my
consulates to send legal defence, but rather renege on my citizenship
and deny any knowledge of my existence. The nail on the coffin will be
hammered in by the Vatican, announcing that they are cancelling
Christmas and reinstating revised version of the Papal Inquisitions to evaluate the threat to catholic way of life. Jesus,
where the hell are those bastards Sophie and Luke? They've left me here
to burn goddamn it! Yes indeed, tread carefully here and try not to
flinch and whatever you do don't look at the gigantic 2m diameter image
of this woman they call Mary who is cuddling a lama. Oh shit, those
porcelain eyes are staring right at me...
"Quiero
saber, I want to know!" the floozy asked. I felt at this moment that
naivety was the best offence and the easiest platform for deniability in
any court, tribunal or pogrom. "I don't know, yo no sé," I replied
while shrugging my shoulders. A stalemate silence broke where we just
stared at each other - wondering what was going to happen next. The
hinges of the rusty gate outside squeaked and the girls instantly
reverted to how they were before Luke and Sophie left - with their heads
in their books, in complete silence. These girl are pros, I remember
thinking, not to be messed with. Is this why there are no 'old timers'
at the English school? I didn't know... Luke and Sophie came back in
after fifteen minutes and found me flustered. "What's wrong man?" Sophie
asked, "You haven't written a sentence." The floozy concealed a giggle
in a cough which made the other girls laugh. Well, no point in
explaining this, I thought. It's too strange to be fully understood.
Two
weeks passed by fairly quickly and Charly would, as usual, come home
with a strange funk and proudly displaying several pictures of the kids –
explaining the cute things they did that day and the various aspects of
their personalities. From the photos, the children seemed to be totally
unaware of their appalling predicament – smiling away as if the little
buggers had just won the lottery. I guessed they hadn’t learnt that
potent adult emotion of bitterness yet, or they were in the process of
practicing. And this is the core reason why I could never volunteer in
an orphanage like Charly did. By not being involved I could remain
emotionally detached and rationally involved. Being on the outside, not
being there, I can accept that circumstance can be a valid reason for
abandoning a child, because lets not forget, it is Peru we’re talking
about here and the orphanage can legitimately provide a better life for
these poor things in certain cases. But my rationality is boiled away
when Charly explains the situation of one wee boy, whose
parents decided they couldn't look after him, so they dumped him in the
orphanage and wiped their hands clean only to then, several months
later, want him back. Charly explained that
after the boy’s parents would visit him at the orphanage, he would wet his
pants. To me, his physical reaction somehow made his situation more
vicious - a clear emotional scenario forcing its horrible effects onto
the physical plane like a possessed daemon wanting to burst out of hell.
As if his emotion was overflowing. This boy had done nothing wrong,
this much is certain. He hadn’t had the chance to, yet he was being
treated as if he had. So forever more, even if his life is returned to
that of a normal boy, he will have to come to terms with his
parent’s cryptic affection. And no amount of explaining from anyone will
ever solve that goddamn riddle.
It’s a good thing I’m not in charge of much because if I was, I would bring back, with all it’s terribleness, the efficiency of the middle ages for torture, the sadism of Stalin for fear and the pure-lucid -insanity of Pol Pot for all-out murder. The annihilation of these "parents" could only serve as a deep clean for the gene pool – a colon cleans perhaps for broader humanity. Why not? Satisfy karma and balance the tills of injustice - especially in this orphanage, or any other for that matter. But alas, I'm not in charge of mass sterilization or executions... for good reason I think.
Another troubling issues that crept into Charly’s regular afternoon debrief was the problem of volunteers and their charity which came with their opinions. By design, an orphanage with 19 small kids gets messy and also by design, four adults aren’t enough to look after so many kids. Everything about an orphanage has an affinity for struggle and where they need resistance the least is from the people who come to "help". Charly had told me in great detail how the girl from Wyoming was banned from ever coming back because she used industrial-strength disinfectant, that she had bought, to use in a poorly ventilated room where two 4 months old babies were laying – after being trice warned not to…
It’s a good thing I’m not in charge of much because if I was, I would bring back, with all it’s terribleness, the efficiency of the middle ages for torture, the sadism of Stalin for fear and the pure-lucid -insanity of Pol Pot for all-out murder. The annihilation of these "parents" could only serve as a deep clean for the gene pool – a colon cleans perhaps for broader humanity. Why not? Satisfy karma and balance the tills of injustice - especially in this orphanage, or any other for that matter. But alas, I'm not in charge of mass sterilization or executions... for good reason I think.
Another troubling issues that crept into Charly’s regular afternoon debrief was the problem of volunteers and their charity which came with their opinions. By design, an orphanage with 19 small kids gets messy and also by design, four adults aren’t enough to look after so many kids. Everything about an orphanage has an affinity for struggle and where they need resistance the least is from the people who come to "help". Charly had told me in great detail how the girl from Wyoming was banned from ever coming back because she used industrial-strength disinfectant, that she had bought, to use in a poorly ventilated room where two 4 months old babies were laying – after being trice warned not to…
“Well all hell broke loose,” Charly explained, “and now she’s banned.” As it turned out Miss Wyoming had raised some money in the U.S to donate to the orphanage – good for her, I raised nothing. Really, good for her. When she arrived, her sensibilities must have been slapped because all she did was complain about the filthy state the orphanage was in and then spend most of the money on cleaning products. Lets get one thing straight, I was not there, so my opinion is somewhat grafted from Charly’s but considering the filth Charly has had to put up with while living with me, I really bank on her opinion that the orphanage was not that bad because her idea of filth has been well calibrated. Charly continued to explain that the tías, the women who live and work at the orphanage, the people who know what’s what, said that baby formula was always expensive and that they nearly run out of money each month to buy it and any money donated will be prioritised for food… Funny that food business, I remember thinking. It mustn’t seem that important to a highly evolved-worldly 22 year old from well-fed Wyoming or wherever the fuck, who is taking a break from her sociology degree to come and ruff it up for a few weeks. I could hear on the edge of every noun that Charly was fanging for confrontation and I feared she was going to get it at the weekly volunteers meeting which was that night – where the worldly 22 year old Miss Wyoming would have her day in court and Charly was her judge and executioner.
On
the long walk to the meeting I tried in vein to distract Charly from
her thoughts of manslaughter. The stress on her face tightened as she
explained that the girl from Gloucester had also been complaining about
the standards of the orphanage and that they were probably going to
raise the issue at that evenings meeting. Oh Christ, I thought, these
people really don’t know what they’re faced with here. We reached the
house and I heaved the jammed door bell which clanged away as if its
life depended on it, a buzzer grinded and we were let in. We were
entering our third week of volunteering, one week more than I was told,
and the atmosphere inside the house had changed somewhat since our first
meeting. The departure of the ironic-hyena and his harem of the five
hysterical-impregnated British girls made things less critical and more
rational for discussion. The mood was calm as we said our hellos but I
could tell Charly was on the brink. For this night, out roles were
reversed: I sat calmly as she marauded nervously in the background – her
anxious energy, gone unnoticed by the others, was being registered loud
and clear on all three of my radars. It’s strange when you are aware of
something that others aren't – especially when it comes to combat. You
almost reach a sense of pity or truce with the enemy for having such
meagre defences - completely naive in the face of total annihilation. I
wondered if this was how the Japanese pilots felt swooping their zero’s
in, from out over the Pacific, on to Pearl Harbour. Probably not, I
thought, but at that moment I could picture Charly piloting, open-canopy
with her scarf flapping in the turbulence, a torpedo plane and lining
up the lumbering beast with the USS Arizona or Oklahoma and then plop.
No remorse, zero guilt only maximum gratification.
Like
every other meeting Daisy set up a Skype call with the lady who ran the
U.K office of the organisation and as usual Daisy breezed through the
relevant news and topics of the last week. Her tone was direct and
purposeful as she pushed through each point unchallenged, yet becoming
slightly rushed at the end as if she needed to address more pressing
matters. To make a physical gesture of completing her mandatory tasks,
Daisy placed her pen on the table and looked at Miss Wyoming and said
the obvious, "I guess we need to talk about what happened today." Miss
Wyoming let out fake giggle, to release the tension, "Like yah, I have a
few points!" Daisy went on to describe what she knew of the situation,
which is what I knew, and she only got so far before Miss Wyoming
interjected with her side of the story. As often with people who have a
shaky story, theatrical band standing replaces fact and this was no
different as Miss Wyoming started to roll her eyes and wave her right
hand around as if swatting at flies. Daisy recognised the tension and
backed off, which left an open forum for the lady from the UK.
"So,
let me get this straight. You used the chemicals in the room, even
though you were asked not to?" the crackly voice asked politely over
Skype.
"Yah! You don't know what it's like. Like the whole place is covered in like faeces...like," Miss Wyoming retorted.
I
looked over at Charly who's eye balls were bulging from the breath she
wouldn't let escape her tight lips until the pressure became too much,
"PhfffffffffffffffffffffffffffT! It's not even that dirty," Charly
testified with stiff resolve. "The shit you are talking about was a
dirty nappy in the corner of the room - which you didn't pick up. You
disinfected the whole room but didn't bother to pick up that nappy, so
it would make more sense, if you found it so dirty, to pick up the
goddamn nappy first!"
That's my girl...
Someone coughed but the rest of the room was silent from shock and Miss Wyoming didn't consider internal resistance on this night and could only muster a limp roll of her eyes and a 'whatever Charly!' To make matters worse for Miss Wyoming's case, the voice coming from Skype agreed with Charly as she put in simplistic terms, "You know it's easy to be confronted with the conditions coming from the U.S or Canada or the U.K. You have to remember that it is Peru and standards there are different."
Someone coughed but the rest of the room was silent from shock and Miss Wyoming didn't consider internal resistance on this night and could only muster a limp roll of her eyes and a 'whatever Charly!' To make matters worse for Miss Wyoming's case, the voice coming from Skype agreed with Charly as she put in simplistic terms, "You know it's easy to be confronted with the conditions coming from the U.S or Canada or the U.K. You have to remember that it is Peru and standards there are different."
Miss
Gloucester, who had recently graduated as a high school teacher, leant
in to offer her high level opinion on the matter by saying, "You know,
also, when you offer advice to the tías
or the manager of the orphanage, they get really upset and rude when
they don't have to. We are there to help and some of us are highly
trained and can offer our expertise. I mean I'm a teacher."
A
teacher! Well Jesus fuck, I thought. I'm an expert at being useless,
but all that means is that I know jack shit about how to run an
orphanage. "Phffffffffft," hissed again from Charly's lips, "All they
need from us is for us to show up when we're asked and do what we're
told," Charly snapped. "The people that work there are there all day
every day, it's a bit disrespectful to show up for a couple of weeks and
to tell them that they are doing it wrong."
That's my girl...
The
voice crackling over Skype, in a diplomatic manner, noted the
objections and said she would follow it up, but I knew, as did everyone
else she was on our side as she said, "You know it's easy to feel
self-righteous when you first come to the orphanage, but you have to
remember what the orphanage is facing every day. Sure it might not be
the cleanest by western standards, but it's still feeding and washing
the children, which unfortunately is their main priority." The crackly
voice hammered home what was important and vindicated the truly
righteous - leaving the room in pristine silence. The sound of victory!
Daisy broke the awkwardness with some light chat and said she had to go
home to her boy and then fled. I didn't blame her, because I too was
making my preparations to leave.
Well,
there was no bloodshed on that night, not even a tear. Hopefully, with a
little luck, Miss Wyoming and Miss Gloucester suffered just enough
brain damage so that the scar tissue could form over their
over-indulgent opinions of themselves. There would be little chance of
them gloating about this encounter back in their native lands without
altering the true course of events. Their parents would probably notice a
slight change in their demeanour but initially cross it off as jet lag
or the remnants of a cold -
never realizing the full potential of their little girls
transformation. The girls’ friends would always wonder what happened to
their friend while she was away. "She came back different," they will
cry, "She's doesn't even come to bible studies or home coming anymore."
It's
hard to measure the one overriding factor that forces a person to
evolve or to grow. I would bet all the change and fluff in my pockets
that Charly's two paragraph whoopin played a small role in their journey
to enlightenment by giving them a perspective lobotomy...
That's my girl...
Well we’re at the end of this one, and if you made it this far you've shown true grit. Yes Sir, you are made of the right stuff. Just like the two Mossad agents we met who were, not so, undercover in our hostel. They claimed they were on the trail of a slack-baron called Ronnie Yair - onto his nasty sent. "This guy has gone AWOL, and we need to either take him down or bring him in before the Americans do... The wolves are closing in this son of a bitch and we have to get there first and drag his bones back to Israel dead or alive... I've already said too much...
Well we’re at the end of this one, and if you made it this far you've shown true grit. Yes Sir, you are made of the right stuff. Just like the two Mossad agents we met who were, not so, undercover in our hostel. They claimed they were on the trail of a slack-baron called Ronnie Yair - onto his nasty sent. "This guy has gone AWOL, and we need to either take him down or bring him in before the Americans do... The wolves are closing in this son of a bitch and we have to get there first and drag his bones back to Israel dead or alive... I've already said too much...
More photos of Arequipa and it's little inhabitants can be found here: https://picasaweb.google.com/109362659982164453049/Arequipa?authuser=0&feat=directlink
Excellent narrative! One brief comment on Ritchie's frequent exclamation: That's my daughter ! :) Rudi
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