“After that trip, you’ll have enough stories to write for a
year!” a friend joked as I told her of my plans to take the people who work for
me and their families on their first safari. I guess she’s right; if you pack 4
adults and 3 children under the age of 7 (6 Ugandans + 1 muzungu; 6 completely
inexperienced travelers); 2 full and 2 half English speakers (with a total of 3 first languages); 2 days’ worth of
food; 1 tent; 1 headlamp; 1 strobe light; and a leaking kerosene stove into a 5-seater
RAV4 destined for a distant game park, cultural chaos is bound to ensue…. and
ensue it did. Alas, the first of (likely) many intercultural musings from the
trip.
Cultural intersection #1, in honor of Valentine’s Day:
I occasionally lament playing the role of bachelorette, the
never ending search through the muck of leftover men…or perhaps undiscovered
gems (so I like to believe). I still maintain an utterly idealistic picture of
a man who will whisk me off my feet and cling to the hope that one day, I will
“just know he’s the one.” As I wait/date/search, it is easy to bemoan the required
effort, to loathe the disappointments that accompany such romantic notions.
Over a shared flask of Waragi our first night, I discovered
some of my travel companions took a vastly different approach towards spouse-hunting.
Three years ago, my gardener, Gracious, informed his village he would be
returning home to choose a wife for his 30th birthday. Several women
appealed for consideration. Gracious returned to his home village, met his
(present) wife--once, talked with her on the phone-- twice, asked for her
consent to marry-- was approved, and held a wedding just one week later. Only a
month after their wedding, Gracious’ 19-year-old bride was pregnant with their
first child.
In the U.S. it takes engaged couples longer to settle on a
florist than it took Gracious and his wife to meet, marry, and reproduce.
Through my western lens, this approach towards marriage is both foreign and
slightly unsettling. And yet, as I attempt to extricate my cultural biases, I
am struck by the problems that such an approach eliminates (think: a limited
number of awkward first dates; far less psychoanalysis of compatibility; an
absence of breakups; no pangs over flirtatious text message phrasing…). At the
base of it, there is something oddly romantic about the faith a couple (that
know next to nothing about each other) put in the construct of marriage, in the
idea of fostered love, commitment, and family.
I still gravitate towards Westernized conceptions of love.
Yet, as Valentine’s Day rolls around (and I am just as single as ever), I can’t
help but chuckle at the idea of an announcement in the San Jose Mercury
proclaiming my intent to marry. A line-up of men to choose from might not be so
bad!
1 comment:
Lol. Sending you much love. I have tons of thoughts on this subject and look forward to having a conversation with you at some point (as with most things, somewhere in the middle is probably best :-)).
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