Note to all: This is Bao Bao
At this point my pupils were dilated unevenly
and I could no longer feel my toes. I
imagine that if House heard these symptoms he would immediately diagnose PTSSD
– Post Traumatic SAT Stress Disorder.
And then hopefully he would serenade me with lonesome piano blues, as
this is still the only known cure.
At the end
of class on Saturday I hobbled home, crawled into my bed, and slept for
fourteen hours. I awoke to a dorm room
full of people and plans. We would
finally start using our Sundays productively instead of merely sleeping off the
effects of a rough night out. We would
sightsee. On tap for the day? Yehliu.
A trip to
Yehliu had first been tossed around a couple of weeks ago. A short, cheap bus ride would deposit us at a
coastal geopark filled with sandstone rock formations shaped like mushrooms,
tofu, ginger, fairy shoes, and queens (the monarchs, not the borough). Our prior plans were thwarted in a number of
ways: Luxy, Luxy-related exhaustion, essays, essay-related exhaustion, and the
sad realization that if laundry was not accomplished on that particular Sunday
we would probably all be arrested for olfactory indecency. Also working against us? Our routinely suppressed irresponsibility,
flightiness, and inability to get anywhere on time.
I’ve
discussed this at length with my roommate / co-worker / partner-in-crime Linnea. As a teacher, lateness is not an option. You run the show. If you don’t appear, 15-20 people get screwed
over as a result. So we simply have to
ignore our dilatory natures, suck it up, and arrive on time with at least some
kind of plan for the next three hours.
On days off this all goes directly out the window. Plans are haphazardly made, and often broken. Destinations are changed mid-route, if not
mid-sentence. Invitations are poorly
extended. Lengthy expeditions through
underground malls deposit us directly across the street from our departure
point. And yet, somehow, despite all
this, we made it to Yehliu on Sunday a mere three hours behind schedule.
Yehliu
Geopark is a short walk through a small fishing village. This village had an immediate and visceral
impact on me. I usually chalk this up to
a childhood spent near the shore: I crave water, and get antsy if I’m away from
it for too long. I remember during
college feeling a sort of painful longing every time I heard a chain clank
against a flagpole. The sound reminded
me of boats and harbors, which I pined for endlessly during my Midwestern sojourn. So the immediate sight of fishing boats, the
smell of sea water, and the preponderance of crusty, muscled fisherman sent me
reeling. As much as I love cities, I
must also have the beach. And after four
weeks of urban hysteria, Yehliu was exactly what I needed.
Yehliu looks like an alien landscape. Black, pock-marked rocks cover a floor of
golden stone. The area is unfortunately
well regulated so we couldn’t dive headlong into the surf in our
underwear. Also, Yehliu is popular. Very popular.
I can only imagine what it would be like to have this place almost to
myself, with no whistling guards, no Taiwanese tourist groups, and no Falung
Gong protesters. There’s something
strange about being part of the picture-taking hoards. I wonder how much I’m actually appreciating
the scene on its own merits, rather than for its pictorial value. I also feel competitive: that Asian woman
over there is taking a picture. I should
be taking a picture! She must know
something I don’t! I sometimes think
traveling was easier when I didn’t have a camera and I just stole other people’s
photos. (OPP. Shout out to the 90’s.)
It was a good day. I'm still not entirely sure what the hell I'm doing here, but days like this help.
yayyyyyy. that is all.
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