I’m nearing the end of my first year-long Photo-a-Day project. Each day in 2017 I followed prompts and posted photos online. It’s been fun, grounding. I’ve learned new things about photography, about the world around me, and about myself.
There are just a few photos left this year. Tomorrow’s prompt is “December Vibes,” and as I walked to work this morning, I wondered what that even means. “Vibes,” short for “vibrations,” is a word that generally annoys me. People write online in response to reports of illness or trouble, “Sending good vibes.” It’s a secular alternative to prayer, an idea that if we think pleasant thoughts really hard, positive effects will follow. I can see why that seems like the same thing as prayer, but it just isn’t.
And December? Obviously the intention is “festive,” and perhaps “snowy,” but as I walked down the trash-lined Port-au-Prince street on this toasty morning (the temperature was probably somewhere in the mid-eighties), on my way to finals week at school, I felt neither festive nor cold. I didn’t have any exams today, and I wasn’t proctoring, and my daughter is home from college, so it was downright painful to force myself to get up and get to work. As I looked at myself in the mirror before heading out, I thought how old and tired I looked: old lady face, old lady hair, old lady clothes. December vibes were definitely grumpy.
There’s a major construction project near my house, with guys up on shaky, scary-looking wooden scaffolding working with cement, and dropping bits of it on passers-by. I moved to the other side of the street. Then, unbelievably, I heard kissy sounds and catcalls in Kreyol from up above, falling down on my old lady head instead of crumbs of concrete. “Really?” I wanted to shout, incredulously, but instead I followed my usual procedure of ignoring, pretending I didn’t understand, continuing on my way.
When I got to school, I went to the teacher work room, since exams were taking place in my classroom, where I usually work. The air conditioning wasn’t functioning, and there are no windows in the room. The assortment of torn desk chairs fixed with duct tape appeared even more pitiful than usual. The few teachers already there looked as though their December vibes matched my own.
But, ah, on the table there was a gingerbread house, an annual tradition made by a fellow teacher. Immediately I knew I’d found my December vibes. I grabbed my camera and took some pictures.
This was no kit gingerbread house, constructed with cardboard and tasting like it. No, this was a gingerbread house filled with character, made from dark, spicy gingerbread, tasting delicious and also nourishing. It had a bit of a wonky shape to it - think Dr. Seuss architecture rather than modernism - and it was topped with white icing and gumdrops. “Merry Xmas,” it read. My colleagues had already begun to eat the roof, so I needed to feel no guilt about digging in myself, and very soon, the exam-grading teachers had made the house look as though a hurricane had passed through. December vibes don’t include hurricanes because the season ends the last day of November, but we’re all too familiar here in Haiti with hurricanes, and earthquakes, and the idea that everything is temporary. How much better to cause the destruction yourself, with your fingers, and eat the delectable results, than to wait for the elements, or the construction workers dropping things on your head.
December vibes include evaluating your students’ work, and realizing they learned less than you had hoped, but in some cases, more than you realized.
December vibes bring our alumni sweeping back home after their first semester in college, or their third, or their fifth, or more. They come in to visit, remarking on how much they miss my classroom, which if I recall correctly they didn’t love quite as much when I taught them in middle school. At my house, we have a tradition of waiting until my own college student returns to do all the Advent rituals from the first two and a half weeks of the month. How we missed those kids, and how thrilled we are to have them home!
December vibes stir up memories from Christmases past, friends and family, moments lost and never to be repeated. There’s a definite touch of melancholy in December vibes.
But December vibes are also scrumptious, filled with the strains of Handel’s Messiah, the anticipation of beach trips coming up soon, the careful setting out of the coconut shell Nativity scene - and the sweet, spicy taste of gingerbread.
2 hours ago
2 comments:
What a beautiful post! Wonderfully bittersweet! Looking forward to seeing more photographs and reading your blog in 2018!
This is fabulous, Ruth! I have so enjoyed following along with your very-different-from-mine setting that comes out in your photos. Your perspective has added a whole new range to my "December vibes." Thanks for this and all your interesting photos and thoughtful posts!
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