I recently had an unexpected and undesired trip to Sudan. On
Saturday, I had just told people I wasn’t going when Sunday morning I was told
that I had to go anyway. So I went on Monday. I was not super-excited about the
trip, and I was uncharacteristically cranky. I got over it a few days later
with the help of some Flaming Hot Cheetos and gummy dinosaurs. I’m easily placated.
What you get when you order off the menu-- za3tar and cheese fatayer. |
I really do like Sudan, actually. It was fun to hang with
the IAS Sudan ladies and to go out to eat Syrian food with Leif. Of course, I
was accused of being a princess when I ordered off the menu, but the Syrian
owner was very happy to oblige. He then told me I looked like Hillary Clinton,
which probably means that I need to stay out of the sun. When I mentioned that
she is a few decades older than me, he then decided I look like Amber Heard,
which just goes to show how important entertainment news is to people all over
the world. Anyway, he makes good fatayer.
I also got to go to the movies with Selma. We were supposed
to go to the theatre the previous day, and she hadn’t been able to take me with
her, and so she decided to make up for it by bringing me with her to watch the
new Egyptian comedy with Ahmed Helmy—the classic tale of a man whose meddling
female relatives decide that he shouldn’t marry that hot young Italian girl and
jet off to Rome, leaving them without a man to drive them to the beach and eat
all of their excellent cooking. Instead he should marry the cute and sassy
Egyptian girl. It was actually pretty
funny, and when Selma answered her phone twice during the movie and had several
slightly whispered conversations with someone, no one yelled at her. The other
girl in our group did get annoyed by the three girls in front of us who took a
selfie in the middle of the movie and blinded us with their flash. But all in
all, it was a very relaxing movie experience and air-conditioned! And with a
possibly unintentional intermission in the middle of one of Sassy Girl’s
speeches when the movie stopped for about 5 minutes.
Feeding potato chips to the cat. He also LOVES peanuts. He's weird. It's not my fault. |
So I do love Sudan, but I am happy to be done with it for
the moment. The rest of the year promises to be a whirlwind of travel in other
countries and finishing 2016 work in Chad and moving to a new house, which I
have yet to find and probably furnish. The bat-eating cat will miss me, and I
will occasionally miss him too, but the cat-sitting experience has proven to me
that I should not have any pets until I find a way to stabilize my life. If you
have any advice on how to do that, please share. I will probably ignore your
advice and continue to live my crazy life, but I really want a puppy so there
is a possibility that I might pay attention to any sage wisdom you send my way.
Anyway, since this trip involved travel, it comes with a
story because I have also not learned how to travel uneventfully. I’m pretty
sure it’s mostly impossible.
The stress of knowing all the work I needed to do in Chad
made me push for the departure date closest to receiving my final exit visa.
Leif, my favorite travel agent who never worries about buying last minute
tickets, found me a relatively cheap ticket via Egypt Air, leaving the next
morning at 4am. At 4pm, he bought the ticket and received payment confirmation
but no booking information. “It will probably come later,” he said, “Airlines
work 24-7.” Which proves that he is a wonderful optimist with a positive view of
humanity. I am an optimist with a negative view of humanity. My optimism
allowed me to pack up all my stuff, my negative view of humanity and chronic
insomnia gave me a short intermittent 3 hour sleep. At 1:45am we received the
ticket, and I left behind the dusty sand of Khartoum for Cairo. Last minute travels like this one are always a
good bonding time for Leif and me. He was the one who convinced me that my last
minute life is OK. Since I am surrounded by Type A planners in Neverthirst and
my own family, people who worry deeply about my laissez faire attitude towards
planning in advance, it is so refreshing to be with Leif. For his part, he told
me, “Amanda, I’m glad to work with you who can handle last minute stuff. A
normal Swede would have been so stressed going to bed not knowing he/she would
have a ticket for a flight at 4am.” So we can see that Leif has it worse than
me being from a nation of Type A planners who give him a hard time about his
last minute life. Since my goal is to BE
Leif when I grow up, it’s nice to know that I’m half-way there. Now I just need
to learn how to fix a drilling rig and hot wire a car and go moose hunting and
answer all the emails that come into my inbox instead of accidentally deleting
them in an attempt to purge possibly incriminating emails before traveling to
certain countries.
Gurasa with the ladies. |
The optimism of Leif and Amanda got me on the plane. Then
Amanda travel systems took over. (See—I can do systems too!)
Amanda travel systems:
1)
Check everything you can because lugging crap
around the airport is not fun.
Exception to this rule: if you
have to pay money to check your bags, then Amanda Rules of Not Unnecessarily Spending
Money trump this rule. Carry everything with you.
2)
No roller bags unless you are in a Rules of Not
Spending Money situation. Roller bags are for lazy people. Pick up your bag and
carry it. Don’t drag it over the feet of fellow travelers or trip them up when
you wander across the path over to the screen to find your gate.
3)
Always take the stairs and never go on moving
sidewalks unless you are looking for entertainment. You’ve been sitting for
hours—move when you can.
4)
If you want to buy candy in the airport, do it.
Travel is for comfort food. But if you are going to be in Addis, they have crap
candy. Save the bread and cheese from the airplane food and eat that—this meets
the Rules of Not Spending Money standards as well.
5)
Watch the dumbest movies on the plane that you
secretly wanted to watch but were embarrassed to admit. Because then if you
ever have to own up that you watched that really dumb movie about the ballet
dancer and the somehow Irish street violinist just trying to make it in NYC,
you can say, “Oh yeah, I saw it on a plane. There wasn’t anything else to do.”
Don’t mention that you could have watched an incredibly depressing
Oscar-contender instead.
6)
Don’t watch incredibly depressing movies on
planes. I sat next to a girl who cried through the entire flight watching one of
those, and it was awkward.
7)
Avoid eye contact with seat-mates to avoid
unnecessary travel-talking. Travel-talking interferes with watching the
horrible movies and/or playing mindless games on your phone. You will never see
these people again (probably) and if there is a large man next to you, he will
probably get drunk and eye contact only makes him think you love him. And then
you have to spend the rest of the flight pretending to sleep, unless you can
really sleep, which I can’t do even lying in a bed in a dark, quiet room.
8)
Aisle seat. Always. Is it annoying when the
person in the middle wants to get out? No. It’s not. Get up and let them out.
Moving is good for you. See Rule #3.
Because I follow these rules, I’ve become adept at getting
out of the plane quickly. If there were an official Olympic race to get off an
airplane before almost everyone else, I would medal for sure. I would then feel
bad about it because there are some sports that traditionally are won by
nations that don’t win all the other events like swimming, running, shooting
things. Getting off an airplane first should be won by an Asian nation like
India or Indonesia. Or China, but China, like America, has enough medals—let
someone else win some! But it does not seem fair that an American would win an
Olympic Event with skills she picked up from years of living in Asia’s (and the
world’s) most populous nations. But my
insatiable need to win everything is all my own—well, it’s genetic anyway,
thanks Grandmom.
Movie selfie. |
Usually, the plane’s wheels hit the ground, and I unbuckle
my seatbelt and turn on my phone. I grab the bag from under the seat. When we
have mostly come to a complete stop, I gauge the power-hungry level of the
flight attendants. American ones will yell at you for jumping up before the
seat belt light is off, but usually in Asia and Africa, they are more relaxed.
If anyone else jumps up first, I have to pop up right behind them because—competitiveness.
Then I inevitably get annoyed at all the people who pop up and push back and
forth in the crowds to get their millions of bags they have stashed all over
the plane (another reason to respect Rule # 1).
When I arrived in Cairo, a lovely elderly Syrian woman
jumped up behind me with an urgency to get off that plane. She pushed at my
knees and told me to hurry up, just push around everyone else, let’s go, let’s
go, let’s go! In the manner, we reached the front of the plane before the first
class passengers disembarked. We were unceremoniously required to move back to
our seats and wait. Unfortunately for the good intentions of the Egypt Air
crew, everyone else had followed us and it was mostly impossible to do that. We
moved a few steps back to make them feel good about themselves, but that was
it. We all got off right after the two first class passengers pushed their way
through the crowd of plebeians in their aisle.
That wasn’t the story. That was just the first part, leading
up to me abandoning the system and then being caught up in the ensuing chaos.
Let this be a warning to you all!
Boarding the plane in Cairo, everything seemed normal. My
seatmates came on almost the very last. That is always hard on me because there
is that brief moment when you think that everyone has boarded and you might
have free seats next to you, but that hope was dashed. Then I saw it was a
woman in a lifai/thobe carrying a baby with a little girl in tow as well. They
shoved into the seats, stuffing an awkward baby carrier in by the little girl.
I called the flight attendant over and asked her to take the baby carrier and
put it in the bin. She graciously complied and the little girl smiled
tentatively at me. Then I went back to
making no eye contact.
Around the time when the meal was served, I broke the rule
again. I started passing things over to the mom who was nursing the baby while
the girl slept on her arm. The mom was also grimacing with pain. So we began to
talk.
“Are you ok?” I asked in Arabic.
“Yes, just my leg is hurting.”
“Let me take the baby for a bit to help you,” I said.
(Generous and cunning. That baby was cute and I really wanted him.)
“Well, you can take him, but he isn’t the reason why my leg
is hurting. I fell in the airport and my foot bent over my ankle, and I think
it might be broken. It hurts so much.”
“Do you have any pain medicine?” I asked, helpfully taking
the baby out of her hands.
“No. I don’t have anything.”
From past experience, I know that flight attendants have
some kind of basic pain killer on hand, so I called over our nice lady and
asked if she could bring some panadol or something to my new friend. (Sometimes
I like to pretend like I’m a doctor.) She did, and a few minutes later the lady
thanked me and said she was feeling a bit better.
Arby's Restaurant and Cafeteria in Khartoum |
We started talking more, and I found out that her name is
Zaynab, her daughter is Aisha, and her baby son is called Issa. Zaynab had left
with Aisha to Sudan about 7 months ago, looking for treatment for Aisha’s eye,
which had a tumor in it. In Sudan, she found out it was cancer (leukemia? I
don’t really know—blood cancer, she called it) and an organization there sent
her to Egypt for chemotherapy. They were in Egypt for months, staying at the
hospital. There she gave birth to Issa, her ninth child. She whipped out her
phone and scrolled through all the photos she had taken there—multiple selfies,
photos of food (classics no matter where you are), and photos of Aisha and her
treatment. There were some pretty gruesome photos, as well as dozens of photos
of various IV bag treatments that had gone into that tiny girl (about 8 or 9
years old).
The hospital room where Aisha was staying had a few balloons
taped up on the wall, and I kept thinking about this documentary I’d watched
where the Make a Wish foundation helped this kid with cancer who had wanted to
be Batman take over San Francisco (I think it was) in a little batman suit to
fulfill his biggest dream. It was an
interesting contrast in levels of comfort provided to suffering children. Zaynab probably didn’t know about cancer
hospitals in America or the Make a Wish Foundation, but like any other loving
mom, she did whatever it took to get the treatment her daughter needed, even
moving to another country and having a baby in an unfamiliar setting where she
knew no one. The love of a mother is powerful. It makes for strong and brave
women.
Apparently, the chemotherapy worked, so Aisha can go back to
Chad, but she has to have follow up visits at local hospitals here. She is
blind in one eye, but Zaynab was told that she can’t get her an operation on
that until she is 15. Zaynab says they have used all their money getting this
treatment, but she has a card from the organization that helped her and if the
cancer comes back, she might be sent to a hospital in the US. She was a bit
excited about that, but not hoping for the cancer to return. If she does go, I
gave her my card and told her to call me first so I can make sure that there is
a friendly face around to help her. I
know people in places.
When it was about time to land, the pain medicine had worn
off, and Zaynab was moaning again, I decided that I would abdicate my throne as
“fastest off the plane” in order to help this little family. It was just like
when that one girl fell on the track and the other one went back with her to
help her cross the finish line. So noble. But to be honest, several times I
considered just handing over the baby and rushing out. It is so hard for me not
to jump up and rush off with the other athletes. Be proud, mother, that I kept
it together. Credit to that adorable chubby baby.
Why yes I will hold this perfect baby as long as possible. |
We were the last ones off the plane because Zaynab could
barely walk. We got into the second bus with the other stragglers (I’ve never
been on the second bus!), and we headed towards the airport, about 5 meters
away from us. At the airport, a security guard noticed me standing by the bus
trying to help Zaynab get out while holding her baby and watching her daughter.
I asked him to bring a wheelchair, but instead, he took Zaynab around directly
to baggage claim and left me, Aisha, and Issa to walk upstairs to immigration.
We waited up there until he came back with their passports to fill out the
entry forms. Then we went to the immigration window, waiting patiently for the
other passengers who had already been there.
While we were standing there, making a scene by being a
white woman with two Chadian kids, I noticed three Chinese men who were
struggling to communicate with an immigration officer. I watched for a while to
see if they were going to figure it out—I mean, on average any given day, there
are about 15 people who can make it through their lives without my help. I
wanted to make sure that these guys weren’t among that 15. And then I decided
to offer my unsolicited help anyway. Can I say that going between French,
Arabic, and Chinese is not easy? Also, my Chinese has gotten really bad. But we
mostly figured it out when one of the men started speaking in mostly
comprehensible English. We found a solution to their problem, and we wished
each other well. They were grateful, I was happy (and embarrassed) to speak
Chinese again, and really—I love Africa but I also miss Asia. It is nice to
have some fellow Asians wandering this great continent with me.
We finally made it downstairs to Zaynab, who must have been
really worried that maybe the nasara
she trusted was a Madonna-type who would snatch up her babies to raise them in
the luxurious lifestyle of a pop queen’s offspring. But if I can’t have a
puppy, I’m definitely not ready for a baby.
At any rate, Zaynab called her sister from my phone, and she
was on her way to pick her up. I
reluctantly handed over the chubby baby, waved goodbye and stumbled out into
the hot sun to find the wonderful Urbain, who had been waiting for me since
10:45, the time I told him to be at the airport to pick me up. It was 12:15. Being
a nice person takes a lot of extra time in the airport. And that’s why you always follow the System.
Unless you need to make an exception for a cute baby and his sweet mother and
sister.