Life remains blissfully good here in Copa. Caitlin and I just adjourned our second week of teaching an advanced English class, with a group of 8 delightful kids. All of whom are quite smart, all of whom seem to have taken a liking to us, and all of whom totally dug learning Duck-Duck-Goose. It´s fun to feel that we are already, little by little, immersing ourselves in life here.
Copa, however, is a bit of a tough nut to crack. Multiple headscratching ironies abound, the most obvious of which, I previously mentioned, is the lack of an ATM. A town which is nearly purely tourist based without a cash flow is a bit like trying to drive a car without brakes. You may be able to move, but control and precision are shaky at best. The amount of money lost due to stubborn behavior (an unwillingness to let an armoured truck from another region of the country come to bring money for an atm) is unfathomable. Hell, this could be Dubai if there was an ATM.
Also there is a neverending tension between the locals, the terse and serious Aymara people, and the wandering hippies who sell jewelry in seemingly every sunny spot in the town. It seems to reflect that constant tug between preserving culture and listless wanderers who have a knack for finding hot spots before they´re hot.
Which brings up Copa in general. The town is adorable, neverendingly beautiful, and culturally rich. For the past three days staight in our neighborhood some unspecified house was blaring eerie, classical music for all to hear. In our minds it bandied between humor and stupification. Eventually we found out that is a traditional way to mourn the recent passing of a family member. Certainly got our attention. I have a fantasy of some cul-du-sac in suburbia being swamped by blasting classical music at 3 A.M. and the reaction of the people there. But we don´t need to get into that.
Also we went to La Paz, a dizzying city to say the least. It is pretty much just a giant, two million person market place. Selling anything and everything one could ever desire, not to mention the massive and awe inspiring mountain (Illimani) that lurks in the background. Still haven´t totally acclimated to this altitude, but once I due, man I will be some sort of world conqueror. Denver, I scoff at thee!
I have started to plant some vague seeds of starting a local beisbol team, but that will certainly be a work in progress.
Finally my parents blessed me with a name that means pitcher (the pouring kind) in spanish so I´ve adopted the moniker Jaronimo. Which may or may not give me some sort of mystical powers.
More on that later.
Járonimo