Todo tiene su momento oportuno;
hay un tiempo para todo lo que se hace bajo el cielo.
Or as most of may know it better:
For everything there is a season,
a right time for every intention under heaven —
I should have kept the words of The Teacher closer at hand on Monday -- or, at least, kept my camera closer at hand.
The first rule of blogging is never leave the house without your camera. The second is not unlike the first: Keep your camera in your hand.
If I had, I would have captured an amazing photograph.
Around noon, I was walking into the village to buy some vegetables for a Mexican red rice dish I was preparing. My mind must have been on matters culinary because I completely missed the full minute I had to capture my photograph.
Just as I was nearing the elementary school, I noticed a red truck driving toward me. Nothing unusual about the truck. It was just a pickup with a sound system.
Blaring announcements are the norm for a community with no newspapers. We rely on either helpful neighbors or sound trucks to let us know what is happening in town.
What was happening here was a circus. Tuesday. In Barra.
I started calculating how I could attend the circus. And then I noticed something unusual. Boys and girls in school uniforms started streaming out of the playground and onto the street. Following the truck.
I thought I was witness to a modern Hamlin piper.
Then I saw it as the truck drove by. A trailer. And a zebra.
As far as the children were concerned, it may as well have been a unicorn.
Lonely in his barred heaven. But the very essence of magic from the plains of Africa.
Of course, by the time I saw what was happening, I had to fumble with the zippers on my back pack. Dig deep. Pull off the lens cap. Switch on the camera. Adjust the focus. Change the setting.
And it was gone as quickly as mist on a spring morning.
Not to be deterred, I backtracked several blocks and caught the truck just as it turned at the Villa Obregon jardin.
A somewhat sad sight of a magical childless creature.
But it is the circus. And I will try to attend on Tuesday.
That brief moment conjured up one of those memories I discussed last week.
There was a day when I wanted to be a veterinarian -- so, I could earn enough money to buy a circus.
My grandfather would take us to the circus whenever both he and Barnum-Bailey were in town. Everything fascinated me. The clowns. The trapeze artists. The animals. The tight rope walker. And the ring master in charge of the organized chaos.
My brother and I actually organized some of the neighborhood kids into an ersatz circus. We had a parade with band instruments and our questionably-trained pets. There was magic. And acrobatics. And clowns of questionable provenance.
I never bought the circus. Instead, I joined the circus that is politics. Looking back, the road that led to the center ring would have been wiser. But not even the circus gives us the opportunity to retrace those steps.
So, Tuesday, I will relive an almost-forgotten memory of being the fellow in the slouch fedora wondering if another pay day can be met from gate receipts.
The first rule of blogging is never leave the house without your camera. The second is not unlike the first: Keep your camera in your hand.
If I had, I would have captured an amazing photograph.
Around noon, I was walking into the village to buy some vegetables for a Mexican red rice dish I was preparing. My mind must have been on matters culinary because I completely missed the full minute I had to capture my photograph.
Just as I was nearing the elementary school, I noticed a red truck driving toward me. Nothing unusual about the truck. It was just a pickup with a sound system.
Blaring announcements are the norm for a community with no newspapers. We rely on either helpful neighbors or sound trucks to let us know what is happening in town.
What was happening here was a circus. Tuesday. In Barra.
I started calculating how I could attend the circus. And then I noticed something unusual. Boys and girls in school uniforms started streaming out of the playground and onto the street. Following the truck.
I thought I was witness to a modern Hamlin piper.
Then I saw it as the truck drove by. A trailer. And a zebra.
As far as the children were concerned, it may as well have been a unicorn.
Lonely in his barred heaven. But the very essence of magic from the plains of Africa.
Of course, by the time I saw what was happening, I had to fumble with the zippers on my back pack. Dig deep. Pull off the lens cap. Switch on the camera. Adjust the focus. Change the setting.
And it was gone as quickly as mist on a spring morning.
Not to be deterred, I backtracked several blocks and caught the truck just as it turned at the Villa Obregon jardin.
A somewhat sad sight of a magical childless creature.
But it is the circus. And I will try to attend on Tuesday.
That brief moment conjured up one of those memories I discussed last week.
There was a day when I wanted to be a veterinarian -- so, I could earn enough money to buy a circus.
My grandfather would take us to the circus whenever both he and Barnum-Bailey were in town. Everything fascinated me. The clowns. The trapeze artists. The animals. The tight rope walker. And the ring master in charge of the organized chaos.
My brother and I actually organized some of the neighborhood kids into an ersatz circus. We had a parade with band instruments and our questionably-trained pets. There was magic. And acrobatics. And clowns of questionable provenance.
I never bought the circus. Instead, I joined the circus that is politics. Looking back, the road that led to the center ring would have been wiser. But not even the circus gives us the opportunity to retrace those steps.
So, Tuesday, I will relive an almost-forgotten memory of being the fellow in the slouch fedora wondering if another pay day can be met from gate receipts.