Saturday 29 June 2013

Quito

Two days of travel including a night in Toronto, finds me arriving very late in Quito. An hour bus ride takes us to a quaint hotel and we finally find a bed at 1am to which I am very glad to crawl into.

We begin our tour of old Quito with a delightful indigenous woman who is a traditional healer and shaman. She is full of energy and stories and is anxious to help us see this city and country through her eyes. She introduces us to traditional healing tea, passes arounds samples of dried herbs and plants and talks about the connections between these practices and traditional spirituality. We then go to an amazing museum of indigenous spirituality when artifacts dating back to 1300 bce show spirals, labyrinths, burial practices and a belief in the spiral nature of life and rebirth. These are the kinds of things Joseph Campbell highlight in his work of finding the tremendous interconnections between ancient religious traditions and our modern myths. Carl Jung had also made similar observations in his alchemy works stating that the Mandela ( or spiral) was an ancient symbol that transcended time, culture and consciousness. This spiritual museum certainly provided further evidence of this conclusion .

The rest of the morning is spent walking uphill to a church and along the streets. One can certainly feel the effects of being in a high altitude while doing such. We board our bus which takes us to a hilltop where we can see an almost panoramic view of the hills and valleys below where Quito is nestled in. The roads through the city are very hilly, steeper than San Francisco but with similar cobblestone.

After lunch up there we head to the equator on an hour long bus ride ( on which i start to feel quite nauseous) and on our tour we learn more about indigenous peoples and tribes in that area, their burial traditions. Like Egypt I am again struck at how central death and life after death questions so dominate religious traditions around the world.

We get to experiment with a variety of things while standing on the equator, from telling time, to shadow positioning, experiments with water that flows clockwise south of the equator but when you move the basin to north of the equator it spirals the opposite direction. A variety of other experiments and insights are fun for this group of teens I'm traveling with. Unfortunately a combination of the altitude and bus ride sends me to bed for the night while they head out to supper .

Rest will hopefully make the eight hour bus ride to the Amazon tomorrow bearable.









Monday 24 June 2013

Off to Ecuador

Two months have now gone by ( rather quickly I might add) and I'm now ready to embark on my next leg of Sabbatical Travel.  This time I will be traveling with a group of high school students (including my eldest daughter Hannah) with the Craig Keilburger's  ME to WE foundation to Ecuador. Check out their website for background information ( www.metowe.com )

This experience mixes volunteer work with exposure to the issues the people in Ecuador live everyday.  A look at the economic, social and interconnectedness with our part of the world is all part of the experience.  In addition, there will be a chance to see some incredible and diverse aspects of Nature.

My reasons for going on this trip are threefold:
1)  Its an opportunity to have a very unique experience with my daughter who will be going into Gr12 in the fall and making some important life decisions.
2) I'm interested in how this highly regarded organization uses global educational exposure tours to have an impact on the lives of youth and young adults.  How does it compare to "mission trips"?
3) I'm excited to learn about the culture and the people of Ecuador and learn about the interconnectedness of our lives.

For those of you who were following and reading my journey to the middle east in April,  welcome back.  For those of you who are joining for the first time, past reflections about that trip are still available online if you wish to see them as well .

Thank you for taking this Journey with me.  Internet access for this trip will be very intermittent so I will attempt to post everyday but it may days inbetween before I can access the internet.

Hasta Luego