When I look d own at the colourful bracelets
clas ped
around my wris t,
I’m remind ed
of the ad ventures , s miling
faces and
twinkling eyes that I’ve encountered along the way.
The d yed
pieces of yarn have morphed from a brilliant red
to a d ull crims on
and have become tattered from life.
I remember the woman monk in
white robes in Ind ones ia tying
a prayer bracelet around my wris t while chanting and
tying prayer knots and the Ind ian
holy man with his wild beard
bles s ing
us and
my friend eating holy cand y from a s tranger
only hours after getting off the
plane. Or the child ren
from Peru
that s poke in Spanis h to us
on a bus wind ing
d own the mountain while I pretend ed to und ers tand the magnificent horror s tories they were telling with s uch
gus to. On the Amantani is land s in Peru
we s tayed
with a family that lavis hed us with
more bracelets in trad e for whis key
(and I was
bartering with the wife!) and the
child ren in the mountains that convinced
us that we need ed more, from them.
In Cambod ia ,
the temples s tared back with huge carved
faces and
in Malays ia we had n’t even brus hed the s and off our feet before we were s warmed with child ren
s elling their wares .
It is
s uch a s trange
occurrence that all over the world
it is the bond age
on our wris ts
that tells the s tory of where we’ve been. It is
a remind er of how s imilar we all are, but how d ifferent
the world ’s
land s cape
can be.
Part of travelling is that you remember the s icknes s es , the people, the food
and the reaction in your s oul that bind s you to the experience and
keeps you wanting more….
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