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Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Stars in the Sahara
You have to travel through the Sahara Desert to get an idea of the size of the world.
You have to sit on the lumpy seat of a Jeep for hours as it bounces across a dirt road and to be let out at twlight in the middle of nothingness, to gain some appreciation of the vastness of it all.
Then you have to lie back, let the sand take your weight and look up into the clear purple heavens. And try to count the stars, layered like glistening icing on a vast multi tiered wedding cake in the sky.
We may never know how many there are but astronomers estimate there are 100 thousand million in the Milky Way alone and countless galaxies beyond that. They glow with a light as icy cold as the desert at night but they are really on fire. And some are so far away that we are seeing light from a star that's now extinct.
It makes me dizzy to think of all this vastness and I always wonder if there's anything beyond these trillions of miles of galaxies. Are they all swept up into a tiny music box on the coffee table of a grande dame called Eve, who inhabits another cosmos of a trillion stars?
I haven't been far out into the desert, but I've been far enough to feel the pull of the planet and those empty spaces filled with dirt and rock and silence. And this was Tunisia, a small nation on the very edge of this vast ocean of sand.
In the middle distance, in the dustiness by a concrete house, a child stood impassive by the roadway. I wondered if she would grow up knowing there was anything different; if she would ever see a city or an airplane.
The desert is a world of simple outlines and hot and cold. It's the backdrop to the biblical Nativity story of three wise men who follow a star across the fastness of Arabia to the stable of the baby Jesus.
It's a simple but touching story re-lived in thousands of school plays. We've all been there when Mary has dropped the baby Jesus doll on its head and three wise social workers have come rushing in.
But Christmas is a curiously seductive time for children and even as an adult it doesn't completely lose its magic. I still remember the school hall and the makeshift decorations hanging from the roof comprising of hula hoops wraped in tinsel.
I thought they were the most beautiful thing I had ever seen.
Then one day my parents took me to a department store grotto to see Santa. In those days it wasn't just a case of forming a line. You boarded a shining train carriage to be taken to this wonderous inner sanctum where elves made toys in a cave seamed with gold.
When I was so young I thought the magic of Christmas would never end. It seemed a million light years before the disappointments and rejections of life set in, the angst of teenage years, the endless responsibilities of adulthood.
But I read something today that convinced me never to never look back in anger. It convinced me that my moto in life should be Carpe diem, quam minime credula postero – "Seize the Day, trusting as little as possible in the future." It convinved me to run tomorrow through the ice in the park and to relish the bite of the wind because there may be no tomorrow after that.
The correspondence was the latest update from my father-in-law suffering with lung cancer. His will to fight was still in him, but it had waned a little; and there was a tone of resignation, a recongition that this will likely be his last Christmas on earth.
And all the shiny things we take for granted and the piped music we deride and the over priced grottos and the wonderfully fake joviality will never be his again to see.
Likewise the pure of joy of children that's unblemished by the realization of what's to come.
So I can't trust the future but I hope one day to return to the greatest of deserts and to feel the cool sand wrap itself around me and look up at the beautiful high canopy of stars and to wonder if there's one with his name on it.
Because there are enough to go round.
This is such a beautifully written, profound post, David. You're really expressing the true spirit of the Christmas and the season. Thank you. xo
ReplyDeleteDamn you made me cry!
ReplyDeleteOne thing I hate about the city is you can't see the stars, except maybe for Venus.
ReplyDeleteThankyou David. Exquisitely written, and all so true, There's something so pure about the desert, and I crave visits there when life gets overwhelming. To me, it's healing, vast and unforgiving and the view of the stars is sublime.
ReplyDeleteI hope you are able to spend time with your father in law at this time.
Thanx Robyn, that's my profound quota met for Christmas, though. Eeek Sorry Lidia. This is true Joe, light pollution etc. Thanks for the follo. Thanks Sue, well you have a few deserts in Australia. Sadly he's a long way away in Vancouver. Have a great Christmas folks.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your visit and comment on my blog, David.
ReplyDeleteIt's true that however tacky commercial interests try to make Christmas, there is something sweet and profound about it that cannot be beaten out of it. I suppose it's cultural, but it just feels special as though sprinkled with a touch of Christmas tree fairy dust.
The way things are going for my dad right now-this really hits home. I'm on an emotional rollercoaster this week, and this piece captures some of the feelings perfectly. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteI've never been to the Sahara or any desert for that matter, but now I feel like I have after reading that. Very well written, David. I love the way this ended too. "beautiful high canopy of stars"---yes, indeed.
ReplyDeleteMerry Christmas to you! :)
Thanx for the follo Sarah - yep I agree. Thanks Tim, and fingers crossed for your dad. You are too kind, Daisy - have a great Christmas
ReplyDeleteYou've told wonderful story. It's a nice feeling to think of the most beautiful thing that exists somewhere.
ReplyDeleteI loved reading this. Wonderful :0)
ReplyDeleteThank so much, David, for this great article!
ReplyDeleteIt took me back to my childhood and brought a lump to my throat. Aah the magic of Xmas!
Here's to you!
Betty
Thanx Olga, it's sometimes hard to look beyond the everyday stuff. You are too kind Marnie. Thanks Betty - have a great Xmas
ReplyDeleteOh my.
ReplyDeleteI remember when I was a child how I could make my head shake and click when I imagined how the stars simply went forever and no matter how far deeply I could see it went beyond that.
Thank you for this written present!