Monday, June 29, 2009

Postcard to Bumble and Bumble


Bumble and Bumble
415 W 13th St
New York, NY 10014
USA

Dear Kristin, Lauren, and Talented Artists,

Did you think that after your creative work shaping, styling and nourishing my hair that I would thank you for your support for helping me get to Ecuador by doing THIS to my hair????? It's almost commedia. At least you'd be proud that I didn't wash my hair for days (if not weeks) while abroad. Well, even if you aren't inspired by this lovely trend, rest assured I am no longer sporting this look on the streets of NY. Thank you for helping me repair the damages incurred by the Equatorial sun and shampoo . . . I can't promise it won't happen again!

xo Jennifer

Postcard to My Followers around the World


El Mundo
London, Canada, Japan, Australia, Europe--from the Equator to the Meridian
Earth, Milky Way, Infinity

Dear Lovers and Fellows in Wanderlust,

Let's take a moment to say--nothing, but feel what we feel . . .

"Silence is the perfectest herald of joy. I were but little happy if I could say as much". I have learned: be open, obey passion, hear instinct, love your body, respect the Earth, connect with each other, be grateful each second. The same power of standing above the laguna in Quilotoa exists in a production of Titus Andronicus on the Globe stage in London, in a sudden kiss, in the brown ale of a Richmond pub on the Thames, in the jubilee dancing to Sam Cooke's soul. Inspiration comes in many forms--passion? inspiration? magnetism? Know it when you feel it. Take it, use it, love like it. Love is all that matters. It comes in many forms. Know it when you feel it. Take it, use it, follow it.

Namaste,

One with Poor Hands and Rich Eyes, and a Scarlet Heart

Postcard to My Followers in NY


"Home"
Astoria, Brooklyn, Manhattan
New York, New York
USA

Dear Ye, with the hum of the city under your skin,

This place gets under your skin too. I don't want to come back. No offense, but I have been writing, teaching, and acting without a second thought for anything else. I've been doing everything I love --something you enable but somehow don't allow me to do. . . I'm talking to you, NY. But to my compadres within your walls, I send you a snapshot of the buildings unlike ours. This "graffiti" is how the country campaigns for the candidates at large. A particular village supports a particular man, who has a number and then slogans are painted on the sides of their houses nestled in sloping mountain-sides. Occasionally a fedora and red cloak disappear into the green folds of earth. Panoramas are peopled and unpeopled. Who is voting, I wonder? I am hypnotized and my mouth is agape, slowly filling with the mud of fertile Andean fields.

With thanks and inspiration,

Jennifer

Postcard to My Followers in Hawai'i


"Home"
Honolulu, Pearl City, Hawai'i
USA

Dear Everyone,

Look! Slippas! I feel so at home! I ride in truckbeds like highschool days, but this time, I stand up and hold onto the roof as we speed under the sun and stars. Here travelers from Poland feel the Aloha of the island way and of our group of 5 women . . . No sashimi but lots of tilapia. Plenny rice but covered in beans. Not lilikoi, but fruitas de la passion. Same same. Surfers have the same passion. People have the same rhythm. Sun has the same heat. The cockaroaches are bigga and Sea Lions not dogs bark on the beach. It's so blue. It would take me 20 days to sail to you. People here dream of the North Shore. No rubbish. So clean.

Mahalos,

Kenipala


Postcard to Exhale Spa


Exhale Spa

150 central park south
NY, NY 10019
USA

Dear Laina, Richie, Fred, Elizabeth and so many more...

I've never been more present in all my life than I am now. Moving to the city in America that tends to be everywhere ahead of this moment, has brought me to an oasis of presence: Exhale and its mission to unite the mind and body, DAT and it's mission for dramatic adventure. I remember the very reason I came to New York when I think of you both, and presently, I am grateful. Thank you for supporting my own mission and passion. The spa is a gift in so many ways that I will do my utmost to make sure I tell as many city vagabonds as I can about the strength and values I've experienced first hand working for you. I'm sending you this to share yet another moment with you.

With a giant exhale (truly),

Jennifer

Postcard to Cafe Grumpy


Cafe Grumpy
224 W 20th St
New York, NY 10011
USA

Dear Caroline and all who help make the perfect cup,

Hola! I write to you from a coffee farm in the cloud forest of Mindo, Ecuador where a woman was handing us samples from her own cupboard's cups. I had the chance today to help roast beans, but I was in rehearsal for the play we've written followed by a hike into the waterfalls, so I missed out. >:( No room to be grumpy! I am inspired and grateful--partly thanks to your help to get me here. I hear the coffee from this farm is not as good as the restauranteur's home grown beans, so I am setting out later to try and buy a pound (for $2.50--is that reasonable?) I also had the chance to grind raw and roasted cacao beans, which we mixed with raw cane sugar to make a great fondue. Pure and natural. And I look forward to enjoying the kind of coffee in the city that is not an excuse to cloud with cream and cram with sugar.

Buzz Buzz Buzz,

Jennifer

Postcard to Big Booty



Big Booty Bakery Co.
261 W 23rd St
New York, NY 10011
USA

Dear Jose,

Oh, how I wish you could have come along to translate! I found yucca bread --yours is still better by my account--baked and fried yucca, and many other delicacies. Without first experiencing it through you, I may not have had the same enjoyment and thrill of finding it there. I'm in Mindo, where dinners are $1.50 for a whole plate of "whole foods" goodness that would put the market's name to shame. Empanadas and fresh juice that has the froth of a cappucino.... mmmmmm. But I am coming back for the chocolate and Colombian coffee!

Ciao,

Jennifer

Postcard to Tea & Sympathy


Tea & Sympathy
108 Greenwich Ave
New York, NY 10011-7741

USA

Dear Nicky and Dewi and those bestowed with a beautiful accent,

I'm here on San Cristobal Island, which is a 20 day sail from Hawai'i, and 3 months from Dover. It's a bit too hot for tea here, but today we taught in a school of excited children from ages 4-14. There were 60 of them, and a challenge to lead, especially in broken Spanish. I could have used some hula hoops and minstrels at the end of the day. But instead, I was able to celebrate our success in the classroom with a fresh squeezed glass of watermelon juice and plantain chips with my feet wet and sea lions barking obnoxiously all around, as they command the sand. Thinking of you and bringing latitudes together. I'll physically do it when I cross the equator next week, en route to Mindo and remember my time stradling the Greenwich Meridian.

Ciao... Jennifer xo
.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Postcard to S Factor

Sheila Kelley's S Factor New York
235 W 23rd St
NY, NY 10011
USA

Dear Gerri, Heather, Yesim, Anna, beautiful teachers and ambassadors, Jennifer Sterling's Saturday noon, all other sisters and students, and of course, Sheila . . .

Thank you for helping me get to Ecuador. Thank you for inspiring me that night at Truth & Dare, which now seems like a far off moving meditation. I had no idea how beautiful and talented you all are. Soon Amanda will be in Ecuador, and somehow this entire adventure comes full (hip) circle. . . and around again; it is as if you've all come with me! So much serendipity and generosity is in our studio--I feel it here as I remember how this all came to be--this desire which became a seed which became a plan which became a reality--I can imagine this is something like how S Factor began. Teaching and acting and creating are as important to me and intertwined with my life as is moving and dancing through the language of SSS with you. I hope I can someday and somehow be part of helping you reap your other passions too.

Sending you a delicious fresh squeezed passion fruit kiss,

Jennifer x

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Fire Water

If you haven't guzzled Fire Water out of a recycled 1 L water bottle from a stranger at a street party, I won't describe it. But in Ecuador, there are plenty of other kinds of fire and water for me to share with you:



This is how I will initiate my children into adolescence.



Yes, he said boobies.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Sharing the Moon

A few nights ago in Mindo, the moon was full. That night, in the tiny jungle-town in the clouds with its streets crumbling, children playing on dust piles with wooden crosses, huge colorful birds painted on every city wall, the people danced in the streets under the moon. Kathleen, Christen, and I were dragged by our taxi drivers and zip lining guides from party to party, but for some reason I kept getting caught dancing with a sixteen year old who wouldn´t take no for an answer. This has become a joke that doesn´t get old. We danced until midnight and drank firewater out of a plastic bottle but were home like Cinderella at midnight. NOTE: ¨uno mas¨does not mean ¨one more¨. In Ecuador, it means ¨infinity.¨

The children here are inspiring. The next night, Christen and I decided to eat Ecuadorian food while the others had pizza. We turned down the market street to find a random bonfire ablaze in the middle of the road under the stars hidden by Mindo clouds. The artisans of the village were playing the flute, the drums, and some kind of plumbing pipe. The music seemed to incense the children to be daring and fearless; the game was to jump over the flames as many times as possible without getting burned. They were laughing and squealing with the kind of fear that is also exhiliration---the kind of exhiliration I felt when I hung upside down on a cable that connected two mountains while my arms dangled into the ravine below. We watched the children dance with the flames for 30 minutes until the fire turned to embers and smoke. Then we ate rice, beans, and yucca till our stomachs were as full as the moon.

The night of the street party, someone sent me an email, imagining how we were both sharing the moon from very different places, wondering if I were feeling as full as it was--full of inspiration, full of happiness, full of myself. Reading her words days later, my experience that night was suddenly enriched with the thought that we had shared that night, defied separation and sewed distastance together with that night-light in the sky.

In Mindo, our casts sewed together our experiences over the past three weeks ---into two short performances. We created something general out of something specific, stories full of details that would never have existed without support, without an impulse, without desire. A question was raised in one of the pieces: why share these specific experiences? Will anyone but us get it? I wondered briefly if my blogs might evoke a similar alienation.

The Yellow cast´s piece ended with words that made me cry, for it justified precisely why sharing this adventure is important. The final words captured precisely why I am here in Ecuador, why I am blogging and why the moon deepens our collective nights:

¨. . . in those quiet moments when we are alone together there will be more life between us, more shared understanding to tie us together and we will no longer be solitary beings walking around stuffed with their own memories, but rather people who are attached . . .¨ -Regina Gibson

When we share our experiences via the details, we share the moon. We can feel connected to each other on a night that might easily be a lonely or solitary one. When we choose to share our moments and adventures we braid pieces of our lives together. We can never share one life completely with another person let alone with everyone, but by sharing when we can the details, by telling our stories, we enrich our love for and understanding of each other; we create a moon of our own.

Juliet says the moon is inconstant. I think rather it is perfectly constant--a constantly changing constancy. The Blue cast´s piece (our piece) explored a woman´s desire for a life of her own, permanent impermanence, passion, and freedom. Emerson said that a ¨zig zag line of a hundred tacks¨ is straight at a distance. We will all change. We will all grow, and we will all die. Who knows what beyond that. I think we continue to evolve. I think we enter another phase of the moon.

I leave Ecuador tomorrow morning. I have exactly 15 hours left in Quito, and yes, I am choosing to blog. I feel inspired by this country and you. Yes, all of you who read this and follow along with me, those who have directly and indirectly made this incredible journey what it is and what it will be as I take so many habits, lessons, ideas back to New York, where after a month or so the moon will be full again. Who will share it with me then?


Friday, June 5, 2009

In Clouds


It's the first day in Mindo, and yet again don´t know if the clouds signify that this is but a dream.

IF YOU GO

highlights of your journey there will include:


  • Machetes
  • Using cab drivers´cell phones to reach half your team who got lost in another cab going to the wrong bus station. HINT: know more Spanish words than Terrestre, No Bueno, and Muy Delicioso.
  • Waiting for 75 minutes on the side of a highway for the last bus to Mindo. HINT: It comes after you give up and walk back to the bus station.
  • Unknowingly tracking dog shit into the van-taxi and blaming the driver for smelling like a diaper.
  • Not knowing why your driver wants to pick up ¨his friend¨to go with him on the ride. You´ll sweat as he winds back through the streets of Quito, wondering if he is leading you to a pickpocket den of his strongest amigos where they will beat us, take our passports, and sell our ovaries.
  • The sensation of sweet American shame--- when you discover ¨his friend¨is just his wife.
  • A hot argument with driver when he stops 3 miles outside your agreed destination. We call this one: ¨midnight in the jungle without a ride¨

highlights of being there also include:

  • Waking from your treehouse bed to the sound of birds whispering.
  • Hiking through waterfalls and sliding into a freezing pool upside down.
  • Gliding over deep valleys in a rusty cable car in the mist.
  • Riding in the rain standing in the back of a pickup truck and dodging branches and clouds.
  • Warming up with local grown coffee and chocolate made from cacao beans roasted and ground here. You´ll help make the syrup that you pour all over bananas and strawberries. All for $1.50.
  • Using rehearsals to explore the character of a mysterious Baaronness, her many lovers and their strange disappearance over 80 years ago.

Good Night, Day One.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Death and Desire


Baroness Wagner de Bosquet, brandishing a pistol and a whip, brought her three lovers to The Galapagos in 1929. One was found dead. One disappeared with her, neither of them to be seen again. The last left Floreana, returning to the Ecuadorian mainland.

Who was she? Why did she come here? Did they survive? What happened?

Quest.
Fantasy. Hotel. Home. Encantada.

Five women writing a play with Quilotoa fire in our blood step into thick, wet, sea-level air.















Dying
Disappearing
Adapting
Discovering
Recovering Transforming
Returning
Desiring



Bluer than Hawai'i. Smaller. Stranded? Where are we?


What is happening to my body? Why am I sad? Why am I happy? Where am I going? What will I be? When will I die? What is time? Will you touch my face? Can you see me? Where are you now? Will you remember me? Will you remember me when I die? Do you believe in love? What can't I live without? What did I eat? Am I strong enough? Am I good enough? Am I thin enough? What does chemotherapy feel like? Will I forget? Why can't people write myths? Why can't we fly? Where do currents go? Who's looking at the moon? Will I have children? Will I lose my job? Why don't I eat meat? Why do I love dancing? Where does joy come from? Can I trust myself? What color are my eyes? What is missing in my life? Do you think I'm a whore? Do I care? What kind of god do you believe in? Do you believe in Love? Do you like the feel of sand in your hair? How long can you go without a shower? What exactly is a tree tomato? How do you say avocado in Spanish? What am I thinking of? What do I feel? Does heartache say goodnight? Why be excited? Can you be in love with the world? With everyone in it? With kittens and coconut soft serve? Can I live without my mother? Will I dream tonight? Will I remember it? Will Shakespeare forgive me? When will I see England again? Will I die young? When will I realize I'm old? How will my body fall apart? Will I be eaten by a shark? Will I skydive? Will you join me? Can you always follow your heart? What will this play be like? What's the weather in New York? What's it like to have 3 lovers? "Can the child within my heart rise above?"

Tortoises, Surfers
Easy and juicy prey

Naked vegetarians
Stainless steel teeth
Bodies pillaged
Oil and meat


Men with mach
etes trim the hair of a cementerio. They follow us. We want to live.

"I'm changing, arranging; I'm changing everything . . . oh everything around me. The world is a bad place, a bad place, a terrible place to live; oh but I don't want to die"