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What
am
I
doing
here?
You
wake
up
at
sunrise,
and
it's
already
late.
You
realise
everybody
is
awake
long
before
you.
The
city
is
bustling
with
thousands
of
buses,
packed
and
puffing,
taxis
honking
and
people
already
transpiring,
commuting,
getting
busy
with
unbelievably
hard
jobs,
without
a
hat.
As
soon
as
you
step
out
of
your
hotel,
you
understand
why
the
city
is
so
alive
that
early.
The
heat
is
unbearable.
The
sooner
you
start
off,
the
better.
You
desperately
look
for
a
decent
coffee
(which
invariably
you
will
not
find)
before
another
full
day
that
typically
starts
with
a
ride
in
a
worn
out,
colourful
bus
that
looks
exactly
the
same
as
all
the
other
ones.
You
doze
in
it's
uncomfortable
seat
for
many
a
long
hours
while
the
driver
burns
traffic
lights
with
a
smile
and
accelerates
exactly
when
pedestrians
try
to
cross,
or
worse,
just
before
the
sharp
turn
over
the
canyon
,
negotiates
his
way
through
people
and
livestock
with
his
honk
and
gestures
meaningfully
to
any
driver
that
even
remotely
thinks
of
overtaking
his
diablo
of
a
bus,
all
this
under
the
never
ending
sound
of
loud
cumbia
until
you
get
off,
while
somebody
throws
to
you,
or
rather
to
your
head,
your
dusty
rucksack
stacked
on
the
top
of
the
bus,
amongst
other
dirty
luggage
and
animals.
No
one
else
gets
off.
Is
this
a
bad
sign?

Under
the
blinding
sun
but
still
half
awake,
you
watch
the
bus
slowly
disappear,
it's
cacophony
slowly
go
silent,
and
you
ask
yourself:
What
am
I
doing
here?
Is
this
the
place
you
read
about?
That
friends
told
you
had
oh!
so
much
fun
visiting
not
so
long
ago?
Reason
-or
survival
need-
prevails
over
your
anger
and
you
get
busy
looking
for
a
decent
room,
WITH
ventana,
a
window
in
gringo
language.
Which
you
find
in
the
end,
but
there
will
be
no
hot
water,
the
door
will
have
already
been
broken
in
and
the
windows
will
have
no
mosquito
net.
If
you
get
windows
überhaupt,
and
not
just
the
net.
You
explore
your
new
destination,
while
people
look
at
you
as
if
you
were
the
new
cowboy
in
town.
You
realise
how
wrong
your
guide
was
about
this
"charming,
off
the
beaten
track
little
village",
but
it's
too
late.
You
ARE
the
weakest
link
but
cannot
leave,
the
stranger
in
this
forgotten
pueblo-by-the-sea.
This
is
your
own
western
movie
and
it's
up
to
you
to
decide
how
things
will
happen,
you
tell
yourself.
Nice,
ain't
it?
Unless
it
turns
into
Omen
III,
of
course.
Being
the
offspring
of
a
western,
cartesian
and
over-insured
civilisation,
you
try
to
discover
your
whereabouts,
as
well
as
the
bus
timetables
(ha!),
the
boat
schedules
(¡wah-ha-ha!)
and
transport
to
the
nearest
airport.
But
¡caramba!
there
is
no
nearest
airport
and
the
last
boat
left
at
07.00.
Someone
shows
vaguely
to
you
the
bus-stop
but
you
have
a
hunch
they
are
not
sure
at
all.
You
ask
cuando
pasa
tomorrows'
first
diablo
and
"early
in
the
morning"
is
the
most
reasonable
answer
you
get.
What
am
I
doing
here?
You
spend
the
last
drops
of
energy
walking
to
the
nearest
cleanest
bar
available,
for
a
shed
and
the
first
Imperial
of
the
day.
With
a
slice
of
lemon
¡por
favor!
At
noon
you
are
already
tired.
Everyone
is
hiding
from
the
sun,
animals
included,
and
if
you
want
to
be
pragmatic,
there
were
more
than
just
one
Imperial.
Still,
you
gather
your
forces,
rent
a
bike
and
head
off
to
the
nearest
beach,
the
scenic
one
with
the
funny
name
all
the
guides
write
about.

But
being
fit
in
this
latitude
bears
another
meaning.
To
start
with,
you
never
start
your
adventure
at
noon.
Or
the
bike
ride
becomes
a
survival
race
for
the
gringo
you
are.
For
example,
you
soon
realise
you
somehow
drank
all
your
water
in
the
first
hundred
meters.
The
heat
is
unbearable.
Your
fancy
(mauve,
blue,
orange)
Gatorade
drinks
-latino
version-
are
long
before
consumed
and
your
small
"I
love
NY"
hat
does
not
protect
your
boiling
head
enough,
neither
does
your
Piz
Buin
4.
When
you
finally
get
there,
the
beach
is
splendid,
only
it's
not
a
PC
screensaver,
this
is
the
real
thing,
the
palm
trees
are
there
but
the
water
is
muddy
and
too
warm.
You
can't
remember
if
SHARK
fins
are
a
local
specialty
in
this
area
and
the
surf
can
break
your
bones
like
carrots
in
seconds,
you
have
no
idea
where
the
current
can
bring
you
or
what
the
heck
you
are
stepping
on.
Oh
yes,
you
forgot:
this
is
the
rain
season,
the
water
is
trouble.
That
I-must-go-there
photo
in
your
guide
must
have
been
taken
during
the
dry
season...

You
rest
under
a
palm
tree
and
enjoy
the
silence,
the
beauty.
You
feel
strange,
being
that
far
from
All,
your
family,
your
kids.
You
miss
them
and
at
the
same
time
you
feel
closer
to
them.
You
took
this
trip
for
exactly
this
reason,
to
feel
closer
to
them,
but
you
have
long
before
given
up
trying
to
make
this
sound
reasonable
to
them,
propably
because
it
does
not
sound
reasonable
to
you
either.
You
know
exactly
who
you
miss,
but
totally
ignore
who
misses
you.
Diagnose:
lonely
travellers'
disease.
But
with
time
panic
recedes...
The
sound
of
the
waves
lulls
you
away
to
a
déjà-vu
that
you
wish
would
never
end...Slowly
you
feel
you
were
born
here
in
a
previous
life...
...Later
on,
much
later
on
the
sun
gets
more
orange.
Less
blinding.
You
set
off
exploring
further
again,
this
time
on
foot,
and
soon
realise
you
were
wrong,
it
still
is
very
warm
and
you
can't
find
your
way
back,
you
never
found
that
"you
can't
miss
it"
spot
where
the
path
turns,
where
the
hut
lies
and
the
river
crosses,
the
Spanish
in
the
first
pages
of
your
guide
being
of
no
great
help
when
you
last
asked
for
the
camino.
But
in
the
meantime,
you
bump
into
one
more
of
those
fantastic
beaches.
Then
an
old
lady
with
her
grandchild
that
takes
you
in
charge
and
following
them
you
reach
yet
another
perfect
spot
for
your
pictures.
Totally
unknown
to
your
book,
or
di
Caprio
and
his
gang.

Actually,
you
were
not
lost,
you
were
just
waiting
for
the
bright
side
of
your
day
to
happen.
The
people
you
just
met
feed
you
and
bid
you
farewell,
and
off
you
go.
With
yet
another
unforgettable
memory
and
a
rather
heavy
stomach.
....
Get
back
on
foot?
Then
bike?
You
make
it
to
the
beach
exhausted.
You
definitely
are
not
fit
enough
to
bike
back
to
your
village.
Not
even
if
you
had
the
strongest
espresso
you
have
been
dreaming
of
since
the
airport
bar.
You
are
propably
dehydrated
and
your
head
feels
empty.
Then
you
spot
this
sign.

The
boat
taxi
man
is
not
there,
but
they
know
someone
who
knows
someone
and,
after
meeting
practically
the
whole
population
of
the
beach,
a
fisherman
agrees
to
ferry
you
back,
as
well
as
your
bike
and
your
empty
bottles.
God
-and
the
fabulous
people-
are
kind
to
you
once
again.

Back to your hotel.
A
shower
and
a
shave
and
off
you
are
again.
In
your
last
clean
T-shirt.
As
was
the
case
in
the
morning,
there
is
nothing
to
do
in
the
village
at
sunset
time.
Just
some
jovenes
playing
billiard
in
a
dark
saloon.
So
you
just
wander
around
and
make
photos,
lots
of
them.
It's
now
dusk
and
the
shades
in
the
corners
start
making
you
feel
uncomfortable.
But
you
are
lost,
again,
and
you
must
find
the
courage
to
ask
those
shades
the
way
back
to
your
hotel,
without
showing
them
you
are
afraid,
or
your
watch
for
that
matter.
Evening
comes
and
you
find
yourself
at
the
beach
bar,
de
nuevo.
The
barman
seems
to
recognise
you
this
time.
He
gives
you
one
of
those
enigmatic,
conspiratory
smiles
that
worry
you
a
bit.
It
seems
natural
that
you
sit
at
the
bar,to
be
closer
to
the
other
travellers,
propably
the
only
guys
you
have
something
in
common
with
in
this
remote
place,
but
what
exactly
is
this
something?
And
mainly,
do
you
REALLY
look
as
defeated
as
they
do?
If
not,
why
this
sympathetic
smile?
You
look
at
the
people
around
you.
Some
are
watching
the
TV
playing
non-stop
brazilian
soap,
beauties
and
handsomes
in
neat
clothes
that
seem
even
more
unreal
than
usual.
Others,
most
of
them
are
silent.
Some
appear
to
have
simply
forgotten
to
leave,
and
in
your
guts
you
feel
this
urangst,
you
fear
this
could
happen
to
you
as
well:
Get
stuck
here
forever.
Like
it
propably
happened
to
this
old
American
with
the
emptiest
gaze
you
can
remember,
sipping
drinks
since
morning,
with
a
sad
face
and
a
"Vietnam
veteran"
hat.
What
am
I
doing
here?
After
the
second
Imperial,
you
spot
this
forgotten
deckchair
on
the
sand
beach
under
the
palm
tree.
And
you
decide,
this
is
definitely
The
perfect
place
to
end
your
day.
You
ask
for
more
beer
that
you
down
like
water,
until
you
try
to
get
up
and
visit
what
looks
like
a
toilet.
But
water
it
was
not.
Is
the
sand
moving
under
your
feet,
or
have
you
been
watching
the
waves
a
bit
too
long?

You
order
more
fried
platanos
and
beer
and
gradually
everything
starts
to
spin,
becomes
fuzzy
AND
meaningful.
The
wind
through
the
palm
leaves.
The
moon
that
at
times
comes
through
the
clouds.
The
lightning
on
the
other
peninsula,
tomorrows'
destination.
The
soft
breeze
that
lets
you
at
last
be
without
sweating.
And
the
young
beautiful
waitress
picking
your
empty
bottles.
At
precisely
this
moment
you
hear
this
song coming
from
the
bar
and
it
suddenly
all
sticks
together,
makes
sense.You
came
here
for
this
moment:
The
palm
leaves,
the
clouds,
the
moon,
the
breeze
and
the
song...
Y las estrellas son resplandescientes...
At
last
,
you
know
what
you
are
doing
here!

But
it's late and you
must
get
up
early
next
morning
and
catch
this
bus
to
next
town.
Or
rather,
you
should
get
up
early
manana.
Because,
come
to
think
of
it,
you
have
not
the
faintest
idea
when
or
where
the
bus
leaves.
And
anyhow,
you
wake
up
earlier
every
day.
Must
be
this
heat...
So,
can
this
wait
another
cerveza?
¡Claro
que
sí!

October
2007,
about
Golfito
Muchísimas gracias a todos los Ticos que hicieron de mi viaje en Costa Rica una experiencia ... rica y única. Especialmente: Johnny, Alex, Jaime, mis profesores Esteban y Jesús, el personal del Turu Bari que me transformaron en Superman, Lucy y su familia por sus comidas riquísimas (suerte con la administración tica...) y tantos más. ¡Pura vida y hasta la vista amigos !
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