Here in Port Louis, Mauritius, I sit in a hotel room waiting for tropical cyclone Eleanor. The downstairs bar is emptied of its glasses, bottles and furniture, tiny birds fly unchecked in the indoor breakfast room, grateful to be indoors where the crumbs are plentiful; guests gather at the buffet, filling their plates, unsure of when the next meal will be served. Storm tracking apps are traded like stocks with much chatter on Eleanor’s projectory and strength; reception lies quiet, its glass front doors locked. Hotel staff who have not gone home bustle around, calmly helping guests with their queries and needs.
Bellies full, we stagger back to the room where the food coma hits and I pass out, missing the blustery gusts, the driving rain and the Palm trees bent double in the gales. I wake up to silence. No bird song but no perceptible damage either. The anti-climax hangs in the air between us, like a missed opportunity for a story yet to be told. In gratitude, Craig completes his expenses and cleans up his emails while I sit with my book, trying to concentrate and quieten the busy mind.
For me the last 24 hours are the analogy for the last six months – a promise of something which turns out not quite as expected.
For South Africa is a beautifully cruel country offering contrasting experiences and incredible highs and lows. Learning to trade in trust has been hard, I’m having to go inward to come out again. While we remain physically safe, I have lost psychological safety having trusted people who have stolen thousands of pounds worth of irreplaceable family heirlooms and jewellery from our home. When coupled by a serious physical assault by a medical professional, who was (wrongly) trusted on the basis he was a British High Commission approved Doctor, I find myself unmoored, bobbing along in a questioning sea; What is my skill set? What is my cultural awareness? How do I show up?
By contrast, placed in wide-open spaces of endless sky and a far horizon glinting in the sunlight, with elephant breath through the window and a reverberating lion roar in the ear drum, the country of South Africa delivers a truth perspective; I am but a mere speck of breath in the universe.
And so, in this ying and yang of experience and expectation, disappointment and joy, fear and excitement, I sit in stasis. I have to work first on self before enjoying the fruits of future work.
While this cannot be rushed, I also recognise my fortune; a now comfortable home and a life-partner gainfully employed, I have the luxury of taking the time needed to heal and explore. My South African counsellor, used to dealing with victims of violent assault, murder and rape does not indulge willy-nilly, self-reflective wallowing. Let’s call the spade a shovel and we will dig in to the past to understand the present. In reality this means I am swallowing medicine I have tried to avoid for 30 years.
You can’t lie to liars without becoming a liar. We can’t cheat a cheater without becoming a cheater. Fighting fire with fire doesn’t protect trust it merely leaves you with the ashes of your integrity. Michael Josephson
I don’t know where this will lead. For the first-time, in a long time, there is no clear outcome. To learn to trust again, I must first trust in time and instinct.
Sit in limbo.
The storm may hit;
It may also swerve past.