Mexico, in a few words, is similar to a massive slap in the face. It leaves you initially stunned but with your senses heightened you begin to experience more clearly the magic of this country.
| Will you take a scorpion with your Mescal, sir? |
Mid-April I arrived in Mexico City, DF (Distrito Federal) as it's known to it's locals. Slap in the face number one. 30 million people living in one urban centre is a megalopolis rather than a city. Upon flying in the city extends further than the eye can see. Yet the life of the city mimics that of many others across the globe, businesses function, individuals go about pursuing their own interests. Less interested in the similarities inherent in most large cities, I determined to move further South, initially to the colonial capital of Oaxaca. As I have continued to find through my travels, that real adventure start when you remove yourself from the chaos.
However Mexico, never one to completely conform, to this day lacks strict adherence to the Catholic faith, Despite the 300 year foreign rule and atrocities committed against indigenous populations in the name of the church, native pre-hispanic culture has evidently survived. As my journey extended further South into the hills, it became markedly apparent how central indigenous spiritualism remains within contemporary society. The healing practice Temezcal, pursues a holistic approach to healing. Resembling a north-american sweatlodge, over an hour is spent inhaling herbally infused vapours known to cleanse the body. The technique makes recourse to the four elements fire, earth, wind and water, releasing highly energized minerals trapped in the rock for several hundred years. The experience left me feeling completely centred for a considerable period of time without the series of distractions that typify the daily wanderings of the mind.
| Spongebob's going to get it real good |
However, regional Mexico may well have been able to reconcile the diverse nature of their heritage.
The trip so far has found me not only accepting invitations to impromptu birthday parties amongst rural Oaxacans, complete with real Spongebob piañta, as well as being heartedly welcomed amongst locals and long-term foreigners alike in the Mescalería's of San Cristobal. The privilege of experiencing several aspects of regional life here has opened my mind to the breadth of Mexican contemporary culture.
Currently arrived in Guatemala where the pace of live has abruptly stepped a notch down
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