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Saturday, October 07, 2017

Consultation with Contractor

Saturday October 7

Last night I had a sore throat.  I could feel a cold coming on.  In the evening I went out to a pharmacy to get throat lozenges.  My regular cough drops had run out.  Normally I cannot get through the night without a cough drop.  With this raspy throat coming on, I risk being up all night without throat relief.  I looked for Cepecil (which is medicated and brings immediate numbness to the throat) but that was not available.  I did get something a little more medicinal than Halls, with benzocaine. 

I found a place that does only salads, to my great relief.  It is a short walk, two minutes really, from my motel room.  For 95 pesos I get a heaping bowl of lettuce, three vegetables and two scoops of ‘protein’.  The latter could be egg, or cheese, or chicken your choice of five flavors.

I choose cubed beats, mushrooms, and carrots or broccoli.  I am trying different chicken flavors, but the pepper lemon one is a definite no-go, since it brings a strong taste of white pepper.  They serve it with saltines, and shake a generous portion of parmesan on top. 

I feel no need for supper after that lunch.  I did eat a slice of bread, just because; it will spoil if I don’t do more than a PBJ once a day.  And of course, the ever present banana.

Through the night I doctored myself with water, a vitamin C 1000 every four hours, and ibuprofen.  I am needing the ibuprofen through the day, which is rare for me.

 I don’t know how much pain is the cold and how much is the eye still hurting.
A fleet of Harley Davidsons and entourage arrived at the Motel today, at noon.  My next door neighbors, a hefty couple in black leather, are from Torreon.

I went out to Mr. Gonzalez’s office today.  Before leaving the motel I studied the route on Google maps, including looking at the photos of intersections.  I selected the option to view it offline, also.  I am using the Samsung for this, which has no phone service, only Wi-Fi. 

I got lost a few times, but not too badly.  I had memorized sign posts along the way. Until I came to the last leg of the journey; I pulled into a supermarket and called him.  He came and got me immediately, I had overshot the office by a few blocks.  The offline map failed me.

We discussed the fine points of the house project.  He will design the whole kitchen, but we will proceed with just a small part of it now.  Maybe next year I will have saved enough to finish it.
I asked him to hire Juan as one of the workers.  We tossed around some ideas for housing, so the guys could stay onsite.  I was chagrined at the thought of staying at a motel for another month; I suggested that once the tile and plaster was done, even without water and electricity I could stay in the house.  Then he suggested that his guys could stay in the house.  I could easily stay at Mike’s or Doug’s.
Doug is coming this weekend, and JoanMarie will be coming mid November.  But I think there is enough space for all of us. 

Moving money is a problem.  It is urgent that on Monday I seek out the ministry of Immigration and start enquiries into obtaining a residence permit.  In the meanwhile, I will have to consult with my bank and let them guide me as to how to receive cash.

For the immediate, I calculated that with the dollars I brought with me I could at least give Mr. Gonzales a down payment, and he could begin.  We concluded with arrangements, next weekend his men will start bringing out supplies so that all is ready for them to begin Monday morning.  He said it should take a month.  Groan.

On the drive home I had a much easier time of it.  Google maps must have laid out the shortest route, not necessarily the most direct.  I was on Avenida L. Cardenas headed towards 20 de Noviembre, where the motel is, when I smelled a familiar smell while stopped at the traffic light.  I put my nose to the air, looking in all directions to see where that burning smell was coming from.  Then I heard guys laughing in the red pickup to the left of me.  The guys noticed my looking.  Smiling, they said, ‘you want some?’  I nodded my head vigorously.  They said, ‘follow us’. 

I pulled behind them and drove for a few blocks, past 20 de Noviembre.  Finally they made a left turn into a narrow one-way street and pulled over.  I parked behind them, and took a 100 pesos note out of my pocket.  They were nice, clean cut looking guys.  My pesos bought me one very fat cigarette.  As we turned to go, one guy turned back towards me and offered me his business card.  The card advertises home remodeling and painting services.

I paid for three more nights; Sunday night will be my last.  I have arranged to meet Jhampa out at the compound Monday.  If I haven’t heard from Eddie before then regarding renting a house in Pozole, I will try to get a good price from the hotels or motels directly in Canatlan.  Since the eye doctors can’t do anything more for me, no need to stay in the city.



Thursday, October 05, 2017

The floral arrangement







In November, 2016, I left China and came to Mexico.  My introduction to my new life included a breather, a time out to regroup.  I immediately began a week-long retreat with my Canadian friend Jhampa Shaneman, and his students.  We were in the beautiful city of Morelia, at a countryside resort hotel.  There I met Rudy.

At the end of the retreat I planned to visit my friend Catherine, at Lake Chapala in Jalisco.  Jhamps was also going to Jalisco, and so we go by bus.  Rudy, however, over breakfast volunteered to drive us.  Extraordinary!  I came to learn that he is a semi-retired medical doctor, who admired Jhampa and just wanted some stimulating conversation.  He agreed that when I returned to Durango, he would meet me at the airport.  He offered his home for a brief visit.

Rudy and his wife turned out to be two classy people.   Rudy still had his private practice, though he had given up his University gig.  His wife was very active in a group of ladies who were in a guild and focused on helping underprivileged women.

I grew very fond of them.  Unfortunately, I was not a very good guest.  Still, they suffered me when I returned in June for eye surgery; they put me up for pre and post-surgery days.  I was living at the time out in the countryside, in the Luz de Compasion compound in Pozole.

At the time I was painfully aware that I had a duty as a guest to bring hostess gifts.  This is a skill I am woefully bad at.  There seemed no grace to my state as a guest.  I could not regulate my schedule to theirs.  I would eat at noon, as is my custom, only to find that at 2 pm the servant would prepare a meal for them.  It took me a while to realize this was not random.  I longed to think of what I could do to show them my appreciation.

For months I have been thinking that when I returned to Durango, flush with the sale of the Florida house, I would buy a huge flower arrangement for Rudy and his wife.  I finally got to do that Monday, late in the day.  I got a call from the florist, saying it could not be delivered.  No one was home. 

I picked up the bouquet and drove to the house.  I saw that both cars were in the garage, and a white car was parked at the curb by their door.  I surmised they had taken a plane trip.

Salvo, their large schnauzer, was roused after I rang the bell.  I spoke with him some through the barriers, until he went up to the roof so we could talk.  I stood in the street and we had a happy reunion, but mostly he wanted me to take him with me.  I couldn’t believe they would leave him alone, but what else could they do.  No doubt someone came to add to his kibble bowl.  There was enough rain falling each day to fill his water bowl naturally.  He was used to peeing and pooping on the roof; that was not different.  But I wondered how often he got to go outside.  His usual routine would be to go out early every morning and check out the neighborhood, going far down to the corner on a regular route of his own, to meet and greet, to sniff and suss.  He was crying in distress, and I felt so helpless.

I put the bouquet in my car and brought it to my tiny room at the motel.  When I occupied the room initially it held the overpowering smell of camphor.  I removed the camphor from the toilet bowl and put it outside.  The dominating smell then was from the bouquet.  Knowing I wouldn’t keep the bouquet there, I also bought an air freshener for use in subsequent days.

On Monday I drove by Dr. Carrillo’s office, before seeking out the florist.  Dr. Carillo was just pulling up as I was leaving, I having made an appointment for the following day.  He came to my car, saying oh what a miracle, Rudy said he hadn’t heard from you.  Gee, it would have been nice if at that moment he had gossiped just a tad and mentioned that oh, by the way have you heard they are on a trip to the Vatican?

I only learned that tidbit on Tuesday, when I arrived for the appointment.  By then I had spent a large chunk of change on a gorgeous and fragrant bouquet.  I told him that I would bring it to his office, so that he and his patients could enjoy it.  He said oh no, no, no need, don’t do that.  I said well then, would you prefer I threw the arrangement in the garbage?  My tiny room is too small, it overwhelms the room.

Gosh, I can’t imagine myself ever spending that kind of money just to have a nice bouquet in my recluse’s home.

This eye clinic is on a very short one-way street on a hill, with extremely limited parking.  Earlier that same day, planning for a 12 o’clock appointment, I left my house at 11:15 to make sure I found it okay.  I got lost again on the way, got into traffic, and when I thought I was minutes away I hopped into a shop to get a gordito to go.  But still I arrived just minutes before 12 noon.  There was no parking space.  He keeps one space in front of the clinic marked clearly for his clinic only; it was occupied, although the office was empty of patients.  I parked behind that car, in a driveway clearly marked for no parking.  The receptionist came out and said I had to move.

Fifteen minutes later I returned to the office, out of breath.  The receptionist tried to usher me into the office, but there was an elderly lady sitting there waiting for her 12:15.  I insisted that she go, not wanting to appear like the pushy American. 

Eventually I saw Dr. Carrillo.  He looked into the eye and pronounced it sound.  Apparently, he did not see the folds that the other ophthalmologists had seen.  He recommended ending the medication.
I felt a little puzzled by this, but perhaps I have been focusing too much on the eye and imagining the pains that I’ve been feeling.  So we are off the drops.  The last time I tried that, just about three weeks ago now, my eye turned deep red and light hurt like a knife through the brain. [two days later:  sans medicine, the eye is once again red and painful.  It is evening now; in the morning I expect pain upon seeing the sun]

I caught him up a bit on my travels, anchored by visits to ophthalmologists.  Then I finally enquired about Dr. Rudy and his wife.  That is when I learned they were on a trip to Europe.  Dr. Carrillo could not say how long they would be away.  So I told him he must enjoy the flowers in their stead.
As I left the doctor’s office I said to the receptionist, please doni’t leave until I get back.  I knew she had a penitent for keeping her hours to the absolute minimum. I don’t know what her deal is, no doubt it works for the doctor, but it has caught me up short a few times.  So I purposely said, please don’t leave!  I’ll be back right away.

Well, of course I got totally lost on the way home. I found myself on a new very wide connector road, it didn’t match the map, and I was utterly lost.  I pulled over to the side of the road, tears of frustration streaming down my face, the large map I had just bought stretched across the wheel.  I heard a tap tap on my window.  A very nice man, who reminded me a bit of a young Uncle Tony (Dad’s brother), smiled and said hello.  He had obviously noticed my Florida plates, and wanted to be of assistance.  It turns out that I was on a new road, the 3-year old map was inaccurate.  He handled my teary story with class, and helped me back on my way.

I finally found the motel, grabbed the flowers and headed back to the doctor’s office. 
By this time I knew by heart the direct route to the doctor’s office; I was unthwarted by the jumble of one-way streets. 

The car that had been parked outside the clinic, in the parking spot clearly marked reserved for the clinic, was still parked there.  Without hesitation I parked in front of a garage.  At the top of the hill I saw what looked like a homeless guy waving his arms and screaming at me, No! No! No!  I ignored the madman.  I was still in my car getting ready to open the door.  He banged on my window!  I, still in my Zoloft-deprived state, fierce face swollen from the recent tears of frustration, banged back at him.

I carefully lifted the flower arrangement out of the back seat, noting signs of wilting, a rose petal fluttering down.  I tried the door of the office.  It was locked!  I set the flowers right down at the entrance, and left it.  If it stayed there all night, if the crazy man came back and helped himself, it was no concern of mine.  I was done with this good deed.

As I pulled away from the curb, it occurred to me that perhaps this homeless-looking guy was actually employed by the homeowners on that hill to protect their garage entrances from cars like mine.

Once back home, I tried the office number.  It was hooked up for fax reception.  I could not leave a message.

I called again the next day, asking if they enjoyed the flowers.  The receptionist smiled an affirmative.  They were received, I did not ask at what hour.






Rainy Season in Pozole

Rainy season Pozole (this essay is out of sequence.  Soon I will finish editing and post the backstory of my summer in Pozole, where I introduce some of the mentioned characters)

October 4, my early departed grandmother’s birthday, finds me making serious enquiries about finishing my house in Luz de Compassion.

I spoke with a contractor from Edil Construction, whose number I found in the yellow pages.  Mr. Gonzalez advertised that he spoke English, so I called him.  We arranged to meet tomorrow and drive out to the house.

I then let my fingers do the walking to a solar energy engineer.  I went to his tiny office in a humble, partially paved neighborhood on the outskirts.  He is quite knowledgeable about Pozole and its state of electricity.  He will meet me there tomorrow, as well.

Using his whiteboard and a fading yellow marker, he worked out the configuration that I was trying to describe to him.  Before I left China I had a serious sit-down over dinner with Pierre, where he taught me what I needed to know.  I wrote it down, but probably on my China phone.  Have no clue where that phone is now.

Happily, he told me that there was a project underway, the land had actually been bought (or committed, however a utility company deals with land ownership) to build a large solar array in Canatlan to supply electricity to Pozole.  We at LdeC would have to pitch in to pay for the cables that are needed to extend the power to us, but it would still be simpler than trying to build my own array.

I thought time had come when I needed to visit the house myself.  I was eager to see Dog, too.  In early afternoon I set out.  I arrived, to find the roads impassible with mud.  The creek that I need to drive through is swollen, too, and impassable.  What used to be a six-foot hop along stones to ford the stream was now a raging river twenty feet across.  As I entered the village I got stuck right away.  Fortunately, it was within a short walking distance to Beto’s shop.  Two of the young men, neither being Shubert, came and got me straight.  They warned me to stay up on the old railroad road, park there and walk in. 

The walk in was probably about a quarter mile.  That is the path that runs from the main paved Canatlan highway down the hill and between two fields, and comes out just yards from the entrance to LdeC; a poorly maintained right of way access.

It was not just muddy.  The path is unevenly strewn with rocks.  There are deep stands of water, green with algae, maybe 6 inches deep in spots.  The rest of the path, where it rose above the puddles, was slippery mud.  I was wearing sandals.  I remember a time in Bamei, in East Tibet, when I was driving along a dirt path turned to mud.  I was going slowly, but the car came off one submerged rock and landed on another sharp rock at just the right angle and force to blow the tire.  Even Gonzalez, the next day, with his big Nisan Pickup truck, would cry uncle midway, park the truck and go the remainder on foot.

I hadn’t gotten far down that path when I spoke out Dog’s name.  She gave a little woof, as she played with her black son in the mud 100 feet further down the muddy road.  I called again, and she saw me.  The tail started wagging.  Soon she was in a full run.



We walked together to the camp.  I looked for the dried food I had left, but no doubt has all been consumed.  She felt like a stuffed sausage herself, no ribs showing, so I know she has been eating well. Her topside was white and clean, and I could find no fleas.  Her son is with her, returned from the family who had adopted him some months earlier.  He is wearing the backup flea collar I had left.

In the summer I had glimpsed a small cat and a kitten in the compound, but never got close to them. I now learned that this was mother and daughter.  The mother seems the size of a 6-month kitten herself.  The one kitten had grown enough to where the mama wasn’t protective of her.  In fact, this petite mother relished petting.  The kitten was skittish, unapproachable.  Compared to Dog, whose belly and legs were black with mud, the cat fur was pristine white, around the tiger striping of the mom, more white and no striping for the kitten.

The weeds and corn were high, uncut.  Remember that Juan was just planting when I left, mid July.  Now the corn looked nearly ripe.  There are full grown round winter squashes, and white beans (chicharon) swell the green pods hanging on the bush bean plants.  Juan had shown me a handful of the seeds he was planting, back then.  I thought it odd to mix corn, beans, squash and what he called ‘rice’.  The long grass now has seed fronds on top, so I will have to ask him if these are indeed a grain, or just weeds. The garden is not as nice as the remnants of the garden I saw last November.  That garden seemed to be more orderly, planted in rows of corn, and a separate patch for squash.  This garden plot is overgrown with weeds, and a jumble of squash, bean pods and corn crowding each other out, and all choked by weeds.


Everywhere I drive in Durango and environs I see this huge yellow flower in wild profusion.  I see them not only by the side of the road, escaping stone fences, just everywhere, as well in what looks like cultivated fields.  They seem like miniature sunflowers.  They must produce some kind of food.  Perhaps oil, like safflower oil?  I shall have to ask after that, too.  The front of my house is a wall of these flowers, six feet high.  I had to struggle, at the edge of the row where it meets the brick façade of the house, to get past them.  I tried to go directly through the wall, but it was impenetrable.

As I was slogging through the bog towards LdeC, I was thinking I needed a pair of galoshes.  Indeed, on the drive back through Canatlan I did stop and buy a pair.  Meanwhile I found an old pair sitting on a bench in the small corral.  I decided I could borrow them for the walk back to the car.  I doubted they would be missed overnight.  Of course they are old, with plenty of punctures through the rubber giving me a wet walk back, but at least I would have clean shoes for the drive home.

After I stopped at my house and picked up the things I felt I needed in the city right now, I went to Doug’s house to wash my feet and shoes.  I was a bit surprised to find that there was water at the sink.  Doug keeps one large melmac bowl on his fridge.  I pulled it down and filled it at the sink. There are no wash basin there.  The water coming into the bowl had flecks of dirt or hay in it.  Using this, I was able to clean my feet, although I made a bit of a watery mess on the floor.  Doug is due this weekend from Canada, so I’ll have to make time to clean that in a day or two, once it dries.  When I left in July there was still a half-full 5-gallon jug of water. After washing the bowl in the sink,  I then used purified water to rinse out the bowl before putting it back on the fridge.

Dog was happy to be back in Doug’s house, where we had spent many summer weeks.  After we left my house, Dog’s son went his own way, and Dog kept to my heels on over to Doug’s house.  She came inside, watched me for a minute, and then disappeared.  When I was ready to go, I found her on her usual perch, on the pillow on the car bench.  I should have checked it for mud (at least I no longer worry about fleas), but I was tuckered.  Perhaps I am not acclimated to the altitude; I felt heavy-limbed.  We had a happy memory moment there. 

I locked up the house, picked up the things I fetched, and left the camp.  Because my key did not work the padlock of the gate, I had to squeeze myself through the bars.  Surprisingly, I made it.  She followed me back up the path, through the algae green puddles and the mud, to my car.  I opened the driver’s door and sat while I changed shoes and wiped the muddy waters from my feet.  In the summer she was a most reluctant car passenger.  However, this time she was ready to jump into the car.  Sadly, I had to hold her back.

So tomorrow is a big day.  I will finally bring the dream into the sharp focus of reality.  I will have a serious meeting with the contractor.  A few days later I should have an answer.  How much will it cost to make this house livable.   Then I have to decide if it is worth it.

I called Gonzales, the contractor, and Eddie, the electrician, to warn them they needed either a high 4-wheel drive vehicle, or mud boots for our trip to Pozole in the morning.

I tried calling Juan, the caretaker at LdeC.  He didn’t answer the phone.  I attempted to leave a message, but I am not sure he knows how to listen to messages.  I also texted him.  One way or the other, I hope he will get to the land early enough to open the gate, and to prepare a path through the overgrowth to my house.

Coincidentally, next Monday Jhampa will also bring round an engineer, to consult on the septic or sewer system.

Now if we could only agree to dig a deeper well.

Thursday started as an overcast day, but there had been no rain in the night.  That was a good thing, since I had carelessly left the VW sunroof open.

I make a quick trip to Soriana Supermarket to buy kibble for the dogs and cats, and a pan de los muertos for my own breakfast.

Gonzales picked me up in front of the Oxxo mini market which is next to the Motel, at 9 am.  We had a nice chat on the long drive to Pozole.  I learned that he had spent quite a number of years working in construction in the States, including Danbury, Connecticut.  Not a place I picture having an enclave of Mexican workers.  What do I know.

I talked about the house and my plans.  As I talked, it became clear that I could live in the house with a bare minimum of work.  I wouldn’t have to immediately finish off the half-bath and the second bedroom.

We arrived.  I noticed he had not worn boots.  He had on ankle length sports lace-ups.  He felt confident in his Frontier, I guess.  However, as we got halfway down the road and he saw the green algae on the surface of the water-logged ruts, he decided to go no further.  I felt bad for him, me in my newly acquired galoshes, but we got out of the truck and went the rest of the way on foot.  Just as I had vocalized my thought of the previous day, that it would be pretty awful to slip in the mud and fall head long into the algae goop, I slipped and fell.  I went down on one knee, before regaining balance.  Oh well, no harm done that a washing machine couldn’t fix.

At the gate to the compound we both tried jiggling the key in the padlock.  I slipped through the bars, but he just could not.  Fortunately, Juan emerged out of the head-high weeds coming towards us, and unlocked the gate. 

We beat our way through the weeds and tall yellow flowers to the house.  We surveyed it, tossed around ideas, and finally came up with a plan.  He would plaster all the walls, even the unfinished half-bath and bedroom, after tiling all floors.  He would plaster and seal the disgusting looking celiing. There were blotches of what looked like that dangerous black mold you hear about.  He would fix all that, and also put a finish on the roof to further seal and strengthen it.

So, armed with a final plan, he took off to his truck.  I didn’t want to think of how he was going to get his truck back out of that long wet trail.  I understood that he is a business man and I was taking a big chunk out of his day, so I had paid him 400 pesos.  He wasn’t doing me a favor, this was a business transaction.  That assuaged my conscience a little.

Eddie should have been there by then.  I called him.  He said he was about 20 minutes out.
He called me back a little later, and asked if it was okay to drive through the river.   I told him the little that I knew; I had been advised not to attempt it.  Juan had just told me that by going a little further on the railroad path, there was a passable road.  I passed that along to Eddie.

Eddie must have backtracked a little, and found a resident with whom to discuss roads.  He showed up quickly, from the direction of what had been, last June, a shallow stream.

We took a few moments to survey the wires suspended across poles along the road.  We noted the one meter on the wall of the compound’s enclosure.

We walked to the house, the weeds barely pressed down from the recent foot traffic.  We surveyed the inside of the house, and it then occurred to me that there was no junction box.  We looked at each other with the same thought, but he was ahead of me.  Outside, he said.

So we fought our way through the overgrowth to the back wall of the house.  Sure enough, there hung a tangle of wires and a little box without its fuse.  He explained to me that here we had aluminum and copper trying to join, some of the wires were exposed and oxidized.  Lovely.  Clearly, this was the job he came for.

Further, to ensure an undiminished flow of current, he suggested we run an independent line with its own meter from the road to my house and my junction box.  This solution felt right. 

As we headed out, I suggested that as a courtesy we talk to Juan, and explain our plan.  We found him in the little corral, working the power saw.

They stood and talked a while.  When Eddie mentioned getting a separate meter for me (and each subsequent house), Juan apparently said he didn’t think the power company would give permission.  Eddie told him that he had friends in the department, he knew the ropes, and would have no problem obtaining my very own meter.  Juan looked ahead and just nodded, taking in this information.

Just then a great big backhoe or earth mover roared up towards Eddie’s parked truck, and stood noisily idling.  The two men got the hint, and quickly moved the truck inside the gate.

I said a sad farewell once again to Dog, knowing that at least she would have delicious kibble again.  I mean, it is not like she has been starving.  The pets’ dish in the corral was laden with tortilla and beans.  Nevertheless they greedily chowed down on the kibble, so I think it will be appreciated. We hung the bag of kibble from a hook in the rafter of the tiny enclosure in the corral, beyond their reach.

As we drove home, Eddie and I had a most interesting conversation.  He talked about how Durango has only recently started to grow, but still didn’t seem to have much to offer foreign tourists.

I think Durango is a well-kept secret, and maybe it is time to let the word out.  The vision began to grow and develop.  His father has a parcel of land ready for development, about ten minutes outside the city.  Wouldn’t it be nice if it developed into the kind of condos that retired people liked, with maybe a clubhouse where the residents could meet and play cards and such, and have weekly trips of sightseeing and shopping organized by the management.  That sort of thing.

I said I needed to create a web site, perhaps a blog, for ex pats.  I should carefully document all there is to see and do in Durango.  I wonder if there is a golf course nearby.I would gather some of the history of interest.  Eddie mentioned that there was a very ignored war memorial in the hills we were passing, dedicated to the revolutionaries of the Zapata era who freed the republic.  Leading to the thought that there must be many more hidden treasures, known only to the natives and mostly ignored.  There is the wild west restoration, which is a bit of an amusement park, he says.  There is still the the 'chupaderas', a movie set built by John Wayne and not incorporated into any amusement park.  Downtown, there is the cable car from the museum to the one hill that sits in the middle of the city, offering an awesome view.

But most of all, I need to write vignettes of life in Durango.  What does a retiree need?  In my opinion, the weather here is ideal.  The blue skies of Durango are famous in Mexico.  The temperature is constant.  There are chilly nights in the winter, but the daytime sun quickly pushes the temperature back to 70 degrees.  The downtown area is small but picturesque, with traditional markets.

The traffic sucks big time, but where in the world is that not true anymore?

At the moment, the airport has limited flights, unlike Torreon where one has multiple options to fly to Mexico city or other domestic destinations.   But once the flood gates open and demand increases, surely another airline or two would want to enter the market.

So, gentle reader, whereas yesterday I despaired of my life, feeling like a withering expendable appendage, today I am re-energized with a vision, a project. 

I paid for three more nights at the hotel, and hope that soon I will be moving into Pozole.  Eddie has a colleague, a fellow electrician, who is a native.  He has set him to work finding temporary housing for me among the many vacant homes in our little hamlet.

Oh, and by the time we had reached the motel, Eddie already had an estimate for me.  The project, he said, would cost 5,500 pesos; about $333.  
Here is how the land looked in July, during sowing. That is my brick house