Back in a Virginia cemetery in...2008, was it? |
OK, back to Mexico.
I did, indeed, dip my toe into the subjunctive while browsing the rows of graves in the local cemetery here in Oaxaca. For the extra curious, you can gawk at my largely out-of-focus photos on Facebook, capturing some of the great parades, festivals, and art everywhere you look this time of year.
What I really want to talk about though is learning a language and how getting sick abroad is HARD.
It might not be "getting pepper sprayed in the face" hard but...it's hard. Just when I thought I was getting over the epic Guatemalan adventure with bugs and feeling normal, I started to feel crumby again. My same eye started to itch and get puffy again, too. My Spanish teacher recommended that I try an ointment that was supposed to work wonders. I took her advice and went to the corner store. I immediately applied the cream, Terramicina, onto my eye as directed by the sweet lady behind the counter who is probably not a pharmacist. After a shallow internet search later that day, I learned that in the U.S., Terramicina was only approved for cats and dogs by the FDA. In California, you need a prescription to give it to your pet.
In Mexico, you just need 80 pesos.
Essentials |
So I got the drugs and returned home. From there, I passed the time reading about international pharmaceuticals and video taping lizards crawling across my ceiling. I also brushed up on my tenses and began comparing English and Spanish tenses from an evolutionary standpoint. Did the future perfect continuous become necessary for our survival as a species?
- I will have been eating that dead wooly mammoth when the lions try to eat our children. -for example, is a rather complex but perhaps vital statement to communicate. You don’t want your fellow tribe member to assume your action of eating has finished and you are in any shape to protect your offspring or do the next important survival skill...like the Spanish subjunctive.
What I do know is that thousands of years later, this lady called Saint Lucy became your go-to gal for all your eye problems. I just learned about her in the museum the other day. Maybe if you put a few pesos in the hole carved out of her chest, she'll make sure your eyeball problems get better. Man, I wish I had known about her BEFORE I bought the doggie eye cream or got bit in Guatemala. Here's looking at you, Santa Lucia! I'm thankful I still have my eyesight!!!
Just a couple of eyeballs on a plate belonging to Santa Lucia, patron saint of eyeballs. |