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The Reflector

The Student Newspaper of Mississippi State University

The Reflector

The Student Newspaper of Mississippi State University

The Reflector

    Finding myself in Mexico

    In the midst of a long recession, my family and I found it wise to go on a cruise to Mexico. Although I felt like an excessively rich snob lavishing in all manner of vile indulgences (multiple trips an hour to the self-serve ice cream machine) while complaining about a lack of service to a staff of foreign workers who leave their home seven months at a time for little pay, cruises themselves aren’t really expensive. Traveling itself is the expensive part.
    I had romantic opinions of
    Mexico before going there. I
    imagined myself on a sailboat,
    staring thoughtfully at the horizon,
    while hurried crewmembers
    dock on a nice little pier. I would
    then enter the city of Cozumel
    and rein riches upon the poor
    masses of merchants. I knew the
    economy was bad in America,
    but I figured surely our dollar is
    worth more than theirs. I fantasized
    about buying a real sombrero
    and perhaps a maraca and
    eating authentic Mexican cuisine.
    I would listen to mariachi bands
    on the street and traverse narrow
    roads, stopping along the way to
    chat in Spanish with locals.
    In one word, I would be in another
    country for the first time
    and immersed in a language I’ve
    studied four years but only within
    the cramped halls of academia.
    I worried only slightly about
    culture shock – the bad water,
    rampant pickpocket criminality,
    vulgar street Spanish, beggars
    and vagabonds. But I was too
    good for culture shock, because I
    was a cultured man. I embraced
    diversity.
    Before I even embarked upon
    my adventure, I could smell the
    sands of Cozumel.
    I departed the nasty waters of
    Mobile, Ala., and in more than a
    day’s time I had reached Mexico.
    Sure, it wasn’t I who literally got
    there; I simply rode along lazily
    as my captains did all the work.
    Nonetheless, in spirit, it felt like
    I personally made the journey. I
    personally completed my longdesired
    quest to seek a new land,
    a new adventure.
    I was sure it was going to be
    a learning experience, a pivotal
    event in the lifetime of one
    Southerner whose assumed traditions
    and beliefs would be
    challenged, unsettled and fi nally
    shattered in order to create a new
    man with a new worldview. I was
    going to fi nd myself, my true self,
    in Mexico.
    So I arrived, although it wasn’t
    on the picturesque pier I had
    imagined. In fact, there were
    no windows for me to look out
    of while I waited for nearly an
    hour while crewmembers taxed
    their minds trying to fi gure out
    a way to get my brother and me,
    both of whom are troublesomely
    handicapped, off onto the dock.
    They seemed so surprised to see
    us. I suppose in Carnival Cruise
    Lines’ vast history, I was the fi rst
    disabled person to decide to go
    on one of their cruises.
    But, lo, I and my household
    were fi nally offi cially in Mexico,
    casually bypassing the welcoming
    mariachi band’s donations can
    and trying to ignore those masses
    of merchants, who didn’t sell
    goods for very cheap after all, so
    we could find somewhere to eat.
    After paying $80 for a taxi ride
    (the disabled class being slightly
    more expensive than most), we
    settled into an authentic Mexican
    restaurant, drank virgin margaritas
    and ate a “margarita pie,”
    described as a Mexican version of
    America’s “famous key lime pie.”
    A note on the menus, which were
    in English, assured us the water
    at the establishment underwent a
    rigorous purifying process. While
    we ate, a middle-aged Mexican
    couple serenaded us with a xylophone
    to the tunes of popular
    American oldies.
    As it turns out, there are few
    locals roaming the streets and
    shops in Cozumel. I saw quite
    a number of old white people,
    including a Willie Nelson impersonator
    who I chatted with
    for some time. Besides those who
    worked at the counters and drove
    the taxis, Cozumel has a great
    number of temporary immigrants,
    those who, like me, stay
    for two or three hours to eat a
    chimichanga and buy a sombrero
    and a T-shirt souvenir. In fact, for
    a fl eeting moment, as I peered
    out my taxi’s window onto the
    small streets, I thought perhaps
    I was in Orlando or some retirement
    home in Florida.
    Returning to the dock to wait
    for crewmembers to fi gure out
    once again how to get my wheelchair
    and me back onto the ship,
    I gazed down in defeat with the
    truly unsettling realization that I
    felt home in Mexico. I didn’t see
    or talk to many Mexicans. Apparently,
    the merchants, those
    wise guys, account for America’s
    infl ation. I didn’t get to drink
    any of Mexico’s famous dirty water,
    and for a second, I thought
    my taxi driver was going to have
    the guts to steal a bag my friend
    left in one of the seats. Instead,
    he tracked us down and returned
    it to us.
    So, I have no frightening experience
    to share with you, other
    than the fact that I still haven’t
    found myself. I may have to go
    somewhere more exotic, like
    Baghdad, to do that. I did buy a
    sombrero and a T-shirt. In lieu of
    gratuities I had to pay, I couldn’t
    afford the maraca.
    Matt Watson is the opinion editor
    of The Reflector. He can be contacted
    at [email protected].

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    Finding myself in Mexico