Sometime towards the end of December the thought arose from nowhere, as thoughts are wont to do, that I wanted a one-piece swimsuit. Not long after this, in Copacabana, Bolivia, we took all our dirty clothes to the local laundry. Later when we collected them some were still a little damp so we strung up a clothesline in our room, as we are wont to do, and hung them to dry. We both clearly remember seeing the bottom piece of my swimsuit there. A couple of days later, as we were packing to leave, we searched that room high and low but the bottom half of my swimsuit was nowhere to be found, and has not been seen since. Be careful what you wish for. You want a one-piece swimsuit? Here you go!
The under-chin strap of my sunhat was elastic, and every time I pushed my hat back off my head it choked me a little. What I wanted was a chord with a toggle so I could adjust the length at will. I had no confidence whatsoever of finding a toggle anywhere in South America short of a major search in a big city, but the thought kept on arising. I want a toggle. I want a toggle. In one of the smaller Chilean towns we visited Don found a store selling fabric and sewing notions, but once again I had no confidence they would have a toggle, and anyway I felt too lazy to go check. I think it was the next day, or the one after, we boarded an empty long-distance bus for the next leg of our journey north and there, discarded on the seat I had been assigned, was a chord with a toggle on it. Exactly what I wanted for my hat was there on the seat waiting for me. I was stunned. My jaw dropped. Once again I was floored by the synchronicity of the Universe.
We were in Puno, Peru for Fiesta Candelaria, a major festival of indigenous dancing, lined up to buy tickets for the stadium performances that day. Suddenly, and unexpectedly, a young Peruvian woman who spoke English came up to us and introduced herself. That was the beginning. That was the miracle from nowhere that began a whole series of events leading to us being able to be in the media-only area that day, and getting official authorized press credentials for the media-only area for the following Sunday. There were over one hundred different dance groups the first Sunday and more than eighty on the second Sunday.
Without the press credentials our view of the dancing would have been this from the lower seats:
or this from the upper seats:
See the umbrellas in the photo above? That’s where the people with press credentials get to be.
The young woman explained to us that the stadium was divided into four sections and that it was not possible to move between the sections. I asked her what would be the best section for photography and she said the South section so that’s where we went. When I walked into the stadium and saw the metal fence, beyond a surprisingly mild twinge of disappointment, my first thought was well I guess I won’t be taking any photos today. We walked a little further in and suddenly I saw a gate in the fence giving access to the field. Spontaneously I walked up to the man guarding the gate and explained in my best tourist Spanglish that I have an online journal and please please could we be allowed in to photograph. He asked us to wait. Someone was sent to get a person of greater importance. When he arrived I explained it all again and he let us in. We were so excited. That day I took 1263 photos! The most ever in one day.
Later I asked if we could do the same again the following Sunday. He said we would have to get press credentials from the Candelaria office and told us where it was. So the following day we found the office, explained that we had an online journal and before we could even really say what we wanted the man there said you want press credentials. Si si we replied most emphatically and with veiled astonishment, hardly able to believe our luck. Between my ability to say a few words, and Don’s ability to understand what was being said, we understood what was needed – send an email to them requesting press credentials, and bring in passport photos. We returned, having sent the email, half an hour later with the required photos, and a few days later picked up our press credentials. Never mind that Don’s was in the name of Marcelino Zamata Hincho! In big red letters, stamped across both passes was the word HABILITADO. Authorized!
If that woman hadn’t introduced herself to us we would not have known about the different sections of the stadium, nor would we have known to go to the South section, nor would we have found the gate onto the field. What sweet serendipity it was. We couldn’t believe our luck. We were both so excited. We were official press! I was a periodista! And as it turned out we were the only non-South American media there, and I was interviewed, in my halting Spanish, for Peruvian television. Too funny.
We booked and paid for a nine-day adventure in the Amazon. Then we booked, and sent a deposit, for an eight-day Galapagos cruise to start right after our return from the jungle. Unexpectedly we received an email from the agent saying that we’d been bumped from the cruise because the ship had been filled with a tour group. What?! We were not pleased. Then I mentally decided that if we couldn’t go on that cruise it would be something better. It turned out to be so much better than we’d imagined. After some back and forth with the agent over a couple of days we settled for a very similar cruise going a week later and asked what compensation we would receive for this, um, disruption, in our schedule. She couldn’t give us a discount, but she could give us two extra airport transfers (meaning we would have four in total). And that turned out to be a gift as well.
We came out of the Amazon exhausted. We’d been hiking over rough and muddy and swampy ground for two to four hours most days, out and about in dinghies and canoes, swimming, and not sleeping well but determined not to miss anything anyway. What a huge blessing that we were given a week to recover before we went to the Galapagos. We were in no condition to head straight into another round of hiking, swimming, and snorkelling everyday, and have any chance of being able to appreciate it. Being bumped from the cruise we’d initially booked was a gift we didn’t even know we would need. Not only that, on arrival we were told we’d been given an upgrade from a cabin with port holes to a bigger cabin on an upper deck with large picture windows. Now we were very pleased 🙂
Quito is an astonishingly difficult and complex city to navigate. The area around the airport is pretty rough and there’s nowhere nice (read safe) to stay there. The airport is an hour or more from the downtown core. We really needed those airport transfers – when we arrived, when we left for the Galapagos, when we returned from the Galapagos, and when we left for Cuenca. Once again the universe took care of us.
Losing the bottom half of my swimsuit was amusing really, and a harmless reminder for me of the power of thought, and to listen to my thoughts and be careful what I wish for. But the toggle?! That leaves me kind of breathless at how unfathomable it all is. Did a butterfly flap its wings somewhere so that a hat chord and toggle would be discarded on a seat on a bus in Chile? On the same seat of the same bus that I would later take? Is that it? And the forced change of plans for our Galapagos cruise. Again dumbfounded, as if there is something that knows what is needed better than we do ourselves, far better, and then just arranges it. What is that? Is there even an answer? But the most astounding of all for me was that woman who spontaneously approached us at the festival, and how that lead to the series of events that culminated in us having press credentials and the best seats in the house – for free! It makes me feel small, but not in a bad way, and humble, and so very very grateful. It’s a kind of puzzled, bewildered, silent, aching stillness, this recognition of the mystery of life. I think I don’t know anything. And it’s better that way.
Photo of the day: Dancing in the street at Fiesta Candelaria, Puno, Peru. Even here our press credentials allowed us to be on the street rather than behind the rope barriers.
PS After a fairly extensive, and unsuccessful search in Lima for a one-piece swimsuit, I did find a replacement bottom half for the “one-piece” swimsuit I already had.
All words and images by Alison Louise Armstrong unless otherwise noted.
© Alison Louise Armstrong and Adventures in Wonderland – a pilgrimage of the heart, 2010-2015.
This is great reading….the universe is a mysterious thing but stay tuned in to it or you miss out on a lot.
My daughter and her husband had some miraculous experiences in Taiwan a couple months ago – under the category of “kindness from total strangers.”
I am smiling at all of this!
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Thanks Jo Ann. Yes the Universe is a hugely mysterious thing, and when things like this happen it’s hard to deny it. It makes me smile too.
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Good karma, Alison. You’ve got it!
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Oh I hope so Silk, but I don’t take *anything* for granted.
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You and Don deserve some miracles to make your roads less challenging. Ask, and you shall receive. (Except for one-piece bathing suits, apparently.)
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Thanks Pam. We do deserve some miracles don’t we?! As does everyone. I hope there’s many coming your way 🙂
I haven’t given up on the one piece suit yet – it’s out there waiting for me.
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Glorious manifesting! Fun to read your pose, more evidence that we create our own reality. The best thing is, once we know for sure that we do, we suddenly get better at it without even trying.
I wonder if losing half of the two-piece, then not finding the one-piece you craved, might be a reminder that you were born in a one-piece and it’s always “on” you, ready to use (says your naturist friend ;)).
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It amazes us how much better we’ve gotten at it since we’ve been on this journey, but still, the things that arise that we didn’t even know we needed, so of course didn’t ‘choose’ or ask for, like the press credentials and the change in cruise schedule, are slightly mind blowing 🙂
As for swimming in the swimsuit I always have on, I think that may well have immensely startled those I was swimming with in the Amazon and the Galapagos. Just the thought makes me smile 🙂 though I would every time it’s remotely appropriate. It’s one of the things I absolutely loved about our casita in Mexico – our pool was private enough I didn’t need to wear a swimsuit, and after the first day never did. Heaven.
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wonderful serendipity. you take such wonderful photos that i bet they take one look at your weblog and promptly decide to give you the press pass.
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Yes. Wonderful serendipity. We’re still pinching ourselves. Thank you re the photos.The man in the Festival office did ask to see this ‘online journal’ but unfortunately the internet was so slow the pictures wouldn’t open.But at least he could see there was something there. I plan to send him links when I finally do the blog posts about the festival.
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Wonderful and exciting! Tell Marcellino “hi” for me.
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It was all very exciting. I’m looking forward to eventually getting to those posts about Candelaria. It was a wild time. Marcelino says hi back 🙂
xox
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Marcelino Zamata Hincho!!! hysterical 🙂
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Isn’t it? We were a bit concerned at first, but no one ever checked. I have wondered if Señor Hincho’s credentials were in the name of Donald Read 🙂
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Straight to the pool room 🙂 (have you seen the great aussie movie ‘The Castle’?)
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No. Off to check it out now 🙂
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It doesn’t relate to the situation – just that expression ‘straight to the pool room’ is used for anything special.
I love that movie though so go check it out anyway ha ha 🙂
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Just read about it – sounds great. Maybe I’ll be able to see it when I’m back in Oz in December
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Woohooo!! back in Oz 🙂
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Isn’t it funny when we are given a new name in some official format? We take on a whole new persona with abandon, immediately and without hesitation. Nothing brings out the playfulness lurking within us like someone in uniform telling us we’re someone we’re obviously not. These stories were really wonderful reminders of the ease with which Life arranges space and time when we let it– poignant reminders of the fact I’m overdue for a name change…
Michael
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Oh God Michael, I didn’t even need the new name, just the new label was enough! A whole new persona taken on with complete abandon! I was a periodista and loved it. Don also. Señor Hincho played his part with abandon too. It was so much fun, and honestly I loved being solicitously waved into the stadium, and then into the section, and then through the gate to the field. Those press passes around our necks opened all doors without question. It felt great!
Life always knows what it’s doing. We just have to get out of the way. It still leaves me astonished though. Every time.
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Absolutely love how the Universe works! You do know you’d better change your byline to Alison and Marcelino, right?
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We love how the Universe works too. I think we’re starting to get it, but like I said to Silk I take nothing for granted. I get scared of becoming cocky, or thinking I know anything. That will surely stop the flow. It’s a delicate balance. I sometimes feel like we’re walking a high-wire of trust and confidence, and the slightest lean into arrogance or ego could bring it all tumbling down.
Alison and Marcelino has a nice ring to it 🙂
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I also have these synchronicities in my nomadic life, often daily. Most people wouldn’t believe how aligning with The Flow can meet our needs so perfectly. Thanks for sharing it.
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I haven’t the slightest doubt that you encounter these kinds of ‘coincidences’ frequently. I know that you know well that we are so perfectly taken care of if we just let it be, and get out of the way. Glad you enjoyed our miracle stories.
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You realize there is no such thing as coincidence…it is all intended to be. Your focus caused it to manifest. 🙂
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Well our continued and committed focus on positive thought was certainly a big part of it, but we couldn’t focus on things we didn’t even know we needed like the press credentials of the change of cruise schedule. But we do trust at the deepest level that the Universe will take care of us.
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Let’s see… dressed in a swimsuit bottom and a hat with a toggle. It creates quite a vision, Alison. Go for it. As for the press pass, serendipity it was. I’ve had that happen a couple of times as well. Once was at Burning Man and the performers at a costume contest all posed for me. The other wasn’t quite so fortunate. I was the only white guy to show up at the opening of a mosque in Africa plus I had two cameras. That meant, of course, that I was the press. I was immediately ushered inside to sit next to the most holy of holies in what was obviously the seat of honor. All of this was very good until our little dog, Do Your Part, escaped from the house, tracked me to the mosque, came charging inside and made a beeline for me as several six-foot plus Mandingos charged along behind. It came close to causing a riot, with me as the objective. Watch what you ask for indeed. 🙂 –Curt
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Quite the vision yes. Enough to make Don laugh out loud 🙂
That must have been a great experience at Burning Man, but the one in the mosque sounds hysterical. Glad you survived!
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Ah, just barely on the latter. Do Your Part made a quick exit and I was left behind with the consequences. Mainly embarrassment– bit it was intense. –Curt
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Gosh I love the “slice of life miracles”!!! Not earth shattering to some but important to us 🙂 Padma and I were only commenting yesterday on the miracle of our parking Guru, Amma! Every time we need a parking space and we joke “Om Namo Narayani Amma” one appears! Priceless and convenient 🙂
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Oh we have a parking ‘guru’ too (well kind of – we just start chanting ‘parking karma’ ‘parking karma’) – it always works. ‘Slice of life’ miracles – great way to describe it, and yet I also think all of life, and all that arises, and all of the Universe is a miracle, everything from the mundane to the magnificent.
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Ah, I love it when you include a little (or a lot of) God stuff in your posts! Good reminders.
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Thanks kelly. Me too 🙂
There was just so much magical stuff happening that I had to write about it.
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Would have loved to see photos of the one-piece swim suit, Alison. hahah. Love the synchronicity. The Universe is opening doors everywhere. So glad you are able to see them and appreciate them. {{{Hugs}}} Kozo
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No you wouldn’t Kozo. Really, you wouldn’t 🙂
We are constantly amazed at the doors that open. Opening for you too I see.
(((((Hugs))))) Alison
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A fantastic memory and photos ~ the best part was your description of the girl you started talking to and she took you on the adventure ~ “That was the miracle from nowhere.” These are always the best memories and something you can look back and escape the present world 🙂
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Thanks Randall. Sometimes when we’re travelling things seem so aligned – with some kind of mystery that we’ll never understand. The “miracle from nowhere” that led to us getting press credentials still blows me away.
Alison
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