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In the years following high school, while deciding on the direction which my academic life would take and trying to cope with the disappointments of a lost relationship, I began to have dreams of swimming. I don't want to over-play these dreams, because they were not all that frequent, nor were they all memorable. In fact, I can only recall a handful of these dreams: Chief among these was a dream of me gliding powerfuly and effortlesly underwater. At some point in the dream, I approach a large boulder on the edge of an underwater cliff, I kick it and the boulder rolls off the edge and disappears out of sight into the darkness. So, for what it's worth, this imagined pool of water also holds a special place in my mind as a pool that I once swam in with the strength and conviction which escaped me in reality.
While studying at the University of Toronto, I signed up with a drive-away service to get to Florida on the cheap. The deal was, I would drive a car to Florida usually for snowbirds for a hundred bucks and gas money. The snowbirds would fly ahead, I would meet them in their town and hand off the car to them. The cars going south were mostly luxury vehicles which always made the drive down easy. The motels along the highway were in surprisingly good shape and, even more surprisingly, only cost around twenty or thirty dollars. It was on my second trip down to Florida that I stayed at a hostel in Miami Beach for a few nights. Each day I would have a leisurely breakfast and then stroll a few blocks to a small grocery store, load up on some fruits and vegetables, a drink or two and some Marlboro Lights and head to the beach for the day. Miami Beach, at least close to the ocean, has not changed much since those days. I would lie on the beach until late in the afternoon, swim sporadically in the ocean and munch on treats with not a worry in the world. Later, I would use the public transit to make a foray into Miami to a shopping mall, gallery, or to catch a movie. Swimming in South Beach, who could not love this, at any age?
Back home in Ontario, my love of canoeing, especially into the interior of Algonquin Park, has always dovetailed with my love of swimming. I have gone into the interior (solo), with friends, with my wife and more recently, with my son. Aside from the experience of camping and canoeing, each trip to Algonquin has always carried memorable moments of swimming. Chief among the joys of swimming in a northern lake is the obligatory swim au naturel. This last summer, however, the fact that an aggressive snapping turtle called our bit of the lake home, made skinny dipping that much more, um, novel.
A natural extension of my love of swimming above water was to learn the skill of scuba diving. On one of my three trips to that most slothful of all Caribbean nations, The Bahamas, I went diving to a reef near Freeport. This was six years ago and, despite the fact that I have gone diving off the coast of Zanzibar, was
the most memorable dive I have ever had. At a depth of 30-40 feet, the water was glass clear and the reef was full of colourful life. Best of all, Reef Sharks were plentiful and although the ones I spotted on this occasion were only 5-6 feet long, they were impressive enough in their ability to effortlessly glide with speed around the dive group. Scary impressive.In 2009, I visited India with my trusty cohort, Anwar Sumar. Yes, that Anwar Sumar! The temperatures all across India were consistently at thirty celcius and above, and swimming ( ironically, a very humid sport) was always a welcome escape. In New Delhi, in Mumbai, Goa and Bhubaneshwar. Yes, that Bhubaneshwar! What Bhubaneshwar? The same Bhubaneshwar no one has ever heard of. A city in the eastern reaches of the sub-continent, close to Calcutta; a city full of Hindu temples built in ages past and still in use today.
It was in Bhubaneshwar, after a long day spent chatting with people I will likely not see again and was, in retrospect, glad to be rid of, I spent the late afternoon hunting down a gallery in town and then returning back to our hotel with my loot. Exhausted, I left the hotel room to grab a coffee and a slice of cake, as it began to drizzle in the central courtyard. I hunkered under the sun umbrella and sipped my coffee, ate cake, had a smoke and waited out the rain. I got my chance to swim a half hour later in the infinity pool pictured here. The pool was all mine and I thoroughly enjoyed treading as gently as I could so as not to disturb the glassy appearance of the water. A great moment that I still remember as clearly as, well, water.
Now we're into the home stretch...The Taj Mahal Palace and Towers is a 105 year old heritage hotel located at Apollo Bunder opposite the Gateway of India. A hotel which describes itself as "offering luxurious rooms and suites with sea and city views spread out over the traditionally built Palace wing and the modern tower wing."
Picture if you will, another courtyard: This one has high walls crawling with tropical greenery and large (palm trees) and small (no clue) plants all around. To one side of the ovalish pool are tables and chairs and further in a covered-but-open-to-the-surroundings-restaurant occupied, on this night, by not one person. The lighting is mostly coming from inside the pool with a few yellowish globes around the pool. It is late in the evening and the blaring of car horns, car engines, motorcyles can be heard in a muted way just on the other side of the walls. If you stood atop the walls on the street side you would see the The Gateway of India, leading to the Indian Ocean only just across the street. And there I am, half naked at the snazziest of all hotels in India. Swimming around in that pool on that particular night with no one but me in the pool....the feeling was pure bliss and I savoured it and tried to fix the scene in memory knowing fully that this was one of those once in a lifetime moments which I could never re-visit or re-create.
2 comments:
Can you teach me to swim...no really.
Dude if seeing u half naked is the price I have to pay to help you, then so be it!
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