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The Ten Things I Have Learned As an Ex Pat in Costa Rica |
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By Alexandra Lancaster
- Patience is more than a virtue here. It is necessary in order to be happy here.
- Resourcefulness: because I love it here I have found ways to “make do”, to “create”, and to substitute (while working in the kitchen,) that I never would have learned had I not moved here 13 years ago.
- Awareness: because life moves slower here I have learned to look at the faces of people, at the roadside stand of flowers, at the landscape, and find new perception.
- Through frustration and hardship, at times, I have learned to stick things out. The borders are close together here and I have learned to confront life because it is closer to me than any other place I have lived.
- Listening. Spanish is not my native language. Therefore I have trained my inner ear, the one that not only listens to words, but listens to the meaning behind words...the hearing “eye”. Thus communication for me has changed and deepened.
- Affection: In the States, where my life was more hurried and more anonymous, I drew back from people more. The Costa Ricans have taught me it is ok to pause, to hug, to touch with kindness in a way I would have feared doing in the States. This affection is a tonic for me in my village, San Isidro de Heredia...that I crave when I am feeling down. Go buy a cauliflower and get a hug and a quick joke from the vendors.
- Letting go: A few years ago I stopped harping about things like Potholes, long lines, a lack of things I thought I needed to have here in order to be happy: now I try to focus on what I can change and I leave the potholes alone and stare at the small houses, people walking, the far mountains.
- Mystery: The occult and peculiar nature of a culture that I will never fully understand: I have come to more or less (!) realize that it is this very mysterious quality that gives the country its charm. I believe I will never come to grips with some of the attitudes here and I no longer try. This is turn has engendered the next item:
- Humour. The Costa Ricans have great humor and wit, which is accessed of course through their language, so I don’t catch it all. But I try to understand with my heart and thus I laugh with them and sometimes we are laughing about the same thing.
- My priorities. When I visited for two months in the States recently, and observed how life has become there, I came back to Costa Rica and saw what has become important to me here: Clean air, love in its myriad manifestations, a lifestyle less spent on pursuing money, family life (my employees on the finca, I came to realize, are my nuclear family, and I missed them intensely...more than I might have known had I not left for a while), good health (which the U.S. cannot give me since I am one of the great Un insurables in the U.S., quiet time apart from the bustle that one becomes accustomed to in a society like the U.S. where upper class people barely even raise their own children.
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