Friday, May 31, 2024
The e-news written last week drops. What a relief not to have that pressure today, our first day back from a seminar in Bali. W and I walk the neighborhood loop, start work, and make calls. The neighbor's Vanda orchid smells like heaven.
Along the street, a tall tree is draped with white flowers and beans.
This is my usual view: 3 dogs walked by W on one leash. The little poodle out front? He is boss. PakG has washed him and brushed him out to white perfection. Today Casey comes over mid-morning so that makes a pack of 4. We're dog-sitting while his people travel.
Usually I journal or paint but not this trip. I write down what I remember this morning about the people met and places explored. We met some dedicated and creative leaders and made new friends.
Monday, May 24 - off to Bali
Bali is one of the easiest places to get to in Asia for meetings, conferences, and retreats. Because it's a tourist center, flights from almost anywhere are possible without too many layovers. (Elon Musk hosted a conference here last week.)
PakG gets up early to drop us at the 6:20 a.m. shuttle to the "new" (5-yr old) airport 1.5 hrs away. The nicely paved double divided highway is as bumpy (side to side and going forward) as a gravel road with potholes. I'm not kidding. I have to sit upright with a pillow behind my neck. The wrenching is so bad that I have mild headaches all week from the base of my skull. Sadly, there are no chiropractors here.
The bouncing makes it impossible to take pictures. This is what I get when I shoot out the front window: a thrust upward ... and a shot of the ceiling ... or a dip when the phone points to the floor.
The airport is almost empty.Curbside, there's hardly anyone either. We few clients from the shuttle toddle off into the terminal.
Inside, I find a passable ramen for breakfast.
W and I arrive at the hotel in Kuta within 4 hours, door to door. We check in; it's basic and clean @$81 for all 3 nights. It is near the ICC (conference center). The ICC staff is excellent - what a great place for meetings. The snacks and coffee are good and the catered meals are tasty.
The pool, beautiful by day, glows by night.
Bali tourists are back in full force. Next door, the massive souvenir shop is crammed with 2-storeys of reasonably priced crafts. Balinese are creative with natural and artificial materials. I buy a 6" bronze goldfish for $6. Compared to Seattle ($200 paid for a bronze mouse 15 years ago), it's a steal.
We unpack and head across a few busy streets and follow a roundabout to the Dijon Deli and restaurant. It's always worth a visit to this Australian-style fresh foods eatery. W orders his usual gut buster. (I have 3 yummy bites.)
Supper is excellent: ribs (skinny ones) with soup, salad, and dessert. Too much! A server comes by with a paper towel and calmly snags a huge roach from the wall beside the next table. Good catch.
Tuesday
After lunch together, we have a session with Ed (HK), who offers an orderly explanation of how organizations grow and multiply. W and I are glad we came. The information is practical and useful. And both speakers are inspiring.
This beach is known for its fresh-catch seafood and fish. Each one gets a plate with bitter green vegetables and a white snapper, prawns, and a lobster. What?! Delicious, fresh from the source. Rice is on the side.
The big draw is the sunset. Again, conversation, understanding, exchange. A precious time together.
Wednesday
We walk back to our hotel for a quick breakfast before the sessions. It's a full and fruitful morning.
Orange marigolds are popular at temples and shops. First we pass these stems, popped through different-height wires.
A little further down the street, they are laid in front of a door. Puffs of wind blow them slightly off grid.
And still further, they are strung as a mobile over planted water pots.
Workers are framing a roof without safety gear, welding metal above the busy streets.
Dinner is at Naughty Nuri's, our go-to for ribs and more. Near the sink where I wash my hands, there's a tiny baby changing table - maybe 🤔 70X70cm (2X2'). Obviously babies are smaller and less squirmy here than in the West. Or maybe moms are just more flexible?
Another Bali tradition for us two is Gusto's gelato, 250 meters down the street. It's dark by this time (6:45pm) but 4 cases of ices glow a welcome. We share a cup of gelato in the quiet back courtyard.
Thursday
It's 1.5 hours flying. We wait almost an hour at baggage claim for our small suitcases. Then we catch a 4-hr shuttle home. I sit near the back, while W takes the only other seat: shotgun at the front, the least relaxing seat in the van.
The shuttle arrives midnight Bali time (11:00 here) and PakG picks us up. He's registered our vehicle while we've been gone, an ordeal that takes hours. W is very grateful.
Read more:
*You, God, are my God, earnestly I seek you; I thirst for you, my whole being longs for you, in a dry and parched land where there is no water.
I have seen you in the sanctuary and beheld your power and your glory. Because your love is better than life, my lips will glorify you. I will praise you as long as I live, and in your name I will lift up my hands. Psalm 63:1-4