I usually am up about an hour or so before Mark. I sit
out on the balcony with my breakfast and my thoughts. Then I read for awhile.
When he gets up we go for a walk on the malecon and then go up to the roof for
a swim. The days pass by seamlessly. It’s morning, and soon afterward, it’s
evening. In between are small excursions to pick up groceries or the New York
Times which arrives three times a week at Roberto’s (a minimarket on Olas
Atlas, the Zona Romantico main street, whose proprietor Mark has befriended),
lunch, supper, a nap, lots of reading, some Sudoku. It’s a life fairly devoid
of incident but in no fashion boring. I have joined the local library which
boasts about 5,000 books in English – and, they are very excellent books. I am
currently making my way through Victor Klemperer’s diary from 1942-45. It is
entitled, “I Will Bear Witness.” Married to an Aryan wife he was protected from
transportation to a concentration camp but from little else. His almost daily
writing of life in Dresden as the war progressed gives the most nuanced account
imaginable of the physical and moral conditions of not just the remnant Jewish
population but of the Aryan community as well. For his astute commentary, his humanity, and his courage, Klemperer has entered into my personal pantheon of heroes.
I think about our life in Toronto and of my family and
friends there. Yesterday we had a video Skype visit with Elizabeth and Billie
which was wonderful. How great to not just talk but to see their beautiful
faces smiling out at us! Billie showed us all of the great books that she had
received for Christmas. Elizabeth, our Toronto secretary, went through the
bills that had arrived so that I could pay them by e-transfer, and told us of
the latest happenings in the on-going tangle of politics at her current place
of employ. Lots of interesting possibilities opening up for her. She and Al and
Billie are looking for a place in or near Barrie.
Today Catherine is having the family: Eliz et al, Mo, her
friend, Darryl, her housemate Emily Smith (Eli’s sister and so Theoren and
Emily’s Aunt) and her son, their cousin, Gregory, for a traditional Christmas
dinner. Catherine opted to work on Christmas and Boxing days to earn in two
days what she would have made in five – a smart move – and will now celebrate
Christmas in style at her home at Jackson’s Point. We will have a video Skype
visit with them later today. I look forward very much to seeing all of them.
Tomorrow Mark and I are
renting a Jeep from a local dealer – just up the street from us – and plan to
drive over to Sayulita, a beach neo-hippie community about 60K from here. We’ll
also take advantage of having the car to check out some other places along the
bay (the Banderas Bay on which Puerto Vallarta resides, stretches along almost
200K of the Pacific coast).
On our walks on the malecon in
the morning when only the walkers and joggers and dog people are out and about,
there is alot of nodding, helloing, and good morning or buenes dies happening.
All very friendly. Periodically we stop to chat with someone who has in particular
been greeting us for awhile. Today we talked with Karl, a tall, likeable fellow
who lives in Vancouver but who emigrated from South Africa in the sixties. From
working in a mortgage office he moved on to buying real estate himself and, it
seems rode the market into a fair amount of capital. He has become the go-to
fellow for much of his family who, over the years, also wanted to escape South
African politics and who joined him in Vancouver and in his business. A
thoroughly interesting and pleasant fellow.
As I mentioned above, our life
here is simple but is very textured, shot throughout with the music and colour
of Mexico and the Mexicans, and with the special diversity of Puerto Vallarta
itself.






