20 August 2012

Lebaran


“The purpose of life is to live it, to taste experience to the utmost, to reach out eagerly and without fear for newer and richer experience.” –Eleanor Roosevelt

Hi all

I went to a party at an embassy apartment last night to watch the fireworks and celebrations marking the end of Ramadan and start of Eid ul-Fitr aka Idul Fitri aka Lebaran. I mention the embassy apartment bit mainly because the luxury apartment came with one of the best verandas of all times, so we could all crowd out there at watch the city celebrate from 25 stories up. Jakarta is relatively calm this time of year because a few (10? 15?) million people leave the city to go back to their hometowns, whether ancestrally or where they were actually raised up, to celebrate Lebaran. Which is a lovely treat traffic-wise for those of us that stay behind. (The threats of bar firebombings from a militant group of thugs only puts a minor inconvenience to things if you know where else to go.) It also made the celebrating last night manageable rather than the chock-o-block mess of traffic it could have been.

Jakarta from up high and especially at night can be quite beautiful, both much greener and even brighter and more sparkly than you imagine, and with fireworks of varying complexity and size going off as far as the eye can see against the sound drop of cars honking, the occasional bus full of revelers with drums, and the chanting from a competing number of mosque loudspeakers, it was a striking scene.




Being here for Lebaran and yet being quite content to be observing but not in the celebrations and not to have any particular invitation to someone’s family events to attend over the next 2 days to eat mounds of food and beg forgiveness for any wrongdoings I may have committed over the past year are both cause for reflection for me, or rather they feed into ongoing reflections: on what I’m doing in Indonesia (think, what in the world am I doing here? not, what do I do here for a living)?, on the nature of being an expat, on the draw of living abroad. 

The expat issue is a bit complicated for me, coming from a background of work and experiences in which being “expat” was something to look down on with more than a hint of disdain. Yet those previous experiences were chosen very purposefully because I wanted to experience those cultures, and were relatively short-term and time bound, and were structured as immersion experiences in which my substantive daily interactions happened largely with people from the place that I was staying and in their language. On the other hand I ended up in Indonesia largely on accident, without any particular passion for the culture or society and without any particular end in sight to the time here, and in environments that are dominated by other foreigners.

I do need to be able to operate in the social context, which I think I can do fairly well even in remote villages and in meetings with minor and not-so-minor government officials and the like; and I need to have a support network, the current state of which I’m fairly contented with. If that support network happens to be mostly other foreigners, that is a problem only philosophically. (It should be noted that even in my times as a volunteer, or doing field research, or studying abroad, or in the Peace Corps I relied on American and European friends for miniature escapes, to be able to be myself among people who more or less understand me as an integrated whole without needing explanation or defense of bits and pieces.)

What I realized I have done though, in being content with just those basic operational minimums, is shut myself off from the possibilities for adventure even here in Jakarta. And I define adventure in a very broad way: trying the unknown I suppose, or taking risks, or generally pushing into uncharted territory however small. For instance, one of the conversations I floated into last night was comparing horror stories and tips about using Jakarta public transportation and realized I’d never ridden a Kopaja mainly because I didn’t feel like dealing with the unknowns (how much does it cost, what are the routes, when do you pay, who do you pay, how do you signal to stop) especially since a taxi ride is a fully known quantity and is still quite cheap (though granted at least 10x more expensive!) Or, before my month off in the US, an old friend from my neighborhood growing up happened to be in Jakarta and I barely had anything to tell her about how to spend her couple days here, like for instance the location of Jakarta’s oldest ice cream parlor that my roommate pointed her in the direction of. Examples like these are partly the old you-don’t-see-what’s-in-front-of-you and also largely because I’m avoiding dealing with the unknown and thus resigning myself – confining myself --  to the max. 2 to 3 degrees of separation among friends and the same usual bars and restaurants and Saturdays spent at home or at the mall.

In that regard then, what is the point of living here? I can’t believe I’ve “turned” enough that it’s just the relatively higher standard of living that I can afford, or a stubborn resistance to a quiet predictable life path, or the constant exposure to extremely bright and motivated people, or the possibilities to work on projects that would be way above my league if I was on some career ladder somewhere. Although those things are nice enough, certainly I could create similar circumstances a few time zones closer to my nearest and dearest if I aimed for them, and in any case as I was smacked in the face with this summer there are equally appealing -- though very different -- plusses to living closer to home.

My sister thinks that if I move back home, I’ll get antsy and it won’t stick. And maybe she’s right, there’s certainly that precedent in my life. Though my recent aversion to adventure makes me think that any such antsy-ness would be a case of false grass-is-always greener. I’ll be faced very soon with a question of “what’s next?”. I’d like to answer that question with something more substantial than a 4-month work contract, which at this point has become a cop out way for me to avoid making real decisions about the direction my life is going to take. So for the time while I do still have definite commitments keeping me in Jakarta, I need to start making the most of being here. I need to rediscover if I really am adventurous, or if instead I’m resigned to the caricature expat role that I used to look down on, resignedly putting up with the sacrifices that come with living far from home while not attempting to inhabit or experience the place that I do live.

I’ll take the Kopaja to the ice cream parlor next weekend and report back.

Mohon maaf lahir dan batin: forgive my wrongdoings

xo
M