In 1995,
I spent three months in Guatemala. I studied Spanish, lived with a delightful
“host family,” and travelled the highland countryside in resurrected old
school busses from the States. I’ll never forget those busses: busses colorfully
crowded with patient riders, seats built for two kids but wedged with three
adults and a child or two all spilling into the aisle; busses where indigenous
women in rainbow garb boarded with children and chickens and balancing
baskets of potatoes and onions on their heads; busses with dangling window
tassels and onboard stereos pulsing with Mexican accordians; busses blasting
clouds of thick black smoke with each step on the gas; busses hand painted
into clunking hulks of character; busses with speeding cowboy drivers and
teenaged assistants riding shotgun, who loaded luggage on the roof and
then climbed in the back door at forty miles an hour on winding potholed
roads and somehow oiled their way through packed seats and aisles collecting
fares and never forgetting who had already paid, and how much; and busses
sporting stickers of the Blessed Virgin alongside the same suggestive silver
silhouettes that sometimes here grace the mudflaps of trucks. It was quite
a ride.