quinta-feira, 23 de julho de 2015

The best place to live in

A long time ago, she had believed some places were better to live at than others. Some places have more resources, you may argue, to agree with her first supposition. But that hardly has to do with the place in itself, more likely with who’s ruling it. The lack of resources that can be found in one place doesn’t determine that its population will not have those resources, not in our global economy. The lack of money to buy them from somewhere does. You see, its not really about the place, there’s so much more to it.
         But different places have different weather, you might say, still agreeing. And that is a fact. The dry, melancholic wind that blows on the trees during the Brazilian winter is absolutely different from the hot breath that comes in a Sudanese summer, and all the other seasons in both countries have their particularities as well. But the weather in itself doesn’t make one place better and other worse. What decides the “betterness” is nothing but the taste of the client: if you enjoy cold, a mild European summer with full blow snow on winter may fit you. If you hate snow and feels depressed every time the thermometer drops, a tropical country may be a better option for you.
         In fact, no comparison that involves the terms “better” or “worse” is reliable, since we who make comparisons are people, and people prioritize different aspects when comparing. The machines that make comparisons were also programmed by people to prioritize certain aspects, and as its programmers, will hardly ever see the full picture. Humans have great trouble looking at things constantly from multiple perspectives. It is an art to learn during a lifetime.
         Anyway, she had once believed some places were better to live at then others. She had dropped that supposition along the way, coincidentally when her list of countries know had overcome the amount of fingers in one hand. By then she had realized what   makes a place incredible is not only the weather, or the touristic places. It is mostly the little things. It is the person that greets you every time you get into the supermarket. It is the canteen server that smiles at you every meal, and worries if you don’t show up. It is the way flowers grown on sidewalk cracks. The species, color and smell of these flowers. Their texture. It is the presence or the absence of bees. It is the way snow melts slowly and is transformed into rainy drops dipping the street when it’s sunny. It is the birds that you have finally trained to come by your window, by tirelessly leaving pieces of bread outside.
         A place is more than the view. Growing accustomed to a place is to be able to walk without taking your eyes off the ground, because the way the stones are set, and that particular patch of concrete, and those specific bushes on the sides are so familiar that you could be guided by them only, and not get lost. The beauty of a place resides in the way it surprises you every once in a while, and at the same time it feels like home in the way it’s unchangeable. Loving a place is, when coming back to it, feeling your heart flooded of a warm nice soapy feeling, something like the smell of a favorite soup flavor in a wet winter’s night. It is to smell that soup’s scent in your soul, and feel comfortable just with the idea of resting your bones in your old known bed.
         Loving a place is also – and sometimes, mostly - loving its people. Knowing you’ll miss them so deeply if they aren’t there. Sometimes loving a place involves loving people that are associated with it, but no longer there. Faces stained in your memory. Perfumes and finger shapes and the texture of their skin, the way the sun reflected on their eyes when they sat in that bench over there. Loving a place can be about what happened there, or what you wish would happen. It can be about memories and dreams. It can be about the sweetness of routine, and the bitter flavor of leaving old, safe smiles for new ones you still don’t know if you’ll get.

         When her passport carried stamps from more countries than one hand could count, she realized all of that. And she suddenly knew that no place is better than other. That there is no best, and no worst. There is only you, and your way of looking, and the space you allow in your heart for that place to spread its roots. The amount of room you have for new people to curl up in. The amount of tea leaves in your cupboard to share mugs and stories. 

She realized there is no better place: there is only a better you, that will find beauty in every place.