Have you ever felt, looking in the mirror, that you're seeing your face as you could have looked a thousand years ago? That happened just now. Bleary-eyed after two flights, no makeup, face lined after a week in the sun, hair straggly after I took it out of its wet ponytail, exhaustion oozing out of every pore -- I looked straight ahead and saw, in me, some dull-eye peasant girl who knew nothing of the life I now have. One who looked tired and plain and slow. Me, in another life. One difference: the electronic toothbrush in my hand. I'll hazard a guess they didn't have those a thousand years ago.
Home now from paradise, which makes me sad, but it had to end sometime. I spent achingly beautiful days on the beach, in that clear waveless perfect water, floating with my face to the sun. On the beach I consumed burgers (2), hot dogs (1) steak (1, ribeye), slice of sausage pizza (1), pina coladas (2), bloody Marys (2) and rum punch (1). Oh, and many many beers. I learned the names and life stories of many of the locals, and the others I knew well enough to wave to; I finally (after some 10-odd attempts) managed to drive my way around the island in a little electric golf cart-like car without getting lost or tipping over. I read three books (Catch-22, Lorrie Moore's A Gate at the Stairs, Frank Bruni's Born Round), all excellent. I went to bed before midnight every night, except the day in which I read all of Moore's novel, when I barely blinked at midnight and read straight on until I was done.
I took ferries, small boats, bigger boats. Off of our little island, I snorkeled, bought expensive jewelry (I would have regretted it had I walked away), visited the same restaurant twice to satisfy a mango colada craving and got the bartender to teach us how to make it. I ate fresh saltwater lobster and a pineapple upside-down cake so good, I can't get the taste out of my head. (The mushroom and asparagus risotto was pretty dreamy, too.)
I unplugged. I did not watch TV. I did not surf the Internet. I had my iPhone so I could get emails and texts and do some light research, but that was it. (I couldn't even update my fantasy baseball team.) I lackadaisically checked work emails on my Blackberry once a day, then promptly forgot about them. When I told Wendy at the grill that the iPhone had been a lifesaver for its access to the outside world, she gave a short laugh. "The outside world is overrated."
And now, home, to a couch piled high with laundry, to a DVR that's nearly full of all the programs I missed, to a new work week that threatens to bring with it a heavy dose of drama. Vacation, it seems, is over. I will wake up in the morning and wonder if it was all a dream, as if the world we inhabited this past week was imaginary, magical, needing protection -- rather like Narnia, or the island on Lost.
But this week, at least, I will try to keep the island with me. I will try not to stress. And what will keep me going is the feel of the water on my body, the sight of those white, wide, sandy beaches, and the sound of the locals saying goodbye to us with the words, "Hope to see you again real soon."