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FROM THE EDITOR

 


March 30, 2003.

It all started when I was working as proof-reader at the Tribune, just a short time after it began publication. I came into the office one day, white with anger at an incident I had just witnessed. My editor at the time calmed me down, asked me what had happened and said, “Why don’t you write about it?” And that’s where it all began. “She” has been saying what’s on her mind ever since then.

When Cynthia reminded me that this issue would mark the Tribune’s 6th Anniversary, I began to think about everything that’s happened over these years ... well, maybe not quite everything. As our editor said, much has changed. I thought about the changes I experienced in my own personal life. I saw my next door neighbor’s family grow from seven to seventeen, including five grandchildren (not counting this week’s most recent addition: a rooster that has no idea what time of day it is.) I saw my teenage mechanic get married and become a father. I watched the town grow, slowly crawling up the mountainsides. I read how its population grew from less than 100,000 to 250,000 or more. I saw a street where two cars used to park somehow accommodate eleven today. I discovered the joys of the Internet.

I also thought about all the things that have not changed, the things that made me fall in love with Puerto Vallarta over nine years ago and that still cause me to smile every day and every night, even after all this time. I’m referring to the myriads of beautiful children playing and laughing in the street in front of my house, the incredible colors and the bird songs that greet me each morning, the flowers, the mountains, the deep blue ocean, the sounds of the roosters crowing in my (other) neighbors’ yards, the man who comes by every afternoon selling his “Pan y bolillos!” or the donkey braying in the vacant lot nearby. And I have never grown tired of watching the nightly fireworks launched by that beautiful, impressive galleon, the “Marigalante”.

Another good thing that occurred during these years was the decision my partner and I took to start up the www.pvmirror.com web site. I spoke to the folks whose articles I translate for the Tribune to ask for their authorization to put their work online, Jesus de Avila would take care of all the rest. In the two years since its début, pvmirror.com has expanded by leaps and bounds, hitting the 1 Million hits mark right after the passage of Hurricane Kenna. So far this year, it is averaging over 650,000 hits per month. Jesus and I are very proud of this - with all due modesty.

I celebrated my very first New Year’s day in Vallarta at a friend’s house in the Versalles neighborhood (known as “colonias” in Mexico). He had organized a brunch party for a few friends. There were some cactus growing in his courtyard and I was just starting my collection of different plants for my home so I asked him for a cutting from his spiny beauty, which he gave me most graciously …after putting on some very heavy gloves. I planted it in a wide shallow pot on my terrace. It never did anything, then after a while its green color turned gray and it looked as if it had died, petrified like the plants in the Petrified Forest. And so it was throughout the years - until this month. A couple of weeks ago, it presented me with a whole bunch of babies. Go figure. After nine years. Isn’t Mother Nature fantastic?

And talking about things fantastic, many have discovered that Vallarta and the things that happen here can often be described as surrealistic. That may be so, but what I have found surrealistic lately were CNN’s computer simulations, especially those they used at the beginning of the war. Watching those tanks skimming across the surface of the Iraqi desert sands at full speed, raising little clouds of dust behind them, made me think that I was watching a video game of some sort. Now don’t get me wrong, I’m not going to enter the debate pro or con, but I’m a baby boomer (the oldest there is, born in January of the year they started counting) and as such, I just want peace, not war. I wish it and I pray that it comes quickly, for all of us.

Nevertheless, and despite the war, the universe continues to unfold as it should, Mother Nature continues to fight the best she can against all the damage we are inflicting upon her, and life goes on. Thank goodness.

Mexico continues to celebrate Benito Juarez’ birthday every spring (this would have been his 197th) and the long holiday weekend of March 21st in Vallarta was proof of it. I don’t remember the last time I saw such long lines in front of all the fun establishments in town, both along the Malecon and on the south side. By the time midnight rolled around on Saturday night, my girlfriend and I had trouble driving home from the delightful play we had just seen at L’Opera, “Trouble in Paradise”. The lines of people extended all the way into the roadways and traffic was a mess. Everyone was having a great time and no one seemed to care. I love to see that. That’s the way Puerto Vallarta should always be.

By the way, summer’s coming fast and so is the rainy season, so if you haven’t gotten your de-humidifying rods yet, now would be a good time. You can reach Norma at 223-1389. And while I’m pushing stuff here, I should also share something else with our local readers. One of you wrote in a little while back asking for information regarding the availability of Tupperware in PV. Well, it turns out that our own Betty Galleja at the Tribune is an authorized distributor of those never-say-die wonders so if you’re fed up with the 20-year-old Tupperware containers you brought down with you (like I did) you could call her and see all the new stuff they’ve got going nowadays.

I was reading that letter to the editor sent in by Mr. Richards and it reminded me of when I first tried to find a copy of that super video. What a joke. Wherever I went, the salesgirl would tell me, “Lo siento. Se acabaron.” (I’m sorry. We’re all sold out.) Why they don’t call the distributor to get more is beyond me. In case you folks are looking for one, and you get the same response, just tell the young lady (or young man) to call the distributor to get more. It seems to work …most of the time. But not at Sam’s. That’s a different story altogether. I’d better not get into that as it would take another page for me to expound on my feelings about their merchandising techniques or should I say, lack thereof.

Tuesday is April Fool’s Day, dear readers. Don’t let yourself be taken in like you were on El Día de los Inocentes” (Mexico’s equivalent in December). If you read some really weird headlines in one of our local publications, take it with a grain of salt, even though it may be true… after all, this is a most surreal place where the strangest things can happen at times.

Smile. Be happy. Take care of each other and if I may suggest, pray for peace to come quickly.
Hasta luego.

pvmomto3@hotmail.com

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