Just gotta do it!
Relieve summer boredom.
Hide from climate change.đ
FREE ebook, Tangier Gardens 11,12,13,14,15 August
Get it and like it!
Just gotta do it!
Relieve summer boredom.
Hide from climate change.đ
FREE ebook, Tangier Gardens 11,12,13,14,15 August
Get it and like it!
Tangier Gardens ebook on Amazon will be FREE 11, 12, 13, 14 and 15 August.
Get it and tell me about the fragrant flowers and cooling gardens.
MidsummerFolly
8 days til Tangier Gardens is FREE
Itâs summer and itâs hot!
Need relief?
Get the FREE ebook Tangier Gardens, 11-15 August on Amazon. Pick it up!
3 for 1–a good deal: FREE and available now at Vella here–>https://tinyurl.com/3fhvpdsd
***
And coming next week Vella.02. A NEW Vella story = North or northwest?
What is it?
Majoring in Landscape Architecture, CJ is in Tangier on a term abroad design study. The visit occurs at the turn of the 21st century, barely before the 9/11 disaster.
The landscape had always been CJâs muse. But in Morocco, he did battle with it. He was confused by it. He tried to understand it. Its oriental roots ran deep across the entirety of north Africa.
But he discovered that the Moroccan landscape had equally strong roots deep into the dark heartland of west Africa. In Morocco. In the coming Vella, CJ recounts some of his northwest Africa explorations.
Find the FREE Vella episodes here–>https://tinyurl.com/3fhvpdsd
Want to keep up with CJâs international landscape adventures and get advance notice of free copies, then click here–>https://tinyurl.com/bdyjwrak
***
Okay–put up my first Vella (American college student in Tangier)–three short episodes(700wds each average)–more to come.
But that is not the whole story.
I self-published Tangier Gardens(120,000wds) via KDP select in March and after the 5 day free offer launch (50 downloads) everything has gone to sleep–deep sleep.Â
I had a bunch of background stories that didnât make it into the final Tangier Gardens, so I figured to put them together on Vella.
I need some feedback from the Vella episodes. What is missing? What is disappointing? What is good?
Find the FREE Vella episodes here–>https://tinyurl.com/3fhvpdsd
Find Tangier Gardens here–>https://tinyurl.com/2p9e66xm
In my novel, Tangier Gardens, CJ completed his term abroad design study by assembling a series of short stories documenting his unusual Moroccan landscape interactions. He learned about marabouts from at least three different sources. Trying to understand marabouts began CJâs downward spiral. This is how he describes his learning experience. This is not a fantasy. It was CJâs real life in Tangier.
For CJ the landscape had always been his museâŠuntil he settled in to Tangier and the north west African landscape. The shape shifting began when he first learned about marabouts. It wasnât marabout shape shifting, it was landscape shape shifting. Where was CJâs landscape muse?
But according to Wikipedia, marabout definition is a bit short of the breadth I learned in my over two years living in northern Morocco. Wikipedia says:
Marabout means âsaintâ in the Berber languages, and refers to Sufi Muslim teachers who head a lodge or school called a zÄwiya, associated with a specific school or tradition, called a áčarÄ«qah âway, pathâ. A marabout may also refer to a tomb (Arabic: ÙÙŰšÙŰ© qubba âdomeâ) of a venerated saint, and such places have become holy centers and places of pious reflection.
But what I learned is that each marabout has its own story that changes over time. Letâs let CJ recall his second marabout story. To read CJâs first marabout story follow this link.
I had wished only to get home, back to the US. But my experience at the Ramadan Kareem Party and on the way backâŠconfusion all around me. Dreams? Realities? Realities made no sense. Nowhere to hide. This had been like teeps with super powers. Powers that shape shifted realities. That evening was like a carnival ride in a fun house–no beginning, no end–a psychological fun house; and I was falling off the rails on the fun house train.
Iâd had enough. I thought I was attending a friendly social event. First Bree, then Harlequin and his albino brother, then Zainab, then the mad chanters. No, no, no! Cross-cultural bullshit, over the top.
Somehow, I got back to my flat. I had ended up in some place where reality overpowered the nightmare. Where reality became worse than the nightmare. Sidi Hamete knew what to do.
This story got so dark that I still hesitate to daylight all the details. I turn to my diary entries to aid my rather chilling recollection.
Beside me, on my bankette, Sidi Hamete was sitting crosslegged, cradling my head on her lap. She was telling me about ohrwurm, and how, once it is encountered by anyone, a weakness is implanted. That was the most I had ever heard her talk.
âWhat?â Stunned, I was stunned.
She said, âMagreb geomagnetique help ohrwurm; and this region is rich in geomagnetique.
âOhrwurm eat discipline of host. Make them susceptible to immoral, unethical, danger, and horrible death.â
Stunned and now worried, I asked,âCan I be fixed?â
âOhrwurm weaken discipline. Ohrwurm then weaken will power. Then invite dark, invite zombie.â
I pleaded, âPlease turn my nightmare into sweet dreams.â
Again I pleaded, âCan you fix me? And what about my Hand of Fatima charm, isnât that helpful?â
âYour Hand of Fatima is for tourists, and can I fix? Maybe. The first time and again this morning I give positive marabout powers and spells to bring protection, to bring normal to your life.
âYoung man you have good heart. You must learn to protect it. Your time here in Magreb has taught you lessons of the street, lessons of the Africa. Do not forget them. Protect yourself. But do not harden your heart.â
She had found me on the doorstep when she opened the front door at 5am. She knew immediately it was more of the same and worse–she walked me up the stairs. She had to clean me up. Deeply this time. I looked around.
I was clean. My clothes were off. I was covered, wrapped in large, freshly laundered, white terrycloth towels.
Around me I saw: candles, censers, mortar and pestle, a small gas burner stove, potions, and an open can of detritus, as well as a large porcelain bowl containing a moist mixture of cloths and herbs.
Sidi Hamete, looking concerned and helpful, gently put my head on my pillow as she moved to the floor and sat next to the banquette.
She continued, âWe must finish this before you leave the Magreb. Once this djinn has you, it will never be vanquished. You are finished.
âIts connections are deep and everywhere. After the first time you are open, then inviting easy entry, any time, any place.â
I asked, âBut is it actually a worm?â
âYes and no. At first it is the essence of worm, subtle, alchemical. In time that essence grows and changes into dark that takes energy from your brain. Takes little by little your life. Your force. You cannot walk. You cannot move. You cannot see. You cannot hear. Maybe you can think, maybe not. The worm gets big.â
I asked, âCould this be evileye?â
Very quietly, Sidi Hamete said, âI donât say no and I donât say yes. I donât say and we donât talk.â
She continued, âWords like iron threads–fly direct to geomagnetique. Finish, okay–no more talking–now drink this tea.â
Sidi Hamete reached out with a small cup of gelatinous tea. She told me sternly, âDo not smell it. Do not think about it. Grab this cup. Drink it fully. Fast! It is for your life! Now take it and drink!â
I did!
âFast and hard!â
Gulped it all down!
In the split seconds following, I felt it move down my esophagus and begin to settle into my stomach. Nothingness at first, then my thoughts started up again. Instead of talking, I started breathing–voluntary, controlled deep breathing. I had to gain strong control of my breathing to stop an aggressive repelling muscular action in my stomach that became a rasping noise in my ears.
The deep and strongly controlled breathing gradually settled the wrenching convulsions as what I swallowed had passed my choking esophagus, my convulsing stomach and finally moved quietly into my intestines. Then the rumbling began.
âOkay?â Sidi Hamete asked.
âYes, butâŠâ, I put my hand over my lower abdomen.
âThat is normal. It will clean and empty, day or two, okay?â she said.
I said, âOkay.â
âGood, now just relax, and pray to your god.â
âBut what did I drinkâŠâ
âYou do not want to know. You do not want to ask. Be satisfied with my words. It is your own healing essence with the help from the plants.â
ââŠand will I be safe to go home?â
âNo more questions, now sleep, my friend, before long it will be like nothing happened.â
I didnât want any repercussions from that night. So I stayed quiet about it. But after Sidi Hamete went downstairs, back to her apartment, and in my weakness, as I laid down to sleep, when I closed my eyes, clarity briefly flashed. One realization crystallized. This entire six months had been about a battle between good and evil. Feeling ever so vulnerable, like a young child, I folded my hands to pray and whispered:
Now I lay me down to sleep,
I pray the Lord my soul to keep,
If I should die before I wake,
I pray the Lord my soul to take.
***
Interested in more of CJâs landscape experiences in Morocco? Visit my Tangier Gardens Amazon book page.
In my novel, Tangier Gardens, CJ completed his term abroad design study by assembling a series of short stories documenting his unusual Moroccan landscape interactions. This is one of his stories. This is not a fantasy. It was CJâs real life in Tangier.
Wikipedia describes Aicha Qandicha as a female mythological figure in northern Moroccan folklore.
But this wasnât exactly describing CJâs experience. Hereâs how he told it.
Part One: We all have one
After I had the cast put on my ankle, I was immobile. My design study had gotten lost in the fog. I was desperate. I needed help. Thatâs when the Goblet stories began their reveal.
I learned some very unexpected things about myself in Tangier. The most intriguing occurred in October when I engaged in a disciplined chocolate and absinthe meditational cleansing. The cleansing was gentle. It revealed itself through subtle changes, internal realizations.
One morning before sunrise, I had finished the chocolate and absinthe treatment and was sitting quietly in my rooftop terrace garden when I found myself engaged in the strangest bit of internal conversation. A voice spoke to me. That voice spoke from a strange part of my head, near the inner ear or thereabouts.
It said, âHello, my name is Goblet. I am your chalice keeper. I can help you.â
I needed help.
That was the beginning of a friendshipâa kind of crystal ball friendship. I donât know how else to describe my relationship with Gobletâsometimes there, sometimes not there. I could never be sure. But it was all built around my sense of hearing. Goblet explained the background.
Goblet told me, âThere was a time when there was no such thing as white noise. Hearing always has had many configurable adjustment bands that could consciously, subconsciously, voluntarily, or involuntarily filter for hearing improvement. Then, as time passed, as environments morphed adjustment mechanisms failed. White noise and all iterative variations made hearing via air outright painful.â
Goblet continued, âFor certain important messages, in order to hear them without extreme and torturous pain, it became necessary to go underwater to hear. Then finally today, resulting from the hard filters, we have so many sounds that are not understandable. It is for our safety that our ears now have a hard fixed filter that limits the sound waves we can hear. The earsâ capacity is only 15% of its total capability.â
Gobletâs historical perspective intrigued me.
Goblet added more, âThat hard filter is not the only ear filter. Each of us also has a secondary filter, an intelligent, discretionary filter that is known generically as a chalice keeper. A chalice keeper is an angelâa personality with a duty to protect and to clarify that which appears unknowable in life. Chalice keepers are sexless. They pass on knowledge untainted by human vices.â
Goblet paused, weighing my comprehension, then continued, âYou may wonder what is the chalice? It is the low-level network of control that regulates passage and transformations via the sensitive, multi-dimensional connection gates, the ports, the portals between sound waves, the hardware of the ear itself and the neuron transfer of sound via the nervous system in the brain. That control also includes the essential connections to the pineal glad and to the seat of intelligence in the heart itself.â
Back in the US, my world normally was a din. But while in Tangier that din expanded into a multi-layer aggressiveâa confusing labyrinth.
While I was asleep, Goblet moved quickly and directly to solve what was troubling me. Goblet always found the way. Goblet found the intended destination by keen hearing.
Every time I went to sleep, Goblet could detach himself from me. Goblet could travel to the places it could never travel with me because in hours of consciousness I functioned as a restraint, as Gobletâs governor. My world fit into the constraints of time and space, while Goblet was free of those constraints. I walk through the world in 85% ignorance of what is around me. Goblet witnesses everything and is there in particular to assist me, should I choose to listen in times of stress and danger.
Chalice keepers are why most of us have magic in our ears. Goblet is why there was magic in my ears. Our ears bring us magic. They suspend time; they suspend place. They control the ports, the portals of connection to all worlds, real or imagined. For me, Goblet was active and motivated because, as a designer, I was an explorer. Chalice keepers are especially keen to help explorers. Goblet helped me. Goblet was my pass to the .
Here is how I came to understand it. Humanâs gross sense organs are all severely filtered. The sense organs are limited so that the confusion of continuously multiple inputs does not overwhelm the need to act. If the human sense organs are overwhelmed, the human may become paralyzedâa sort of analysis paralysis where too many new inputs are occurring too frequently to allow for intelligent discrimination.
Goblet filters these inputs for me. Goblet hears everything as it is. Then when I am under stress, uncertain, anxious, Goblet feeds, via sounds direct to the ear, or dreams, or thoughts or ideas, the data to facilitate my discriminating and decision making. Goblet does not decide. In essence, Goblet is like a data base. Goblet filters, then feeds data to me. Then I assess those data and, via free will, decide on my own course.
Goblet is not all knowing. Goblet goes out to gather information. When I am sleeping, Goblet does this. Goblet has limits to travel. Goblet must find and arrange material conveyances while problem solving for me. For transportation, Goblet communicates most regularly with dragonflies and storks. In the scheme of things, they have a duty to facilitate the required travel of chalice-keepers. They and the chalice keepers share knowledge and information without the constraints of time or space or language as we know it.
I was obviously under duress. My attempts to come to grips with the culture of Morocco, the street scene of Tangier, while simultaneously trying to reconfigure my design study caused me ceaseless stress. My goal had not changed. I still wanted to graduate and get on with my life in the professional world of landscape architecture. But my filters were clogged. Noise had weakened me. I had become a rebel without a clue.
Goblet definitely had work to do.
Part Two: In the bled Magrebi
Sometimes all needed was Goblet helping recall what I had slept through in history or geography classesâor books or stories that I had read.
Stork, known locally among his friends as Cico, pronounced seeco, knew he was on call; but he was comfortable sleeping in his nest on the top of an old column in Tangierâs La Montagne neighbourhood. He was on his winter vacation. He liked Morocco, quiet, drowsy kind of placeâmild wintersâearly springs.
Cico was in a languorous daze. Pleasant, he was⊠then he heard his name being called⊠he thought, âItâs one of those chalice keepers⊠they are generally nice⊠but they have a knack of interrupting my sleep.â
Goblet was eager to get advantage of a large storkâtraveling with a stork was almost like traveling first class on a commercial airlineâlarge seats, lots of room, but better. Always a smooth flight; and thus easy to absorb information.
Cico responded, âHello, whoâs this and whatâs thisâa ride where?â
âMy name is Goblet; and with your help I need to get out and into the countryside.â
âCountryside? I can get you there. Hop on. The countryside is pleasant at night.â
Goblet liked Cicoâs helpful attitude and asked, âWhatâs it like here? Do you find it difficult? I was with Aeshna, the dragonfly recently, and we had a horrible intrusion by young humans.â
âNo, itâs not bad down hereâitâs like a winter vacation. But you canât ever be sure about human youth. Most chalice keepers down here stay home. Most all the humans are content with their mosques and their mountainsâbut up north in Europe itâs different. Always dissatisfied, those Europeansâalways seeking discoveries, answers. So it is hard work up there. Truth is most of the storks head south.â
Goblet preferred the storksânice smooth ridesâand soft smooth personalities. Not like the dragonfliesâbut oh, those dragonflies were colourful, beautiful, and riding them was exciting, fastâŠ
âWhat are you looking for?â
âMy master needs to get the aura of the countryside and its importance to humans here.â
âI can help; but first, can you tell me something about humans?â
âSure, what is it?â
âWhy is it that humans have such a hard time understanding the good and the bad at the same time? Why do they think that death is bad? Why do they not understand that life begets food for other life and that death is inevitable? I thought you chalice keepers were to help them with these big picture items?â
Goblet, noting the old tendency among storks toward verbosity, had to push gently to get a word in edge-wise. âHumans have this thing called hope and they must nourish it otherwise they have a tendency toward self destruction. Especially when lots of them congregate, they make swirling, massive interventions on the landscape.â
âOk, we will sort out your master. Everyone countsâone by one. In the countryside, we should visit marabouts. They are filled with human historic endeavour to discover something better in this region.â
âMaraboutsâin the countrysideâtell me more.â
âThe marabouts in the countryside, anywhere, can shelter both good and bad djinnsâor either one, or the other⊠you never knew if no one told you or you had never visitedâand over time they change. The bad ones mislead like a rascally boy, just happy to make a fool out of you. The good ones can part the cacophonic curtain of life, granting a visitor temporary peace or provide useful direction for the visitorâs life. Sometimes the same djinn can do either, depending on the attitude, the aura of the visitor.â
âHereâs one. This marabout has a mix of Christian, Moslem and Animist roots. Even so, Christians are not allowed, though some sneak in when no one is watching. This saint bestows barak, good luck on visitors who leave their fluss, their money, and promise to become in this world servants, instead of takers.â
Goblet looked aboutâlooked ok on the insideâGoblet had brought my thoughts and set them on a ledge inside. Goblet and Cico sat still without talkingâjust listening, just feeling. Then Goblet felt a chill. Both simultaneously noted the creek just outside and downhill from the Marabout window.
Cico said, âThere are all different djinnsâfriendly djinns, nice but dim djinns, confusing djinns, threatening djinns, and djinns ready to cause bodily harmâbut a creek next to this MaraboutâŠâ
Goblet and Cico looked at each other–they both knew what that meant. Aicha Qandichaâ powerful djinn in this part of Africa.
Cico said, âShe is always about the sources of water–she can smell the men who are strong, who are saving themselves, who know restraint, austerityâŠâ
Aicha Qandicha could smell that masculine strength from the thoughts, my thoughts which Goblet had set down at the Marabout.
Cico continued, âShe attaches herself to strong men. She craves the challenge of undermining them. She knows how to distract men with her beauty and then confuse them.â
Goblet snatched up tightly my thoughts and motioned to Cico. They sped as quickly as they could, away from the creek, up high in the air, away from the humidity that marked the area of the Marabout and the creek, hoping to disconnect from any trail my thoughts may have left behind.
Goblet hoped that Aicha Qandicha would not follow my thoughts back to Tangier. Goblet knew that the last thing I, already redlining with uncertaintyâthe last thing I needed were attentions from Aicha Qandicha.
***
To read more about the Moroccan landscape, visit my Tangier Gardens book page on Amazon.
New fresh spring green blades of grass and then common primroses. We are past the beginning of spring into the warm Easter colors of spring.
Let me see–how many years have I been alive?
Has there ever been a year without a glorious spring?
Of course not.
Spring inspires me to write about that existential wonder we all share. Spring is medicine that soothes the political and media attempts to agitate us all.
I just go outside and take a walk.
The best of my spring inspirations has been my first book, Tangier Gardens.
In Tangier Gardens, I explore the curative effects that plants provide to ease human existential anxieties.
The Tangier Gardens eBook is FREE today for one day only.
What about the Berbers? Where did they come from? And how many Berber differences between the Mediterranean and the Sahara?
CJ was looking in the landscape for cultural roots.
Where do cultures originate? As CJ, Christopher Janus, encountered the diverse variety of north west Africa cultures woven through Morocco, he was mystified. He was uncertain. He lost all clarity.
What had seemed to CJ to be a simple check-the-box term-abroad design study in Morocco became dark and darker. CJ did not know where to turn. The labyrinthine medinas became his metaphoric state of mind.
A fog of failure overwhelmed him. His life was in danger. His project was down the tubes. And his graduation was in question. CJâs dreams of the future had gone down in flames.
Then he discovered portals–plant portals. What are plant portals?
Let CJ describe them in his fictional autobiography, Tangier Gardens, set at the outset of the 21st century. His is the story of fascination and intrigue. It asks more questions than it answers. Get into it. CJ did.
In a limited time Spring Joy offer on Amazon, 19, 20, 21, 22, and 23 March 2022, the Tangier Gardens eBook, normally $3.99 is FREE. Buy it on the first day of spring! Grab Spring Joy while you can.Â
If you would like to be kept up to date about discounts on CJ’s portal adventures in the Middle East and North Africa as he becomes an expatriate landscape architect, sign up here on CJ’s mailing list.Â