On
Thursday, Mansour and I met for the third time to talk about life, and such.
The first thing both of us noticed was the weather; it’s amazing how nice it is
outside right now. We figured it would be an injustice if we were meeting inside
anywhere.
Eventually,
we got to catching up with each other on what had been going on since our last
talk. A couple of weeks ago, Mansour started having car problems, which still
seemed to be continuing. On Thursday, he had actually gone from having no car
to three operating cars: his original one, a new one he bought because the
engine in the old one was fried, and a rental. He had a couple stories of
Craig’s List deals going wrong, but eventually he found a new car. I guess he
is going to save his old one for his brother to buy.
I’m not a
big car person, but Mansour and I both knew well that him buying a Japanese car
was a much better purchase than an American car; American cars are just meant
to die after “x” amount of years, so that you have to buy another from them. I
guess that American cars aren’t really prevalent in Saudi Arabia, anyways. He
said the lack of longevity was why.
Eventually,
we got to talking about our upcoming weekends. I went to Houston for the
weekend and went to a Rockets basketball game, U of Houston baseball game, the
rodeo, and Luke Bryan concert. He said that my weekend sounded really eventful,
but he had nothing planned.
So, since
he didn’t have anything going on, he said he wanted to go out and do something
crazy. Like skydiving. I’m not sure if he ended up going, but he seemed pretty
serious about it. This got us talking about doing crazy things and being
spontaneous. He said that skydiving was something that he had always wanted to
doing. I have the exact same desire.
That thought made me think about
how crazy it is that our completely polar opposite cultures still desire the same
sort of outlandish adventure. It seems that the human desire to do things that
are out of the box and potentially dangerous is simply that: a human desire.
Not affected by culture at all.
Next time that we meet, I want to
sort of explore this idea even further. It makes me wonder what other desires
are of the flesh and unaffected by culture.
Hi Jimmy, Good post on your dialogue with Mansour. I am glad that, despite the differences, you have discovered similarities. dw
ReplyDelete