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Michael D Housewright
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Why I Travel - Or how I almost became a Mexican DJ - The Finale

At last the final installment detailing the trip that began my life as a traveler and storyteller. This is 100% True.

Part 1 - Part 2 - Part 3 - Part 4 - Part 5

There was not much time between my return from her hotel and our scheduled farewell dinner that night. The other folks who had been part of the scuba trip not mentioned here in these stories now seemed to be all around me. I did not like any of them and did my best to steer clear of the stubby business guy, the used car salesman, and of course the snobby teens who had all been there for Scuba.

I had not been there for SCUBA, I was there for discovery of a much more telling variety. I was at the time a little sad I had not made friends with the main-streamers and over the course of the next 20+ years of travel I would learn why. I do not tick off boxes on a life agenda. I do not go where lines are long and patience is a requirement. I don't obey traffic laws when the law is not applicable to good sense, and I have always known that what goes on in Mexico does NOT stay in Mexico, it lives within us the rest of our lives.

I wanted dinner to be over quickly. I had to get to the Scaramouche and meet her tonight. I was sure that it was just the unfamiliar nature of our hotel room that held her back that day and like any self-respecting hormonal teenage boy, I could not go home to the gang without a real conquest. Besides, I had the sack to lead her from the dance floor one night. I could surely do it again.

I had been at Scaramouche almost an hour. This time I was fueled on lime daiquiris and nervous hope that the sinking feeling in my stomach was not a harbinger of doom. I was growing tired of the music and I was alone. The crew was all still at the farewell dinner and Scaramouche was not on the evening's agenda for the boys. They were planning to visit the beach disco Maya 2000 that night as it was purported to have a greater abundance of local flavor and in all honesty, cheaper drinks.

I paced back and forth looking like a caged animal waiting to pounce. I wanted to tell her I was sorry if I went too fast, hoping she would say no, you weren't going fast enough. I was ready to say so much when I finally spotted her. Somehow she had made her way into the club and was already on the dance floor and she was dancing with "Tony Montana". That sonofabitch! I could not believe it was him and I really could not believe he was wearing the same damned clothes. His hips were moving like they were on a swivel and my girl was smiling at him like she had just been given a new puppy.

Writing this right now I can feel my stomach turn with a sense of enormous loss and dreamlike disbelief at recalling this moment from over twenty years ago. I think it may be because I have experienced the feeling several times in my life since that night,and each time it cleaved a bit of fat from my soul.

I pushed down the remaining drops of my limey drink as I watched this dirty derelict steal my glory. I waited patiently and completely on edge till I saw her break for the restroom. I quickly followed and caught her near the front door.

Me: what the hell is going on with you?

Her: excuse me

Me: You told me to meet you here and I was waiting for an hour and now you are dancing with that thug

Her: you don't own me, I can dance with who I want

Me: yeah, but we were supposed to hang out

Her: well things change

Me: what do you mean

Her: I mean, he gets it, he met me before I met you and I wasn't sure until now, but he gets it

Me: really? this thug gets it? come talk to me outside

Her: why?

Me: so we can talk without this fucking music goddamnit

Her: oh, blasphemy now...its not worth it

Me: oh you are a good girl now...? come outside (taking her arm and getting as far as the stairs before she pulled away) I want you to come with me to the other club and I am sorry I was too forward

Her: I am not leaving with you

Suddenly like the fucking Myna bird from the 1930s cartoons I saw him from the corner of my eye smoking a cigarette along the sea wall. How did he get there I thought. I saw him motion to her and then puff out his chest like a bird on the Discovery Channel towards me. I was admittedly taken aback and I wished to God the donde boys had been there to deal him a death-blow.

She pulled away from me completely and began walking towards the creepy pirate. She looked over her shoulder after about 10 paces and in a partial whisper said, "I'm sorry"

As they met he took her hand and they began to stroll along the wall and I assumed to his place where he would lay claim to my loving cup.

I hollered out to whoever would be able to hear me, "Blasphemy? Really?" and then mumbled a curse under my breath and hailed a cab.

I arrived at the Maya 2000 with a heavy heart. The place was empty and the music was terrible. I was determined to return the Mojo that had been just stolen from me and I was going to do it in cavalier fashion. I ordered a rum and coke (a drink I despise to this day) and looked for a willing victim. At this point in the evening the club was sparsely dotted with aging douche bags and their leathery wives. I knew things were bumping back at Scaramouche but there was no way I was going back there. Besides, I knew my people would eventually arrive here.

After about 20 minutes of bad drink and awful music I made my way to the DJ booth to request a song. In the booth was a 5'5" 250 pound snowball in white with a beard and mustache. He was the color of burned caramel and had hands like a hobbit. I asked him in broken Spanish if I could hear a song. He cupped his hand to his ear suggesting he could not hear me and so I repeated myself more loudly at which point he looked at me and said:

SB - El DJ está ahí (the DJ is there)

Me: ¿dónde? (here)

SB - que está allí (he's over there)

Me: él? el baile tipo? (him?  the guy dancing?)

SB - sí, que lo es

The DJ was a man of about 45, lean, with slick hair and dressed entirely in white. His shirt was perfectly pressed with embroidered patterns running along the center of the shirt and finished by crocheted buttons. It appeared like everyone knew him and he definitely seemed like he had no interest in returning to the DJ booth.

The Snowball looked at me again and motioned for me to come in the booth. He seemed edgy like he had someplace to be and quickly. He pointed to a stack of records in crates and suggested I choose my song from there.

The smell of the warm amplifiers and the whirl of lights on the equipment hit me like a shot of courage from the Korova Milk Bar. Was this fat little Mayan going to let me at the helm of the Club 2000?

Sure enough he pointed to the volume, fader, cross-fader, and the video controls as he watched me queue up my first pick Rock me Amadeus by Falco. In moments I was headset over one ear and working towards bleeding in a little Need you Tonight by INXS. The system was crystal clear and after my first two songs Snowball left me on my own. I watched the DJ as he held court with no less than a dozen gorgeous women on the floor. He periodically made gestures to the booth suggesting approval for the choices made by his fat little colleague (who was now back at the bar serving drinks).

After about 35 minutes of my spinning records the place was filling rapidly, and that is when I spotted the donde boys. They tore in the front door and crashed to the bar where Snowball served them tall drinks. I knew as I saw my father stroll into the club with BR and the rest of the guests, including the tee-totaling teens that my moment to shine was then. I knew I had once shot to show them why I didn't SCUBA, why losing a girl would not bring me down, and why the real DJ must have been in fact an island angel in white.

I brought the lights down and left the disco ball and blue lights engaged. The place was honestly too dark to walk easily but the mood was sexy as hell. I faded out the beat and slowly brought up the opening of George Michael's Father Figure and as I watched the dancers grow antsy over the slow pace I faded into the Beastie Boys:

" LET ME CLEAR MY THROAT" - belted the lyrics on a volume level I am sure the audio system at the Maya 2000 had never attained before or since. "kick it over here baby pop and let all the fly skimmies feel the beat.....ummmmm DROP! BOOM BOOM BOOM! went the bass as The lights flickered and the woofers lurched forward to the point of pulling at their housings and sounding like a Mexican cabbie grinding the rusty gears of an ancient taxi. The wind from the speakers blew up skirts and shorts on the dance floor as the Beasties screamed "coolin on a corner on a hot summer's day". Snowball ran from the bar and the DJ spun in complete horror as I, in one sweet moment of audio overload, was completely destroying the Disco Maya 2000.

Snowball got to me first as he pulled hard on the volume lever like a pilot of a Cessna trying to bring the plane out of a terminal dive. I was laughing with joy as I cross-faded into Erasure's A Little Respect when the DJ met me in utter disbelief of my presence. However, soon he was all smiles because there were dancing bodies across the club cheering and smiling at thebpm  onslaught.

Not only had I taken the bridge of a dead club just one hour before as a 17-year-old kid from Texas I had brought it to heights of success and jubilant celebration that I knew was not happening at the hated Scaramouche. Somewhere on the island Tony Montana was being introduced to American Blue-Balls but I was having the most triumphant moment of the most exciting week of my life.

When the DJ walked me down from the booth to meet my waiting father I could tell the two men must have recognized one another as there was a bit of an awkward pause before the DJ he asked my dad if I would be back tomorrow. My dad smiled and said that I was 17 and I had to get back to Texas and to school. However, I knew in my memories I would be back everyday of my life.

On the flight home the next day I could tell my father was ready to be home to his wife. I no longer knew what home was.

This is why I travel and how I almost became a Mexican DJ.

tags: @blissadventure, adventure, Aqua Adventures, blogging, blue balls, Cozumel, disco, DJ, drinking, food, humor, kiss, life, Maya 2000, Michael Housewright, Quintana Roo, Scaramouche, social media, the blissful adventurer, Travel
Tuesday 04.03.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Why I Travel - Or how I almost became a Mexican DJ Part 5

This is the penultimate chapter in the story of how I came to be enamored with travel and imbued with wanderlust.

I would suggest reading the first 4 parts before reading this one if you want the back story; otherwise, just dive in and let me know your thoughts.

She wore tight denim shorts. That is the memory that pervades the images in my mind as I consider our walk through the streets of Cozumel that day. I had completely forgotten where I was as I looked often at my new friend and could have cared less about the sea, the sun, or even investigating some new part of the island. Her body and how each component of it made me tingle in places and ways I never had before, was all the exploration I wanted. To this day the physical discovery of a woman is easily the most powerful curiosity I have ever experienced. No drink, drug, or thrill has ever surpassed the initial few hours of intimacy with a heavenly creature of the opposite sex.

She seemed a little annoyed that I insisted she see our shitty little dive hotel in town rather than seeking a beach. I am sure now as I think back that she realized I was not the dashing and brave young man fueled on rum and sugar that had spun her about the dance floor like Travolta in Urban Cowboy. I was indeed a neophyte lover seeking physical contact like a zombie wants brains, and just as clumsily.

As we were walking I began to notice a menacing figure lurking along the wall and then again near the shop where we grabbed a Mexi-Coke. At first I blew it off finding it odd that I would even notice or recognize a person more than once while on vacation and while wearing puberty-colored glasses. Yet, this guy, dressed in a dark printed silk shirt and black trousers with a thin pirate moustache was just creepy enough to stain my thoughts and create a nervous edge to my alternatively brilliant state of mind. As I saw him walking a few paces behind us I noticed my girl glance at him over her shoulder and even though this was indeed my "first rodeo" with a girl something about that wide-eyed peek told me all was not cool.

As we rounded the corner towards my hotel and finally without the specter of "Tony Montana" over our shoulders she looked up at me and smiled. We made our way into the hotel which I assumed she would find a complete dump compared to her modern accommodations. On the contrary she was immediately taken with all of the wondrous scuba equipment strewn across the floor. I wasted little time and began to undress a bit. With my shirt off and shorts almost down she put my mask and snorkel on me and then quickly threw off her shirt and pressed against me. At last, my first bra! I thought as I was much more adept with the snap than kids in movies I had seen.

Her breasts were much softer than I ever expected. They felt like a cross between a pillow and a warm water bottle. She put on my father's scuba mask and in our 12X14 room we began to act as though we were under the water. We both moved about the room with swimming motions and turned our heads sharply from side to side as if we had a 360 degree view of the world. We took turns wearing my father's BC and I remember how unbelievably sexy she was bare-breasted with that yellow and blue buoyancy control device providing intermittent support and glances to the promised-land. At that point I could no longer control the anticipation and  I "swam" up behind her and using hand gestures and faux bubble sounds I intimated that I could help her with her shorts. She obliged, and let me tell you that if I was good with the bra, removing her painted-on denim shorts set fire to our willing suspensions of disbelief and our playful underwater dance came to an abrupt end.

I started trying to ask how to make it better as she began to laugh uproariously. It took me a moment to realize I was still wearing my fucking scuba mask and I sounded like a moron when I spoke. Eventually I was able to remove her shorts and there we were very nearly to the bottom of the 9th and I was Casey at Bat. I was simply beside myself at what I was seeing when the full picture came into view for the first time in my life. I was so nervous I thought I would pee my already moist drawers. The site of this bronzed-beauty was such a stark contrast with my pasty skin tone it was almost jarring.

The flowers I imagined in her hair and the look on her face I perceived to mean "come on in" was like I had been born suddenly into a new person. This was going to happen!

Just 15 or 16 hours ago I had never even kissed a girl and now here I was on the cusp of conquest, the kisses, the aromas of food I never knew existed, and the newness of circumstance muted all my senses. I wanted to be touched too I thought, just like I am touching her. I have no idea how this could be bad I justified as I was readying myself for the victory lap.

Then, and without any warning came one of the most awful sentences any human had ever spoken to me. "We're not going all the way!" she said in a voice I did not even know she possessed. I can hear the sound of this sentence as clear now as it was nearly 25 years ago and in slow motion even "weeeee'rrrrre nooooooot gooooooiiiiiing alllllll theuuuuhh waaaaaaaaayyyyyyy"

Aaaaargh! I just gave her all I had. I just showed her all our cool and fun scuba shit! We were alone, we were in Mexico! What the hell.....why???

In that instant I heard the sounds of the donde boys from the stairs, and then I saw their faces through the shutters as they ambled along our second floor walkway. They were back, they were coming here, and my girl and I were in a compromising state of uncompromised. We were guilty and with nothing to show for it! She grabbed her clothes and ran for the bathroom. I sprinted up and locked the door just as my Dad's hand hit the handle.

I shouted "one sec, I am changing clothes" as I threw on my shorts and shirt. I opened the door and while it was so completely obvious what we had been doing in that room, no one paid us a bit of mind. When my unrequited lover emerged from the bathroom the boys and my father practically ignored her. I just knew I was screwed even though I hadn't because I had no knowledge of what my father and the boys had just experienced.

Somewhere on the other side of the island a man dressed in white carrying a 45 caliber handgun had come to the aid of 3 American strangers and without even knowing it, a young man from Texas was extremely grateful as well. I am certain had the boys not been shell-shocked they would have given my tease of a girl and I the third degree.

As it was she and I slipped out the door and took a cab back to her place. We sat in silence for the duration of the cab ride and as she exited I gave her a small kiss and she told me to meet her at the Scaramouche that night. I was more than a little confused as the cab driver made the turn back to town. I was not about to give up on her and at the same time the dull, blue ache in my loins would not belie the feelings to come...to be continued

tags: @blissadventure, adventure, Aqua Adventures, blogging, blue balls, Cozumel, disco, drinking, food, humor, kiss, life, Michael Housewright, Quintana Roo, Scaramouche, social media, the blissful adventurer, Travel
Monday 04.02.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

Why I Travel - Or how I almost became a Mexican DJ Part 4

I cannot even remember her name.

I know that the donde boys and I strolled into the Disco Scaramouche that night along with some stragglers and the other kids my age on the trip, who I am certain turned out to be teetotalers, to find the place was busy but not jammed like my father's experience in the past.

Los dondes and I grabbed a table near the dance floor and within moments I was drawing deep straw-fulls of pina colada. Keep in mind I was 17 so the more sugar the better in my drinks to ward off the brutality of cheap well rum. I remember we were all laughing that my dad seemed to puss out and then, like the moment a boy realizes that Jergens is not just for soft skin anymore, I saw her.

Sleeveless white cotton dress, curly blonde hair, somewhere between Baby from Dirty Dancing and Kathleen Turner from Romancing the Stone was a marvelous young woman cutting a rug on the dance floor. She was dancing alone but had what appeared to be a disco employee dressed all in white shadowing her. He was older than I was and at the same time I looked right through him on each turn of the music to see the face of this beautiful girl.

I was a total fool at home when it came to girls. The station of my nerdy-ness and the years of stereotyping that go along with being with the same kids for 12 years had blocked my access to the real teenage wasteland so I often felt myself to be ugly or for some reason unworthy for courtship. I came to find out I simply needed some shitty rum, a little anonymity, and a major push from a fireman and a phone technician (the donde boys).

As I downed my 3rd pina colada I decided it was time. My gut was swimming and all that sugar and booze gave me energy I am sure was on par with at least medium grade meth. I rose from my seat in my light blue Don Johnson trousers I had gotten from Mervyn's onsale. I took a deep breath and straightened my back to reveal my strikingly lanky 6'5" 160 pound frame while my flowing black and white print shirt gave the impression I was hoisting the main sail on a human ship's mast.

I strode out to the floor as my eyes met hers. At this point I had 0 choice but to engage. I tapped the disco boy on the shoulder and straight out of a scene from Happy Days I said, "may I cut in?" I swear upon the graves of my ancestors that was what I said.

The only part more shocking than my dialog was the fact that disco boy took one look at my ghost-like complexion, looked back at the tanned and nubile girl to his left, and simply walked away.

There I was on the floor alone with a girl and we immediately spoke, or tried to speak over the sounds of bad 80s music. Instead of talking we decided to dance. Much like Napoleon Dynamite I may have been an angst ridden, nerdy kid, with a propensity for tall tales, but get me on the floor and I could move. In a matter of seconds I was spinning my girl about like a whirling dervish. I was like a giant rubber band in the day which made for an interesting site I am certain.

While I had excellent rhythm and unique moves. My sheer height and gaunt physique made me a spectacle of curiosity. Wow, that guy is really goofy, but he is kind of good I imagined most people to think. On this night though I was Denny fucking Terrio. I owned the Scaramouche!

I noticed after what seemed like 2 minutes but was more like 45 that the donde boys were gone and it was just me alone with a creature I had no idea how to entertain. It was hot and we were both pouring sweat as the music slowed a bit.

We decided to walk outside and sit on the steps and we must have taken a seat at  or very near the precise area of the steps where my father had been accosted by henchmen just a few years prior. All I knew at the time was that I could have been sitting on the stairway to hell and I would not have cared because I was so much closer to heaven than I had ever been before.

To this day I remember every feeling I had being alone with this girl on the empty steps of a Mexican Disco. I cannot remember a word we said, only that she was from Tyler, TX and as we stared at one another we said some silly things about humidity and Texas before our lips met in a salty perspiration soaked kiss.

The Scaramouche became Shangri-La and although I had never kissed anyone before that moment, I had practiced on my arms, in my mirror, and with my pillow so that when the occasion arose I would be less than a fumbling, nascent, tongue-heavy moron. I think that kiss was the first thing in my life that had ever exceeded one of my lofty expectations. In that fleeting moment I was convinced that coming to Mexico made me the lover I always knew I was. I was never going to go home I thought as we walked across the street to the deserted Plaza....to be continued

tags: @blissadventure, adventure, Aqua Adventures, blogging, Cozumel, disco, drinking, food, humor, kiss, life, Michael Housewright, Quintana Roo, Scaramouche, social media, the blissful adventurer, Travel
Thursday 03.22.12
Posted by Sarah Finger
 

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