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Round the World by Bike - a long distance journey around our planet.
Al Humphreys
Syria to Amman, Jordan
"We are not demanders of War and Terror, but we will defend ourselves
against War and Terror" read the sign at the frontier. It was lunchtime
and the road was hectic with children laughing and shouting their way
home from school. Their school uniform was a dark green military uniform
complete with shoulder epaulettes. The British Consulate in Istanbul
had 'strongly advised' me not to enter the country.
Welcome to Syria.
I met my first scary Syrians - a family of orange pickers who housed
me, fed me, thrashed me at chess and waved me on my way the next morning
laden with about 40 oranges.
I spent the next evening in Lebanon in the company of Monsieur Diemoz,
an octogenarian Frenchman who worked as the concierge at an old people's
home. Roquefort for breakfast fuelled me into Beirut where I watched
possibly the worst ever (and hence funniest) performance of Macbeth.
My journey is getting surreal.
Post-war Beirut now boasts a stunningly renovated downtown area, classy
restaurants and coffee bars, open-top BMW's, mobile phones and fat cigars.
My muddy shoes, ripped trousers and non-coiffured hair did not seem
very appropriate. It is true that large areas of the city are still
laced with bullet holes and hardship, but the city and its people are
looking forward to better times now.
I stayed with Raymond Khoury, a Sierra Leone born restaurateur who had
been forced by war to flee the country overnight. Now in the land of
his fathers he has turned his hand to teaching Physics. I stayed too
with Sandy and Art Charles - in his mid-50's Art had pedaled across
the USA without a single day off, putting me to shame! He could afford
gallons of chocolate milk though - I put it down to that! And him thrashing
me at table tennis? I was just being a polite guest!
Bursting from almost incessant eating and Middle Eastern hospitality
I was ready to tackle the biggest mountains of my journey as I turned
inland.
Baalbek is an archaeological phenomenon for which the superlative could
have been invented. The biggest and the best preserved Roman temple
in the world and, my favourite, the biggest building block ever cut.
It measures 20m x 5m x 4m, weighs 2000 tonnes and would need 40,000
men to shift it! The stones at Stonehenge are a mere 50 tonnes. The
place is stunning and I had it all to myself! My jubilation at pitching
my tent at the foot of a temple was tempered by discovering I had left
my sleeping bag and mat in Beirut. Idiot! The temperature hovered around
zero, I didn't sleep much and dawn was a very real relief.
It is Ramadan, the Muslim month of fasting during daylight. As I entered
Damascus a student I met on the street invited me home for iftar, the
evening breaking of the fast and a HUGE feast. The food was delightful,
the father's high volume anti-Semitic ranting a little less so. Cycling
through Damascus at 4pm amongst several million hungry Muslims driving
home at high speed is my new number one most dangerous cycling experience.
I nearly quit. Being alone means that there is nobody to tell you to
stop being ridiculous when you are feeling down. The sheer scale of
what I was attempting, the feeling of being trapped like a hamster in
a wheel, the loneliness and the anonymity hit me in a wave of terror.
I plumbed new depths of sadness. Only my stupid pride stopped me heading
for the airport.
But then I discovered Damascus. Dark winding souks, atmosphere and surprises
around every tight corner. Kebabs better even than Istanbul convinced
me that I could not possibly go home yet. So I pedalled on and gradually
began to cheer up. But I do not wish to endure (nor will I be able to)
too many times like I went through in Damascus.
Bosra is a Roman theatre in Southern Syria capable of seating 15,000
people. It is almost as pristine today as when it was built 2000 years
ago. The place oozes atmosphere and the acoustics are unbelievable.
And again I had the place to myself. I sang Happy Birthday to myself
on the stage to a vast audience of zero. Amazingly, two Belgian cyclists
showed up. We brewed tea on the stage and spent the night in the theatre
(imagine trying to do that in Rome!). My high-volume rendition of Jerusalem
beneath a full moon was spectacular.
We pedalled together to Amman. Jordan is my 15th country and I now have
6500km under my wheels. It is time to recuperate for a while, to do
battle with the Sudanese embassy and to enjoy the unexpected pleasure
of a huge Christmas dinner courtesy of my new host - headmaster Phillip
Brisley.
Arabian kindness and hospitality has been universal, trusting and humbling.
The cuisine is fabulous. The history is jaw dropping. I know I can safely
leave my bike unattended in the street. The only bad thing has been
one day of torrential rain as I left Syria. That must have been the
reason why the British Consulate warned me so strongly against travel
here!
My Life Really is a Roller Coaster
Surely this cannot go on. I left home to cycle around the world. I was
expecting a physical grilling, to be frozen and burnt, tired and sick,
lonely and afraid. But the reality is so different. The cycling is,
relatively, not a problem. I can handle it. But my emotions are driving
me crazy - it's a bloody roller coaster!
I am having unforgettable experiences, meeting fascinating people, seeing
extraordinary things. But the depths of sadness I keep plummeting to
are frightening. And it is not just once or twice this has happened
to me - it hits me every few days. There is no way I can continue for
long in this frame of mind.
I miss those I love at home. I miss 'comfort-zone' living - Starbucks,
armchairs, 9-to-5, music, friends, routine, familiarity. I feel terrified
at what I have got myself into - how did I have the audacity to think
I could possibly pedal through Africa alone, how could I have committed
myself to three years of this madness, of being the odd one out, of
knowing no-one or nowhere, a world where nobody knows your name? I feel
I have bitten off more than I can chew and surely this cannot go on.
It all came to a head in Damascus. I had reached the end of the road.
It was too much. It was too hard. I was too alone. I was in too deep.
I had failed. I was the nearest I have ever been to quitting. I was
so close to heading for the airport and escape. It was over.
But I am trapped between a rock and something painfully hard. Frying
pan or fire? An impossible situation. For there is no way I can go home
either. The very comfort-zone I crave now is exactly what led me to
all this in the first place. I cannot go back to that. And on top of
all that is my stupid pride - I have told so many people of my grand
schemes that I cannot possibly show my face in England before Christmas!
So I stayed. I didn't quit. I pedalled on down the road. I cheered up.
I've made it now to Jordan, country number 15 and 6500km under my wheels.
But the journey is just beginning, there are countless adventures ahead
and a fair few horrors too. I must gather my rain-clouds while I can,
for these dark depths of sadness make the high points even purer. It's
not a bike ride, it's a roller coaster. I just don't want too many freefalls
like in Damascus.
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