You get there by ferry from Cancun and it is, or it was, a million miles away in attitude from the flash and high rise of that particular party town. That’s me, always stepping off the beaten track!
I built a house there once, in the jungle, at the south end of the island, not far from the Mayan ruins of the goddess Ixchel, in a patch of jungle that was garlanded by butterflies in the day and the will o the wisp trails of glow bugs at night.
The last time I saw Isla was a summer night in 2005 when the humidity hung heavy in the Caribbean air and lightening was flickering far out to sea on the Bay of Mujeres. My husband Phil and I had just had dinner at Gran Puerto Cancun with our friends Katherine and Bruce and we had watched the sunset paint the sky over Isla Mujeres from our seats at the Alta Vista restaurant at the top of the lighthouse at the port.
As we waved Katherine and Bruce off that evening I remember watching them walk down the dock to the ferry, with the lights of Isla in the distance and I wondered if I would ever be here again because we had just sold our house on Isla, we were heading to Turkey and I didn’t know when we would be back.
I haven’t seen Isla since that day.
Phil never saw Isla again; he died in Turkey in 2008. I never saw Katherine again; she passed away early this year after a long and courageous fight against bowel cancer. The Alta Vista restaurant is closed after one too many hurricanes hurled itself at the tower but Isla is forever there, tucked away in a corner of my mind, waiting.
After Phil died I couldn’t go back to Isla, I couldn’t even look at pictures of it for a very long time. We liked and enjoyed and understood Turkey but Isla we loved and Isla was our special place. It was the first place we went on holiday together, it was the first place we dreamed our dreams and it was the first place we made those dreams happen. Just looking at pictures of the brilliant, blue shaded, waters around the island used to reduce me to tears.
I stopped reading my friend’s trip reports, I stopped keeping up to date on the island. I kept in touch with Katherine as she took on cancer but we didn’t talk about Isla. I never talked about Isla.
And then my Dad died and for no reason I understand I started thinking about Isla again. It started calling to me, across the seas, across the years, a call rolling up along the gulf stream from the Yucatan to the coast of Pembrokeshire. It said, “Come see me, it’s time.”
So I’m going back to the island, making the pilgrimage at last. I’m going to go play in the water, dive the underwater museum, see Silent Evolution, the ever growing crowd of statues that now colonises the sea floor off Isla, it wasn’t even an idea last time I was there, now it’s nearly six years old and becoming part of the ecosystem. I’m going to go watch them release the baby turtles into the autumn seas, go eat great food, maybe drink a few cocktails, go discover the island vibe again.
I’ve got a flight to Cancun and a ticket to the island and I’ve booked a few days at Na Balam which is a tiny little hotel on the beach that I have always wanted to stay at and then I’ll see where we go next. Maybe I’ll stay on the island, maybe I’ll move on, I’m traveling with hope but if Isla has changed beyond all recognition then that is cool too, at least I’ll see her one more time.
Before I head off to Isla I have a trip to London planned. I am lucky enough to be attending BlogFest 2014 where I get to meet other people who share my weird blogging habit.
Bloody hell, people like me, people who readily admit that they blog and don’t seem to be ashamed of it!
I’m looking forward to it, it’s a chance to socialise, a chance to listen to some great speakers including one of my favourite authors, Nick Hornby, and a chance to participate in debates and masterclasses. It’s exciting to be going; blogging is often lonley and whilst you get boosted by the lovely comments people make you don’t get to interact with people in person very often, or I don’t because I tend to live in weird places, so actually getting to spend time with other bloggers is going to be very, very interesting and cool and stops me feeling quite so odd!
Read your amazing blog with great interest, it made me want to cry to read how much you love and miss the island and then the good news. You are brave enough to go back and rediscover.
It sounds just up your street, swimming, diving and relaxing away from it all. We wait to read more fantastic blogs to brighten our days of wind, rain , bills and little hope to experience dreams like yours.
As soon as I saw the title of this, I thought of when we met…standing in the street, talking with you and Phil – and then coming to see your beautiful house. The thing I remember most though is how you and Phil were together. That’s always stuck with me. Because as much grief as you gave each other, it was always with a huge current of love underneath – none of that edge that one often sees with couples.
I’ve never stopped going there and it does change. Each trip is different, because I’m different. But the one thing that never changes is that it is still one of the most beautiful places in the world. And her powers of healing still run strong.
I wish I was going to be there when you are…I’d give you a great big hug and then, I know, we’d laugh ourselves stupid over everything under the sun. Have a great time! xoxo
So glad you’ll be going back, Karyn… the Island has changed dramatically since you’ve been last, but it still holds it’s magic to those of us that have loved her for so long. I have many pictures of our meeting 9 years ago – such great memories, bittersweet. You introduced me to Huevos Motulenos for breakfast – a meal I crave till I return! I am so grateful to have met you & Phil – your mutual senses of adventure & lust for life were contagious! I’m sad that our paths won’t cross – we won’t be going back until January. Enjoy your time there – I can’t wait to hear your perspective.
you are definitely odd. That’s what I like about you. Because from my stance of a non-blogging odd person, I get you. Maybe because I’d like to be a blogger but I don’t know from where to start! Enjoy the Blog Fest… but more importantly, allow your tears, feel the comforting arms of Isla Mujeres, the Isle of Women, womanhood, envelop you, and go along with all the weird emotions you will experience. You will be stronger from doing this journey. God speed.
Double envy – exotic island and Blog Fest. Enjoy yourself.
. . sounds and looks pretty special – got close a few years back when we stayed a while at Ilas Los Roques off the Venezualan coast. Probably not as developed with only brightly painted wooden wooden huts to live or eat in. Have a good time with lots of good memories.