The water in Afghanistan is very strong. It
shrinks my clothes.
I came out on this mission fully intending
to put the festive season behind me. I had heard that the place where I’m
staying has a gym, a swimming pool, and tennis courts. I didn’t hold out much
hope for the latter, but the pool was a possibility, and the gym would
certainly help. I took up valuable space in my bag to pack t-shirt, shorts, gym
shoes, white socks – all the stuff people wear to a gym.
I gave up on the idea of tennis (if I had
ever had such an idea!) within 30 seconds of arrival. I looked outside as we
were checking in, and saw the tennis courts – under about 30 cms of snow.
Still, the other two remained possibilities.
(The tennis courts)
(The tennis courts)
On the second day we were having dinner,
chicken something with rice, naan bread, and green tea, when I asked where the
swimming pool was located. One of the fine young men who serve in the
restaurant showed me the way, out through the doors and on to a patio. The pool
is huge. It has to be at least 30 metres long, and is very deep at the deep
end, almost two metres. It is also in good condition, glazed with nice tiles. I
could see all this clearly, as the only thing that was missing was water. Mind
you, the patio was open to the outside, and so it would more likely have been a
rink than a pool, should water have been present. It must be nice in the
summer, though.
(The road to the gym)
(Inside the gym - a treadmill and a generator. Luckily one of them works!)
We could make our own circuit, walking up
one flight of steps from the lobby, across the landing, down the second flight
of steps to the restaurant, and back along the main corridor to the lobby
again. That would be doable, combining both the treadmill and the step machine.
We could set our own pace, and alternate between fast and slow. We could even
carry bottles of water and do arm curls as we walked. It would be a good
workout. As long as nobody saw us, that is.
Another option would be stop sitting at our
desks all day, and take 5 minute stretch breaks every hour. We could combine
the stretching with rapid pacing around the office – zoo-caged lions are always thin and svelte. That would work, at least it may stop
total stupor from setting in. We considered that idea more fully over dinner
that night, chicken something else with rice, naan bread, and green tea, and
thought it might work. And it did, except that our interpreter broke up into
hysterics as he asked us what we were doing. That made us a bit self-conscious.
The next morning, over our regular
breakfast of omelet, naan bread, and green tea, Jim came up with a radical
solution.
“What about giving up naan bread?”
Never, I replied. It’s too good. And
anyway, the human body needs some carbs.
That day on our way to work we asked the
driver. He said that every day when he got home he went to the gym and ran five
miles.
“Afghan food is excellent,” he said, “but
it’s really unhealthy!”
Never. Ever. You made the right decision!
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