This weekend Meagan and I drove Wakulla Springs to meet the
CIES group for the outing. I was
happy to see Hayley there as well.
Upon arrival Meagan and I saw the group gathered around the boat tour
house. They were all standing in
clumps chatting or just standing.
I saw my conversation partner, Chris, with her Brazilian girlfriends and
we greeted each other and conversed, mostly small talk. Being
an entertainer, I decided to play my ukulele, which seemed popular with the
CIES group. A lot of the young
women smiled and asked what instrument I was playing. The Japanese women seemed most interested in the
instrument. Another friendly
Japanese student named Takya (spelling questionable) greeted me and Hayley
while standing in the sun on the high dive. We talked about CIES and the coolness of the water. Then, I decided it was time to jump
in! I like to get everybody to
count “1-2-3,” to motivate the more timid jumpers, like myself.
The group went out on the boat tour, and upon returning, some of the
Brazilian women were swimming near where Hayley and I had set up “camp”. I played my banjo and sang some folk music. Then Meagan, Hayley, and I swam out to them
and the six of us stood in a circle and talked about their home-region in
Brazil, the indigenous people, and the folk music of Brazil. The ladies sang us a song from their
childhood, and then we showed them “ring-around-the-rosie”. I was happy to know a famous
bossanova tune called “Agua de Beber”
(translated: Water to Drink).
Maria and Maria explained the meaning of the song, which is one of
companionship or camaraderie.
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