Wednesday, June 4, 2025

If John Steinbeck visited the ancient city of Luxor

Travels in Dust and Time: A Journey to Luxor

The road from Cairo unrolled like a dry ribbon, a tether pulling us toward something older than cities, older perhaps than memory. Luxor, they called it now, though once it bore the name Thebes, a place of gods and pharaohs, of temples so large a man could lose his own smallness in their shadow. I came not as a scholar, nor as a pilgrim, but with the kind of hunger that comes from hearing whispers in stone.

We arrived in the amber light of afternoon. The sun here doesn’t set so much as surrender, quietly and with reverence. And the Nile, eternal in its purpose, glinted like a mirror made for gods. The air held the perfume of heat and dust, and beneath it all, something deeper—sand, sweat, and the breath of time.

The bazaar thronged with energy, aroma and vigour

Luxor is a city built on layers. On one side of the river lies the living city, the bazaars, the motorbikes, the children with wide eyes and wider grins who run beside you, palms outstretched, laughing. On the other side—the west bank—the dead sleep. Not peacefully, for the tombs of the Valley of the Kings and the queens are not quiet places. They hum. They hum with the weight of stories that never found their ending. In those winding tunnels painted in ochre and lapis, Ramses still speaks. He speaks not to you, but through you. And if you listen too long, you’ll find a part of yourself sealed in there, left behind among the jackal-headed gods and golden promises.

We hired a small felucca and drifted across the Nile. The boatman, an old man with eyes as sharp as river reeds, said nothing, as if words might disturb the balance. The oar dipped and rose, dipped and rose, a rhythm older than language. I watched the sun melt into the hills behind the temple of Hatshepsut, and I thought of time—not as an enemy, but as a sculptor. It carves us all in its own image, eventually.

The Temple of Luxor: Columns as thick as tree trunks reached for the sky

Karnak was less a temple than a memory you could walk through. Columns thick as tree trunks reached for the sky, which seemed too pale to contain such ambition. I touched one, half expecting it to pulse beneath my hand, like the heartbeat of some slumbering god. The guide, a thin man with a cigarette clinging to his lip, rattled off names and dates. I heard none of it. I was busy watching light filter through the cracks, illuminating hieroglyphs like a sacred script written by the sun itself.

And so we left Luxor, though not really. You don’t leave a place like that—you carry it. It tucks itself in the folds of your coat, in the callouses on your hands, in the dream you’ll have weeks later of standing before a statue whose eyes follow you.

There are cities you visit and forget. Luxor is not one of them. It waits. And someday, like all the others before you, you return—if not in body, then in reverie.


If you'd like to visit Luxor for yourself

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Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Boryeong Mud Festival: A Messy Delight in South Korea



Every July, the sleepy coastal town of Boryeong in South Korea transforms into a muddy playground, attracting thousands of thrill-seekers and fun-lovers from around the world. The Boryeong Mud Festival, also known as the Daecheon Mud Festival, is a messy extravaganza that promises an unforgettable experience.

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