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Posts Tagged ‘Ithaka’

  1. Forcing Odysseus to Leave Home

    January 17, 2010 by host

    Greek-Island-Greece-Odysseus-Man-in-Water

    I was surprised to learn that one of the main heroes of the Trojan war, and the protagonist of the Odyssey, pulled out every stop in the book to avoid having to leave home and join the fight.

    When Helen was abducted by Paris, her husband, Menalaus, asked Helen’s old suitors to help bring her back to Sparta and to make the Trojans pay for their affront.  Odysseus was obligated by an oath to help, but an oracle had prophesied that if Odysseus left home, his journey back would be long-delayed.  To avoid this fate, Odysseus pretended to be insane.  He attached a donkey and an ox to his plow and began to sow his fields with salt.  His ruse was uncovered only when his infant son, Telemachus, was placed in front of the plow and Odysseus veered to avoid hurting him.

    Human beings will put themselves through all sorts of ruses to avoid doing what they know they should do.  I’ve certainly done it

    What would have happened, I wonder, if Odyssesus had succeeded in his ruse?  Would he have been just another long-forgotten king of Ithaka?  Would he have secured his place in history through some other adventure or act of bravery?

    History has shown that the stories of ancient Greece all have some basis in fact.  What do you suppose really kept Odysseus wandering for ten years after the fall of Troy?  Who were the sirens,  Calypso, and the Cyclops?

    All interesting questions, and I hope to be able to answer at least one in my lifetime.  For now, I need to find another Telemachus.

    © 2010 – 2011, Ithaka Bound. All rights reserved.

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  2. Ithaka

    September 7, 2009 by host

    Keep Ithaka always in your mind.

    Arriving there is what you’re destined for

    I pulled the blog name Ithaka Bound out of thin air a few days before I was due to leave for Greece.

    I’d tried three or four other names — all included the word Greece and all were already taken by others.   I wracked my brain for a clever name but nothing clever came to me.  Then I remembered that beautiful poem by Cavafy.

    My mind wandered to the King of Ithaka who left his home, all those centuries ago, to fight the Trojans over an abducted Spartan queen named Helen. How long Odysseus wandered, looking and yearning for home, never giving up until he had Ithaka in his sights.

    Ithaka is the proverbial homeland of the soul that we all seek — internally or externally — we all know it’s there, we can sense it just in front of us, always just out of reach. I decided to make my pursuit external and included it on my list of islands to visit.

    Arriving in Ithaka is special, no matter how you do it.  If you take a boat from Lefkada, over water as smooth as glass, you’ll arive in the postcard port of Frikes.  Arriving by way of the main port of Vathi, (Ithaka has a permanent population of 300)  is just as breathtaking an experience.  You’ll be greeted by a sign in the port reminding you that every traveler is a citizen of Ithaka.

    I guess that’s why I felt so at home there. I’ve been a traveler since birth, and I think wanderlust is wired into our genes the same way green eyes or a dimpled chin would be.  Don’t blame me if I can’t stop wandering — it’s in my DNA.

    It’s in yours too.

    I’m not going to post any photos of Ithaka because I don’t want to ruin your arrival on the island.  You’ll find Ithaka to be exactly as you’d imagined — an emerald green jewel rising out of a turquoise sea.  The greenest island in Greece, surrounded by the clearest, calmest waters that never knew a meltemi.

    That’s as far as my description will go.  I wish you a journey as happy as mine was, and may you be spared the trials of Odysseus.

    Laistrygonians, Cyclops,

    wild Poseidon – you won’t encounter them

    unless you bring them along in your soul,

    unless your soul sets them up in front of you.

    I’ll be back in the States on the 10th.  I’m giving myself two days to get to Athens, just in case the sea decides to delay my return or someone goes on strike.

    Hope your road is a long one.

    I expect my return acclimatzation to be painful–I’ve been living a Greek island dream so what else could it be?  My first few days without the sea will surely have me sobbing like a Sicilian widow.

    © 2009 – 2011, Ithaka Bound. All rights reserved.

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  3. 4 more days and the wake up

    May 18, 2009 by host

    Seriously, where did this past year go?  Last thing I remember, I was resigning from my job and making a devil-may-care decision to go to Greece as soon as the sun began shining again on a regular basis.  The winter was long and grey; I wore out my Mama Mia! DVD trying to keep hope alive.  Now here I am, dusting off my carry-on and trying to decide between SPF 15 or 30.

    I guess history teaches us that any trip to Greece should be long-anticipated and hard won: Odysseus journeyed for ten long years after the fall of Troy before finally reaching his home in Ithaka.  He had to deal with shipwreck, lazy lotus eaters, multi-headed monsters, and his men being turned into swine after innocently dining on wine and cheese–with Ithaka always just out of sight.

    Odysseus set the bar so high, there’s just no complaining about a middle seat in coach.

    © 2009 – 2011, Ithaka Bound. All rights reserved.

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