What Country Am I In, Again?

Still damp from the hot springs we have been swimming in, we are barrelling through the back streets of Siwa, an oasis town in Egypt’s Western Desert, mudbrick houses looming out of the desert dark in the lights of the 4WD.

Then there is a bang.

Z flies into me. I ricochet into him.

My head slams into something.

And then there is silence.

I slowly begin to absorb that we have crashed. “Are you alright?” I ask.

“Yes,” Z says. He sounds normal, thank god. “Are you OK?”

Thank god! He’s OK. No tears. No damage.

That is the only thing that matters right now, that Z is OK, which he is.

“Yes,” I say. “I’m fine.”

The other guy in the car, the guy who was driving, he is alright, too.


I notice there is no window left next to me and that the door won’t open as we are nose down in a pile of sand and rubble, the body of the car suspended over a metre-deep hole.

Ah! I think, rather slowly. That would be the bang!

And the window has gone because my head has taken it out.

I clear the remaining fragments of glass from the window frame, and we climb, perfectly calmly, albeit in rather slow motion, through the empty frame onto sand.

It feels as though someone is pouring two streams of cool water down my face. It’s rather cool and nice, especially in this desert heat. Like having my face under a running tap.

Oh, I think, very slowly. I’m bleeding.

I’m bleeding A LOT.

This is going to worry Z.


“Oh my god, MUM!” he says.

I can’t see myself in the light of the headlights, which, bizarrely, are still on and actually shining through the heap of sand, but I can see Z’s face.

The guy, the guy who was driving – who is he? I feel like I know him from somewhere… – is pushing something to my forehead, some white cloth. On reflex, I take over and apply pressure with my hand.

“I’m fine, Z,” I say, pulling out the explanation that every parent uses at some point from deep in my sluggish brain, where it has lived since my parents used it with me. “Cuts on the face and head always bleed a lot. It’s because…”

Why is it? I don’t know why it is. I used to know this. Now I don’t. Is it because they’re near the surface? Lots of blood vessels?

No, that doesn’t make any sense. “It’s OK,” I say again. “No big deal. A lot of blood but nothing serious.”

I feel very shaky and sit down in a pile of sand.


All of a sudden, there is a guy with a kabout, a little motorbike powered trailer, and we are in the back of it, tooling through yet more darkened back streets.

“Z!” I say, panicking. “Does he know where we’re going?

“Yes,” Z says. “X gave him detailed directions.”

Ah! I think. So that’s the guy’s name.

And then it slips away again.

What was his name again? How did I know him? What were we doing in a car with him? And where were we going?

It is then that I realise I cannot remember the name of our hotel. Nor can I remember why we are here. Nor do I know what town we are in. Or what country.

“Do you know where we’re staying?” I say. “I can’t remember the name…”

“Yes,” Z says. “We’re staying at Siwa Gardens.”

“Is that what this place is called?” I ask. “Siwa? We’re in Egypt, right? Are we in Egypt? Yes, we are in Egypt, aren’t we? Oh my god. I can’t remember anything.”

This is terrifying. I rack my memory. Where are we? How did we get here? I know we had a crash, but what are we doing here?

And where the hell are we? Is this Indonesia? It doesn’t LOOK like Indonesia.


I start to babble hysterically, then stop. I’m absolutely terrified but worrying Z won’t help.

I think about what to say that’s not going to be too scary.

“OK,” I say. “Here’s the thing. I don’t think I’m seriously injured but I am concussed. I can’t remember anything. I can’t remember how we got here. I know there was a crash but I don’t know how. I don’t know where we are staying. I don’t know what town we are in. This isn’t unusual with concussion…”

“OK,” Z says. “We’re in Siwa. We were driving back from a camp with some hot springs and X took a bend in fifth and missed it.”

“Oh!” I say. “I thought there was a block in the road. A dune in the road. Where are we again?”

“We’re in Siwa,” Z says, patiently. “There was a big hole in the road, though. But we landed in some guy’s front garden. I think he took out his stall.”

“OK,” I say, trying not to babble. “I have short term memory loss. This isn’t that unusual with concussion. But it can also be a symptom of more serious head injuries. So you need to monitor me. If I still can’t remember things in the morning, or if you can’t wake me up, or if I start vomiting or falling over, you need to get me to a hospital. Our travel insurance is with…”

… I have no idea who our travel insurance is with…

I know, at the moment, who Z is, who I am and that we have been in a car crash and my head has taken out a window while travelling at 40 miles per hour or thereabouts.

I also know that I am concussed, could have more serious head injuries and might need to go to a hospital and get medevaced out for treatment.

We’re in Indonesia, right?

Don’t be stupid, I say to myself. Look at all this sand! Look at the dunes! Look at the mudbrick. We’re clearly in…

… Where are we again?…

… Oh, yeah. Egypt.


Weirdly, I am lucid enough to worry about this. I can’t remember anything but I can worry about not remembering anything. Which is progress, I guess.

This town – what’s it called again? – this is a small town, I think. No place to have head injuries.

They’ll need to, to put me in a machine, what do they call that thing they put you in to look at the state of your brain? They won’t have one here.

They won’t have anything here. Where is here again?

I try not to ask Z this, as I have a feeling I asked him already.


“We’re here,” Z says.

I fumble in my wallet for a note. It’s all monopoly money to me. What is the currency here? Egyptian pounds? What does that even mean?

I find a note. I like the colour of it and it looks right, although I’m not sure it will be enough. I hand it over. The guy drives off.

“Is this where we’re staying?” I ask.

It doesn’t look familiar. There’s a weird gateway. There are all these palm trees. And a huge garden. Where are we? I could get lost here.

What is this place? It’s like the apple orchard in Mr Wiz, but with palm trees instead of apples. I thought there was a pool here. I can’t see it.

“This is our room, Mum,” says Z.


My head is starting to hurt. I have bumps all over it and the cuts are bleeding again.

I really, really need a cigarette. But I don’t have a lighter! I don’t have a LIGHTER!

“That guy!” I say. “What’s his name? That guy! He has my lighter!”

“Well,” Z says. “Judging by the state of his car, he probably needs a cigarette more than you do.”

I begin to turn the room upside down, looking for a lighter, matches, any form of fire-making equipment. There’s nothing. I go out to the place where the man sometimes sits, but he’s not there.

Can I open the drawers and look in there? Something tells me I shouldn’t do that.

I feel like I’m in a dream. When I come back to our room, it looks like a new place, again, and in the mirror my face looks too bloody and too old to be mine.

Nothing is familiar, because my memory is shot to pieces. “Tell me what happened again,” I say, in between futile requests to Z to go to the place with the man and find matches.

“We spent the day in the desert with X,” Z says. “He’s our friend. You know him from Abdu restaurant. We went to a salt lake and watched the sunset. Then we had dinner at a camp with some hot springs. And on the way back, X was driving in fifth, which he shouldn’t have been doing in Siwa, and misjudged a bend.”

“Oh!” I say, rather monotonously. “So THAT’s his name? What town are we in again?… ”

I sleep, eventually.


In the morning, I wake in a surreal sort of panic.

I remember being in a crash. I lost something in the car! What did I lose?

My camera’s there.

Oh f*ck, I think. My computer.

After locating my computer, my next thought is nicotine. I know I don’t have a lighter, because I spent an hour or so looking for one, and I’m pretty sure I’ve lost my shoes.

I wander over to reception. I know the word! And I recognise the place! No one’s there. But it’s breakfast time, so they’re probably in the kitchen, cooking. I know where that is, which is good.

I know the name of the place we’re in and I know the name of the manager.

“Do you have matches?” I ask.

“What happened?” Sami, the manager, says.

I realise that I have two inch-long cuts on my forehead, which is still covered in blood. Z offered to dose me up with iodine last night but I said I wanted to shower first.

Yes, I admit it. I’m a wimp.

“There was a car crash,” I say. “My head smashed the window. Z’s fine. Me, I have some cuts. But, I’m OK.”

“Hamdilullah!” S says, inspecting the cuts.

“Hamdilullah!” I say. Thanks be to god!

I grab a coffee and a cigarette, and head back to our room to begin the task of waking Z up and to try and clean up my cuts a bit.


“Wakey-wakey!” I say.

He sits bolt upright, not, for once, to complain about this mode of address, which irritates the hell out him now he’s a fine upstanding chap of 11.

“OK, Mum,” he says. “What can you remember? Can you remember everything now?”

“Yes,” I say. “We’re in Siwa. In Egypt. We were at a camp with some hot springs and X was driving us back, when we crashed.”

“Oh good,” he says. “Your memory’s come back.”

“Yeah,” I say. My head feels sore as hell and I have some other bruises I have yet to assess, plus I’m feeling strangely tearful and have two deep gashes in my forehead.

“But you know how I always say that it’s ridiculous that you have to wear seatbelts in the back seat in the EU? And that that’s over-regulation? If we’d been wearing seatbelts, I wouldn’t have cannoned into you, and both my head and the window would still be fine.”

Not, of course, that most Egyptian vehicles HAVE rear seatbelts.

“I think we should probably think about going back to Alex,” Z says. “You need to rest today, and then I think we go back to Alex tomorrow. On a bus. Because buses don’t crash.”

“Unfortunately,” I say. “Buses do crash. Often.”

But I figure we’ve had our crash for the time being.

And, in fact, to have travelled for more than two years with only the odd slow-motion bike crash makes us lucky.

Very lucky indeed.

Hamdilullah, as they say here. Thank god.

And, if there is a next time, which there won’t be, this time Z will know what to do.

41 Responses

  1. OMG! So glad to hear you’re ok! Yes, seat belts are wonderful but hard to come by in many countries. Take care!

    • Theodora says:

      Indeedy. I have a new respect for them, having become most gung-ho and cavalier over the last 2+ years. Did I mention that EVERYONE in the family automatically assumed I was driving?!

  2. Barbara says:

    So glad to hear you’re alright. Great read, too!

  3. Sheila says:

    What a scary ordeal! I’m glad everything turned out fine in the end.

  4. Betsey says:

    Wow. I don’t know you, but have been following your blog, and I am *really* glad you are okay. Hope you are able to follow up at the hospital. And that’s a good reminder about seatbelts.

    • Theodora says:

      I haven’t actually followed up at the hospital, because apparently the first 24 hours is the danger point. If I’m not 100% on Sunday — as in, if I still have any headache — I will go and see a hospital, tho’.

  5. oh my gosh. i am SO GLAD you’re ok. whew!!

  6. Jenn says:

    Amazing. Writing.

    Glad you are ok!

  7. Allyson says:

    So glad to hear you were both ok! I got a concussion recently in Dubai while alone with my two-year old and it was a frightening experience. I worry about what would have happened had I been knocked out, and have put child ID bands on my packing list for our next trip. Any suggestions?

    • Theodora says:

      That must have been absolutely terrifying. Z’s big enough to look after himself, but a 2 year old, wow! I think you can rely on people to look after little children in that situation, BUT having all the emergency contact details to hand on one piece of paper (in your wallet, perhaps?) would come in very handy.

  8. Katja says:

    Oh my god. So glad to hear that you’re both OK. Great piece of writing about what must have been really terrifying at the time.

    • Theodora says:

      The concussion was more terrifying than the crash, Katja. Z found that the most scary part as well, obviously, although he’s now treating the whole thing as bragging rights, being male and 11…

  9. Heather says:

    Please get the rest and care you need. Really glad to hear you’re both ok. You’re so lucky to have each other. Be well.

    • Theodora says:

      Thank you, Heather! We are taking it very easy now, in Alexandria, which has decent medical care, and I’m not going to rush anywhere from here…

  10. Theodora–it takes a while to recover from a concussion. Listen to your inner mother and find a place to take it easy. We need your brain sharp for more insightful blogging. (Not that it’s all about us.)

    Traveling mercies, girl.

    • Theodora says:

      Thanks, Kate. We’re in Alexandria which is about as restful as it gets in Egypt without being out of range of decent doctors: the government appears to have started killing people again in Cairo, as you’ve probably seen, but Alex seems currently pretty calm.

      I’m going to rest up here and then I think head down to Nuweiba to get across to Jordan. Zac has a visit to his dad scheduled for end of May, so I’m actually on a schedule of sorts, which is rather annoying…

  11. OMG Theodora –what an ordeal you went through! And incredible story-telling in spite of it all too! Z’s level-headedness deserves a medal too–you must be so proud of him. Take care xoxo

    • Theodora says:

      Thanks, Jesse! I am really proud of him, in fact. I don’t often shower him with praise, but I did the next day — along with making sure he ABSOLUTELY knows what to do if, as his dad put it over email, “it all goes a bit Natasha Richardson…”

  12. I am so grateful to Travelfish for tweeting your story. Glad to find another travel writer with a way with narrative!

    • Theodora says:

      Thanks, Lauren! And thanks for adding me to your list, as well. Really much appreciated…

  13. Ainlay says:

    I echo Kate’s recommendation – take it slow and keep monitoring yourself. No jumping around for a while!

    Isn’t it amazing how calm you can stay when you are with your child? When my hand was literally facing the wrong way after my fall I was able to say to the kids “this? this is nothing, I’m fine. Let’s just pop along to the hospital to make sure though ok?” Have you been to a proper hospital since to get checked out?

    • Theodora says:

      YES! It’s hilarious, isn’t it? As a solo person, or with other adults, I think I’d have fallen to pieces completely. As it is, the mother urge kicks in and you’re channelling the Black Knight in Monty Python — “THIS? Only a flesh wound…”

      And, no, I haven’t. From the medical folk I’ve talked to (I’ve also got medics in the family, and spoken to family, who would have been all over me to get to a hospital if they felt it necessary), the first 24 hours are critical, and mild headache is normal for 3-5 days afterwards.

      So if I still have any headache or discomfort on Sunday, I will go and get some checks done — we moved down to Alexandria to be easily in range of said facilities. Hospitals here are 20th century, and there might even be a 21st century one, though I doubt it…

  14. Dalene says:

    Wow, wow, wow. So glad you and Z are okay. Take care of yous…

  15. Adam says:

    Beautiful writing and harrowing story. Glad to hear you’re okay – definitely sounds scary.

    • Theodora says:

      Thanks, Adam. It could have been a LOT worse (hitting another vehicle at that speed would not have been fun), but, yes, it was quite shaky-making…

  16. Leigh says:

    Great story and really well written – just too bad you’re the main player. Now you do have to look after yourself because concussion symptoms don’t always appear right away – and I speak from experience. Hope the rest of the trip is a tad more uneventful.

    • Theodora says:

      Here’s hoping so too, Leigh, although given the whole Cairo political thing just exploded again and things are feeling rather tense, I’m changing location for a while. How long did your concussion symptoms take to show?

  17. Laurence says:

    Wow, amazing story. Great writing! (Enjoyed Z’s post too :D)

    • Theodora says:

      Thanks, Laurence! Z loves having readers in particular, even though he ignores them most of the time…

  18. Katrina says:

    The way you describe your thought (and “un-thought”?) processes reminds me of the Jill Bolte Taylor talk on TED. If you haven’t seen it, you must! She’s a brain scientist who suffered a stroke. The talk is called – wait for it – “Stroke of Insight”. Amazing stuff!

    Anyway, glad you’re all right. The knock apparently did not impair your sense of humor or perspective, Hamdilullah. 😉

    • Theodora says:

      Hamdilullah indeed. And, fingers crossed, there won’t be too much scarring either. It takes a couple of weeks of being grateful you don’t have head injuries to start wondering whether your eyebrows are going to be lopsided indefinitely…

  19. Phil says:

    Holy crap. Glad you two are alright! Definitely lay low for a while. In any case, you managed to turn a rather scary situation into an entertaining post, which is at this point unsurprising to me 🙂

    • Theodora says:

      Thank you! And, at least we don’t have mango worm.

      It was an unrelaxing week, to say the least. Night bus out of Siwa to get to Alexandria in case the concussion went weird and I needed a hospital, then while we’re in Alex a political situation develops in Cairo and 11 people are shot: which left me thinking it was time to leave Egypt for a while.

      Bus to Cairo, night bus to Nuweiba, ferry to Jordan. Gah. And, after all that, Egypt seems to have calmed down again…

  20. Angie Away says:

    What a crazy story! I’ve had a concussion from banging my head on a window as well, so I know exactly what you were feeling! I’m glad you’re both ok.

    • Theodora says:

      Thank you, Angie. I’m fine now. I have mild scarring, but that’s all, so pretty much right as rain. And, considering the absence of seatbelts, for both of us to be OK at that speed is, well, extremely lucky on our part….