Category Archives: India

A journey to the Pushkar Camel Fair- a lifelong dream fulfilled for my husband, Gerald, and scratched off his bucket list

Trouble in Paradise/The Turtles are Coming

It’s chaos now in Agonda. What with the new Turtle Nesting Legislation and the 28% tax! Nobody knows what is going to happen. – Terry Fernandes, owner of our resort

Agonda beach in Goa has been our secret retreat since we first came here ten years ago. Most savvy travelers eschew Goa because of its reputation for overcrowded beaches,noisy bars and general mayhem. But Agonda is different. It is a small fishing village made up mostly of descendants of the masala mix of Portuguese and Indians. Its quiet calm and absence of discos and nightclubs is the major draw for Indian and European visitors looking for a peaceful escape. There is an easygoing balance between the locals and the tourists.

Last year it was discovered that some Olive Ridley turtles had nested on the beach. Each of them lays hundreds of eggs between November and April and the incubation period is forty to fifty days before the babies can swim out to sea. The government decided to set up “Turtle Nesting” zones for eventual development as tourist attractions and enacted legislation prohibiting any and all structures within two hundred twenty meters (about 700 ft.) of the shoreline. Marine turtles are considered “vulnerable species and have the highest protection status.”

Agonda’s economy is primarily based on tourism. Local merchants protested to the government and managed to get a temporary stay order. If the stay is overturned Agonda will effectively cease to exist, as almost all of the lodgings, stores and restaurants are within this arbitrary boundary, and will have to be razed.

I saw no signs of turtle nesting anywhere on the beach and the constant zipping around of the beach patrol truck certainly doesn’t do much to show that the government is serious. It is astonishing that they would imperil a flourishing community.

Living in California I have the utmost respect for environmental protection, but the priorities seem a bit lopsided in a developing country like India where human needs are overwhelming.

After our exhausting thirty six hour journey we experienced some initial disappointment at the changes in our beloved beach experience. We were saddened to hear that our favorite chef and friend,Frances,was in a motorcycle accident and was was forced to close his restaurant where we dined nightly. (Notice that I say “dined” not ate- he was a master chef and a true artist in the kitchen and I looked forward to his nightly creations.) The political demonstrations due to the new citizenship laws enacted by Prime Minister Modi, as well as the bankruptcy of the travel agency Thomas Cook have also had a major impact on tourism.

Our disappointment was short lived as the wonder that is India kicked in.

Last night was a “live music” performance featuring a father and his eight year old daughter, Meghan,visiting from Bangalore. While he calmly played the guitar, this diminutive energizer bunny belted out “Purple Rain” and “This Girl’s on Fire”. She was enthusiastically enjoying the attention of being in front of a crowd of appreciative listeners. She was cute and she knew it.

When her set was over she came over to the table where I was sitting with a young Belgian couple because she saw me mouthing the words to a song her Dad was singing. “How do you know the words?” she gushed. Satisfied that I knew a bit about music she then started jumping up and down, flicking back her long black hair like an MTV diva, and proclaimed “I want to be a singer!” Dressed in a pink flowered jumpsuit her attitude belied her eight young years, and she didn’t stop jumping for an instant. I asked her how long she thought she could keep on jumping up and down and her response came quickly with a mischievous smile- “Forever”.

The audience was made up of first time visitors to India, long time expats as well as young and old Indian families.Everyone was having such a good time that we didn’t care if sometimes her voice didn’t quite hit the right notes. This sense of family and community is the Agonda that I love.

Thankfully the old adage “The more things change, the more things stay the same” proved true.

Amy’s Story

I was born in Calcutta and adopted at three years old by a single woman from Utah. I have no memories of India at all and when I applied for a visa to come here was surprised to learn that I had to first renounce my Indian citizenship. I never knew I was still an Indian citizen.

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Amy has a big,beautiful infectious smile, with eyes that invite you to engage. When I asked if I could interview her she readily agreed. I’ve been curious about the motivation for so many young Europeans and Americans of Gujarati origin to come to Ahmedabad to live or work at Manav Sadhna for extended periods of time. But Amy’s story is a bit different because she grew up in the non-Indian, very white Mormon culture of Salt Lake City.

My mother was a non practicing Mormon, as were her parents. They enjoyed a lifestyle of cocktail parties and country clubs. My mom felt that she shouldn’t have to be married to have a child and was liberal minded. She picked me out from an orphanage photo.

 

Amy’s upbringing was filled with the love of her mother and grandparents, and when asked if she experienced any racism growing up, she replied simply “No”. I was surprised and pushed further. ” Maybe my mom sheltered me from that. When I was a junior in High School someone called me a “Nigger”. I told them I was Indian.” Amy’s mother exposed her to Indian culture as a young child and had a mural painted in her bedroom of Amy riding an elephant amidst landscape scenes of India. Four years later her mother asked if she would like to have a brother or sister, and soon after a boy from Bulgaria was added to the family.

Unfortunately this idyllic childhood ended with the untimely death of her beloved mother when Amy was twelve. Her mother’s niece and husband, who were childless, came to live and care for the two motherless children. Trying to cope with the loss of her support system Amy turned to the Mormon church. The idea of being “sealed”with her mother for life ( a Mormon ritual)was very comforting .

Sealing is the everlasting covenant from God to families that we will always be together eternally. All married couples are sealed to each other with their children being born into the covenant, but when a couple adopt a child, they take the child with them to the Temple for a sealing ceremony..

She had been spending almost all her free time with the local Bishops family as well as other practicing Mormons, a way of escaping her less than happy home-life. Becoming active in the church was a natural consequence. Although her family were “inactive” Mormons, Amy was baptized at eight according to Mormon practice.

For the next twenty years Amy was the ideal Mormon. She didn’t drink, smoke, practiced purity in thought and action and attended Church regularly. She never questioned any of the tenets of the religion. All that changed in 2008.

Amy’s brother had a much more difficult time adjusting to his new home, having lived with his mother only a few years before she died. He turned to drugs and alcohol and had a tumultuous youth. They lost touch for many years. When one day he called and said he was clean and sober, and had found a homosexual lover, she was delighted for him. The church up until this point had been vague on their position on homosexuality, and left the handling of the issue to local leaders. Meanwhile, Amy had been experiencing doubts about her own sexuality and began seeing a therapist. The legalization of same sex marriage in California in 2008 made her curious to learn more about homosexuality.

In 2015 when the Church came out with their official position on same-sex marriage, Amy was at this point identifying as a lesbian.The handbook stated that children of same-sex marriage could not be blessed or baptized until age 18 and at that point had to renounce their parents in order to join the church. The policy also states that those in same sex marriages would be considered apostates, a category that includes murderers and rapists.This was the final straw. It was time to leave.

I strongly believe in God because of my adoption story and other spiritual experiences I’ve had throughout my life. I also believe I will be forever with my mom and grandparents with or without the Church’s teachings. If the LDS Church reversed their policies on homosexuality I’d be an openly gay member. I still believe in the tenets of the church but I am also learning to have more faith in the universe, that I don’t need to worship in a church or temple. I can be close to God anywhere.

I’ve always known that my life was a miracle and lived it as such.

 

THE TOILET GARDEN/GANDHI’S DREAM

“It is health that is wealth not pieces of gold and silver.”-Gandhi

I wrote this four years ago but noticed that it was not published and had “disappeared”. For those that haven’t seen it before, it was this visit that inspired us to come back and work at Manav Sadhna.

More people in India have cell phones than toilets. The Toilet Garden was listed as #61 in the guidebook “101 Things to Do in Ahmedabad “, under the heading “Flushing Diversions“. Yes, there is one, I am not joking.  During our family visit to Delhi we didn’t have time to visit the Toilet Museum so we thought we would make up for this lapse.

It is located inside the Environmental Sanitation Institute compound on the grounds of Gandhi’s former ashram. Founded in 1955 by Ishwarbai Patel, better known as “Mr. Toilet”, there are thirteen varieties of toilets displayed in a lovely garden.

Gandhi was horrified that one caste of people, the Harijans, formerly known as the “Untouchables”, were responsible for going around to the villages and collecting the waste. “Mr Toilet” distributed more than 30,000 toilets, and now 55% of the population have sanitary facilities , up from the previous low number of 8%. The garden was built in honor of this great accomplishment.

Gerald, of course posed in front of the “VIP TOILET” as well as one of the squatters.  I joked that it would be nice to have a  cafe with toilets as seats, and sure enough there was one. We sat down, had a chai, and used our toilet paper as napkins.

A figure of Gandhi was carved into a tree stump nearby and we went next door to visit his Ashram.

Manav Sadhna, an NGO that works with improving the lives of women and children in the neighboring slums has its headquarters here. Forty thousand women scrounge for garbage to sell to recyclers and these women play a vital role in the sanitation of Ahmedabad. This center is a safe haven for children to learn a skill, get basic health care and experience love and compassion. There are also various programs for the elderly,computer training , recycling and finance.  More than 9,000 people in the community are served.

What started as a lark, ended up as a fascinating and informative look at another side of India..

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How Uber Almost Saved My Life /Ahmedabad Revisited

Uber in India?! Well, sort of. On hearing that Uber had come to Ahmedabad we were ecstatic. One of our greatest challenges staying here two years ago was dealing with transportation issues. Now we could go anywhere in the city, explore new restaurants and be more social.

Traveling by rickshaw is at best a frustrating experience. First the haggling about the price, then the invariable blank stares when you give the destination, and last but not least, the blasting of diesel fumes in your face. Our 95 rated face masks were packed and ready for use, but now we wouldn’t need them. Maybe.

Our second challenge was going anywhere on foot. Crossing the road in India can be a life altering if not life ending, experience. Anyone who has been to Asia knows what I’m talking about. Lanes as well as travel directions are a mere suggestion. Cars, rickshaws, motor scooters, pedestrians and livestock “share” the road. LOOKING RIGHT, LOOKING LEFT (they drive on the right side of the road) WATCH OUT for the speeding moto driver, RUN QUICKLY between the rickshaws, WAIT, that car is going in the wrong direction. I was so freaked out last visit that we only went to the Foundation and back and then stayed holed up in our hotel room.

This time we felt confident that with Uber we could go anywhere cheaply and with ease in a nice air conditioned vehicle. We realized that in India it would not be the same as in the USA or Europe. Nonetheless our expectations were perhaps unrealistically high. Most drivers back home drive part time, in India it is a full time job. In 1993 there were 3,000 cars in Ahmedabad, today there are 300,000. Some drivers own their own cars, others work for fleets. Those that drive for others earn about $150 a month, those who own their own cars can make up to $1800 a month, minus the 20% Uber fee.

 

It will be your best friend.

This was confirmed by a young Indian woman we met at our first airbnb.

After being happily settled in our modern hotel room we were ready to go out for dinner at Tinello, an Italian restaurant at the Hyatt Regency. Not that I don’t love Indian food, but after three weeks I wanted something different.

I opened up my Uber app and it connected me immediately with three drivers in the area. It would cost 72 rupees (a little over a dollar) and our driver would be Manish , driving a Suzuki Echo. But wait a minute, what’s that in small print at the bottom?

Driver is deaf or hard of hearing.

Nope. Nix that one, it’s hard enough making yourself understood by someone with normal hearing.

Chandraveer would be our driver. As a white Suzuki Maruti pulled into the driveway, things were not looking auspicious. The car was old,dirty,dented and the driver looked like someone out of a gangster movie. We got in anyway. No more than two minutes had passed when we heard a bump, bump bump.

This car has a flat tire, let’s get out.

Gerald grabbed me out of the car and we went back to the hotel to start again. The driver was still flailing his arms trying to get us to wait and get back in the car. The third one was the charm and we arrived ten minutes later at the restaurant.

Subsequent trips have proven to be iffy. Once, while trying to find a major clothing store, Fabindia, the driver became totally lost. His GPS didn’t work, he became flustered and the car smelled like a diseased animal had recently died. We were forced to get out and walk. Even the polluted city air was better than remaining in his car another minute.

Our second problem was graciously solved by the hotel manager, after telling him about our apprehension crossing the road to get to the Foundation in the mornings.

Welcome back, Mr. Huth. We will assign you and Madam one of our bellman as your private escort every day.

Luckily Hindus believe they will live many lives or no one would ever cross the road.

Close Encounters of the Holy Kind

Early morning is a good time to visit the Jagdish Temple in Udaipur, before the incessant roar of motorbikes and auto rickshaws drowns out the melodic chanting of the faithful worshippers inside. Down below, two ladies are sitting cross legged, on the staircase leading up to the temple, arranging their baskets of marigold and rose petal strands. Business will be brisk later as visitors buy offerings to be blessed by the priests.

At the top of a steep, narrow staircase stands a rack where shoes are placed before entering the shrine enclosure, a custom practiced in every temple in India. Stepping onto the icy cold stone floor I make a mental note ( for the umpteenth time)to wear warm socks next time.

I decide to walk around the thousand year old shrine, carved with stone elephants,riders on horseback and sensual dancing figures. In the back of the temple there is an open courtyard, a private space for temple attendants and wandering saddhus, and I hesitantly enter,not wanting to encroach upon the sacred grounds. A tall, thin man dressed in a green military style uniform. beckons me to come closer. Seated next to him are two Saddhus- one with saffron robes and dreadlocks, the other in simple white rags, and they are both puffing away on their ganja pipes. The “official” surprises me by pointing to the Saddhus and announcing in clear, precise English.

Shankar Maharaj and Loden Maharaj- they are my gurus.

I smile serenely.

Shit, shit, shit, shit.

Am I hearing him right ? He is waving his arms around in an exasperated manner and I realize he is warning me about the piles of cow dung littering the courtyard. Cows are sacred in India and they non chalantly wander through the streets, highways, doorways, and temples, with the knowledge that they will not be disturbed.

I ask if I can take photos of the Saddhus, and they happily agree and start posing. My reward for not paying attention for two seconds, is to slide into a schmear of hardly visible cow manure IN MY BARE FEET! All of us start laughing. Holy shit!

When I finish taking pictures and want to show them to the “official”, he brushes me aside.

No,no. I don’t want to see the photos. Send them to me. Here is my address at the temple.

He hands me a torn piece of paper scribbled in Hindi script.

Everyone knows the Jagdish Temple in Udaipur. It will come here. 4″ x 6″ only. Now let’s have some chai.

Just then Gerald appears and rescues me from having to make excuses for not wanting to risk drinking from those “holy” cups.

I knew I would find you here.

A Perfect Chaos/An Ordinary Day in Udaipur

Nestled between the Artificial Jewellery Shop and the Medical Supplies corner an elderly man sat on a high stool, fiddling with watches. He was surrounded by all manner of clock and watch parts and a small glass case displayed timing devices for sale, costing between a few dollars and several hundred. Gerald lives by the mantra “In India anything is possible”, but hopes for repairing his twenty year old travel alarm were fading.

Its a really cheap clock but its been a lot of places with me over the years and has sentimental value.

We approached the gentleman, asked if he repaired clocks, and he seemed to think it could be done. Of course, in India no one will ever admit that they cannot do something. We had spent the better part of two hours trying to get my IPad keyboard repaired or replaced ( it died suddenly), with no success. Each new person kindly shepherded us to the next “electronic shop” (nothing more then a tiny niche off the main market street crammed with plugs,memory cards,computer cords,etc.), but in the end , no go.

Do you mind waiting ten or fifteen minutes? He thinks he can do it.

I knew how much that clock meant to Gerald and I was enjoying watching the action on that very busy main street, so I said “Sure”.

It was after our dinner, about 8:00pm, and most of the Indian families who were spending their holidays in Udaipur were rushing around in rickshaws at dizzying speed or walking single file to avoid being sideswiped by a car. The evening was just beginning for them and the mood was festive with the whole family in tow- young couples with their children, in -laws on both sides and the occasional lone auntie or uncle.

I had the advantage of being able to see everything from my slightly perched position but not get in the way of the rush of bodies and cars. The main road was narrow, windy and not made for all the vehicles and cows that travel through.

Suddenly chanting and drums came from a loudspeaker nearby, and I craned my neck to see where it was coming from- a wedding procession perhaps? The last call to prayer from the mosques was over an hour ago. When I looked up I saw a Hindu shrine on the upper floor of a building across the road, where an evening puja was just beginning.

In the midst of all this frenetic activity, the clock man smiled at Gerald and said:

Clock fixed now.

The charge was 70 rupees (about a dollar) and we left, knowing that the clock still had many thousands of miles to journey in the future.

Behind the Curtain/India Exposed

You won’t be able to take photos or watch the make up preparation, but to see the Theyyam Bagavathi Muttilotu is an experience not to be missed. She is one of the most powerful goddesses and the performer cannot eat meat, drink alcohol or have sex for forty one days beforehand. She stays behind a curtain and doesn’t come out until ready to receive the headdress. For some people it is scary because she can be unpredictable and start yelling and gesturing aggressively.

Kurian, my Theyyam authority, and owner of Costa Malabari Guest House in Kannur, explained this to me in an earnest tone. I have been coming here ever since I was first exposed to Theyyam in 2014.

Theyyam is an ancient ritual practiced in the Malabar region of southern India and is performed exclusively by men who manifest the deities and goddesses while in a trance-like state. The ritual started out as a practice of the lower castes and later became absorbed into Hindu culture as a way of communicating directly with deities.

Malabar village shrines are dedicated to a particular deity and an annual ritual or festival is sponsored either by a family or the priests, and is open to the greater community at large.Theyyam season is between November and May. The more powerful Theyyam deities can attract thousands of worshippers to the ceremonies.

At nine in the morning we started out for the first village. It was later than usual because the ceremonies, which usually start at sunrise, had been going on all night. Plastic tarps were set up as booths , carnival style, to sell the various trinkets- plastic toys, balloons,bangles and other assorted useful objects which the attendees would inevitably buy. Bollywood music, interspersed with adverts for travel agencies, hair growth clinics and “fancy dress” shops, bellowed out of two loudspeakers positioned just outside the kavu ( sacred area around the shrine). It was early and we were among the first to arrive. I always like to have time for the villagers to become comfortable with our presence.

My flip flops, already muddied with the moist red dirt, and traces of the many people who had trampled over them, were placed outside the entrance to the shrine, and I hoped I would be able to find them again after the crowds stormed through. I attempted (vainly) to sparkle as much as the Rajasthani women and wore my best gold dangly earrings, bangles and mangal sutra ( Rajasthani marriage necklace).

Gerald and Richard had set their backpacks on the red plastic chairs in the front row to save the best seats. It wasn’t until later, when an old lady snarled at him did he realize they were in the women’s section, and had to move.

I immediately rushed over to the costume/make up preparation area. Each one of the eight deities that would be represented has a unique costume and intricate face painting design which can take hours to complete. After four hours in the tropical heat,watching the six drummers feverishly lead the deities into trance, and the mesmerizing dancing of the Theyyam, I was exhausted. We had seen four deities and there were four more getting ready. As the sun baked into my skin, even with the sensory overload of these rituals I knew that I absolutely had to go to the next village where Bhagavati would be the grand finale.

As we arrived at the next shrine- a much bigger venue with hundreds of people already milling about in the temple grounds, the anticipation was palpable. As in the other village we were the only non-Indians and were given a place of honor so that we could to see better.

An old man with bloodshot eyes- probably from too much toddy-approached me.

Bagavathi is a powerful goddess, coming soon. She will make you cry, I do.

I was anxious for the finale after waiting almost two hours .We had rushed to get there by 2 pm and my eyes were glued to the curtain covering the place where Bagavathi was preparing, waiting to see some movement that would indicate an appearance. The only food I had eaten was a packaged ice cream bought from a vendor. Although we were invited to share the feast that was prepared for the masses at each shrine, I had politely refrained from eating and drinking, knowing that the toilet facilities would be suspect. But there was no way that I would even think of leaving before seeing what I had come for.

A bonfire had been smoldering for hours. Suddenly the temple priests and attendants started running over the hot coals and encircling the shrine. A swell of women and men charged across the temple grounds to the corner where Bagavathi was ready to receive her headdress. I didn’t know whether I should join them or stay put in my prime viewing position. The women next to me kept on squeezing me in in order to make room for a badly misshapen young man, lying on a mat behind me. They pointed to a woman standing nearby who I assumed was his mother, and she motioned that she wanted him to be blessed when Bagavahti passed by. I knew if I left there would be no returning.

Fearful that if I stayed I might miss the action, I ran over, just in time to see Bagavathi, in brilliant red headdress and huge skirt,flaming torches in both hands. Worshippers were pushing and shoving to get close enough to pass their arms through the flames, a sign of receiving her blessings.

And then just like that it was all over.

The car was quiet on the way back to our guesthouse. A small window had been opened , exposing one of the many sides of Incredible India.

Murder on the Ernakulum Express/Dying of Laughter

Hey, look what I found at the shop!” Richard ran toward us, grinning from ear to ear, holding up a copy of a book entitled “The Dumb and the Dumbfounded”. Good title for a series,eh?” We were at the rail station trying to pass the time since our train from Goa to Kannur, in Kerala State, would be delayed at least an hour. My Canadian friend Esther was on her first trip to India, and I was trying to convince her that this train would be much better than the one I took in Orissa when a cockroach crawled over my blanket as I was trying to sleep. “We’ll be in chairs in an open car, it’s really lovely”. Although skeptical, she seemed slightly appeased.

A group of Tibetans had just arrived on the platform and the women were busily fingering their prayer beads, while the men were crowded around one of the accompanying Buddhist monks. They were in earnest conversation with hands and arms flailing about. One of the elder women, dressed in a sarong of bright red handwoven cloth, thick strands of turquoise and coral hanging from her neck alongside a pendant with a photo of the Dalai Lama,was staring at me. I was wearing my usual travel gear: red Indian baggy pants and a scarf embellished with gold flower patterns. My reward for dressing in local style was a betel nut stained,red-toothed smile of approval.

I thought there must be a big meet up with the Dalai Lama or some such religious event and we were all venturing a guess at where they were from and what they were doing here. When I asked, the unexpected response was simply “We are going to the beach”. That’s what you get for stereotyping.

Gerald ran up and down the platform trying to find out exactly where we should be standing to board our train. The platforms were connected by a foot bridge, involving carrying the luggage up and down flights of stairs, and we didn’t want to schlep more than necessary. Richard volunteered to look at the digital board at the entrance since he was the most fleet-footed and the train was scheduled to arrive in twenty minutes.

Meanwhile it was ten minutes before the trains arrival and we couldn’t see Richard. Esther was panicked that he might not make it back in time and would miss the train. I am not leaving without Richard!” She was adamant.

Finally the train arrived, and baggage in hand, all four of us leaped over the small space between the platform and the train step. A long narrow corridor separated the seats/sleeper bunks and two tier curtains functioned as privacy barriers. Not exactly the “cockroach train”, but definitely a bit of a disappointment since our tickets were first class A/C. We settled in, deciding to put our luggage in the upper bunks and positioning ourselves across from each other. The window, although stained with dirt and mud allowed a filtered view of the lush countryside of palm trees, rice paddies and backwaters.

Within minutes out came the jar of peanut butter, crackers and tasty little bananas. “Meals on Wheels” arrived in the form of Biriyani lunch containers with a choice of veg or non-veg. The aroma of cloves and cardamon lured us into trying one of each. Rice was well seasoned but finding the veggies and the chicken was cause for another round of hysterics. The other passengers in the car must have thought those foreigners are really crazy.

First order of business: Esther and I decided to check out the bathrooms. I had noticed a sign saying “Bio Toilet”, and that sounded promising. There were two- one on each side of our train car. Esther peeked in one. “This one’s a squatter, but it’s clean”. That meant that we could drink water during our eight hour ride and not worry about having to use the toilet. With confidence I went into the second “European style” one, to do my business. Better early on than later when too many people have already been there. The first thing I noticed was the three locks. THREE LOCKS???!!!! What is that all about, I didn’t want to even think about it.

No sooner did I pull down my pants that the train jolted to a halt and I was practically knocked over into the toilet. When I got back to my seat we all broke out into hysterics again and couldn’t stop laughing. Traveling with good friends makes challenges entertaining.

Surprisingly, the conductor made up an hour of our delay by speeding by some of the scheduled stops, leaving bewildered passengers running helplessly alongside the train which only comes once a day.

I did not feel at all guilty thinking “Better them than us”. Such are the joys of travel in India.

As Time Goes By/Returm to Goa

“BANG! BOOM! BANG BOOM!” I awake before dawn ,startled by the thumping of monkeys jumping on the roof of our house. The palm trees, laden with coconuts, are swaying wildly, as an extended family of monkeys jumps from branch to branch and then lands soundly on our roof. Why should I be surprised? We are, after all, in India.

It has been two years since our last visit to Goa and arriving here feels familiar and comforting. Our “Lifestyle Resort” has not changed much-overgrown plants and weeds still sprout up through the cracks of the staircase leading up to our small but homey room. There has been some updating- freshly painted neon orange walls, and new linoleum floors-attractive but slippery when wet. The black plastic toilet seat is still the same relic from another era,

Francis, our favorite chef/friend has taken away the only decision we needed to make,-choosing what to eat for dinner- by surprising us each night with some new Goan creation that he wants us to try. I know I’m slightly obsessed with food, but Goan food is so good. The curries-ambotik, cafreal, ,xiacuti, sukha- redolent with pungent spices and coconut are too delectable to resist. And why should I?

Younger faces with more tattoos, now stroll on the beach doing yoga,jogging, and laughing with that carefree air of those who have no responsibilities.I don’t remember seeing so many tanned, lithe bodies doing exercises or taking selfies with “GOA” written in the sand. It’s in stark contrast to the orange-vested Indian garbage cleaners with their brightly colored green plastic bags chattering animatedly with each other. Note to self ” Stop thinking about what you’re going to eat next and start doing your Qi Gong.”

What apparently has changed, is me. The first time I was greeted with “Nice to see you again Mama“,I laughed and shrugged it off . By the second time I began to feel annoyed.  After the third greeting I was downright despondent. I always enjoyed being called “Didi”, which means sister in Hindi. On the last visit, I had graduated to “Auntie“which is an endearing term for a slightly older relative, and that too was sweet.  Unlike the sexy connotation in Latin culture, “Mama” here is used for grandmothers!

I guess it’s time for massage, threading and whatever beauty treatments I can manage to elevate my status.

Gerald’s Thoughts on the India Journey

This was written by my husband, Gerald:

“It Depends Which Day You Ask”.  This was the answer we received from one of the Non Resident Indian doctors working at the Gandhi ashram, when we asked how they felt about their experience there.  And in many ways, that is how this journey went for me.  This was my eighth time in India, and coming so close on 2014’s fabulous visit, that was a tough standard to look up to.

We began in December in Goa, and sitting on the beach watching the sunset,drinking a cold Kingfisher beer, it felt like we had never left.  After following the incredible Theyyam ritual in Kerala, we arrived in Ahmedabad, where I had volunteered to teach art to children at Manav Sadhna, the foundation based on Gandhi’s vision “Love All,Serve All”.  The people I met there, dedicated, selfless completely devoted to improving the lives of those less fortunate, have made a strong (and hopefully lasting) impression on me.  Through the art, I was able to bring some light into these children’s lives, and give them a sense of achievement.  The last day there when I set up an exhibition of the work they had done, seeing their faces was quite wonderful.  But the city we were staying in (Ahmedabad) was truly one of the most awful places I have ever spent time in.  And bit by bit I lost my desire to go out and explore after the day’s teaching.

Leaving Ahmedabad for Udaipur, our favorite city in India, was like escaping from jail.  So many friends there and so many good memories.  And then finally, somewhere new, where we hadn’t been before, the source of the Ganges at Haridwar and Rishikesh in the foothills of the Himalayas.  Incense burning,bells ringing,chanting of mantras,wandering Sadhus,all the India I love.  For me, travel is still “discovery” of new places and peoples and there was less of it on this journey.  What makes India so glorious are the “wow” moments, and perhaps because so much of this journey was going back to places we had been, there were fewer of them than last year.

We returned to our beloved Goa for the final days, to warm up, eat the great food, enjoy the company of old friends and indulge in the warm waters of the Arabian Sea.  And each day I asked myself,if my wondrous journeys to India had run their course.  Somehow it felt like working on my collage, when a certain point comes when adding more papers no longer improves the overall piece.  I always tell my students that you need to know when to let go.  For the first time, I did not come home counting the days until my next visit.

And yet…as I am working on my book of drawings and watercolors,the passions and energy of this fabulous country and culture stir inside of me.  I can still taste all the wonderful spices,and see the smiles of all the many friends we have made there over these years.  So, who knows?  There is still the East to explore,the mountains,the tribal areas,the totally different cultures.  Are there still “wow” moments waiting for me?  Who knows?  Will I go again?  It depends which day you ask.

Namaste