Aug 31, 2011

India: McLeod Ganj & the Dali Lama

Still chilling in McLeod Ganj in northern India, where apparently it rains and rains and rains

A typical day looks like this:

6:30am...sun!

...then rain at 10:30am 

clouds at noon

3pm rain

6pm rain rain rain rain all night long lol. 


It is very very damp. I did laundry in my sink three days ago and it is still soaking wet!


My room in Dharamsala with its forever drying laundry

Today I am able to eat some food....I am on the mend! I am excited about feeling stronger and looking forward to starting some yoga and local exploring in the area :)

The last 2 days I dragged myself out of bed to attend lectures on Buddism by the Dalai Lama at the temple. Unfortunately they do not allow cameras and I dont think I can do the experience justice by explaining it, but I'll try:

Days before the lectures began, people went to the temple and put down cushions or pieces of cardboard to save a seat. The temple has two floors that wrap around this central room with a big chair where the Dalai Lama sits. The morning of the lectures, you line up (separate lines for men and women) to move through a security check point where you walk through a metal detector and then get a full body pat down.  After this, if you have a bag, you go to a row of tables and your bag is emptied out on a table and thoroughly searched (even through the little pockets). It is more intense than airport security! You are not allowed to bring in cameras, lighters, cigarettes, pointy objects, electronics or cell phones.

Then you are allowed to enter the temple where THOUSANDS of people: monks, tibetans, all nations of people white, asian, black, are sitting cross legged on the ground, pressed shoulder to shoulder.

When the Dalai Lama arrives, the air is palpable with expectation, all heads are turned, all waiting with smiles.  The air is hushed but electric. He enters surrounded by his entourage of serious faced, armed men.  There is a pre-cleared path, and he walks by the the crowd who all stand up to catch a glimpse. The Dalai Lama has this surrounding air of peace and he has a big smile.  He touches and speaks to people as he passes by, then walks upstairs and sits in the chair in the special room where he teaches from.  This room is packed, full only of monks.

After he sits, the Dalai Lama speaks to the crowd over speakers arranged at the corners of every room.  He is also broadcast over tvs set up on the lower level.  He speaks first in english, and has quite a sense of humor.  Then he switches to tibetan, which he does the rest of the lecture in. The Dalai Lama's words are translated and broadcast over the radio, different stations for different languages.  I tune in to the english station with a small f.m radio I bought in the market and listened in with headphones.

Halfway through the morning lecture there is a break.  You hold out your cup and Monks walk through the crowd pouring steaming hot tibetan tea into them. Tibetan tea is salty and milky and leaves an oily taste in your mouth.   People in the crowd share and pass around crackers and snacks they have brought from home.

There is another break around noon for lunch.  The monks scatter around the courtyard to man giant metal caldrons of rice or buckets and buckets of veggies or dahl.  The hundreds of people line up, holding out plastic bags, cups, bowls and stainless steel containers that the monks scoop a heaping ladel of rice into and then pour steaming wet dahl over top.
There are so many people, it is push-shove-push-shove get food! get food! But there is no anger or fighting, just push shove LOL very different than home.

Push-shove apparently is the way things get done in India. There is no such thing as a cue: the next person to get served is the one that could push to the front next. People push onto the subway before people can push out. Cars dont even follow lines, they just squeeze wherever they fit and go!

One of the people I attend the lectures with, Sebastian, the husband of Chris, a great Canadian couple I love to death, mentioned he was surprised that there was no road rage here because the road is only big enough for one small vehicle but somehow two are always trying to squeeze by, while at the same time people are squeezing in and around them in every direction. But even though the cars are stuck the people remain calm. They dont yell, they just HONK HONK HONK and reverse and forward over and over.

I think people here are already expecting that getting anywhere by car is going to be difficult so they are chill about it.  They know they will eventually get caught up by other cars and people and meandering cows eating garbage in the streets and that is just life.  As an aside, one thing you learn here quick is when you are walking and you hear a horn you squeeze to the closest side of the street and look around to see how big whatever is trying to pass you is. If its big you might have to jump into a ditch or climb up into a storefront. Sometimes you feel the car or truck brush right past your shoulder! The pecking order of the streets (from least likely to get run over to most likely) goes: cows, buses, cars, autorickshaws, rickshaws/motos, bicycles, people. So, as a pedestrian, you get out of the way! Surprisingly, I have only met one person so far that has become injured by traffic: she had her foot run over by a rickshaw after she got knocked over by a cow and landed with her legs in the street.

Tomorrow morning is the last lecture. If it is not raining too hard I will try to explore the city and check out some yoga!  Lots of love to everyone at home...thinking about you!
Anna

Aug 28, 2011

India: Dharamsala

Two days ago, desperate to escape the hot mess that is Delhi, I hopped on an overnight bus headed north to McCloed Ganj in Dharamasala.

I had some time before I boarded the bus, so I went to a little shop to drink chai and people watch.  A nice guy from New York pulled up a chair and we had a fun conversation.  It was a nice change...it has been surprisingly hard to meet other travelers here!  So far my impression of Indian tourists is: they are all from Israel, they are traveling in giant groups and are not very friendly or welcoming and are rude to Indian waiters.  The New Yorker was a painter, in Delhi for 10 days to source some art supplies.  I told him I had some time to kill so he invited me shopping with him to pick out some presents for his friends.  We headed to the market and bought paper and stickers and scarves and spices, but he was mostly interested in going to the pharmacies...?  He picked up several packages, which I later found out were filled with litres and litres of ketamine!  He explained  how the pharmacies would pack the ketamine in rosewater bottles so he could ship them to his friends all over europe, and how you could cook the water down into powder.  Ha!

On the bus, I was seated next to a young Indian girl who I ended up having a really nice, long conversation with about India, Delhi, and traveling. She told me the area I was staying in Old Delhi was not that great a choice: not safe, over crowded and  a very poor part of the city.  She said New Delhi was the place to be! She thought my protest story was funny and commented it was probably the worst way possible to be introduced to the country. She said, if I survived that, I can survive anything in India!

She told me the protests were to support Anna, a 69 year old man on a hunger strike to support a bill against corruption in politics. If the bill passed, many important officials would be punished for taking "black" (corrupt) money.  Anna was camped out around the corner from my hotel, which is why there were so many protestors were there.   Apparently he has not eaten in 14 days! The girl said this was not his first hunger strike:  the last time he went 20 days without eating! She noted the Indian people were getting more and more upset as time went on and the situation was getting quite volatile. I asked what would happen if Anna died? She said India would explode into chaos.


McLoed Ganj is a small mountain town comprised mostly of Tibetan people, cows, water buffalo, stray dogs and lots and lots of monkeys! I was warned not to leave my windows open in my room unattended because monkeys will come in and take my things!  As I write this there is actually a monkey sitting outside the window of the internet cafe right now!

It has been raining on and off since I got here and it is much much cooler than Delhi....actually comfortable! I spent yesterday in bed because I have been feeling super sick. I haven't eaten anything in about 24 hours... I dont think I could keep it down.  At first I thought I might be feeling off because I had only slept about 4 hours since arriving in Delhi, but now I know it is probably "Delhi Belly."

I am pretty lucky because the Dalai Lama apparently will be coming to Dharmsala when I am here to give a public lecture! Mcloed Ganj is the Dali Lama's home and it is super rare that he is here!  The Buddism office opens at 9am, and I am going to go and try to register to be able to sit in on the talk.  I am a little concerned that I wont be able to sit long enough to hear the lecture because of my stomach issues....
I will update in a couple of days. If all goes as planned will head back to Delhi (NEW Delhi lol) around September 5 but that is still up in the air.

Lots of love, miss everyone like crazy.
Anna

Aug 25, 2011

India: Delhi!

Lesson learned today: next time I come to India, get the prepaid taxi to your hotel.

Normally, I turn the taxi offer down and take public transit.  First, the taxi is likely SUPER overpriced and I like to save money. Second, I like to start figuring out where I am and how to get around.  Since my experience in Thailand, I always prebook a hotel for my first night in a new country.  I purposely reserved one in an area close to public transit so I can get there on my own.
And it almost worked this time.
Except this is India.  And India is crazy.

After a sleepless 16 hour plane ride (with a whole row to myself!) I arrived in New Delhi airport, excited, hopeful and tired.   The airport is new, clean and super modern.  I find the train station easily and hop on the airport express metro to New Delhi train station.  The metro is also new, clean, open and super modern.  Outside, however, is an extreme contrast: things go from shiny, new and air-conditioned to hot, humid, hundreds of people, tiny corridors, whistles and people shouting. I step out into a crowd of THOUSANDS of shouting indian people.
According to my lonely planet's map and the hotel website, I only have to walk 5 minutes down the only road from the train station and I will be at my hotel.  Easy!

Well...turns out there is more than one exit from the train station.
And more than one street from the exit.
There are 5.  And 2 highways.

And I was surrounded by people screaming because I had just walked into a huge protest.   Hundreds of people were streaming through the streets with painted faces, carrying flags, chanting and yelling and army guys in camo outfits with big guns. I found myself standing on a cement island in the middle of it all staring at the chaos around me, people streaming by on all sides, completely lost.  

So...I turn around and go back to the metro.  I will find a phone and call the hotel for that taxi.

I go back in but the protestors had reached the station so now there were now hundreds of people crammed inside yelling and yelling and yelling and the phones are all broken. An Indian officer in camo with a giant gun approaches me and tells me to leave because it is not a good place to be, miss.

I go back outside and accept a ride from an open rickshaw outside who swears he knows the street on the map and I dont know where I am going or if it is the right way and I sit perched on the wooden seat with my bag as he pushes the rickshaw through the crowd (because he cant ride the bike in the sea of people). Kids are hitting my bag with flags and I get spit on....

We get out of the crush of people and he hops on and we ride over a bridge, then around and under a bridge, where he hops off and talks with some friends, then hops back on and we go back to the bridge and through some side streets and he talks with some more people and then back through some more streets...wasnt this hotel a 5 minute walk away?.... and finally stops in front of a sketchy alley that apparently my hotel is down...

I give him a big tip, shoulder my bag and head down the narrow, lonely alley.  Then hesitate.  I am tired and alone in a dark alley in the middle of nowhere, India and I am most likely lost.   This is the worst idea in the history of the world.  But I keep going down the alley, and it ends.  So I turn and go down another alley and....hey, there is my hotel!

The man at the front desk of the hotel is very nice and I must look bewildered because he offers me tea and sits with me down and asks if I am okay.  LOL

Today has been much better. Still havent slept. No protests so far. Going to see if I can find my way back to the train station. Yesterday I was ready to turn around and go home but I think it will all be okay now.
Lots of love to all...will update soon.
Anna

Aug 12, 2011

Destination: India

On August 16, I take a one-way ticket to INDIA! I land in New Delhi and from there likely head north until the monsoon season passes then head south. If there is time maybe a stop in Nepal? Thailand? China? Super excited!