Friday, September 4, 2009
Out of India, sad face
We flew out of India and are now on a small island, KO Chang, it is beautiful but raining. Damn monsoon. Anyway trying to prepare myself for home, looking forward to it but still sad about ending my travels. Can't wait to see you all, much much love to all!!!
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Picture catch up
Thursday, August 20, 2009
More on Varanasi
as always we are trying to buy our train ticket out of a city within 24hours of when we want to leave. This means that we are not sure if we are leaving or what class we will be in, but like every other time something unexpected will happen and we will get to say "it was meant to be!" To be honest if we don't get to leave tonight I won't be upset. Varanasi is a city that I can only take in little bit at a time. We leave for our shopping for the day or whatever and then I need time to decompress afterward, sitting high on our rooftop or quietly in our room. The day before yesterday as I was trying to get back to the room I got really, I mean really, lost in the ally maze that is the old city of Varanasi. I walked passed houses that have been there for hundreds of years and have the same way of doing things as back then. Yesterday while waiting for my friend who was inside a temple another guy we met and I had some beggar kids come up to us. This is not special and happens all the time, everyday, but because we were kind of stuck where we were about ten-15 of them eventually came up and started to play with us. We played with them for at least 30min. Of course they asked for a rupee, but in all that time they only asked twice. They were having so much fun with me just clapping hands and practicing their English counting that we all forgot about everything else. It was really interesting, and once again this is totally common, after we started talking to just a few who were under 10 one of them called to some of their friends something like bring over the babies. Well some 4/5 year olds brought over 3 babies, under 2 years old one was no more than 5 months old. This is one of their strategies i guess. Every beggar girl or woman has a baby under two that they have with them. Every single one. Well anyway this story isn't about that. Right away the kids could tell that we were not going to give them money, but we were going to give them time. my friend kind of held all the babies while i played games with the older ones. I had to make sure every one got a turn clapping and counting because there were two girls who kind of ran the show and pushed the littler ones around and wanted all the attention. After a while a man came up, and we think for many reasons he was kind of like their boss man just like in Slumdog Millionaire. We just ignored him and kept on playing.
Its so easy, when you see all of these various horrible things, to want to blame someone. It has to be one particular person's fault. Like the boss man for the kids. But in reality he is the only one feeding them or giving them any sort of anything. Another interesting experience happened just last night, we were in a tuk tuk with a young driver and a police man stopped him and just smacked him. A few min. later the kid had to give him a 50rupee bribe. There were a lot of things going on at the time but when it comes down to it my friends and I think this: First our new friend was sitting in the front seat next to the driver so the police man easily saw that westerns were in the tuk tuk. Of course we gave the guy an extra 50 later to pay for the bribe. I think the police man new we would pay the kid back. Now police men barley make enough money for shelter and food for their family's. Everything else they have to pay for with bribe money. So maybe that police man needed 50 for something so out of all the drivers he chose ours, maybe, knowing that in the end the kid wouldn't really have to pay for it. That still means the cop was an asshole and the police force is majorly corrupted here, BUT it also shows a bit of humanity in all of it. The kid was just 19 years old and didn't know his way around. Who knows how long he had been driving- a week? a month?
Anyway you can kind of imagine how a person could feel overwhelmed here, externally as well as internally. I am constantly thinking and processing what happens around me. Ever since I got here, to this city in particular, I feel that all of my sense are heightened. I smell more of the world, I see more color. And my heart is just trying to keep up with it all, trying to be a real part of it while still reserving some of myself. If I don't hold just a little of myself back, well, I can put it this way:For a selfish reason I wouldn't let myself hold the 5 month old yesterday. I just knew that if I held that baby it would be too much for me. I don't know what would have happened, maybe I would have cried or maybe I would be coming home with a little baby but I knew that holding that particular emaciated calcium deprived baby would kill me inside. I had a great time with the kids and I know they will remember it just like I always will, but that one baby would have somehow opened me up too much...
Like I said, still processing, still taking it all in, always wondering what will happen next.
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
India
Just an ally off the main street:
It's the Taj:
Kids at Taj:
At the Taj- sooo wet!:
Waiting to get into Taj:
View from farm with the kids who lived on the farm:
The farmer's clay house:
The Baby Taj:
The baby that was thrown at me on my walk to the waterfall...
The Family we met on the train to Agra:
Sunday, August 9, 2009
More of the same amazing place!
Saturday, August 8, 2009
Dharamsala and Mcleod Ganj
I don't even know where to begin. Now I know why people say there is no place in the world like India. In the 5 countries that I visited before coming here nothing came close to my journey here. I'll just have to pick up where I left off, in Delhi...
leaving Delhi was a big relief. We spent a lot of time in the different bazaars and got to see the Red Fort, of which pictures I will put up later. I left my friend to go home a little early and had a little bi of a bad experience with a bicycle rickshaw driver. He kind of followed me after I got out of his rickshaw(as he did not know where I wanted to go) and so I went into a shop. He came in and argued with the owners of the shop who told me that he wanted 20 rupees. I told them what happened and then just gave the driver 10 Rp to go away. Although it was an overwhelming experience it was really good because it made me realize how India works. For every beggar or hassaler there are two respectful and helpful people right by to help you out.
The next morning Mo and I headed to the train station planning to go to Agra to see the Taj Mahal. Well we quickly found out that train tickets needed to be booked at least 4 hours in advance and that going to Agra would not be possible. So we pulled out our map and decided to go to another of our top destinations, Dharamsala. We had to wait until the 9:30pm train and then got off the next morning at 7:30am only to catch a 3 hour bus to our destination. Talk about the "real Indian experience."
Well Dharamsala is in the far north west and it is the current residence of His Holiness, the Dali Lama. We are in the small village of Mcleod Gani staying just a few hundred meters from the temple. We are actually in the Himalayas!! It is so beautiful here and the people are sooo giving and kind. We have made many friends, Hindu, Muslim, Buddhist etc. and love to have chai with them and are invited to a home cooked dinner tonight! There are more tourist here as there is a big yoga center here as well as the Dali Lama (whose house I went to today!). The vibe here is just so relaxed and although it rains a lot I like I am high up in the heavens.
So change of subject I am trying to extend my trip. Monique is returning to the states on Sept 10 after returning to Thailand and I realized that the only thing I have to go back to is my job (at a bar, whoo hoo...) so why not try and stay a little longer??? More details on that to come later. The important thing to know is that I am safe, happy, having the best time of my life and having once in a lifetime experiences!!!
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
India
Right now I am sitting in a small internet cafe next to our hostel, the Peace Hostel. We are staying in a small Refugee area for Tibetans. I am wearing a traditional Indian style Tunic suit and wearing bangles!!! Yesterday we went to our first market to shop for our outfits. I got two tunic things and one pair of pants. It was so amazing to shop right along side Indian women. Its really different from shopping at home. Because there are only 2 or 3 styles each outfit is really ornate and everything has to match perfectly! you know me I don't match so its a little hard but I'm trying.
Yes we have seen all the things that people told me to look out for, begging children, people sleeping in the street along side cows, I almost got run over by a bus. Literally. But also it is just a city like anywhere else and people live here and I do not have that fear that I was expecting. Everyone is so nice. Yesterday I slipped on the stairs to the subway and two people helped me up and one man asked very sincerly "are you hurt mam." I was so touched. In the states no one would have blinked.
We have one more day in delhi and then we are going to the Taj Mahal. Not going to spend more than the day in Agra as it is not a great place, instead we are spending the night in a nearby town called the "city of eternal love." Driving was probably the craziest part of my short time here. I thought that the driving the the middle of the road in SE Asia was dangerous but here is 10X worse. When I get pictues I can't wait to show you my Indian oufits but for now just know (Mom) that I am safe and happy and don't want to ever come home!!!
Love you all so much, EM
Sunday, August 2, 2009
Last Day In SE Asia
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Back to Thailand
View from the boat
We spent two days on this thing!! Not so comfortable
I arrived in Bangkok on Monday and got all of my visa stuff for India sorted out. It was kind of a grueling journey though as I got on a bus in Laos at 1pm and then two buses later arrived in Bangkok at 5am the next morning. That same day I met up with Monique, a friend from work who decided last min to join my India trip. That same afternoon we got on a local train headed to the town of Ayutha(something like that). After we got our seats we waited for the train to take off. After a few moments we heard the engines, then the first part of of train started to sail away! Our car and the cars behind us were not connected right for some reason and we were left behind. Not long after that we were reattached but it was the funniest thing I have ever seen. Everyone's faces were so confused!
So beside that we are enjoying our last night here. Tomorrow we head back to Bangkok. I pick up my visa and we do some last min shopping before Jamie leaves on Sunday. I am really sad that she is leaving but also excited about the next part of my trip, India! It is nice that I will be traveling with someone for at least part of the time and we have talked with lots of other travelers about what we should expect when we get there. Other than that it is really nice to be back in Thailand. The people are so nice here and I feel more familiar with the people and culture than I have been these past few weeks in new countries.
Going for dinner in the market now...
yum...