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Tuning In

Thursday, February 21st, 2008

It’s a pretty awesome feeling to just sit under the bodhi tree. It’s unfortunate that the original one was chopped down, but it’s nice to know that what you sit under now is a relative of that original tree, specifically a grandchild. I could probably pass hours there if it weren’t for having to eat and sleep and all that. On my final day in Bodh Gaya, I’m sitting next to a monk from Myanmar who is taking classes at the university there and we get to talking. We spend the rest of the afternoon together visiting various monasteries around and he shows me the giant stone Buddha at the Japanese monastery, which is quite impressive size-wise but notably lacking in character and warmth. But he’s made of stone, the poor guy, I guess he can’t really help it.

The night before at the much appreciated Belgium fritte fest, I met a guy who’d done a Reiki course in Guatamala. The more we talked about it, I decided it was something I wanted to do, and this, right now! was the time to do it. So I called ahead to Kolkata and arranged to study with a private master there for a couple of days. Reiki’s a bit hard to explain, and in a lot of ways it’s probably better not to try, but suffice it to say it’s a form of alternative healing, using the energy all around us. It acquires an “attunement” by a master to get all your chakras whirling in order, and then you are a channel for the energy and can direct it at will. I was attuned to Reiki II, and I think that’s enough for me, I won’t be going after a mastership. Reiki II allows me to practice not only on myself and others hands on, but I can also do distance healing. From what I’ve experienced, it’s some pretty powerful stuff, so I’ve picked up some literature from other philosophies, and I’m looking farther into what I’m dealing with here. Maybe I’ll let you know about it, or maybe I’ll let you know about it.

Having the structure of a “class” was nice not just for normality’s sake, but to get to know the city and feel just a little like I lived here. Surprisingly there’s a subway, which I came to understand after getting terribly lost only once. One fine morning on my way to class, I grabbed some breakfast on the street. When I got to the subway entrance, there were two guards who denied me entry, on account of my still eating. So, I finished, but when I tried to go in, they still wouldn’t let me, apparantly because I had yet to wash my hands. I take out my hand sanitizer and do so before them. I’m still holding on to the paper from breakfast, and am looking for a trashcan (rare), and they advise me to throw it on the ground.

In the Kolkata metro system, you may spit, hack, cough, piss, burp (surprisingly popular here amongst men and the ladies) and litter…but God help you if you don’t wash your hands.

When I got off the train the morning of my arrival from Bodhgaya I went immediately to my teacher’s house, so I had all my bags with me still and nowhere to sleep that night. After class, I took a cab to Sutter St, where all the backpackers in Kolkata live. I’d gotten advice to go to a particular guesthouse, and was headed there through the courtyard (ish) when someone grabbed me from behind. My fist thought was that I was being asked for money or pens or chocolate, but it turned out to be a girl who was staying there, traveling with 2 other girls, all from Spain. They needed a 4th person in their room and wondered if I’d like to join. Why not? It’s a good chance for me to practice my spanish and for them to practice their laughter at my pathetic attempts at spanish, so ok, everyone wins. They’re here volunteering for Mother Theresa’s organization, and I’ll probably go with them tomorrow. As I’ve spent the entire 3 previous days doing Reiki, this leaves really only today to see Kolkata, so what am I doing here?

Banaras Real and Coincidental

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

I arrive in Vanarasi with the sun.  Though I had a guesthouse in mind, my driver insists on one called the Elvis Guesthouse.  It’s too early and I don’t feel like arguing, so I let him take me there.  My first move is to see the Ganges.  Right now, it hasn’t rained in a while, so the river is pretty low, but it’s still something to behold, especially so early in the morning.  I have breakfast on the rooftop of the hotel, where I meet several other travelers and the hotel proprietor, Lala…like the teletubby.  There’s a festival going on which start that weekend, so a group of us arrange to head down to the Main Ghat to see them make a special puja.  Afterward we go out to eat at a place that serves wonderful western food, including real cheese!  The group consists of myself, Lala, an Israeli woman Sharon, two men from Toulouse and another guy from Germany.  The streets of Vanarasi are small and windy, something about them reminds me of Venice, but I can’t put my finger on what it is exactly besides the cozy yet energetic feeling you get walking around.  Everything (like in much of India) is painted in bright pastels and smells like incense, exhaust, street food, and dung. 

 It’s strange to sit at a table where everyone is communicating in English, but you’re the only one to whom it is a native language.  Especially because I don’t talk that much in small groups I don’t know, so my contributions were largely grammatical.  On the way home a kid comes up trying to sell us something.  One of the French guys whisks him up on his shoulders and runs down the street, letting him go to chase him and then pretending to run away with whatever he was selling.  There’s music in the streets due to the festival and the men in the group stop to dance briefly with the children.  All I want is to dance to, but it would attract a lot of unwanted attention, so I refrain.  The next day I run into Sharon at the same restaurant and we talk for a while–she’s been all around India, and practically lives here, so she’s good for advice.

I do a lot of walking.  One of the most sobering things I’ve seen, I imagine in my lifetime, is the burning ghats.  This is where families go to pay their last respects before burning the bodies of loved ones on pyres along the Ganges.  The smell is overwhelming, and the sight and feeling you get from the place is such that it can only be witnessed, any descriptions here would somehow cheapen it.  As I was standing and watching, I started speaking with an Indian boy there about the ritual and accompanying beliefs.  After a while, he invites me to his family’s silk factory.  I don’t intend on buying any sarees until the end of my trip, and I tell him as much, but Varanasi is famous for its silk, so I agree to go with him.  Tourists here get these sort of invitations dozens of times a day, and for the most part I ignore the people and just keep walking, but for whatever reason, I was that day in the mood to go see a silk shop.  When I get there, I’m given tea and meet the man who owns it.  No sooner has he found out I’m from New York than he asks me if I know Manhattan College.  Why yes, quite well.  How strange.  I assume he’s mistaking it for NYU, and just throwing some names out there, but then he tells me he knows a professor there.  “Stephen?” he says, but I don’t understand his accent until he says he’s a professor of Religion, and then I realize I know exactly who he’s talking about, quite well.  The odds of this happening in a country this size, in a city this size, are so small it’s mind boggling.  I promise to come back and buy my sarees from him on my way out of town in April.

Most of my time in Vanarasi is spent walking around and relaxing.  I didn’t stay long because I plan on coming back en route to Nepal.  It’s an amazing place, my favorite I’ve seen so far.  My next stop is Bodh Gaya, where it is said Buddha gained enlightenment.  I already have my guesthouse picked out on recommendation from one of the French guys, who has also sent a note with me to give someone who is a chef there.

 My first day is spent lounging around and fighting off the resurgence of whatever bacteria is eating away at my vital organs.  I do eventually have the wherewithal to eat, and this gives me a chance to go to the temple and bodhi tree where it all went down.  I sit for a while under it with numerous others who’ve come from all over the world, as it is the holiest of Buddhist pilgrimages.  Also just so happens there’s an international chanting conference going on till the 22nd here, so there are monks galore.  Paranoid as it may seem, I found myself worrying that they knew who I was, the girl who f’ed up the radio back in Chang Mai.  Something about the way they looked at me.  Maybe it’s the guilt.

Today as I was walking down the street, I was stopped by two Belgium guys who invite me to a dinner party they’re having (of all places) on the roof of my guest house.  Though I’m no where near my guest house at the time, I know exactly who they are and tell them I’ve got a letter for them from someone I met in Varanasi.  Again, what are the odds?

Valentines Day Blog of Hope

Thursday, February 14th, 2008
"The thousand times he had proved it meant nothing. Now he was proving it again. Each time was a new time and he never thought about the past when he was doing it." -Ernest Hemingway, The Old Man and the ... [Continue reading this entry]

FYA

Friday, February 8th, 2008
Here's the link for a few of the pictures I've been taking. It takes longer to upload them here than it would to kill an elephant with a sewing needle, and it's almost as painful, so bear with ... [Continue reading this entry]

Bad Bugs and Other Calamities

Wednesday, February 6th, 2008
"Imagine if each day a man must try to kill the moon, he thought. The moon runs away. But imagine if a man each day should have to kill the sun? We were born lucky, he thought." -Ernest ... [Continue reading this entry]

Goodbye Winter, Hello Crazy

Friday, February 1st, 2008
"What is that feeling when you're driving away from people and they recede on the plain till you see their specks dispersing? It's the too-huge world vaulting us, and it's goodbye. But we lean forward to the next ... [Continue reading this entry]

Meanwhile, back at the ranch….

Saturday, March 3rd, 2007
Here's the story: If you will open your hymnals to the entry of October 2nd, you will be reminded of the most unfortunate event of my losing 3 blog entries courtesy of website malfunction. Wah. I know ... [Continue reading this entry]

Temporary Ascension of my Weltanschauung Soapbox

Saturday, March 3rd, 2007
[NOTE: Originally posted September 6th, 2006] "Time weighs down on you like an old, ambiguous dream. You keep on moving, try to slip through it. But even if you go to the ends of the earth, you won’t ... [Continue reading this entry]

Oh where, oh where can she be?

Saturday, March 3rd, 2007
[NOTE: Originally posted August 24th, 2006] Alright kiddos. I'm going away to do meditation again. This time for a bit longer, until September 8th. So don't expect any emails or favors until then. Not that you ... [Continue reading this entry]

Cambodia, Cont, etc, etc

Saturday, March 3rd, 2007
[NOTE: Originaly posted August 21st, 2006] “What’s happened has happened. What’s coming is already on its way with a role for me to play. And I don’t understand. I’ll never understand. But I’ll try to understand. ... [Continue reading this entry]