a bollywood death scene
As I lay in bed last night around 8 pm, feverish and exhausted, listening to the prayer calls from a dozen different mosques ring our across Lake Nageen, where our houseboat is moored, I felt like I was in a movie and this was the scene where I died. I’d been feeling progressively awful throughout the day and by the time we ate dinner, my body ached and I had no appetite. Anna took my temp and I had a fever, so I took some tylenol and went to bed, sleeping for almost 12 hours before getting up, feeling refreshed and ready for the day.
As I got better, Anna got worse. She has the same stomach troubles I had a few days ago and is not very happy right now. We were supposed to go on a boat tour of the lakes in Srinagar today, but she just wasn’t up to it. It’s not looking good for tomorrow, either. I hope that a decent night’s sleeep will help, but, even with antibiotics, these things seem to take a day or two to run their course.
The stomach bugs are one of the worst things about traveling. Being sick is not much fun at home, but when you’re on the other side of the world, it’s particularly unpleasant. We’re lucky, in that our sicknesses hit when we didn’t have to do any long bus rides, but it sucks to lie here in Kashmir, surrounded by beautiful mountians, too sick to do anything.
Since I’ve been complaining, I’ll stick with it. I’m sure that traveling around the world seems like all peaches and sunshine to all of you back home, but sometimes, I’d rather have the house and job and everything else ad just be at home.
For instance: the salesmen/touts/whatever here in Kashmir are intolerable. I wrote bit about our argument with the houseboat manager when we arrived about our activities for our time here. Yesterday, a friend of Mustak, our tour guide/cook/housekeeper stopped in to sell us shawls. He was relentless, even after we told him we weren’t interested in buying. It’s tough, because they look at us as enormously rich and many of the people who stay here are enourmously rich, so when we say no, they take it as a personal slight against the quality of their merchandise. We bent over backwards assuring him that his shawls were beautiful, but we just couldn’t afford them. That was a mistake. In the future, we’re just going to say no, politely but firmly and not think about it any more. They use guilt as a sales tactic and we’ve got to stop falling into their trap.
Another mistake we’ve made is believing people when they tell us something. One of the hardest things about India is that people lie to you all the time, even people that you think should be trustworthy, like officials at the train station. We’d read in the Lonely Planet that you shouldn’t believe anyone who tells you that the tourist office in the New Delhi train station is closed or burned down or under renovation, but when we went to the station looking for that office, one of the officials there told us exactly that (we made the mistake of believing him because he looked, well, official) and hustled us into a cab that dropped us off at a travel agent where I’m sure he got a nice commission. That’s where we booked the trip we’re on. The official at the train station said that the agent was a government endorsed agent, but he was actually just government recognized, which is slightly different. Now we’re stuck on a houseboat that’s outside of Srinagar and can’t do anything without paying the owner/manager an arm and a leg. It was stupid not to remember what we’d read. What’s the point of a guidebook if you don’t take their guidance?
We’re looking forward to getting back to independent travel. There are a lot mre headaches, but you are in charge of your own fate. If a hotel is no good, you don’t stay there. If a cabbie wants too much to take you somewhere, you wait for the next one. Independence has its downsides too (nobody holding a sign with your name on it at the airport), but we’ve more or less been on tours for the last 3 weeks. It’s time to see India on our own terns.
Well, time to let Anna get some rest. Goodnight!
Tags: complaints, India, Kashmir, sickness, Travel
and I thought telemarketers were annoying, hopefully you guys can kick the sick without missing out on too much
the sick has been kicked, for the most part. Anna’s still visiting the toilet a bit more often than normal, but it’s not slowing her down.
hope you’re enjoying life back in mn!