Wednesday, August 24, 2011

As Muitas Pessoas

Caste system? WTF?

I understand the part where we are supposed to integrate into the stratified social system but I REFUSE to treat anyone less than a human being. If I did buy into the I AM AMERICAN HEAR ME ROAR role, then I would be trying to get cooking staff fired because the authentic Indian food is too spicy (I'm talking to you Steve from Michigan!)

But keeping in check with my moral system, I have been chattin' it up with the cleaning ladies for our dorm rooms. (That's right kids, study abroad and you don't have to clean your own room!)

And we have been gabbin like old ladies in a knitting club about food and family. However, we are only speaking in Kannada and with the 11 words or so I know I might have told her that I have 2 kids and that I'm married. Well, technically I am married but that's another post. ;) Sorry boys, the Hot Chocolate is off the market.

Speaking of marriage.... Random picture time!

 
But out of all the interactions I've had here with the other students and faculty, the two cleaning ladies, their names escape me as always, have taught me more about their culture than any 20-page lecture on historical Indian architecture ever could.

The thing is that despite having a grasp on other languages that couldn't get me out of an airport, high anxiety in most mundane situations, and a general disdain for over interaction with strangers, I have never felt more comfortable with people I don't know than when I am traveling, traveling alone more so.

I do enjoy the comforts of being in a group while abroad, but I always look forward to those moments when I can walk up and down the streets a little ahead of the rest of the Americans so I can just blend. There are not any preconceived notions of what I am, I am just another person in the world being in the world.

Family and friends are some of the most valuable things on the planet, but even they are at fault of taking away that special feeling of joy that can be derived from just being. Judgement is always the most painful when it is received from a loved one.

It just seems that most people I know back home don't really understand me, despite the lack of a language barrier - I think it's because my first language is nonsense.   It just seems easier to picture myself in these small scale situations with a more humble group of people rather than trying to fit into the masses. 
But in the grand scheme of things it does not matter what others think because we are all gonna die I guess. Wow that was morbid. I giggled when someone farted in Yoga today. Did that make it better? Good. :)

Monday, August 22, 2011

Wise Elephant Quote #74


I would like to introduce you to an old friend of mine - The Wise Elephant.

We found each other on my last Indian adventure and we didn't spend much time together, but the moments we did share (mainly trunk touching and synchronized eye blinking) was pretty memorable. Wise elephant was especially of interest to me because we found him at an elephant rescue camp and I wanted to rescue him from that place.

The men their beat the elephants in order to control them and yet we were still encouraged to ride the poor animals. Many in my group didn't think anything on it but I did  not want to prolong their suffering, even if it was just a few extra pounds on their backs. And even with all this torture, wise elephant did not let these men break him, nor let let life breaak him.

So in memory of my elephant friends, I have compiled some Wise Elephant quotes that I would imagine the wise elephant wanting to share with the world.
I have not added any names of the people who these quotes actually belong to because in my eyes they are universal truths and it doesn't matter to me who said it, although they are direct so feel free to look it up yourself.
And with that I present you with Wise elephant quotes.



Sunday, August 21, 2011

Discharged from Aviation Station

Like I said before these accounts of my current Indian adventure are to be quite out of order but I have the utmost confidence that you will be able to keep up. I will admit that the comedic river runs dry in this post, so for some giggle therapy, look at my other website thingy's latest post found here. (It has many pictures)

Now let me take you back to a time when my feet were still atop American soil and the departure of my family had just ended, rather uneventful but at least no tears.

I take leave of Austin and embark on a rather unorthodox route to Indiatown. From Austin to Atlanta, Atlanta to Boston, Boston to Paris, and Paris to Bangalore. I didn't mind what the route, my destination was going to be heaven.

And 30 or so hours later it was indeed. Although it was at night and the skyline was not very forgiving when it comes to preemptive sightseeing out the window, I could still feel how my immediate surroundings had changed.

An example of outside. I guess.
The familiar smells of what was once foreign foods and visions of new faces of people draped in intricate cloths made me feel at ease and in a sense, at home, for the first time in a while.

All that was left to do was get my passport stamped and be on my way to the beautiful abyss that was just outside the window, still sheathed in the midnight sky. The moment came to hand over my passport for a simple overlook and a stamp.

Overlook. Stamp in hand. Double-take. No stamp.

Multiple men are called over. I am sent to an office. I explain my visa dilemma. (Long story short I got a tourist visa instead of a student visa because the Houston consulate is dumb.)

I am told that I have to go back to America. *glass shattering* I see the black vision of India somehow dim even more in the window that has been transformed from a glimpse into the future to an exhibit in a museum with a sign that says "Do not touch."

Ok plan B. Sprint to the door. I almost ran track in high school. Pros: possible make into the country and definitely let everyone in this airport know how fast the hot chocolate is. Cons: jail.

Alright, new plan. Get your thoughts together. Call mom. Oh good my phone is dead. Alright, figure out how to pay for plane tickets back home. Funny, I thought I was home now.

A man approaches me and asks to see the name of the University that I will no longer be attending. The piece of paper that I hand him is the same piece of paper that denied me a student visa from the consulate. The same paper that has me contemplating a fate as either a poor student back in the states without a college to go to, or a rich American airport refugee for the next four months.

The same paper that changes the word "No" to "Yes" from the man I handed the paper to.

I have no idea how fates work. I have no extensive knowledge of any religion nor do think there is a big man in a chair dictating our every move. But whatever force, either internal or external, that drives our lives, I thank it for putting me through this test and allowing me to not lose my cool in this stressful situation.

And the fruits of my labor have been entry into my Heaven: India.

BOO-YAH!!!!

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Yoga Brain and the Right Arm Buffet

Just as a heads up I will upload pictures when I have enough brain power to remember to bring it one of these days, until then I will post my older India pictures just to spice the page up, even if there is no rhyme or reason to them.


Deceased Indian Butterfly
See what I mean? No rhyme, no reason. Now back to the good stuff.

Neutrino

नमस्ते दोस्तों! namaste dosto (Hello friends!)

Like a said before I am going to try real hard to be committed to this website thingy because last time, there were a few casualties when I went on hiatus. I have yet to bring my camera to any of our wonderful excursions and my tales will most certainly be out of order because I like to add entropy to the world whenever I can.

As a nice sum up of the days previous, which I will hopefully delve into on a later date, here are some of the highlights that will not get you up to speed in any means, just to give you a glimpse of my international epic thus far: 
  • Airport refugee
  • Yoga brain and the right arm buffet
  • I don't speak "No" and/or tears on my pillow
  • Gluttony: A a dichotomous story of food and board games
  • ek, dois, three in Kannada and/or I should learn English first
  • Pigeon monkeys and elephant prisons
  • Hair maulestation
And as a delicious treat for your eyes and mind, I will allow you to engage in this rather boring yet epiphanic moment while I was in class if you can believe it or not.

Salutations

So here’s the dealio. I have restored my interest in website making because well, my life has become more interesting. I will do my best to keep it up to date with comedic moments along with some possible moral endings.

Careful, you just might learn something.

And on that note, I will leave you with this simple introduction and no update on my personal life – what a great start.

Just treat post as a path of breadcrumbs leading you to a cornucopia of whimiscal wisdom.