Sunday, September 27, 2009

Calcutta, Mon Amour



Wow!
Who would have thought?
This city is great, far surpassing my expectations. I expected to be horrified and depressed (and at times I am, but no more than in any other Indian city). Instead, it's beautiful, semi-organized, with so much character, pretty safe walking around all neighborhoods, Indians of all classes and walks of life can be found even in "shady" neighborhoods, it's a 24-hour city and I guess it can be called the city of joy, as it is reported to be called.
The pollution is definitely the worst part of it. I have a sore throat and gooey eyes from the dirt and pollution. When I came here last week, I instantly got stuffed up and gooey-eyed, which I normally am not, and as soon as I left 5 days ago, I got instantly better. Upon my return 2 days ago or so, within 24 hours, sore throat again.
But this doesn't deter me from enjoying a city that is thriving and interesting. A mixture of old, decaying, colonial architecture, majestic buildings, lots of turn of the century buildings, a few modern buildings, the classic Indian style of geometric patterns and crazy shapes. Lots of streets have trees, lots of nice promenades, even very humble neighborhoods retain some calmness and beauty. Few people pester you here.
I must admit I expected more from the Bengali food. I had an interesting and delicious banana flower curry in my cooking class the other day but it's one of the few meals here that I reacted badly to and I eliminated from my body within the hour (ha ha - bad sweats and all). It's strange - I eat in food stalls on the street, chai from anywhere (when they get the water from the streets pumps) and never get sick but I go to a high-class woman's house and the stuff runs right out. Anyway, my body responds fast and everything was better as soon as it was out. But Bengali food in general is too sweet (always had added sugar to every dish) and not spicy enough.
All the same, I've discovered a fantastic street stall called Tirupati with lots of Korean as well as Indian dishes which takes the cake for atmosphere, nicely painted colored benches, a sweet man with tuberculosis as cook and the sous-chef is deaf. The food is great and cheap and I see a Korean film crew making a documentary on the hand-pulled rickshaws every day around there. The sweets here are great. Like 100 varieties, all based on a ricotta-like cheese called chhanna.
There are so many different and interesting neighborhoods here; the city has such character. Plus, right now it's Durga Puja, celebrating the goddess Durga, AKA Chamundi, AKA Kali, who is the big main goddess for the city (like a patron saint) and every neighborhood has huge decorations put up, all hand sculpted, decorated, painted, lots of trompe l'oeil to look like real buildings with columns, imitating all architectural styles. Tomorrow most will be immersed into the Ganges River, here called Hooghly as it's one "tributary" division of the Ganges.
The metro works like a charm here, with the same tickets as in Barcelona and trains that look even as old as the "L" trains in Chicago. But the stations are decorated with lots of art and sometimes Bengali poetry, unlike the Chicago stops. This city reminds me of NY, in that even at 2 am you'll find restaurants open and lots of shops open. It's easy to get around with all the transport, from yellow cabs to metro to electric streetcars to auto-rickshaws to cycle-rickshaws to hand-pulled rickshaws where a man literally pulls you around with his own force. I felt like I couldn't take one of these until I saw a fat Indian family of 3 (grown adult female as big as me) all riding in one, pulled by one man. I've seen as many as 4 in one so I don't feel bad about making them pull me. They'll try to scam you like any rickshaw driver but I always ask the natives how much it should cost and then give tip, which an Indian never would. It's their profession, if they don't get work, they don't make money. It's seems unjust making someone pull you along, but it works out perfectly when you're already tired from touring and walking all over and your 2 1/2 hour yoga practice.
My trip has been made even better by meeting a really neat Israeli guy 5 days ago who I've spent all of these days with. A former Israeli military officer for 8 years (that's right), he's now studying Indian Studies and has a lot of the same interests as I (as well as our mutual love for this country). Plus, there's the added benefit of traveling with a man, which, trust me, makes it sooo much easier here. Oh, did I forget to mention that he also speaks Hindi, so we have problems ever. I'm cut-throat hard about not being taken advantage of by taxi-drivers, etc and he speaks the lingo, so we get along swimmingly. So basically we've been laughing our heads off and conquering Calcutta and the Sunderbans Tiger Reserve.
Anyway, my eyes are actually watering from the pollution so I've got to go back to the hotel.
I send my love from Chowringhee, the Muslim/Bengladeshi quarter of Kolkata. XOXO.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Here's my street (Contour Road) walking home in the morning after yoga practice. Long shadows as the sun rises!
I love the fruit on the head. The apple man was happy to have his picture taken.
A bonsai tree in the gardens of the Sat-Chit-Ananda Ashram, my favorite place in Mysore. Existence-Knowledge-Bliss!

Next stop....Bangalore, then Bhubaneshwar!

So, I decided I wanted to go to Bhubaneshwar mostly because of the sound of the name, and because I thought I could probably handle a 30-hour train ride but probably wouldn't be able to pull 2 nights on the train and a 37+ hour train ride all the way to Calcutta.
So, perfect, I'll try to spend the minimum in Bangalore, my least favorite Indian city (probably only because I've never been in Chennai, tee hee) and head straight across the Indian sub-continent! That's right, crossing the whole country by train.
The fun part of trains in India is just about everything. The color of the stations, the noise of the train on the tracks, the wallahs who come up on the train at the stops to sell chai, chili-sprinkled fresh cucumbers, fried chat, dosa, fried peanuts, all the food you want and don't want to eat! Then there's seeing the landscape pass by, drifting off to sleep, listening to music, puttering around on your berth and slyly glancing at the other car companions while they aren't looking to figure out what they're doing on such a long train ride.
So, what's to see in Bhubaneshwar? Well, it's the capital of Orissa at somewhere between 1 and 2 million people, and supposed to be "the City of Temples". That's nice, because I like visiting temples. Lots of old ones. Also, nearby, there's a site with a bunch of ancient caves with cave paintings and then also ancient (or late medieval) cave temples. So, I also thought it was worth a stop to sample the Orissan food, which is reputed to be good, and you know me, I don't want to miss an opportunity to miss a different cuisine. Let's see if I notice any differences from other Indian cuisines.
And here's a picture of my rose from Jimmy, the Belgian. He's probably happily meditating on his own rose as I type.
Maybe later I'll inform you about my Satchitananda Ashram excursions!

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

A rose by any other name....

I'd just like to notify the world in general that last week was the second time in my life that I've received flowers from a male (the first time being from my father, of course and I'm excluding the times I've received flowers from street vendors in Spain and India alike). Correct, never from any boyfriend or love interest, but this time definitely in the interest of universal love.
A friend of mine here who's a serious yoga practitioner and long-time Vipasana meditator said that he'd read too many times about an open-eye meditation practice simply meditating on a rose. He said it was such an incredible experience, just you and the rose, and it really pulls you in so beautifully. And what do you know, the next day I find 2 roses left in front of my apartment door!!!
And it's amazing. I'm totally happy with my daily transcendental meditation practice but wow, the rose is a beautiful thing. You can try different techniques, like the kriya practice of looking at an object (or candle light) and not blinking and continuing to gaze until your eyes water and you cry (which I did twice with my rose- so beautiful!). You can also drink in the beauty of a most perfect flower. Now I understand why so many poets write about roses. Such a wonderful creation. So many details, such shading and different tones of color. Such depth, such shadows. And every day is different! The rose changes every day. And it lasts such a long time. As you enter in union with the rose, there is energy transfer (like ET did) and you see visible differences from day to day. Or you can experiment and meditate on one, ignoring another rose, and compare the difference in the roses days later. In general, when I focus on the rose, I only see the rose and everything else fades out except a glowing halo around the flower itself. I've been practicing meditation and trance states in different places around Mysore, my favorite being the Satchitananda Ashram (which is my favorite place in Mysore and thus all of India). Wow! The experiences I've had there! More later!