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April 30, 2011

Last round of bookings

I just confirmed a flight to Singapore next weekend! I'm going there for a few days to visit my friends from NYC, Eric and Camille, the ones I met up with in Koh Lanta. They've been working there for the second winter in a row, painting roller coasters (they're scenic artists). I never had a huge desire to go to Singapore and they particularly enjoy living there, but I figure why not? It's a free place to stay and friends to show me around, and when else am I going to go?

With that confirmed, I just booked two more tickets: the bus to Vientiene (Laos), and the train to Bangkok (where I'm flying to Singapore from). And now, holy shit, no more travel bookings (since my flight to Hong Kong is booked and I don't plan on doing much travelling around there)! No more logistical figuring, travel agent hassles, timetable juggling, and decision-making: I'm done booking!! So strange.

The standard thing to do when leaving Luang Prabang (which I have been loving for the last four days) is to head to Vang Vieng before going on to Vientiene. Van Vieng is where all the backpackers go tubing down the river, floating from one bar to the next; no one can believe that I'd dream of skipping it. But I'm taking a pass for the same reason that I didn't go to Pai in Thailand: I'm kind of tired of the early-20's backpacker scene. It's not something I really noticed in India, but then again you generally get a different type of traveller there. In Southeast Asia the hoards of young backpackers seem intent on partying hard and moving on to the next place, and frankly that makes me feel a bit old.

So I'm taking a pass on the whole tubing thing in favor of a more extended stay in Luang Prabang. I've been hanging out with a woman I met on the two-day slow boat down the Mekong. She's a year older than I (34), just finished teaching in Thailand, and also exhausted of the party-harders. We've been lazily exploring the town: went to a waterfall, took a boat to some caves full of Buddha statues, stopped at a whiskey-making and weaving village, climbed the big hill in town to explore the temple compound there (it has a Buddha's footprint imprint that I'm not kidding, I could curl up and take a nap in). Tomorrow we're renting bicycles and riding around the countryside. Ahh, the slow life!

April 29, 2011

I finally broke down...

...and bought an umbrella. It's not monsoon season yet, but everyone says the rains have started early this year. Wow, such rains they are. You can literally see the downpour in the rainbow umbrella impromptu photoshoot we did the last night at Koh Lanta:

The first night of the documentary shoot we stayed in a very rural village with a small hill tribe. After a few beers and some interviews we collapsed on our bedrolls, it was quite a long day. Then around 3am one of the most intense storms I have ever experienced rolled in. Constant thunder, lightning, rain in sheets. I tried to ignore it and go back to sleep until the roof started leaking, at which point it was a mad scramble to make sure the equipment was ok, and to relocate to the lower level. That was fine until the rain started leaking through the second story floor onto us; fortunately they had a tarp on hand., and the cameras were fine. I was too sleepy to take any epic storm photos, though I took one of our second sleeping spot the next morning:

Since I've been in Laos it's rained every day. The aforementioned umbrella was purchased in another downpour, yet somehow rain managed to come through it, and I was totally soaked from the waist down. Fortunately it's not constant yet; we had some nice sun today for the waterfall in which I went swimming.

April 28, 2011

Down the Mekong

After three days running around north Thailand filming for the documentary (extended entry on that forthcoming) and then taking a two day slow boat trip down the Mekong (photos forthcoming as well), I'm ready to kind of park it in one place for a while. Fortunately, I'm in a great place to spend some relatively extended time: Luang Prabang, Laos. It feels very French-colonial, as someone said, "Like you're in an Agatha Christie mystery."

I did get some pretty bad food poisoning one of the boat ride nights, fortunately it didn't hit till we were docked and I was in a guesthouse; I'm feeling much better today. However, after staring at a ceiling fan for hours and taking a boat down the Mekong, I really want to re-watch Apocalypse Now.

April 21, 2011

Chiang Mai and unexpected camera work

I really like Chiang Mai, it’s such an enchanting city. I’ve been staying in the old part of it, which is surrounded by a wall and a moat. What I find most interesting though is the proliferation of wats, or temples. There are so many just within walking distance; I spent several hours yesterday exploring them, until they all started to blend together.

Full set of wat photos is here.

Today I visited a monastery that contained several tunnels from the 14th century. It was very peaceful to walk around, and meditate underground.

Since I’ve been in Chiang Mai I’ve gotten to try a few new things, too. I saw a Muy Thai (Thai boxing) match, ate durian (it had the texture of a custard apple, but tasted more savory), and had the dead skin on my feet eaten by a bunch of fish. It happened at a stall at the night market, and had to have been one of the strangest things I’ve ever felt.

I’m still kind of reeling over how easy Thailand is, so friendly and navigable. Once I got to the north part of the country it got a lot cheaper, too. Oh, while I was still on the island I went spelunking with Eric and Camille. It really felt like we were in the guts of the island. At one point we all turned off our headlamps and it was the darkest dark I’ve ever darked. Eyes closed, eyes open, same same.

And now for some exciting news (as if everything else has been boring?): I was asked to join a film crew that’s making a documentary on Thailand. The director’s wife had been doing some of the camera work, but she got really sick and had to go back to Australia. We’re going more north tomorrow with a driver and an interpreter to film a hill tribe, and then to Chiang Rai, along with some other stuff. The opportunity literally came up an hour ago, and I didn’t have to think about it long before saying yes. Why not? I did some filming when I was in Ghana some years ago, and this sounds like kind of a neat, different way to see this country.

After that I’ll be heading out (on my own) to cross the Friendship Bridge from Chiang Khong over into Laos, and then taking a two-day slow boat trip down the Mekong to Luang Prabang. Yeah!

April 19, 2011

More travel

I'm not sure that it's a good thing that I don't really flinch anymore at 24 hours of travel.

Turns out I was wrong about the full moon; it was actually the 18th, the day to which I switched my ticket. I considered changing it again but meh, my friends had left and listening to bad trance surrounded by wasted dudes with bad tattoos just didn't seem worth it. Maybe I'm just getting old.

So I took an overnight bus to Bangkok, arrived at 4:30am; it was much much nicer than any bus I rode in India, complete with airbrushed dragon on the outside. Upon arrival I went straight to the train station to wait for my 8:30am train to Chiang Mai. Once again, my new netbook saved me, it's been so good to be able to watch movies during all of these long layovers.

The train wasn't great but at least it had AC. All the guidebooks say not to go to Thailand in April, and now I know why. At least Chiang Mai feels a bit cooler. I even opted for a fan (non-AC) room for tonight to save a few Baht, though I may change places tomorrow.

I must say that I was not really looking forward to how tourist-oriented I knew Thailand would be, but after India it's actually really nice. Helpfulness and smiles and all that. However, I'll probably head to Laos soon, it's supposed to be cheaper and less developed.

April 16, 2011

Thai arrival

All that travel became so worth it when I walked into Mong's bar, right on the beach, and Camille and Eric came running toward me. I dropped my backpack and commenced relaxation; this is a great place for it. An older German man I met on the train to Delhi said, "Thailand is Disneyland, it's so easy." After two months in India, so easy it is.

Even the ferry ride(s) were nice, but I love being out on the water. Yesterday we rented motorbikes, a great way to explore Ko Lanta. I'd driven one in Goa last year, and it was so fun to zip around again. This is a long, thin island with one side that's entirely beaches. We drove to one the first day where there were only three other people onthe entire beach: a British couple and a local fisherman.

The Andaman Sea is so lovely, really calm; I haven't seen a single whitecap. And warm! When you're neck-deep in the water you can still see your toes, ahhh.

Besides swimming multiple times a day and exploring the island, we've been doing some light shopping (I bought sequined burqa!) and lots of hanging out, catching up. My friends have been working in Singapore, running the construction of and painting scenes on a roller coaster six days a week; they left NYC a few weeks before I did. This is their vacation, and it kind of feels like a vacation from my vacation. Or maybe the drinks in buckets have something to do with that.

It is ridiculously nice here, but quite expensive. After spending $4 per night on a hotel and less than $2 a meal for the last month or two, $20 a night seems like a fortune for a room. Of course, that room is right off the beach, has fresh clean sheets, air conditioning, an actual mattress instead of foam or a bedroll that makes me wake up with pins-and-needles arms asleep, hot water with actual water pressure, non-fluorescent lighting, the works.

I don't want to repeat getting stuck on the beach though. Camille and Eric have to go back to work in Singapore on Sunday (I'm considering a cheap flight to visit them for a few days), so I booked a bus ticket out of here that morning. Then I realized that Sunday night is the full moon, and it'll be beautiful here, so I ran back and begged to change the ticket to Monday. The guy made a phone call, hung up, and said OK! No charge, no hassle, and the whole process took under ten minutes. Wow, talk about the opposite of India, where it would have taken at least half a day and I'd probably just have to buy a new ticket. I think I'm still decompressing. Let's hope Thai overnight buses are not worse than Indian ones.

So a couple more days of beachin' it up, then I head to Bangkok. From there I'm thinking go north, maybe to Chiang Mai and then crossing over into Laos, maybe spend a couple days on a boat down the Mekong. I love being on the water; we're trying to rent a longtail boat today, but it's off-season so it might not be possible. I do enjoy places in the off-season though; even if they're more hot there are no crowds (especially here, I think the massive flooding a few weeks ago sent everyone packing).

In the meantime, I'll continue enjoying the company of friends, long walks on the beach, and motoring around. We formed a bike gang, the Neon Pink Eagles, since two of the three scooters are bright pink with leopard spots. Bike gang photo (and sequined burqa) coming soon, meanwhile, this is us:

April 13, 2011

Hard travel

I started travelling Monday evening, and I won't get to my destination until Thursday afternoon. This is definitely the longest stretch I've ever had (previous record was coming back from Ghana, something like 34 hours door-to-door).

The sleep deprivation isn't helping much; I got four rough hours on the upper berth of Monday's overnight train that arrived in Delhi at 6am. Then the hotel that I was considering in Bombay didn't work out, so I waited that 7-hour layover at the airport. However, they don't let you into the international terminal until three hours before your flight so I watched a movie on my laptop in the shockingly not terrible waiting room, where I met a couple other backpackers who helped pass the time. Grabbed a couple hours of sleep on my flight to Bangkok, I love it when the plane is empty enough to snag a whole 4-person row.

Now I'm waiting out my 9-hour layover at BKK to HKT where I have an actual hotel room for the night(!!) before taking the 4-hour ferry to Koh Lanta tomorrow morning. I had considered heading into Bangkok to get a crappy room for the day just to rest but decided against it. I have so much waiting-in-airports momentum built right now, and a hard drive full of movies. Plus two months in India has um, really improved my patience and capacity to just wait...and wait. And wait.

I did make the most of my day in Delhi: rode the metro (subway) to the old market and to the Lotus temple, which was beautiful. The metro was great, much more clean and efficient than NYC. I had just enough time to meet a couple friends for lunch, one from the Bhagsu Cake Crew and another that I met at the Chakki Bank train station, before heading to the airport. Of course there are pictures, but I'm a bit too bleary-eyed to post them right now.

I still kind of can't believe that I left India. It'll sink in more when I finally leave an airport, but still. As frustrating as it can be sometimes (but also so beautiful in so many small and huge ways), I have gotten used to the quirks of India, at least some of them. Now I have a whole new set of behaviors to adapt to. I just have to finish getting there first...

April 11, 2011

Leaving India

It's hard to believe that it's been two months in India, I'm not ready to go! Next time, six months.

I've got a lot of hard travel in front of me for the next three days. Tonight I take a 3-hour taxi from Dharamsala to Chakki Bank, then an overnight train to Delhi, then I fly to Bombay, where I reserved a crappy hotel room to sleep in for four or five hours before taking a 5am flight to Bangkok. Then I spend the day there and fly to Phuket at 8pm, crash at some random hotel, wake up the next morning, and take a 2-hour ferry to Koh Lanta. Oh my!

But it'll be worth it. I've been warned that Phuket is horrible, but I decided to go to Thailand last winter standing outside a Williamsburg bar with my friends Eric and Camille. They said we'll be there, come meet us! So I am going. Our time doesn't overlap much, only three days or so before they have to go back to Singapore, hence the breakneck travel plans.

So in a few hours I am off. I wish I had more time here, but that's always the story. It's been wonderful to catch up with friends that I haven't seen since Goa, as well and hang out with new ones. But, onward...

April 10, 2011

Himalayan trek and HH The Dalai Lama's temple

After two months in hot hot sunny southern India, I was totally unprepared for how cold (and rainy!) Dharamsala is. I arrived after another crappy overnight bus ride, one where every bump felt like a roller coaster; whipping around mountain hairpin-turns didn't help, either.

I originally looked for a room in MacLeod Ganj, the backpacker ghetto up the road from Dharamsala (no one actually stays in Dharamsala), but it was overpriced and full, so I headed up the mountain a bit further to Bhagsu, which was much more quiet--no honking!--and affordable. I like it a lot, actually.

My second day here I hired a local guide and went on a three-day two-night trek up into the Himalayas. Bhagsu is 1700m elevation, and on the first day we climbed to the top of Triung, a nearby mountain, elevation 2800m. It took about four and a half hours, going pretty quickly. There were a couple chai stalls interspersed along the trail, which we stopped at briefly (FUELED BY CHAI), but by the time we reached the top my legs were killing me.

As I crested the ridge of Triung there they were: the big-ass white mountains that I've been dying to see this whole time. I broke into a grin and started running towards them, like I wanted to hug them or something. So amazing. It was cloudy, started to hail soon after we got to the top, so I couldn't see the peaks, but wow, it was just an awesome sight.

Once it started to rain I huddled in a government shack over a smoky indoor firepit trying to get feeling back in my fingers and toes. Eventually the rain stopped and I pitched my one-person tent, positioned with the flap open onto the mountainside and Dharamsala below.

I had dinner at one of the three chai stalls on top of Triung; turns out you can pay 200 Rupees to stay on a cot in them overnight. I probably could have done most of the trek myself, I met a German girl who did, but I didn't want to risk getting lost or hurt alone on a mountain. Too old for that. Over dinner I also met a couple Spaniards and a Russian who were very nice, the Russian even did some fire dancing, lamenting how much she missed Goa.

Then it was time for bed, aka one of the most uncomfortable nights of my life. I had only a very thin mat between the cold cold ground and I, and it got down to 34 degrees Farenheight (thanks for the travel clock with thermostat, mom). I literally lay there waiting for it to get light out because even in my polar sleeping bag and wearing five layers I was too cold to sleep. Halfway through the night I decided there was no fucking way I was spending another night up there on the mountain; as my old friend Jen used to tell me, you can't be hardcore all the time. Lesson learned.

Finally it got light out, and I stumbled from my tent into a spectacular dawn. All the clouds were gone so I could see the mountain peaks so clearly. Breathtaking, or maybe that was the altitude. Ever since I got sick in Bolivia I've been susceptible to altitude sickness; I could already feel it up there.

I watched the sun crest over the peaks while sipping the best coffee ever. Maybe all food tastes better on a mountain you've climbed, or maybe I've just been in India too long and now actually like the taste of instant coffee. Who knows.

After taking down my tent, I headed with my guide up to the snow line, 3300m, another hour or so higher up. Lo and behold, once we got there, dug into a wall of snow in the side of the mountain was another chai stall. I swear, Indians will put a chai shop anywhere. So I had some chai, visited with a couple from Bombay and a couple from Boston that I had met on the trek up to Triung the previous day, as well as the solo German chick. Busy morning at the snow line!

Then I headed back down the mountain, cut my losses and told my guide that I wanted to go back to town. Hot shower and soft bed sounded like heaven. Plus, the second night was supposed to be spent in a cave above the snow line, and the mountain pass was snowed in; even with an ice pick it would have been too risky, and we didn't have shoe clamps like the time I climbed the glacier in New Zealand.

We took a different way back, not the main trail we'd taken up the mountain, and wow, going down was much harder on my knees (already so sore from sitting cross-legged for a week at the ashram) than going up. There were points along the cairn-studded mountain side I thought I'd never make it down, but it's all in the mind: left foot, right foot.

Stopping for breaks sometimes, I watched the thousands of white and yellow butterflies cross the mountain and valley. As I learned, April is way too early in the year to attempt a Himalayan trek, but it's the perfect time to watch butterflies fall like snow. And so many ladybugs!

Finally, after about three hours we made it back to civilization. Of course, power was out in the entire town, and the $3 budget hotel I checked into had rock-hard mattresses that hurt my already bruised from sleeping on the ground hips. The hot water heater in my bathroom took four hours to heat up enough for me to take a decent shower, too.

Needless to say, I wasn't in the greatest mood after the mountain. The night I spent up there I couldn't stop smiling, but the night I got back I was Sir Grumps-a-Lot. But I had promised myself a piece of Bhagsu cake at the end of the trek (more like a bar: bottom layer nutty buttery cookie, middle layer dulce de leche, top layer solid chocolate nom nom), so I went to the Original Bhagsu Cake spot. There, I ran into the Spaniards and Russian, and ate with them. They had gotten lost twice going down the way I went, and were also all very cranky. Perfect!

They next day, yesterday, I went with a couple of them to a morning open meditation at Tushita, a Buddhist retreat where I wouldn't mind comoing back to take a 10-day course sometime. Then we went to the Dalai Lama's temple, which was not quite what I expected but really amazing nonetheless. I hear whispers that he's in town, but no one I know has actually seen him.

There was a wonderfully peaceful energy to the place, though. I sat in a temple with three dozen praying monks, meditated for a while. They occasionally played music, including those ten-foot long low deep mountain horns that I've always associated with Tibet. I felt so lucky to be there.


April 06, 2011

One week at an ashram

I spent a week staying at Phool Chatti ashram, 5km outside of Rishikesh. I hadn't planned on going to an ashram while in India, but I had such a rough landing in Rishikesh, flea hotel and all, that when I saw a sign over the road for a week-long meditation and yoga course I thought ahhh, that sounds lovely.

And it was lovely, just wonderful. To begin, the location was amazing: on the banks of the Ganges, far enough outside of town to be really quiet (except for the occasional hollering from rafters hitting the nearby rapids).

The ashram in various incarnations has been there for over 100 years, originated as a resting place on a holy trek 300km to one of the sources of the Ganga (Ganges). The word "Phool" indicates that many people's ashes have been scattered there, and "Chatti" means something like rest stop (I think).

It's run by Swami-ji, who has been there over 40 years, and Lalita-ji, who has been there since she was 15. Brandon was our meditation instructor, and Laltia-ji taught the yoga, chanting, and pranayama. Everyone who works or volunteers there was amazing, really peaceful and helpful.

The schedule was the same every day:

5:30am wake-up bell, which I surprisingly did not mind

6am meditation, though I was usually sitting by 5:45.

6:30 chanting

6:45 neti pot cleansing, which I have been doing for years, on the banks of the Ganga.

7am pranayama

7:15 hatha yoga, though a lot of pranayama was incorporated. One morning we did laughing yoga, which was so much fun.

9am breakfast

10am karma yoga. I ended up cleaning the bathrooms every day by choice, something I would never do at home; we have a cleaning lady and I'm happy to pay for her. But I found that I really didn't mind it at all. Singing mantras to myself the whole time really helped.

11am walking meditation. The walks were different every day: a waterfall, the Ganga, a swimming hole in a smaller river that fed into the Ganga. They never told us where we were going, so it was a lovely surprise to get to the top of a mountain and find a stunning waterfall. Along the way I saw so many beautiful butterflies, birds, red dragonflies, it was like a nature observation as well.

12:30 lunch

3pm satsong (group discussion).

4pm ashtanga yoga

6:45 pooja, a worship ceremony to Shiva at the ashram's temple.

7:30 dinner

8:30 guided meditation. One night we did yoga nidra, which I've always wanted to try.

I was in bed most nights by 9:30 or 10, which helped with getting up so early in the morning. I discovered quickly that I really liked the schedule; after so much travelling and figuring out where to go what to do where to eat etc., it was really nice to not have to make any decisions for a week. In fact, once the course was over (I stayed an extra night at the ashram, not quite ready to go back to the real world, as real as Rishikesh can be), most of us found that we didn't know what to do with ourselves in all that free time.

Coming back to Rishikesh and looking at a menu for the first time in a week was actually quite overwhelming, kind of like the restaurant scene in Never Let Me Go. Meals were communal, seated on the floor, served and eaten in silence. In this way eating became a meditation. I put my chapatti or spoon down between every bite, ate slowly, really tasted everything.

The food was really good, too! I was expecting some standard ashram gruel, but it was all so delicious. I even ate potatoes. Breakfast was always porridge and fresh fruit; lunch and dinner included a vegetable, some kind of dal, a sauce, chapatti, rice. They'd dish the meal out from shining silver buckets and continue coming around to offer seconds, thirds, and fourths until you popped. I found that I usually had seconds and thirds of the vegetable; I really love vegetables. No dessert ever though, the only sweet stuff I had all week was the ubiquitous chai with sugar. Of course, when I got back to Rishikesh I had four desserts in one day.

I realized that internally I've been quite cleansed for a while. I had meat only once since arriving in India: fish in Goa; meat has been banned in Rishikesh for 30 years, as has alcohol. Except for a glass of wine in Udaipur, I haven't had any alcohol in over a month. And I don't really miss it.

As for the course itself, I highly recommend it, especially for people with not much experience with yoga and meditation. (Not recommended for people with bad knees though, we spent the whole wee sitting cross-legged on the floor, and owwwww.) I've been practicing yoga for 14 years and attempting (rather unsuccessfully) to meditate semi-regularly for several years now, but I still got so much out of the program. It didn't feel like there was enough scheduled meditation, but there were chunks of free time in which I ended up sitting in the hall, meditating two or three additional times a day.

Part of the reason I was meditating so much was because I chose to do most of the week in complete silence. I figured why not, when will I again have this opportunity? The ashram itself was mostly silent, but people were allowed to talk from after lunch until dinner began. I found that once the opportunity for socialization was removed there wasn't much else for me to do besides meditate, since they discouraged reading, writing, and listening to music.

I began speaking a little again on Thursday (The course began on a Sunday, finished on a Saturday), mostly because an old knee injury flared up again. That ended my ashtanga practice for the week, but that was ok. At first I was quite mad at myself for pushing it too hard and causing more knee pain, but then I meditated on it, tried to practice some Metta (lovingkindness) towards myself, and that helped a lot.

Once I started speaking again, I also discovered that we had a really wonderful group of people there. At the end of the course, Lalita-ji said we were her favorite group this year because everyone was so enthusiastic to learn, and full of love. It really felt true. Side note: India is crawling with British and Israeli people, but there wasn't a single one of those nationalities represented in our 30-person group.

Every day I woke up every day in my tiny room (I could touch both walls at the same time) that I grew to love and stepped outside to watch the Himalayan foothills start to glow in the dawn, listening to the Ganga flow. I was so happy there, it really felt so peaceful.

The place had plenty of showers but since our daily walks always ended in a place where you could swim, I ended up not showering for the whole week, bathing instead in waterfalls and the Ganga. But I must say that my first hot shower once I got back to Laxman Jhula (Rishikesh) was sublime.

On the last night of the program we had a bonfire on the beach. Everyone was finally speaking (I was one of only four people out of 30 or so that chose complete silence for the course), and they served cookies and sweets, which produced a huge group sugar buzz. We sang songs and goofed around; Lalita-ji called it a "spiritual party." It felt like the last night of summer camp.

On the final morning of the program we did a Havan ceremony, where we chanted a mantra 108 times around a fire. We were told that you could write something on a piece of paper that you wanted to let go of, and at the end of the ceremony I burned my paper. It really feels like it has already started to work.

Then we took a group photo before saying goodbyes, though quite a few people, myself included, chose to stay an additional night. Some of us continued hanging out together in Laxman Jhula, even staying in the same hotel, postponing letting go of the ashram experience for which I am so grateful to have been a part of.

The full set of photos from the ashram is on my photolog.

April 05, 2011

I feel the earth move

There was an earthquake yesterday around 5pm in Delhi (I think? maybe Indonesia). I was laying in bed in my hotel, preparing for a reiki treatment that evening, when I felt the bed start to move like a big truck was going by. Then I realized there are no big trucks in Laxsman Jhula, and the motion was sustained for a whole minute or two. I looked over and saw the water in my water bottle sloshing back and forth, so I ran outside and asked my friend from California, did you feel that?

Every hair on my body was standing on end, and the surface of the Ganga looked very strange. So I ran back into my room, threw my passport/credit cards/cash and water in my bag and ran out of the building. That's when the hotel manager got kind of condescending and told me it was probably just construction, he even patted me on the shoulder. I'm totally going to go tell him I was right when I check out.

Which is only in a couple hours! I decided to go to Dharmasala, taking an overnight bus there around 4 today. I also booked my transit back to Bombay, since I have only five days in Dharmasala before I have to head back for my Thailand flight. So strange that my time in India is almost over; two months was nowhere near enough. I got the ten-year visa this time, so I know I'll be back, perhaps for six months next trip.

April 03, 2011

Back from the ashram

I'm back in Rishikesh after a week at Phool Chatti ashram. It's strange to be handling money again, making decisions about what to eat, sleeping in, hearing constant honking...

I'll post a full report when I've processed it a bit more, but a week of nothing but meditation and yoga was really amazing. I spent most of it in complete silence as well, which really helped. I was really happy there, but ok to leave though; it was time. I've already had three desserts today, and haven't yet ordered dinner.

Strange that I only have ten days left in India, where did the time go? I had originally planned to go to Manali next, but I think I might head to Dharmasala on Tuesday instead with a girl I met at the ashram. I have only enough time for one other place, and Dharmasala feels right. I'm going to sleep on it though, and not worry about it until tomorrow. One thing I realized at the ashram is how much time and energy I spend planning and worrying about decisions that become clear in their time. I'm going to try and do less of that.