Sorry, this won’t be the most exciting blog post.
Only a week and a half remaining of my internship (can you
believe it?) and my task is to compile all the information I’ve been collecting
about mobile phone culture, electronic waste and the associated grey market
economies in India into some kind of report that will make sense even though I feel like I’ve only scratched the surface. So for the last few days (and probably the
remaining 10) I’ve been pretty much keeping my nose to the grindstone and pounding the keyboard. Suddenly, this internship thing feels like the end of last term when all my papers were due. I pounded out more than 2,000 words yesterday and about the same today. Yikes, how long is this things going to be?!?
I did take last Saturday off to tour Old Delhi and the
Chandni Chowk market area and then sample mangos at the Delhi Mango Festival
and watch a mango eating contest. (Okay everybody listen up: nobody can think about the starving children in India just now for this paragraph.) Have to admit, all those mangos made me a
little sick of them for about 48 hours, but I got over it and had some for
lunch today. Dee-lish.
So, with not much more to report, here’s some photos to give
you a sense life at the ashram. I hope I’m
not repeating myself.
And a toothy picture of the Mother, Sri Aurobindo’s right
hand in the pursuit of enlightenment through integral yoga that apparently only
gets going at Nirvana where old yoga leaves off, or so Meena-Didi told me.
Their images are everywhere.
Sometimes it feels like you are being watched.
A gothic image the Mother.
Here’s my 5 star accommodation: the bed with the blue
sheets. To be sure, I shouldn't complain about the thin mattress. It's more than most people in India get. The place is clean and serves three meals a day.
I don't think we're in the Taj Mahal Hotel anymore, Toto !! |
There is a pair of peacocks on the grounds and they had
chicks this summer. One of the chicks was
bitten by a mongoose and is lame but we hope it will get better. Mongoose are famous for being the only animal that can take down a cobra, so how the little chick survived the mongoose attack
is beyond me.
This is the view of the ashram building from the grounds
where there is a big well and a vegetable garden.
Squash anyone? |
One of the nice things about staying at the ashram when we
did was that it coincided with a class of young men and women who were here to
learn spoken English. Cathy and I got to
know some of them when they started using us to practice their English, or
relieve their tedium, as the case may be.
In any event, their course ended about 10 days ago, they all went home
and the place seems lonely without them.
This is Anu. Happily, she returned yesterday to start 3 years of teacher training at the ashram
affiliated school.
Anu and somebody with a double chin |
And this is Ballav.
He and his brother Madan didn’t take the English course nearly as
seriously as Anu and, not surprisingly, didn’t get to move on to teacher
training. They were a lot of fun too but
they’ve gone back to Orrissa. I still
get broken-english texts from them but the dialogue is pretty limited since they are a lot better at spoken english than written. (The photo also shows me after my haircut,
since you were asking.)
Ballav |
Line up at the dining hall for breakfast and the usual instructions about not wasting food:
The breakfast line |
More instructions about sugar |
Most of our socializing with Anu, Ballav and the others
takes place in the dining hall and you never know who’ll you’ll meet
there. Two nights ago, Meena-Didi, not
an ashramite but a semi-regular of some sort, sat down at our table and before
long was scolding me for drinking water with my dinner. (Who knew you shouldn't?)
She went on to tell me ad nauseum
about how water dilutes the juices in your stomach, prevents proper digestion
of your food and makes you constipated. No water, therefore, from half an hour before meal time till one hour
after. Since being bunged up is exactly
the problem I’ve been having since I arrived I was receptive to her theory. (Who’d have guessed, eh? You expect a westerner with a westerner's typically fussy tummy to have the opposite problem in India.) So I promised to try out her theory for a
week and get back to her. File that
under too much information. Obviously it is a slow news day.
At dinner
the next night she sought me out again and talked my ear off about Sri
Aurobindo’s integral yoga and the fact that he was so enlightened, in body as
well as mind, that when he died a light shone out of his forehead and his body
didn’t decompose for five days. I don’t
mean to make light of the more sensational details, but sadly, most of what she
went on (and on and on) about was lost on me. Truly, I wish
I’d had a tape recorder to capture it.
2 comments:
You write well. I had seen you at the Ashram many times with your colleague and always wondered what you were doing in India. Now that's answered. Hope to see you at the Ashram, if you are visiting again.
Thanks for checking in. I hope to be back in India soon, but not in the May/June heat again.
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