Tuesday, August 9, 2016



Chapter Fourteen

     Wednesday, July sixth morning, about the evening of the fifth.
Anna has just come down from the Annapurna circuit, twenty-one days trekking – take five seconds and think about what that looks like – around, all the way around, a cluster of the giants. Anna is a nurse from somewhere in the USAso happy to be on this exhilarating vacation, which she will carry to Bali within a month to celebrate her thirtieth birthday with a friend she hasn’t seen in five years.
      Highlights from last night’s unraveling. Who is here, why are you here, what are you looking for tonight?
     Quite the busy night, as one-by-one, two-by-two, and sometimes more, visitors climb the staircase to the loft. Our friend the young British fellow, would be accountant, and I play a couple of card games on the floor table. Pool table busy with some new visitors. Matthias from Austria and his two or three friends are sharing sticks around the green felt table. Tanya comes up from the jazz going on in the club below and behind the Babylon. Prakash, quiet, alert and listening, likely knows more about what’s going on up here than anyone. Later on, two Chinese young men from last night come up and are welcome to our table. So overall, it’s quite an active night, and all kinds of conversational highways are either opened or widened. 
     Thursday, July seventh around three-thirty with a black coffee at my patio breakfast table, complete with thriving garden and a single strand of prayer flags tied to the sky, softly waving in the breeze between the leaves. Alsan stops over at ten this morning with his four year old son, Zide. On the scooter, Zide sits in daddy’s lap, the two of them tied together with a sash, little body to big body; if they roll, they roll together. I’ve got the back seat, and the ride is to Sarangot hilltop overlooking the city and the lake. No doubt it was somewhere along this uppermost ridge that Gopan Tsering and I stopped on our final walk down from our thirteen day trek in 1970. From up here today, the shimmering still water is algae-green. It’s easy to see how the waters have risen over the three weeks I’ve been here. The observation pier at the city’s edge is substantially submerged. Today is a paragliding day, and Sarangot ridge is a favored take-off and landing area. Alsan is a licensed paragliding instructor, or used to be, so he knows a lot about how the currents work and how to work them. So it’s hang out time on the Sarangot ridge with Alsan and Zide for a couple of hours watching the paragliders and there are quite a few coming and going, taking off and landing, some of them even disappearing into a cloud once in a while. Drive back down to Lakeside street Umbrella Café where there are some Russian dishes. I order a recommended fish plate, and Zide,  Alsan and I build a little ship with some magnetized pieces of plastic, for sailing across the table, and between tables.
     Sunday morning, July tenth, eleven-eleven. Mostly cloudy, swallowing the early morning blue, gathering for another downpour . . . when? The secret to be revealed, at the moment least expected. The last couple of days are merged as one. Friday the eighth is Prem’s birthday, twenty-six, and he keeps wanting to say that because all of that is now behind him, and he is entering his twenty-seventh year, he can say he is twenty-seven. A technicality of convention to banter on till the cake comes out, a big, chocolaty rectangle with “Happy Birthday Prem” written amidst the sugary rosettes. Prem cuts a slice for each of everyone here, including Mike who bicycled from New York to California in 2009, decided to keep cycling, and hasn’t been back to the USA since. Disconnected from the internet for the last two years, and shoots a mean game of eight-ball up here at the Babylon. Never know who’s going to be dropping in here from one night to the next.
     Friday morning, Alsan and I scootered to Mahendra cave, twenty something kilometers up the rocky road north of the city. A wide-mouthed, walk-through horizontal hole in the ground, easily a couple of hundred yards I’m guessing, over the uneven solid rock floor, until at the very end of it, a Hindu priest sits on a small ledge next to a Shiva shrine, decorated in blossoms and burning oil lamps, where he will give blessings to anyone who wants. Returning through the damp and slippery, dimly lit hole through the rock, there is a narrow branch to follow, thirty or so twisting yards to a vertical convoluted wormhole towards the sky, climbable in a twisting, serpentine kind of way about thirty or so feet through this other gateway of Mahendra cave.
     Friday night’s birthday and cake party for Prem moves over to the Ozone, where the synthesized music is loud and the dancing is crowded and wild.
Tanya is a shake-it-on-down dancer, and Prem and Prakash get into it as well.
I get into it a bit, but the crowd is too thick for me, and I mostly sit watching and sipping  my beer. Closing at two, move on out through the side door to a nearby late-nite shop for an order of some early morning  mo-mos, relocating to a gently rocking rowboat, and then the table by the lake. Prem and Tanya, the birthday twins, and Prakash and I, partners in some special perceptual sense that we are continually discovering. Lakeside walk back to the corner where the roads diverge.
     Next morning at quarter to nine, meet at Babylon to start with morning coffee at Godfather’s, then ride the van to the top of the ridge where Tanya will take her first paragliding soar through the valley between the hills surrounding the Lake and her city. Prem is her pilot. Alsan takes his son Zide for a paragliding leap. Prakash and I walk down together till we catch a local bus to the bottom, where we take a taxi to Godfather’s next to Babylon for a lunch. Nap time afternoon into evening, till its time to be there for Tanya’s birthday cake party at Babylon. Two cakes even, a round one and a rectangle, and candles that won’t blow out! Until that winds down to the basic group for the night at the lakeside upstairs porch of the Babylon Guest House. Tanya, Anna, Matthias, myself, young volunteer from Netherlands, Prem with his guitar, Prakash, and Alsan. We sit tonight on this small porch, looking through the darkness of the after midnight lake, around a wooden rectangle table, where two small candles keep on burning.
     Tuesday, July twelfth. Going all the way back to the evening of Friday the eighth, to Monday afternoon. All one event, a series of events, leading to this moment of intermission. Saturday’s birthday party evolves into Monday’s going-away party for Tanya. Time to go back to England for a couple of months to consolidate, liquidate, and terminate, and take another step of separation from history in the UK, and towards her City by the Lake in the Himalayan foothills.      
     Tanya rides with Prakash on his scooter, and I ride with Alsan to the clear flowing river over the rocks, flowing through the lushly green canyon, easy going current by the shore, and swiftly flowing current in the middle. Transition is sharp. It’s Ok to go with that fast current, but there’s nothing to hold on to except the rocks on the bottom, as long as there is a bottom, and unless you’ve been this way before, hard to tell anything about what kinds of rocks are scattered around just below the surface. There is a moment of losing control over where I am and where I am going. There is a boulder strewn drop off just ahead, that is basically non-negotiable, so when it comes time to gather my attention into a fixed purpose, there is no space for languid thinking. Ladder myself horizontally across the rockholds I find below the surface towards the shallows and the pebble strewn shore. That could have been a death: skull shattered against a boulder, pink, mushy brains churning with the water spilling over rocks on its way towards another whirlpool. Had no idea I was getting into a death-defying trip when I jumped into the flow. The eight or ten little boys hanging out here, jumping into the water, taking their ride, and getting out when they want, make it look like a water slide at an amusement park. And I’m sure it is if you know the flow and how it goes. So with my old “got-to-give-it-a-try” attitude, here I am in the middle of something I have no control over, and I am heading for my death. Time to put the A, B, Cs of what you need to do together and real quick. Attention zeros into the self, the rocks and the current. And after all is said and done, such a simple thing it was, over and out in less than a minute. Thankful to my adrenaline glands for kicking in when I needed them, and nice to know that my quick-thinking do-or-die reflex is working. The day is still here, my friends are still here, I am still here, and everything is just as it has always been, and it is all – simply –  enchantingly beautiful.

     Loosen up a bit down by the River.
     Jump into the current, let it take me for a ride.
     Say what?
    There’s rocks down there, further down the way.
     They be harder than my skull, me thinks,
     So it’s time to find a hold,
     and edge on over to the shore,
     where my feet are on the ground,
     and I can see where I’ve just been.
     Jumped into the current
     and let it take me for a ride . . .
     . . . all the way to the other Side.

     Wednesday morning, July thirteenth. Monday’s going away party for Tanya was: Spontaneously, the idea blossomed. The original idea was to meet for lunch at noon at Babylon. A very simple plan, and only Prakash and Tanya and Alsan and I are there. Alsan is carrying his drone in its backpack carrying case, and this idea to scooter on down to the river is clearly his. Alsan knows lots of off-the-beaten-track places where seclusion from the city is not far away. A bend in the clear water, swiftly flowing mountain stream on its way to becoming a river. . . . where a dip in the pool and a ride with the current says come with me. Along with several eight to ten year old boys jumping off the streamside boulder into the crystal clear waters for company, and two young Nepali mothers washing clothes and their kids on the other side from our pebbly beach. The drone flies, and everybody gets wet. Sendoff party looking forward to a reunion. Go where you must go, and be where you must be, and we all be looking forward to something like this happening again, maybe even at the same place, this little bend in the river already packed with memories, and when we find the right time again, we can make some more.     
     Tuesday, July nineteenth, ten-ten. Totally overcast, as far as I can see. Eight months now gone by traveling through and living in this part of the world, India and Nepal. One month Chennai, through a monsoon flood. Pondicherry for three and a half months, with emphasis on Thai massage, healing arts sensitivity training, book publishing and distribution, and the Sea, forever rolling in from that faraway eastern horizon. Sikkim for thirty-five days, where I found the trailhead town of Yuksom for a quiet place to stay. Darjeeling punctuation mark on my way to Nepal. First month in Nepal between three places: border town Kakarvitta, nine days; ancient city Bhaktapur, seven days; and Tibetan enclave Boudnath, eleven days. After all of which has been my first five weeks in Pokhara, where I can easily stay another three weeks before being on my way again, towards explorations in Ladakh. No urgent planning required at this time.
     Babylon has slowed down now that the birthday parties are behind us, and Tanya has flown off to UK. Couple of nights ago, Shekar introduced me to his two friends Prem (other than our birthday Prem) who went to Canterbury, England a couple of years ago for a business management training program, and during his visit was enchanted with the old world Canterbury architecture. Prem has a literary mind, and we go all the way back to the Canterbury Tales. Sateen, another friend of Shekar, is at our table with his literary mind; he asks if I like poetry and I happen to have a copy of my book. Sateen is taken in with the word RoseViolet in the very first stanza, and both Prem and Sateen are interested in where the book is coming from and what it’s about, as I give my overview explanation. Sateen recognizes the “Demon Cloud” drawing on the back cover, first person to have ever given it that label, which is pretty close to what I have in mind with that image. Not necessarily all that demonic, but menacing and threatening and a call for attention to the impending impact of the climate change scenario. Since my inventory is low, and these fellows seem tight, 
I give Prem and Sateen a copy to share.
     Outside of an occasional ride with Alsan on his scooter to a bend in the river for a dip or some other natural place to sit, I mostly been walking not very far around the neighborhood, up and down Lakeside avenue, maybe trying out a new restaurant or coffee house, but mostly winding up back at Sweet Memories for lunch or dinner or tea. Two teenage girls, daughters in this family, are always there to take my order and serve me up with their familiar smiling faces. Sometimes, Mum serves me up and sometimes the ten year old boy. As a regular, I’ve pretty much got a handle on the menu repertoire, and I don’t have to wonder what I’m going to get when I order.
     After finishing The Snow Leopard by Peter Matiessen, I found Cities of the Plain by Cormac McCarthy on the guest house travelers’ exchange bookshelf. Cowboy life in southwestern New Mexico in 1952, captured my attention in the story, in the dialogue which made the story happen, and in the thirty page epilogue which was a journey in itself. I got so wrapped up in that story and epilogue that I couldn’t put it down for three days after I’d turned the last page. Didn’t exactly re-read it word-for-word, but re-read quite a few passages from the crucial scenes, the pivotal scenes, the enchanting scenes, and the reflections on the interface between our dreaming world and what we call our real world, all through the voices of those imagined, all so very real characters.
     Of course, I’m looking towards another novel to pick up and spend my time with, since conversations and excursions are few and far between these days.  Got to keep my mind connected with what it enjoys and knows how to do well:
reading something literary, reflecting on the writing I encounter, treasuring what
I appreciate when I find a writer whom I admire, and then, after all is said and done, scratching out a few words of my own, and also sometimes picking up my little handful of colored pencils, and painting a scene from my spontaneous imagination onto a blank sheet of paper, and take a look at where my thought is for the day.
* _ * - * _ *
     With early morning rain
from the garden doorstep.
Smooth and steady, tumbling,
tumbling through the leaves,
the music of
In-cess-ant-less-ness.
Like ocean waves swelling,
and gently rolling,
Swelling and gently rolling,
Into the sand, into the sand.
There is no raging through the wind,
No swirling gyrations of intensity,
Only falling,
and even in the thickness of downpour,
It is all just gently falling,
falling from somewhere up there
In the depths of the opaque,
soft gray light of the blank canvas,
Into the proliferation of myriad green-full-ness,
Where the sounds of impact,
Each and every one in-audible,
Multiplied by the thousands upon thousands,
Resonate together into the
End-less-ness of it all.
* _ * - * _ *
     Five weeks now gone by in Pokhara. Clouds gather, Rain falls, Skies clear, Sunshine brightens a day, Clouds begin to gather. Every day has its own “going with the flow.”
     Thursday, July twenty-first, mid-morning. Going back to the table last night at the Babylon, overview of the rain-dampened street below, with B.K. our medical professional, Prakash whom I haven’t seen in a couple of days or so, Prem (birthday boy, guitarist and singer, and paragliding pilot), and Shekar, owner-manager, mastermind for this establishment. Prem plays his guitar and sings, while Prakash corresponds with his gentle djembe. All around catching up, nothing much going on. The days go by, the nights go by. Sometimes it rains, sometimes it doesn’t, and sometimes the sun shines bright in the blue sky. Each day a slightly different walkabout, in between the showers, or through them if you must, umbrella in hand, looking for that place to sit that feels right for the time. Conjuring up the thought that makes the day just a little special, some unique non-recurring aspect to craft a note around.
     Surya minds the bar and there is not really much going down this evening-night in the city. Ballu comes up with one of his friends, and we gravitate to the green felt table for a few rounds of eight-ball. BK and I, Prakash and Ballu, and other teammate combinations. In the back of my mind is a forthcoming journey to Leh, and how I’m going to swing it. Perhaps fly to Srinigar, then take the two day overland through Kargil. Would like to see that countryside, and take a gradual and measured path to Leh rather than simply jumping in, airport to airport, from where I’m at to where I’m going. There’s another different world up there, and the path to the place is part of where it’s at. Meanwhile, the table closes down, Shekar goes home, and the rest of us who are leaving circle down the spiral staircase to the empty late night street. BK and I walk together the three blocks to my guest house where we part as he walks further on towards his journey to Chitwan tomorrow to visit his parents, then to Kathmandu to figure out the best way to continue his medical studies. Go for his Master’s, is how he describes it. He would like to go overseas to practice, where some money can be made, for although Nepal needs all the doctors it can get, or keep, the economic potential is comparatively minimal, and not encouraging.
     As we are parting, I say what I can to provide that encouragement to continue with his professional development, and perhaps focus on what he can do to keep it here in the home country. Sometimes, all it takes is a simple sentence to strike a chord and make the impression that needs to be made. My words are out there, and how they are heard, I cannot really know. I’m not telling him anything he doesn’t already know, anything he hasn’t already heard. No doubt there are many complexities for him to consider. We part at the wishing well, where the mysteries of all of our tomorrows ripple outward from the center where the coin, the token of our intent, makes its splash. He in his direction, my wandering soul in mine, for wherever I think I’m going and why.
     Saturday, July twenty-third around seven in the completely overcast morning. Evening with Isaac and Nikita at the Babylon last night, just returned from a visit to Muktinath and Jomsom and their mythological journey up the Kaligandaki river, the route I took all of those years ago, the route I would already have taken again were it not for the monsoon rains. It was a dangerous trip, Isaac and Nikita confirm, with mudslides and falling rocks and narrow cliffhanging roads that brought their hearts to their mouths. A mythological journey visiting the threshold of death along the way. Awe-inspiring intensity with landscape and ancient rooted-in-the-earth culture on the edge, the frailty of their existence at the whimsical random mercy of falling stones.
     After days of seemingly timeless emptiness, the Babylon coughs up another treasure of a conversation with this couple from Holland, Isaac, all of forty, looking younger, and Nikita with her enthusiastically intelligent conversational manner. They will take their mythologically inspired journey along the Kaligandaki next to the Gangetic plain where they will continue their paths of discovery downriver to whatever unplanned for places draw them in their direction. The guiding light between this lovely couple will take them to where they want to go together, discovering their individualities, their magnetisms, and the opening of their chakras along the way.
     Isaac, Nikita and I go on and on well past the dimming of the Babylon lights.
Adventuresome and talkative nineteen year old James from UK joins in from the nearby bar stool and sits with us for the final round of topics. James, with his heavily cockneyed British accent intends to engage in every intense physical adventure he can get himself into before he’s thirty, which he assumes is the beginning of the natural turnaround point for the onset of physical decline in the ability and inclination to pursue such activities. By the time it’s time for we-all to pay up and stand up and vacate the premises, I’ve got a copy of my book out for Nikita and Isaac, and one for James. For Nikita and Isaac, it’s a made-for-them book, and I wish I could have time to talk with them about it, to talk with them more, period, but they are on their way out of town tomorrow, and the final look we share will carry deeply for a long time towards wherever we meet again. Always here, in this place where we always are. Waiting by the Lake is one kind of Timelessness, and swimming with the river of mutually stimulating conversation is another kind of Timelessness. Where we are going is where we are at, and it is so much fun, so much fun, when conversational partners find each other.
     Monday evening, July twenty-fifth, around ten-twenty. After the city gets a solid soaking with a six hour steady downpour. Little rivers flow through the gutters, but this comes later. First of all, I have to walk north on Lakeside mid-afternoon when the clouds are still gathering, umbrella in hand, knowing that something will be coming down, and I don’t want to be stuck in my room for whatever that is going to be. Past Sweet Memories, and past the Babylon, past a whole string of other little restaurants and hotel fronts and shops to the Sun Wel Come with a Dahl-Bhat in mind, the Nepali version of an Indian thali, a mound of rice surrounded by an array of delectables. Matthias is already there with three friends I have never met before. I’m walking the other side of the street when Matthias calls me over from their table. How convenient. My table is the singleton on the covered patio one step below and next to their table, so it’s like we’re all sitting together, and I begin to get to know Chandra from Delhi, and Garrett from Portland, Oregon, and Rajiv from around here. Chandra and Garrett and I easily fall into our exchange. Chandra, the artist and poet, and movie script writer, singer, Vipassana meditator, and educator for children and teenagers about personal discovery and development and the kind of world they will be growing into. All wrapped up into a bundle of enthusiasm, determination, and intelligence. Garrett has a memorized poem about his ordeal of engaging the depths and complications of quitting his tobacco cigarettes. A long poem, artfully conceived and spoken. As part of explaining who I am and where I come from, I happen to have with me a copy of the English version of my book. Chandra and Garrett take an avid interest and we proceed through some questioning and answering and hypothesizing about why things are the way they are. Garrett tells me the story of his surreptitious visit to the innards of a Mayan pyramid still in the earliest stages of discovery and exploration, and how he broke through the archaeologists’ locked doorway to an interior of painted walls clearly portraying an array of human figures with animal heads. Reminiscent, shall we surmise, of Egyptian figures painted on walls some three and four and five thousand years ago. What were those artists thinking when they were painting those images . . . the Egyptian, the Mayan, . . . all of those peoples from however long ago, in whichever land, on whichever continent, on whichever wall of which cave . . . what were they thinking? And what kinds of thoughts do these images create in what we like to imagine are our complex, sophisticated, up-to-date-with-the-latest-app minds? How does one think as one stands face-to-face with the paint laid down into that wall by that long ago artist? Picture him or her now when the structure was new before the jungle’s reclamation. With their bottles of paint and brushes as they send their message to all who will ever see it, whomever that might be? Garrett, for one, of the very few since that very long time ago.
     The Sun Wel Come is a cozy Nepali family style restaurant, specializing, to me, in Dahl Bhat, while including a diverse menu for whatever else I might want, and I can imagine heading over here more often. Chandra and Garrett are taking a bus to Muktinath in a couple of days. Inconceivable to me after hearing the stories of my Dutch friends Isaac and Nikita the other night. I’ll be waiting till things dry out in October or November before heading up that way myself. When the skies are clear and the tumbling boulders have done their tumbling, when one can see where one is going, and the footing is well grounded. Making new friends from out of the Blue, whom you really feel good about, is a magical moment.
     Tuesday, July twenty-sixth at ten in the morning. Another passing thought. After a rain that went on and on and on from sometime around five yesterday afternoon to just a few minutes ago. And the cloud is still completely opaque gray, and we wait, for the next release. Now down to the last five copies of my message, four for giveaway and one to carry to Leh, where I must inevitably find an offset printer and make another hundred copies. The enthusiasm and interest of Chandra and Garrett and Rajiv in the drawings and the words, together with the setting of what unfolded at Sun Wel Come last night sheds a lot of light and makes it abundantly clear that I am finding my current. Two more weeks here and only four giveaways left. Clearly, this is what I’m about, in the material world, a book giver-awayer. Last will and testament for those who wonder what I was thinking about on my way out. Was it Lao Tzu who, as his final days were drawing near, walked away from the city and into the mountains for his last trek, wrote his final message to the world before his departure? And for all of the many others who left their final thoughts, their summary of what they saw and heard and remembered, behind in writing? Not to know who one’s readers are? Only to know that they can be read by anybody who knows the language, so that instead of trying to write to anybody or everybody, one writes to the language with the words that one knows. Syntax, Semantics, and Lexicon: that’s all it all is, notes along the line to follow if the music rings true.
     It’s not just our table of five! On the other side of this narrow patio porch-let, across the entrance steps of the Sun Wel Come, is another little set of tables with another set of travelers where I’m sure I would easily fit into the conversation and the music. Chandra for one and Matthias for another, as the late afternoon rain continues through the dusk and into the darkness, are visiting that other set of tables. A trio of musicians emerge, their instrument boxes opening like cocoons emerging into butterfly wings of music from the guitar player and his voice and the box-drummer, and the harmonica background, and the porch and the restaurant from one side to the other, from inside to outside, swims with the sounds of the cascading downpour in the energy of togetherness with each other and the waterfall. The book tour has found its venue, and the bookmaker has run out of books! Chandra is not merely a selfie taker with her camera phone. She creates three and four minute videos of what is going on around her, including herself at appropriate intervals, narrating the scene, or simply tuning into the music. She has a movie maker’s mind. And just wants to include with whoever is out there in her internet world the events and people of her real time existence. She’s got a little piece of me now in her catalogue of clips, and where she’s going with it, and how much more I will get to know her is whoever’s guess. She spoke of plans for a bus ride to Muktinath for tomorrow, along with Garrett, and if it has been raining north of here on the road to Tatopani, to Jomsom, and on to Muktinath like it has been here for the last sixteen hours, one might wish to brush that idea with a touch of caution, but here is youth and adventure and exploration and a one-time visit, at least for a while, so they might go on ahead with it and put their lives in the hands of whoever will be holding onto the steering wheel of that bus. Not I, even if this was my first time here, and I was twenty-six, and had never seen the mountain, I don’t think, or would I? If I was twenty-six again, I might be right there in that bus alongside Chandra and Garrett . . . how can I say what I would have done . . . If? I had my own set of harrowing adventures when I was twenty-six, doing things and going places I wouldn’t try to do or go to now. But for everyone, I suppose, at least for me, there is that turnaround point where one decides, one looks at and weighs the alternatives, the relative values, one decides that the absolutely real possible danger trumps the possibility of the anticipated thrill, or whatever sense of satisfaction one would walk away with from the other side of the tunnel. Taking the road less traveled by is not always such a good idea. There’s a reason it’s less traveled by. A little dose of wisdom might say that it is a good and perhaps even better idea to keep one’s view set on the longer term destination. Now I am closer to that place than I was all those years ago, and after a while, the rainfall resumes, and there is sweetness in the air.
     Wednesday, July twenty-seventh at ten on a thinly overcast day. One becomes sensitized to the depth of the overcast from one day to the next, from morning, through afternoon, and evening. Here in the heart of the city, as closed down as the city gets at night, there are enough late night shops and signs and occasional low-light lampposts to keep the streets in soft light, and there are no stars, no constellations, no planets. In daytime, like a threadbare rug of broken warp or waft, strands of blue sky appear and widen around midday and shadows appear. Another day in Pokhara walking between three worlds.
     In this room, my interior, the world of memories and dreams, as in the endless staircases and waterfalls of Escher’s drawings, and the spatial interconnectedness of interlocking colonnades, like puzzle pieces all a-heap that can be arranged and rearranged, into patterns of changing shapes. Entertainment central. I do include the view through my window in this world. A profusion of leaves, from the smallest of ferns to the tallest banana trees, through a field of maize stalks now shorn of their gifts to the world, withering brown for return to the earth, thick moss covering old stonework, broadleaf stalks of bushes with leaves fluttering on the other side of the glass, on the other side of the metal bars that insure against intruders. All of that is in this room. This is the window between worlds.
     On the other side of the door is everything and everybody who is out there.
Everyone I encounter and engage with. Some I have already met, and we continue from where we left off. . . yesterday or before. Others, first encounters, first impressions, first smiles, first frowns, first recognitions, first sounds from the new voice, first words spoken. This is me. Who is You?
     Met Devi yesterday early afternoon in the Xerox shop. He has a house for rent in the hills along the main road to Beni, twenty kilometers west from here. Pictures look nice. Lots of green space around. Looks like kind of a glen between hills, wide apart enough to lend a wide view of the sky. October and November will be clear skies. I suppose I could see some stars and planets out there. If it’s open when I return, I’ll have a look.
     Walked to Sun Wel Come for another Dahl Bhat, third in a row. I need this kind of food right now. Here comes Matthias and Rajiv down the street to join me at the little round table on the small front patio where we can sit and have our meals as the afternoon’s pedestrians make their ways one way and the other along the asphalt lane between the rows of shops. Through our mostly silent conversation with its occasional catch-me-up notes. That was yesterday. Not a whole lot of social interaction, but just enough of good quality to help me feel a bit connected with the world on this side of the door.
     Between these two worlds is the infinite space of what to do in the meantime.  
My world in reading, especially through novels where I can meet people I never knew in places I’ve never been, doing things that will never be a part of my real experience, and through the storyteller, fashion an image of character development and interaction and live for a while through my imagination in their world. I take at least a few days to read a novel, allowing a set and sequence of images to settle into my thoughtfulness. Where I’m at in the middle of some story, in the middle of some character’s dilemma or experience, hovers noiselessly in the background of my time in my other two worlds, the interior and the exterior. A stitching thread of continuity. The path of someone else’s life, as observed and crafted by an author.
      After Cities of the Plain, I found Prodigal Summer by Barbara Kingsolver on the traveler’s bookshelf. I read it years ago and know I liked it, just as I’ve liked the several of Kingsolver’s books I’ve read. By now, I could barely remember but a couple of scenes, so I entered the story with the sense of rediscovery, and thoroughly enjoyed meeting again all of the characters whom I had known once before. Rural Appalachia, in all of her Natural beauty.
     There are small stores in town with shelves of used paperbacks to browse through, many of the books in very good and excellent condition, so that now I’m in the middle of The Road by Cormac McCarthy © 2006, and today will be my third day into this story. A man and his son walk through the utter desolation of post apocalyptic America. Not running through it too quickly. Letting my sense for these people and where they are at settle in.
     Thursday, July twenty-eighth at eleven on an overcast morning.
For yesterday. Matthias called around noon to see if I wanted to meet with him and Rajiv for a walk, otherwise unspecified, and we agree to meet at Orange House in an hour. As I’m walking my way along North Lakeside, meet with Garrett walking the street with no particular place to go, so we walk together to meet with Matthias and Rajiv. Next to Orange house is Sharma’s, a cool little teahouse shack with an inside upper lounge where Chandra and Monica are lounging with a light lunch. Who sees who through the doorway and calls out, I’m not sure, Chandra or Garrett, doesn’t matter, there are now four of sitting on the cushions around the lounge table. Including Monica, young blond Polish astrophysicist who studied at Harvard. In giving me the layman’s idea of what astrophysics is, as different from astronomy, she says it’s mostly math about quasars and such things cooking in the quantum mechanics world. Altogether of which is about as much as I’ll ever know, I think, about what astrophysics is all about. Call to Matthias to meet us here at Sharma’s, so then there are six of us around the table, and five of us decide to walk together along the road going north out of town along the lakeshore to Happy Village. Garrett heads back into town to meet some other friend for some other reason.
      Patches of old asphalt, mostly packed rocks, some muddy spots, and one swift little stream flowing down from the forested hillside across the concrete slab of a spillway built for this little piece of road, water rushing its way through descending levels of stones and rocks towards the lake just below. It’s a nice long walk, and we pass by one of the paragliders’ preferred landing areas, and Chandra gets into long conversations with those fellows as she nurtures her interest in giving it a try. Happy Village has a whole slew of little restaurants and small guest houses that cater to the paragliding crowd, and the Pokhara visitors who want to live along the opposite lakeshore, outside the city, a mile walk or a bumpy busride away. Lots of green water plants cover the surface of the water along this lakeshore, and with lush hillsides for the main background, greenery surrounds, and the city is a thin line across the other lakeshore horizon. Outdoor patio in the grass for a Dahl Bhat lunch for some of us, and lemon water for all of us. Dark clouds are gathering over the hills on the other side of the lake and it’s quite clear what this will lead to, but there is no great hurry, for we all know how long it takes for these things to build up to their tipping point, so we linger on the patio drenched in all manner of greenery around. Bathing our senses in the shimmering light of acres of water plants at this shallow end of the lake where it begins to melt into marshland. And the coolness of a cloudy day before a rain, with the lightest of breezes to whisper through the leaves of the trees at our table.
     We begin our walking return, and within a hundred meters or so, comes a country bus around the corner heading in our direction towards town. We flag it down and take the bumpy ride to where we disembark at Sharma’s. Here is where I leave my afternoon hiking friends, for I must walk quickly back to my guest house before the rains begin. Stretch out for a little rest at home, quick refreshing shower; chicken, veggies, and fries at Sweet Memories, and it’s time to return to Babylon after three days absence.
     Big crowd tonight, including Matthias, Rajiv, Chandra and Monica around the green felt table. Ballu and BK at the bar stools; Shekar, Prakash and Surya for sure; Alsan and Garrett, who between them later on get into a wonderful conversation about how they love their juggling and how it feels in their brains. All I’ve got to do now is decide I really want to practice to the place where I can be a part of that discussion. New faces as well, including a man who has his first novel in the hands of an interested publisher. A sense of accomplishment. A sense of good things to come. A sense of wanting to share, as he and I exchange outlines from our personal stories. There will be more to talk about, clearly, but tonight is kind of a merry-go-round in general. The fellow from Chennai who’s been motorbiking through India is here, and the two house Djembes get some good and proper attention. A few other familiar faces that I’m not close with personally. Closing times in these parts is eleven, and the crowd needs a gentle push from Shekar and Prakash and Surya to nudge us all down the spiraling staircase to the quiet, dimly lit asphalt lane where I catch my ride back home on the back of Ballu’s scooter. Kind of party you like to see happen and be a part of; everybody just shows up.
     Followed by the crash. Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday, out of circulation. That raspy throat in the morning tells me something is coming down and by afternoon I’m running a fever, along with a crushing headache (this is not a hangover) like some Yeti’s paws grasping my skull from both sides and squeezing, and the stomach is going on strike. How long and how far is this going to go? Is this a direct outcome of last night’s free-for-all sharing of joints – both kinds: the tobacco-hash variety, and the pure ganja forms – exacerbated by a visiting Jordanian who in his enthusiasm wants to get everybody on the floor stoned, and he’s got the big fresh stash to do it with. My personal policy is to take what I want for the moment, and let it pass when I’m satisfied. Even so, the crowd was entertaining, scattered about in little groups – the pool table, the bar, couple of Djembe players and accompanying musicians, couple of tables where groups of four or five sit and talk – and by the time one adds up all the possibilities, seems like a great opportunity to pick up a virus.
     I visit Babylon as this fever is building up to help Prakash write an English language cover letter for his German visa application. He has the opportunity to go there for a month, at the invitation and expense of a German fellow whom Prakash served as a trekking guide back in 2013 and 2014. All Prakash has to do is get all required paperwork together, which includes this cover letter and a couple of other English language statements. Of course, I understand what Prakash means when he says what he says, since I’ve been talking with him for the last six weeks. But it really doesn’t come across clearly in writing, so I have to help translate what he wants to say into reasonably understandable written English, into what I’ll call the Nepali English idiom. All of this has to be done now, for he’s taking the bus to Kathmandu this weekend for a Tuesday interview with the German visa man. The German who invited Prakash wants him to come over and talk about a children’s home in Kathmandu and a school in Pokhara that are the beneficiaries of his German charitable organization. The German’s letter to the embassy is a page and a half explanation of what this is all about, which I can only decipher in fragments, and I have to help Prakash write a letter that tells a story that meshes with the German’s request. Not an easy task when Prakash has only the foggiest notion of what he is supposed to be talking about over there. We get one full page together, single space, from heading and salutation to closing remarks. Quite an accomplishment. Like a little miracle. Pulling sentences and paragraphs seemingly out of thin air from what Prakash is telling me.
     On the walk back home, I head for the pharmacy to ask about aspirin or other otc medicine that will help alleviate my fevering brain. Just so happens, BK my medical professional friend shows up – a crossing paths coincidence. As I describe my symptoms he asks the pharmacist for one of those arm-pit thermometers which reads me out at 99.8. Kind of on the hot side. BK orders up three types of pills for me and tells me when to take them and so forth and to call him if I feel the need. That is a godsend coincidence. I am mightily uncomfortable and there is no appetite. He thinks maybe it’s a stomach virus, and the word is this is not going away overnight. What can I say? Be extremely cautious in large party settings, and for me, from now on, it’s steer clear of those hash-tobacco joints. I’ve been doing those things with the Europeans who’ve been coming up here for the last six weeks. Its what they like to do, and I’ve been doing it with them, but it’s time for no more of that. Hash is not the problem. It’s the tobacco that’s messing me up.
     Now it’s Monday and I’m pretty much coming out of it, but it’s been four days of a dysfunctional brain that can only think about how uncomfortable it is, and demanding that I do whatever I need to get back on track. In one way, an opportune time to stop and take stock of what I’ve been doing here in Pokhara, since my last week here is coming right up. Virtually everybody I’ve met here in Pokhara has been through connections I’ve made at Babylon. In one sense similar to how my Pondicherry experience became so almost exclusively focused around the Thai Massage classes. Two rather radically different kinds of environments to get mixed up in.
     Prakash came by the guest house on Saturday and we worked out some revisions he wants to see in the cover letter. Alsan drove Prakash over to the Pokhara school for a look-see and meet the people there so Prakash will have some idea about what he will be talking about. He will also visit the children’s home in Kathmandu when he goes there, and before he goes for his interview. It sure would be great to see him get to make this journey, tentatively scheduled from August ten through September six.
     Meanwhile Dawa walked me over to her favorite travel agent where I booked a flight for August eleven from Kathmandu to Delhi to Srinigar. First leg of my next change of venue. I have been thoroughly unpacked for the last six weeks here at the Little Tibetan Guest House. Namgyal and Dawa, my host and hostess, are a true pleasure to know, and have been especially kind helping to accommodate my stomach through this sickness with cups of ginger-lemon-honey tea, sliced fresh fruit, and water cooked porridge. Now it’s time to sort and resort through my baggage, decide what to take and what to leave behind. Currently nurturing the plan to return here in October when I’m finished with Leh, and give it another month when the skies are clear and the roads are dried out, and all of the landslides have done with this year’s landsliding. Plans are vague and tentative, but at least I have some sense of direction. I’ll just have to wait and see what turns up around the next bend in the road.    
     From the depths of desolation in the darkest hole of Hades, the fire that never fades throws light into the world of color and sound again. The brain is coming out of the Laundromat. For all of whatever that virus was all about, however it found its way into my throat, into my flesh, into my neural network, and for whatever went by with all of those fine people by way of those tobacco-hash joints. . . for the last six weeks night after night . . . all of the garbage has to be cleared out. This is day six after the big party, and the onset of the attack and the counterattack, of the rebellion and the demand to “system restore” the internal hard drive. The five day nightmare has opened all the files . . . including those long forgotten and lost in the archives. . . nothing is ever really deleted . . . and in  a sense, everything has now been updated, everything that insight can tell a story for. All stories are subject to revision without notice from the manufacturer.
     Including today, I’ve got six days to wrap up the Pokhara show. So far, I feel like keeping today in recovery mode. I feel like I can see again. I don’t feel like I need to be walking up and down the lakeside looking for a place to sit. I’ve got the absolutely perfect place to sit right here in this room . . . naturally cool air and a view through my window of greenery close, greenery near, greenery far away. Five days of darkness it’s been in this room. Now let me see it with a Ray of Light, and then return to Babylon for some hot tea, fresh pizza, and another game of eight ball.
     I believe today is Prakash’s interview day with the German embassy, so my best thoughts for his success are with him.  Sunlight breaking through today, illuminating broad swathes of moss on old stonework incandescently. Time to spend some time looking through a window onto a piece of the natural world, and watch the changes always going on, the movements in their subtle grace, and the visitors, butterflies and birds, who come to play their parts on the stage. Noiselessly – all of it . . . Noiselessly, always moving.
     Like a River flowing, the memories pass by, fading in, each clearly being there, then fading out into another memory fading in, from another time, another place, clearly being there, and on they go one after another, from every time and place from my entire life, in totally random sequence, from the most obscure and most seemingly inconsequential to those I might deem the most important, all on an equal footing, one after the other, one at a time they flow by: every roadside rest stop, every sidewalk ever walked along, every household visited, every friend I ever knew, every snowstorm weathered, every campfire watched, every art museum gallery treasured, every night sky remembered, every classroom sat through, every library bookshelf ever gazed upon, all of the ways in which I knew Chicago, and Madison, and St. Louis, and Albuquerque, and Champaign-Urbana Illinois, and Canyon-Amarillo, and all of every other little town I knew in between, along with all of the scenes from India and Nepal, from forty-five years ago, from five years ago, from this ongoing visit. Beyond free association. There is no obvious clear association between one image and the next. There is no rhyme or reason to any of it. Every one of them as clear as the moment it comes from, all right there in front of my face.
     I can grab one and hold on to it for a few extra moments if I like, as with that final sunset over the eastern slope of the Sandias, seen from the reststop on the interstate as I was driving out of town on my final departure from the city where I lived for fifteen years; as with my Palo Duro canyon treks across the red rock mesas, where I discovered so many paintings. There is no end to the flow, and the clarity and number of these images is staggering.
     The tensions in my neck have abated, the energy flow from spine to brain has broken through some rocky barriers. There is no good or bad, nor likes or dislikes to be measured against any of these images. They are just all there, the vast assortment and collection of scenes from my life here to visit me in this room as I look out into the foliage through the breeze and the drifting clouds on the other side of my window. More stories in there than I can ever tell.
     Friday, August fifth, going on one in the afternoon. Coming out of this morning’s dream, through wherever I was going with it all, kind of a problem-solving expedition . . . at the very end, looking across the lake in deep dusk, as the last dark orange line across the horizon precedes the descending night, just over the line of the rim of low lying hills, first crescent Luna follows sun-Surya behind the horizon. Which is all very coincidental with tonight’s first crescent to appear in our real time sky, which due to city lights and cloud cover, I must simply visualize through my Cybersky program. Tonight’s first crescent is also spot on conjunction with Jupiter, with Mercury and Venus in the neighborhood by just a few degrees. What a beautiful show that will be for those in the right places.
     Prakash and Alsan stop by yesterday afternoon. Checking up on my recovery, which is going well. Prakash’s interview at the German embassy sounds like a paper-shuffling performance by a secretarial perfunctory. The official read all the letters and statements in Prakash’s portfolio, asked fewer than half a dozen routine questions, typed notes into her keyboard, and said she’s let him know without the slightest clue about the possible outcome. We did all we could. The ball is now in the other court.
     Now we can get back to hanging out in Babylon again in normal mode. For me, first night there in a week, and I’ve only got a couple more nights left. Starts off slow round eight-thirty with Prakash and Alsan and the Chennai motorbiker, and Surya, and Ramesh. A bit later. Shekar comes up for a while. I am not drinking or smoking anything as I wish to keep the old brain clear for a while, especially in these days preceding my voyage to Srinigar. Pool table keeps us busy for awhile. A small group of Nepali friends comes up. After all the acquaintances have been sorted out and more pool games gone by, a talented hand finds the house guitar, and comes out with Hotel California, and he’s a singer too! The music circle begins. Two flutes, two Djembes, harmonica and a Jew’s harp, not all at the same time, though sometimes close to it, and all of it really flowing around the guitar player and his singing. Altogether about ten guys in a roughly circular arrangement of chairs and cushions. Such a fine night for getting back in touch with the Babylon.

"Relax, " said the night man,
"We are programmed to receive.
You can check-out any time you like,
But you can never leave! "
* - * - * - * - *
     Sunday, August seventh at four in the afternoon, as the clouds above are gathering. Loose ends. As it turns out, neither Chandra nor Garrett took that overland ride through the Kaligandki gorge they were almost ready to start off on ten days ago. The rains made a rather emphatic statement those days immediately preceding their scheduled departure, and whether they called it off or the transport company called it off, these friends are still in town and there is plenty to keep the adventurers entertained right here in the valley and surrounding hills.
     Chandra keeps going back to the Begnas lake area about twenty kilometers southeast of the city where there are fine guest houses and lakeside picnic and resort areas and a clean swimmable lake, and all without the Pokhara urban density. Surely I will have to visit there when I return in October. Maybe stay out there a few nights. Weather-wise, late fall will be clear, and I will then be able to arrange some kind of overland journey towards Muktinath.
     Meanwhile, word last night is that the German embassy called Himalayan Monk Travels to verify Prakash’s employment as a trekking guide. The investigation is in progress, and a decision is expected in a couple or so days. Garrett is heading out overland towards Rishikesh today, with intentions to travel on to Kashmir, and it looks like we will meet up in Leh in three or four weeks if all the dominoes fall into place.

Sunday, July 10, 2016


Chapter Thirteen

         June sixteenth, Thursday around one-thirty on another totally overcast. cloud enfolding, rain be-spattered day. The clouds broke up yesterday afternoon and I walked the two blocks to the lakefront and observation pier at the end of the street in front of my hotel. Distant gently rolling silhouettes of cloud enshrouded hills on the other side of this mirror to the sky. As the misty-ness condenses into light droplets, walk across the lakeshore green grass campground to a restaurant with South Indian masala dosa. Drizzle subsides, clouds part, sunlight falls to the streets and I head north up Lakeside street to get a feel for what’s along the way.
     A metal spiraling staircase to the first floor above takes me into the Babylon Café. Tanya calls me here, tall, smiling, lithe and spontaneously engaging, she beckons to me in passing to climb the spiraling staircase I have just that moment walked by without notice. Climb the stairwell and visit a magical place, she says. Somewhere in the middle of her middle age, this woman brings me up here with her smile and her voice. Tanya visits with her friend Prakash at a table overlooking the street. I climbed this stairwell fully intending to visit with Tanya, and sit quietly at the table for four across from her and Prakash, who are engaged in conversation, clearly with strong roots of personal caring. Babylon is not crowded, but everyone who comes up the stairwell seems to be part of a network of friends. There are some not-so-very loud speakers set into some parts of the ceiling, and one of the old original Beatles albums comes on. Song after song, the whole early repertoire. And there are a couple of guys working the pool table, and all I’m mainly doing up here is getting to know Tanya, her friends, and the place they like to be. It’s a down-home place, and these are down-home people to me. Raju is an extraordinary young man who is passionately trying to improve the schooling facilities and programs in the rural areas surrounding Tatopani, a village I remember from long ago.
     As afternoon settles into dusk and darkness, pool teams gravitate towards the table, and Tanya and Raju and I and a couple other fellows, including the owner-manager sometimes, go through quite a few rounds of next team plays the winner eight-ball. Pizzas are ordered, a beer comes out, and magical incense burns. Lots of little get-to-know-you salt and pepper conversations along the way. If you think the evening is over at eleven, you’ve got another think coming. A few blocks up the street is a like-it-like-that place called Orange House, where some extraordinary musicians from Australia – saxophonist and flautist – are performing tonight, although by this time, they’ve probably finished, but they are good friends of Tanya, so let’s go see them anyway. The Orange House patio is open to the lake, and a great swathe of darkness spreads out across the waters towards pinpoints of light from the occasional home in the distant hills. Altogether, a dozen or more people in our group. To me, all of this is basically Tanya’s party.
     Raju needs some teaching puppets for his Tatopani schools. Alsan the Russian juggler says that the key to juggling is to remain un-focused in your attention to what you are doing, and see more, such as what is going on within the range of peripheral vision. Focusing has its role, and so does un-focusing. The party goes on till around two. The owner-manager here is also a part of the circle of friends, and all formalities have been either liquidated, smoked-out, or both. Walk part of the way back with some of my new friends, along dark and damp and dimly lit streets, and through that last stretch of empty lanes between Babylon Café and my Little Tibetan Guest House. The dark morning hours of empty city streets are freshly rain-washed, while misty halos surround those occasional urban light bulbs. Puddles of fresh rainwater reflect those halos of misty pastel hues into the envelope of silence.
     Second night out in Pokhara and I’ve found my anchor through Tanya and her friends at the Babylon Café. From U.K. in her forties, Tanya is full of exuberant, positive, serious, and playful energy for everyone in this circle of friends. And seriously, she has been through a deep and complicated story I cannot here begin to tell, not least of all because I barely know it, but also, very importantly, because not all the stories people tell me are mine to tell. For all of what it was, she came out the other side, with a fresh resolution to see her life through to the fullest, and all of that has brought her to the Babylon Cafe in Pokhara.
     Raju, in his twenties, gives his heart to the educational development for small kids in rural Tatopani. Prakash is a sensitive finger picking guitarist. And one can only wonder who else will come up these stairs. Not much of a food menu: snacks and order out pizza from Godfather’s next door, soft drinks, tea, coffee, beer and liquor – and a free pool table that pretty much always has a game going across the felt. Pokhara is looking like a place to sit and get to know, and it is especially nice going to a little place where I’m talked to more like a friend of the family than as another customer.
     Cloudy, rainy Thursday morning after the party. Order up breakfast and wait for the clouds to lighten up, maybe even disappear for a while. Walk Lakeside north from where I’m at once more, looking for landmarks for where I was yesterday. Where is that spiraling staircase again? Closer than I think. Raju will be heading back to Tatopani probably tomorrow, and if I am going to come out and visit, the sooner the better, for these little rains we’re seeing these days are only harbingers for what is to come. The Jomsom – Muktinath idea might not be viable. Right now all I want to do is get the feel for Pokhara, and let my ideas for excursions grow and mature before I go jeeping down the road. More pre-game research and analysis is required.
     Friday, June seventeenth early afternoon at Sweet Memories restaurant on Lakeside street, Pokhara. Best cup of Masala Chai I’ve ever had, in a large mug, at a bargain price. Good bowl of Thukpa vegetable noodle soup. Hot and sunshiny today. Got it in my mind to stay in Pokhara at least a couple of weeks. Throw in some excursions into outlying areas, and I can easily see a month going by. For sure, it’s got that feel of a place to stay and get to know. Walk south along Lakeside street to get acquainted with store fronts for coffee shops and restaurants and book shops. Maybe because its off-season, last couple of weeks before monsoon sets in, or maybe because it’s just that kind of town, mainstreet traffic is light, and the street horn music is negligible. Lakeside Serenity. German bakery by around four-thirty.
     Tanya, You have been living in this little Pokhara world you have created for yourself for quite some time now. Soon you will see the world through the eyes of fifty years gone by and wonder what that will look like. I’ve walked up the spiraling staircase to visit your magical world, Tanya. So far, it is you and I and Raju and Prakash and Shekar who are playing the primary parts for this story. Principal venues have been Babylon Café and Orange House night club. Orange House three nights out of the last four. It’s another night in Pokhara, and where do we go from here?
     Saturday June eighteenth at two-thirty afternoon at the table of my doorstep patio. Yesterday (Friday) began with a cup of excellent Masala chai and a bowl of Thukpa at Sweet Memories on North Lakeside. Sunshine and Blue skies. Walk by all the shops and restaurants of south Lakeside. Time to get a little sense of where is what, and what is where. So many choices for restaurants and coffee shops! At the taxi stand in the shade of a large banyan tree, take the path to the Lakeside promenade where many restaurants fronting Lakeside street extend themselves with patios and gardens into panoramic Lakeside views. Find a shady spot under a small tree to enter that space where the calm water and blue sky and grayscale horizon blend into each other and that is all that is in my mind. Walk to the German bakery on North Lakeside for good chocolate cake and black coffee. Climb the spiral staircase of Babylon Café around five-thirty, and shoot a few rounds on the green felt with Prakash. Others come up the spiral staircase as the hours roll slowly by, including Raju, and Tanya and Shekar and MataMa. The pool table is always busy with different team combos playing round after round of eight ball. As our teams wind down and others take over, get down to a circle of seven on pillows around a floor table, including Tanya and Raju. Tanya asks about my book. I bring my two copies out, and she and Raju and I sit at an end of the table reading through the verse on the first page very closely. Raju is verily enchanted with the phrases he reads aloud and his enthusiasm enchants me. The other copy circulates around the bar and the pool table. Raju wants to translate into Nepali, and Tanya, Raju and I spend time talking about Nepali equivalents to my phrases, such as The Spirit of the Earth. There is a Nepali word for that, MataMa our Earth Mother, who happens to be sitting at our table.  It’s like pouring all of the pieces out of a jigsaw puzzle box and watching them all fall into their perfect interlocking places. The whole world, you know, passes through the Babylon Café in Pokhara. At the top of the spiraling staircase of Babylon Café is indeed a magical place.
     The party moves over to the Orange House again (still Friday). Prakash has his guitar, and there is good music and singing in the darkness under the occasional flashing lightning bursts of the lakeside night sky.
     Midnight between Saturday and Sunday. Sandeep, Sunder, and Matty. Electric Bass, electric guitar, full set of drums, put it together at the Orange House tonight. At the last table for the night, Sunny puts together some graceful pickings for our table, including Tanya, opposite Eric, Raju and I. Tanya, Raju and I take our table all the way to lights out, and sit in darkness and ambient light for several minutes.
     The (Saturday) evening began upstairs at Babylon with Shekar and I one-on-one across the table for some basic getting to know the family time. Tanya and Raju arrive at dusk in their helmets and slickers, having ridden through some rain on their return trip from a day in the surrounding hills. We sit together for awhile, each with a fresh large bottle of Tuborg beer, and gravitate towards the pool table for a few rounds with partners with Shekar or someone else around who wants to get in on the action.
     Gets to be time around nine or so to be getting over to the action at the Orange House. Raju’s scooter gets he and Tanya and I on down the street to where we want to go. The house is not crowded and we get a table up front where we can watch close how the musicians work their instruments. Tanya’s reasons for choosing our table works for me. Eric comes to join us not long later, and then after a bit, is called up to the stage by the guitarist Sunder who hands Eric his guitar, who then plays through a whole lot of jamming with Sandeep and Matty, and it is all very good. Almost like a family of musicians who like to share what they’ve got going on that evening.
     And so it goes - a little dancing, a little smoking, and a little beer drinking - till the guys who brought their instruments here begin to pack them up. Then it’s move to the rooftop for a more open air and small table relaxed conversational setting. Until the lights go out, and we sit in the dark, and walk through the maze that leads to the empty midnight street.
     Tanya showed me her poems. I read them aloud from her i-phone screen across the blue-checkered table cloth overlooking the quiet street. She is indeed a real poet, with a sensitive and fiery heart. Not so abstract as to be un-sensible, but metaphorically suggestive in clear emotional language. She has no thought about publishing these in a booklet. That’s not why she wrote them. Here is a feeling that comes from the heart, so that I might understand myself better, so that I can see the Beauty in the waves crashing onto the rocks, bursting into clouds of misty spray. And to share with others, one at a time, a message from a place that is not often seen.
     Sunday afternoon. Having met Raju at Babylon Guest House, I ride with him on his scooter to Laila’s Bar and Restaurant, basically a south side version of Babylon Café, a place to shoot a little pool and sit quietly with a beer or chai. Later go on back to the Babylon Guest House rear balcony facing the lake. Tanya arrives, and we three go through Raju’s computer pictures from his village. As darkness settles in, Nepali dinner with Tanya at the family place across the street. Later that evening at the Babylon Café, Alsan the Russian who has lived in the Maldives, gives a long and exquisitely eloquent charade for how to sail a rig, and how to become so one in tune with the wind and the wave through the ropes one holds on to, how one adapts one’s weight, and pulls tight or lets go slack, and how much, and when . . . into the dance of “automatic error correction” to become one with the wind, sailing, sailing, sailing . . . across the water.
     Monday afternoon. Calendar of Days, counting from another new beginning. Not counting the first afternoon and evening of arrival, day number six in Pokhara. Starting on the first day with the walk up the spiraling staircase to the loft of the Babylon Café. Small bar, short menu, one pool table, two sticks. Half a dozen foursome seating arrangements, three low tables on the floor with cushions, and three sets of wooden tables with chairs.  Two tables are at the ledge with the street overview, and there you have it, the Vortex. Virtually  most everything that has come around these last five days has been through the Babylon Café and her sister a couple of blocks up the street, the Babylon Guest House, and the Orange House night club for jazz jamming and special musical arrangements, and its beer garden wooden table feeling for the organic.
     Tanya at the crossroads between the horizontal and the vertical. When it came down to the choice between “do away with it all” and “Live like you’ve never lived before.” So here she is!, inviting me up the spiraling staircase to the magical room where foot-trails from around the planet circle the green felt, then take rest at a chair or a cushion before moving on to somewhere else. Raju is staying over at the Babylon Guest House, and is searching for one hundred dollars to buy a set of sock puppets so he can tell stories and teach his kindergarten school children in Tatopani. Prakash helps behind the bar when necessary, and keeps track of his shot on the pool table. Also very nice with his fingers on the acoustic guitar strings. Shekar, chief manager for both the Cafe and the guest house, perhaps thirty, beautiful wife and baby boy just nine months old, and is always a good man to have on your team around the felt. Alsan, the Russian – Maldives sailing man and juggler. There is my inner circle. I’ve got an anchor in Pokhara. Some little movement has been set into motion - the flutter of a butterfly’s wings – and every day the sail will unfurl to see if there’s a wind. And when the sail catches the wind and you’ve got all the ropes you control well in hand, you become the wind across the water.  That is one of the places to which one can go on the loft at the top of the spiraling staircase  – Babylon Café.
     Passing through midnight between Monday and Tuesday, twentieth and twenty-first. After noontime chai at Sweet Memories, it’s up the spiral staircase where Prakash is housekeeping and Raju is working the green felt with one of his friends. Raju and I sit for a little while and I get a facebook invite. Around two, walk up to Babylon Guest House to meet with Shekar and tell him I will pass by his offer of a streetside hotel room. I’m going to stay with my garden deluxe at the Little Tibetan. Shekar and I together in his living room are served plates of fresh made spaghetti from his smiling wife. So we’re all down, and I walk back to the German bakery for a chocolate cake and black coffee, before return to the hacienda for quiet time; then take in a great veggie burger from Sweet Memories before heading up the spiral staircase as nightfall begins. Business is good tonight, some tables going in conversational circles under the dim but illuminating light. As the evening stories unfold, my primary attention is with Tanya, Raju, Prakash, and Shekar. There is a nice flow of visitors climbing the spiral staircase  to the magical loft, hanging out a little while at a table or shooting pool, then going back down to the city sidewalk. Tuborg is the preferred beer, and I take my turns around the green felt in continuing rounds of eight ball. Tanya is in the game, Raju is in the game, Prakash is in the game, and Shekar is hanging close to the bar and keeping his eyes on the tables. All the way to closing a bit after eleven. And all the final goodnights on empty wet black asphalt shining under occasional street lights are spoken, and all of our wishes for seeing each other again.
     Tuesday morning. Frederick from Norway has the room next door at the Little Tibetan. There is no hurry, and nothing is happening. Tuesday afternoon. Meet with Frederick at Godfather’s. Share a couple of beers and pizza. Frederick is just back from a couple of weeks trekking in the Annapurna range. In Pokhara for an overnight and flies out tomorrow. I guess Frederick to be in mid-twenties or early thirties. Lean, athletic outdoorsman, this has not been his first trek and won’t be his last. We cover a lot of ground conversing through mutual interests. I finally get around to giving him a copy of my book, and he is interested in how I explain what I put in there, and how long I have been carrying it.
     Getting it down in Pokhara. Wednesday morning on the patio with Frederick who is in a frustrating pickle because of visa complications that will seriously interfere with his precisely planned itinerary from Pokhara to Delhi to visit with his friend there and then on to Bangkok to visit with another friend before flying back to Norway. Totally balled up because of one of the so-called clearly stated rules and regulations. Well, if it had been clearly stated, Frederick certainly wouldn’t have bought the e-visa, now worthless and non-refundable. To which bureaucrat shall this be explained? The final answer will always be: What can I do? in the tone of fateful helplessness. For Frederick, it’s pick up the pieces and reconfigure the plan for how to get to where he wants to go within a workable and comfortable time frame. Bus to Kathmandu and fly to Delhi looks like the way. Like cruising along the freeway after a long stretch, getting tantalizingly close to the destination, and running into a total roadblock and convoluted detour. Nothing to do but do what you need to do.
     Meanwhile, over at Babylon last night, Prakash is out of town to Kathmandu for two days. Tanya and I are working with Raju’s computer on putting together a Resume / Curriculum Vitae for Prakash, so he can apply for a water salesman and delivery position in Dubai or some such place. Prakash is twenty-six. His experience is five years as Bar Manager here at Babylon. His mother has just been diagnosed with a treatable cancer, and Prakash wants to work where he can make money to pay medical expenses. Prakash also has people helping to see if there are opportunities for him in either Germany or Spain. What is so agonizingly frustrating is that he will have to leave his mother’s side during this critical time while he is earning money to care for her. This Dubai opportunity is fresh, so we’ll see. Meanwhile, another night at Babylon.
     Wednesday night into Thursday morning, halfway between sunset and sunrise, Twice-a-Day-Dawn, unraveling a story that went by today. One small colored pencil drawing. Watch Frederick be confronted with his itinerary crisis, face it with decisive action, and be off and on his way to a bus to Kathmandu by one.  Lots of drizzling going on throughout the morning and afternoon. Type notes and drink coffee on the downstairs patio. Sweet Memories for veggie burger and chai after six, and up the spiraling staircase to find Shekar alone and awaiting tonight’s flow of visitors. I’ve got the perfect view of a red and orange and violet tinted sunset over the distant hills beyond the Mirror to the Sky. Raju comes up and gets into a pool game with one of his friends. Tanya arrives with friends Matias from Austria and another fellow. Alsan shows up and he and I have been having conversations about balancing and movement. The juggler who sails through the wind over water and who describes the movements one makes while paragliding to catch the currents as you feel them going by. Conversing with Alsan is such a stimulating experience as we wind our way through convoluted but sensible and ultimately simple descriptions of what we see and how we experience everything out there, including and especially those other people, or, as Mali would say, “There are no Others.”
     Sometimes sitting on some floor cushions at a low level table with Alsan and Matias, sometimes circling the pool table looking for my best shot. All the way to the end, after closing the bar, laying the sticks on the table, and finishing those last beers, winding our ways down the spiral staircase to the quiet street with soft light. Raju’s original intention to be on his way to Tatopani continues in this state of postponement as he persistently tries to figure a way to get some puppets for his schools.
     Between Thursday night and Friday morning, the twenty-third and the twenty-fourth. Continuing the log for the Babylon café. Ran into a group of Global Vision International volunteers sitting on the cushions around one of the floor tables.
Americans, Europeans, Australians, young twenties or younger fulfilling an educational requirement with this overseas volunteer work. So they come and hang out with the orphan kids for a few weeks and then go home to their American, European, and Australian homes, and the kids are left with another hole in their heart. Someone who comes into your life and shows you love, so that you can then show your own love . . . and then the visitor disappears, and here is a fresh hole in your heart. How many times does this happen in this child’s lifetime? How many people will he see come and go, will she see come and go? This perspective from Tanya, and I’ve heard similar stories.
     All of that aside for the generous volunteers who put their hearts into what they are doing. As I sit down at the next table, friendly faces turn my way, and we connect around their table. We get around to the symbol on my T-shirt, and to sacred geometry with Rachel on my right, so I bring out my book, and Rachel is very interested. Rachel turns the pages very slowly and refers to the stanzas as hymns. Such a lovely thought. The first time I’ve ever heard that thought, and I go immediately in my mind to Sanskrit chanting, and I don’t know exactly what Rachel is hearing, but the idea, regardless of the language and the style, is enchanting, complimentary, and inspiring. Rachel was absorbing those stanzas, those lines, those phrases, and she heard something.
     June twenty-fourth at noon. Day ten in Pokhara. Nothing to Say. Break time. Just let those thoughts think themselves out until something comes along that says it wants to be written.
     Sixes are Dicks. Fours are Whores. A drinking game through a deck of cards and there are so many rules; every card that is turned over has a rule that says who takes a drink.  Not wanting to get sloshed, I sit and watch and listen and laugh along with the table of seven volunteers turning the cards and making the calls.
     Circling the midnight hour between the twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth. Saturday becomes Sunday and there will be a new adventure. Today was blue sky sunny after a misty beginning, and south along Lakeside is my path for as long as it takes to reach a turn around point. A continuing line of shops of every sort, coffee cafes, and hotel fronts, along one side of the street, and a continuing, lushly green park alongside the narrowing lake on the other. A sculpture garden of granite stonework, arranged like small megalithic standing stones, or fallen stones, all carved with intent to convey a connection with the ancient, the primordial, the organic. There is a carved stone face, one eye open with sun wheel within, the other eye closed, almost, into a knowing wink. Listen to the message in the Stone.
     A whole new crop of G.V.I. volunteers, including Holly whom I played Casino with the night before, and Lorraine from Wisconsin, and Brittany from Dallas. Prakash is returned from his Kathmandu visit, and may have to visit there again. Alsan is here at the bar. Raju is not here tonight.
     Monday the twenty-seventh mid-morning. Yesterday was for sitting in. My first floor window faces an ancient stonework wall three feet high, lush with green moss and small ferns, and over the wall is a back yard field of tall and flowering corn stalks. Easy place to sit and watch the sky go by. Go to Sweet Memories for a chicken sizzler and chai at six, then on to Babylon for this evening’s story. Special guest this evening is Brendon from Ireland, age fifty-one. From the street, Brendon sees that there is pool at the top of the spiraling staircase. I have already played some Casino with Shekar, and am turning cards over in solitaire, when Brendon arrives looking for a game, so he and I go a few rounds. We set the sticks down, passing them on to the younger crowd now gradually climbing the stairs and making the place hum. Tanya comes in and she and Brendon have a rousing good across the bar conversation about all the British and Irish things they know so well. Prakash is running the bar, and Alsan is close by, and he and I experiment with ways of handling playing cards. Different teams walk around the table. For me, it’s mostly sitting at the bar going through some beer with Brandon. Schlantza.
     So what I am actually Doing in Pokhara is hanging out in restaurants (Sweet Memories), Coffee bars (German bakery or Himalayan café), and the Babylon Café and Bar for beer, eight-ball, and making friends. Masala Chai and Tuna veggie salad for lunch at two. Hot sunny out there and unless I want to work up a sweat, no need to go walking very far. Countdown for Tanya’s birthday is zero minus two weeks. Can’t help but wonder how that is going to fly.
     Tuesday the twenty-eighth.  Into the first row of hills surrounding the lake. With Alsan my guide, on the back of his scooter up some winding rocky paths first to visit Alexander, who speaks Russian and Hebrew, and writes satirical poetry in Russian, and then translates into English, but translating poetry, as we know, is more than slightly difficult. Then Alsan and I go along another rocky path to meet with Birin, native Nepali, Anne from Russia, and their eight month old son Agestay, i.e. Rishi. Lovely overview of the lake and the City by the Lake. Alsan gets into an elaborate explanation and demonstration in mime of the paragliding experience. So when am I going to try it? Not just yet.  Meanwhile, back to Sweet Memories for a one o’clock masala chai and plate of Aloo Pakoda, i.e. potato wedgies deep fried. What are the most memorable experiences in my life? Thank you Prakash, for that question. There are a lot of ways to think about that one! Alsan gets a copy of my book over at Alexander’s. 
     Frozen in a state of repetition. Drink beer and shoot pool at Babylon every night for the last two weeks. Breakfast on my patio, delivered by Sarita: porridge, fried eggs, potatoes, toast and coffee: every morning between seven and eight.
Visit Sweet Memories restaurant on Lakeside every day, sometimes twice, for Masala chai and something to eat. Everything else is peripheral. In depth local color at the Babylon Café. Play it for all its worth in this circulating circle of local friends, people who either live here, or leave only to return. The blossom unfolds of its own accord. Here is a matrix where I fit in. Leave it to my guides to show me the way. You stay long, you meet people who stay long. You don’t be in a hurry to go someplace particular right now. Here again, it is all about who you meet along the way. It is about finding my conversations. One for what I’m talking about with myself, and the other for what we talk about together, you and I.
        Thursday, June thirtieth at eleven-thirty morning. Cloudiness prevails so far. Boudnath, Kathmandu was for circling the great stupa every day, all fifteen hundred years of it, right where it always has been. Over here in Pokhara, it’s the Babylon Café and Bar, one spiraling staircase above the sidewalk, where the circles go round, and particularly those circles around the green felt. I’ve fallen into a story and all I have to do is tell it. Raju and Tanya have been off to visit Raju’s school in Tatopani the last three days. Up in the loft it’s been mostly Prakash, Alsan and I focusing around the bar, and Prakash and I will sometimes team up to challenge a round at the green felt table. Prem is also there last couple of nights with his guitar.
     Rode with Alsan on the back of his scooter thirty kilometers down the road southwest of the city. One destination turned into another and every bend in the road led to another winding path that offered the question, what is around this corner? Till we get to the end of the map, the edge of the paper where the road no longer goes. Lunch in the village on the edge of the known world, and then follow a little walking trail down from the road to a crystal clear mountain stream rushing through clustered boulders.
     Two weeks now its been in the city, hanging close to a small world between the Little Tibetan Guest House, the Babylon Café and Bar, Sweet Memories restaurant, and a couple of coffee house bakeries, besides which the grocery store for juice and peanut butter, that’s it, and I wonder about what is beyond the city limits, knowing full well that it’s not all that very far to the great peaks, and there cannot be a hurry. The day will come, just like yesterday came, and the road was there, opening again and again, through one curve into another, to places that are always there.
     Saturday, July second. Here we are. Middle of the year, mid-morning.
Looks like cloudy all day, if it’s anything like yesterday. The kind of cloud that settles over the lake and into the streets with hazy gray presence. The raindrops perpetually hang, drift and fall through the misty atmosphere, as the lake and the city and the sky merge into a soggy wetness. The let-up yesterday came just before noon. I walked over to Sweet Memories for a veggie burger, fries and chai, sat through another downpour, at the streetside open air table under the canopy, where I can reach my arm out into the lake falling into itself. And the cloud takes another breath, inhales after the sneeze, withdraws to gather herself again. Pedestrians emerge one by one into the mist, the opening in the cloud. Walk the block and a half and across the street to the German bakery for black coffee and chocolate cake, and a front table chair in an empty shop where I can watch through the wide plate glass the passers-by. Watch for who glances through the window, through the open doorway, to this old man sitting at this table reading a book.
     Currently eighty pages into The Snow Leopard by Peter Matthiesen, from 1978, about his trip in 1973 through Pokhara and around the Annapurna and Dhaulagiri ranges, where I walked through in 1970. Peter and his friend then went much further west and north into Himalayan Nepal, quite rough country to be walking through as he so vividly describes, and he weaves the story of his personal journey through life into the narrative, so there are at least two stories going on here. First time I’ve read this piece of writing, this set of interwoven stories. Reminds me of what I think I’m doing. This year long sabbatical I’m sleepwalking through, dreaming my way through the world I walk through, deciding who and what and where and when everything all goes together in making up the story I live with. Here is how it looks like from inside the cave.  
     Now down to nine copies of the English version of my Pondicherry published edition of The Gathering (another Title?), and four copies of the French version.
I can imagine it not being very long before I find interested parties for eight of those English copies, which leaves me with my demo copy, and the option of looking for another offset printer. Say for a hundred books, and I could hang around Pokhara just like I hung around Pondicherry and hand them out to likely readers. But I’m not going to be in Pokhara all that long, and I can’t be carrying a load of books off to Leh. Baggage weight will be a critical factor on that trip, however I choose to carry it out. I’ll just hand out what I’ve got till I run out, less my keeper, and then maybe make some more in Leh. For it is fun sharing my book with people I meet along the way, other travelers, residents, like-minded people, sharing interests in the way we see the world. It’s my answer to the question, what do you do? or, what have you done? Alternatively, who have you been? or, who are You? And so on.
     So I sit in the German bakery, and watch a little more rainfall; another break comes along, and it’s walk back to the guest house, where I can watch the rain resume through the ongoing opaque afternoon. Two nights away from the Babylon. After every night for two weeks, since my first afternoon in this City by the Lake, it’s two nights away from the beer, the green felt table, the greetings in friendship, and the ayurvedic, medicinal, alchemical smoking recipes that pass by. It’s been two nights off for reflection time. The question lingers about how long to continue in this city, when to leave, what route to take, how to prepare, and even whether or not I will get much closer to the mountains of Nepal this time.
     My sense for what I’m doing here revolves around meaningfulness and completion. Whatever it turns out to be, whoever it turns out to be about, myself included, there will be a departure. The idea, “See You Again,” will hang in the misty cloud above our heads as we wonder, will who we have been together happen again?, or, is who we have been together who we always are to each other? In either case, it is always fun to reconnect when two hearts feel it true.
     Sunday, July third, eleven-forty morning. Sunshine and blue sky to start the day off, although I won’t be surprised if the gray clouds roll in. Returned to Babylon yesterday evening. Touch base with Prakash around the green felt. Starts off he and I the only ones there. Tanya climbs the stairwell, now returned from her few days over in Tatopani at Raju’s school playing guitar and singing songs to kids. Always smiling Prem comes up, and a bit later, Alsan is here. Then a couple of other Nepali young men, Ballu and Ram. Teams are chosen and rounds of eight ball go down. Thing about the teams is how changing partners flows between games and sets of two or three games. So that during the course of an evening, given six players, each person will likely as not have paired up with each of the others. Alsan never plays pool, although he often watches as closely as everyone else what is going around on the table. The  Nepali guys, Ballu and Ram, eventually call it an evening and head down the stairs, and then this group of five carries on with what is like a little reunion for Tanya returned from absence to her treasured presence. A couple or so more pool games, some juggling with those illuminated-from-within balls that change colors. There is no red ball, or blue ball, or green ball, and yellow and violet are also in there, as each color fades slowly through its glowing aura into another color. Some partnership teamwork juggling between Alsan and Prakash. Both Prem and Prakash take turns with the harmonica I brought up, Alsan has his harmonica, and Tanya plays guitar and sings with her strong voice. Back stretching and bone-cracking exercises for whoever is inclined. All things considered, a rather fit group of yoga practitioners. Way past the closing hour, and Prakash, in charge of the place, has to keep hushing our voices so we don’t disturb the downstairs neighbors. Tanya, Alsan and I finally make it down the spiraling staircase. Alsan scooters Tanya north to her guest house, then returns to scooter me south to my guest house. These are really short, walkable distances, and basically, all that is really going on here is a small group of people who like sharing time with each other, and making our lives, for all of whatever it is that each of us is dealing with, a bit easier. Take a break and laugh a little, and ride through the dark, empty and silent streets of Lakeside Pokhara on this friend’s extra scooter seat. Thus day nineteen in the City by the Lake. Through the slowness of evolutionary development, another day is here.
    
In every hue of gray they gather,
Merge dark and light into each other
Through lightning flash and thunder rumble
Towards the storm impending.
Begins the Rain
Through final soft gray light of dusk
Falling into darkness,
Our darkness not yet here,
So let us linger in this gray light,
Listen to the falling water,
Soft and steady falling,
Falling from however far above,
Straight down from sky the droplets fall,
Into the Lake, onto the Earth,
Into the branches of the trees,
Where the white bird sleeps.

     Monday, July fourth, at ten-thirty in the morning. How is the cloud doing this morning? How many words are out there for how many shades of gray are out there, all the way across from every horizon to every other horizon, drifting through each other into new configurations? Lunch yesterday at the Chinese restaurant I see across the cornfield through my window. Paper red lanterns dangle across the upper floor patio looking over the quiet side street. Name of the place written in large black on white Chinese characters. Outdoor blackboard menu with specials of the day is all in Chinese. This might be the real McCoy, or should I say, the real Lao Tzu? Every dish of the page-after-page menu has a picture with a Chinese and an English name, and I go with the fried tofu and vegetables in hot sauce with a bowl of white rice, and the bottomless glass cup of green tea is provided. Here across the cornfield from the window to my room, my window to the sky, and the bird taking wing.
     Evening rain clouds gather. Another night apart from Babylon. Whether it’s raining or not, I want the night off. I love the Babylon crowd, and feel more at home here than anywhere on this entire trip since November. I sit here on the threshold of the Himalayan massif bonding with my family. These are the people I’ll be coming back to when I return, including my host family at The Little Tibetan Guest House. I can take a bus west to the town of Beni, but I have seen a thirty-second video clip Tanya took from the rear of Raju’s scooter as they rode along the rocky path from Beni to Tatopani, and that’s what it is, a rocky path.
     Every day it rains, the dirt gets a little soggier, and when and where the next landslide will strike is anybody’s guess. So it’s like I got to be settling into myself, while my self is settling into Pokhara, and not fretting about the sogginess of the season, but rejoicing in it, watching with wondrous amazement the unfolding and unrolling the day’s sky story.
     Happy Rainbow Family day!
     Tuesday, July fifth, still in the morning, getting on towards noon. Another cloudy day at the opening, with no apparent movement in the air except for that wide wing-spanned bird gliding aloft in circles after circles after circles without a single movement in those wings, just gliding, and gliding on whatever invisible currents she turns through.
    The days are all the same. Every day is different. Returned to my newfound favorite Chinese restaurant yesterday for that same tofu and vegetable dish from the day before. My system likes this change in diet for whatever this Chinese chef is putting into his sauce.
     Returned to the Babylon last night before nine. Shekar, Prakash, Alsan and Tanya are around the short, curving bar, along with a younger British fellow who is considering his career choice alternative. He thinks maybe accounting because it pays well, but the rest of us here are encouraging him to think along more exciting lines. Like maybe Airplane Pilot. Tanya was a pilot when she was in her twenties, and gives first hand encouragement and advice for pursuing this idea. Some pool games get started, Ballu and his friend come up, teams are shuffled, and everyone except Alsan goes at least one round. A group of five young Chinese come in, two girls and three guys, and sit around the low table next to the bar where the rest of us cluster, so before long the two clusters are sharing words. These five are from the Hong Kong area, and are on a south Asian jaunt for several weeks. This is their first night in Pokhara, and they climb the spiral staircase from pure intuition or some such thing. Walking down the unknown street, and here’s a spiral staircase, so let’s climb and see what’s there!
     For one thing, I get into describing the geography and ethnography of New Mexico in a more detailed way than I have in a long time. Albuquerque, a not so very large city, surrounded by vast empty and wild areas of dry desert and forested mountains, nurtured by the great river that slices through terrain in some places and curves slowly through green forested lowlands in others. Here has been my home in the cultural matrix of the ancient pueblo peoples, and the traditional and not-so-traditional Spanish and Anglo peoples. For the young listeners from Hong Kong. Perhaps one day they will go and see what I have described.
     The night winds down, and the night winds on, till in the final hour, long after closing, it’s Alsan, Tanya, Prakash, and I sitting around the low table next to the bar under the light of the green and the red Chinese paper lanterns.