Log Chapter Two
Monday, November thirtieth. Morning is
here, I’m ready for school, and some character in government garb has decided
to call it all off. It rained last night, no doubt, and puddles are scattered
about, and hundreds of thousands of students and their teachers in this city,
will be staying home today. Even right now, the rain does not fall, and one
wonders why the official is making this call. Like it or not, the stage has
been set and all of the actors wait in the wings for what will come next.
As many days have been lost already, as
there have been sessions actually held. I’m prepared for my role, yea, overly
so, and have time on my hands to chase wandering thoughts as they travel from
one choice to another. Yesterday, Sunday, I stepped through the gate of the
Annexe, and walked up the street, past shops, and stalls, and stores of many a
type and demeanor. I found new colored pencils, and blank paper for notes, and
sandalwood incense to lighten the air in my room. Herbal tea bags for flavor,
paper towels for cleaning up messes, and a cloth to wear round my waist when I
am at leisure. Dodging puddles and cars, and cycles and buses, while
yesterday’s sun was bright on my forehead.
Another day is here now for musing on what
is to come. I get the idea that my host and hostess have more plans for my
role. This week, assuming classes are held a sufficient number of days, will be
spent in concert with my teachers of the English department. So far, I’ll be
getting a sense for students in every standard from the sixth through the
twelfth. Somewhere along the line, I’ll be given my own class or classes. I
read a few paragraphs from this morning’s English language newspaper for
Shantha, and she is enthralled with the idea that I will be performing the role
of American English pronunciation maestro. All of these classes with the
English department teachers are leading me towards this objective, which I am
completely fine with, and I truly appreciate this breaking-in period for
getting used to the system and the students. Meanwhile, I wait in the wings to
be called on stage, and so far I am little more than an extra with a brief
speaking part. The plans are evolving and I’ll be finding out what I need to
know when I need to know it.
As for longer term views, Shantha makes
it clear that Mi Casa Su Casa applies here at the Annexe for the rest of my
life. My only question for myself is where do I take it from here. This
academic quarter goes till the end of March. Of
course, I will want to visit my original neighborhoods of Pondicherry and Cuddalore, south of here a hundred miles. I will
want to visit some of my favorite places from my visit and tour four years ago:
the beaches of Goa , the Ganges at Varanasi , Rishikesh in Utterakand, and Dharamshala in
Himachel Pradesh. The Kathmandu valley draws me to Nepal . All of those, just in themselves, are a lot of
places to be visiting, without even thinking about how long I might spend in
any of them. Any number of serendipitous encounters might magically appear
along the way, and the journey itself will be the destination.
On the horizon of my wishful thinking gem
is the town of Leh in the district of Ladakh in the northernmost state
of Kashmir . Any visit I might make there would have to occur between
June and September, for it is snowbound in winter and colder than any place
that I have ever known. There are those of my friends and family who would ask
why I would want to go to such a place, and there are others who would
understand perfectly well. I can find Tibetan culture in Dharamshala and Nepal and other Himalayan regions. Leh in Ladakh is
further away from everything I have ever known in a way that rings a chord that
has no explanation.
When I lived in Madison , Wisconsin in the mid-seventies, there came a moment in 1978 when
I had a two week vacation from my ongoing life there. I
unfolded a map of the USA , and followed the lines that led to Taos and through northern New Mexico to the Canyon de Chelley, and that is where my
partner at that time and I drove. There was a music in the direction and a
music in the places we visited that rang a tune true to my heart. I knew I
would someday go there for a longer time, and I settled in that area in 2000 for
what came to be fifteen years, and now that time is behind me in many ways.
There is another voice that whispers in my
ear and calls to this other place
I
have never known. Hard to say how long it will take to get there, or via which
path I will take, or whom I might travel with along the way. All of those
mysteries are here, and what or who I hope to find there is impossible to say.
There is simply a sense that says that’s where I’m going.
Meanwhile, in this huge coastal city in South India , I have a role to play, persons to speak with and
know, hearts to understand, voices to listen to, things to learn. All of which
begs the question, where does the USA fit into this plan?
Start off with four full months at the
school, December through March.
Last day of class is Saturday, April
second. I then have about six weeks for traveling or whatever I want till I
must leave the country by May 18. I’ll go first to Pondicherry and
Cuddalore, then Goa and Varanasi , and then
cross the border into Nepal . Stay there a
couple or a few weeks. Take the bus to Pokhara, and continue west across
southern Nepal to the border
crossing at Mahendranagar. Re-enter India , take the
hiway to Haldwani, to Hardiwar, and the short road north from there to
Rishikesh. Rest stop. Then Rishikesh through Dehra Dun to Shimla, through Mandi
to Dharamshala. Rest stop. Then to Pathankot to Srinigar. Rest stop. Long road
from Srinigar to Leh. Looks like Kargil would be a good halfway point for a
rest. High point between
Kargil and Leh is Fotu La at 4147 meters, 13,602 feet. Leh is at 3520 meters,
11,545 feet. No need to rush, as I will wish to ascend slowly and avoid
Altitude Sickness. I think this
old body is in pretty good shape, I’ve got a good pair of lungs, and am at
least used to New Mexico altitudes. Nevertheless,
this is not New Mexico , and I’d like
to return and visit my friends.
Will likely leave Leh mid-September, returning to Srinigar, and from
there likely return through Dharamshala. Might also go through the Kullu Valley to Manali,
where I visited for a few days in 1971 during my travels after my Peace Corps
assignment was finished.
Head down to Delhi , and catch a
plane to the USA . Go through
my medical procedure for my inguinal hernia and have my skin doctor look me
over for cancer. Cop a hole-in-the-wall apartment in Albuquerque for as long
as it takes to reconnect with friends, and do whatever all seems appropriate
and necessary. Hopefully will have enough cash to get
some kind of car. Check in with my contacts who might be interested in my
paintings. Visit Missouri family and
friends, and San Diego family.
Perhaps Christmas in San Diego .
Once all of those things are settled, perhaps by the spring of 2017, I can pack up and come back over here
for wherever I want to be. I really don’t think I’m going to want to teach
school here again. This four month stint here will be plenty enough of that for
me. It’s fine, well and good for what it is right now, and will be the final
chapter of my professional teaching career.
Those six months from the beginning of
April through the end of September should give me enough perspective on options
for redefining my life here on the subcontinent. I am now rather locked down
between the school and the Annexe, and will be doing my level best to keep
myself creatively engaged. Yo!
Sounds like a
plan.
Tuesday morning, December first. The rain
is falling, the rain is falling, the rain is falling again. What do you do when
the rain is falling? You sit, and pick up your pen. One hand’s breadth wide,
one hand’s length long, this ancient booklet, brown-leaved manuscript, holds
within a treasury of classical English verse from ages long gone by. Fables and
stories oft forgotten and rarely told, wait silently for inquiring eye, to give
voice to the words within, give music to the listening ear, and fill the sails
of imagination with winds that have traveled from faraway places. From lands
across the seven seas these stories are told, conceived and written from those
long ago times before the world we know became electrified. When the wind and
the wave were the sources of sound, and the pattering of raindrops told us what
the weather would be today. When how far you could see was the breadth of the
world, when messages were carried on slips of paper from one mind to another. Faster
and faster our world accelerates, our treadmill spins at the speed of light.
The reason of Rhyme is lost in the maelstrom, and dizziness takes the helm. All
are awhirl in trying to catch up, and the anchors are lost at sea. Our ship is
now driven to the crags under the waves, and the splinters we grasp will be
held most dear, until we are cast upon the soft shore to find our footing
again, where the sound of the wind and the patter of rain will keep us company
once more.
Heavily and steadily, the rain has been
falling all day. Now eight in the evening, and there is no sign for abatement.
From my doorway, I’ve watched the puddle grow from ankle deep, to calf deep,
and now knee deep, whenever one of the grounds crew or servants or drivers
wades by. My floor is raised from ground level by a few shallow steps, and I’ve
watched them disappear beneath the waves, one by one. I wonder where the cars
are at. I wonder what is going on at Ambi’s house, since his floor level is closer
to ground level than my apartment. I wonder what
the streets of the neighborhood look like. I wonder what the school grounds
look like, since this entire section of the city between the Annexe and the
city are pretty much level. Om Prakash has moved his bed and belongings into
the anteroom of my apartment and will be sleeping here tonight. Electricity for
this apartment went out a couple of times today, an hour or so at a time. Night
has fallen and the rain just keeps raining. Little black frogs the size of my
thumbnail are hopping around on my kitchen floor, half a dozen or so of them so
far. For now, the floor of this apartment is an island in a deepening lake of
water fallen from the sky. This morning when Selvan was walking by in the ankle
deep water, his comment to me as he lifted his arm to the sky was “three days.”
If that is an accurate forecast, at this rate, the floor in this apartment will
become ankle deep, easily. Jason the gateman is also moving into one of the
rooms in this network of rooms my apartment is a part of. Om Prakash tells me
that Ambi and Shantha have moved up to the second floor of their house. From
the air, this section of the city, and the entire city for all I know, must
look like Atlantis sinking into the sea. Whatever passes for a drainage system
in this city no longer passes. Will there be a morning newspaper tomorrow to
tell us what is going on and what to expect?
Wednesday morning, the rains have slowed
to a drizzle, and the surrounding lake holds level at knee deep in the
driveway. Electricity is out in my room -
no fans, no overhead lights, no re-charging for my laptop. All I have is the
light from the cloud-covered sky through my window. The internet stick I was
given by Kesavan has expired, so I will be sending no messages out. Om Prakash
tells me the cars are over at the school where the flooding is not so deep. The
electricity in the anteroom where Om Prakash slept works, but not the bathroom
and the room where Jason slept, so the problem is somewhere in this building,
and an electrician will need to be brought in.
Find out
last night that Jason the gatemen is from a village in the same district in
western Nepal as Om Prakash’s village. So now I’ve got two western
Nepali’s keeping me company in this flooded city in the south. Have got the
entire day ahead of me now in this island of a room in the middle of the
monsoon lake to plan, revise plans, and then plan some more. Like beads of a
necklace, Luna and Jupiter in Leo, and Mars and Venus in Virgo align. Sun-Surya
with Saturn holds close in Scorpio, and Mercury is close behind.
Here I now sit in the waiting room.
Waiting for the skies to clear. Waiting for the Lake to subside.
Waiting for the school to reopen and classes to resume. Waiting to walk down
the stairs from my doorway. Waiting for my electrical outlets to power up and
the lights to come on. Waiting for lunch. Waiting for my next cup of tea. Waiting
for the Light to shine through the dark corners of my mind. Waiting for colors
to brighten the shadows in my thought. Waiting to decide which decision to
make. Waiting to know what my options are. Waiting to find the key to the lock.
Waiting to open the door to tomorrow. Waiting to know when to speak. Waiting to
find my Voice. Waiting to know whom to speak with. Waiting to know what to say.
Waiting to walk through the mountain pass. Waiting to swim through the ocean’s
breaking waves on the beach. Waiting to listen to the voice within tell me what
I am waiting for. Waiting to return to where I came from, so I can begin again.
Waiting to find the depths of emptiness, so I can begin to fill it again. Waiting
to remember what today is all about, what yesterday was about, and the day
before, and all the way back to my first word for the world. Waiting to understand
meaning, Waiting to understand you. Waiting for you to speak of who you are, so
that I may know more than before. Waiting to watch you smile and hear you
laugh. Waiting for you to brighten my day. Waiting to follow the stars through
the night and wonder where they are going. Waiting for the light to shine forth from
every person alive on this planet. Waiting for the hardness of heart, where it
is, to soften. Waiting for empathy, compassion and wisdom to shine forth from
every person’s heart. Waiting for swords to be melted and recast into
ploughshares. Waiting for the flags of mistrust and division between peoples to
fly no more, and for all border crossings to open. Waiting for the gods of
anger and fear to fall by the wayside. Waiting for the voice of humanity to
awaken to its higher calling. Waiting for ignorance to subside. Waiting for
hypocrisy to disappear. Waiting for the Arts to flourish. Waiting for release
from the bondage of selfishness, greed, and war after war after war. Waiting
for all of the armies and navies to be disbanded. Waiting for cooperation to
replace competition. Waiting to work together for the common purpose of
well-being for all. Waiting for the stewardship of the Earth to replace
exploitation. Waiting for men and women everywhere to stand side by side in
mutual respect and admiration, and through the balancing of insights and
strengths, to mutually enhance one another. Waiting to play my role for
whatever needs to be done. In the wings, I am waiting.
I have arrived at the South Indian version
of monsoon madness. There were occasional light showers yesterday and last
night, nothing like Tuesday’s continuous downpour that created this lake in
which I’m marooned. And the waters do not recede. If there is a municipal drainage
system for this part of the city, which I am beginning to doubt, it is
obviously dysfunctional, and I must begin to wonder how long this vast puddle
will be keeping me company. Till it evaporates? And if another continuous
downpour comes around, how much deeper will this lake become? The waters are
now just below Om Prakash’s knees, so have receded perhaps three or four
inches. I am not about to roll up my pants legs and wade through those murky
waters, which are not exactly of swimming pool quality. And I shudder to
imagine the quality of the waters in the streets and neighborhoods on the other
side of the front gate. And of course the effluvium of that soup cannot help
but seep through and find its way into the waters on this side of the gate.
Moisture and dampness pervades in the air and the prospect of creeping mold
does not brighten my frame of mind. Om Prakash and Jason slept in the anteroom
last night, refugees from the flood. In fact, all three of us are refugees from
the flood on this block of concrete above the waters. Rumor has it from Om
Prakash that an electrician will come by today to restore electricity to these
rooms. Strange how of all the rooms in the interconnected set of rooms of this
building, only the anteroom has a currently working electrical connection, with
a working overhead light and ceiling fan, and a workable re-charging outlet. It
certainly would be nice if this as-yet-to-materialize electrical technician
could restore my overhead light and ceiling fan into functionality.
All
of which leads me to another set of questions. Perhaps it is time to revise my
plan and abandon this notion for teaching at Ambi and Shantha’s school for the
next four months. These very kind and generous friends have settled into a way
of life that centers around their school and their home at the Annexe. I’ve
expected some level of regularity in the program, but now that I have become
embedded in it, I’m beginning to find it uncomfortably confining. For one
thing, there is my feeding schedule. One cup of morning coffee brought over by
Om Prakash at seven. Breakfast at eight, either here or at the school. There is
no menu or choice and I get what is set before me. Lunch at twelve-thirty or
one, always the same, rice and sambar and rasam and curd, seven days a week,
whether here at the Annexe or at the school. One cup of hot chai with milk at
four. Dinner at seven is set before me, chapattis and the dish de jour,
whatever it happens to be, chosen by whom I don’t know. I am not exactly
enthralled by the clockwork regularity of the virtually predictable menu. It is
all well prepared and tasteful, but my choices are zero, both for timing and
for what it will be.
Then there is this room I am given to call
home, and the way of life I see evolving around it. I don’t mind the
simplicity. One large and one smaller table, two chairs, one cot, a floor fan
to supplement the ceiling fan, and some shelves for books and folded clothes.
It’s the scheduling of my way of life and inaccessibility to the outside world
that shall prove to be my undoing if I try to continue this for the next four
months. So far, I’ve had two days of classes with my English department
teachers, and I pretty much feel like I’ve got the idea for how a day at school
works. I get in the car with Ambi and Shantha at eight and the driver takes us
to school in five minutes. At the end of the day at four or five or whenever
Ambi and Shantha decide, we pile back into the car for the drive home. They go
to their home and I go to my room to wait for my meal to be delivered. What
then? Preparing lesson plans for next day’s classes and reviewing my day in
this personal notebook. I can amble around the courtyard and residential
grounds, or, as I did Sunday, venture forth into the street of shops, which I
can see will soon become of very limited value as entertainment.
Parts of
Chennai are no doubt culturally and artistically vibrant, but none of us are in
our twenties or thirties anymore, and getting to and cultivating those sectors
would be an exhausting task. Ambi and Shantha are not there anymore, and I
can’t do it alone. The only way for me to sustain my equanimity in my home would
be to don my monk-ish garb, and I’m really not sure I’m up for that for the
next four months. I savor long and vigorous walks and exercise, and so far I
feel like I’ve been little more than a conduit for rice and sambar and
chapattis. Visions of bird cages and jail cells dance through my brain, and I
turn the pages of my Lonely Planet guidebook looking for places to go where I
can cop a room, and take long walks and sit in a restaurant whenever I choose,
and sip as many cups of coffee or chai as I wish whenever the fancy suits me.
At the moment, I’m looking towards Pondicherry , a hundred
miles to the south, a town by the sea I know well. Of course, I’m sure they’re
getting slammed by the monsoon just as hard as we are here, and no telling what
conditions on the ground are like there right now. Meanwhile, the waters of the
lake surrounding my room are calm, and I’ve seen a ray of sunlight peek through
the cloud cover to reflect for a fleeting moment on the gently rippling waves.
Will not be going anywhere or making any announcements until after the waters
recede. Where’s my canoe when I need it?
Saturday morning, December fifth. There
comes a point when more than enough becomes too much, and the body sends the
message. Start off with a round of diarrhea at eleven Thursday night, followed
soon by some heaving and vomiting. A mild headache visits the frontal cortex accompanied
by a gentle fever. All of this continues through the night while I’m reading up
on symptoms for ailments in my Lonely Planet guidebook. Are these the symptoms
for on setting Typhoid? Huge Bummer! Or simply some other parasites that have
decided to visit my gut and chomp around on my brain? Still a nasty idea!
I really did
not come over here to die, and know that a lot of my friends and family would
be very disappointed if I did. All in all, things are going well in my life and
I think I have a lot of good to look forward to. There’s a whole bunch of
people over there I want to keep talking to, and to have that all cut off for
some very stupid reason is not a part of my plan. As dawn rolls around, I write
out a message for Ambi for Om Prakash to deliver. I would like to go to a
hospital for diagnosis and treatment, and would he please find some vehicle,
perhaps one of the school buses, that could drive through the lake and pick up
and rescue me. Ambi responds via Om Prakash with a packet of rehydration salts
and the promise to get Kesevan right on the task of getting a vehicle. Within
an hour, there is a vehicle waiting in the street at the front gate. Om Prakash
lends me his flip-flops and leads me through the almost knee deep lake of the
courtyard to the gate. There is a graded dip in the ground level between the street and the driveway into the
courtyard, which is why the courtyard water is so much deeper than the ankle
deep street water. Driver takes me over to the school. There are rises and dips
in the street level along the way with alternating stretches of pavement and
puddles. Pavement is clear at the entrance to the school, but I can see that
further inside the grounds is what looks like an ankle deep lake. I’m
transferred to a car with driver Selvam, who takes me over to Kesevan’s house
not far away. We drive around through various streets of this part of town,
some waterlogged and some not, to the homes of some doctors Kesevan knows but
nobody’s home. We finally settle for a visit to Rakshith hospital where the
consulting physician listens to me describe my symptoms and assures me this is
not Typhoid. That’s a relief. I hope he’s right! Looks like some nasty bacteria
have found their way into my gut, and he prescribes three sets of pills to annihilate
those critters and replace them with some more friendly types. Some mineralized
rehydration drinks are also in order. On our way back to the Annexe, we stop at
a pharmacy and Kesevan fills the order. As we’re driving towards the Annexe, I
make it clear that I want to be returned to the YWCA guest house. By now, it’s
about ten a.m. and even the
concept of returning to the room I’ve lived in for the last thirteen days feels
like a death sentence. Kesevan visits with Ambi to deliver my wish, and Ambi and
Shantha come out to their water-logged porch to wish me bon voyage for where I
need to go. Selvam takes Kesevan back to
his home near the school, then drives to the school to pick up another of the
company drivers, so these two between them can figure out how to get to where I want to go,
for the guest house is really an incredible distance from the school and road
conditions between here and there are anybody’s guess. To me, the streets of
this city are a Gordian knot of twists and turns and I get the tourist’s view
of waterlogged and half-submerged neighborhoods. Neither my stomach nor my
brain are in their happy places while Selvam and his partner are making
decisions about which ways to turn along the way. We arrive at the guest house.
Oh, happy day! At the desk, all that is available are the more expensive AC
rooms, and I take one sight unseen. Bid a thankful adieu to my road warrior
drivers, then go to my room and fall on the lifeboat of this fresh bed. It is noon but I’m
passing up lunch, and sign up for the seven-thirty dinner. A fresh wave of
fever washes through my body, but I feel confident that it will subside as the
afternoon passes. Fresh hot shower in the sparkling clean bathroom helps this
body feel like it is heading in a good direction, along with most of a liter of
mineral water. Go down to the dining room at four for a cup of hot chai with
milk and an egg sandwich to accompany my first pill. The fever has begun to
subside. Stick with the milder dishes at the seven-thirty dinner, and sleep
through the night like I’ve come back home.
Meanwhile, the city around me is an
ongoing disaster. For the most part I cannot make out what the Tamil television
in the lobby is saying, but the images are quite clear. It’s like I’ve arrived
in New Orleans in the middle
of Katrina. Occasionally, captions are in English. One million persons
evacuated. A hundred thousand rescued. Umm. I wonder, where are these people
evacuated to? Rescued and put where? Chennai hospital oxygen fails and fourteen
people die in ICU. There are no newspapers in the lobby. Fishermen’s boats are
being brought in to aid the evacuations, and fifty-six thousand food packets
have been delivered. The Chennai airport is closed due to flooding, and there
are images of passenger trains standing idle at the station. Chennai and
neighboring Kancheepuram district have been the hardest hit in this monsoon.
The idea of trying to go anywhere from here seems ridiculously insane. I’ve
told the front desk people that I’d like to sign up for the first available
non-AC room, and that I really don’t know how long I might be staying.
The idea of teaching at La Chatelaine has
now evaporated into the realm of impossibility. I am searching for a way of
life and it will not be found in that environment. My teaching days are behind me, and I will
not be returning to the Annexe except to wish Ambi and Shantha my very best. I
will want to bid Adieu to Kesevan and Mani and Vasala and the English
department ladies. I will want to give my hearty best wishes to Om Prakash and
his robust, good natured companionship through my thirteen days in the guest
house. Everyone there has been over-the-top kind with their attentions, but the
facilities and the situation are simply not a match for the way I want to live.
I’ve now got my eye on Pondicherry , but the
monsoon season could last well through December and into January. At the
moment, I’m simply waiting for a non-AC room to open up for an extended stay at
the guest house and will explore whatever shops and entertainment I can find
within walking distance. Breakfast this morning of cornflakes with milk, fried
eggs and toast and some rice cakes with two cups of coffee and one tea, and the
stomach says ok.
Sunday morning. Not every dream merits
recording, but here is one. I am sitting near the driver of a very large
tourist bus who is performing the delicate maneuver of guiding a corner of the
front bumper of this monstrous machine into gently nudging a corner of the rear
bumper of a rather small parked car. I don’t see how he can see, from his
elevated driver’s perch, where those street level bumpers are, but he manages
to do exactly what he intended. Then switch to outside the bus and entering a
large box of a room with white walls with splotches of artist’s paint scattered
about on those surfaces. An abandoned artist’s studio. This is one of those
“naked in public” situations. The other people in the room are mostly minding
their own business, although we are all part of the same group. There are a few
piles of old clothes lying about, and I search through them for something to
wear. After I find some underwear, I
come upon an old khaki vest decorated with boy scout pins and badges and decide
to wear it. I cannot help but be fascinated with the idea that this old
artist’s studio space could be resurrected. The others in this room, my
erstwhile companions, feel a need to be moving on to somewhere else, and I know
I should be going with them, to where exactly I do not know, but they’ve
already left and I must hurry down a hallway to catch up. I take a quick turn
around a corner, and find myself going down a child’s sliding board. I hold
onto the side rims before going very far down, and see that this slide has a
very long and steep and curving descent into depths I cannot see. I cannot turn
around and go back up the slide to where I got on, and the only way off would
be to leap over the side into a depth where, at this point, I can at least see
a bottom. This is still a precarious height and I harbor a measure of
trepidation about making this leap. Then, on the edge of a nearby cliff, a
white stallion appears. He looks to me and then leaps into the emptiness and
descends into the depths of a canyon far deeper than that which I had been
facing. I watch him fall with my heart in my throat and lo and behold he lands
on all four feet as if he had been taking a stroll in the park. And the
drizzling rain falls through the leaves of the trees at the guest house while
the traffic picks up on the street outside.
Through the lobby and dining room area of
the guest house everyday walks a well-dressed, heavy set though not overly so,
man with a gentle look to his face. Sharp trousers and collared shirt and
necktie with YWCA pin. He speaks quietly with front desk attendants and kitchen
staff and is clearly a man in charge at some level. Yesterday evening at five
as I was visiting the lobby before going for tea, he addressed me by name. Mr.
John, will you be taking dinner tonight? I reply No,
I’ve had lunch today and that will carry me through, and I will wait for
breakfast tomorrow. He’s sitting in a lobby chair somewhat apart from the TV
area. I sit in a chair next to him, and we begin our conversation. How long
I’ve been here, how many times I’ve been to India , and what are
my plans. He tells me I could go to Pondicherry if I wanted,
that the roads are not so bad in that direction. I could even rent a car if I
wanted, and that the drive is scenic, often in view of the ocean. He tells me
what he knows about Pondy and Auroville, and a certain group of foreigners who
are building a cooperative sustainable community which even generates its own
electricity by having members take shifts pedaling a bicycle mechanism. I tell
him I’m looking for a place to call home in India and that
Pondy is one possibility. An alternative would be Dharamshala in Himachal
Pradesh in the far northern part of the country. He was born in Chennai and lived
here all of his life, has done some traveling through Tamil Nadu, and north
through Bangalore to Mumbai. He
is, in fact, the manager of the guest house, and has of course spoken with
visitors from many countries, listening to their stories of where they have
come from, why they have come to India , what they
plan to do here. India is the
Mother, he says. She is Mother India to many who come from abroad seeking for
something that is missing from their lives in their own countries. He tells the
story of a woman who told him that when her plane landed in Delhi , she began to
weep uncontrollably for some sense of inner joy that she had returned home once
again. Mother India is the spiritual home for so many of the Earth’s people, he
says, and some, for whatever reasons, chose to be born in one of their
reincarnations in one of those foreign countries, and they are called back, and
when they return, they know they have come home. All I can say is, I know the
feeling well. His name is Kiran, and he says I can call him Ray. Kiran is a Ray
of the Sun’s light and can be used as either as a man’s or a woman’s name. This
Kiran is a Ray of Light to those whom he meets in this world, and if he can be
that Ray of Light to at least one person every day, he is fulfilling his role
and the meaning of his life. He tells me to write of my travels and experiences
in India , and show the
Light of this culture that I see to those of where I come from in those far
away places. He assures me that he is very happy to know me, and that I must
always think of the YWCA guest house as my home, my hacienda.
Sunday morning newspaper is here, with
continuing stories of flooding and population displacements in many parts of
the metro area. A map on the front page identifies all the areas of the north,
the west and the south of the city and surrounding areas that are most sorely
affected. This guest house is located near the central part of the city which
is least affected, perhaps because the ground in this area can soak up the
water more easily. Perhaps for other reasons, but not because it’s not raining
here. The army and other relief organizations are sorely pressed, individuals
drown trying to help others in need, the airport might soon resume limited
operations, but certainly no international flights for the next three days.
Television images of people wading through waist deep and chest deep water
follow one after another, agricultural crops in the outlying areas are ruined,
and Cuddalore, my home town to the south, looks like they’ve got it as bad as
anyone around here. Relief supplies can’t seem to be coming in fast enough to
keep up with the needs of those who have been displaced. The train station
stands idle, and outside my window, a little black kitty gingerly hops between
puddles looking for somewhere to go.
Have now established a reasonable and
workable beachhead for this visit to the Tamil country as I am transferred to a
non-AC room. Down from $26 to $15 per day. Who needs AC in this kind of
weather? Open my windows and turn on the ceiling fan, and, thank you Shiva, for
the quieter side of the building. I can stay here forever for $450 per month
and get all my meals and three cups of tea per day from the marvelous kitchen
and dining room here for another $150 per month. I can watch the rain fall and
revise my plans every day until the stars come out and tell me which way to go
next, here at my Chennai hacienda.
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