Saturday, December 31, 2016

Return to South Asia: Chapter 3 - Family Time in Central India

Chapter 3 - Family Time in Central India

Sunday, December 18, 2016

The shared taxi I was riding in made reasonably good time to the Guwahati airport from Shillong. As a result, I was stuck hanging around the check-in waiting area because there was no one staffing the airline counter, which wouldn’t even open for another few hours. On top of having to wait, it was a bit on the humid side of things in this no-A/C room, the only food available was really greasy food stall fare, and the bathrooms were probably a 4.17 on a cleanliness scale to 10. Even with that, I was happy to be here instead of in Shillong, though that meant pretending that I didn’t have to go to the bathroom for a few hours.

The flight to Delhi was on the uneventful side. The planned reunion with the family was more on the eventful side of things. But more on that in a little bit.

At the Delhi airport, I got my baggage and then looked around for a driver holding a plaque with my
name on it. Nothing. Then I stepped outside and then realized a few moments too late that I wouldn’t be let back in the building without an onward ticket. Airport security in India is such that you can’t enter the building without proof of flight. And since I don’t have an Indian SIM card, I had no idea how to get a hold of my folks. I had a phone number but no phone.

As I tried to negotiate with airport security to let me back in to make a phone call, a nearby snack food vendor overheard me and let me borrow his cell phone. I called my cousin-brother-in-law with my approximate location who then called his driver to let him know that I was at the international terminal and not domestic terminal 7km away. And so I waited, and wandered, and wondered still how they’d find me among a sea of brown people across a ½ km terminal and 3 lanes of traffic. And then miraculously, I saw my dad wandering around looking around everywhere for me except at me in front of him. My brief fear of being stranded at an Indian airport lugging my bags around for 5 hours evaporated.

My parents live in India part-time and in the US most-time. For the better part of a decade, they’ve escaped the winters in the US, shut down their house, and re-centered their daily lives for a few months in a town smack-dab in the middle of India called Nagpur. Since I was here in-country, they flew up to Delhi to meet me and do a few days of sightseeing. And while here, we stayed with my cousin-sister and her husband in Ghaziabad, about an hour away from the Delhi airport.

But hey… let’s tell the whole truth here, ok? My parents actually flew up to do sightseeing with my sister Leenata, her husband Chris, and their three kids. I was just along for the ride. Unfortunately, an extraordinary amount of phone calls, duplicate visa fees, and lots of tears didn’t result in the kids getting their visas in time largely because Cox & Kings (the agency contracted by the Indian government to handle India visas in the US) can’t get their collective sh!t together to do a damn thing right. And so my sister’s family’s entire trip had to be cancelled and they are out somewhere in the neighborhood of $15k in total expenses (including internal India flights and non-refundable excursions) along with shattered hopes and dreams. Well, everything except that last part, though I’m sure my sister may have felt a little bit of that too in her final days of despair. If this were to have happened to me as a single traveler, it probably would have been much simpler to adjust and resolve. But with a family of five, everything becomes more challenging.

As far as the rest of us were concerned, we had spent the past few days debating a few different options and ultimately just decided to continue on with the itinerary as is, albeit without my sister’s family.


Monday, December 19, 2016

After a somewhat comfy sleep on a pull out couch (which wasn’t too shabby as far as pull out couches go), my parents and I loaded up into my cousin-brother-in-law’s car with driver and we headed off for a few hour drive to Agra. And as everyone knows, the only reason to go to Agra is for the Taj Mahal.

Well that, and the Agra Fort, which we went to first because we saw it first. It’s a pretty neat building, and I could probably talk a bit more about what the significance is about it, and why it’s there, and all sorts of good stories but we were too cheap to hire a guide. Well, mostly we were too cheap because we had seen it about 15 years ago with a guide and so clearly we were already experts. I contemplated hiring myself out to some unsuspecting tourists and making some cash, but I left my official India tour guide badge in my bag back at the house. Maybe next time. In any case, it looked nice and there were lots of cool photo opportunities, which of course is clearly the only real reason to go anywhere.

Next we headed over to the Taj Mahal, which for some reason is this crazy huge tourist attraction for some reason. My favorite scenes in the world are generally nature-made, like the Iguacu Falls in Brazil/Argentina, or Torres del Paine in Chile, or Milford Sound in New Zealand, or Lake Louise in Canadia. If I came up with a list of my top 25 “wow” spots, they would almost all be natural wonders… but for two exceptions. One exception is the Sydney Opera House. The other is the Taj Mahal.

Most people have heard about the love story that created the Taj Mahal, so I won’t recreate that here, nor will I attempt to vouch for its authenticity either. If you haven’t heard about it, do a quick Google search or check Wikipedia. I’ll wait here for you.

What makes the Taj Mahal spectacular to me is sheer grandeur and a sense of perfectness, even though it’s a tomb – and tombs generally creep me out because they seem to be completely useless structures to me (and graveyards too). But this building is so beautifully perfectly white and when in front of a blue sky, it offers such a picturesque peaceful view that it’s something that I would be perfectly at ease staring at for hours on end; all day even.

Unfortunately, the blue sky frequency is less in Agra these days – the pollution is a bit of a problem and we could barely see the Taj Mahal from Agra Fort a few kilometers away because of smog. The line to get in was not so long, but the foreigner price was something like 2000 Rs while the local price was about 200 Rs. Naturally, we paid the local price… and then proceeded to get hassled by the entry folks who said we didn’t have the proper IDs. I kept my mouth shut and when the guy asked me “Kaha se hai?”, I responded with “Nagpur” and my parents’ local address when pushed further. Ultimately, I think the guy got tired of badgering us and just decided to move on. My parents can more easily pass as locals, but something about me screams “foreigner” even though it’s crystal clear I’m of Indian heritage. After high-fiving for saving about $25 USD each that would have clearly been wasted on the upkeep of a stunning national treasure, we felt silly and a bit shallow and moved on.

Inside, we spent a little more than an hour taking pictures, wandering around, and soaking it all in. While pictures will never do it justice, there’s not a better option until virtual reality is perfected. I know that Samsung is claiming to have perfected virtual reality with some silly goggle add-on to one of their newer phones, but I call shenanigans on that crap.

After having our fill of the Taj (we’re on a first name basis), we got back to our driver & car, had a late lunch from an unnecessarily large number of tiffins that my cousin-sister packed for our trip, and then headed back to my cousin’s house. On the way, the driver stopped at a new dessert shop that we were told was putting all of the other dessert shops out of business (I think it was called Shankar Sweets?). They definitely get an A+ in my book because their rasmalai was out of this world. Many Indian sweets have an unnecessary amount of milk or an unnecessary amount of sugar in them. Rasmalai is the perfect blend of these two excesses, thankfully. I’m lactose intolerant, so I carry around Lactaid pills and use them judiciously… and like Elaine and her sponges, when presented with an option to consume dairy, I do a quick mental evaluation to determine whether or not the option is Lactaid-pill-worthy. And Rasmalai, my friends, tops the list of Lactaid-pill-worthitude.

Of course, there’s no real shortage of Lactaid pills in the world, and I get mine from Costco anyway, so they’re pretty darn cheap per pill; net: I’ve got no real excuse. But somehow (much to Julia’s chagrin), I rarely manage to have the pills on me and so my stash tends to reach their expiration date before consumption. But we all know that expiration dates are a hoax to get you to throw stuff away and buy more – it’s one of those evil marketing ploys called “planned obsolescence”. And we don’t want the evil marketers to win, do we? Absolutely not – and so I’m just really taking one for the team with my defiance here. I’m also very lazy and somewhat forgetful, which may play a miniscule part in why I have so many expired pills. Miniscule.


Tuesday, December 20, 2016

After another night of sleeping on the pull-out couch, I got to wondering where I’d be sleeping if my sister and her family had actually been able to join us. Indians never allow family to get a room in a hotel room; there’s ALWAYS space. If that means moving the furniture around and rolling out a bunch of comforters on the floor for everyone to sleep side-by-side like a kid’s slumber party, so be it. To tell the truth, I like it that way too. It’s family, you know? Judging by Chris’ and Julia’s reactions to these practices in the past, something tells me that most white American families don’t do this, but please feel free to let me know if I’m mistaken.

So we packed our bags up, loaded them into the car, and the driver hauled us back towards Delhi. We had a flight to catch in the late afternoon, so we bid adieu to my cousin-sister and cousin-brother-in-law and thanked them for their hospitality. I honestly have no idea when I’ll see them again. The last time I travelled to India was early 2008, so we will undoubtedly see many cousins that I haven’t seen in a long while and many that I won’t see again in a long while.

Sometimes, I almost feel like I’m one of Chevy Chase’s family members in National Lampoon’s European Vacation where they visit a family they think are their relatives but turns out they went to the wrong house. In a sense, I almost feel like I’m swooping in and greeting them in a language they barely understand and then just as quickly swooping out, never to be seen from again. Well, at least not until the next time I come to India to lather/rinse/repeat it again. Of course it’s a little bit different since many of our cousins see my parents nearly every year as part of their annual seasonal retreat.

But yeah, back to today. Since we have been to Delhi before and have seen most of the standard tourist fare in the city, we decided to go to a new tourist attraction called Akshardam. This is a relatively recently built Hindu temple that is an absolutely phenomenal masterpiece, and it’s so big that Delhi even has a metro stop for it. According to the website, more than 300 million hours of labor were donated in its creation by over 8000 volunteers. The artwork & carving is simply masterful and must have taken a ridiculously long time. This being India, I’m sure some decently large chunk of those 8000 "volunteers" were not independently wealthy, so I’m hoping that they were compensated or otherwise provided for appropriately vs being "voluntold". My parents were telling me that the global religious organization behind the temple has built an even bigger one in New Jersey. We weren’t allowed to take cameras inside, so you’ll have to click on the website to get a better idea of just how gorgeous this was. But no doubt in thousands of years, future generations will be visiting this temple and marveling at the artistry and grandeur, just as we do today at places like Angkor Wat or Chichen Itza.

From the Delhi airport, we flew south a few hours to the city in Hyderabad in Karnataka state. This is the closest major airport to my mother’s side of the family and her brother met us there with a friend and a driver to pick us up and drive us 3 hours to the city they live in, Gulbarga. Actually, it seems that the name is being changed to Kalaburagi, much like Bombay became Mumbai and Madras became Chennai. Well, kinda… it seems the name Gulbarga comes from the Urdu language, whereas Kalaburagi is Kannada, the state language. I didn’t actually know that stuff before, but it seems that Google and Wikipedia are exceptional tools of learning in this day and age. In fact, my Dad and I took to jokingly saying “let’s ask Guru Google” whenever something (frequently) came up that we didn’t know.


Wednesday, December 21, 2016

I spent the bulk of today getting reacquainted with cousins on this side of the family that I hadn’t seen in 8+ years. On my mom’s side, my siblings and I are more or less the oldest of our generation and most of our first cousins are in their early-late 20s. This trip marked the first time I felt like I could have more of a peer-to-peer style conversation with any of them which felt quite a bit different and really interesting, even though there’s still a good 15 years of age difference.

Each morning here, I was awoken by the sounds of the nearby mosque at dawn. There are no noise ordinances in effect (or enforced, at least) here, so the calls to prayer from the mosque are broadcast over loudspeakers. Since Gulbarga has a massive population of Muslims, there was no escaping it in this town. At least the person singing into the microphone had a somewhat pleasant voice. With the right voice, it can actually lull you to sleep a bit, though I seriously doubt that was the imam’s intent.

My dad and I were getting a bit antsy and bored in the house. The house wasn’t small by any means by Indian standards, but it was on the small size by our Western standards, especially given the number of people staying there. My family in India is a bit on the conservative side, and this side in particular still lives in a nuclear household. By this, I mean that the family lives together – my mother’s three brothers all shared the home of my grandparents with their wives and children. Yes, in the same house. After one of my uncles tragically passed away, his wife and kids separated from the rest of the group so now there were just two brothers + families in this house. This still felt a bit cramped to us given what we were used to. Heck, my home in Cincinnati is bigger and it’s just me + Julia + 2 dogs living there.

Unfortunately, there wasn’t all that much to really see in Gulbarga since it’s not much of a tourist mecca. There’s basically a fort and a few temples and that’s it. So my dad and I decided to go to a relatively new Buddhist temple called Buddha Vihar, which sits on the outskirts of the city. My mom’s family doesn’t own a car, so my two cousin-brothers took my dad and I there on their scooters.

It took about 20 minutes to reach there on scooterback. As we arrived, I noticed a few things: 1. the city had all but faded away… we were pretty far from anything; 2. except some crazy monstrosity of a building that seemed to go on for blocks and was still under construction. This crazy building apparently was a hospital that was likely largely a waste of public funds that a corrupt minister was behind both for votes as well as to skim off the top. But more remarkable about the building was the complete lack of any architectural design integrity. I’m not an architect, but putting massive roman columns with a spattering of Islamic-style domes just doesn’t look right. It was strangely off-putting.

The Buddha Vihar center, on the other hand, looked really nice. By the time we arrived, the sun had set and the spotlights reflected brilliantly against the stark white temple domes. Photography wasn’t permitted and there weren’t really any tour guides (since it’s an active temple and not a tourist spot), so we couldn’t really find out much information about it. So we just went inside and prayed a bit, meditated a bit, and then kinda walked around before mutually agreeing that it was time to go. As we were leaving, what appeared to be a party bus (with loud music and disco lights) pulled up near the gate and a smattering of middle-aged people got out to go to the temple. I guess party buses and religion mix.

On the way back to the house, we stopped off at the hardware store that my uncles run. Though they had switched storefronts recently, it still brought back lots of childhood memories. When I was a kid, my mom would often bring us to Gulbarga for weeks one end during our summer vacations and my brother and I would often spend the better part of the day at the shop and play with the hinges, door latches, and anything else young pre-teens would find fun.

One of my cousin-brothers will be taking over management of the shop before too long so we got into a conversation about inventory, order management, accounting, and so forth – everything here was done by hand and manually. Since it was a small shop, it didn’t make sense to upgrade to a computerized point-of-sale system with integrated back-office functionality given the local old school business model. I didn’t expect to hear differently, but it got me thinking a bit about the evolution of sales, from the 1-off non-branded shop that I was standing in up to the massive megastores that drive commerce in the US. Yes, I'm a big huge nerd.


Thursday, December 22, 2016

There wasn’t a lot on today’s agenda in particular either, so I decided to ask my cousin to take me to the factory since I hadn’t seen it in a while. My grandfather had opened the hardware store maybe 50-some years ago and this was the family’s primary source of income. During that time, my grandfather employed local laborers to make a few items by hand and they purchased the rest. The handmade items were water jugs and pots, hammered into shape manually from flat sheet metal. As my uncles began running the business, they saved money to invest into more modern methods of production. A few decades back, they bought a building in a nearby industrial-ish area and installed a few pieces of equipment. The primary things they make today are nails and washers, and there’s still some manual hammering going on too.

Other than a quick visit to my mom’s sister’s place 10 minutes away, we didn’t really do much else except hang out with family. Later in the evening, my parents and I boarded a train to go to Pune, a city just outside of Mumbai. We arrived after midnight and one of my cousin-brothers on my dad’s side of the family sent a driver to pick us up and bring us to their apartment for the night.


Friday, December 23, 2016

After a quick breakfast and our morning chai, my dad and I went to take a walk to a nearby neighborhood park. Since we were in a city, I had envisioned a square similar to what we have back home, but instead we arrived at a walled-off park with a stationed guard on patrol. I’m not sure what they were patrolling for, but I presume they were stationed there to keep homeless or poor folks from setting up camp inside the walled-off park.

Inside the park was a central greenspace, surrounded by a two-lane walking track. On the outskirts of the walking track were outdoor exercise stations as well as a children’s play area in one corner. To my surprise, almost all of the exercise stations were being used largely by middle-aged adults who you would not guess spent time exercising at first glance. As India is “Westernizing”, obesity and diabetes is on the uptick since manual labor exercise is increasingly not a part of daily life for the burgeoning middle class. It was nice to see that there were at least some efforts to create parks like these to address the problem.

The rest of the day was basically a crash course in catching up with lots and lots of family members on my dad’s side. Many of my dad’s brothers and sisters had children that were right around our age. When we were growing up and took summer vacations to India, we’d frequently spend several weeks in the small village that my dad grew up in, Aheri. Well, “small” is a relative term and by Indian standards, Aheri was tiny small since there are only around 100,000 residents. In the US, this number of people would be a small city, and certainly significantly larger than the towns in Eastern Kentucky where I grew up (~5,000). In India, it’s literally a blip on the map, to the extent that Aheri usually doesn’t even show up on the map unless you type it in or know exactly where to zoom in. Given that it’s so tiny, most of our cousins that we grew up with left that town after high school and moved to the big city, and a pretty sizable chunk of them ended up here in Pune.

Pune itself is growing extremely rapidly. Most of my cousins have either recently moved or will be moving soon to an area of town with huge high-rise apartment complex developments. We stopped by one that is a few months away from being complete and I had trouble distinguishing the complex from something we would see in Miami or another southern-US warm city. The pace of development is frighteningly fast, and you could also see some older small homes and shanties where some poorer folks lived. As the middle class incomes rapidly rise, the disparity between them and the lower class working manual labor jobs is getting wider and wider.

In the evening, we went to another cousin’s house for dinner and all of the nearby relatives and extended family petered in to join us as their schedules permitted. One of my cousin-brothers brought along his very young son, a little tyke so adorable that his very existence makes a compelling argument for procreation.

By and large though, the family was getting together just as family does – catching up, joking around, enjoying each other’s company, and whatnot. It was really nice and you could see how close they all were to one another. It’s something my siblings and I missed out on quite a bit growing up where we did, and it’s something that even our next generation is missing out on since of the three of us, my sister is the only one with children. We have cousins around the country and a higher concentration of them in New York / New Jersey, but nowadays we’re lucky if we connect in person with them even once a year. It’s just been a bit different growing up and living in the Midwest.


Saturday, December 24, 2016

Continuing our rapid-fire family tour, my parents and I were driven to the airport in the morning to fly to Nagpur, where my parents have maintained a second home the past few decades. We were picked up by a cousin-brother’s driver and car… a fellow named Amit. Amit looked more like a driver/henchman for a bad guy in a Bollywood movie: he wore dark sunglasses and a knit cap, he had a 5 o’clock shadow of a beard, and possessed a general sneer about him that hinted “I can’t be trusted”. As I learned later, my cousin-brother isn’t exactly enamored with this guy either, but he’s had difficulty finding a reliable driver and has had to settle for what who he can find.

My parents’ home is basically a three-family home and they occupy the top floor. The bottom two floors are occupied by my cousin-brother and he runs a few businesses out of the space. This is a great setup for my parents since they have a trusted family member to watch over the place the majority of the year when they’re in the US plus they get a very reliable source of market-rate rent as well. When my parents originally built the house, there was extremely little around them – just a sea of largely open land. I distinctly recall the last time I was there (~15 years ago) wondering why my parents would build this house in the middle of nowhere.

As we drove up to the house, I was floored by the development around the house. The street was full of other businesses and similarly sized modern homes, and the neighborhood looked as though it had existed for generations. There was also a ton of construction going on in Nagpur to build elevated metro lines above the major roadways. The speed at which the country is evolving is incredible. An Indian-American friend of mine visits the country almost every year, and she shared with me that she notices significant improvements each time she comes.


Sunday, December 25, 2016

After a simple and quick breakfast at my parents place this morning, we headed out with a few uncles and aunts to a school about 2 hours outside of the city. This school, Navin Desai Residential School, was founded a few decades back to house and educate the children of stone quarry manual laborers and sex workers living in extreme poverty. To these kids, this school is their only hope to escape the unfortunate circumstances of how and where they were born. The school had an assembly program organized today where many of the children performed in a talent show and every once in a while a jolly brown man or boy with a Santa hat wandered around to give out some candy. There were also a handful of speeches by different leaders and other presumed local dignitaries, and there was a short ceremony in honor of my parents for their continued support of the school.

Then again, maybe something totally different was going on. I couldn’t really follow along that well because my proficiency in the local language, Marathi, is fairly low. I can understand 50% of what is being said if someone speaks slowly and clearly, but even then I can only muster about 25% of a response. Interestingly enough, it’s more often than not that Spanish words are popping in my head to confuse me further.

In any case, the performances were really nice to observe. Many of the children performed with the biggest smiles you could imagine on their faces – they were clearly very happy to be there and were enjoying the camaraderie of their classmates. They also somehow managed to put together some incredibly beautiful dresses and costumes for their performances.

After about 6 hours of this, including lunch, we began to head out to return home. I actually don’t know how long we were there, but it felt like 6 hours or more to me. I don’t say that because I was bored of the proceedings and what was happening, but that there’s only so long I can watch without having anyone to chat with and without understanding what’s being said. Plenty of my cousins and aunts and uncles were in attendance, but with both language and cultural challenges, our conversations more or less went like this in Marathi:
Random Relative: “Hi. Do you remember me?”
Me: “Yes, of course!” (even if I only kinda did)
RR: “You should come visit more often!”
Me: <smile> + <ubiquitous Indian head nod> + “Yes, okay.”
RR: “Will you come to our house?”
Me: <smile> + <ubiquitous Indian head nod> + “Yes, okay.”
RR: “Why aren’t you married?”
Me: <smile> + <ubiquitous Indian head nod> + “Yes, okay.” (i.e. pretend not to understand)

I was generally pretty nervous about having any sort of in-depth conversation with most my relatives, particularly those that were of my parents’ generation. Since my family comes from relatively small villages, they are pretty conservative and can be fairly religious as well. As such, my decisions to date to not get married, not have kids, live in sin with a white girlfriend, and recently leave my well-paying job of 20 years just don’t compute very well. Heck – I have a hard enough time explaining all of that to Indian relatives who live in the US. Add the language barrier and complete lack of cultural context and the conversation would be doomed before it even got started. So my game plan going in was topic avoidance. That being said, I didn’t have any concerns with talking about any of this with my cousins of my generation (or younger) at all, particularly those who lived in larger cities and spoke more fluently in English.

On the way back to Nagpur, we stopped off at a military camp for elementary and high school boys and girls that’s run by one of my father’s friends whose career was in the Indian Army. But what was supposed to be a 30 minute stop ended up being a 2-3 hour detour. After welcoming us, the general (I’m not actually sure what his rank was) showed us the basic training athletic course that the campers train on, and then had two of the older boys demonstrate for us. Having had little to no physical activity for the past 4 weeks, I was itching a bit to hop up and join them, especially on the ropes course elements.

After a full demonstration on the 20-some stations, we returned inside and joined the entire class of campers for their camp’s welcoming ceremonies. The welcoming ceremonies were in Marathi and so I couldn’t completely follow along, but we listened in on a speech where the general’s daughter shared her father’s accomplishments while in the Army and then showed a video. And then she gave another speech about something else. I’m sure it was all good stuff, but today was positively exhausting. I was very angry at Cox & Kings right about now for royally screwing up my sister’s family’s visas because I would have appreciated having her kids to hang out with to help pass the time.

Oh yeah, Merry Christmas and all that. I have to admit that it was extremely nice to NOT be at home amidst all the Christmas hullabaloo and non-stop Christmas songs on the radio and blaring in every store. The commercialism and materialism of what is supposed to be a positive morally-uplifting tradition feels tragic and the polar opposite of WWJD to me. Yeah I know, I’m a big party pooper.


Monday, December 26, 2016

On this fine day fifty years ago, my parents were married in India. They had a semi-arranged marriage, meaning the families introduced both to each other and left the decision up to them after a few meetings. A few months ago when I had purchased my airfare, the plan had been to have a large puja ceremony and celebration to mark the occasion. But as had become the norm with this trip, plans had changed.

To my parents’ credit, instead of spending money on a large celebration, they decided that a better use of those funds (and more) would be to make a sizably large donation to a charitable organization… I think that’s what yesterday’s event at the school was partially about. The new plan was to do the puja in their humble abode and mostly invite local family members, though a few did end up making the trek in from their homes several hours away.

The puja itself was mostly conducted with only a handful of guests in the room. Most notable about the puja was the priest who was performing the ceremonies – it wasn’t a he, it was a she. This was probably the first time I had seen a female priest (priestess?) conduct any sort of Hindu ceremony and it was a nice indicator that progress is being made along all sorts of fronts in India.

Following the puja was a catered lunch that was set up by a local restaurant on a large balcony off of my parents’ living room. The food looked amazing and there were lots of family mingling and enjoying each other’s company. At least I think they were enjoying each other’s company… I had come down with a bit of a fever overnight and was largely participating from the more comfortable confines of a warm bed. I was also unfortunately not exactly regular in the waste expulsion department either. Julia and I shared a set of texts about exactly this:

P: My mom says I definitely have a fever. I know I got bitten by a bunch of mosquitoes last night, so I’m fairly certain it’s scurvy.
J: Oh no. Sounds like zika crossed with scurvy?
P: No. Maybe it’s pink eye.
J: The interwebs say you have either chikungunya or dengue.
P: Good to know.
J: Or maybe zika. Don’t get pregnant.
P: I’ll just pull out. No worries.

Meanwhile, my parents got nervous and started asking around on why I could possibly have a fever and ultimately decided that I was showing early signs of malaria and that I need to be positively diagnosed by a qualified medical professional immediately. So in the evening, I was dragged to a local doctor who asked me the basics and determined that I had traveler’s diarrhea and not malaria. At my parents repeated questioning, he conceded that we could always get a blood test to rule out malaria but repeated twice that it was not really needed. So obviously, I had an entirely unnecessary blood test performed against my will to confirm that I wasn’t on my deathbed. Because, you know, I’m apparently all of 9 years old and am clearly utterly incapable of making a single decision on my own.

I’m not bitter. Really.

Scratch that. I am very bitter and my parents won’t hear the end of it any time soon.


Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Today was like the 7th Day, a day of rest. The base plan had been to start an overnight safari trip to a nearby tiger reserve, but when my sister’s family didn’t end up making it to India, we decided to just cancel instead. That I was recovering from an illness only made the decision that much easier.

As a result, we did a whole lot of nothing today at my parents’ house. It was so nothingful that the most eventful thing that occurred all day was watching some construction workers pave the street in front of the house. The interesting aspect here was that the street didn’t really appear to need new asphalt at all, though it was clear that the locals were pretty happy that the work was underway.

With nothing better to do, I went down to the street to stand and play the role of unwanted supervisor with a complete lack of subject matter expertise. To be fair, there were easily 10 other residents playing similar roles and providing unneeded advice while sneering and complaining, so I wasn’t the only one by a longshot (though I did not sneer nor complain). I shared with my cousin that in the US, the richer areas of town will get street repairs easily twice as frequently as poorer neighborhoods; he shrugged and shared that the same happens here in India, except that the disparity is much greater. I wasn’t surprised.

My cousin also made a passing comment that it’s standard for government contracts that the local minister skims 10-20% right off the bat. Now, I have no idea if that was just chatter or truth, but it’s well known that corruption is extremely widespread in India down to the local levels. It’s not uncommon for the police to hassle people just with the intent of getting a bribe to leave them alone. The current Indian Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, has stated that eliminating corruption is one of his primary goals, but this has to be a ridiculously daunting task, especially for a country as large and populous as India. I’d love to fast forward 20 years and read Harvard Business School’s case study on how they ultimately solved the challenge.


Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Given that we had originally been scheduled to be still on safari today, we again had a wide open schedule. I was feeling much better at this point - the antibiotics prescribed by the doctor were working, as were the electrolyte packets used to make less-tasty slightly-metallic Gatorade for rehydration. A few aunts/uncles from my mom’s side were staying with us the past few days for the celebrations and they took their leave to return to their respective homes this morning, leaving just the three of us.

So what did we do? Why, of course, my dad and I went to get a massage. My lower back had been hurting quite a bit for the past few weeks given the lack of proper Western sleeping comfort. My cousin pointed us to a nearby ayurvedic massage place called Baidyanath. The facility we arrived in was extremely clean and modern; it was as though we were in the US. The prices were a bit higher than I had expected, but still pretty darn cheap by Western standards – we each signed up for a 1 hour massage running 1400 Rs (~20 USD).

After a few minutes of waiting, a big burly guy walks into the waiting room and beckons one of us for our massage treatment. I didn’t want this guy inadvertently breaking my father into two pieces, so I stood up and followed him. I also prefer a deeper stronger massage, so I figured it would be better for me anyway. Burly Dude led me to a private room with a massage table and motioned for me to strip down. So I stripped down to my underwear. And then he tied this wimpy gauze-like paper around my waist and then motioned again. I obliged and pulled down my underwear and two seconds later I was the proud owner of a highly see-through speedo-tight gauze loincloth.

The massage itself was not targeted to any specific area or region of the body; instead it was more or less an all-out beat down of every muscle and joint that you may or may not have realized you possessed. Dude cracked my fingers, knuckles and each of my toes. He also got a wee bit more intimate with my hoohah regions than I was comfortable with, but you know… when in Rome. Julia and I had joked over IM the night before about getting a happy ending. When I saw the Burly Dude fetch me from the waiting room, I had thought that my happy ending was not to be. Instead, I think I may have just not gotten the happy ending I had preferred.

After the beat down, I was placed in a steam bath – instead of a steam room, they had a small 1-person steam box in the room that they opened up for me to sit down in and then closed the box with my head sticking out for fresh air. It was kind of like one of those magician’s boxes except without the fake swords. And I wasn’t exactly a beautiful magician’s assistant either.

All in all, though, it was good. My muscles felt more relaxed, my lower back pain had subsided, and I could add another notch to my bedpost. Good times.


Thursday, December 29, 2016

And then we had yet another day of rest.

Since this part of the trip began, my dad had been commenting frequently that he wanted to go eat at this place called Barbeque Nation, an all-you-can-eat style joint. Well, today was his lucky day.

My cousin-brother eats there quite frequently, so he picked us up from the house and drove us there for lunch. The restaurant was inside of a new 4-story mall, complete with escalators. I know – this shouldn’t be surprising, but honestly… for where I’ve generally been in India in prior trips, an escalator is a bit out of the ordinary. Well, 4-story malls are out of the ordinary as well – it’s amazing how fast the place is developing.

Each table had a little grill set up in the middle. Given this setup, I assumed they would bring out skewers of meat that we would be responsible for cooking to our preference. Nope. They brought out cooked meat on skewers and placed them over the grill to keep them warm. The options were chicken, shrimp, goat, and fish, and all were a bit on the spicy side. In fact, after a few skewers, I had to ask them to bring out some bland ones because the spiciness was getting to my stomach which had only recently been on the fritz.

Much like an Olive Garden or TGI Friday’s back home, this place apparently attracted lots of customers with birthdays. All of the servers gathered around a table on at least 3 different occasions to sing “Happy Birthday”. Of note, they sang it the standard way… like any other human being would sing it. Most restaurants in the US have come up with their own version of “Happy Birthday” because the song is actually copyrighted by a large company (Warner) and they would technically have to pay royalties every time it was sung in public. No, seriously – I didn’t make that up. But clearly, the fine folks at Barbeque Nation in Nagpur, India, could care less about those greedy bastards. So not only did they sing the standard “Happy Birthday” verse, they also sang a second stanza which went “May God Bless You” in lieu of “Happy Birthday to You”.

You’re welcome for sharing that. Rivetingly seat-clutching, I know.


Friday, December 30, 2016

We got up painfully early this morning to pack up our bags and wander outside to wait for an Uber to take us to the airport at something like 5am. It took a good half hour for the Uber to find us, even with the built-in GPS capabilities in the tool. My guess is that speaks to how poorly marked roads are in India. Uber was only introduced in India relatively recently, but it’s quickly become a massive player in the market here. Taxi drivers here seem to prefer it as well since they don’t have to wait so dang long in between fares. That being said, if Uber were to become the dominant player such that most taxis were on the app as well, then supply would return to greatly outstripping demand and taxis would be idling around again waiting for fares. But I guess at least they wouldn’t be driving around looking for fares and wasting petrol in the process. Dunno.

More intriguing about the Uber phenomenon in India is that everyone here pronounces it Indian-style… “ooo-bare”, and they all asked me if Uber has come to the US yet. When I share that it’s an American company and the service has been in the US for over 5 years, the response is generally shock and then they ask why an American company would have such an Indian-sounding name. And then it’s disbelief when I share how you’re actually supposed to pronounce “uber”. I had this conversation with at least 5 different people through this trip.

We arrived to the airport crazy early… so early in fact that we had to wait for an hour before the airline counter even opened up. We were just flying to Mumbai, so I think our stay in the Nagpur airport was probably longer than the flight itself. The Mumbai airport though… wow. It’s beautiful. It’s been 8 years since I’ve flown through here, but man did they make a crazy big upgrade. Trump has mentioned a few times that our US airports need to be upgraded because they are “third world”. He’s wrong, because ours are nowhere near as nice as these.

From the Mumbai airport, we took another Uber to the Indian Arc de Triomphe, locally referred to as the Gate of India. We were trying to get to the ferry dock, but it was a bit of a madhouse. We had to queue up in a crazy long line to funnel through a few TSA-style security checkpoints before we could approach the ferry. There was a bombing a few years back near this area, so that might explain the increased security. Then again, we were leaving the area on the ferry… it was pretty easy to walk up to the Gate of India or nearby hotels and avoid security altogether if bombing were on our minds.

It didn’t take us too long to find our specific ferry, but the crowds were a bit vicious. Our destination was a beach area just south of Mumbai in a region called Alibag. After asking around a lot at the airport, we learned that it was actually easier to get to this region via ferry from the Gate of India instead of taking a bus, taxi, or train, because land transportation would have to travel much further out of the way because Mumbai is situated on a peninsula that juts out into the ocean a bit. But here we were trying to squeeze through a mob, and I had all of my luggage with me to boot.

Normally, taking a ferry out into the ocean a bit would be an experience surrounded by beautiful views. If there were no smog, that likely would have been the case here as well. Instead, we were greeted by a light brown foggy haze in all directions. Mmmm… gorgeous! The ferry ride itself wasn’t much to write home about. It seemed that a lot of people on this ferry were either daily commuters or something like that since no one had any luggage with them. It was less exciting than the Staten Island Ferry, although that’s a probably not a fair comparison since the Staten Island Ferry is really quite nice and has stunning views of NYC.

After about 90 minutes, we began approaching a dock in the town of Mandve. Asking around, we learned that the second leg of the trip to Alibag would be by bus and that everyone had to get off the ferry here. It was scorching hot outside and by the time we got to the bus loading spot, the line was tremendously long and literally wrapping around itself. We probably had 2-3 busloads to go in front of us and even then we would not be guaranteed a seat… the bus could be standing room only by the time we got on.

Fortunately, my mom had the bright idea to check with a rickshaw to see how much they would charge to take us directly to our hotel. The price was not too steep… a few hundred rupees, and probably the best spent few hundred rupees on this trip. It was really quite hot, and the all-natural air conditioning provided by the auto rickshaw was a very welcome sensation.

When we arrived to the hotel, it seemed just kinda ehhh… ok. It was a building with about 6 guest rooms in it and a decently large side yard. It would have been considered a bit run down by Western standards, but by middle-class Indian standards was more than fine. We had only booked the place yesterday when my parents and I decided to try and go somewhere for New Years at the last minute. One of my cousin-brothers recommended this place because he had stayed here with a large group of friends a few months back and had a terrific time… though I think their enjoyment likely had a lot more to do with the group’s company than with the accommodations.

The food was exquisite though. We got there a little late for lunch, but they prepared something for us anyway and it was divine. We later learned that this little no-name hotel often gets catering requests because they are known for their terrifically good food. The kitchen itself was a bit dinky and not really that much of a kitchen – it was more or less an “area” between the building and part of the parking lot. But I suppose talent is more important than facilities.

After our late lunch, my parents and I took a stroll to the beach area. This hotel wasn’t immediately on the coast, but it was only a short 7-10 minute walk there. The entryway to the beach was surrounded by small food and merchandise stalls and there were a few locals peddling a variety of activities as well: from horse or camel rides to banana boat rides to dune buggies to horse-drawn carts. We passed on that and walked along the beach… it was low tide and the water had receded significantly, so we had a bit of ground to cover just to get to the water. Also, there wasn’t a foreigner in sight – this was very clearly a vacation spot for local Indians. I’m guessing foreigners generally didn’t come because it wasn’t particularly easy to get to, the hotels weren’t 4+ star, and the sand on the beaches wasn’t white and pristine. But that made it kinda cool to see how and where Indians enjoyed.

After wandering a bit, we took a horse cart ride back to the food stall area. The horse was driven by a kid who couldn’t have been any more than 11 years old, but that’s how it works in developing countries – children often become responsible adults very quickly out of necessity. I’m not ready to say that the Western way is clearly superior though, since we have an awful lot of 20 year olds who don’t know how to clean up after themselves or do laundry or have a conversation with their professors or bosses without their helicopter parents getting involved.


Since it was close to sunset, we grabbed a seat at a coconut vendor’s stall and we each got a fresh coconut, both for the water and the scrumptious tender flesh inside. The coconut dude can tell by the sound of the coconut whether it has more water or more flesh so he can serve the type you are looking for. Also, for those (like us) who want to eat the flesh after drinking the water, he chips off a slice of the shell for you as he carves it up that you can use as a cutting spoon of sorts to scoop out the rest of the coconut flesh. I’m pretty certain that this is where Colonel Sanders got the idea for his infamous KFC spork.


The sunset made for some really beautiful scenery, though at the very end the sun disappeared from sight due to the presence of a decent amount of smog & fog along the horizon. Even so, sunrises and sunsets are some of those things that you can never get tired of, so we were happy to be there. But I really wasn’t quite sure what we were going to do here for two more days as we had originally planned. It felt like we had already done and seen everything there was to do around here. Well, short of riding a banana boat.


Saturday, December 31, 2016

We got up early this morning and packed up to leave. Both of my parents agreed that there wasn’t much to do here and figured we could head back north to Thane, a suburb outside of Mumbai, to visit one of my grand-aunts. So we had an early breakfast and crammed into an auto rickshaw for a 20 minute ride to the bus station in Alibag.

At the bus station, I sat on a bench for 15-20 minutes with the bags as my parents alternated walking around asking station employees when and where the next bus to Thane would be arriving. With public buses, seats are not assigned and it’s on a first-come first-serve basis. Since it would be a long ride to Thane, it was kind of important that we got on the bus quickly when it arrived. And since everyone knew this, generally people try to hop on to the bus as quickly as humanly possible – regardless of whether or not the bus is stationary yet or whether or not others are trying to get out of the bus from the same door you are trying to enter. The result is a bit of chaos.

When the bus finally arrived, my mom managed to squeeze in at the front of the crowd and grab a row for her and my dad along with a seat directly behind for me. And after everyone else got on, there were easily 10 people standing in the main aisle.

Over the next 3 hours, the bus stopped and dropped off or picked up a ton of people seemingly every few minutes. It was a bit hot and sticky out, so the windows were open to get a nice warm icky breeze. And since this is India, the warm icky breeze generally came with a heavy dose of dust. Since there was basically no possible way for this ride to go by quickly (sleep was definitely not in the cards), I popped in my headphones and listened to randomly sequenced songs from the 80s through 00s.

I found that I had a distinct memory attached to most songs. For Billy Joel’s “She’s Got a Way”, I remembered my friend Adam singing this song to his girlfriend Amye at a talent show our senior year in high school. For George Michael’s “I Want Your Sex”, I remembered the highly anticipated music video coming out on MTV and being immediate must-see-TV for all teenage boys… event though in reality, the video wasn’t all that suggestive or lewd, and definitely not by today’s standards. For The Beatles’ “Yesterday”, I remembered my friend Drew Curtis (same guy who started fark.com and who ran as an independent in the 2015 Kentucky gubernatorial race) at summer camp at WKU in 1987 come up with Weird Al-like replacement lyrics, resulting in a duet at the end-of-camp talent show where we sang “Leprosy… all my parts are falling off of me”. Obscure memories, most certainly, but I cracked more than one smile during the drive while warm icky dust attempted to stick to my face.

In Thane, my great-aunt’s home is right next to the railway station and so it was easy to get a rickshaw to take us there after we got off of the bus. We were famished, so we stopped into a nearby restaurant to grab a bite to eat in their air-conditioned seating section. The place wasn’t overly unique or distinct as far as restaurants in India go, but somehow it looked extremely familiar even though I hadn’t been in this area of India for well over 15 years. My mom confirmed for me that we had eaten here a few times several decades ago.

The mind is a funny thing. Julia yells at me all the time because I will invariably forget something she asked me to do me 3 minutes ago and I’m absolutely terrible about remembering names or faces. Yet I can remember all sorts of brandcodes for industrial perfumes that I managed 10 years ago at P&G’s Avenel facility (like Primavera = 10079545), how to spell obscure words like supercalifragilisticexpialidocious, and random shampoo ingredients like DMDM hydantoin learned while studying bottle labels as a kid searching for utterly useless ways to prolong a hot shower.

My great-aunt was very surprised to see us when we knocked on her door - I don't even think she knew I was in the country! But one glance at her and I was ashamed that I nearly missed the opportunity to spend any quality time with her. She and her husband (now passed) were among my favorites when I grew up, in part due to my great-uncle's fluent English. But I’m so very glad we ended coming back from Alibag earlier than expected so that I could spend this time with her; I’m definitely scared that she may not be around next time I visit. Because you never know, it could be another 15 years.

She recounted a story for me of when I was a very young child (~3 yrs old) and my siblings and I were staying here at their place while my parents had to go elsewhere for a few days. I had woken up in the middle of the night and asked for some milk to drink. Unfortunately, there was very little left in the kitchen and my great-aunt needed to save it for any guests that might come in the morning for tea (as per tradition). Apparently, she gently explained this to me, and I listened intently and then just said “okay” and went right back to sleep without a fuss. As she shared this story, there were tears in her eyes and I just couldn’t hold her hand or hug her long enough. She then took the opportunity to tell me that I needed to shave my beard, and so I dutifully spent the next few minutes gently rubbing my beard whiskers all over her face as she squealed and yelled at me. Finally she told me in no uncertain terms that Julia is a goddess and I need to put a ring on it. Oh, how I love this lady so – she’ll always be one of my favorites.

My mom’s sister and her husband had also arrived to visit today, unexpectedly as well, so my great-aunt all of a sudden had quite the crowd in her place. But as I mentioned earlier, when it comes to family in India, there are never too many people nor is there ever any question on where people will sleep.

My mom was taking an overnight train to another town to meet with other family members tomorrow, so my Dad and I accompanied her from the local rail station to the long-distance rail station to see her off. Local trains in Mumbai particularly are notorious for being jam-packed and we didn’t want my mom to have to fight through the crowds alone. Fortunately for us, the trains we rode ended up having a reasonable amount of space, but we saw plenty of others that were overflowing with men hanging on the outside with barely a fingerhold on a door jamb.

It was dark and cooler out by the time we got back to Thane, so my dad and I took a stroll around a park several blocks away. It being New Year’s Eve, there were lots of people, stalls, and police out and about. I really wanted to eat some of the delicious street food, but I was reluctant given my very recent digestive issues. Instead we searched the square up and down to no avail for some authentic kulfi, a non-whipped ice cream like Indian dessert. It may have been for the best that we were unsuccessful though, since I’m lactose intolerant and kulfi is pretty much pure cream.


Sunday, January 1, 2017

In the morning, my dad and I took an Uber to the airport. My dad was headed back to their home in Nagpur, and I was flying down to Kochi in Southern India to start my next adventure. But first, we got to spend time and enjoy the beautiful new architecture of the Mumbai airport again. Of particular note was the prevalence of advertisements… actually maybe this is no different than in US airports, but a few of them just stood out for some reason. Specifically, many of the eye-catching advertisements were hawking shiny new cell phones.

Like most other Asian nations, India is ridiculously selfie-obsessed. There are countless commercials on TV and billboard advertisements out and about that tout how this or that new cell phone gives the perfect selfie, even in low light dance party-like conditions. This narcissistic selfie-obsession is really beyond creepy in my mind. With that background, it makes sense that the airport too was littered with large banner advertisements from cell phone companies, most of which I’d never heard of like Oppo and Vivo. But it was so creepy that I even felt compelled to take this selfie in front of the advertisement of a schmuck taking his own selfie with his “please-oh-please-punch-me-in-my-self-righteous-face” smirk.

I know… I have issues.


Tidbits

  1. Just because someone is wearing a University of Kentucky sweatshirt in India doesn’t mean that they are from or have lived in or even know what Kentucky is. It could be that they just got a free sweater from unsold merchandise in the States or something like that. In fact, there are lots of people walking around India with shirts sporting some English saying and they clearly have no idea it means. Like this young kid wearing a shirt that says “Don’t you think IF I were wrong I’d know it?”
  2. It’s very common in India for middle-class families in India to name their homes. This is odd to me, of course, because here in the West, only the arrogant super-rich folk name their homes. In fact, a friend of mine was house-hunting in Dayton about a year ago and she and her husband had some hesitation on putting in an offer on a house they liked, because it had a name: “Rubicon Manor”. I should have advised them to move to India, where they wouldn’t have felt out of place with a named residence. In my vast experience, that’s a perfectly good reason to move to a different country.
  3. Growing up, my siblings and I always felt a bit strange in India when it came to meal-time because we were expected to just come to the eating area to eat and then leave. We didn’t get our own plates, serve our own food, or clean our own dishes. Instead, the women or older girls of the household were expected to do this while everyone else could just pop in and then leave. Not only that, the women generally didn’t eat at the same time, and instead were serving the rest of the family and/or making fresh roti/papad so the others could eat it piping hot. In the US at least, my mom made sure that all of us pitched in and helped with everything, and it was very rare that she didn’t sit down and eat at the same time. So it was pretty clear that each gender played specific roles in Indian society back then, especially in our conservative family. What surprised me a bit was that even with this trip to visit family decades later, the same was still happening in many of the households. But perhaps it’s only occurring in the same households as it was before and the younger generation isn’t sticking by those norms anymore? I’m not entirely positive.

Sunday, December 18, 2016

Return to South Asia: Chapter 2 - Meghalaya


Chapter 2 - Meghalaya
Saturday December 10, 2016
After spending the better part of two weeks together, Lil and I bid adieu to our budding bromance and went our separate ways. He had a very long 10-12 hr drive back to Tinsukia and I had an actual vacation to get to. A few of the local VK workers helped get me squared away – we took an auto rickshaw to the Guwahati bus station where there were scores of people yelling “Shillong, Shillong, Shillong!!” which I quickly realized was code for “Get Yer Ass In Mah Vehicle if Yer Headed to Shillong”. The VK folks ushered me into a shared SUV, where I was promptly placed in the middle seat of the front bench, straddling the gear shift and getting my hoo-haa brushed up against every time the vehicle was due for a gear shift. On top of that, my heavy backpack was leaning on my left leg, my right leg was tucked behind the driver’s clutch foot and my knees were touching the console. Calling this merely “uncomfortable” is putting it way too nicely, and at the moment I was in line for 3 hours of this discomfort. On the plus side, the ride was only costing me 170 Rs ($3 USD), but I would have certainly shelled out a handful of additional bucks for some reasonable comfort.

I was debating on whether or not to raise a fuss or chalk it up to a new experience but then my rapidly-numbing left leg made the decision for me. Parsing together some undoubtedly unintelligible Hindi words, I managed to convince the driver to let me in the third row of the SUV. What’s really strange is that the back row was COMPLETELY empty. Why anyone in their right mind thought I would rather sit in the front row cramped like that is beyond me. I hadn’t even realized that there was a third row, honestly. There was a married couple in the middle row (normal back row in our US SUVs) and they very clearly couldn’t be bothered to offer up any assistance or acknowledge my existence, even as I was trying to enter the third row which required the lady to move a smidgen so I could pull her seat forward. I half contemplated trying to squeeze through the rear window.

Indian people can be funny. To someone they know, or know through someone else they know, they are incredibly hospitable and friendly. But if they don’t know you, you essentially don’t exist. I wonder if perhaps this is a mental survival mechanism, since locals undoubtedly regularly come across people in situations that Westerners would likely consider to be disturbing and appalling. In any case, it was clear that I didn’t exist to the rest of the folks in the vehicle and I definitely yearned a bit for some of that Midwestern/Southern US neighbor-level friendliness to random strangers.

I later figured out that the couple in the middle row paid extra (three fares) to get the entire row and were more understandably protective of their paid territory. It was a bit comical though later on because as we neared Shillong, the driver picked up 3 guys who wanted to get into the city and all 3 of them joined me in the back row. By Western standards, this would be a no-no and a fire hazard or something. By Asia standards, this is a par for the course and they didn’t even flinch at the discomfort.

As we arrived in the city of Shillong, I learned that this shared taxi was only going to take me to the outskirts and I’d have to find my own way to the inskirts… I mean, city centre. Strangely enough, the small taxi rides in Guwahati and Shillong (10 mins each, AT MOST) were in total more expensive than the shared Sumo between the two cities (3 hrs).

The driver dropped me off at the main bus terminal because I knew the hotel was close by and he had never heard of it. So I walked up “Jail Road” for about 15 minutes before deciding that I must have gone the wrong way. After I made my way back to the bus terminal, I saw the EC Hotel smiling at me across the street from where I had exited the taxi in the first place. Dummy.

After checking in, I wandered around the area a little bit. This part of town is called Police Bazar, which pays homage to just how easy it is to bribe policemen all around India. Ok, not really. I have no idea why it’s called this, but it is clearly a shopping mecca for those who live around here – that at least explains the “Bazar”. And I saw a policeman standing around too, ostensibly in wait for a bribe to then stand somewhere else instead. All in all, the area was quite drab and kinda sucked.

I was looking forward to finally having internet access – not only to be able to stay in contact with Julia and family via WhatsApp and e-mail, but also to know what was going on with my fantasy football teams and UK Basketball. You know, important stuff. But as my string of WiFi luck would have it, the internet at the hotel wasn’t working at all because they are renovating. I also had to piece together my travel plans for the coming days and lack of internet since I arrived in the country was definitely not helping. And I was also having lots of difficulty finding any group tours to join at the local tourist agency offices.

Boy this is hard.

Every other country I have travelled to, it’s been fairly easy to meet other travelers and join forces to make a plan. Naturally, I assumed it would be the same here. Instead, it seems that 80%+ of the tourists are Indians from the mainland area, and that basically everyone comes with a group and travels within that group. So I think I’m just SOL (if you don’t know what that means, look it up). The receptionists at the hotel have been looking at me funny too – not because of my dashing good looks, but because they don’t come across single travelers who don’t have their own transportation or cell phone either. And so they’re basically thinking I’m a big dumb bozo because obviously I should have been prepared with both – again, I’ve NEVER traveled anywhere that either were a necessity.

On the plus side. I got to have a much needed change of scenery when it came to both food and sleep. I had some really nice Chicken Tikka barbeque for lunch and Chinese food (strangely enough, at a restaurant named “Barbeque”) that was really just kinda ok. But the bed… wow. Finally a bed where I could get a proper night’s rest in. The mattress was heaven – it was at least 4” thick, which is easily twice the thickness of any mattress to date. Actually, at one of the places I slept last week, I was having a particularly rough time falling asleep on a ridiculously firm/nonexistent mattress – and it turned out that the mattress was really just 3 non-fluffy comforters covered with a bed sheet. That’s not even trying to be comfortable.

Sunday December 11, 2016
After convincing myself to crawl out of the warm bed and then figuring out how to get hot water for a nice shower (there’s a light switch that turns on the in-bathroom water heater), I ventured out to try finding a travel agency to book some day and/or overnight trips. I’ve got plenty of time, so plenty of flexibility. The problem I quickly found is that everything is closed, including the nearby internet café, owing to today being Sunday. It seems that a good 90% of folks here have converted to Christianity over the past century and many take the Sabbath to heart. I have no issue with that at all, it just means that I had bad timing.

I returned to the hotel a bit frustrated and dejected – no internet, no phone, and everything was closed. Fortunately for me, Hemant at the hotel reception was feeling particularly generous with his time and helped me find an open internet café to do some research. He also helped me purchase a SIM card for my travel phone and book trips/accommodation for the remainder of my time. The SIM card was perhaps the most difficult thing – it seems that getting a fresh SIM card for a foreigner requires an act of God and a local to mortgage their first born son. Given that there’s a fair amount of illicit criminal activity in the region, along with some rebel factions creating trouble, it makes sense that the government would want more control over things like “disposable” SIM cards

But, it being a Sunday of course, the SIM card wouldn’t be activated until Monday, so I was still SOL for connectivity for a bit. You may have noticed that connectivity in general has been problematic this entire trip. It’s beyond frustrating and a key learning for future trips, quite honestly.

One of the sites in Shillong that was nearby and worth visiting is Ward’s Lake, which as you deft readers have undoubtedly surmised is a lake that was named after someone named Ward. After getting simple and very accurate directions from Hemant, I completely missed the entrance and walked a few extra unnecessary kilometers and entered the park from the opposite side instead. Some street signs would be helpful, but of course that is asking too much.

After paying entrance and camera fees of what amounted to about $0.50, I walked into an urban oasis. Wow. Just wow. All of a sudden, I couldn’t hear the hustle and bustle of the city, the air seemed cleaner and more breathable (it wasn’t too bad to begin with though), and I was surrounded with greenery… and I suppose bluery as well from the lake. A green lake really just wouldn’t look as pleasant. I found a park bench and relaxed for a good 30 minutes and then wished I had brought my iPod or a book or something else. When boredom hit, I found the entrance closer to the hotel and strolled back to my room.

The rest of the day was pretty nondescript. Outside of eating lunch and dinner, I read an e- book I had checked out from the Cincinnati Public Library. This week’s selection was “Confessions of a B-List Actor” by Bruce Campbell. I’ve been a fan of Bruce’s work, mostly owing to my old high school friend Daniel, who has harbored an unrequited man-crush on Sam Raimi and Bruce Campbell for decades. As for me, I just like their brand of silly humor – it speaks to me on a deep emotional level and gets me in touch with my inner qi.

Monday December 12, 2016
This morning, I had a quick breakfast and packed my backpack for an overnight trip I was taking with Pioneer Adventures to a spot near the Bangladesh border called Dawkhi. Near Dawkhi is a riverbed that is excellent for camping and all sorts of adventure sports. As their business became popular over the past 5-7 years, the locals began to take notice and started picking up on trying to make Dawkhi a tourist destination. While it’s not there yet, it is definitely on its way. Of course, I did this trip because of the adventure sports. Generally speaking, things that make adrenaline flow are the things I’m excited to do.

Normally, tourists are supposed to make their own way to Dawkhi since that’s the norm for local tourism here. Fortunately for me, one of the tour operators was driving in today from Shillong and could give me a lift. So I got picked up by Adrian and we had a nice conversation on the route. Along the way, we saw lots of the mountain tops being carved up for the limestone to be shipped off to Bangladesh to make concrete for what must be Bangladesh’s massive construction boom. Adrian shared with me that the overwhelming majority of land in this state (Meghalaya) was privately owned, unlike in other states. As a result, the government can’t stop the limestone harvesting unless they outright ban it. Every short bit, Adrian would point to another open pit of a mountain that had existed a mere week ago the last time he had driven on this road. Interestingly enough, if the government had actually owned most of the uninhabited land and wanted to scalp the mountains to harvest the limestone, it would have taken much longer since India is well-known for its central government’s corruption and inefficiency.

After a few hours, we arrived in Dawkhi – which was a small little town with nothing much at all for visitors. It just served as the commercial center for the surrounding area, like most little towns do. Adrian took me into a simple cramped slightly-dingy hut and ordered food for us. I don’t recall exactly what we ate, but so much of the “meat” was joint/ligament/cartilage non-edibles that it was difficult to enjoy. Well – it was un-edible for me because I’m a spoiled Westerner.

After lunch, we waited in town for an hour or so while the other 6 tourists trickled in for this 2-day/1-night trip. Five of the others rode in on rented motorcycles while the last one rented a car + driver for about a week while she traveled solo. Then we played follow the leader and drove another 15 minutes towards the campsite on tiny one-lane roads that hugged the mountainside cliff. We did run into a bus or truck or three along the way and had to slow down to somehow find a way to squeeze two vehicles through without one of them plummeting to their doom. I’m so glad I’m not driving any vehicles in India. Outside of the near-death experiences, the scenery was generally pretty nice.

Bangladesh itself is right over there. Like literally right there. There was no fence or wall or anything like that. It’s just right over there. At road crossings, there were military border patrol folks stationed and clearly visible, but it didn’t seem like there was anything Trump-wall-like that was blocking entrance between the two nations. This was surprising for a few of the others because apparently India and Bangladesh have not always been on cordial terms.

To get to the campsite, we had to walk down a hundred steep-ish steps or so from a parking lot down to the riverbed, which was teeming with other tourists who had rented tents and pitched them wherever they so well pleased on the public riverbanks. Pioneer, however, rents a separate private campground from locals so that we are away from the masses a bit, thank goodness. Along with tents, there’s a dining hut, makeshift kitchen area, and two toilets (one squat and one Western). During the monsoon season, everything washes away and they have to rebuild from scratch. I haven’t mentioned it yet, but this region’s monsoon is the wettest in the world… so much that plenty of tourists actually come for the monsoon itself to be able and witness the ferocity of it first-hand.

After we canoed to our private campsite, we had to wait for a good 30-45 minutes for a small family to vacate the premises. Apparently, the dude was a government minister of some sort and his assistant called early this morning Adrian to “request” that Pioneer give access to the campsite during the day. They were supposed to be out before we got there, and it was clear that Adrian was pretty peeved about it, but also felt as though he had no choice in the matter either.

By the time we got settled, it was already dark and it was clear that we wouldn’t be doing any adventurish activities that evening. I briefly considered calling the government minister and asking him to partially refund my money. After all, my limited Hindi skills did include being able to call him an idiot monkey. Well, to be honest, I don’t know if calling someone a “pagal makad” would actually make any sense in Hindi but it would have sounded funny as hell.

Since it was dark, we got our stuff settled into our tents, had a cup of tea, and sat around the campfire to get to know one another a bit more. I pulled out my iPod & portable speaker and at the request of everyone, didn’t put it on random since this crew didn’t seem to like the idea of listening to completely random crap from song to song. The Beatles and then Billy Joel and then Micheal Jackson would have to do.

So the group… there’s Pali from Mumbai who is a Strategy Consultant about to embark on a new job in a few weeks. Pratik and Tejashree are a young couple on their honeymoon and are from Mumbai and Pune (about 100km apart) – they’ve known each other since middle school, but only started dating ~4 years ago and now will have to figure out how to live together while they work in IT in different cities. And the last group were these 3 guys from Chennai: Sureshkanna, a guy with a name so long that everyone (including us) calls him KSP, and a fellow whose name I can’t remember so I’ll just call him Desmond. These three are high school buddies who take a vacation every year together; usually it’s a group of about 10 of them but it seems that many couldn’t take enough time off or something. Desmond also just finished his civil service exams and is planning a lengthy career working in the government as a non-corrupt official. And given the way we were seated, we just needed Adrian to sit amongst us and we would have had our initials spell out PPAP.

I quickly realized that this was the first time I had ever spent any amount of time with young Indian professionals in India. All of my prior interactions were either with my cousins or through business, which isn’t the same. So I took the opportunity to ask all sorts of questions to try and understand their world. I learned that none of these folks had any thought of having an arranged marriage – that was a very antiquated concept to them, which was especially interesting to me since that’s still the standard in my parents’ families. I learned that it’s very difficult to take more than 1 week of vacation at a time for many of them. I learned that I was actually the only one of the group who believed that spirits existed.

This last point was kind of interesting actually. I shared with them that I believe that there is something that happens with your soul after you die and that some souls linger... and that I was fully aware that the scientific method would likely never be able to prove this. The line of questioning from the group made me remember something that I don’t believe I had ever told anyone. When I was a young kid (~8 yrs old), there were many times that I would struggle with sleep. I would wake up and see my body lying in bed… as though I was viewing my body from the bedroom door. A split-second later, I would be viewing my body lying in bed from a millimeter away. My viewpoint would cycle rapidly back and forth and it would freak me out. The same happened to me a in a few other places as well, generally when I was trying to go to sleep. I learned later when I went to Hindu camp that out-of-body experiences are not uncommon. This group of folks found this revelation absolutely fascinating. And I found it fascinating that they found it fascinating… as though I were the most Hindu/spiritual of the group even though I was the American.

When we first sat down at the campfire, Adrian took our orders for any alcohol and had a few of the workers run back to town to get it. One of the guys he sent was named "Forceful" - we thought that was a joke, but Adrian explained that in this village, parents (who clearly don't speak English) will see a word or name and just name their babies that... including curse words. He knew a guy named Adolf Hitler, who ended up becoming a real jerk of a politician. Anyway, it took Forceful, Bashful, and Prince Charming about two hours to return. And then we sat for another few hours still just listening to music, drinking a few beers, and passing around a homemade cigarette that Adrian rolled. It was an absolute blast to be with a group of English-speaking folks at least somewhat close to my age.

Somewhere around 9pm, we realized that we were all quite hungry and noticed that the food was sitting in the dining area ready to be eaten whenever. I have no idea when the cook put the food out there… it may have been sitting there already for 60-90 minutes for all we know. We had a few helpings and then sat back down at the fire until near midnight. After all of the beer was finished, KSP had gotten a small bottle of whiskey, so we each grabbed a teacup to share it from. No one drank it straight – everyone added water to the whiskey in their glass. It wasn’t very good whiskey, so the water was probably very necessary. Either way, I found that interesting as well since there’s a common stereotype of Indian men loving their whiskey (and Black Label at that).

Sleep came very quickly likely owing to the alcohol starter, but unfortunately it didn’t last too long. I really should have brought my inflatable camping mattress because the mattress pad just wasn’t cutting it. Come to think of it, I could have used the inflatable camping mattress at all of the places the last few weeks when I was sleeping on the thinnest mattresses known to man. I’ll have to add that to my list of must-pack items for next time I travel.

Tuesday December 13, 2016
Because the sun comes up quite early (~6am), I ended up getting out of the tent before too long. There wasn’t a ton of activity going on anywhere as most were still in their tents, so I took a little hike up the beachline to explore a bit. Near the campsite, there was an inlet to the river that was full of large smooth boulders. During the monsoon season, these boulders would be covered with water, but now there was just a small trickle stream running through. I could also see that our campsite piped their fresh water way upsteam of this inlet – they piped in water for cooking, washbasins, toilets, and even a shower. It was quite remarkable given where we were at.

There were a few inflatable kayaks on our beachfront, so I checked with Adrian, put on a life jacket and hopped in one of them to paddle around a bit and Pratik/Teju hopped in the other one. It was a bit windy out and as a result the river was moving reasonably fast, so I couldn’t just lounge around on the kayak either. It was a nice little workout to get to the other side and back.


When we returned, Adrian set us up with harnesses and we took a very short hike up a nearby hill to go ziplining across the river. It was a pretty quick zipline, but was still loads of fun. Most of the others had never ziplined before, so there was a bit of panic/comedy with them as well. The great thing was that we could zipline to our hearts’ content since the line belonged to Pioneer and the workers there woud canoe us back and forth across the river as desired. Even with that opportunity, no one went on the wire more than 2 times. For me, that’s because there were more interesting things to do… like cliff-jumping.

There was an area for a low jump (~10 ft) and a higher jump (~30ft) that would not normally be very scary. What made it hard was that the water was so crystal clear that it was difficult to tell exactly where the water began, especially on the higher jump. As a result, the higher one appeared to be 50+ ft even though it was nowhere close. Only a few of us ventured up there. I went twice, the second undoubtedly after succumbing a bit to peer pressure.

A few of us tried snorkeling as well, but there wasn’t all that much to see. Apparently, there’s a lot more fish when the river is higher during the rainy season. Before we knew it, it was nearing noon so we headed back across the river to dry off and grab some lunch before heading back to Shillong. Pali had hired a car & driver for her short vacation in the area and was headed back to Shillong herself and offered to let me ride along in her car so that I didn’t need to get a taxi. It was a good thing she offered, because after paying Adrian for the trip, I was really quite low on cash.

All in all, this overnight trip had fun activities but really was nothing much. But since I had been craving any sort of peer conversation for about 2 weeks now, honestly the price could have been 5x and it still would have been worth it. I had considered staying another day, but then I definitely would not have had enough cash nor would I have a ride back to Shillong.

In Shillong, Pali & driver dropped me off back at Police Bazar where my hotel was. She was staying in a different area of town called Laitumkrah and she was raving about the many cafes and restaurants available there, which is about the polar opposite of this place. I’ve got another trip planned for tomorrow, but was thinking I’d switch hotels when I return again.

As we departed and said goodbye, she extended a hand to shake… which struck me as interesting. I think in the States, even after spending barely 24 hours with someone in a group setting, we’d still depart with a half-hug type of farewell regardless of gender. Given that Pali comes from a more progressive and Westernized slice of India, I wasn’t sure what to expect really. I don’t think one is right or wrong… I just found it interesting.

I stopped by a restaurant called Trattoria that the hotel recommended for local Khasi cuisine just at 7pm. It seemed odd to me that Trattoria wasn’t the name of an Italian restaurant, but maybe that’s just me. Apparently, 7pm is also when the restaurant closes, so the owner pulled together whichever bits of food they had left and offered it to me for the paltry sum of 100 Rs. Most of the food was really quite tasty, but the pork left a lot to be desired for my Western palate. The pieces of pork were leathery tough and appeared to be entirely skin and fat with nothing that we would generally consider to be meat. I suppose I shouldn’t expect any differently here given that developing countries tend to use every inch of the animal when they slaughter one, which is a practice that I deeply admire while also acknowledging my own hypocrisy. I tried a bite out of politeness and was hoping to be able to stomach it and get a somewhat reasonable quantity down the hatch, but I just couldn’t and regretfully left the two pieces virtually untouched.

And the final piece of the day… my new Indian SIM card was still not working. The kiosk had told me that it would be activated Monday evening and here it was on Tuesday night and nothing. This was getting beyond frustrating, but I had a sneaking suspicion that my Nokia Windows phone was largely to blame. I couldn’t get the thing to come off of airplane mode, nor was I able to do a factory reset. And so, my connectivity frustrations continued. It’s a strange sensation not being able to connect while in a completely foreign land. Not that long ago, this type of connectivity didn’t even exist, and in a mere decade (or so) the needle has been lodged in quite firmly.

Wednesday December 14, 2016
After discussing a bit with the receptionist Hemant, I opted to take a private taxi to a nearby town of Cherrapunjee vs hopping in a shared taxi for far cheaper. The private taxi would allow me to take in some of the sights along the way vs just a one-way transport.

My taxi driver for the day was a young fellow named Ricky, who I learned is 26 and has been driving for more than a decade. I did the math and it didn’t seem quite right, but I figured I’d let it slide for now. Ricky’s English was fairly decent – he is largely self-taught, learning mostly from tourists and by watching TV and movies. Most local people here don’t speak Hindi, so even the Indian tourists from the main part of the country are often conversing in English with the locals. Ricky grew up quite poor and he told me that he wanted to go to school and maybe college, but his family couldn’t afford for him to not work. He wore his hair quite long in a punk Mohawk style and reminded me of my old friend Akmal in college who was from Malaysia. Ricky clearly spent a good amount of his earnings on his mobile phone as well as a sound system for his taxi. He also seemed to know every single other one of the thousands of taxi and rickshaw drivers on the road.

At Ricky’s suggestion, we skipped visiting Mawphlang, the sacred forest, because apparently it was just a bunch of trees that were important to old people. Instead, we took a shorter detour to Shillong Peak where I was treated to a beautiful view of the entire city. It seemed like lots of local schoolchildren were on a field trip to this location too because it was packed. It was interesting, but I think these types of lookouts are far more interesting when you actually know the city, the neighborhoods, the landmarks, and the roads. For me, it was just a bunch of buildings scattered across a valley and I had zero idea where Police Bazar was and I kinda didn’t really care either, sad as that sounds. Instead, I spent more time people watching. Observing what locals and Indian tourists find interesting is kind of interesting in itself.

With Shillong Peak complete, we headed down the road to Cherrapunjee. I suppose it would have been worth mentioning that Meghalaya as a state is really a buttload of mountains that separate the plains of Assam to the north and Bangladesh to the south. The mountains strangely seem to have relatively flat tops as well, though the mountain sides are very steep and jagged. I would have loved to ask my guide more information on this, but I don’t think Ricky would know the answer let alone even understand what I was asking to begin with.


As I mentioned, Meghalaya has terrific monsoons, and Cherrapunjee in particular generally receives the award each year for most rainfall on earth. And yes, there’s an award ceremony where Trump gets to grab your crotch. During wetter times, the drive to Cherrapunjee is littered with waterfalls around every other turn. Since we were in the dry season, Ricky stopped at the ones that still had water. Some of the less memorable stopping points had names like Elephant Falls and Wah Kaba Falls, the names of which I only remember because I have receipts for paying admission and camera fees. One of these two (Wah Kaba, I think) had some impressive scenery from a very steep mountain cliff that the walkway looked down from. I guess it was memorable after all.

The final stop was at Nohkalikai Falls just outside of Cherrapunjee. These falls are famous for being the tallest plunge waterfall in India, and indeed they are beautiful. The name comes from a legend that a young lady jumped off the cliff after her second husband killed her daughter (his step-child), or something gruesome like that. To get a better view of the falls, I spotted an entry to a bunch of concrete steps going down the side of the mountain, so I naturally followed them. The stairs kept twisting and turning and so I figured this should be getting somewhere good. Except that the stairs inexplicably stopped, as though the next set of steps fell away in a landslide or something and the space was reclaimed by the jungle. So I turned around and went back up 200+ steps for largely no reason. Joy.

Why is this kid white?
One of the consistent things I saw along the drive and in both Shillong and Cherrapunjee was a concerted push to keep it green and clean. It seems that the state recognizes the importance of being environmentally friendly and is actively marketing to the population to try and educate everyone. Unfortunately, this will take a long time as there are still plenty of people burning garbage by the side of the road and tossing out trash as they drive by in their cars. On the flip side, I haven’t really seen anyone defecating in the gutters or in an alleyway, which used to be quite rampant the last time I was in India.

As we arrived into Cherrapunjee, I quickly realized that the town was quite small and there was really nothing there. The hotel that Hemant had helped me book was a place called Coniferous Resort just south of the town on the side of the road. Being mid-day, there wasn’t a soul around except for a few people at reception. And I quickly learned that the hotel didn’t have WiFi. So now, instead of being in Shillong with no hotel WiFi and no cell phone, I was now in the small village of Cherrapunjee with no hotel WiFi, no cell phone, AND no internet cafes. I just went from bad to worse and an additional wave of frustration set in.

After getting settled in the hotel, I asked the hotel reception guys if they could help me with my Indian SIM card to figure out why it wasn’t working. One of the fellas popped it into his cell phone (many cell phones in India apparently have dual SIM slots) and told me that the SIM hadn’t been activated, which meant I was SOL on this SIM card for now. Luckily, another hotel reception dude took pity on me and let me borrow an extra SIM card he had that was already active – I’d just need to put some money on it. After putting that SIM card in my travel phone, I was still having no luck – my Nokia Lumia phone still wouldn’t get off of airplane mode for some reason and I still couldn’t do a factory reset. And then the first hotel reception dude said he had the same phone in the past and was able to mess with it to get it reset. I know this isn’t terribly interesting to anyone but me, but I’m hoping you get the gist of how amidst a feeling of helplessness, I caught a few lucky breaks from compassionate souls. After resetting the phone and buying phone minutes and cell data (separate transactions in India) plus some additional tinkering from the cell phone whisperer dude to get the internet to work, I was finally in business and I could call my folks, send Julia a WhatsApp and check my e-mail at my own pleasure. This whole experience was definitely an exercise in humility for me since I was entirely at the mercy of these local folks. 

Thursday December 15, 2016
After a quick breakfast, I chatted with the hotel reception about how to get to Nongriat, my hike of choice for today. And then I learned that it’s too far and that I’d definitely need to hire a taxi to the entry point to drop me off and also to pick me up. These guys too were a bit surprised as well that I was traveling alone and that I didn’t have transportation of my own. Super.

So I asked them to call a cab for me and I met my taxi driver, Nam, who drove me for about 30 minutes along a terrible dirt road and a good number of switchbacks to the small village of Tyma. He was also kind enough to give me directions on how to get to Nongriat and an estimate of how much time it would take to get there and back. Basically, it was about 9am now and he’d meet me back here at about 2pm.

The town of Nongriat is nestled deep into the valley and is not accessible by vehicle because the mountains are too steep. As a result, the only access is a very long paved sidewalk with a veritable buttload of steps… about 3000 according to multiple accounts on the interwebs. Sure, the trek there was downhill and should be easy-peasy, but I often find that downhill is more stressful to my knees. So I quickly shelled out 20 Rs without a second thought to the entrepreneurial young boy at the entrance who was selling nature-made bamboo walking sticks.

I made fairly decent time getting to Nongriat and was there in 90 minutes after crossing a couple of steel cable single-person bridges and a quick detour to see and walk across a living root bridge. Yes, that is exactly what it sounds like – it’s a bridge made from live tree roots spanning the river. This doesn’t occur naturally of course, it’s something the locals have to shape and coerce from strategically located strong large trees over multiple years. However, once these root bridges are finished, they can last for hundreds of years from local traffic. Since this is kinda cool and unique, when non-locals heard about these, they quickly became a bit of a tourist attraction, myself included. And because foot traffic increased dramatically, the concrete sidewalk I had just descended was funded by the government along with some steel cable reinforcements underneath the root bridges as well.

Nongriat is a simple little village with absolutely nothing to offer except nature in all directions. It was peaceful, green, and simply gorgeous. I finally came across a few Western travelers here too – apparently, they are the only ones who feel that this place is gorgeous and is paradise. It seems that the Indian tourists don’t view this area as a vacation at all; they see it as taking a major step backwards to go live in the villages that many have spent so much time escaping in the first place. Since Westerners are generally awash in infrastructure, we see this as a beautiful (if simple) retreat.

I had originally planned to stay here in Nongriat for a night, but Hemant and I could not find a working phone number for anyone in the village to book a room. And now that I’ve arrived in person, there are rooms everywhere, except that I didn’t pack for it. I seriously considered just staying anyway and wearing the same clothes for an extra day, but I didn’t have contact lens solution and didn’t bring my eyeglasses, and I was kind of short on cash as well.

I stepped onto the balcony restaurant of one of the local family’s homes and it took a while for the strangely uninterested hosts to take my order. I was a bit hungry after getting what probably amounts to the first real exercise of this trip for me, so I just had some ramen noodles to get some carbs in me. After I was done, I had to figure out how to get my strangely uninterested hosts to tell me how much I owed them. As much as everyone else seemed to be saying that the locals are extremely friendly, I didn’t feel like I was much on the receiving end of that hospitality. Looking back, it’s entirely possible that it’s because I’m not Western. Ultimately, the lack of hospitality was the final reason I decided not to test my luck and stay the night. Another group of tourists had saline solution and offered to lend me a few hundred rupees to get me through a night, but I politely declined. Sometimes you just have to go with your gut, I guess.

On the way down the grand staircase a few hours back, I had passed a couple of Dutch backpackers who had spent a week relaxing in Nongriat. So I naturally asked them if there was anything that I definitely needed to see in my day trip here and they quickly advised that hiking to Rainbow Falls was an absolute must. I was a little concerned about taking a 2+ hour hike given that I’d still need to climb up the ridiculous staircase at the end of the day, but YOLO, you know? So, off I headed towards Rainbow Falls.

First though, was the necessary trip to the local root bridge, which was really the main attraction of this area to begin with. The reason this one was so special is that it was a Double-Decker Root Bridge… it really was quite special in real life. Not so special that I flipped out and filmed a clip of me losing my sh!t about it like the Double Rainbow guy, but close enough. Seeing that each deck of said Double Decker Root Bridge basically went between the same places, I’m not exactly sure just why the locals felt it necessary to build two levels. Perhaps foot traffic was so high that it necessitated an additional lane? Or perhaps there was a terrible accident on the original single-decker where two people ran into each other in a head-on collision and plummeted to their doom below? Or perhaps they just figured that this would get the tourists flocking to them. I’m guessing it’s the last one. It worked, by the way.

The hike to Rainbow Falls appeared to be the only trail on the other side of the Double-Decker Root Bridge, so I followed it for about an hour, not always knowing if I was on the right path or not. Along the way, I walked through the village soccer field and the village graveyard. I also walked by some of the largest spiders I’ve seen in my life. The hike itself was nice, but a walking stick would have been supremely helpful and I realized a wee bit late that I had left mine back at the hotel restaurant in town. I’m pretty sure my knees are going to seriously hate me tomorrow.

Finally I started hearing the sound of crashing water and I knew that I was close… and all of a sudden, a glorious vision approximating paradise magically appeared and took my breath away. And true to its name, there was a very solid rainbow hanging out right near the base of the falls. I actually looked around to see if I could find the Lucky Charms leprechaun because I figured if he was going to exist anywhere outside of Ireland, it would certainly be here.

But seriously? How is this actually part of India? The India I know is full of people, dust, pollution, trash, squat toilets, open sewage, beggars, unbearable heat, and a strange side-to-side head nod movement that takes years to decipher and likely closer a decade to adequately master. This was heaven on earth with zero people around, clear skies, and zero pollution (and zero side-head-nodders). And I had it all to myself… well for about three minutes until another Western couple happened by. I sat and relaxed for 15 minutes before getting up to head back. I thought about jumping in the crystal clear water, but I couldn’t easily find a clean way to get down from the boulder alley I had arrived atop and I didn’t want to risk it since I was an hour from civilization.

The walk back to Nongriat was quite fast… though it too took the same hour as the hike in. Somehow when you are walking on a known trail or driving a known highway, time always passes by much quicker. That being said, the climb back to the top of the mountain took a hell of a lot longer than coming down, for obvious reasons. I ended up counting steps as a sort of mental game to both try and pass time and get farther between taking rests. I had already called Nam and rescheduled our pick-up time to 3pm and I didn’t want to have to call him again.

I ended up finally making it up at about 3:10pm. Along the way, I passed a large extended family of Indian tourists, many of whom had no business walking down so many steps, especially in chappals or dress shoes. This walk clearly screams for sneakers for those who don’t run up this canyon on a daily basis. I also passed by a small group of younger Indian guys heading down who had clearly motorbiked in. They were wearing leather-ish jackets, boots, and carrying helmets and I can’t imagine what their hike back up would be like in that gear. They did, however, stop to chat with me and asked me to join them for a selfie that they promptly posted to their social media accounts.


When I got in the taxi with Nam, I more or less collapsed in the front seat. I shared with him that I had made it all the way to Rainbow Falls and back and he was utterly shocked. Apparently, he’d never had a tourist do the whole thing anywhere close to as quickly and was surprised that he wasn’t picking me up closer to 6pm. I’m guessing that he didn’t transport very many tourists that were in true hiking shape because I know I’m crazy out-of-shape. Even so, I appreciated the compliment.

My FitBit confirmed at the end of the day that I had taken about 25,000 steps during the day and walked up 275 flights of steps. Not too bad.

Friday, December 16, 2016
After eating breakfast this morning, Nam picked me up to drive me back to Shillong. A few kilometers from the hotel was a place called Eco Park, which didn’t really seem to have anything particularly “eco” about it other than just being a park, but I’m guessing that calling it “Park” would not have been as marketing friendly. But the park did have a distinction of jutting up against a mountain cliff, allowing for some spectacular views down into the plains beyond known as Bangladesh. I guess that in itself made it a worthwhile stop-off.


The next stop was at a cave that was found a few years back. Owing to the limestone mountains and torrential annual downpours, there’s lots and lots of caves around and many are either unknown, only known to a few locals, or very difficult to get to. This one was one of the larger ones more recently discovered and was only about 3km off the main highway… so there’s a terrible gravel driveway connecting the two. I told Nam that we have lots of limestone in Kentucky where I grew up and about Mammoth Caves which is so mammoth that the entirety is still not completely mapped out. At least I think that’s right. I have no idea and I’m too lazy to look it up before writing this down. I just know that the current cave system is gigantically larger than what we thought it was when I visited as a kid in elementary school. I think.

This cave system was neat, but really nothing special. There were a few nice sights along the way and all, and some neat paths to walk down. But I have some minor claustrophobia issues, so it didn’t take long for my gentle solo stroll exploring the meandering cave system to become a race for my visit to be done and over with.

Since we had a few hours to kill, Nam and I got to talking a bit. He grew up in Cherrapunjee but lived in Shillong for a few years and got a degree in Geography because that’s what he was genuinely interested in. After graduating, he quickly learned that there weren’t many jobs available in geography and moved back home. He also enjoyed small town life better (he seemed to know everyone in town) and preferred to remain close to family anyway. So… he started working for his father as a delivery driver, saved up enough money to buy a car and now drives the car as a basic taxi. He’s saving money to buy a nicer car to use as a more luxurious option that is preferred by most of the Indian tourists to the area.

This was a stark contrast to any semblance of a conversation that I had with Ricky, who drove me to Cherrapunjee from Shillong a few days prior. Ricky was born and raised in Shillong to a poor family and didn’t seem to have any living hopes and dreams… or perhaps better worded, any dreams he had were shattered by the reality he faced. Nam, on the other hand, had a very supportive slightly better off family, does a very similar job to Ricky, but has all sorts of dreams that he is actively working on. I also couldn’t help but wonder how much environment played a role as well. Nam seemed to be living more of a “wholesome” life with a stable family, which is generally easier to do in a smaller village. Having the same type of stability in a city like Shillong inherently requires a higher level of finances, not to mention any negative influences that might exist in the city as well. I know it’s far more complicated than that, but I guess it felt as though Nam had extra help from growing up in the community he did.

Along the drive back, Nam pointed out a town that had decided to go green and clean – they had wastebaskets along the roads every 50-100 meters and employed street sweepers to pick up any trash that passer-bys might toss out of their cars. Apart from dust/dirt, the town was spotless. As I was admiring the nice job they had done, all of a sudden there was trash strewn everywhere. I asked Nam and he said we had just passed into the neighboring town. Absolute night and day difference.

Nam dropped me off at my new Shillong hotel in a different area of town called Laitumkrah that Pali from the Pioneer trip had been raving about a few days back. From Cherrapunjee, I was able to find a hotel on the internet and call them to make a reservation, all due to my borrowed SIM card. Connectivity really makes all the difference in the world.

After settling into a triple room all for myself (that’s all that was available), I walked around the neighborhood and there was definitely more restaurants than in Police Bazar, but it was a far cry from being a tourist haven as I had been used to finding when I’ve traveled anywhere in the past. There’s just not really a foreign tourist trail here. And I’m really pretty sick and tired of hanging out on my own, so I opted to just read or watch TV and hope that the time would pass by quicker. By the time I went out for dinner, everything was closed and I ended up getting a pizza that I had to take back to the hotel. That sounds really sad and pitiful but I was actually perfectly fine with that.

The room was really really cold though. You know how when you get really cold to the bone, it becomes really difficult to get warm? That’s kind of what happened to me. Since I had decent WiFi at this hotel, here’s an actual gem of an exchange when I texted Julia about this problem:

P: It’s frickin cold here. Damn lack of heating…
J: You can rent a heater for your room. Cough up 300 rupees.
P: True.
J: PARAAG MADDIWAR!
P: Yes?
J: That’s less than $5 dollars. I just looked it up. You already saved a lot by using this hotel. Go rent a heater!!!
P:
J
J: I have no sympathy.
P: I’m a real man.
J: You’re a turd.
P: That reminds me.
J: Yes?
P: I need to use the bathroom.


If any of you actively follow my Facebook feed, you already know that this is a common type of conversation between us. I did end up renting the room heater. I was very glad I did, but I’m also mildly surprised that it didn’t burn the place down. One look at it and I think you can understand why. I made sure to keep a clear 3ft perimeter around the thing at all times.


Saturday, December 17, 2016
Today was a pretty chill day. I had all day to kill really, and I did that by doing a whole lot of nothing and not even really venturing out that much. I wandered along a street for a bit in the morning but it got boring real quick, so I wandered back. That’s really about it. I’m done with Shillong and ready to move on. Yes, that rhymes.

So the more memorable things of the day were really the meals. For breakfast at the hotel, they had the standard staple of poori (a fried dough-style bread that poofs up) and sabzi (a potato-based curry dish) that every hotel basically carries. It might as well be the oatmeal of India. What was memorable about breakfast is that there were apparently about 50-some men staying in the hotel that were part of some sort of travelling Indian orchestra. I thought about striking up a conversation with one of them to find out more, but I didn’t have the energy. As I said, I’m ready for this phase of the trip to just be over.

For lunch, I went to some Caribbean-hut-like looking place a few blocks from the hotel. The food was not that great. But what was memorable was that they apparently only owned one record and chose to play that one full blast. And the machine they were using was also apparently stuck on single-track repeat mode. So after listening to some random Coldplay song about 6 times in a row, a restaurant employee took some mercy on us eaters and changed the track so that we could listen to a different Coldplay song multiple times over. I think this must be their tactic to keep guests from lingering too long. However, the food being crappy is probably already handling that job for them, so they may as well either turn off the music or figure out how to turn repeat off.

Dinner was at a Chinese restaurant nearby called Déjà vu that got super-high ratings on TripAdvisor. That’s a really strange name for a restaurant… it makes me think that patrons vomit the food and get déjà vu from tasting it twice. Either that or maybe it may have once been a strip club. After being seated, I was beginning to think it was the latter. The place was swank and tricked out like they would have a dance party at a moment’s notice. I ordered some pork dish because it sounded good, but the owner quickly came over and asked me what I was looking for. After I explained, he made a suggestion to adjust my order and I went with it. I’m so glad I did – the food was absolutely amazingly tasty. On top of that, there was a live solo singer in the other room that was providing accompaniment for many of the diners, and I quickly wished I had been seated over there. I considered asking to be moved there after my meal was complete and just having a drink and listening. But then I remembered that I just wanted to go to bed and get the hell out of Shillong. This is really unlike me, I know. 

Sunday, December 18, 2016
My only job today was getting to the Guwahati airport for an 8pm flight. That’s it. But that also meant that I had a lot of time to kill. So I killed time in the morning and then checked out at noon to go off in search of a shared taxi to the Guwahati airport. The hotel reception told me that the shared taxis leave from Police Bazar, so the bellhop flagged down a shared taxi for me and I crammed into the back of a Maruti Suzuki clown car with 3 of my new best personal brown friends for a 7 minute ride in pain for the low price of 20 rupees.

At Police Bazar, the hawkers were yelling out “Guwahati, Guwahati, Guwahati”. They weren’t, however, clicking their red-sequined-shoe heels together, so they didn’t disappear and wake up from a bad dream. Instead, I yelled back Guwahati Airport and a small gaggle of hawkers fussed and fought over me. I followed the winner to a pretty nice sedan and then waited patiently in the back seat of the car for about 30 minutes while he tried to find other passengers. He tried to convince me to pay 1000 Rs and we could leave immediately, but since I was in zero rush I was happy to wait and just pay the quoted 400 Rs price, much to his dismay.

And when two other riders finally showed up, I sang out loud “Shillong, Farewell, I hate to say goodbye” from Sound of Music as the city faded away in the rear window. I was really looking forward to seeing some familiar faces after the chaos of the last few weeks and I was just a short flight and a few hours away from just that.


Tidbits:



  1. Nearly all of the meals I have been served in restaurants come with the very Indian condiments of sliced green chili peppers and sliced raw onions in a small plate. When I was growing up, we always had the same plate of condiments at the table as well, though we also usually had cucumber slices as well.
  2. Indians here refer to ramen noodles as “maggi”, which is the prevalent brand name of ramen sold in India. And even though it comes from a 15 cent pouch, it’s somehow often seen as higher status that homemade food, which is far far better.
  3. Personal space is not a thing here in India. Even in airplanes, the window passengers are expected to squeeze by seated aisle and middle seat occupants because it’s not a big deal if the window passenger’s legs rub up against yours or if their butt passes by inches in front of your head.
  4. I haven’t really seen much road rage here, even though people drive crazy. I think it’s because not everyone drives here which limits the pool of drivers (the meek either have a driver or get in a taxi) and that most drivers here drive similarly enough that the other drivers know what to expect from them. I’ve seen drivers get upset at an action from another driver, but they seem to get over it quickly. Then again, they probably have to so that they don’t get in an accident.
  5. I’ve seen almost no one here drive while on their cell phone. At home, it seems that greater than 75% of drivers (and nearly 100% of women below age 30) are on their cell phone without a headset or speakerphone. Not only that, I’ve seen multiple people pull over to talk on their phone when they receive a call.
  6. People here seem to wake up really early with the sun (6-7 am), but somehow work doesn’t seem to start in earnest until nearly 10am. As a result, lunch is generally around 1-2pm and dinner 7-8pm.