Sunday, March 24, 2013

Halfway here, halfway home

This is about the halfway point for my time in Asia – I’ll be leaving India for Nepal in May, then flying back to India in June, then flying back to the U.S. a week later. 
To commemorate the halfway mark of my time abroad, here are some things I miss about the U.S., and some things that I do not miss:

I miss…
-Wandering around campus late at night with friends
-Freedom to go to friends’ rooms whenever, male or female
-Wearing less modest clothing [sometimes]
-Having access to an air-conditioned gym…ooh, also air conditioning
-Ecohouse silly times/environmental endeavors/gardening and cooking/friends
-Food: smores, mac and cheese, salmon and asparagus, chocolate chip cookies, eggs/a protein-heavy diet, kale, greek yogurt, apples
-Halloween, and excuses to wear costumes
-Western feminism
-Finding new American music, my radio show with Allison
-Netflix – mostly to watch documentaries though. Or Sherlock. Or Mad Men. Or Parks&Recreation
-Hendrix party culture

I don’t miss…
-Reality tv and the stupidity that comes with it
-American bump ‘n’ grind dancing
-Homework, stress, and work in general
-Dependence on cars rather than public transportation
-Everything being expensive
-How un-friendly people can be, in certain parts of the U.S. (compared to here at least)
-Hendrix party culture

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Spring Break (of sorts)


View of Hampi from the top of the hill. Hanuman Temple, Hampi

 At the top of Hanuman Temple hill, Hampi


Vittala tempel at sunset, Hampi

 Lakshmi the temple elephant

 Lakshmi, again

 Part of the historic Hampi tour, monument made from one huge boulder

 15th century ruins, Hampi


Sanskrit on a stone tablet, Hampi


Marie goobering around, Hampi


Marie and I on St. Mary's Island, Malpe (with McChauffe, which she carries when she travels and takes pictures with it)

 St. Mary's Island, Malpe

Last week, half of my classes were canceled because the Sociology department was going on a 'cultural tour' aka educational field trip. So Marie-Cecile, a french classmate, and I decided to go on our own cultural tour of the nearby state of Karnataka. It was a whirlwind week of traveling, as we would spend one night on a sleeper bus traveling and the next in a hotel/guest house, staying in one place for a night before going to the next. We went to Hampi, Udupi, Malpe, Mangalore, and Bangalore. While it wasn't the most relaxing trip, I had a blast. Hampi was my favorite place by far - I wish we could have stayed there longer. Hampi is a World Heritage Site, and is surrounded by strange rock/boulder formations. The city itself has old monuments, ruins of 15th century temples and statues, and is one of the most laid-back places I've visited, full of Western backpackers and good food. At one store, I bought an embroidered camel leather purse but I didn't have enough change - so the shop owner told me to keep the purse and pay him later! (which I did soon after). Our first day, we crossed the river by boat and explored old ruins and went to a small temple at the top of a steep hill, from which we could see the quaint city beneath us, including the river and hills around it. After lunch at an Israeli restaurant we wandered around and stopped to get cake at a bakery before crossing the river and walking up a hill overlooking the main Vittala temple just before sunset. As we were eating our cake, I felt something wet on my head. I looked up, and realized that a monkey had just peed on my head!! It then tried to jump after us to get our cake so we ran away. Monkeys are vicious! The next day, Marie and I went down to the river to see the temple elephant, Lakshmi, about to take her daily bath in the river - we were a bit early though, so we just saw her before she took her bath (we had to leave for the bike tour at 8:30am). Then we went on a 4.5 hour bicycle tour of Hampi historic sites, which was fantastic. Afterwards we were pretty beat so we relaxed at a restaurant for most of the day.

The next day we arrived in Udupi by bus, where we wandered around the large Krishna temple in the morning with all of our backpacking gear before taking yet another bus to the nearby fishervillage of Malpe. After getting lost at the harbor, hauling our luggage for a while, we made it to the tourist boat leaving for St. Mary's Island. We hopped on and joined the 3 dozen Indian tourists for a boat ride to the island. Afterwards, we took a bus back to Udupi, then on to Mangalore. Once we got to Mangalore we tried to find a hotel - when I realized I had lost my passport copy (which I later found) and Marie didn't bring one...so we had to visit several hotels before we found one that would take us. Yikes. Good thing I had written down my passport and visa numbers just in case! We ended up having to pay more than we wanted to, but it was okay...in the evening we went to the mall to see a movie - the new Oz movie, my first movie in a theater in India. Also it was 3D...and it cost $3 US which was wonderful.

The next day, we decided to go to nearby Ullal Beach. As we were waiting for the bus to take us to the beach, Marie bought some sugarcane juice which was delicious. Then, we saw the bus coming - but it didn't stop! Marie gulped down her juice and chased after the bus, but it was to no avail - we had to wait 20 minutes for the next one. I cannot believe she ran down the street, chasing after the bus! After visiting the beach, we went back to the mall to kill time until our bus left for Bangalore that night.

We arrived in Bangalore at 5:30am, and met our friend Leon (poor guy, he stayed up all night and then had to wake up early to greet us, and it was his birthday!) at his house. Our time in Bangalore was really fun - one of the best weekends I'd had in a while. About 10 or so friends stayed at Leon's for the weekend, where his mom kept plying us with more home-cooked food than we could eat (it was all so good, though). We celebrated his birthday throughout the weekend, spending Saturday at his house with friends and family dancing and eating great food, and repeating the party the next day at his uncle's house, where we enjoyed Indian barbecue and a had another dance party (let me tell you, it's hard to dance in a sari). Indian birthdays involve the birthday boy/girl feeding everyone else cake, then they eat some. There's a lot of food, dancing, laughter, and love. It's great. I'm going to be traveling during my birthday, but I hope to celebrate with friends before I leave Pondicherry.

It was a wonderful week - I had a great time with Marie, and our friends in Bangalore. Marie also taught me some French - mostly incredibly useful phrases like "Bonne douche!" which means essentially "have a good shower!" (See, Amy, now I am fluent in French! Just kidding) This week is a bit like another spring break because classes have been cancelled for the rest of the week due to protests by Tamils in Tamil Nadu against the mass killing of Tamils in Sri Lanka. Hmm...my blog sounds like all I do is travel and hang out, which is moderately accurate. I did take a midterm yesterday though, so that's something, right? An official came into class as I was taking my test to say that classes were canceled, but I chose to finish my test before leaving for the day...


Sunday, March 10, 2013

Livin' That Pondi Life


Over the past two weeks, I…
-Went to the Mahai Maham parade in Pondicherry, during which gods from Hindu temples all over Pondi were paraded down the street
-Had some unfortunate digestive issues and spent the majority of the week near the toilet
-Practically had a three day weekend as my classes ended at 10:30am Friday – found the atm on campus, got a coconut near the beach, and got a pedicure (for $7 US, great no?)
-Walked around Rockfort Beach in Pondi with Arun and checked out a nearby park as well as listened to some live Tamil music at the beach – there’s always something going on there in the evening. Had ice cream for dinner, yolo!
-Discovered (okay, the French girls told us about it) the most wonderful restaurant for European/American food near Auroville. Farm Fresh serves burgers, eggs, salad, sandwiches…all things that are no longer a common part of my diet! It’s also a small store, so after sharing a salad and a burger, Liz and I stocked up on the essentials: pasta, peanut butter, dates, and kombucha. We also went there for breakfast! Yum.
-Went into Pondi with two classmates, Swarna and Subhadra, and a couple of their friends for lunch. They are from Kolkatta in West Bengal so we went to get Bengali food – rice, dal (lentil sauce), a sweet sauce, vegetables, and spicy fish curry, it was delicious!
-Watched a crazy documentary about Indian feminism. Not the same issues as Western feminism, let me tell you...I was the only foreign student there but I wish there had been someone else, b/c I couldn’t tell if it was shocking to me or everyone
-Fell off a bicycle (note: it wasn’t moving) b/c my harem pants got caught on the back, so I fell off, ripping them beyond repair. Oops. Embarrassing, yes. Hilarious? Absolutely.
-Took my first midterm (internal here) in my Indian Sociological Perspectives class. Wrote 6 pages (bigger than US paper size) in an hour, then when I turned it in a classmate asked me, “is that all you wrote?” Uhhh…yes…?
- Visited an ayurvedic doctor and now have medicine that tastes like icing; after my trip this week I’ll be going back for an ayurvedic massage
-Went to the Rockfort Beach and then had dinner w/ my professor, Dr. Mili, her husband, his brother, wife, and daughter. It was really nice! I had a lot of fun – how often do you get to hang out with your professor and her family?
-Starred in a movie! Ok, not really - I was an extra in a Tamil film, so I sat in the sun all day and pretended I was a guest at a wedding. I got free food, a necklace, and 2000 rps ($40 US) as well as a Kingfisher beer – a good day, I would say, though I did get my first sunburn of the semester.
-Killed 3 cockroaches in a 20-minute period (Allison you should be so proud of me, the other girls were afraid but I was just like, yeah, that’s a huge one, lemme just smash it with my shoe!) and found one under my desk and didn’t freak out, just swept it outta my room

…and that’s what two weeks in Pondi are like. Basically. This week I don’t have half of my classes because the sociology department is going on a field trip (44 college students on a trip, oy vey). I’m going to travel around the state of Karnataka for a week with Marie-Cecile, who is from France. We’re going to Hampi and Mangalore, arriving in Bangalore on Saturday to celebrate a friend’s birthday. Then later this month I’m going to Ooty, a famous hill station in Tamil Nadu! Sorry for the lack of pictures - the water decided to cut out this morning in the middle of my shower and the wifi isn't working in my hostel so I'm currently in an internet cafe with shampoo still in my hair hahaha

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Oh, my. Mysore and Bangalore

Last Thursday, the four American SIP girls and I traveled to Mysore and Bangalore, arriving back at Pondicherry University Monday morning at 6:45, after which I went to my classes and then slept (until I decided to go into town to see a parade, that is).

Traveling there meant taking:
-A bus from Pondicherry University to the bus stand in Pondicherry (45 min)
-A private bus overnight to Bangalore (8 hours)
-A bus from Bangalore to Mysore (3 hours)

Traveling here is both hard and easy - easy in the sense that it's much cheaper than it would be at home, and I have more time/flexibility to travel during my semester in India than I would back at Hendrix...but it's also incredibly difficult. I'd never booked long distance buses/trains/etc or hotels before, and doing so in another country where the people you're talking to don't always speak English is challenging. Also our internet doesn't work very well in the hostel, so it's hard to even look things up online. It's worth all the stress, though - as soon as I get back from traveling somewhere, I start thinking about the next trip!

Once we got to our hotel in Mysore, we rested for a bit (two of the girls were sick! poor things) and then headed into the city for some sight seeing. Mysore is a tourist destination - for Indian tourists, not Westerners - and so the city is very green/full of nature, the roads are wider, the sidewalks are cleaner, there is less traffic, and people even wear helmets when they ride motorcycles! It's a beautiful city. We visited the Maharaja's Palace and explored the gardens, then took an auto-rickshaw to the top of Chamundhi hill, where we could see all of Mysore in the distance. Then, exhausted, we returned to the hotel for dinner (most hotels have restaurants attached) and I tried my first Indian wine. Result: something like sweet brandy mixed with rubbing alcohol. Bummer.

On Saturday, we hired a driver for a few hours (something I could NOT afford to do at home, but divided among everyone it came to $4 per person for 4 hours) and went to nearby Sri Rangapatnam, a historic fort. Once inside, we toured the Gumbaz tombs, Summer Palace, and the Ranganatha Swamy temple. Afterwards we split up, and Liz and I went to Cafe Coffee Day (think Indian Starbucks) before wandering around, exploring Mysore and shopping. We hung out in a park for a bit, where we got several stares - being the only white people around - and then went shopping! Mysore is famous for silk, sandalwood, and incense...and I might have bought too many scarves (6) but some are for gifts! So it's fine, right? We then walked to a nearby art gallery which was unfortunately closed.

We ran into an auto-rickshaw driver who called himself Master Blaster (I only speak the truth) who offered to show us the "real" Mysore. We went through neighborhoods and alleyways, stopping to see wood carvings being made by hand, Indian cigarrettes called beedi's made of leaves being rolled, an incense/essential oil shop, and finally a silk emporium. It was awesome.

Sunday, Liz and I took the bus back to Bangalore, where we hung out at a mall (A/C! Fancy, clean bathrooms with a bidet! A bookstore/coffeeshop where I bought a book about feminism in Tibet and a french press! Did I mention the A/C?) and then went to India's first microbrewery, the Biere Club, where we met up with Kara, Jackie, and Lauren. I'd never been to a microbrewery before...after that, we took a bus from Bangalore overnight to Pondicherry, where we arrived at the university at 6:45am. I had breakfast, went to my classes, and then slept...until I went into town to see a parade that occurs once a year, that is.


The five of us at Chamundhi Hill


Cheesin' outside of Maharaja's palace - beautiful place


The Gumbaz tombs


Mysore city square: it's a pretty well planned city, I was impressed!


A man doing wood carvings


Driving the Master Blaster auto-rickshaw! (Just kidding, I didn't really)


Wandering through the small alleyways containing woodworking shops, incense makers, etc.


The temple on top of Chamundhi Hill and the bustling market outside of it