Sunday, March 25, 2012

Rishikesh



Rihikesh is the given place for gurus, sadhus, pilgrims and seekers from the east and west alike. There is a myriad of ashrams, temples, yoga and meditation places all posing the apparent risk of ‘spiritual shopping’. It is situated at the foothills of the Himalayas, on the side banks of the holy Ganges where the water is still fairly clean, and very scenic with the turquoise blue water coming down from between the forest-clad hills and clusters of various pastel-coloured buildings nested at the sides of the river. Between the river-banks there is a walking bridge where you also encounter motorbikes, cows and climbing monkeys with no sense of heights. It is a place I long wished to see, and it has been good to be here for a few days.

Mostly I have taken it very easy, and I have met some nice fellow travelers from England, Portugal and the U.S. A couple of days I went for satsang at the ashram of Prem Baba. He is the spiritual teacher of some of my Norwegian friends, so I wished to go there and listen to his talks. So much light, love and compassion flowing there along with the most beautiful music and singing. Truly a place for the heart to open!

I did bump into a couple of friends there, always a good feeling while away, and had lunch with one of them at Ramana‘s garden, a well hidden gem of a restaurant with excellent food where all the profit goes to an orphanage next door.



A couple of evenings I witnessed a fire and mantra chanting ceremony at the riverside. It started at sunset and the drama went on building up for an hour or so. At the end little lights are sent off down the stream with good wishes and prayers.

The last day I made an effort to go and see the legendary Maharishi Mahesh Yogi ashram, where the Beatles started their spiritual endeavors in 1968, and where many of the songs that later found their way into the White Album were created. However, the ashram was abandoned in 1997 and the jungle is taking it back bit by bit so now you have to have one of the forest guards open the gate for you for 50 rupees. Then they refused to let me in unless I payed another ‘local guide’ to take me, because they claimed it was unsafe for lone women to be there. I was a bit short of time and was not up for negotiating this common paying-extra-game, so I turned at the gate. Close enough.

I do understand why people stay long time in beautiful Rishikesh, but for me it is time to move up to Dharamsala.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

First glimpses of Delhi



Staying back in Delhi at this point was bit unplanned but I am really happy it happened. I had a couple of days to reconnect with my Australian friend Phaedra that I met in Tel Aviv which was absolutely awesome. From my first few impressions I like Delhi very much, bearing in mind I have mainly been exposed to the privileged areas of the southern parts of the city. Delhi feels like the gateway to the north, which I have been longing so much to see. So forgive me for trembling a few moments at the doorstep..!

The first day I spent park and garden-grazing my way up to the Bahá'í House of Worship, commonly known as the Lotus temple. Since its inauguration in 1986 the building and its architect, Fariborz Sahba, have won many awards for its extraordinary construction.



There seem to be a lot of green areas mingled into the urban landscape. At this time lots of flowers are blossoming, and the temperature is also summer perfect. In one park I found a new acquaintance, a tree without leaves but with massive red flowers. Never seen anything like it before. This world is full of astonishing beauty!



Saturday I spent with Phaedra at the Hauz Khas village and Deer park, with its bambi deer who keep their white spots even as they grow up. Cute ones! The greenery is interspersed with old Mughal temples which makes the place quite enchanting. We looped around the ruins of the Madrasa of Feroz Shah, and I just love feeling the wings of history sweeping over me at these old pale pink monuments…




We caught the sunset from a rooftop restaurant overlooking the very-green lake and the very-green trees surrounding it. How to get onto the pathway encircling the lake from the park remains unsolved, it is just there seemingly without connections. Have to look into that next time around!



Hauz Khas with all its trendy little designer boutiques, antique shops and creative rooftop restaurants gives you sort of a London Greenwich or Camden market feeling. It has a very nice vibe and I do hope to have a budget for some shopping here once it is time to fly out from Delhi!

The afternoon before leaving, thanks to a Fjällräven backpack, I started speaking to a friendly Swedish/ Danish couple. The place where we found each other was a bit off the track so we decided to jointly go for a coffee at the new Bazaar instead. They too were designers and we had a very good time together before it was time to catch the night bus up to Rishikesh.

Bangalore revisited



I had two missions in Bangalore; the first one being to visit my host family from the time I was there doing fieldwork for my master dissertation, the second one to do the Art of Living level two course.

Madan, my guest teacher from university, is like a brother, so it was very good to see him again. He is always at least one step ahead of himself! I cannot keep up his enthusiastic pace even for one day, but I did my best to accompany him on a tour around town visiting a few people. Then he went off for work in Singapore. The family has two adjacent apartments, Madan has the one, where my room also is (yes he insists it is mine!) and next door are his sweet parents. They too are like family, I even call them Amma and Appa. Happy to see they were both in good spirit.

Ever since my first Art of Living course, which I did here six years ago, I promised myself if I ever do the advanced level course I do it at the main ashram outside the city. It is situated in a beautiful place on top of a hill and down a valley with lots of trees and flowers everywhere. The Art of Living organization is represented worldwide (even in Malmö!) and besides yoga and meditation ‘adjusted for the 21st century’, they have life style changing programs for drug and alcohol addicts and do a lot of good social and educational work. But it has turned into a big business too, and do I feel awkward about that. Nonetheless, I enjoyed the course and it felt like well invested time. When we arrived the teachers told us that there we had nothing to do during the whole course, which was true. Basically only sitting for meditation and being quiet. It was very good indeed, silence is very powerful. My main problem with it is that I do not want to speak even after! ‘Guruji’ Sri Sri Ravi Shankar (no, not the Beatles one) was not at home but his smiling presence was still around.

My retreat at the ashram ended with the beautiful Monday morning puja (ceremonial offering and chanting). The mantras that were chanted created intricate webs of sound, serving as keys to different levels of consciousness. You can travel with trance music for sure, but you can travel longer indeed with mantras!

Back in town I revisited a few of my old hangout places and went for walks, checking my inner Bangalore map. I also acquainted myself with a cold, so I was not on top of my energy. Anyway, one of my best places is the informal café in the back yard of the Fabindia store in Koramangala. The store itself is highly inspirational with good quality fabrics, interior design and clothes, all mixing tradition with the modern. Not wishing for anything more than inspiration, I sat down with a mango lassi and a magazine like I used to do. Perfect on a warm afternoon when the streets feel too busy and dusty.

The traffic situation in town has really gone from bad to worse since I last visited three years ago, infrastructure has not been able to keep up with the rapid population growth. Already in this short time I had enough of air pollution and traffic that does not even move. Anyway, missions were completed.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

The land that time forgot



I never intended to go to Hampi, but in India a journey always directs itself. Since I was going from Goa to Karnataka and the inner resistance to an 18 hour train ride was not transcendable, I decided to take the night bus to Hampi, get a night of good sleep there and then continue on another night bus to Bangalore. With the ‘little’ added bonus of seeing the enchanting sites of ancient Hampi. Well. Sometimes one should just go places! I am so glad I did.



Life had a few nice things in store for me. It started already on the night bus where I shared the seat with Melanie, the loveliest lass from Scotland. We had the same amount of time to spend and similar ideas of where to stay and what to see, so we decided to share the experience. We took the little boat over the small river to ‘the other side’ in Hampi, a bit off the hustle and bustle of the more touristic areas, which proved a very good decision.



Volcanic eruptions have created a vast landscape of giant boulders, and it feels totally like being on another planet, maybe like Planet of the Apes! Well it is at least said to be the birthplace of Hanuman, the Hindu monkey god. Do bear in mind that the pictures really do not make the place any justice. It is an absolutely breathtaking place.





Hampi is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site at the banks of the Tungabhadra river, and used to be the very heart of the Vijayanagara Empire from the 14th to 16th century. Most well-known is probably the Vittala temple with its stone-chariot and musical stone pillars. Lonely Planet and other guidebooks say that it may be dangerous to stay at the sites after sunset due to risk of robbery and the like, but I believe that is when the dinosaurs come out, and they just don’t want us to see.



At the Virupaksha temple I had little baby temple monkeys swinging in my shawl – they are totally mischievous fellows!! They would have robbed me of any food if I had some. Lakshmi, the temple elephant, did not say much but was happy being stroked on her rough elephant skin.

Everything makes your eyes widen, and along with the Vittala temple I found elephant stables, the Lotus Mahal and the Queen’s Bath to be the highlights. Oh yes indeed I would like to have a bath like that, with a soothing swimming pool size bath embellished with pretty pink ornaments! It is intriguing to imagine Hampi at the height of its day with elephants, horses and all the paraphernalia of a wealthy culture.





The second day we rented bicycles to get a little further away. I liked my pink Miss India bike even if I could not get my Scandinavian legs straight. After climbing the many hundred stairs up to the Hanuman temple we met the Hanuman guardian (and collector of money for keeping an eye on the shoes that you have to remove). The temple is in use and while we were up there the devotees were chanting so loud as to be sure they really awakened the monkey gods. The view over the landscape from up there is stunning.




You could explore Hampi for days on end but I feel very content with what I have seen in this short time. The stay ended at the Mango tree restaurant overlooking the little river at sunset. Best thali so far! On a banana leaf as it should be!


Bye Arambol



Arambol kept me longer than I had planned, but prolonged stays always happen for a reason, or maybe two. It is just a feeling inside and you know if it is time to stay or leave. All you have to do is to listen and follow.

Well, I had one practical reason to stay around for a while, since I happened to put myself in a not-so-convenient situation. Ahead of this journey I had super-check on everything – I even started packing a month in advance which has probably never happened before in world history. There was one thing I missed though – that my visa-card expired in February… Thanks to wonderful Carlos & Christina from Ängelholm who brought the new card here, I can happily continue my travels. It must have been the longest mission ever for a postman, respect for that!



The last week I found a very good Kundalini yoga teacher and that gave me lots of inspiration for practice and chanting. It worked really well to set the inner peaceful alarm and get up in time in the mornings. Well, the cockerel in the back yard helped too.



I left Goa with the sweet taste of a last adventure that took me around to some places in the north of the state. To Panjim, the main northern city, and the tranquil sites of Old Goa with their magnificent Portuguese cathedrals near the Mandovi river. To the vibrant intensity of the Saturday night market at Arpora with its laid-back hippies, Kashmiri traders and pulsating trance music. Outside the market a Go-cart-track that had to be tried out, and somewhat to my own surprise, I absolutely loved it! Now I cannot wait to do it again.

Arambol gave me good space for reconnecting and healing, time to get the cold winter out of my body. Thank you for a restful vacation on your beautiful beaches that were my home for five weeks! I already miss the ocean…

Cozy places, good food & friendly people



Even in a few weeks one creates habits! I have a few favourite places to eat and hang out which I frequent most of the time.

The interior design of the restaurant at Cheeky Monkey where I stay seems inspired by Thousand and One Night and it is really convenient to have a superb restaurant at your doorstep! They offer absolutely awesome salads and pizzas (think I only had better ones in Venice!). There are not too many restaurants in this country where I would dare to have fresh veggies and salad leaves, but here everything is super fresh. If that is not enough, perfect homemade pasta and noodles with prawns and roasted vegetables are also on the menu. And, dare I say, their hummus is almost better than any one I had in Israel.. (I said almost, ok?). The owners and staff are the friendliest ever and make sure my every wish is met.

In Magic Park as I mentioned before they have the most nutritious and yummy food, the Sunday special evening buffet is a classic. In the afternoon a sparkling pink ‘Galaxy’ is perfect – a homemade probiotic grape champagne that gives the system a re-boost in the heat of the day. My no-sugar diet is working very well and it is a total relief not to crave sweet things anymore, feels like I got a whole new space freed in my mind – more than two months now! Nonetheless, once in a while I indulge in the M-P-non-sugar-chocolate-pralines :)

For Indian food I have mostly returned to Kinara, a kind of hidden away restaurant with good food and neat prices. It is the best place in Arambol for thali – a genuine Indian meal with sambal, vegetables, rice, chapatis, papadums, pickle and curd. I like to sit in their garden when it has turned dark and see the stars twinkle between the palm leaves.

At the end of my stay I have developed a habit of having a banana-pineapple-coconut-pancake-breakfast at a thai place called Marum. It is a very relaxing café to sit and have a chai while using the wi-fi. The white painted rough wooden walls are decorated with of flowers, coloured lights and chalk-on-blackboard signs. Cane furniture and coconut mats complete the simple yet beautiful style. It is mainly an evening place and the staff are working late so they never open on time in the mornings. A few times I have been waiting outside talking to one Indian woman who works there in the early day. It has been so interesting to hear her stories and opinions about things in society. It is not so often you get to talk to a woman like that, it is usually the men who take care of the business and do the talking! Every time my standard breakfast is ordered she knows I am there and she comes out to say hello.

Finally, I have spent hours reading in company of a latte macchiato in the shade under the mango tree at Re(love)ution. Lucky for me coffee here is so weak even I can drink it! Saturdays I have often had a treat of a cheese plate with two gouda varieties, smoked buffalo mozzarella and a freshly made cottage cheese. Yum! There is a nice crowd hanging out here in the daytime when the afternoon is too hot for other things, so I have enjoyed talking and making friends. On the reading list was poetry by Tagore and Jim Morrison, Paolo Coelho’s ‘Veronika decides to die’, Kahlil Gibran’s ‘the Prophet’ and ‘Halfway up the mountain’ by Indian author Kiran Khalep. Can easily recommend all of them!