Saturday, October 26, 2013

Rivers and Roads

This is going to be quick, I apologize. But I am attempting to create a Youtube account thing (WATCH HERE) through which you can see all the videos of places I have been and things I’ve experienced. So here we go!

40 rupees can get you a lot here, but my favorite is a trip to this part of the beach. (the exchange rate here is about 60 rupees per US dollar). One sunny day we went on an excursion up the hill by us to a park owned by the Visakha Urban Development Authority. While the park was nice, carefully manicured grass and the whole nine yards, what I loved was the part where the park ended: the beach. There were tide pools everywhere, caves, rocks, and waves crashing on all of them. I was in love.

I started scampering over every rock formation I could get my foot on. My friend has the pictures of me on the tops of the ‘crags’, so these are the best I could do. A local villager came while we were walking around these pools and he climbed into the pool right behind me, turns out it is about 8 feet deep. If the water wasn’t so polluted, it would be a very tempting dip.






A red moon over the sea: something that is nearly impossible to capture. We took a trip to Bheemily one day and as we were walking to the beach we saw the most incredible moon. It rose, low and red, over a rapidly darkening bay of black sand. Magical.










One of my mehandi masterpieces. Foot model: Jamie.










Vizianagram. Home of my favorite festival. There is no way that this festival can be done justice in words. The day started with us piling in the rental car in our best sarees and driving to a small town, Vizinagram, to meet up with a doctor that we know (who also happens to be the royal astrologer to the Maharajah). We spent some time with him and then we made our way to this building that faces the main road where the festivities happen. People started packing in below us. Anticipation weighed the air down more than the steady drizzle. Three hours after we arrived at the top of the room, the festival began! 

The worship and pooja of this particular festival involves a member of an important family strapping himself into a chair attached to the end of a 40’ pole. The said pole is attached to a rolling cart which makes its way from the temple to the fort three times (a total of 5 km). Not only does he have to stay in this chair, but he has to do so while bananas are being pelted at him from all sides. If you throw bananas at this contraption, you are making an offering to the goddess being celebrated (no extra points if you hit him). Really, it was a pretty good day!

Meet Raju. He is an 8th class student in Vizag who’s father is a fisherman, a trade Raju has already taken to like a fish to water. This kid has a great smile and even better sense of humor! He was regaling us with stories of his swimming far out in the sea to go fishing. We impressed him with our vast knowledge and command of the Telugu language. All in all, a lovely bit of communication.

Bathing in the river is apparently a common occurrence here. We saw this when we went on a YSA conference trip to a nearby city. As we were getting out of our bus to go and see the two old bridges of the city (one of it’s only attractions) we were joined by another group of people, all in red, getting out of their bus. Once we got down there we noticed that half of the other bus was in the water bathing! It is a religious act and one that is VERY India!

Here are the two bridges that we saw. The one on the right is the old bridge and on the left is the new. I love the juxtaposition of traditional and modern! Steel versus brick.










Friday, October 11, 2013

An American in India

There are certain experiences that come with being an American in India.

Whether you want to or not, you stand out. You are white. You are tall. You are big. You are loud. You don’t want to be all of these things and yet you are always end up being that person. Incapability to tan, larger bone structure, inability to whisper: all things you can thank years of evolution for embedding in your DNA. That being said, I do what I can to fit in: wear Indian dress, pull my hair up in the style here, talk more quietly, speak when spoken to, use the Indian English (a language on its own). It helps, but nothing will change my natural ability to stand out.

This last week, a friend of mine and I went to a Jain conference so she could interview people. We met up with a friend of ours and she took us into the hall to sit at the back like you normally do when late. No, the leaders insisted that we go to the front row where there just happened to be enough seats for the three of us. We, Lins and I, were invited by the head nun to give a speech about India on the things we have learned. Two to three minutes each would suffice. Uhm, okay! I have learned that it is impossible to say no here; all you have to do in response (and really, it is the only response which anyone seems to understand) is the ever ambiguous head bobble. Does it mean yes? no? maybe? It all depends on what the other person wants to hear. Generally speaking, it means yes. So we head bobbled and started thinking about what we would speak on.

We didn’t end up speaking at that conference; they ran out of time. However, we did get commemorative plaques (written in a mountain dialect which is similar to Hindi). All the leaders held onto one side and the two of us held the other and everyone with a camera proceeded to document the moment.

Guruji! Looking good at 93
Another fun vignette from India happened last Monday when the three of us ventured into the jungles to commemorate the birthday of a celebrated local guru. This guru is the leader and head of the Yoga Consciousness Trust, the yoga program I am a part of in the mornings. The morning of the festivities we hopped in our rented car and left; giddy with the excitement of taking part in something that is so very Indian. [Cultural note: The worship of gurus is very popular here. Pictures of the more influential ones are posted in bus stops, bathrooms, car windows, and just about everywhere else. Most of the prominent gurus have ‘expired’. Yet, here was our chance to see a guru who was still alive!] Upon arriving, we realized just how deep we were in India. Everywhere you looked was jungle or rice patti; palm trees of all shapes and sizes lined the road; somewhere nearby a beautiful raga (song) was being played; and the spiders hung in the trees. These spiders were literally the size of my face. They had long, spindly legs, sleek bodies, pincers, the whole nine-yards. We tried asking people about them, but no one seemed to pay them any thought; so we let them be. As soon as we walked in the doors of the ashram (it means community but typically one with a cause) my yoga instructor and some of my meditation classmates met us and took us to where they had saved seats: the very front (thank you!). I was introduced to the lady next to me, she also practices meditation with the YCT but goes to the night classes, and we discussed Deborah Kerr’s (is it c-a-r or k-e-r?) acting and how we liked An Affair to Remember. She thought it was wonderfully acted, I agreed for the most part.
I kid you not, this one is small and yet is larger than my hand.
These pictures are of the kids at the Ramakrishna School of Excellence which is a part of the ashram. They demonstrated their yogic abilities for all of us, resulting in incredible jealousy and awe.

We got out of the rental car and saw this!
 It was a ten minute walk into the jungle to get to the ashram.
An Indian Gothic

Some of the best yoga poses I've ever seen.
After the ceremony Becs, Lins, and I went on a walk through the pattis and forest. While we were discussing the finer points of the spider suspended above the road in front of us, a tribal woman came walking by us. We attempted to ask her whether or not these spiders were poisonous…neither of us speaking the other’s language. Somehow she communicated that she wanted us to go back to her village with her; so we, like the curious foreigners we are, followed. Apparently all the rice fields around were hers! We reached her cluster of thatched huts and met her family. One of her son-in-laws spoke English very well and talked with us for a bit. We asked him about the spiders and asked if they were dangerous. He wasn’t sure, so he asked his mother-in-law. I haven’t seen someone laugh that hard in a long time; she had thought we wanted to eat the spiders and couldn’t figure out why someone would want to do something so stupid! They weren’t poisonous, but they kept joking that only China and Korea do ‘weird’ things like that. Although the reaction to our wondering about the spiders was nothing to the reaction I got when trying to imitate a snake in yet another bought of failed communication. After talking with them for a while, it was time to get back. We big farewell to this lovely family and are hoping to see them again someday!


He was the cutest little guy. Had some serious talent too.
India is always full of surprises, the trick is not getting caught in the undertow. Ride the wave. Take hold of that adventure and it will take you further down the beach than you planned, but you are so glad you went. Metaphor aside, I can’t share on here everything that happens to me but when I get home and you get me talking, I can tell you stories for hours. I can only give you a taste of India. As time goes on I find that everything is merely a taste of India until you are there are are submerged in it: the flavors, colors, sounds, and sights.


TO SEE AMAZING PICTURES OF INDIA CHECK OUT THIS BLOG: http://www.wewillsurelyfindit.blogspot.in/

You'll get more than what I'm telling you here too.



The tribal woman. Just look at how
spacious the trees are!







Tuesday, September 24, 2013

The Lotus Mudra

Guess who is actually writing when she said she would? This girl! Enjoy it while it lasts.  (I started out on time. But obviously it didn't make it).

I want to talk a little bit about the things that I am learning, not just the things that I am doing. I realize that I don't add in as much about that, if anything, when I make these posts. SO if you are looking for an easy post to read and know what I am up to, please refer to the previous post: Incense and Peppermints.

I have been meaning to write this all weekend, but I just never got around to it. Sorry! I am done pretending that I can actually post things on time. So let's just go with the idea that if I post: Great! If I don't post: Great! It will be a surprise for all of us when I actually get something up.

So, I don't know exactly what you want to hear about what life is like here or what I am learning. But I will just write, stream of consciousness style, and I pray something will eventually make sense.

I am realizing just how young and immature I am. I am like a new star, I feel like I have been around forever but when I am compared with the other stars I find that my lifetime is nothing compared to theirs. I am still a star, which is wonderful, but I am no where near the maturity level of the others. The people I talk to and interview are the old stars, the sages, the gurus, they who have had a glimpse of what all is out there. Through their knowledge I can find a peace of my own and can settle into my 'starhood' and be okay with my short life. I know there is so much more to follow; I need to take this part slowly and allow it to fill me. The important thing is that I am learning to pick what I allow to fill me. There is simply too much to savor it all; it is a shame but it is the honest truth. We have the agency to choose what fills us and makes us who we are, I want it to be good things.

So I meditate. I do yoga. I find the things that I truly and honestly enjoy. Yoga is a passion that I am only realizing that I have. I used to do it back in the States, but not like here. Here, yoga is a way of life; it is a passage to finding the Ultimate Truth. No, it is not 42. It is 42 plus some. And then some. And then some. It is a part of your everyday experiences, it is a part of you. I believe that God is too merciful to allow there to be only one path of truth on the Earth. Every religion has an aspect of truth for people to cling to and to love. When you love the Ultimate Truth, you learn what that feels like so you can recognize it the next time it happens. You feel that spirit and you know that feeling comes when you interact with the divine in some way.

You know this interaction. It is when you feel the chills run up and down your spine and you just know something is right, or perfect, or especially beautiful. Maybe you feel some kind of burning in your heart that it feel you have suddenly been filled with an inexplicably transcendent mood. You feel as though your mind encompasses the entirety of the cosmos at once and that you had a glimpse of something bigger than you are. The feeling is subtle and sometimes you can miss it. This all happens in an instant, you feel it and then it is gone. The reason I bring it up is because I feel it here constantly. In mundane conversation, in the interviews that I hold, in the pooja (prayers to deities), in meditation mantras, in the examples that I see in people's lives, in my own thoughts. For some reason this environment is much more conducive to this kind of thought. There is a poem that I am reminded of: Derrick Brown's "A Finger Two Dots Then Me".

I say to him… why do I call you God?
He says ‘Because Grand Poobah sounds ridiculous.’
(Who knew he was so witty?)
I ask him ‘Lord, so many poets have tried to nail it and missed, what is holy?’

At that moment,
the planets begin to spin and awaken
and large movie screens appear on Mars, Saturn and Venus
each bearing images I have witnessed
and over each and every clip flashes the word holy.

armadillos–holy
magic tricks–holy
cows’ tongues–holy
snowballs upside the head–holy
clumsy first kisses–holy
sneaking into movies–holy
your mother teaching you to slow dance
the fear returning
the fear overcome–holy
eating top ramen on upside-down frisbees
cause it was either plates or more beer–holy
drunk beach cruiser nights–holy
the $5.00 you made in vegas
and the $450.00 you lost–holy
the last time you were nervous holding hands–holy
feeling God at a pool hall but not church–holy
sleeping during your uncle’s memorized dinner prayer–holy
losing your watch in the waves and all that signifies–holy
the day you got to really speak to your father cause the television broke–holy
the day your grandmother told you something meaningful
cause she was dying–holy

Everything can be holy if we make it, if we intentionally think of something and lend it meaning. How much more meaning would any of these experiences have if we had thought they were holy at the time? What would we have learned? 

The reason I called this post the Lotus Mudra is because that is the mudra for opening your heart and for intentioned thought. A mudra is a position that you hold the hands for yoga in order to access a subtle aspect of the body. Here is a  picture of a lotus mudra. I want everyone who reads to try to open their heart to feel that embrace by the cosmos. Open your heart to the holiness around you and feel it now, not after the fact.









I have more thoughts, but I think this should do it for today. I'll try to post more stuff like this, not just what I am doing.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Incense and Peppermints

It has been too long! And that is entirely my fault...I know I said I would write on Saturday. I just didn't know what to write about, and so I have left it until today. Wednesday is the day that the guilt of not writing overwhelms me to the point that I actually do something about it.

Update on stuff I have done:

 HOW BEAUTIFUL IS THAT?! That, my friends, is Araku Valley. One of the most incredible places on planet earth. This is the view on the drive up. Reminiscent of more tropical Blue Ridge Mountains. Oh yeah, and there were monkeys on the side of the road.






BORRA CAVES



These last few are from a service we attended at a local mosque this morning! I will try to upload some of the singing on Youtube later. The pink veils are what the women sit behind. The reason we went today was because it was their spiritual leader's birthday. Celebrate good times!



Sorry this is brief! I WILL have one on Saturday and it will be good!

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Seashells from the Bay of Bengal

I promised I would write, and here I am.

In my opinion, there is nothing that sounds quite as magical and romantic as "seashells from the Bay of Bengal". I just love saying it, reading it, thinking about it. Rebecca and I spent part of the morning on the beach today collecting seashells and trying to avoid the waves, quite unsuccessfully on both accounts. Well, that isn't completely true because we did find some shells. It is quite unfortunate that India doesn't have a good way to deal with waste; I say that because we can't swim because of all the bacteria and small crawling things that could infect us that live in that water. The water is just so beautiful. There are some rocks out and around in these outcroppings that would be perfect to climb when the tide is low. However, I value my life just a bit too much to do so.

I'm trying to think of things to mention or random incidents to describe...Brace yourself for this adventure into my mind...

Not too many nights ago, there was a thunderstorm that was unlike any I have been in for a long, long time. I don't think that I've mentioned this before, but forgive me if I have. It was about eleven at night and I had just drifted off into sleep. It was hot, so sleep was not restful. When I woke up, about half an hour later, it was POURING outside. The amount of rain that was coming down was ridiculous. Imagine a poorly filmed movie where they take all the water they can and just dump it and dump it to the point where you laugh because it was so unrealistic. That is how it was. I couldn't see to the end of the street. The palm trees around us were swaying in the wind and you could hear the rain as it hit the palm and magnolia leaves. Then the thunder. I went out onto my porch and watched it, the entire sky lit up with the lightning. I don't think I've ever heard thunder sound as though it came from the splitting of the sky before. It was as though the entire seam of the universe was coming undone with a horrendous ripping sound. I loved it!! Every time it happened, there was a reaction in the pit of my stomach that instantly reminded me of nights curled up under the covers clutching my stuffed animals. It was a kind of primal fear, it was beautiful and so exhilarating! Linsey and I were both out on the porch when those thunder claps happened and it was all we could both do to not scream. Wish you could see what I saw! But, I wish that about everything. So we must do what we can.

Oh! Here is something pleasant. If you have a weak stomach, I can promise you that you do not want to read on. So just skip to the line and all will be well. No, this is not about feces (which, again, is everywhere. I keep seeing it and the first thing that goes through my head is 'I hope this isn't human' and sometimes it isn't but then sometimes it is. Delightful). This is about my yoga class this morning.

As you see in my hand, there are two things in my hands. The one that is white and looks like a tea pot is what we, in America, know as a Neti Pot. This is something which you use to clear out excess mucus when you are sick or just have, well, excess mucus. You dissolve some salt in lukewarm water, put it in the pot, sick the spout in one nostril and turn to that side so that the salinated water runs up one side and down the other. The key is making sure that you tilt your head correctly so that it doesn't go through your mouth. I've done this at home before and it works wonders! It is really rather pleasant when all things are said and done (even though it feels like you are drowning your first time). It is a little crazy, but nothing like that little, red, rubber tube you see me holding. Now that is something I've never tried before in the whole course of my life, nor had planned to. However, the opportunity presented itself and I figured it would be good to try out. What you do with that little guy is you stick it down one nostril and you pull the end you stuck in through your nose out by way of your mouth and then you have an end coming out our nose and one out your mouth. Then you proceed to do a push-pull maneuver to get out excess mucus. Then repeat on the other side. I was a little nervous during this whole thing because I had always thought it was something that immature and crazy little boys did with noodles...but no. Here I was surrounded by people who thought it was the most normal thing in the world and I was expected to snake it down my nose. So I did. And it wasn't as bad as I thought it would be. I have been blessed with a gag reflex that is not very active, so while I gagged enough to cry.. I didn't gag as much as other people! So, bonus?

Also, to complete the scene: there is another yogic technique for purification that involves the drinking of saline water on an empty stomach and then vomiting it all back up. So while we were doing this, there were more people around us actually throwing up and not just gagging. It was a lovely scene. Everyone critiquing the various methods of how to stick fingers down the throat to induce vomiting. One man was rather vocal when he would vomit, it sounded so exaggerated. Yet, I could look up and there he was. Puking on the side of the path. When we had finished our neti procedures, we went into the yoga hall and sat down in a meditative pose. While we were there beneath the fans in a peaceful mudra, you could hear the sounds of people throwing up outside. It was delightful.. It was one of those moments when I looked around and thought I am here. Not in America. Not going to classes. Not worrying about school and such. I am in India. Wow. Slightly crazy, but I loved it! People here don't think those things are weird, vomiting and nose things. Their attitude rubs off and I found myself just enjoying the culture.

                                                  

You may begin reading again here if you avoided those last few paragraphs.

In the course of the next few weeks I am hoping to get some interviews and things done. There is a school around here for mentally handicapped kids and I am really excited because I get to volunteer there! The girl who was here before we were (well, we overlapped a week) went there every day and helped out. I just can't wait to do some good in the community! I thought there would be some NGOs or charities around here that I could get involved in when I got here, but there aren't any that I have found. Service is more a part of every day activities instead of a big deal like it can sometimes be in America. Also, since everyone has a job to do and a place in society it can be hard to get stuff done because you have to wait for the right person to come and do it. Service isn't the same because there is always someone to do something instead of needing a person to just help out.

Mmmm while I write I can hear the afternoon thunder rolling in. I love it, however, it means that the autos will be charging extra when we go to institute because of rain. Shoot.

I don't know..what else do you want to know? Just message me if there is an experience or thought that you want to hear about more or at all. We have a lot of deep discussions here about various intellectual concepts, so if you want those I can add them. I figure I'll just write about experiences and if you want to know my opinion on somethings that you can just ask me.

OHH I can Skype! So if you're reading this and you just can't bear the distance between us or you just want to chat or whatever the reason..we can skype! Honestly, I love skyping so if you want to then I am down. Add me: emilyywillis   Whenever I'm online, I am available. Easy rule to follow.

I think that about does it for today. Talk to you soon. Have a wonderful week. I'll end with a quote from one of my favorite movies: " Even though I may never meet you, laugh with you, cry with you, or kiss you. I love you." I hope that you are getting something out of my experience here in India. The reason I keep a blog is for you, in the hopes that something I do might make the smallest impression in your life to do something differently or better. If you just laugh at my stories, that is enough!

Till next time.


PS Linsey (one of the girls I am with) is a photography major and is basically a boss. If you want to see some REAL pictures of India check out her blog: http://wewillsurelyfindit.blogspot.com/

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Janglin'

The title for this post comes from "Janglin'" by Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes who I've been listening to on NPR's Tiny Desk Concerts. Love those.

I am so sorry it has taken me so long to post! I just haven't had that much to say. But I shall try to make sure that I write each week. I'll get another post up  this saturday or something and get back on track. 

This post will just have a bunch of pictures and I'll try to get some of the stories down. But Saturday's post will be better. Hope everyone is having a great week!


This is a market that we stopped by one time. People come from miles around for these one-a-week markets. They bring goats (which you can see here), fish, metal workings, ceramics, and all kinds of fruits and vegetables. Apparently the black and white spotted goats are 'auspicious'. (Everything here is auspicious to some caste, clan, goddess, god, etc)
 As we were driving along the road we came across one of the many strikes that are going on. These are the dentists protesting outside the dental college. Fearsome.

Really, all they do is burn tires and yell stuff. Even the people yelling lack the enthusiasm that should be a requirement for strikers. Only 2 out of every 50 know what the strike is about; each one is over in about 20 minutes. No harm done.
 A rice field that we drove by. Imagine white birds in the sky and mountains in the distance and you would have a fairly good idea of what I saw on the drive to Sri Mukhalingam. Still can't believe I live here.
 Siddhu (named after Siddhartha) had a ceremony up at Simhatchelum one day (he is finally of age to begin learning and therefore supplication must be made on his behalf to the goddess of learning and books). We all went up in our saree's. Everyone thought we looked so good, we even ended up in the newspaper the next day. #fifteensecondsoffame. Left to right: Rajhu (Durgha's husband and Siddhu's dad), Rebecca, Linsey, Me, and Durgha (seven months pregnant!).
 Found this little gem in the Yoga Village for Andhra University. This is the most incredible country because you can get your bachelor's in yoga here. Uhm. Okay.
 Here is the sign outside the village.
 En route to my house. All of these trees have delicate blossoms on them and here you weave them into a string that you pin to your hair. The flowers are so fragrant, it is really very pleasant. They do it with jasmine too, those are my favorite flower strands.
 A bunch of stray dogs just curling up in some cement mix before the rain came. There are packs of dogs everywhere. I live in constant fear that I will at some point be appealing to them and they will attack me. They are ferocious and sometimes their fighting wakes me up in the middle of the night.
 Krishna's birthday was last week! So the festivities were riotous and extravagant. He is a god, that is meant to be worshiped by fun and parties. Every morning he is woken up with singing and playing of music and he goes to bed after more music and the offering of sweets.

This is a mantra tent. There were 108 steps on the ground and on each step you recite the mantra: Hare Krishna Hare Krishna
Krishna Krishna Hare Hare
Hare Rama Hare Rama
Rama Rama Hare Hare
 Each one of those steps represents a bead on a japa maala (a necklace of prayer beads...kind of like a rosary). Devotees of Krishna recite that mantra 108 times every day because it is supposed to bring your mind closer to Krishna and freedom.

This is a picture of something that I was able to do: rock the Krishna idol. He is in a sort of a cradle and devotees pay to pull the rope back and forth to rock the cradle because Krishna is supposed to find amusement in this. I was able to do it for free because there were TV cameras and I was white. It was fun!

 We went to these ruins of a Buddhist monastery the other day: it was the most incredible place. Each place you went here felt as though it was holy ground of some sort. You could tell that peaceful people lived there. It was quiet, secluded, and calm. It is one of my favorite places so far. There are some pictures of me doing some yoga asanas on them, but with my face about the color of the bricks I chose not to post them.

What you can see specifically here are the rooms for the monks. Each room is about ten by ten and would house two monks. We think...
 Rajyalakshmi and Madhu! These two hang in there for everything. We put them through a lot. They are our translators and are a huge blessing. Without them we wouldn't be able to do anything, really. Madhu is putting up his "Shanti" hand. He always says that when we seem in the least bit annoyed/stressed/anxious/excited/or if we show emotion in the slightest. "Shanti! Shanti!" Shanti means peace and calm.
 Here we are! All in the salwar kameezes that are so common here. Mom, that is the bag you sent me with that I didn't think I would use...I use it all the time! I have fallen deeply in love with these pants. They are the most comfortable things I have ever worn and they conduct breezes like nobody's business.

That is a giant Buddha behind us, it was in a little alcove in the trees. We decided it would be a good place to stop.

PS Objects in picture are shorter than they appear.
 A shot from our time in Bheemli. You will definitely see more pictures of there because we are planning on going back soon. There is a university with a new meditation hall that I want to check out (it is a part of the philosophy and Ghandian studies department) AND there is this incredibly mysterious looking cemetery that we didn't have a chance to go into. The cemetery is owned by the local Catholic convent and I guess all the sisters had a day off when we went.

Oh. And the water is the Bay of Bengal.
 Here are some fishermen working on making their nets. They were all over the beach and their hands were so deft it looked like no work at all.
 That is one of the oldest buildings in Bheemli (with the tree growing out of it). It was built by the Dutch settlers, I believe. Hard to believe that it is still standing today. There are some more of the fishing boats!
 I just love this picture. It is an accurate representation of how things looked while we were there. Magical and perfect.

 A woman at the market! Those artichoke looking things in the middle have become my new favorite fruit: custard apple. Sounds really nasty, but you just split one open and it is like passionfruit meets an apple meets mangiis (sp?). I pick some up every time I see them. The last ones I had were really ripe and man...so good.
I found Narnia/Diagon Alley. NBD.



















That is all I have for right now, but I hope that I can get you some more information about my time here! Talk to you soon

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Pomegranates and Coconuts

My favorite picture that I have taken. By far.
I think I must have to write only on a weekly basis, I don't have the material to make more than one post a week! This week has been fairly relaxed; we haven't gone farther than 20 minutes from our house for the most part. Although, Wednesday we did go to see a temple because our cook's son was a part of a ceremony. While we were there (all in our saris with bindis and braids) this guy took our picture and we ended up in the local newspaper the next day! Kind of crazy how being white automatically makes you famous here. The article said that there were three girls from America who looked so good in traditional dress. That was pretty much it, but hey who am I to argue with my few seconds of fame?
Every hair place is a hair 'saloon'

I finally found some fast internet and am updating this in the break I have between lunch and yoga. Everything slows down this time of day because it is nap time. Everyone has just eaten and no one does anything till 3 at the earliest, but usually more like 5.

There isn't much news from my neck of the woods, but I guess I can fill you in on what has been happening. I am starting to settle into a schedule. LET ME CLEAR ONE THING UP: This is not a study abroad, per se. It is more like a field study. I am taking one class, Telugu, but other than that everything is up to me to decide. The rest of my time is to be used at my discretion. We are not working with the local university. That is just not how the program is set up.
My favorite depiction of Ganesh

That being said, I'll let you know what I am doing with my time.

My abode.
In the mornings I go to a meditation class in the park, soon I will begin doing a yoga class before I go to meditation. Then I come home and sometimes we have Telugu but if not then I get ready for the day. After which I go out and do interviews, study the language, transcribe interviews, read, write, or just talk with people. After lunch it is the same thing until my other yoga class (which is an hour and a half). Then I come home, get some stuff done and have dinner. I interview people about meditation and the how/why of practicing. I have interviewed one person so far, and he has given me so many insights. I cannot wait to continue talking to people!

My friend, Linsey, took this of me
when we were stopped at the side of
the road. There was this grove of palm
trees and we couldn't resist! Slight
problem was that the ground was covered
in fire ants...
My actual project involves the differences between the religions and their methods of meditation and use of yoga. I am hoping that this will lead to more in depth studies in the future. But, for the present this is something that I absolutely love to study and it gives me insights into my religion as well as this culture.

Other things that have been going on...

Each night we sit on our porch and watch the bats fly in. I don't think I've written about the bats yet, but these bats are around 18" long and swoop into the trees right in front of the house. It is incredible!
Couple from the fishing village we talked with for a while!

I'm leaving for yoga now, but I'll write more soon!

Emily

PS Opening a coconut by yourself is the most empowering feeling!