Thanks for all the wishes, thoughts and prayers for my grandmother. I am happy to report that she is in good spirits, building up an appetite, and ready to come home from the hospital, hopefully tomorrow.
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Florida
Thanks for all the wishes, thoughts and prayers for my grandmother. I am happy to report that she is in good spirits, building up an appetite, and ready to come home from the hospital, hopefully tomorrow.
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Monday, March 30, 2009
Luang Prabang to Bangkok to Amritsar
After Laos I had a whirlwind 24 hours in bangkok and then on to Delhi and today Amritsar. So far loving Amritsar. It feels like another planet. The energy and vibrancy on the streets here is like nothing I've felt in the past few weeks- actually like nothing I've felt ever. Riding in a bicycle rickshaw from the train station into town, sun shining down, so many people in the streets, packed into vehicles, all shouting, laughing, smiling, waving. So much happy chaos. I'm struck by how unusually friendly and curious everyone is here. Next up - going to visit the Golden Temple for sunset.
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Sabadee
I finally have a new camera after my old one developed a fatal lens error on the beach in Chennai. So here are some pictures from our first day in Luang Prabang.





Thursday, March 12, 2009
KK
Here is the link for Sadhguru's talk in Bellevue on March 24:
http://www.ishafoundation.org/component/option,com_program/program_id,1785/task,details/
Sadhguru in Seattle March 24
Hello! It's been a long time since my last blog update. Wanted to let seattle friends know about a great event coming up- my guru is giving a talk in Bellevue on March 24. If you have any interest or curiosity about yoga or meditation I would highly recommend! Sadhguru is charismatic, funny and of course incredibly insightful- I assure the evening will be a pleasure. Let me know if you attend! I will post details soon (having difficulty posting the link from this computer).
This morning I'm writing from the airport in Singapore as I am en route to Malaysian Borneo. The last few weeks in southern india have been terrific. Received an ancient mantra from a yogi in a cavernous room in the nilgiri mountains, watched the sunrise over the waters of three seas at the very tip of the indian subcontinent, gorged on tender coconut and fresh fish while drifting on a houseboat through the keralan backwaters, received a blessing from an elephant at hindu temple built in the 11th century, trekked through tea, coconut and cardamom plantations, engaged in a two hour conversation with a renowned ayurvedic doctor, and yesterday observed some colorful holi festivities. I'm taking just a two week leave from India but already missing it! Also looking forward to adventures in Borneo and Laos. So far I can say the singapore airport Tiger airways terminal is fantastic. Free internet, free drinking water and it is very clean. They are even giving out free candy... amazing. Love from the road!
Monday, February 9, 2009
Marriage & Meditation
The week after returning from Isha was especially great because Deb, a friend and fellow Chennai-based AJWS volunteer, stayed at my place while she was attending a mediation course at Sivananda. We had great conversations about spirituality, yoga and judiasm every morning over coffee and fruit salad before we both headed off to work at our respective NGOs.
Knowing that I'm going to be leaving Chennai soon I've been savoring all my experiences here even more than usual. I've been so grateful for the absolute wonderful group of colleagues and friends who have greeted me so warmly here. Leaving this place for my next adventure is going to be truly bittersweet.
This past weekend in Chennai was my last, and it was definitely a good one. Balaji, a friend from Seattle invited me to his sister's marriage. Wow! 2000 people and three solid days of ceremonies. So many symbols, rituals, flowers, blessings, gifts, people, drums, cameras, and delicious foods. It was a lot of fun. I wore a sari and that was fun too.
A picture of the bride and groom:
A picture of Balaji:
Sunday, February 1, 2009
Compassion
"Many times, human beings, once they reach a certain level of attainment, have an urge to be overly compassionate. Misplaced compassion always comes from your ego; you want to be the most compassionate person on the planet. Wherever anybody need anything - reach out. This is not coming from any kind of understanding, wisdom, or awareness... This problem is there among people - they want to be the most compassionate. True compassion is not about giving or taking. Ture compassion is just doing what is needed. You ave no preferences of your own; simply doing what is needed is compassion. Your revving yourself up into a huge amount of emotion and and reaching out to somebody is not compassion. This is just self-satisfaction, devious ways to fulfill yourself. Compassion is possible, genuine compassion is possible, when there is nothing to fulfill in you, you are just doing what is needed."
Friday, January 30, 2009
25 Things
1. Tender coconut
2. The 8PM rush at the neighborhood shrine: people, song and incense spilling out into the street
3. “Had your breakfast?” (morning greeting)
4. “Sit down”
5. “What did you pay for this?”
6. Yoga class commands: Relax! Stretch! Breathe! Focus! Concentrate!
7. Drinking from vessels without lip contact
8. Stares
9. Techniques auto drivers employ to solicit more money than the agreed sum
10. Girls with flowers in their hair
11. Bindi stickers
12. Bangles
13. The mysterious fluctuating availability status of various menu items over the course of a day
14. Household shrines
15. Creation, Maintenance and Destruction
16. “Is it not so?”
17. Billboards and placards advertising shops that no longer exist, or do not exist yet
18. The entire office staff sharing one email account
19. Nescafe, sugar and boiled milk
20. Locking the bathroom door closed when no one is in there
21. Hand washing after eating
22. Poop, crows and trash
23. Straight men embracing
24. Chai wallah, fruit-and-vegitable wallah, real-estate wallah, knife-sharpening wallah, tailoring wallah, ironing wallah, ear-wax-removal wallah, cotton-candy wallah, sugarcane-juice wallah, handyman wallah, fortune-teller wallah, spoken-english wallah, SAP-C++-JAVA-.NET-Oracle-CAD-training wallah
25.
Saturday, January 17, 2009
Pongal O Pongal
Monday, January 5, 2009
Happy New Year!
I returned from my trip from to the north in time to celebrate the new year in Chennai with an evening of Bharatanatyam dance (traditional Tamil Nadu style) and a visit to my favorite South Indian restaurant, the Murugan Idli House, where a delicious New Years dinner for two ended up costing us the equivalent of $4.
Many people are asking me about the cost of living so I thought I'd write about that topic a little. The dollar goes a long way here. In general I find that most things cost anywhere between one-tenth to one-fifth of the price of a comparable product in the States. My observation is that agricultural products and goods and services that are labor-intensive cost more like one-tenth. Some examples: a good lunch in a nice, air-conditioned restaurant costs about 60 Rupees or $1.25. A small cup of chai or coffee is around 5 Rupees ($.10). My morning trip to the fruit stand, yielding two pomegranates, two guavas, one papaya, and 10 small bananas, cost 80 Rupees ($1.75). Rent for a "posh" two bedroom western-style flat is around 15,000 Rupees per month ($300). The only things I've found with roughly equivalent cost are: 1)dried pasta 2)cocktails at a fancy hotel bar (both are purchased almost exclusively by foreigners).
A few words also about what I've learned people earn: a well-paid domestic worker working every day 4 hours per day may earn 1000 Rupees ($20) per month (note this is far less than one-tenth the US equivalent wage). The college-educated coordinators at my NGO earn 10,000 Rupees ($200) per month. It is not surprising that many Indians see Westerners and assume that their big backpacks are stuffed full of cash. When discussing this assumption with some colleagues, they were genuinely shocked to learn that there are poor people and homeless people in America.
It's hard not to want to help people here by giving handouts when American dollars go such a long way. But is it appropriate to do so? My observation is that giving handouts has a number of adverse effects:
-perpetuates a mentality of dependence
-handouts actually reinforce social inequality because they are distributed unequally
-encourages parents to use their children for begging
-handouts may allow the giver to feel good and move on, while doing little to truly alleviate suffering.
I'm interested to hear others' views since this is a topic I've been thinking about quite a lot.