Post-Culture Shock
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »It took us about a week, but we’re just about over the culture shock India hit us with. Our stomachs are acclimating to the food, our ears are used to the constant din of car horns, our noses have come to expect the worst, but we’re still grappling with the poverty. I’m not sure we’d ever be able to get over that.
We spent a few more days in Nainital, where we hiked and hired a paddle boat shaped like a swan and joined the Boat House Club so we could drink beers on the deck overlooking the lake. Then we hired a driver to take us west across the Himalayas to Rishikesh. We drove on some of the worst roads either of us have ever been on to get here. Innumerable mudslides have washed out much of the asphalt, leaving, at times, very little actual pavement. A good portion of the 13 hour drive was essentially on a one-lane road with a new curve starting as the previous one finished high, high, high, high above the valleys that rolled on below. Sometimes the road was nothing but some dirt and huge rocks and potholes for dodging. Needless to say, there was very little in the way of guardrails and almost no shoulder. Our driver was a pro, though, and he got us here safe and sound — no thanks to our silent, white-knuckled backseat hoping, I’m sure, but he pretended not to notice our hushed anxiety.
Rishikesh is the town the Beatles visited during their spiritual quest. Surprisingly, after three days here, I’ve yet to see any sign that they were here. I thought for sure there’d be plaques (The Beatles Ate Here!) and souvenir-type stuff all over the place. Thankfully,that’s not the case. This town is a very holy place in the Hindu religion. Pilgrims visit so they can soak in the Ganges and begin pilgrimages up to temples in the surrounding mountains. There are also lots of ashrams where you can practice yoga, massage and other spiritual healing enterprises. Barb is at a yoga class now, and she’s got three more scheduled for tomorrow. I plan to search out a newspaper (not easy to come by here) and watch the Indians and the monkeys (who hang out on the suspension wires waiting to grab an ice cream cone or a bag of grapes from bridge-crossers) cross the Ganges on the footbridge that spans the river.
Today we took a hike up to a beautiful waterfall in the mountains outside of town with some new friends we met here. It was a fairly steep climb in very humid weather, so we were all drenched by the time we got to the top, passing several different falls and pools along the way.
We will likely spend the rest of our time in India here in Rishikesh. We are planning a safari at a national park nearby so we can see some elephants. We’ll also likely do more hiking, yoga, reading, card-playing and relaxing. And then we’re off to Bangkok on Friday





