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Posts Tagged ‘Indian adventure’

Whilst living in Calcutta, I fell ill. I’d had malaria three times earlier and this felt similar, so I got rather worried. As I got rapidly weaker my Indian father decided that we couldn’t wait till the morning for the private hospitals to open. We had to visit a local overnight clinic.

With the prayers of the rest of the family we were sent off the buzzing, scented, loud, kerosene-lit night of Calcutta. The city felt peaceful to me but it was so poor that desperate acts of violence took place sometimes. My middle-classed family had a rule of always being home before nine o’clock in the evenings, for personal safety. Even the adult men of the family would not, if possible, move outside of the house after dark. With me they were extremely worried as I stood out from the crowd so much. They never let me take a walk alone, even at daytime, without a family member as an escort or their car and driver hanging along.

It felt restrictive, even suffocating to a woman who’d taken care of herself for years and years and traveled alone in much more dangerous places. But I lived with them and tried to respect their culture and manners.

So, this was a unique opportunity for me to experience the city by night. Electricity worked virtually nowhere so oil lamps were burning here and there as cars, rikshaws, cows and donkeys competed at all hours for the reign of the streets. Streetchildren and stray dogs slept on the muddy pavements.

Everyone stopped whatever they were doing as we passed by – I certainly was the only blonde there, amongst millions of locals.

Otherwise a normal seepia colored night in southern Calcutta. Beautiful in it’s own way, and so alive.

After more than an hour, we reached the clinic. A dirty tiny hut with roof and walls set up out of sheets of metal. Heavy rocks were placed on the roof to keep it in place, in case of storm or wind.  The floor was soil, covered by litter  – I even spotted  a few used needles. A tiny oil lamp in the corner.

I congratulated myself for having carried my own needles along, all the way from Finland.

There was barely enough space for a schackled bed and a tiny chair. I lay on the bed as the doctor sat as far away from me as possible.

Quite soon I realized that although we both spoke English, we didn’t speak the same language.

He thought maybe I was pregnant. Although I had no experience on the topic I did know that high fever and cramps were not classic symptoms.

He, on the other hand, refused to consider malaria as it barely existed in this part of Calcutta. Still waters were more frequent in the North and consequently malaria was more rampant there as well. He just couldn’t understand that I traveled. Not only from one part of town to the other, but even to other cities.

Stubbornly he concentrated on the possibility of Pregnancy. But as I was an Unmarried Young Lady residing with a Very Respectable Local Family these things could not be mentioned around me. He went around the issue like a cat around some hot porridge, with coy references and veiled innuendo that absolutely infuriated me.

Finally, as he refused to consider other possibilities but the unmentionable, I got frustrated and just blurted out: “Look. I’m not pregnant. Whatever is wrong with me, it’s something else. Please figure out what.”

The good doctor was embarrassed to the core. Cleary, he wasn’t dealing with a lady.

After the very culturally shocking examination (or lack of it) I was in for another jolt.

The doctor wouldn’t discuss his diagnosis with me, but with the senior male member – the head – of the family. There I waited, so upset that I wanted to cry, as he told my Indian father that I was most likely suffering from an ectopic pregnant and was in deep denial of the situation.

Uh-huh.

Quite some lessons for a Twentysomething Finnish Woman who had taken care of herself independently since high school.

But my Indian Father wouldn’t budge. I’d told him I wasn’t pregnant and whatever a doctor told him was irrelevant.

As soon as the hospitals opened he took me to the best one.

This time, the place was huge. A clean gigantic white building equipped by all possible modern tools and machinery.

My doctor, an elderly man, sat behind his desk. He talked only to my father and never even looked at me.

His assistant, a female nurse, asked me a list of questions and felt my stomach – apparently it wouldn’t have been appropriate for a man to touch a female patient.

After this examination, the men went to another room to discuss the diagnosis. This time the conclusion was homesickness. I must have been missing my family so much that my health was suffering.

The prescription was love.

How very Indian.

But I wasn’t able to appreciate the humor in all of it as I was still shaking and shivering with high pitches of fewer.

The whole family camped around my bed determinately showering me with their love and affection. Just like the doctor ordered.

But then, very surprisingly, I did get better.

Who knows.

Maybe the latter doctor was right and it was all the love that finally healed me.

(PS. I’m is so boringly Western throughout that I still believe it was a mild case malaria that got cured by itself.)

~*♥*~

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There is a little, very holy city called Pushkar in Rajasthan. Once we spent some time there… Encountering saddhus – holy men who had given up all worldly possessions and aspirations – striving only towards enlightenment.

Life in Pushkar was like it has been for thousands of years. Slow. Spiritual. Strange.

With cows galore.

Every day people would come to bathe in the holy lake. Saddhus gathered and lived as close to the holy water as possible.

There was nothing touristic about Pushkar. It was thousands of years old, spritual and real.

The town had some serious rules as it was starting to draw in us unruly Westerners. The city authorities actually literally forbade opposite sexes from holding hands or engaging into other indecent activities publically.

Every evening there was a march through the city’s narrow main street, with an elephant (dressed and painted in her best), horses, camels and a huge podium for a golden elephantine figure of god. There were all possible instruments making loud music – that I’d rather describe as cacophonic noice – and some holy men with nude torsos surrounding the Godly figure.

The whole recital was deeply respected by locals, and totally peculiar to the rest of us. But impressive nonetheless.

The backcountry of Rajasthan was so cheap that we were able to stay in an ancient palace of a maharaja – and after the dusty camelrides that really was sweeeeeet

I did yoga on a breezy rooftop with a local yogamaster very early in the mornings or after sunset, as the temperatures soared well above 40 at daytime.

A very sad characteristic of Pushkar was that there were plenty of women there, who offered to read or predict the future from men’s hands. The prediction always happened in some little hut nearby. The code was clear; if a woman said she was from Jaisalmer (city closest to the Pakistani border) and wanted to read an man’s hand -and touched the hand while proposing to read his future (men and women simply don’t touch each other casually in India) – she surely was a prostitute. So many of them were very young, and almost all were carrying babies with them. It was very difficult to understand the phenomenon deeper, as all the Jaisalmeri women I met were illiterate, unschooled and spoke no English. But they were extremely kind, sweet and welcoming to anyone who bothered to give them a little smile or take a moment to admire their babies.

The sunset from the balcony of our palace was absolutely stunning. Breathtakingly beautiful. Although I took hundreds of pictures of it, I couldn’t quite capture it’s exquisiteness… This is as far as I got with my pocket camera.

Pushkar has a soft spot in my heart because I felt how real it was. Is.

An authentic piece of a continent that is India.

~*’*~

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