Maybe, it was
because my head was already back in San Francisco when I landed in Delhi. Or
maybe it was because it was after almost ten months of mostly solo travel. But
India was so hard for me. In a way I didn’t expect. That doesn’t mean that I
didn’t have moments of beauty. India blew me away with her beauty, with her
extreme heat, with her streets crowded with people and animals and cars and tuk
tuks and humanity. I don’t pretend to be an expert. After only a month, I saw
very little of this country that takes up an entire continent and has over a billion people. It is second only to China in population and a baby is born
every other second.
But she did teach
me some lessons that I’ll share with you.
2. It’s
electrifying. You haven’t
seen creativity in wiring until you have seen the electricity cables in India.
I will say that Kathmandu and parts of Southeast Asia were similar, but India
takes the cake with the quantity and low clearance of the power lines in the
old city of Delhi. Mind your head or your liable to be shocked. Literally.
4. You
will get harassed.
Especially if you are a woman. Well, actually I can’t speak to what will happen
if you are man, but if you are woman, especially a white, blond woman with blue
eyes, it will feel like every man on the street will tell you that you are
beautiful, greet you and sometimes even try to grope you if you get too close.
They will want to help you. They will want to know where you are from and where
you are staying and how long you are in town. They will stare. They will
whistle. You will feel like a piece of meat. They may ask you for a kiss. They
may even ask you to have sex. Now of course, that doesn’t mean that every
Indian man is out to kiss you, grope you or hope that a casual sex encounter
will occur. But they too are victims of the tourism that has infiltrated their
city over the recent years, they too watch Hollywood movies and they too can
see that Western female tourists tend to wear very little clothing in
comparison with Indian women. But when it does happen, remember you’re not
really in danger. Just look straight ahead. Don’t smile. Don’t veer off your course,
and if they offer you a service or a product or a piece of advice, just say no
5. Sometimes
it feels like it is all about the money. “Can I take a picture?” I asked the man selling food that
looked like roasted corn off the cob mixed with tomatoes and peppers. “50
rupees,” he replied. You will be asked for money from the hundreds (maybe
thousands) of beggars (as old as 80 and as young as 5) on the street. You will
be asked for a tip from the guy who watches your shoes in the mosque. You will
be asked for a tip from the guy who leads you up the tower and the one who
helps you put on the borrowed clothes so that you are covered up enough to
enter. You will be sold over and over again. “Sarees? Just try!” “Baskets? Come
look.” “Post cards! Red Fort guidebooks.” “Spice bazaar tour only 20 rupees.”
“Come with me, I can show you where it is lady . . .” Nothing is free and
everyone expects you to bargain, so get your haggling skills in order or
prepare to overpay.
6. If
it feels too good to be true, it probably is. This is probably one that I should tell myself every minute
of every day. The free couch surfing is likely a mattress in a dirty room that
that you’ll share with two twenty year old boys so that you sleep with one eye
open and hope you escape unscathed. The “pay what you like” rickshaw will want
a kiss from you and keep insisting and then be offended when you give him 20
rupees for a 3 km ride. The pants that should cost $30 but cost $3 will not
make it the three weeks left you have in your trip. There’s a reason it only
cost a tenth of the price. The offer of help from the stranger on the street. .
.it comes with strings attached. Know that if it feels like you are getting
away with something, you just haven’t heard the punch line to the joke yet.
Except for when you find that one. The guy in the tour agency that realizes
that you need a minute and maybe a chai, as you cry over the fact that the
rickshaw took you all the way back the way you had just walked despite the fact
that you told him where you wanted to go three times to drop you at a bazaar
that was likely his families and then insisted you pay him for the ride. The
guy that exchanges your money and lets you give him your ripped 10 rupee Bill
and gives you a 10 from his own pocket. The guy selling carpets that sees you
standing in the cross roads and jerks his thumb to the left, knowing that you
are looking for the metro. The metro customer service guy that issues you a new
token after you use the wrong token to get off at the first stop. The woman who
moves over in the metro to give you a place on the hand rail, after she watches
you being tossed like a bean bag with no where to grip.
9. Get
Lost. The streets of Old
Delhi are designed for you to lose yourself. Travel back in time and wander
down the street past the man that irons your clothes and the one who shines
your shoes. Past the woman chewing tobacco and spitting it on the street. Past
the cow and under the wires and step over that sleeping dog and let him lie.
Through the markets selling fruit and into the market selling socks and later
electronics and pirated DVDs. Don't look at the map. Don’t take out your phone.
Eventually you’ll turn up somewhere, and they’ll be time to ask or look and
figure it out.
14. Be
open . . .even when it feels hard.
They call Delhi, Agra and Jaipur the Golden Triangle. Partly because when you
look at the three cities on the map, they form a triangle with the roads that
go from one to the other. That’s the triangle part. And partly because of the
quantity of historical temples, forts, palaces and monuments in the three
cities. I imagine that’s the golden part, since it’s full of the treasures of
Northern India.
The
thing is that the end of April / Beginning of May is low season for a reason. I
imagine that it’s always hot in India, but to be completely honest of my
ignorance, I don’t know how hot or if indeed during monsoon season or the dead
of winter, it’s hot at all. What I can tell you is that in late April, it’s
hot.
And I am not talking 80 degrees hot. I am talking 106 degrees, scorching,
heat stroke hot.
And
everything that you want to see – the forts, the mosques, the temples are
located outside in the middle of cities that are very densely populated with
people, cows and sometimes stray pigs in the street, or goats or your
occasional elephant or camel.
I
have fended off cat calls, sexual propositions and advances from rickshaw
drivers, young men who think western women lack any semblance of scruples and
store owners.
I
have said no thank you till my lips felt numb to every young boy selling a
magic trick, to every mother begging with a disabled child in arms, to every
ambulatory sales person selling snow globes of the Taj Mahal, large, colorful
balloons the size of a small child, post cards and guide books. To every offer
of a guide service in every fort, palace and temple. To every store owner
wanting to sell me tapestries, saris, silver and more.
I
have been photographed enough to make me feel a small modicum of sympathy for
Jennifer Lopez as she tries to go to the supermarket undiscovered.
I
have walked through 300 hundred year old tombs, each marble structure
hand
carved.
I
have seen the Taj Mahal from across the river and up close and personal, each
detail painstakingly made over 22 years by 22,000 men.
I
have climbed towers to see the cities sprawl out in every direction…
I
have watched men stamping batik prints, painstakingly block by block.
I
have been hotter than I thought humanly possible.
I
have been almost as cold.
I have eaten food that made my mouth sing with joy.
I
have stood on the street and cried from frustration, heat and exhaustion.
I
have walked through four forts in an as many days.
I
have spent more than three hours trying simple to buy a train ticket to leave
Delhi, being sent from agency to agency to agency with no clear piece of information,
sweat dripping from my forehead into my eyes.
I
have stood awe struck by the sheer size of the city of Delhi and the stark
differences between the old and the new.
I
have been saddened by the extreme conditions in which many people live.
I
have side stepped around potholes, jumped over piles of trash, avoided farm
animals in the street and had trash thrown at me from a doorway.
I
have had the nicest seat mate on my train ride from Delhi to Agra, a young man
from Punjab working for the government on his way to Kerala for training. We
shared pictures of our families and our hopes for the future. And he never once
said a single, solitary inappropriate comment.
I
have had advice from my Rickshaw driver in Jaipur, an older man with very
little English, “this street – me no problem. This street you, some problem.
You, no thank you. Eyes floor. Yes?”
I
have been invited to a wedding.
I
have seen dead pigs and dogs, their lifeless bodies abandoned in murky sewer
water or dusty corners.
I
have seen children playing stickball in front of a dilapidated building, their
cries those of sheer joy. 
I
have seen women dressed in flowing saris in every color of the rainbow.
I
have been invited to young woman’s house in Delhi upon my return to redeem my
impression of the city with a local’s help and guidance.
I
have been given chai over and over again upon entering a business, an office or
a hotel with a bow and a “namaste.”
I
have been bumped around the back of a rickshaw on streets with more potholes
than paved surfaces.
I have pushed my way though crowded, city streets and wandered aimlessly down empty, rural dirt roads.
I
have been given wrong directions that led me to slide down the side of a
mountain.
I
have been taught that Srinigar really is Heaven on Earth, both in its natural
beauty and its hospitality.
I
have stood on the mountains with snow all around me, Himalayan peaks jutting up
in every direction.
I
have been treated like a daughter and fed like royalty.
I
have been welcomed time and time again to “My India,” said with pride, and am
left hoping that I too will grow to love the paradoxes embodied in this country
packed with spices, color, heat, tall mountains, rushing rivers, spirituality and extremes.