Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Smiling, Talking, Silence

Bad News: my camera memory chip seems to have picked up a virus. My photos seem okay, i'll just have to find a computer that I can sacrifice to upload them... The anti-virus software in the few cyber cafes I've tried haven't let me copy them. In the mean time I'll go back to borrowed pics.

Anyway, Mumbai is a wonderful town. If only it wasn't hotter than blood, and if the places I ended up sleeping weren't crawling with bedbugs (don't worry there's a photo of the awful bites that will come some day) it'd be a quaint place to spend a week. The architecture of the town blends Arab, Hindi and British styles in a way that makes the place feel like London went summering in Western India.

After I spent my first night in the worst hostel ever (see guiness book of records 1999) (just kidding) I took the boat out to Elephanta Island which made me feel much better about the place. Then I made my way to a great berry pilaf lunch at an old Parsee place. Just then, after I got back to my hostel after lunch, fate struck.

"Hey mate, want to be a Bollywood extra? We'll give you lunch and pay you 500 rupees." After a quick call to my agent (who reminded me that she is, in fact, not my agent and would I please stop calling) I signed up.

Later that night I met some guys in the hostel that were going out with a Mumbai local, who turned out to also be a Bollywood scout. She was recruiting for a big film, but it was going to go too late for me to catch my 36-hour train to Dehra Dun. I'd have to settle with the first folks.

I met my costar on the Mumbai commuter train (think of those crazy clips you must have seen of public transit in Tokyo with lots of shouting and pushing). We traveled an one and a half hours to the set and got in costume. Then we sat, stood, pretended to drink, rinsed and repeated for 13 hours. A long, but interesting introduction to the life of a Mumbai extra. Plenty of people do it professionally, and make good money. So much that they won't take a speaking part because then they can't be extras anymore in case someone recognizes them. Even foreigners do it full time. Take the shady Russian, for example, who wanted to borrow my shoes.

"No," I told him "these are my shoes."

Apparently he lives in an Extra den with six other Russians who pass their days walking back and forth, smiling and talking, silently. Which is good because that's what they shouted at us all day "Smiling, Talking, SILENCE!" It began to feel a bit like a Buddhist Koan.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

a few pet peeves...

People who spread their legs on the bus who get all up in my comfort zone. Back off shorty, I know when Baba in front of me leans back it's only going to get worse so just keep to your side.

Bed bugs. Ick. And Itch. And Ick. Same goes for mosquitoes.

Deet. Go figure.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Happy Journey!

Oh, where to begin...

This morning, at 5:45 am, I quietly crawled out of my mosquito net cot and walked until I found a rickshaw for hire.

I didn't want to wake up my roommate, the other volunteer here at Ashraya, since this was not my first early morning trip to the railway station. In fact, it was my fifth.

Four other times I'd been to the crowded home for beggars that functions, from time to time, as a place to trick yourself into thinking you might get on a train.

At 6:15 I walked up to counter 30, which is kindly reserved for the special-needs population of India (being the handicapped, senior citizens, women and foreigners). "Great," I thought. "There's no one here. I'm first in line," which is exactly where the angry ticket salesman hinted, oh so delicately with his spittle-soaked-shouts, I should be. Thank God/Allah/Ganesh/Emory or whichever is the proper deity of obstacles for providing me with that glass window. I'd have to be number one to get my ticket to Dehra Dun.

Then a short, squat, oddjobish looking fellow taps me on the shoulder and says something I don't understand. "Tatkal?" he asks, "uh huh," I reply, "you are number eight." I turn to see the seven people that have been waiting since before 6:15 for the window to open at 8:00. I'd underestimated the mad rush for tickets too many times before, but I had to resign myself to my eighth-place fate. For nearly two hours I elbowed and was elbowed, shoved and got shoved, prayed and was prayed for to get this little scrap of paper, but I finally got it. Even the sweet lady who was number nine and praying for my trip got her ticket. It was a good morning.

Now that I have my ticket, I feel like I should frame the thing instead of using it.

Instead of a $250 plane trip to Bagdogra, or a less-civilized bus ride, I'll be riding the 36 hours to the northeast of India in sleeper-class style for the price of 613 Rs, roughly $15. I bought a couple more books today (The Argumentative Indian and Krishnamurti's Commentaries on Living Vol III).

The plan now is to bus to Mumbai on Monday, mess around there for a couple days and take my train on the 23 to Dehra Dun. From there I'll take a bus to Sikkim and look into a bit of trekking for a week or two. After that I'll work my way back west by way of Varinasi, Delhi, Maybe Rishikesh and Agra for the Taj Mahal. Then back south to Mumbai to fly home to the Atl.

I can't wait for my happy journey to start.

Sunday, April 06, 2008

don't even know what to call this

Apparently today is a holiday - i'm not joking here - where everyone takes sticks and branches and saris and sweets and pots and hangs them outside. i keep asking and i still don't have an answer what it's about...

Saturday, April 05, 2008

Rickshaw with a view

I haven't had much cause to go out beyond riding along to visit hospitals since I've been with AIC.

But when I do, it's always a treat. And that's mostly because rickshaws are fantastic.

These go karts get people around with remarkable efficiency - if not breathtakingly risky cornering. Riding in these things brings to mind the Seinfeld routine about taxis in new york. You could be up on two wheels, cutting people off and hitting pedestrians, but since you're in the back seat, it all seems perfectly safe. "Hm, wouldn't do that in my car."

Some friends from home are talking about participating in the rickshaw race that happens every january here from the south of india all the way to the north, which of course culminates in a cricket match.

Anyway, there's some photos up on flickr from a recent trip on the rickshaw. I've also included a video below with what it looks like to ride in one and a song I wrote that keeps running through my head when riding...



Friday, April 04, 2008

Ramu Power

Captain planet came to visit when I was in middle school.

I know what you're thinking. "He's a cartoon... how can he walk and talk in 3D?" We were all busy wondering that ourselves when he came into inman middle school's auditorium talking about how the power was ours.

He went on to ask which power we thought was the most important. Of course, we all knew that fire was the best, especially since the guy with the fire ring was SOOOooo much cooler than the others. But fire was not why some strange man had dressed in a foam body-sculpted suit to address a group of middle schoolers as a strange cartoon. No no.

He was there to tell us that the power of Heart was the most important, the most powerful.

Anyway, for some reason, this photo of ramu, the much discussed 12-toed current celebrity of AIC, seems like he's ready to use his power of polydactyly, as he routinely does, to take off in flight or maybe just communicate with animals. Who knows? He can't talk yet to tell us what he's got planned for the rest of us.

Too bad dem toes is around for a limited time only. They's a comin off.

In the mean time, count the toes in the photo below for fun.