A funny thing happens when it storms over the ocean: the water and the sky become the exact same color. I stared at the horizon – or, rather, where I thought the horizon should be – and only saw a swath of pale grey. Two elements had become one. There was absolutely no separation.
Our aforementioned train journey from Bengaluru to Kerala was very similar, in a sense. Walking into our berth, we were suddenly at home with a handful of other people: a portly, mustachioed “uncle” of a man, his wife – “Aunty”, and this tiny young bespectacled woman who giggled incessantly at our admittedly ridiculous conversations. Like the monsoon before me in Varkala, there was no separation between us. Mangala offered food and games. Uncle offered advice. Tiny woman offered us a chance to laugh at ourselves. Throw in passing men touting coffee coffee coffee chai chai chai biriyani biriyani biriyani and it was a microscopic mobile community. We felt some sort of kinship with the tiny woman, which struck me. How many times have I been on a plane and been seriously irritated by someone wanting to chat with me? How many times have I put in headphones – music not necessarily playing – as a precautionary measure to avoid small talk? Why was I open to this exchange of humanity here but not elsewhere? Why had there always been a divide in the past but here it disappeared?
This idea of a shared experience is completely universal, I think, in childhood, but somehow we lose it as we grow older. Walking into a migrant labor school in Bengaluru, Mangala and I were happily bombarded with hugs and handshakes, cartwheels and frog jumps, and general merriment. Despite the geographical, cultural, linguistic, and economic differences between these kiddos and the first graders I worked with in Boston last year, they were exactly the same. There was still the same level of curiosity and willingness to engage in conversation with a total stranger. While every adult seems to lose the eagerness to mimic a frog (is this a good thing?), we seem to fold up into a solitary cocoon whereas the interest in others – neighbors, strangers, guy sitting next to you on the G-train – continues to flourish here.
I cannot begin to count the number of chats I’ve had as I’ve meandered around five different Indian states. They usually follow a prescribed questioning order, with numbers two and three being interchangeable:
2. What do you do?
3. Are you married?
4. And your good name?
From there, the conversation circuitously strolls, sometimes touching on family, religion, my impressions of India, and – in one very bizarre case in Cubbon Park in Bengaluru – a proposition for sex.
I declined.
I finally was able to focus on The Catcher in the Rye, one of those “classics” that I’d somehow never read before. I don’t know if I’d call it the most stunning piece of literature, but I did appreciate the protagonist’s rather stream-of-consciousness thought process. Jumping from films to depression to girls to Catholics, Holden’s notions were without borders, without separation. There were no lonely thought silos, but rather limitless musings.
Maybe I need to be a bit more like Holden Caulfield, like the grey expanse before me. Perhaps I need to remind myself to be multifunctional long after this trip ends. Such existential ponderings, though, would have to wait. After reading a single chapter, I decided to go back to bed. The sea aside, no one was awake. And hey – aren’t vacations for relaxing anyway?
Glad to read another post. You do know what this means, don't you??? You're turning into Dad and will talk to anyone. . . ha, ha!! Looks like you're reaching one of your goals to come back a changed person- good for you. Seems weird that I miss you more that you're in India...not like I see you when you're in NY, but I can't wait to see you in a couple weeks!!! Love you, little bro!
ReplyDeleteJoe it all sounds amazing! What a great way of life you've found. You look like you're having an amazing life changing time of your life!! and the pictures are beautiful as always!! enjoy the rest of your travels! I look forward to seeing you and hearing even more about them all!! Love you!
ReplyDeleteAll I ask is that when you return, you find a way to share some of your teachings with me, oh wise one : ) I will seriously need a reminder of this sort of thinking come, oh I don't know, August 30th? Miss you!!
ReplyDeleteWonderful post, Joe. I hope you will be able to transfer your thinking to your life in NY. You sound great!! And as Lyndsey pointed out --you are becoming another Baker man --able to talk to anyone!! Can't wait to see you. Be safe!! But have fun --Love you!! Mom
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