| Arrived | Saturday, 13 October 2001 |
| Departed | Saturday, 13 October 2001 |
| Last update | Monday, 20 May 2002 |
Life is full of challenges
After travelling through India for almost a month it is time for a
'personal update', isn't
it? For it should be clear that I am very happy. Does nothing ever go wrong,
then? you may wonder.
Yes, sometimes something does go wrong. You do know those moments... Your
cup of coffee falls off
your tray because you are carrying too much luggage. You are queueing for 1
hour in order to buy
a train ticket and it turns out that you've missed your connection and have
to queue up for
another 2 hours. Time after time you've been made to pay extraordinary
prices and sometimes you
just don't feel like negotiating and you end up paying those extra amounts.
When you have finally
prepared your parcel for the post, it turns out that the post office is
closed because of a
holiday. Sometimes I think this is all part of the whole experience. I am
even starting to
become patient, which is an enormous achievement for me.
Sometimes I am really exhausted. At such times I wonder, why me, why here
and what to do next?
Luckily I have a good emotional backup, so if I want to cheer myself up I
just take a look at all
my 'cheer up, girl' things. I look at my pictures (the ones that are also on
the website); I
unfold my cushion cover with the printed photograph on it (homesickness?); I
drink some water
from the cup with the inscription: 'Your strength is your sense of humour';
I cuddle the
(now black!) Year Club Bee toy; wash my t-shirt with my little niece
Marieke's picture on it; or
I hold the purple lucky stone and read the notelets people pressed in my
hand at the last minute
at the airport. Also, I've written so much in my journal that it is almost
full now.
Feeling so bad that you want to cry; no, that hasn't happened to me yet.
The reason may be
that crying when you're on your own isn't nice at all. Or because I realise
I can go back to
The Netherlands whenever I want. But what is the advantage of The
Netherlands? All you lot out
there are going to work in the rain while I am enjoying the sun and seeing,
hearing, feeling and
experiencing beautiful things. Every time I end up choosing the second
option. The main question
is: Is anyone waiting for me in The Netherlands? This all makes me realise
how futile many
problems and difficulties are.
To be honest, I have to admit that I did get a little depressed this week
after a drunk
Scotsman of about 50 years had frightened me with stories about the war in
Afghanistan etc.
(Besides he was so drunk he kept saying he was 25, because he knew what to
do with a pretty
woman like me. Who does not want to be 25?). The next morning, on my way to
the station of Mumbai,
I was still a little nervous about it all. Then I started singing songs from
'The Sound of Music',
including 'Climb ev'ry mountain' and 'I have confidence in me' (I must admit
I didn't sway my
rucksack in the same enthusiastic way Julie Andrews keeps swaying her bag,
but still...).
The strange thing is that next you meet someone (often another backpacker)
at the station and
then everything is alright again. Taking life as it is and being in tune
with what happens every
day makes life less complicated. To enjoy it is an art, and resignation is
sometimes part of it;
that is good for one's morale. Another slogan I like is from Loesje [an
organisation in The
Netherlands that is known for putting up posters in the streets with funny
and often lucid
messages]: Living takes a lot of courage. (I completely agree with
this!)
Travel mates
This member of the Bouter family is still travelling alone. She doesn't
mind; on the contrary!
It's wonderful to be able to decide yourself what you want and what you
don't want to do, to go
and see or to leave something for what it is. (I never realised I knew so
well what I want and
what I don't want). As I am not a very shy person, I get to meet enough
people to exchange
travel experiences and advice.
For example, during the last few weeks I met: Ullie and Hugh (some lovely
names again!) from
Austria in Jaipur; Toby and Jonathan from England (such British names - and
then the three of us
also watched a very British film, James Bond's Octopussy) in Udaipur. In
Jaisalmer I met Suze and
Kiwi from New Zeeland (just before I almost died laughing, he told me his
name really was
Kiwi...). On the train I met a real hero who was going to protect me against
a bunch of very
vague Indian men. Name: Ceasar Taylor... that's what I mean, you really feel
safe when you hear
such a name!
And also... 'All you wanted to know about Nanno, but never dared to ask'! I
met Nanno
in Jaisalmer at the famous Jain temple when a busload of Dutch hippies was
going to storm the
temple. I thought that HE was part of that group and he thought I was part
of that group. After
some small talk we said goodbye. Very soon afterwards, I found that he had
already visited my
website.
In Udaipur I met Joey (a typical 'man from Amsterdam'!) and Sybil from
Switzerland. There was this
cheerful lunch, and I had an opportunity to speak Dutch again!
I met Matthew on the coach to Mount Abu. His English sense of humour made me
laugh a lot. When we
arrived at the hotel, the owner asked, "A double room?" to which
Matthew dryly replied,
"Now, eh, no, I just met her on the bus...".
We have been exploring the town together for two days and watched the sunset
twice. Unfortunately
for you, my dear little Internet-friends, there haven't been any romantic
adventures or any
related obscenities. After two days we both went our separate ways
again.
Yesterday evening there was a lot of fun going on on the train. There
were five of us, all
backpackers (two girls from England and a couple from Sweden), sitting in a
compartment for six
persons. We kept on chatting. It was the first time the others were going to
Mumbai, so I could
exploit my role as a tourist information center again. At half past two we
finally went to sleep.
Today we have been lunching together and a bit later we will have dinner
together. The Swedish
couple will take the same train to Goa as me, so, in brief: it's really
cheerful (I really
appreciate contacts like these at times!).
What do you do all day?
As a backpacker you can have a tough life. My father has been wondering
for years what's the
joy of camping (Why act like a primitive when after years of civilisation we
have reached a
reasonable bit of welfare?), so he will wonder what on earth the joy of
backpacking could be.
For what do you do all day? Well, what shall I say? You try to survive?
enjoy? resign?
experience? absorb? get to grips with? think? In brief, you try to LIVE!
The day often starts with you crawling out of a train half asleep.
Depending on Maslow's
'piramid of needs' and on last night's meal, you start looking for a toilet,
breakfast and hotel.
(So, the order depends on the previous day, but I think I made this clear).
'Hotel' is the
general term for a pile of stones with something that resembles a roof on
top, under which an
Indian family lives and rents out a bed and bathroom behind a few wooden
doors in exchange for a
few rupees. So, you are glad to have all your belongings inside your
backpack, for the little
creatures always appear AFTER you have checked in and never when you first
take a look at the
room. It is as if they appear upon the smell of your signature!
I hope you will understand me correctly: I sleep in reasonably civil
rooms with bathrooms on
my own. However, you can also sleep in so-called 'dorms' (dormitories), but
only the idea that I
wouldn't be able to leave my rucksack anywhere or have to lie on it because
someone else may be
interested in its contents; or your neighbours start copulating the moment
you want to go to
sleep; all this has kept me from even considering those rooms for 1 second.
There are also rooms
with a common bathroom and that is not something I'd like, either. Going
backwards and forwards
because one moment you forget your shampoo, next you forget your towel;
undressing and dressing
again and again in a nervous manner; this doesn't appeal to me, either.
Oh well, once you have organised your 'house', it's often time for some
laundry. I do this
myself, for over here people tend to beat their laundry. You know me; don't
you touch my clothes,
for then you touch Jacq. Only the idea that the zips on my trousers may be
returned to me in
bits and pieces, make the tears well up in my eyes.
After breakfast, usually with bread or a sandwich with jam and a pot of tea
(long live the Brits!)
I start walking. The Lonely Planet is my guide (as it has helped me find a
hotel 9 out of 10
times)> I just walk around places, cities or towns I am visitting. People
often don't understand
that walking around can be nice, too. I find it the best way to get to know
a place.
I also often go out for a local meal and drink tea ('chai' = tea with
milk and sugar; when
you are not familiar with this, you should try to compare it with hot
chocolate. It is really
drinkable!) with delicious biscuits and cream rolls (a sort of pastry with
cream!). That continues
all day. In the evening I am tired and just fall asleep. The next day, the
party continues.
I need some time to think about what I want to do next and then I organise
this. I am good at
organising and planning, so it's all quite easy. It's just that over here
everything takes three
times as long as it normally would. And of course, I meet a lot of fellow
travellers, I write a
lot and I take a lot of pictures. It's one big holiday!
Last, but not least,
Now that you are all reading this, I want to ask you something. Could you
all take your hands
off your keyboards and mouse NOW and applaud the webmaster of this site
loudly:
Marc van de Geijn (yeah!!!)
He has spent many hours working on this website for quite some time now
(which is an
understatement, really) and I am quite pleased with the result. (I do hope
he will persevere
for some time to come!).
Also, now that you are clapping your hands, you deserve an applause
yourselves!!!
For every time I read my guestbook or an email, your responses make me
wildly happy. It is really
wonderful!!! So, many thanks for all your support, and until next
time...
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