Saturday, August 24, 2013

My Life is a Bollywood Movie


Well well, the week has flown by it feels like.  I seriously can’t believe I’ve been here for 3 weeks already.  4 months is already FLYING.  And I don’t like it.  Not one bit.

This week I feel like I’ve been able to have a good little break from Hinduism.  Well… you can’t really have a break from Hinduism while you’re in India, haha.  But I have had some fun experiences that were not so focused on Hinduism and were more focused on other things.

The other night we got to meet with a Borah Muslim.  Well actually, he’s part of a very small sect that broke of from the Borahs, which is a sect of Shi’ia Islam.  So he is pretty much part of a sect which is part of a sect which is part of a sect of Islam, hah!  Anyway, I got to interview him and he was the nicest most polite man!  They are so inviting.  The people here seriously just take you in and treat you like family.  He invited us to their mosque and some other events and it is going to be really fun and interesting to learn more about their practices.  Islam is such an interesting religion and I love learning about their beliefs.

I also made some friends in the branch!  On Sunday I went out to walk by the beach and through this park called Vuda Park with my two friends Santosh and Satish.  These guys are the coolest.  They seriously treat me like a queen… they are so respectful and kind and generous! They help me out with a lot of stuff and it’s been really cool to have friends here and also see what Indian life is like through people my own age.  Best experience at the park: they were both still in their dress shirts and the 3 of us were walking around.  A couple of people were asking them where I was from, and who I was as if I was someone important or something.  The best was when someone saw the three of us and thought that they were my bodyguards…. Hahahah.  We realized after that, well, yeah!  They did look like bodyguards in their white dress shirts, walking around with some white girl.  Hah.  Hilarious.  Here are some pics…



Look at these two! Just the cutest of friends :) haha







 And here we are on the beach... (seriously, look at how white I am! when I instagrammed this I hashtagged 'oreo'. fa real. I am a ghost.)



And then the other night they took me to an indian wedding.  Super cool and fun! (I didn't know that we were going there by the way, so I felt way underdressed in my salwar-kameez with my hair on top of my head haha.  Most people were wearing sarees, but that's ok.  It was a fun and random adventure! [please note also how crazy my hair is in all of these photos. yeah. both blow-dryer and straightener don't work here. healthy hair here I come!])

I seriously feel like my life right now is a Bollywood movie.  All it’s missing is everyone breaking out into song and dance at random moments!  But I am reminded of the movie Rang De Basanthi which is an awesome Bollywood movie… you should all watch it!!  It’s about this british girl who goes to India to film a movie project she has been working on for awhile.  She becomes part of a group of friends there (college age kids) and they all become really close as she follows them around on all their adventures and learns about them and indian culture through them and their experiences.  Anyway… there’s a lot more to the movie than just that, that’s only a very small part haha but I feel like I am that one ghostly white british girl who makes some friends in India and just follows them around on their adventures, eyes wide open through every experience because everything is so new and exciting.  At the wedding they introduced me to EVERYONE.  They were all just so thrilled to have a foreigner there.  I even had a lady (who I think is Satish’s friend’s aunt or something…??) invite me to dine with them, and to teach me Telugu, and to teach me how to wrap a saree, and to give me a saree.  Haha.  Such sweet and loving people here!!

Anyway… I feel like just hanging out with them I learn more about indian culture than anything else!  They are very aware of their culture and they have their own opinions of the good and bad things.  Yesterday I went to the church to study Telugu with them and while I was waiting some boys from the other branch invited me into the room they were studying in because the A/C was on in there (it was so hot yesterday!).  So I went in and they asked me about the project I am doing, and I told them my topic—“self discipline”.  One guy just starts out and says “I don’t think self-discipline is very hard” and I say “oh really? Why not?” and before he even gets a word in I say “WAIT! Can I record this??” haha.  So I pull out my little voice recorder, and a 2-hour interview with 5 college aged indian boys starts.  It was awesome!  We talked about freedom, rules and regulations, happiness, love, truth, the gospel, progression and potential, and the impact of culture.  I learned SO many interesting things.  Between them and other conversations and research I have done this week, here are a few key points I have learned.  I will write them as far as difference goes between America and India.  Of course there are exceptions to each, but I feel like these are things that are fairly accurate most of the time:

AMERICA: very free… tons and tons of options, that it’s almost overwhelming.  Endless possibilities.  Everyone has the potential of being great and doing what they want.  Very ambitious people, always reaching higher and seeking for more.  

INDIA: more limited.  People stay within what they grew up with or what they were taught and rarely branch out.  Not many possibilities or as much potential for progression or change.  People are very dedicated and content with their positions in life and don’t really care to reach for anything different.

AMERICA: very low self-discipline.  Lots and lots of addictions.  Honestly as sad as this is, it is a pretty promiscuous country haha.  Many people live according to their own personal desires or mostly fend for themselves.  Many broken families.  Many people act according to their emotions.  Everyone is constantly changing, fleeting around to wherever the next opportunity takes them.  SO many options that people are rarely satisfied.  Religion is present but not paid attention to and most people are not extremely religious or spiritually minded, although many believe in a higher power or being.  Very extreme in both ends of the spectrum… opportunity and success vs. bondage due to poor or immature choices and failure.

INDIA: very high self-discipline.  Very few addictions, apart from alcoholism which many have told me is the only real addiction here.  Very modest society and very morally clean… very few teen pregnancies, and most people practice sexual abstinence before marriage.  Many women still do not even go outside after 9:00 at night.  People live according to their roles in society and in their family.  The family structure is more important than the self and one’s life is constantly connected to their family… actions are dictated by what is needed by the family.  Kids have a huge respect for elders and for their parents and follow the duty of taking care of their family and parents.  People rarely change from their usual routine… they find their place in society, they focus on that, and they don’t let anything else distract them.  They live their lives focused on that role and don’t worry about living any other way.  Religion is a HUGE part of everyone’s lives.  I have never seen such a devoted people, whether it’s Hinduism, Islam, Christianity, or whatever else.  They believe what they believe and they act accordingly.  Very secure because when one follows their role in their family and in society, they always have their family’s support and life is kind of set in stone.

AMERICA: we search or pursue things outside of us.  Freedom, love, happiness, truth, joy, satisfaction, power, etc.

INDIA: they make or create things inside of them.  Freedom, love, happiness, truth, joy, satisfaction, power, etc.

So that makes me wonder… which is better?  To live in a more narrow but safe life, with not a ton of progression but a strong stability?  Or to live in a more open but dangerous life, with lots of possibility of progression but also a lot less stability?  I like to compare this to the commandments.  I think a lot of Indians live a strict life out of fear.  In fact, when I was interviewing the boys yesterday they told me that in school when they would mess up they would get beat, and so they learned to follow the rules and not mess up because they were so scared.  But is this real self-control?  Well, self-control is self-control, no matter what the motivation is to exercise it.  Although, the motivation to exercise it is still important and does make a difference.  I read in one of the church books (I can’t remember if it was True to the Faith or Gospel Principles) that it’s better to be obedient because you want to, rather than doing it out of fear.  However, doing it out of fear is better than not doing it at all.  It’s kind of like living off of borrowed light too… at least kids will do what is right when they follow their parents’ examples and live off of borrowed light, but it is much better for them to gain their own testimonies and be truly strong because living off of borrowed light, or being obedient out of fear, is not a very strong foundation.  I also asked them what would have happened if they would have grown up in a different culture where discipline wasn't so stressed, and they said they definitely wouldn't have learned so much self-control.  They said if they even went to other countries now they would take on the culture of that country and not live as strictly or tightly as they do here--while still keeping the commandments of course.

A few other things I found interesting were that they have a lot of self-control in the way that they lead their lives and especially with family and how they treat other people, but when it comes to the government they don’t care.  NO ONE obeys traffic laws.  Like, I have never seen anyone stop at a stop sign OR a red light.  Haha!  They don’t respect the police force or the government because it is so corrupt and they hardly have any hope for it to change, so they almost just ignore it.  In that aspect, there is a lot of chaos that goes on here. 

I also asked them about a couple of words and what they meant to them.  One of the words was love.  To Indians, love and happiness is something different than it is for us.  I noticed that all of their answers in one way or another had to do with commitment.  They talked about the love you have for a spouse because they are committed to you no matter what… they never leave.  Most people don't marry here because they 'fall in love'... they marry because it is a cultural norm and they know that it is their duty, and they marry someone who is approved by their family.  In fact, the family is usually the one who seeks out the spouse and then the consent of the child is taken in order for the marriage to happen... so it's a lot more about stability in life rather than love.  I feel like here, personal pursuits would get in the way of marriage.  Whereas in the states, marriage gets in the way of personal pursuits.  Divorce is possible here but is not common, even if the spouses are alcoholics or whatever else they still stay together because that’s just their culture. They also talked about how when you love someone or something, you focus on that one thing and devote your time and attention to it.  So there is that idea of commitment and stabilization again, which I feel like is such a big part of their culture here.  They are devoted and committed.

I guess a downside of all of this, like I said, is that sometimes this prevents progression or the opportunity to find something better.  But if they’re happy, does it really matter?  Maybe it does, maybe it doesn’t.  I remember thinking on my mission that I wished SO badly that the people would just open their hearts and their minds to having a better life and feeling the joy and happiness that comes from seeking out and learning the truth.  These boys also mentioned that they are so much happier now that they have joined the church and that their views on these subjects have changed since they have been members.  So I think it is important to have our minds open to view our potentials because maybe we are missing out on something that we never knew we could have.  At the same time, in American society (and seriously this is a problem with marriage in LDS culture and especially at BYU) people know that there is always something better so they continue to reach higher and search for that, and end up never satisfied or never actually finding it because they don’t know when to stop.  Interesting…

Also, I was talking to Rebecca and she told me a story that her sister shared about work.  She once had a job where she worked with a lot of people from China.  She noticed that they were extremely good at doing what they were told to do.  They had their task, and they did it perfectly.  But when it came to problem solving or being creative they were often lost and didn't know what to do.  I think Indian culture would be similar, so I guess there are just 2 different sets of skills.  In our culture we learn to be innovative and creative and solve problems, but because we are exposed to so many opportunities it is often difficult for us to focus on one task or be satisfied just doing one thing and being really good at that one thing.  Whereas here they learn to be content doing one thing and living a simple life, and they master it by being extremely focused and concentrated.  When something comes in their way though or an opportunity presents itself, they don't really know what to do with it. 

Anyway... as you can see, I am learning SO much.  The culture here is literally exactly opposite of ours (well, for the most part) and so I feel like the diversity is helping me learn a lot.  I am shocked at how conservative they are in some areas like dress and morality, where in North and South America we are totally opposite.  Even with so many western patterns coming into the society here, they have still been able to retain a lot of morality and values.  It is definitely changing though, and western culture is creeping in quickly and changing a lot of the pure Indian traditions that have made their culture the balanced and stable culture they are.  I think there are definitely pros and cons to the change, but it is sad to see the morals changing and worsening.

Well… like I said, time is flying way too fast and I am trying to keep up with everything and take in everything I’m seeing and experiencing and learning.  There are incredible people here.  I love them even more than I thought I would, for reasons different than I expected.  You all know how obsessed I was with this country before I came… well, I have found even more reason to be since I’ve been here and am so glad I finally made it here.  It has already been a life-changing experience and I hope to take home with me all of the things I am learning in order to implement them into my life.

If anyone has any thoughts or comments they are greatly appreciated!! Feel free to e-mail me. :) I love hearing other peoples’ thoughts and opinions! Peace ouuuuuuuttttttt



P.s. oh yeah. We were in the newspaper.  NBD.  Please see how photogenic we are.  Hahaha (and by we I mean myself.  Eyes closed and all.)






Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Wait... am I still in Argentina??


10 reasons I sometimes feel like I’m still in Argentina

1)   The climate.  It is super humid.  You get used to sweating 24/7.  In fact, you are just used to always being wet, and never being dry.  You walk outside and feel like you are swimming.  Air conditioned buildings are heaven on earth.  If I would have been here just a few months earlier, the heat would have been almost just as bad too!
2)   This little guy that lives in my room! 

Had a few of these in Argy too.  

 Oh and this guy.   



Left this box open for one day and what do I do?  Find this guy already building his little home here!  These were all over Argentina.  

 Oh and also this tree.   
 And this one.
 And these giant spiders. (look at the one on the far right... it's like, as big as my hand!! ew ew ew ew ew!)

3)   Because of the same climate, that means my body reacts the same.  Colds (seriously… I always thought colds were associated with COLD weather.  Who gets their worst colds in hot humid places?? This girl.), rashes and break-outs, soft skin, and faster growing hair and nails.  I’ll take the bad for the good though! :) it’s worth it
4)   Crazy streets.  You feel like you are going to get hit every time you go anywhere.  Motorcycles everywhere.  Entire families on motorcycles all at once.  The people are crazy drivers but rarely get in accidents because they have to be paying attention 100% of the time.
5)   The houses!  Made the same way.  Electrical wires out in the open everywhere.  Colorful and beautiful.   A huge house here is a small or normal sized house in the states.  Carpet is basically non-existent. Can’t flush the toilet paper… people use bidaes instead.  No A/C, just fans. 
6)   Dog fights at night.  They are so fun to listen to from my window… haha
7)   Power cuts.  At least once a day!
8)   Street vendors and small little shops everywhere, just like kioscos.  People live from those instead of large grocery stores.  There is a small little shop for every category of things you would need to buy.
9)   Because I don’t speak Telugu, I only understand about 30% of what is going on at any given moment.  Hahaha.  Definitely remember that feeling in Argentina!  It’s amazing how much you can communicate with someone though without using words.
10) The people!  Maybe it’s their beautiful dark skin and unbelievably long and thick dark hair, or their mysterious facial expressions, or the kids walking on the streets in school uniforms, or the way they stare when they see white people (ok, it’s a LITTLE worse here than it was there… see photo below.  Hah!) or maybe it’s just their different culture or language, or the way they live their lives.  I’m not sure, but I’m feeling a little bit of a connection here. :)

For these reasons and more, I think I have been able to feel really comfortable here.  Who knew my two favorite countries had so much in common?! :)

So on Friday we took a 3 hour drive out to a neighboring city called Srikakulam.  It was BEAUTIFUL.  We had to pass through a bunch of little tiny towns to get there.  We went out to this little village to go to an awesome temple called Mukalingam.  It is full of male and female symbolism, if you know what I mean.  Haha.  It was really cool.

The funniest part was stopping on the way in, and the entire village came to see us.  We were there for maybe 10 or 15 minutes and by that point everyone had gathered together, staring at us and pointing… they were all too scared to come say hi or meet us (I’m telling you, when you’re white you seriously feel famous here!).  We got in the car and everyone gathered around our car knocking on the windows and waving, asking us our names, etc.  Haha!  So funny.  Here are a few photos of our fan club...


 Emily waving from the car like a celebrity

 
It was a beautiful area and we definitely want to go back there to just take time and explore the little villages and pathways.  Here are some photos from the day…


 Mukalingam Temple








  

Sewer hogs... they swim around in the sewers.  These ones graduated from the sewers and decided to roam the streets like humans.




At another temple in Srikakulam... it's for the turtle avatar of the god Vishnu

















 a sacred washing area




Rice! These ladies were singing while working.  It was awesome to watch


























  
Emily striking a yoga pose












On my way there and back I was reading a little book written by a guy named Swami Paramananda (apparently the word swami is used in English too but I had never heard it before—it just means guru or teacher).  He brought a lot of south-asian beliefs to America and had a lot of followers there.  This little book is on self-mastery which is what my research project is.  There are so many good things in this book!  Seriously, I am finding truth all over the place.  It’s cool to look at things from a different viewpoint too and compare it to things I already know or have seen.  For example, he talks about the importance of being humble in order to master one’s self.  He relates it to two trees… one who bears fruit and one who doesn’t.  The fruit-bearing tree has it’s branches humbly bowed down low to the ground because they are so heavy and barren with fruit.  The tree without fruit is stiff and upright, but it bears no fruit and is good for nothing but to look at really.  He then goes on to talk about how we must recognize who we are with a clear view and recognize the divinity and power that each of us has, and we must believe that we can master ourselves and have the faith to change.  I was then reading in Mosiah 4 and 5 where the people had a real change of heart, and it talks about the exact same things!  The importance of being humble in order to change, getting a clear view of one’s self, and having the faith to change.  Look at that… there’s truth in so many different places. :)

Here are a few other quotes from the book that I have really liked so far:

“The only way we can rise, the only way we can lift our fellow-beings, is to find a higher level of consciousness.  If we have a nobler standard of life, if we possess self-control, if we are master of ourselves, we shall not need to state it in words.  All who are living around us—children, brothers, sisters, friends—will benefit by what we are.  They may become impatient with us, intolerant that we are different from them, but if we hold fast to our own ideals they will turn to us in moments of distress.  In time of storm, anger, impatience, or great grief, one who is not molested by these things, becomes like a rock; others cling to him and find their consolation.”

From the Bhagavad Gita—“ let a man raise himself by his Self, let him never lower himself; for he alone is the friend of himself, and he alone is the enemy of himself.  He who has conquered himself by the Self, he is the friend of himself, but he whose self is unconquered, his self acts as his own enemy like an external for.”    Natural man… anyone?? I like looking at it that way—an idea of self (as in natural man) vs. Self (kind of like our divine nature and higher potential).

“Whenever we start to do anything with dejected mind, or carry an evil impulse in our heart, do we not act as our own enemy?  We know ethically and intellectually the bad effect these have upon our moral and physical being, and yet we stagger on carrying a load which exhausts us.”  Totally true… it’s the struggle within one’s self!

“We become our own enemy when we are thrown out of balance by anger, hatred, grief or any intense emotion.  We are for the time being obsessed by something alien.  Anger is such an obsession.  It is a very ugly thing in life.  It disfigures a person.  One who is pleasant and lovable can be so changed by anger or jealousy that even if we try we can no longer find any trace of beauty in his face, it has become so distorted.  Yet the whole of us is not obsessed.  We are like two persons,--the person who is angry and the person who is not.  There is a dual principle in us.  One part of us aspires for the highest, best, purest and finest; the other is earth bound, weighted down by material concerns.”

“One who has control over his own self, who is serene in the midst of all dual conditions—heat and cold, pleasure and pain, noise and stillness, under all circumstances—will carry with him wherever he goes the constant realization of his supreme Self.”

“Self-realization means that we have become consciously connected with our Source of being.  Once we have made this connection, then nothing can go wrong; if we have not made it, then no matter how much we may try, everything goes wrong.” –clear view of ourselves, our divine nature, and for me, a clear view of God and how He sees us.

“Plato declares a wise man will be as happy in a state of slavery as in a state of freedom.” Hmmm…. Interesting!  Looks like ‘freedom’ and ‘happiness’ have more to do with attitude rather than situation.

“Many a person after his first failure or when he meets with some obstacle settles down and says: I am not born equipped; it is not in my nature to do this.  He has not even investigated his inner nature; he is judging only from the surface.  If he would go deeper he would find that he has all the inherent powers and possibilities, more than he can possibly use.  Let us remember our dual nature: faltering, failing, weak and unstable on the one side, and on the other: majestic, potent, invincible.  As we reflect upon the higher Self, as we try to find access to it, the lower nature will fade away.”

“If we depend on praise and recognition, if we have any self-glorifying attitude, we are undone.  He who is dependent on praise is equally affected by blame.  When our inner life is empty we cannot help but depend on the exterior, but after our inner life is filled we care less and less for all outer conditions.  We are happier because of this, we create a happier atmosphere—an atmosphere of strength.”

“At present our body, mind and senses are very much like untrained horses.  We must learn to control them, therefore, and prove that we have the power to guide them instead of being dragged hither and thither by them.  We have been made to believe that if we do not give certain comforts to the body, it will go to pieces.  Such thoughts have led us to indulge the body until it has become like a spoiled child.  Whatever it demands, we give without discrimination.  So also with our mind and senses.  It is for us to decide whether we shall yield to every impulse of our physical organism or hold it in check.  This is the first step in giving discipline.”  Btw, I really like that word discipline.  I mean… I hate it, it makes me cringe.  Because it’s hard work.  Haha.  But I once heard a stake president talk about how disciple and discipline have the same root.  Coincidence?  I think not.  Discipline is very important.

“He whose mind is free from all delusion regarding the self, he will stand and not fall in the battle of life.”

Ok, there are a lot more than that but I’ll save them for next time.  I just feel like these are all things I have heard before in the scriptures or in conference.  I love that truth is truth and doesn’t depend upon personal beliefs… it just is and there’s nothing we can do about it but accept it and embrace it and live by it, because that’s how we are truly set free! (John 8:32)

That’s all for now kiddos.  Any comments or insights on this topic would be greatly appreciated.  You can facebook message me or email me (linseyluey13@gmail.com) with any info or experiences you have! Graciassssssss. K byeeeeeeeeeeeee!