Tuesday 22 February 2011

Jodhpur, India

Jodhpur is the way that I envisioned India to be.  It's chaotic, filthy, and smelly.  There is also a strange, exotic beauty about the place that made me feel like Indiana Jones. 


Jodhpur is known as the "Blue City" and from atop Meherangargh Fort (pictured above) it's not hard to see why...


A trip to Jodhpur is not complete without a visit to Sadar Bazaar, the historical center of Jodhpur.  It has a lovely clock tower and many eager vendors.  I'm sorry Seattle, but Pike's Place Market is not even in the same league as Sadar Bazaar.


We capped the day off at Mandore Gardens (below), where we were serenaded by people playing Mary Had a Little Lamb and Frère Jacques on some sort of musical instrument that I'd never seen before (maybe it was a mandore).


In Jodhpur, I realized that I felt smaller and less significant than I'd ever felt before.  The crowdedness and the dirtiness of India had somehow blurred the lines between me and the people around me.  Not only was I smaller and less significant than I'd imagined, but I realized that I was just a piece of the puzzle, a small part of the collective whole...no better or worse than anyone else

Hierarchies and classifications are human-made. 

We are all equal.

"For the warrior, there is no 'better' or 'worse.'  Everyone has the necessary gifts for his particular path."
~Paulo Coelho





 




3 comments:

  1. Sounds like you are having a blast Lori. Take me with you!!!!

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  2. I think your feeling of being a "small part of the collective whole...no better or worse than anyone else" is such a beautiful thought, especially beautiful/interesting in a country associated with a caste system.

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  3. Thanks, Mike. You and Liz need to take a trip to India. You´d absolutely love it. Hope all is well! Thanks for reading my blog.

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