Showing posts with label kedarnath. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kedarnath. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Thus Spake Baba Damdama

"Give me, woman, thy little truth!"
"Thou goest to women? Do not forget thy whip!"

I can picture at least 6 faces in Indian media who regularly come and talk on the talk shows talking a lot more at the usage of the above lines, that come from a 19th century classic ("Thus Spake Zarathustra", by Fakir W Nietzsche). Yes, Nietzsche (hereafter referred to as N) was known to be a misogynist. Its nothing surprising, though, his perspective has been a recurrent one through history and cultures. There's always the occasional ruffle in media over incubation-chamber analogy of the female specia. My (narrow) anthropological finds, though, make me believe that the modern society (American?) seems a little better - see how Maroon 5 and James Blunt can change the world for the good!

Some other great anti-pickup lines from the same chapter:
: Everything in woman is a riddle, and everything in woman hath one solution—it is called pregnancy.
: Two different things wanteth the true man: danger and diversion. Therefore wanteth he woman, as the most dangerous plaything.
: Man shall be trained for war, and woman for the recreation of the warrior: all else is folly.

I pretty much LOLd at every line word up there.

What makes me even more fascinated with this perspective of N is its resonance with that of holy men across the holy Himalayan circuit (as much of it that i've seen i.e. Hardwar, Rishikesh, Kedarnath). Nothing better to start with drawing parallels than how the book starts:
When Zarathustra was thirty years old, he left his home and the lake of his home, and went into the mountains. There he enjoyed his spirit and solitude, and for ten years did not weary of it.

That makes N your average Baba Damdama (Baba = holy man) that you find sprawling all over the lower Himalayan tract. They (holy men) have little veneration for anything but their own philosophy, much like Zarathustra. They are filled to the cup with misogynistic takes on anything concerning the...uh...gyne. They make the male species seem like some divine mutation, out-of-line with regular evolution.

But those folks and my old roomie aside, we have good faith that the leading generations will not think likewise.
That is because soon after independence, Jawaharlal Nehru commissioned a scientific study to put an end to this woman-vs-man debate once and for all...
The average woman was found to have an IQ of 3 pigeons. The average man was comparably smarter, about 5 pigeons.* Don't be surprised - pigeons are smart and were considered appropriate benchmark at that time.

This performance - which makes 'venerate' a synonym to 'torture' - is no reason to make any gender generalisation.

* In marital union, however, their (man-woman's) combined IQ surprisingly reflected a huge drop, to an average of 1/2 a pigeon. This fact of an average Indian pigeon outsmarting an average Indian couple, is why pigeon was denied the status of national bird. The Peacock was chosen (though later studies proved that even the Peacock outsmarted the average Indian couple, it was too late to retract the Peacock, as our handicraft industry had already put this bird on over 1,80,000 export items - as the reader should know, that handicrafts lobby is very strong here in India, only next to the mixing-blood-in-ketchup lobby).

Monday, July 07, 2008

Grandeur of Kedarnath, now visible to all

The Kedarnath (and Hardwar and Rishikesh) trip image galleries are out there! Me and my college classmates undertook this trip in May of 2008, right after our exams were wrapped up with. Hardwar and Rishikesh came first on our map, then Shivpuri for adventure camp + rafting, then to Gaurikund and finally trekking up to the Kedar. The days didn't go without adventure (and stomach upsets). Some left midway, some joined midway and we thinned out from 7 in Rishikesh (6 in Hardwar) to 4 in Kedarnath (Anikesh, Deepanjan, Piyush, me).

Here is some link fodder:
* Kedarnath-Rishikesh-Hardwar :: trip briefing
* Moi Image Gallery
* Anikesh's Image Gallery

Spent some time adding a file module (to the website) to share any useful resources like docs, links, maps, pdf, etc. Expect some activity in that corner soon (even for the Leh and, maybe, Gethia).

Sunday, June 08, 2008

Good to start from the beginning



"Sarath explaining his stomach upset - being as graphic as he can - to derive sadistic pleasure from our contorted faces has been the high point of my trip this far. Rest falls pale. The day hasn't started off good. Our journey is into its 12th hours and there are defeated expressions (which, though, I'm sure a light nap can cure). Our first leg of the journey didn't go without flaws. Of the kind that nobody would've expected, really. We went past Hardwar to reach Rishikesh in the wee hours of the morning. We were expecting to stay awake all through the bus journey, only to fall asleep half an hour before we zipped past Hardwar..."

My recent acquisition of the complete sets of photographs from everybody's cameras marks the culmination of the Hardwar-Rishikesh-Kedarnath trip. Now that the memories are fresh again, I shall make attempts to put it all together.
Also ended up with a fractured journal from the trip, which might be helpful. Missing gloriously on the full moon about which I was looking forward to did plenty to dampen my urge to write when on the move.

The accompanying photo is deceptive, except for my outright blasphemy. This was our only relation to the great Kedar shrine. Neither did we attempt to queue up in the long lines, nor give any offerings. Piyush and I got busy seeing beyond the religious side of Kedarnath - in the spirit of traveling and on the fringes of exploration - while Anikesh and Deepanjan made the most of the room rent by staying indoors.

More chronicles to follow (sooner than you'd contract alzheimer's).

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Kedarnath Trip Ends

Back from Kedarnath. But not Delhi, in Gethia (Nainital). Reached here the day before after a 23 hour bus ride: Guarikund-Hardwar, then Hardwar-Nainital, then a couple of kms of walk through the forest to Gethia as the dawn was breaking. Beautiful cloud patterns before they were dissolved by the morning sun.

The trip was great on a personal level. Having friends that kept falling ill in random order was irritating. Did explore plenty of Kedarnath, and find reasons to loathe the sadhu babas/beggars/escapists. It is baffling how little people see when they visit such places. Me and Piyush share plenty of common thoughts over that.

Lost my cellphone on the 20th. That day started with a lull and culminated with a loss. But a loss that I can't feel sad for; the cellphone was lost the same way I acquired it - on the streets, and my connection's validity was about to end on 23rd, after which I planned to switch to a new one.

Its good out here in Gethia. Quite a chill, warm sun, cloud cover that piles up by the day to finally break into a rain around the evenings.

There's lots to share from the trip - photographs and thoughts alike. Plenty of time and minimal of responsibilities on hand to do that. Nice.

PS: If we have spoken over the phone anytime in the past 6 months, pls mail me your cell number