Thursday, June 7, 2007

The Bettany Blog



Ramblin' Ollie Returns is being put to bed for the duration of the English summertime... hmm, that'll be about two and a half weeks then.

Not quite. More like five and a half weeks. I don't know what my immediate future holds - none of us do, I suppose, but most of us can make a pretty good guess. Well, I don't have that luxury - or rather, I do have the luxury of having not the faintest idea what I'll be doing in the next few months. The last date which is fixed in my UK summer calender is Bristol's Ashton Court Community Festival on the 14-15th July. After that I might leave again. Then again I might not.

I might go to Vancouver, and then overland to Santiago, Chile, where I'll jump onto a plane to New Zealand. Then again I might not. My travels might be over. This could be the last you hear of Ramblin' Ollie! Then again it might not. It's pointless to speculate so I'll stop.

While I may be able to stop travelling - temporarily at least - I can't stop blogging! I spent last weekend hanging out with my family at my parents' home in Staffordshire and it was there that I had the idea to start a family blog.

My mum and dad actually live in Stoke-on-Trent (which is in Staffordshire) but I've decided not to be so specific from now on since the images that the words "Stoke-on-Trent" conjours up for people are all pretty negative. It's not even a problem with the place itself - which, to be fair, is a bit dreary in parts - it's the consumate unsexiness of the words "Stoke-on-Trent". I think someone on the city council should propose they change the name of the place to something more dynamic - I like "Alphaville" - so people would be more inclined to visit, but I digress...

Despite the unsexiness of the location we had a fabulous weekend. The weather was consistently gorgeous, the food was irrefutably delicious and the company was undeniably delightful. We played croquet with Pimms while the perfumes of nature sighed on our skins. We sang and danced and laughed and boozed until we were dizzy with the heady joys of familial communion. It was as though time had stopped and we were in a bubble and we drew perceptably closer to one another.

But then it was over. By Sunday evening there were only a few of us left and as I gathered my things on Monday morning in preparation for my departure that afternoon I felt a distinct despondency, a hollowness in the pit of my stomach, an emptiness in my heart, a spot that until that moment I had forgotten existed, a place where I hold my family dear. Somewhere along the journey between teen angst and adulthood I had lost an intimate connection with my brothers and sisters, the kind of connection that develops when you spend an entire childhood together.

I love my family. I have always loved my family. But I realise that for most of my adult life I've taken my family for granted and in doing so I have lost some of the magic that is conjured when the sparks generated by domestic bliss and discord start flying.

This is why I decided to start The Bettany Blog and this is where you will find me blogging in the immediate future... please - let me introduce you to my family.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

This other Ollie

I’m consumed with the desire to write. I write for three or four hours a day – at least. If I’m not writing one blog I’m writing another. If I get tired of one project then I move onto the next – and so on. You get the idea – I’m writing a lot. This is exactly where I wanted to end up when I set off from England three months ago. It’s taken me a long time to get to this point. I’ve had to do a lot of soul searching and I’ve experienced a lot of frustration in the meantime. It feels great to finally enjoy such engagement with something I find as fulfilling as writing – long may it last.

Sometimes though, I wake up in the morning and wonder if I have it in me to keep it up. I felt like that today. After two weeks of intensive blogging, in which I sought to pull together all the disparate threads of ideas and experiences and emotions from the previous three months, I finally published twelve blogs, some 20,000 words – and immediately I felt deflated. "What am I going to do now?" I thought to myself. "I'll have to go out there into the world and start living it again - I’m not sure I can do that!"

Now I’m not saying I’m a glass is half empty person, but thankfully the weather in Manali is miserable. Today it’s cold, mist obscures the mountains as it drifts down the valley in a kind of damp torpor and there’s a downpour every couple of hours. If the sun was shining it would be hot and I would be out there soaking it up in order to look as brown as possible when I return to England, but it’s not, so this morning I glanced out of the window, decided that the day would remain dank and wet, switched on my computer, opened a half-finished blog and within minutes I was completely consumed.

I came up for air when I hit a crossroads with my theme. Unable to decide which idea to explore next I realised that hours had passed. I blinked a couple of times and left the world of words, slowly coming back to the real world, the world of rain. I reviewed what I had just written. I had just spent half an hour writing and then honing one paragraph which ended up being only 134 words in length… oh but what a paragraph! I don’t know what people’s general impression of my writing process is - but one thing it isn’t is straightforward.

In a roundabout way that’s what this blog is about – my writing, it’s style and it’s process. Perhaps it’s not the most interesting subject under the sun but as I’m stuck indoors all day and night either reading or writing I’m not having all that many other experiences which are worth writing about. What else is there? What do backpackers do all day? This is what I do: Read, write, eat, sleep, piss, shit, wank and treat myself to an episode or two of The Sopranos before bedtime. That’s it. That’s my life. It doesn’t sound very exciting does it? I’m not exactly “living the dream” right now am I? I’m not even meeting people. I’ve become a recluse!

I’m sorry, but other travellers piss me off too much, like the aging hippie who was sat next to me in the internet café writing about throat chakras while chain-smoking cigarettes. Then there was the middle-class English rasta wannabe who told me he’d been in India for only two weeks and proceeded to lecture me about how to treat the Indians, presumably because he had dirty hair he felt that made him more qualified than I am on the subject of dirty countries. Oh, I’d almost forgotten about the girl (English again – how embarrassing) who only gives money to blind beggars because, according to her, they’re the only ones who aren’t trying to rip you off. Yes, unbelievable as it might sound, people like this do exist and they currently seem to be crossing my path in throngs.

Yesterday I spotted a girl sat alone on the patio below my window. She looked a bit lonely and forlorn and I considered engaging her in conversation but then thought better of it; she looked vaguely American and I didn’t want to risk it. Later, in the hotel restaurant, I noticed she was sat with a young English couple who seemed very nice and polite. This assumption about their relative niceness was never confirmed because the poor dears couldn’t get a word in edgeways, the American girl was sat holding court between them telling what sounded to me like frat-party anecdotes in an annoying whining nasal boom which reverberated around the room. You may think I was being over-sensitive, but she wasn’t just annoying me – I spotted a group of Israelis flinching and getting twitchy a couple of tables away.

No country seems to embrace it’s cultural stereotypes more enthusiastically than America. Why do so many Americans talk so loud? It’s weird, and it’s a bit embarassing for the significant number of them who travel who are genuinely cool people and pitch their voices at a normal volume.

But I digress. Where was I? Oh yes - I’m turning into a recluse! After just over a month in India I think I’ve finally found my niche – of one. Apart from a handful of conversations with the Indian boys who run the hotel I’ve been closed off to everybody. I admit, it would be kind of helpful to have someone to bounce ideas off, someone to check my spelling and my sanity just so no mistakes or slanderous comments slip through the net of self-censorship and end up on the internet causing offence, but apart from that, I’m sorted. This is a holiday away from people and although I know cabin fever is lurking just around the corner, right now I’m completely content and totally balanced – I think.

I have to admit that to a certain extent this is all bravado – I have found it perplexingly difficult at times to meet people and make friends on this short excursion to India, and I have been lonely as a consequence. Initially this troubled me, and then I worked out why – or invented a reason why – and I started to feel much better.

I’m stuck inbetween two traveller subcultures. On the one hand we have the late-twenties one-last-blast-before-settling-down posse who frequently travel with their partners and who subsequently alienate themselves and others. On the other hand we have the mid-thirties don’t-know-what-to-do-with-my-life- might-travel-forever crew who are only a couple of steps away from joining the ranks of the forty-something oh-fuck-it-lets-have- another-chillum-and-forget-about-the-whole-thing contingent. I’ve realised that these are not my kind of people. I’m part of the relatively scarce second-time-around-what-the-fuck-am-I- doing-here collective. Oh, I know I could compromise for the sake of a bit of companionship but I reckon I’ve become quite an awkward bugger in my old age and frankly I’d rather be on my own.

I’m rambling, I know, but that’s what I do. I was supposed to be talking about my writing and instead I embarked on a tirade against travellers in general and specifically every single traveller I’ve encountered in the last few days. This is very useful though because it perfectly illustrates my point – the point I had planned to make by now but which got lost amidst all this bitter isolationist cynicism… the point, in fact, that I plan to make NOW.

This isn’t me. The person who inhabits these blogs is not me and the ideas I elaborate on are not mine. The individual who swears, curses and criticises, expresses ignorant opinions, reports badly researched facts, talks about wanking and ladyboys’ cocks – you know, the hippie hater – it’s someone else. The bloke who moans about his insecurities, screams at Kashmiri travel agents and has absolutely no success with the ladies, it’s another Ollie, someone I invent and reinvent every time I sit down in front of my computer and start writing.

This sounds like a bit of a cop out so let me qualify… of course it IS me, my point is that it’s only a representation of me – and not always a very accurate one. It’s like I take one aspect of my personality (the bit that gets annoyed by brash, loud Americans, for example, or the bit that can’t take soap-dodging hippies seriously) and enlarge it until it fills the page, until it becomes a characteristic which is larger than life and a hopefully a bit contentious. I’m simply experimenting with my blog persona – and having a lot of fun in the process!

The Ollie who, in this blog, rants and raves about other travellers is reminiscent of the main character in William Sutcliffe’s lowbrow India backpacker comedy bestseller "Are You Experienced?" which I finally read recently and can claim to some dubious extent to have been inspired by. It’s a silly book but it doesn’t pretend to be anything else and it cuts right through the bullshit that so many travellers in India seem to be steeped in, so it’s an acerbic and welcome addition to the canon of India literature.

Please don’t take me at face value. I love everyone, honest. Half the time I’m just playing the devil’s advocate. If I’m belligerent it’s because I want to stimulate debate. If I’m vulnerable it’s because I want to encourage the idea that it’s okay to share your insecurities. If I’m telling a joke it’s because I want to be funny. It doesn’t necessarily mean I AM belligerent, vulnerable or funny. Many people know me as a quiet chap, someone who doesn’t feel particularly comfortable in the centre of things, the kind of guy who prefers to listen rather than talk and hear other people’s views rather than voice his own opinion. This being the case, I suppose my writing represents a channel which allows me to provocative in a way that I rarely am in more conventional walks of life.

And just for the record I don’t hate all hippies – just the ones who come to India.

Saturday, May 5, 2007

The Great India Blog Email

For those of you who didn't receive my recent group email, I need to quickly explain something. This blog started out as an email which grew far too long and personal to send and realistically expect people to actually read so I decided to publish it here instead. It's a relevant addition to this blog because it reflects my insecure state of mind at the time of writing, and as I point out right up front, I enjoy nothing more than being embarrassingly honest about my insecurities and I want to produce a blog which reflects all of my experiences - even personal ones.

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Hello folks!

You know by now that my group emails can sometimes be fiercely personal and embarrassingly honest. This is because the medium I find it easiest to express myself in - the written word - distances me from the people with whom I'm communicating and therefore I can become rather blasé about what I say, almost to the point of impropriety. It's also because this is the kind of person I am, I suppose - a bit weird and confessional.

There's another reason I write like this, one that I have begun to comprehend during the last 12 months or so. There are a handful of people on this mailing list - travellers I've met fleetingly and friends I have known for years - who have communicated to me that they relate to many of the ideas I express in a very direct and personal way and that they appreciate my honesty and enjoy my style, to the extent that they are sometimes moved by my words. To learn that something you have written has brought someone to tears is very challenging... not that they were bored to tears I hasten to add although I do understand that this is a problem for some of you!

So, the question of appropriateness aside, this is the reason I try to express myself forcibly and honestly in my emails and my blogs and this is the reason I want to tell you that since I last emailed you I've been having a strange, challenging and somewhat confusing time.

If you have the opportunity and the inclination to dip into the multitude of blogs I link to at the end of this email you may get the sense that I've felt somewhat confused for the entire duration of my trip... and you wouldn't be far wrong. I must have supposed - naively - that travelling again would bring everything into focus and provide me with a clarity of purpose that seemed to be lacking from my life during my ten month sojourn in the UK.

I appreciate now that maybe I'd be confused wherever I was in the world, that I'm suffering from a sort of post-modern mental flu which is caused by having too much freedom to choose and not enough reality to ground me. Of course I know I do have stuff to ground me - I have a close family and good friends on two hemispheres and boxes of possessions gathering dust in a garden shed waiting to be housed once more... but this isn't what I'm talking about.

My life is easy. I have no worries. I have no responsibilities. I have no direction. I float on the wind. It sounds good, doesn't it, but the grown-ups amongst you will no doubt recognise that this is no way to live your life. Responsibility grounds you and gives you focus and intent. Happiness has to be worked hard for to be attained. Community and fellowship is the result of years of commitment, care and trust, friendships have to be remade again and again and, despite ideas to the contrary, cannot be put down and picked up again on a whim.

I'm not on a downer, exactly. The truth is that yesterday I was severely disappointed by someone I've met here in McLeod Ganj and this has called into question my whole basis for decision-making and undermined a lot of my confidence in myself. Recently I've been asking myself why I'm bothering to make new friends when I already have so many who are brilliant. This recent episode has sort of proved this point.

This mood-swing email is quite typical of my state of mind of late. Many of you know I can be very reflective, I often think far too much than is good for me and this causes me to be frequently circumspect, even though I know I am fortunate indeed to be out here exploring the world. I'm exploring myself too, every day, and the geography of my heart and my mind is not as fixed as that of the Indian subcontinent, hence the reason I'm feeling a bit lost right now.

If you recall the content of my last email you will know that I was brazenly advertising the fact that I was having the time of my life - I was "living the dream" and so I was, but these moments are fleeting. In one day you can feel as though everything is in your hands, it's all going your way, you're the luckiest man alive and the future holds infinite promise... then the next day arrives and reality bleeds in and suddenly you're floundering about - what you thought you knew about yourself and your companions is undermined - like putting all your weight down with confidence and unexpectedly losing your footing on a steep hill. Suddenly you're sliding...

I say all this by way of an introduction to these blogs. I believe that this is the oddest and most personal collection of blogs I have published. I have struggled to create a sense of balance in them - by this I mean I think that overall the tone is a bit negative, and I'm reluctant to give you this impression because I've had such an amazing time over the last three months. Don't expect too much in the way of drama - my adventures in Australia, Thailand and India have been modest in scale while my adventures inside my heart and mind have been monumental, I think.

The beautiful bodies of Bondi Beach

A snorkel and a muse

Backpacker hell

What a wanker

Australia from start to finish and beyond... from a certain point of view


An interlude in Thailand and a big brush with nature

Bangkok burger break

Mumbai hotel hell

A short term on Palolem Beach

Pahar Ganj

All my ducks in a line

I'll be back in the UK in 3 weeks! Two sets of friends are getting married, my mum is organising a family reunion and I'm looking forward to travelling up and down the country visiting some people I really care about. All this, I think, is excellent - good, grounding stuff for a man who is beginning to realise what's important and what's not.

I hope you enjoy the blogs and the photographs.

Love and light (as the hippies say)

Ollie xxx

Thursday, May 3, 2007

All my ducks in a line



I feel compelled to preface this blog with a warning of sorts. Quite often I begin writing a blog with one theme in mind and then something else captures my imagination so I end up going off on a tangent and ranting about something else, often entirely unrelated to the initial theme. This sometimes happens because I’m writing a blog over a period of days and during this period my interests and feelings change and consequently so does the tone of the blog.

I started writing this blog a couple of days after I arrived in McLeod Ganj. I did not complete it until two weeks later when I was a few hundred kilometres away in Manali. A lot happened in that two week period. Initially I was delighted to be back in McLeod Ganj, I felt inspired and was enthusiastic about the prospect of getting stuck into a five day yoga course – it was an opportunity to establish a daily routine of physical exercise, practice some meditation techniques and (perhaps most importantly) meet some people and make some friends.

When I started writing this blog it was going to be about my love of McLeod Ganj and my desire to start enjoying a healthier lifestyle there, a lifestyle which I could hopefully transfer back to England or wherever else my travels took me. As time progressed the theme began to evolve as I met people and became more involved in McLeod’s social scene. I began to make friends and spent evenings in restaurants talking about yoga and meditation and all the associated things that so many people in McLeod Ganj are interested in. To start with I was quite engaged, but I as time went on I became increasingly detached because, it seemed to me, I was always on the outside looking in.

In the end I was left feeling quite cynical about the nature of the place and some of the people I encountered. I had to leave in order to finish this blog because while I was there I was too close to my subject matter. I was too involved. I was emotional and subjective, and I was angry, which is a rather dangerous thing to be when you’re talking about religion and spirituality, where passions fly, enemies are made and battles are fought and won – or lost.

I was always on the outside looking in..? I was too close to my subject matter..?

Looking at the language in which I have chosen to express myself here, it would seem clear that I had trouble connecting with the people I met in McLeod Ganj. Perhaps that was because we had little common ground, or maybe it was because I was too circumspect - I maintained an almost professional distance from the people I came into contact with. After all, the reason I am ultimately here is to write, not make friends. Certainly I have to accept some responsibility for not fitting into the scene in McLeod, but that doesn’t mean the arguments I put forward in this blog are not valid.

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Until a couple of days ago I was chilling halfway up a mountain in the village of Bhagsu which is right next door to the small but well known town of McLeod Ganj in the state of Himachal Pradesh in the north west of India. McLeod Ganj (named after David McLeod and Forsyth Ganj, the British Colonial officers who chose the spot for their troops to settle in the 1850's) is 1700 metres above sea level and situated on steep hillsides on the south western edge of the Himalaya mountains. Every morning I look out of my window and take in the awesome spectacle of mighty Triund – at 2900 metres it’s a modest mountain in comparison to Everest (8900 metres) far to the east but nonetheless it’s still a thrill to see it’s snow-capped peak with sleepy eyes in the early morning light. It reminds me how lucky I am to be out here.

McLeod Ganj is famously the home of the top dog of Tibetan Buddhism - His Holiness the Fourteenth Dali Lama of Tibet, Tenzin Gyatso, and his entourage, which comprises hundreds of monks and thousands of refugees who have settled here. After China invaded Tibet in 1950 things got steadily worse for Tibetan Buddhism (and for Tibet in general, funnily enough) and eventually the Dali Lama had little choice but to flee into exile, or else face the the very real prospect of having his religion wiped out. So, in March of 1959, the Dali Lama snuck out of Lhasa in the dead of night and crossed the Himalaya mountains into India, arriving in McLeod Ganj fourteen days later. Here he has settled and here he fights in earnest for freedom to return to his homeland.

This part of India in particular is well known for attracting westerners on a spiritual trip. Rishikesh, which is only a few hundred kilometres to the south, is the place where the Beatles met their guru Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in 1967. The four of them hung out together in Rishikesh for a while, playing sitars, growing facial hair and receiving instruction from their guru (and in due course being manipulated by him). Paul and Ringo saw sense and went home, John and George stayed. Eventually the remaining Beatles and their wives fell out with Mahesh and joined their fellow band members in the Abbey Road studios where they recorded the self-titled LP which is popularly referred to as The White Album. The rest, as they say, is history.

There are ashrams all over India which are frequented by westerners, Rishikesh is particularly well known for it’s yoga schools and McLeod Ganj in particular is a focal point for spiritual and philosophical activity – for obvious reasons; Buddhism is becoming increasingly popular among individuals disillusioned with the empty materialism of western culture and this relatively small town is now the (temporary) home of Tibetan Buddhism – which, you may already know, is only one denomination of the Buddhist faith which is paracticed widely throughout Asia. Thailand is predominantly Buddhist but the particular version of the faith practiced by the Thai people does not recognise the sanctity of the Dali Lama.

I don’t know why. If I’m being entirely honest with you, I don’t much care. I could do the research, but research has never been my strong point, you should be grateful I bothered looking up the name of The Beatles’ guru. I hope I spelt it right. Just look at it this way, The Church of England doesn’t rate The Pope because, among other things, he doesn’t rate contraception. I’m sure it’s a similar deal with Tibetan Buddhism and Thai Buddhism, though it’s unlikely that this particular scism relates to birth control.

While I’m perhaps more interested in spiritual matters than a lot of my friends, I do not share the intense, sometimes almost pathological interest exhibited by so many of the people I’ve come into contact with recently. Basically, it’s all a bit mad and I’m starting to feel a bit out of place here. It’s strange and it’s difficult to explain. I also know that in attempting to I will be treading on dangerous ground because, in expressing my point of view, I’m bound to upset a few people. I wouldn’t have a problem with that if I wasn’t still quite confused about the whole thing myself, but despite this concern I’m going to go ahead and say what I want to say – there’s nothing wrong with stimulating a healthy debate is there?

Well, I think I’d better start at the beginning.

I was in McLeod Ganj last year, but only for a short time because I was coming towards the end of my time in India and I still had quite a lot of places I wanted to visit - Rajisthan for example, which is not to be missed! I was here then in the month of March, when the Dali Lama was concluding two weeks of annual public discourses. I was profoundly affected by the place. It seemed to me as though the town and the surrounding villages and countryside was charged with a powerful and palpable energy. I made connections here within myself and with other people. The vague philosophy which I had been gradually inventing for myself during months in India and Nepal suddenly took form and solidified. I perceived the hand of fate in everything. Magic seemed to shroud the entire valley and when I left I felt that I had to return no matter what.

With some regret I confess that I now have a much more rational take on things. I did return to McLeod Ganj in hope that the place would give me a spiritual boost but unfortunately it hasn’t and my feeling about the place has become much more cynical – not because I didn’t get what I came for but because it seems to me now that the place could never have given me what I needed in the first place, which begs the question, what exactly was I feeling the last time I was here?

I had been in India for three months. I felt like I was in tune with the country – if only on a relatively superficial level - but that’s enough I think, it’s enough to begin to sense the steady rhythm of India’s heartbeat, to start to understand what makes the country’s spirit tick. When one billion souls crammed into one country all believe in one god or another, when one billion prayers settle on the psychic plane that surrounds you every single day, then you feel it. There is an energy here that I haven’t experienced anywhere else. It’s irrefutable. But then, I did not take into account my own energy at the point I arrived in McLeod Ganj last year. After a tough season in India and particularly after a week alone in Kashmir - a week spent desperately trying to avoid a sense of crushing loneliness and fear, a week where faith was the only thing I had to hold on to - arriving in a place as warm, friendly and secure as McLeod Ganj was inevitably a profound, healing experience.

I’m not in that place now. I have spent the last two and half months cruising around Australia, Thailand and Goa. The toughest journey I’ve taken in all that time I was lying down in a spacious sleeper compartment for twelve hours, feeling sorry for myself because I had a headache and my painkillers were in my big bag, inacessible on the roof. India has not worn me down. It has not made me vulnerable and insecure. But look at it from another point of view – I have not been here long enough for India to open me up. I have not had enough time to adjust to it, to allow my heart to start ruling my head and to go totally with the flow… perhaps this is the reason I eventually found myself running into trouble in McLeod Ganj.

As I am sure is true with many people, I have a certain duality in my character. On the one hand I’m interested in spirituality, in philosophy, in furthering my understanding of myself and the world in which I live and I desire purity in my mind, body and soul. On the other hand I’m cynical and ignorant, shallow and debaucherous, I seek immediate gratification and tend towards self-destruction through the pleasures of the flesh. Mostly I balance these two aspects but every once in a while I go from one extreme to the other.

After a week in McLeod Ganj I found that I had come to a new balance – I had achieved (temporarily, at least) some measure of purity in my mind and body through yoga practice and abstinence from cigarettes, alchohol, meat and cannabis. I felt more perceptive, creative and clear-headed than I had been in a long time, and yet I still maintained my cynical attitude, an attitude which manifested itself as an increasingly vocal scepticism in direct proportion to the amount of new age philosophy I was having to listen to.

As well as being a popular place for westerners looking to discover some measure of truth and a sense of identity amidst the confusing myriad of alternative philosophical and spirital practices which are becoming increasingly popular in modern society, McLeod Ganj is also a favourite for those wanting to get high all day on cheap, strong hashish. Many combine both pastimes – their journey to spiritual enlightenment is often much quicker, in every sense: once they’ve arrived I suspect it doesn’t take very long for them to lose their way again. In my experience smoking cannabis can offer incredible insights – unfortunately the following day what you can remember in invariably nonsense.

The majority of travellers here smoke hashish - or charris, as it’s more commonly called. This puts me in a position which is unique in my experience – I am a non-smoker in a minority amongst smokers. I quit smoking cigarettes three weeks ago, and while I have no violent objections to cannabis in principle, I see little point in quitting one carcinogenic inhalent and not another. I know I’m in danger of becoming one of those despicable ex-smoker hypocrites, but despite that, I can’t help being a bit sceptical of individuals who are searching for truth while at the same time reaching for a spliff.

You could argue that drugs like cannabis and mushrooms enhance our experience of reality - they help to pull down the curtain between our conscious and unconscious minds and increase our awareness to the extent that we can begin to see beyond the limited spectrum of normal human perception… alternatively you could argue that they just twist your brain and make you see crazy shit. I’m on the fence in this debate. I experiment with drugs as a means to expand my mind but I also do it because it’s a lot of fun and I like getting twisted. I am, in my own way, searching for cosmic truth, but I’m not teaching others how to find it, and I know enough to realise that cannabis is at best a distraction, at worst a psychologically damaging addiction. To be frank I find it absurd that a supposed spiritual teacher can justify being stoned all the time, or advocate getting high as a means to attain enlightment – that sounds to me suspiciously like a drug addict in denial bordering on a drug pusher.

This sounds quite harsh I know, but when you’re surrounded by stoned hippies judging that there’s something wrong with you because you dress like a normal human being, that you’re too intellectual and should therefore engage in any one of a dozen meditative practices, then I think harshness is kind of justified. Too intellectual? What does that mean? Too clever to sit around all day getting stoned? Intelligent enough to embrace soap rather than persistently dodge it?

I am prepared to accept the possibility that all this self-righteous anger is fuelled by insecurity because I know deep down that I will find some greater truth inside myself if I embark on a ten day meditation retreat. If that’s the case then when my eyes are finally opened I will eat my words and promptly pack myself off to Vipassana.

For those that don’t know, Vipassana is the most extreme method of meditation that I’ve encountered, requiring that you spend ten days in a meditation centre without talking, reading, writing or engaging in any other pastime other than contemplation and only meditation which is based on the methods taught in the centre. People rave about it. Someone I met even did three courses in a row. Thirty days of silence and meditation - think of that the next time you get bored in the supermarket checkout queue! Even Jesus struggled with that kind of isolation!

Some of you will already know that during the months leading up to my arrival in India I spent some quite considerable time thinking about going on a Vipassana meditation retreat. Not long after arriving in McLeod Ganj I decided that it wasn’t for me. The longer I spent there, the more secure I felt in my decision, simply because I didn’t get the right vibes from the people I spoke to who had already done one. Now my opinon has been concreted. No – I take that back, I’m open to the possibility that my opinion may change, but right now this is what I think: I accept that after ten days existing in those kinds of solitary conditions I am going to feel pretty fucking amazing returning to the real world. What I don’t accept is that the experience will ultimately leave me much changed, although when it comes to a practice as extreme as this, I cannot judge – I have no basis for comparison. Certainly the people I met who had done a Vipassana did not seem any more enlightened than anyone else with a reasonable level of intelligence and an interest in philosophy.

However, everyone is different. We all benefit from different experiences. I have no doubt that this kind of meditation helps a lot of people. I have simply made the informed decision not to do it because I don’t think it will particularly benefit me. For this reason I feel utterly patronised by people who insist otherwise. I am on my own peculiar journey towards self-realisation, as is every other human being on the planet. Some are actively persuing it, devoting all their energies to experiencing enlightenment as soon as possible. Others are content to live their lives in the persuit of simple happiness without asking of themselves any complicated or challenging questions. Some go to church on a Sunday, a synagogue on a Saturday, a mosque five times a day every day. Others, like me, are on their own journey, one that requires no influence from anything or anyone, save God alone.

I meditate in the sunshine, in the forest, in the embrace of the ocean. I contemplate in the pub, in the office, in the bedroom. I need no method, no ideology, no guru in order to experience peace and perspective. I exist in my heart and my head in equal balance as do we all – like many people I’m just better at communicating with one rather than the other. I am in no particular hurry to discover the meaning of life – I figure it’s a lifetime’s persuit and I hope I have many years of growth in wisdom and maturity in order to get a little closer to an understanding of my place in the universe. I’ll settle for that.

I’ll finish with a conversation I overheard in an internet café. This sort of sums up what I mean when I say I’m sceptical about the kind of spirituality that is practiced in McLeod Ganj. So, a woman walks into the cafe and the Indian managing the place says…

- Hi, how are you?
- Not good. I’m leaving.
- Leaving? Why?
- People here don’t take my [insert name of alternative spiritual practice here] seriously. It’s like beating my head against a brick wall.
- Oh. I’m sorry to hear that.
- Yes. I’m going home. The energy in New York is so much more positive.
- Um, New York..?

People here are always talking about energy - this place has good energy or this person has bad energy, this crystal energises this chakra or this position energises that one. I’ve talked about it already in this blog. It strikes me that it’s all relative. Positive and negative, like good and bad, are relative concepts. I’m sure New York, in it’s own way, has powerful energy! But is that energy any better or worse than that which you would find in Leamington Spa, for example? Or McLeod Ganj or Mecca or Jerusalem? In the end, this relativity means that none of us can judge another, we’re all unique and special little flowers, islands incomprehensible to each other.

I know I’m going on a bit now but I find this very interesting - what does it mean, not to judge? I felt judged by hippies when I was in McLeod Ganj. At times I felt written off by people in an instant – and I confess I did the same thing myself. There was one occasion when a chap lost interest in me as soon as I said I had only just started practicing yoga. I asked him what he thought of McLeod Ganj and he said it was like paradise. I had to stop myself from asking him if he had noticed the rivers of shit running down the mountainside.

I’ve also done my fair share of hippie judging here in this blog. It’s in our nature to judge, how else can we make decisions about people? If we don’t judge the people we meet how can we contextualise them? How can we relate to them and enable them to relate to us in a way we can both understand? The problem is that we judge and then we stop. We don’t go back and re-assess. It happens all the time, based on our first impressions we put people we don’t understand into a little box with a neat little label and then we immediately forget about them. Loathe though I am to keep coming back to the hippies, in the course of the last four decades they have been judged by the mainstream as much as any subculture. I guess I thought this would mean that they would be more open-minded.

I guess I thought I was more open-minded, but what does open-minded mean anyway? Open to new ideas? Open to influence? Open to possibility? It’s another relative concept, isn’t it? An open mind isn’t necessarily a healthy mind. A closed mind isn’t necessarily an ignorant one.

View my McLeod Ganj photographs

Pahar Ganj



I'm not such a big fan of Indian cities. When I arrive in one I sort of panic a bit, flounder around and sweat a lot, looking to all the world like a naive and inexperienced backpacker. Then I get ripped off with my accomodation because I'm usually tired at the end of a long journey and I don't want the hassle of the haggle. Finally I end up looking for the quickest and simplest way out and, ticket purchased, hole up in my room watching HBO and Star Movies until the appointed hour of my departure arrives.

Let’s face it – I AM a naïve and inexperienced backpacker.

On my first trip to Delhi I ended up having a lovely couple of days with a lovely Israeli girl. With her by my side - bold, brash and beautiful in the mould of so many of her countryfolk - I felt empowered and walked the mean streets of Pahar Ganj with a certain swagger. I even felt brave enough to book a ticket on a bus to troubled Kashmir. When she left and I began to regret my ill-conceived decision to go to Kashmir everything quickly fell to pieces. For a start, my bus to Kashmir was delayed for a day so I had to spend another night in Delhi. I was stuck between a rock and a hard place. I was in Delhi and didn't want to be there. I was going to Kashmir and didn't want to go there either. I began to become intimidated by India, alone as I was in this vast city in this vast country. I did not feel in control of my fate whatsoever. I wanted to go home.

Then a cow pissed on my foot. That was the last straw. I disappeared into my hotel room and didn't appear again until the bus to Kashmir was leaving. It turned out that Kashmir was quite intimidating too but that's another story. Leaving Delhi on that bus however was a pleasant experience indeed.

On my return to Delhi I wanted to do it right - no hotel rip-offs, no smooth travel agents persuading me to go to places I didn't want to go to, no floundering and sweating, no cows pissing on me... I'm pleased to say that in the end I did do it right - well, half right, anyway. There was a moment when, shortly after I had arrived from the airport, the receptionist in the Pahar Ganj hotel I had found myself in by some accident or twist of fate asked me, quite reasonably, if I wanted a fan or aircon room. I responded, "I don't know! I don't even want to be here!"

I felt like a jibbering naïve and inexperienced backpacker.

The following day I had more balls and managed to negotiate my way with all my bags through the back streets of Pahar Ganj until I located the main bazarre. That was thoroughly good work, believe me. Alas, I was totally confused once I'd reached the bazarre and spent ten minutes wandering up and down looking for the Nepali shop where I'd reserved my bus ticket earlier that day. Agitated, I wandered past a smooth Kashmiri travel agent - "Hey man, what you looking for? Where you going? You sweating man! Chill out! Come to my place..." I politely explained that I didn’t need his help or him in my face but he wouldn’t stop sleazing all over me – I have never known a group of individuals who love themselves as much as the Kashmiri men in Pahar Ganj. In the end I lost my rag, turned around and snarled, "Your place? You mean Kashmir? I've been there mate and it's a fucking shithole! Now please fuck off and leave me alone!"

I don't lose my cool often but when I do...

Pahar Ganj is - for me, at least - one of the craziest places in India. I have no doubt that it's relatively sedate and civilised compared to many places in India – places like the charmingly named Black Hole of Calcutta for example - but I have my reasons for being slightly anxious when I'm within it's precincts, reasons I've just explained - the place has demons for me. Situated centrally in the country’s capital, it is a bit like Delhi’s equivalent of the Koh San Road in Bangkok, in that much of Delhi's backpacker community centres around it's main bazarre, which provides pretty much every item a backpacker in transit needs from a place - apart from peace and quiet perhaps.

With these photographs I wanted to capture some of this intensity and vibrancy, the bustle and the commerce which makes Pahar Ganj so fascinating to me and which, for better or worse, has given me some of my most profound and startling experiences of India.

View my Pahar Ganj photographs

A short term on Palolem Beach



While I got quite snap happy with my friends and surroundings during my time in Thailand, there was not a subject which particularly interested me and compelled me to reach for my camera. As soon as I arrived in India I started carrying it with me everywhere I went because everywhere I looked I observed something I wanted to photograph.

This fact perhaps reflects the different feelings I have for these two countries. Thailand is a great holiday destination, rich and exotic and full of such beautiful people with such easy smiles... but sooner or later you start to get the uncomfortable sense that in a lot of cases there might not be much beyond those smiles except a deep and somewhat tragic understanding of the ways of the western world.

In contrast, Indian smiles are often hidden behind a deep reserve and caution. An Indian man will quite comfortably stare at you for minutes on end, his head cocked to the side and a scowl of concentration on his face - while you feel increasingly awkward and wonder what you've done to deserve such unwanted attention. All you need to do is stare back with matching intensity, wiggle your head from side to side and treat him and everyone else in the vicinity to a big beaming smile - then watch as he is immediately dissarmed and smiles back in delight, head wiggling fit to fall off.

India is a country I find totally compelling - the variety and the complexity of the cultures represented here is totally overwhelming and it would take someone like me a lifetime to really understand the place, which I think is the reason why so many people return to India again and again throughout their lives. It's endlessly fascinating. With each new place you visit you learn something new, or something you thought you knew is turned on it's head. It has the ability to continue to suprise you every day and in every way. Sometimes those suprises are good, sometimes they're not so good...

I started my second journey into India in the same place as my first. Goa, with it's multidude of beaches and Catholic churches is a good place to start because, they say, it is not "The Real India" – it’s an censored version with a lot of the offensive bits taken out, and as we all know from years of wincing at BBC-hacked TV versions of movies, the offensive bits are often the most interesting. I was not planning to return to Goa because I didn't think it had anything new to offer me. I had just come from Thailand which has a beach culture which is so much more unregulated and uninhibited. A young man can only do so much partying before he hankers for something more substantial and this was how I felt once my final Koh Tao hangover had subsided and I was on my way to Bombay.

I was wrong about Goa, it did have something new to show me - something valuable I was able to learn about myself and about other travellers who choose to come to India - but that is another story and will be told another time. I was also reminded that although Thailand may have nicer beaches, clearer waters and a more dynamic nightlife, in terms of people watching, Goa's beaches win hands down every time, but nonetheless, a week spent back on Palolem Beach could be seen from one point of view as a week too long.

Some of you may recall I was there for three weeks in 2005 and complained in my blog of the awful sense of laziness and inertia which slowly but surely engulfed my being until I felt like a raw husk of a man, a vampire who sweated through the days in a shaded hammock and only came alive at night once half a dozen beers and a couple of cocktails had been consumed.

An hour ago I left Goa for the second time. I remember feeling the first time no desire to go back. I feel the same way now. Clearly this is only a temporary condition then – perhaps one that has come about as a result of over-indulging in Goa and before that in Thailand… I’ve had too many nights out with not enough sleep because in this heat and humidity it’s impossible for me to stay in my hut much past 9am.

I departed in significantly more style on this occasion than the first time. Right now I’m flying high above the middle of India headed for Delhi. This flight compresses a 48 hour train journey into a trifling two hours. I had planned to catch the train and revel in the sights, sounds and smells of The Real India on my way north but that would have meant staying five extra days in Goa and I had to get out! I didn’t have it in me to laze anymore.

It was pointed out to me by a good friend that I’ve become a Champagne Backpacker, jet-setting around India with a laptop, mobile phone, iPod and digital SLR camera. I can hardly deny it. This afternoon I paid 900 rupees for a taxi to the airport instead of jumping on a couple of local buses and paying little more than 50 rupees for the hundred kilometre journey – which would have taken four hours instead of one and a half.

Yes – I took a taxi a hundred kilometres, and it isn’t the first time it’s happened this week, it’s the fourth time. I’ve been pinging around Goa shelling out rupees like there’s no tomorrow. In one weekend at The Big Chill I spent around 15,000 rupees on my ticket, taxis, accommodation, alcohol… and assorted sundries – that’s almost £200, probably more than you’d expect to spend in two days at a UK festival. Over the last few weeks I’ve been leading a very extravagant lifestyle but all that is about to stop because I’m heading into the mountains and planning to quit fags, drugs, booze, meat – and sex.

None of that should be too difficult. The cool mountain air and the state of the butchers’ shops up here should be inspiring. I added sex to the list as an after-thought. If, in two months of travelling in Australia and Thailand, I didn’t see any action then I think it’s fair to say that the trend will continue in the mountains, so I may as well pretend to myself that I’m being virtuous. Some of you might say that’s an apathetic and defeatist attitude but, to be entirely honest, I can’t be bothered and I don’t much care.

View my Palolem Beach photographs

Mumbai hotel hell

I thought my return to India was going swimmingly until I got to the hotel I had booked at a kiosk upon my arrival at Bombay airport. The hotel was a steaming shit hole but more about that later. Whereas on my first visit I had disembarked the plane with the kind of fear that a voyage into an India-shaped unknown engenders, this time I breezed along the concourse, a wry smile on my face and a confident swagger in my step. As I swaggered, I recalled with some amusement my previous inexperience and confusion, the stressed-out, sweat-soaked haul from the aeroplane to the immigration desk.

This time it will be different, I told myself. This time I will deal with the cheating hoteliers, wheedling taxi drivers and the apathetic, corrupt officials of Bombay as they need to be treated; with grit, arrogance and disdain – even if they don’t deserve it – in fact, I reasoned, they need to be dealt with in the manner that Indian holidaymakers themselves deal with those who they perceive are there to facilitate the enjoyment of their holiday – I must behave like a bastard for no good reason… in short, I must project strength.

I was filled with an unjustified confidence as I tackled the gentlemen at the hotel booking kiosk and foolishly accepted the first place they recommended without cross-examination and demand for picture proof.

This was my first mistake. On my previous visit to Bombay I had arrived late in the evening and it was close to midnight by the time I made it through immigration. I had managed to befriend a tough Israeli called Alon – the only other westerner on the flight - who was very sceptical of the ardent claims by the kiosk attendants that it was too late to make the two hour journey across town to tourist-friendly Colaba, so we should therefore stay at a hotel near the airport. Thanks to Alon it was very hard work for them to sell us a double room, which seemed to both of us to be at an inflated price. The price didn’t matter to me, all I wanted to do was take refuge somewhere secure and take stock of the crisis situation I had created for myself for choosing to come to such a place as India.

Alon, being Israeli, was not going to accept a price without first putting up a flight. After much argument and expert haggling, my temporary friend of convenience decided to relinquish his scruples for one night and bed down with me in the hotel we were being sold. Blessedly, the hotel turned out to be a nice place and while my roommate was not exactly ideal, at least I was well protected from what I perceived was a clear and present danger of Indians breaking into the room in the middle of the night and robbing me blind. The following morning the free breakfast we were met with as we entered the dining room was exquisite. I gorged myself on all manner of novel Indian breakfast treats and felt content that for this reason alone I had made the right decision in bending my budget on an expensive hotel for one night. Expensive is of course a relative concept in India – my share of the room, buffet breakfast and airport taxi transfers must have been about £10.

This was the kind of treatment I anticipated when I rocked up at the same hotel booking kiosk on this occasion, looking for a place to spend the night. I had it all planned in my head – since I was flying down to Goa the following morning it made perfect sense to spend my first night in Indian at a pleasant hotel near the airport, where I would rest and recuperate after my flight, watch a few movies on HBO and eat fantastic Indian food on my bed. Unfortunately I was far too easy going about the whole process of being sold a hotel. I realise now that I should have been bullish, reluctant, rude and demanding in order to secure a room in a hotel of acceptable standards. I made it too easy for them and in turn they sold me a dud. It was my own fault. I was like a lamb to the slaughter. I think I’m simply too nice to get a good deal in this country.

After a duration in the taxi of such considerable length that it placed the hotel some significant distance from the airport, I stepped out onto a grimy and badly lit backstreet and beheld the building where I would be spending twelve hours recuperating. It was thoroughly soiled and looked like it needed to be pulled down. Inside the reception I was met by a collection of shabbily dressed staff-members, including the cook, who had presumably come up from the kitchen to leer at the fresh meat arriving rather than advertise the specials, which appeared to be splashed generously over the majority of his outfit.

I thought it was funny when I actually saw the room and compared it with the picture I had in my head of what I thought I would get. I was reminded of some of the worst hotel rooms I had spent time in during my last trip to India – everything was there: a double bed, TV, furniture, air-conditioning unit, a bathroom with a shower, western toilet, towel and soap – but it looked wrong, like a hotel room in a horror movie where terrible things have happened over the years and are imminently about to recommence.

I flicked on the TV and the boy who had carried my bag up from reception helped me tune it into HBO. Cocktail was just starting: Tom Cruise was getting stressed out spilling drinks all over the place while Bryan Brown looked on, an endearing and affable twinkle in his eye. Great, I thought, a perfect, trashy movie for me to settle down and watch before bedtime. I was still in a good mood because no serious misfortune had courted me thus far into this latest Indian adventure and although I now realise I shouldn’t have, I accepted the room without too close an inspection, with a resigned sigh and a ironic giggle. What I should have done was raise hell in true Indian style by insulting and shouting at everyone in the vicinity and demanding another room.

I sent the boy away with strict instructions not to disturb me unless he returned with beer and a bottle of mineral water. With some relief I locked the door behind him, settled on the bed and tuned out of reality and into Cocktail: Tom Cruise’s cocktail preparation skills had radically improved, I noted. The boy returned shortly thereafter with a bottle of Kingfisher Strong and was thence swiftly ushered from the room.

Alone for the first time in hours, I finally had a moment to reflect and assess. After a few seconds of reflection upon the room I realised that my initial assessment had been far too generous. Examining the sheets I realised that they were stained and dirty. Examining the towel that had been laid out for me I realised it was stained and dirty. Everything in the room was stained and dirty, even the glass which I was hoping to use for my beer was stained and dirty. I entered the bathroom with some trepidation and raised the toilet seat. It’s interior was stained and dirty. The room had not been cleaned in some time. Dirty, lazy, cheating Indian wankers, I thought, as I promptly tuned back out of reality and proceeded to try and drink my sorrows away with a dusty bottle of Kingfisher Strong. Tom Cruise was chatting [actress name] up in a Jamaican beach bar. Lucky fucker, I thought.

In spite of my crude accommodations, I had a good night’s sleep, lying on top of my cotton sleeping bag and pillowcase, indispensable for the Indian backpacker for exactly these situations. I got up and went to the toilet, absent-mindedly and forlornly attempting to eradicate the shit stains left by a previous occupant with the stream of my piss. I succeeded only partly – the stain had been there for some time. I reflected that the room had probably not been used in about a month, but with the absurdly inflated price I was paying that would hardly be a concern for the hotel owner. It only needed one or two naïve and exhausted western tourists a month to come through the doors to happily keep him in profit.

After I had relieved myself, I showered, even though I had already done so the previous evening. This was not due to any particular obsession with cleanliness, my motivation was clear enough – even standing in the centre of such a room not touching anything for any length of time would invariably make one feel unclean. As I tried to make it back to the bed and into my shoes without touching the ground, the phone rang. I picked it up. The dirty, cheating Indian at the other end told me my taxi was waiting to take me to the airport. Five minutes later I was downstairs in reception, reluctantly handing over the money I owed. I was not happy to be paying a thousand rupees for my twelve hour stint in the shit hole, but I had little choice – I had agreed the price and I had agreed to take the room.

“Fifteen percent luxury tax,” the receptionist said to me, smiling benignly. “One hundred and fifty rupees extra.”
Luxury tax?! On a room with a shit-stained toilet?! I nearly exploded. In fact, I did explode.
“You are a cheating man!” I shouted, “This room was dirty and disgusting! I am not paying that!”
The receptionist was taken aback by my outburst, but he was a professional (crook), he was only fazed for a moment.
“But sir, if the room was not up to your accepting standards then you should have said and we would have glady provided another.”
“But… but…” I stuttered, incredulous, the realisation dawning that I didn’t have any hope of winning this argument. He was right, and while I knew I was being thoroughly ripped off I knew that I was in a strange hotel in a strange part of a strange city and I was entirely alone. There was only one thing to do.

As I scowlingly handed over the cash I noticed a sign on the wall behind the reception desk advertising room rates which tallied exactly with the amount I was handing over, even to the extent that there was a footnote which stated that an additional 15% would be added on top of the total bill for luxury tax. This reassured me at the time and saw to it that my blood did not boil for more than about sixty seconds, but in hindsight I realise that this could have very easily been fixed during the telephone conversation the hotel booking kiosk attendant had engaged in with the hotel staff in rapid Hindi the previous evening. The sign was one of those matte, black plastic affairs with lots of evenly spaced holes and white letters that can be moved around to create a message of your choice – or in this case, quickly adjust the price of a room upwards or downwards… but preferably upwards.

It was only later, as I sat drinking coffee at the airport, that the phrase tourist trap first flitted into my consciousness. How could a hotel of such hideously low standards of quality and hygiene ever hope to be successful? It couldn’t – the place must have been a classic tourist trap, it’s only purpose for existence to make a quick buck from idiots like me. Eventually I discovered from an India veteran that the hotel booking kiosk at Bombay International Airport is a racket involving the local tourism board, an assortment of local hotels of substantially varying quality, the police and the mafia. By this time the unpleasantness of the experience and the sour taste the rip-off had left in my mouth had all but gone – I was sipping cocktails with hot chicks at Goan beach bars and I was able to be quite philosophical about the whole thing. First of all, you live and learn. Secondly, what is a nice guy like me to do with the various powers of local tourism, hotel owners, the police and the mafia arrayed against him? There’s only one thing you can do – smile benignly, turn on the TV – and don’t eat any of the food.