I awoke thinking that I had injured my tongue.  In my sleep-fog, I examined it in the miror.  Satisfied that it was whole, I returned to bed.  Now, I think that my tongue was changing configuration - hinging in the middle to pronoune the polysyllabic, metered words here.  Exchanging one for the other - Thiruvananthapuram for Trivanduram, Kunyakumari for Cape Cormorin.
I don't know what people want me to be here, and the question of identity seems to be at the forfront.  Like so many things, there is no proper answer.  If I say that I am American, people insist that I am Indian "but settled in the U.S."  If I give them that answer, they tell me that I am American.  I think what people really want - what is important to them - is to place me in a category themselves, to affix the label like a "Hello, My Name is" sticker at a convention.
I went to the sea.  I expected to to speak to me, but all I heard was my own voice telling it that it is not my ocean.  Beofre I could really miss the Pacific, I began to feel connected to the sea, vibrations along a long, long, invisible thread.
Contradictions and ironies are everywhere.  People here are modest, theoretically, yet the men show more leg than any of the styles in H&M last summer.  It's all about the mini-lunghi apparently.  So, the men are walking around in mini-skirts and I get looked at askance if I don't wear a duputta with my loose-ass salwar.  (Duputta and backpack do NOT work well together.)  It shouldn't surprise me, modesty has always been applied nearly exclusively to women.
I am over being cranky-pants (cranky-churidar?) about this trip - it's starting to find its own rhythym now.  So far, this has been my best trip to India - but that is thanks to the low expectations standard.
Monday, January 08, 2007
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1 comment:
omg, i am laughing so hard at "it's all about the mini-lunghi" -- and yet, also gagging at the mental image.
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