Tag Archives: Himalayas

After the trek

May 20, 2013

I am finally back in Kathmandu after an extraordinarily arduous trek. But man, was it worth it! Snow capped mountains, close up encounters with yaks, flowing waterfalls from melting glaciers, the beautiful, warm and generous people of Nepal’s regional areas. Truly a life-changing event for me and a fantastic chance to re-evaluate my priorities and perspective.

I had a moment where my guide Dipak (a gentleman if ever there was one) insisted I rest during a particularly gruelling climb. I had been insisting we continue to get to our destination for the day but he demanded I stop, saying I needed a rest. He handed me some water and a mandarin and said simply: “Angie, look”.
I looked up and was surrounded by majestic mountains, a gushing river, waterfalls, tibetan mountains with their uneven coats of snow. And at that very moment, everything in my life made sense. Had things not happened the way they did, in the order they did and to the magnitude they did, I would never have found myself trekking through the Himalayas doing something which was purely for me. And right then, I was grateful for all which had gone before. And that feeling has not left me a full week later. If anything it has grown.
I love Nepal and find that my needs are diminishing daily. Give me a bed with a mattress an inch or more thick; a pillow which is not stone; a toilet which is indoors (even if it is a very smelly and cold squat toilet during minus five degrees) and I am pretty happy.
The food is astounding. Who the hell would have thought yak’s cheese would be so sensational? I am a convert to Dhal Bhat (lentil soup with rice and vegies on the side cooked with chilli) and have left meat behind me for the duration on this trip after having heard some horror food (meat) poisoning stories.
I leave Kathmandu on Thursday for probably a two week advenure. I am loving not having internet or phone access. It is amazing how that break from technology clears the mind. I like it, a lot.
I don’t know what comes next. Nepal continues to show me very few things happen as you expect. And that is cool. It really is when you are not in a hurry, on deadline and trying to satisfy the demands of 10 people at once.
I am happy. In a way I would not have thought possible a month ago. But things are changing for me and I really reckon I have to be one of the most blessed people in the world.
All the best my friends,
A

Marking my journey – in my own way

End of June, 2013

It’s one of those moments hopefully you will never forget. But people do; all the time.
I am sitting in Kathmandu and wondering whether now is the time to get another tattoo. I am busting out of my corporate life, but I also know common sense means one day I will probably end up back there. A very visible tattoo can – let’s call a spade a spade – have a serious impact on your future employment options.
I already have a tattoo on my right forearm which is very visible. I don’t feel a need to hide it, but I also don’t want to be an advert for tattoos and have another in plain sight. So this is a decision which needs careful consideration.
Tattooing is one of those weird things which becomes insanely addictive and the self-control and common sense required to keep it under control becomes a testament to a person’s sense of judgement and maturity – or not.
So I wander into one of the world famous tattoo artists in Nepal with a clear idea of what I want and where I want it. Discreet and meaningful without being, well, crass.
I flick through the dozens of books to be sure I am doing the right thing. I have just had – in the last few minutes – a half dozen people trying to sell me hash. I am not a drug taker as a rule and so do not need to make this decision in an altered space. But suddenly I understand the dynamics of a lot of really bad decisions being made by hundreds, if not thousands of people.
I had walked into maybe a dozen tattoo studios throughout Nepal but each place kind of screamed at me “not here”. It has taken a long time but I have learned to listen to that voice.
So I find myself in Kathmandu and feel a need to mark this period in my life; a period of radical reassessment, of self reflection, of coming of age; of achieving balance. And I know what I need to do.
I completely understand that tattoo virgins won’t ever understand this. And power to them. But I am driven. I need to mark this period in my life. It is about me and no-one else so I don’t care if another human being ever sees what I am about to do to my body.
I pick the perfect image. It is identical to a charm a dear friend gave me a few months before; it is a metaphor for my recent past – the tree of life! And it is beautiful. Intricate (read painful), but quite perfect. I tell the artist the word I want written underneath it. It is a direct translation of an English word. He suggests a Nepalese version which has greater meaning. I call my Nepali host to make sure I am not about to deface my body with a word which is frankly, having a laugh at my expense. He assures me it is in line with where my head is at.
So I agree, checking first and foremost we are dealing with clean needles, clean ink. The pain is, well, what one experiences getting a tattoo.
But then there is a brilliant distraction. In walk two really young people, maybe 20 or so. They have a German accent and are walking with a swagger. They are young and wearing US basketball outfits right down to the backwards cap. They make me laugh. He is a tattoo veteran. She has never had a tattoo and, at maybe 20, is keen to enter the fold.
She decides to get a love heart on the middle finger of each hand. One will be filled in, the other not. I am wincing in pain as the tree of life is inked into my body, but I am also fascinated by the sideshow of this young, supercool, serious attitude woman, getting her first tattoo. The outline of the heart on her first finger goes well. I can channel the pain I am feeling as my own tattoo takes shape, into sheer curiosity at this very young woman wanting to impress her boyfriend.
But then the artist starts working on the second love heart. It is literally a matter of seconds before our über-cool tattoo virgin passes out; literally. One second she is sitting being tattooed, the next she is on the ground unconscious. The staff try not to laugh. Her boyfriend looks disgusted, embarrassed and concerned all at the same time. I am in enormous pain but boastful I am still conscious yet concerned this young woman is literally unconscious.
Clearly the staff here are used to this. They have been doing this gig for a long time. I am totally pedestrian by comparison. We all share a kind of uncomfortable chuckle, and I feel further emboldened. Sure, I don’t need to take my tattoo to the next level, but I am pretty impressed with myself nevertheless. I have trekked the Himalayas, I have been on the most terrifying bus rides ever, I have quit my job and taken off to Nepal on a whim. I can handle a tattoo in Kathmandu. This woman’s unconsciousness curiously, perhaps uncomfortably, emboldens me, and I gather strength and grit my teeth while the artist finishes my tattoo.
There are maybe only half a dozen people who have seen my tattoo since I returned to the corporate world. Even fewer know what the Nepali word is and it’s meaning. And I like that.
We are built of so many facets. We are not one person, we are many and only gradually reveal ourselves to those we trust.
I like that. It is not withholding who I am. It is taking my time to decide who I share that with.
And always in the back of my head I wonder, did the baseball cap German woman follow through or is she wandering around with half a tattoo? I like the metaphor – each person’s journey is so individual and so intimate.

Introduction to Nepal

May 2, 2013

HELLO FROM NEPAL!
Wow! I honestly don’t know where to start. I sat next to an English coal miner’s daughter between Brisbane and Singapore (really!!!) who wanted to tell me all about her dying mother – an occupational hazard; eneryone feels a need to tell journos their life story! The flight in was extraordinary (not including the poor Nepalese woman who passed out on her way to the loo, directly in front of my seat (still waiting to make sure she had no contagious disease!). The view of the Himalayas was breathaking, amazing, awe-inspiring. I had the same reaction when I saw the Taj Mahal but this time was with a plane full of people, many of whom were experiencing the same level of awe as me.
Kathmandu is bizarre, No other word for it really. Hot, heavily populated with locals hoping to make a quick buck from “rich” tourists. My hotel room is as basic as a room can get. The shower is quite literally a hole in the wall. There is no air con which is fine as there is very often no power (up to 12 hours a day Nepal “power sheds” which means the switch is flicked and the power is out.) Thankfully my motel has a generator which works some of the time. It kept sputtering and then shutting off last night. I watched as they drained fuel from a motorcycle and fed it in to the generator which duly sputtered back into action for about 20 minutes – making the entire building shake with its noise and vibration as it did so. The toilet flushes only when there is power (truly a mystery to me!), my room clock says it is 4 at all times and there is no bin or even facilities to make tea. Yet a guy in the street yesterday told me the hotel I am staying at is kind of top notch. I seem to have one of the best rooms in the place thanks to a former colleague arranging the room through an old school friend. My room overlooks the courtyard/garden (read carpark) and the residence of the motel owner Kiran and his extended family. It is humbling to see how this family lives. I realised last night that everything I packed in my suitcase and backpack was probably more than most Nepalese own!!!
Cows have right of way on the road on the odd occasion when they do move – except when they stop in the middle of the street which is unfortunate for motorists and pedestrians alike. Strays dogs are a dime a dozen spending hours searching for food but ignoring people. I wanna feed them all.
Buffalo, it turns out, does not taste at all like chicken. More gamey and well, kind of yuck!
More to come. Hopefully some of this will start to make sense soon – or not!