June 10, 2013
Surely it would not be the worst thing in the world if I stayed here in Pokhara!!! This place is amazing. Sometimes, just sometimes, the level of laid back gets to me a little. At the ashram they wake us with a cup of tea at 7am. That means it can be anywhere between 6.30am and 8am. The last meditation session of the day – Satsang which means celebration of the day – is supposed to start at 7pm. I have yet to see that happen. Sometimes it just doesn’t happen at all.
Life is so simple here, so very different from ours. I was talking with the teacher Baba Ji the other day about how to take home what I have learnt. He said to me to find an open window and just sit there and be. I thought about this for a while and responded: “I do not have any windows in my life which open”. It was a revelation. Our rented apartment has only the sliding doors to a balcony which faces a main road and a small widow in my son’s room. The office I had worked in for the last four years had no windows which opened.
Baba Ji thought about what I said for a while and said: “but what do you do for air?” It was impossible to explain to him.
A couple staying at the ashram tried to post some clothes home to Holland. The post office told them they could not post clothes anywhere. When asked why not they were told “because it is”. When they pushed the matter and asked why is it, they were told “it just is, that is all”.
You really do need to put your logical mind aside here and just be. Which is very cool.
I seriously think – okay maybe it is just a fantasy – that I could live here. Maybe run a little guest house (with staff who would do the work of course). A foreigner cannot own real estate in Nepal. The majority ownership must be held by a Nepali national.
The people here are gorgeous and smile so openly and freely. They are so completely unaffected by the stresses we labour under in the west. They know how to live. They sleep a lot, dance a lot, eat dal bhat for every bloody meal (am totally over that) and just sit around being. They don’t think about tomorrow or material things or ambition or acquiring or travelling. It is a little narrow-minded but that’s okay. The Nepalese are happy. How many societies can you say that about?
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