And then, AH! You get a real glimpse of it.

This piece was written while sitting in the Delhi Airport…

I was in awe when I saw this vibrant green growth, a welcomed sign of spring.

I was in awe when I saw this vibrant green growth, a welcomed sign of spring.

Its an interesting observation to have, to witness how something has been unfolding all along. And then, AH! You get a real glimpse of it.

 

Slowly, slowly in the way Ma India has her way of being, I was being presented with opportunity after opportunity to not plan, to not have expected outcomes.

 

A friend from my sangha, a group of people who gather together to support one another, reached out to us on our Whats App group to share that she was hosting all night Gong Baths at the International Yog Festival hosted by the Indian Government. She was looking for volunteers to sell the tickets and support with the evening Gong Bath sessions.  The resort was one street over from Mother Miracle, the school I was volunteering at and I thought, I could be at the school in the morning and an at the festival in the afternoon. It was exams and testing week, children were in school from 8-11 and during that time they were taking tests, so during that time Kusum and I would be able to get our work done and after I could support my friend at the Yog Festival.  I reached out to Komal sharing “I am up for doing whatever it is you need me to do.”

Completing my homework from my 200 hour Yoga Teacher Training.

Completing my homework from my 200 hour Yoga Teacher Training.

 

In the days leading to the event, I was working on my homework for my 200 hour yoga teacher training, I had not been feeling well and spent a lot of hours in front of the computer so I was looking forward to having a morning to be, simply be. 

 

I woke up, did my practice and thought about how lovely it would be to have a paratha and chai at the chai stand, then go to the Ram Jhula Market via an auto and walk the rest of the way to Ganga Resort along Ma Ganga. That way, I thought to myself, I could stop when I’d like to feel the warmth of the sun, watch the water, touch the water and be outside. 

Seen along the walk to the cafe.

Seen along the walk to the cafe.

 

When I arrived at the Chai stand, they were closing for lunch- no paratha and chai for me. Okay, I thought, not what I had in mind, what to do… so I thought, I’ll go to a café that over looks Ma Ganga and have a burger. As I made my way to the café, I stopped at a temple to say hi to Hanuman, Shiva, Ganesha and Kali.

 

clear day Ganga and Rishikesh.jpg

The cafe I wanted to go to for a delicious burger was also closed, so I chose to eat at the one next door. Once at the café, I noticed how clear the sky was while enjoying my pineapple juice and grilled veggies with hummus for breakfast, I could see with clarity and far.

 As I walked to get an auto, I noticed many cars, trucks and autos waiting, there has been construction happening and at times they would close one side of the road. In doing so, the traffic in both directions would have to take turns using the available road. I asked to get in a few autos, they told me no by waving me on. I found one rickshaw that offered to take me to Ram Jhula, the section along Ma Ganga I wanted to go to. While sitting and waiting for other passengers to fill in, I heard a man asking about how much it would cost to go to Rishikesh. I asked if I could offer him a suggestion, thinking I have learned to not ask, for when you ask, they know you do not know so they will charge you more. He told me he did not need any suggestions. I, along with 6 others were riding along in the auto, when he stopped and motioned for me to get out.  While I meant to go the market at Ram Jhula, he had stopped at the Ram Jhula bridge, which is before the market. This ‘threw me off,’ as I was not prepared to get out. I did not have my rupees out which took time for me to locate in my backpack, so much time that the driver took off the brake of the auto an began rolling down the hill. I gave him 50 rupees and he gave me 20 in return. What? I said as he drove off, I was pissed that he took 30 rs for such a short ride in comparison to the 10 rupees I usually paid to go all the way to school. (In the scheme of things, this is really not a big deal, 10 rupees is about 15 cents. Looking back, I think it is funny that I had just asked the man if he wanted a suggestion regarding cost of rides, and there I was paying 20 more rupees than I had planned).

It was more about me not wanting to be there. Having a plan, wanting to be somewhere else and not being there. The change in plans had me disoriented, not prepared, and mildly annoyed. I noticed the anger arising for I had not planned to be at the bridge and I reasoned in my mind, if I was dropped where I intended to get out then this whole thing, plus the feelings I was having could have been avoided (typing this has me chuckling because, he meaning the driver, did not do anything to me. I was reacting to what I wanted and did not get and I had a choice on how I wanted to respond and what I was doing was reacting). 

As I began walking down the stairs I saw a baba in a saffron colored simple clothing, with a bandage covering an oozing wound on his knee. Our eyes met and he reached out his hand asking for an offering. I acknowledged him with my hands in prayer and said, “Namaskar”, he pointed to his eye and an empty eye drop package. I acknowledged him and his request and began walking; a few steps down I turned around walked back and took a look at the package. I saw that it was, what appeared to me as eye drops and I told him I would be back.  I have learned from my experiences that I feel comfortable offering tangible items, mostly food, as offerings instead of money, in this case, I walked to the chemist to purchase the eye drops.   Upon returning he showed me that his eye drops were medicinal and the eye drops I was offering to him was not the right one. Wanting to support and determined to get it right, I took a photo and began to head back to the shop. He told me, in what I could understand with my Hindi and his English that he gets his medicine at the hospital and wanted money. By this time, a gentleman had approached us and I looked to him to ask with my face and eyes, “what is the right thing to do,” he suggested not giving the money, which was the feeling I had on the inside.

Comparing the drops I bought (underneath) with the box he gave me.

Comparing the drops I bought (underneath) with the box he gave me.

 

I noticed the time and now, with the commitment I made to be there at 1, needed to get back in an auto to be at the resort. I did not have time to walk and sit along Ma Ganga as I had planned.  I walked back up the steps. A few full autos passed me before one with Hanuman and Durga stickers on the windshield stopped and I hopped in.

While in the auto I made a new plan, I will get out at Kailash Gate and walk from the bridge they are constructing to the resort, that way I can still walk along Ma Ganga for a bit.

Durga and Hanuman on auto.jpg
This is a photo of the bridge that was being constructed. This is near Kailash ghat where I attempted to walk to the resort and was told to go another way. This photo was taken on a different day, from Ganga Resort while I was volunteering.

This is a photo of the bridge that was being constructed. This is near Kailash ghat where I attempted to walk to the resort and was told to go another way. This photo was taken on a different day, from Ganga Resort while I was volunteering.

 

As soon as I stepped on to the pathway, the ghat, I noticed there were a lot of people standing around. I thought it was a burning, since I was near the burning section of the ghat. I also saw a rope. The rope was being used like a divider or boundary, while not usually seen, it is not fully honored when it is, so like everyone else, I walked around the rope and continued walking until I was stopped by a police officer who gestured that I needed to go around. Okay, I thought, I will find my way through this parking lot of tourists busses and make my way through the streets to get to the resort. I wove in and out of the parked cars and busses, passing folks at food carts, drinking lime sodas and navigated my way to a path that I thought would lead me in the direction I needed to be.

 

I started laughing hysterically, “I get it, I get it,” I said out loud while laughing, I am not supposed to have a plan. I see what you (Divine Mother, Universe, Ether however you want to call the higher energy we are guided by) are doing. Giggling to myself I made my way through the streets and was pleasantly delighted to meet a familiar road at an intersection. I noticed a group of people ahead, as I approached them I noticed that there were rolling barriers and more police officers who were stopping folks from entering the road to the resort. I was told with words and a hand gesture to go around.  

 

waiting on the corner.jpg

Familiar with the area I walked the winding streets and approach the next entrance to the ghat, the pathway next to Ganga. There were more police officers there, it was then, that I noticed a huge tent and it occurred to me that they were limiting folks from entering due to the festival, however when I asked to go through, they told me yes.  I walked up the steps to the ghat and proceed to make my way to the resort. After a few steps, I was told, that I needed to turn around and go the other way (the ways from which I had just come from). Which I did, I turned around and made it back toward the first road barrier.

This photo was taken on my way to the Mother Miracle Bakery on a different day, it was taken in the morning as the sun was rising. If you continue to walk straight, this street takes you to the entrance to the ghat

This photo was taken on my way to the Mother Miracle Bakery on a different day, it was taken in the morning as the sun was rising. If you continue to walk straight, this street takes you to the entrance to the ghat

yog fest tent.jpg

While waiting I made a voice recording to a friend, here are snippets of what I said:

The universe is really asking me to not have a plan

I am, I have been trying to get in for 45 minutes

They keep saying,

“No ‘mam not here.”  “Go around.”  “No ‘mam.” “Wait 15 minutes.” “Open soon.”

Does this corner look familiar?

Does this corner look familiar?

I waited there, at the place where I began, now for the second time. It was really waiting, I have noticed that at times I projected my view of folks in India not doing things, standing around and waiting. Over time I realized that they are not actually waiting at all, they are being present. They are in the moment, present in the moment until that moment ends and then moving on to the next moment.  I chuckle typing this, because when I shared this with a friend who is Indian, she shared, yes, that is one way to look at it. The other is that many folks, these are my words, I am paraphrasing, many folks think that someone else will get something done, so while it looks like they are being present, they are there, standing because they think that someone else will do what ever needs to be done or accomplished, so in a sense they are waiting for someone else to do the work. For me, I was really waiting. I was waiting to have access to get past the barricade to get to the Yog Festival to volunteer.

 

After waiting for what felt like a long amount of time, I decided to head back through the streets, past the bakery, back up to the ghat near the tent. My thinking was, maybe they will let me through that way, since they are not letting me through this way. I walked along the street and made my way back to the entrance steps to the ghat.  As before, the guards at the bottom of the ghat allowed me to go through the barricade, I was also able to walk past the tent.  I am getting closer, I thought. I can see the entrance to the hotel, I can see the vendor tents.  I also saw woman hanging a banner advocating for the rights for girls to be educated.  I took a moment to sign the banner and talk with the woman who worked for the state.  Continuing on, I was pleasantly surprised that the officers were permitting me to move, now I was walking down the steps closer the steps that would take me up to the vendor tent where I could volunteer…. Until I walked right past it, following a bunch of folks walking on a path that lead me back to the place where I started from- FULL CIRCLE.

save a girl signature drive.jpg
This is the path I walked along the ghat, it is taken from Ganga Resort, the place of the Yog Festival a few days after I walked the full circle.

This is the path I walked along the ghat, it is taken from Ganga Resort, the place of the Yog Festival a few days after I walked the full circle.

No joke.

Now, again at the place from which I began for the third time.

Same corner, different perspective. This photo is taken from the southwest corner. I snapped this photo because the Kushi Foundation is a charitable trust which is a part of Sattva, where I completed my 200 hr training.

Same corner, different perspective. This photo is taken from the southwest corner. I snapped this photo because the Kushi Foundation is a charitable trust which is a part of Sattva, where I completed my 200 hr training.

I arrived at the desk at 3 pm, when I had “planned” to be there at 1. Komal was gracious and understanding, saying we were on “divine time.”

yog fest sign.jpg

Not one thing that day went according to my ‘plan’ or how I thought it would be.  

 

I was a beautiful day. As it was meant to be.

 

In light and with love,

Sara

I Was There and Now I am Here

Here are photos and captions that I took from the day I departed India and travelled to the US.

Hanuman with 13 story temple behind.jpg

The last photo I took in November 2018 when I was in Rishikesh was of this murti of Hanuman. This past winter I had a dream with this murti in it and in the dream there was a temple behind it, a tall temple with many stories. I spent time here, at this place on Ma Ganga and in front of this murti throughout my time in Rishikesh, it was not until this very moment that I saw and registered that the 13 story Shiva temple (Trayambakeshwar) is in the background. You can also see the Laxam Jhula bridge.

look over your shoulder baby.JPG

My beloved Ria and I used to say “Look over your shoulder baby,” to one another. Here I am doing that, a nod to three things I love - MJ in front of Ma Ganga, with Shiva in the distance.

parantha and sapji.jpg

Soon after that photo it started raining…I decided to sit at my local chai shop to have aloo paratha (a flat, fried bread with potatoes) and sabji (cooked vegetables, here it is cauliflower and cabbage). My chai was on its way….

smiling from bed at Swiss.jpg

I sent this picture to my family as I was leaving the wifi access I had. I anticipated that I would not be able to access wifi to be in touch with them until I arrived in the US. That proved to be true.

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On my way into the Jolly Grant Airport in Dehradun.

Smiling wi.th mask, realized this is all a play.jpg

I continue to be amazed by the power of a gaze. Our eyes convey so much.

smiling with mask.jpg

It is so easy to see the smile that adorns my face even though you can not see the smile. It is all conveyed through the eyes.

Inside the delhi airport.jpg

A snapshot from inside of the International Terminal in Delhi which you have to show your boarding pass or proof that you are flying as well as your passport to enter. The guard, who had a gun, asked me “are you sure you want to enter? Your flight is not until 10:45 pm and it is now only 2. Once you come in, I can not let you out.” “Yes,” I replied, assuring him I was prepared to be inside for that long. I wrote a few pieces during that stretch of time which I will add here.

Snapple in Delhi.jpg

I would write a bit, then stand to stretch my legs. You can not check in until three hours before departure, so I had to carry by bag with me wherever I went. I had an opportunity in High School for my first international trip to Spain (with my beloved Abbey) and as I prepared to go, my dad taught me to never travel with more you can carry, it has been a valuable lesson as I moved a lot while in India and had to carry my bags with me while navigating the terminal. After a trip to the bathroom I noticed a newsstand. As I made my way through the small shop, I saw a refrigerator section that said Chilled Drinks; I walked towards it. To my pure delight I saw a Snapple, a PEACH Snapple! Oh my heart was full with joy! A peach Snapple at the Delhi airport! I selected a bag of mature cheddar and red onion chips to accompany it. When I got to the register, the gentleman rang up both the Snapple and the chips it was 585 rupees. I was a bit confused since the chips were 8o rupees, doing the math in my head I figured the Snapple was close to $8. No, I thought to my self, I can not purchase a Snapple for $8, and then I thought, Why Not?

Octopus has 3 hearts.jpg

You can imagine the delight that radiated from my heart as I lifted the cap to read this! The message. An octopus! Three hearts! A Peach Snapple. The Delhi airport in India. I could not make this up. Life is wonderful. So, so, so very grateful to be able to experience this brilliant life.

kulfi at the airport.jpg

Once through customs and screening, on my way to the gate, I saw a man eating kulfi, a traditional Indian ice cream. “Yum,” I said out loud, “great choice.” The man, whose name is Ajat, turned and said, come have one. He bought me pistachio kulfi and I enjoyed it in the airport. Ice cream in the airport! I finished it right before I went through the second screening to board the plane.

row 41, 41st floor.jpg

I was pleasantly surprised to learn that I slept for the first 11 hours of the flight! When I awoke and checked the time that remained until I landed, I had enough time to watch a movie. I had been seeking an opportunity to watch The Matrix and to my delight they had it as an option. “It is the question that drives us mad. It’s the question that brought you here.” When I saw that Neo and Trinity ascended to the 41st floor to bring Morpheus out of the Matrix I was charmed that I was sitting in row 41… I have not put all of this together to glean meaning… I simply love moments like this…as everything is happening for us…

text thread.PNG

Laura realized that I was flying on 3.14/15! I like numbers. Which is a nod to pi- 3.1415926535 and Ms. Washington’s math class at Mt Hebron Middle school. Ms. Washington taught us a rhythm to remember the sequence. Ask me to chant it for you the next time we connect, I am happy to share it. It too, brings me much joy!

going in to customs.jpg

There were so many people arriving in the US, they stopped us at the top of the stairs to manage the flow down below. The image is blurry because I was not supposed to take a picture and there were so many people behind me I could not stop.

luggage on cue.jpg

There she is, my trusty red travel bag appeared as if on cue, right as I walked up to the baggage carousel.

at the airport hotel.JPG

I spent my first few hours in the US at an airport hotel. This is a moment I captured while there.

On the go again. In the elevator headed down to meet my Mom and my Dad! They arrived in Newark later that evening from a trip Panama and Costa Rica. We were going to go to their house, which my Dad named the International House.

welcome home from Pam.jpg

What a welcome! Pook had crumb topping donuts, flowers, and a balloon waiting to greet us! Yes, we ate donuts at 2:30 in the morning. There is not wrong time to enjoy a donut.

in my room.jpg

This is what was waiting for me when I went upstairs!

octopus card.jpg

This was the card she wrote to me that was hidden in the envelope. I mean!

Ophelia.jpg

And this, is what was inside a pink bag surrounded by gold heart tissue paper. Her name is Ophelia and she was “born” in November 2019… the same time I departed for India!

Yes, life is magical and I am so grateful to be living mine to the fullest!

Sending you love from three hearts and an eight armed HUG!

in love and light,

Sara

Sri Ram Ashram as an Orphanage

view of courtyard SRA.jpg

Orphanage/fully functioning family? I am confused. This is a text that came from my beloved Lauren. Totally understandable question, I thought as I read it.  Here is my answer, with the information that I have at this time.

Sri Ram was founded as an Ashram, as a home for children who did not have one. When the founder, Hari Dass, known as Babji was young he had a friend who was an orphan. His friend told him stories of children being hit and abused, and in that moment Babji made a commitment to create a place where children would be loved, treated with respect and grow to be active contributors to society.

When Sri Ram started, Babji knew that children were taken and used as servants so he was against giving children up for adoption, so in the beginning, children who came here, joined a family in which they would live.

Ansula and I were talking one day and she shared that one of the hardest days of her life was the day she learned Babji passed.  Many of the children here, had not met Babji. Ansula and the elder children had.  I hear them share fond memories of laughing and joking with Babji spending time with him outside under the mango tree.  The other hard day she shared was July 4/5, when she had to say goodbye to her brother that she had a very special bond with. She shared that he had been adopted.

Up until that moment, I did not know that children here at the ashram were adopted.

Rajvi, has been a trustee for Sri Ram for over 25 years and he explained that in more recent years, the times have changed and so has the law.  Now, Sri Ram is required to ‘put children up for adoption.’ While the older children will not be adopted, the younger children can be. They have a specific process and rules that govern these decisions. Families go through an interview process, they have folks visit their home and they are required to submit financial statements (the income must be 3000 rupees a month- that is close to $600). Once a child has been adopted, then Rajvi and his wife Rami travel to visit the child with their family twice over the next two years.

Sri Ram, to me is a family. It is not and does not feel like an institution. Children are welcomed here as I was welcomed, with open arms. Children come to Sri Ram in three different ways, they have either been orphaned, abandoned or surrendered.  Sri Ram welcomes them all, even as young babies. The youngest baby they have welcomed was eight hours old. Not all children come here as babies, some children are much older, one child recently came and he is eight.  No matter how they arrive here, all children are a part of this family and are provided for until they are settled and established on their own and that looks different for each individual.

Since being here over the winter holiday, I had the opportunity to meet older siblings who have returned to visit for the break, some come for the weekend, one stopped by to pick up mail. Some are in school, studying dentistry or photography, living with roommates and navigating being independent moving away from the ashram to Delhi or Jaipur. Three girls left together and work together at a travel agency and work together to cook meals. They shared that living in the ashram has prepared them to live that way. One started a Cross Fit gym in Haridwar and recently bought a house.  Some are married and have families of their own.

Each individual is unique and the ashram does what it can to support and afford opportunities for all of the children to follow their passion and achieve their dreams.