Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Flights Home :)

Kristen and I have decided to head back to Cape Town a little earlier than initially expected.

Return date: 28th February 2012

In short we miss everyone way too much! We'll be in Cape Town for 3-4 weeks, and then we'll be heading to the States for the rest of the year.

This may mean the end of this blog soon - but not the end of our adventures! We've got some really exciting stuff planned for the next few weeks. Read on...

Kerala - First impressions

Kristen and I arrived (by train) in Kochi (Kerala) today.

First impression - the people are so much more friendly. Here is just a snapshot:
  • Venders don't ask twice when you kindly decline their offers! 
  • Food is served with a smile - oh and a $1.20 dollar breakfast and a $1.10 lunch. Cheapest food in India so far!
  • Tuk-tuk drivers actually offer us fair prices, that we don't even bother bargaining. One tuk-tuk driver found us a wonderful "home-stay", a motorbike to rent, and drove us around, and only asked us a minimal rate of 20 rupees ($0.40). We gave him 100 rupees because he was just awesome!

Kerala Plans

Our rough plan for the following 3 weeks (wow - only 3 weeks left!) are as follows:
  • 7th (tonight) - homestay with a local family (motorbike rental) for 2 nights near Kochi Fort.
  • 9th - Travel 40km down to Alappy for a day on a wonderful back-water house boats, fresh fish meals... more to come! A mere $10 per person (all expenses included!)

  • 11th - Take a ferry to the Lakshadweep islands, for 6 nights on the islands (with only 30 others tourists!). We'll be scuba diving every day - I need to learn somehow! We crazily booked this earlier today! Fingers crossed it looks like the pictures :) 

  • Then we have a week left to head North, or South? Suggestions welcome :)
I know it looks a bit extravagant, but in this affordable country Kristen and I have decided to treat ourselves!

3 weeks of relaxation to celebrate our engagement :)

Or has it been 3 months?



Monday, February 6, 2012

Bargaining in Goa

The bargaining in Goa is sooooo weird! I mean, India has tourists, sure. But Goa has TOURISTS. Here is a little comment on bargaining.

To get you in the mood...


Imaginary Situation: 

Given, a straw hat is worth $5 in a city.

Standard Rules of bargaining (in a city, where supply and demand are in balance):

Opening bid:
  • They say $20
  • I say $5
Bargaining round(s):
  • They say $15
  • I say $8
  • They say $12
  • I say $9
Agreement stage:
  • We agree on $10
Goan Rules of Bargaining (supply and demand are up-side down!):

Opening bid:
  • They say $20
  • I say $5
They say (literally): Go away.

Why? 

I believe that the more developed beaches (North), are falsely saturated by tourist income. People selling are not willing to budge, because although you want to bargain, there are 100 "innocent & rich" tourists lined up willing to pay the starting price!








  

Having Joy and Being Happy

"Joy is what happens when we allow ourselves to recognize how good things really are." 
-- Marianne Williamson

I heard a sermon shortly before I left Cape Town about having joy in your life... what it means to carry joy with you and not let life steal it away.  I also heard Cindy Wells -- (a woman who has served many roles in my family's lives -- from being my dad's Sunday school teacher when he was a kid to being the administrator in all the Thompson kids' middle school to being a source of support for us since my dad died) -- talk about having her joy stolen when her husband passed away a few years ago and that she is slowly gaining it back.  I didn't quite understand it at the time, but I think I'm wrapping my head around it now.

It made me think about the difference between having joy and being happy.

First, take a look at the parts of speech of each word (yes, I know I'm a nerd) -- joy is a noun and happy is an adjective.  Nouns are things, you can carry, hold, earn, lose, and even sometimes touch.  Adjectives are subjective, fleeting, and reflect a state of temporary being.

Even consider that in English, we only have verb to reflect a person's state of being (the "to be" verb: is, am, are, etc -- I am happy, for example).  In Spanish (and I presume a few other languages as well), there are two verbs for "to be" -- ser and estar.  Ser reflects a permanent state of being (gender, personality traits, physical characteristics etc), whereas estar is used to reflect a temporary state of being (how you feel and where you are show when you use the verb estar).

Okay beyond nouns and adjectives -- it is impossible to really be happy all the time -- consider all the ways that people can become sad, anxious, etc.  A nice meal or sitting on the beach makes me happy, but getting sick makes me sad.... happiness is generally fleeting.  It's a descriptive term for a temporary state of being. Life gets in the way of being happy a lot of the time.  This is something I've been forced to think about more in the past few months.

Something that is perhaps less fleeting than happiness is building up and holding on to joy.  Joy is a noun.  You can carry it with you wherever you go.  I think joy is more of a perspective, a way of looking at things, a personal fulfillment that is more permanent than temporary happiness.  It's yours and no one else's. It can be shared and it doesn't diminish. Joy comes from being confident in who you are, what you believe, and the relationships with people around you.  Joy has a friend (another noun) that can be possessed -- peace (but that's for another day).

Joy can also be stolen from you and affected by life, but not as easily as happiness.

I've thought about this a lot on our trip here in India... about ways to fill up my joy instead of riding the waves of happiness and sadness.  I feel like a lot of my joy was stripped from me a few months ago clear out of the blue and it's taken a while to build it up again, but once it's built up on a firm foundation I think it will be even harder for it to be stolen.  I also think that recognizing the value of joy and that it is a thing to be treasured, built up, and protected makes it less likely to be stolen.

Lastly, my joy was affected because my dad suddenly passed away -- but the source of the joy that I had before -- my relationship with my dad, the amazing ways that he affected my life, taught me, guided me, and loved me -- have not been lost.  Reflecting on this restores my joy even though it brings some temporary sadness.

Strive for joy... and when you find it, share it!


"I have told you these things, that My joy and delight may be in you and that your joy and gladness may be of full measure and complete and overflowing" -John 15:11



Rating beaches in Goa

Here are our thoughts of the beaches, from a week of motorbiking up and down the coast! Simply, the further North you go (along the coast), the more developed it is! The further South you go - the more beautiful. For more... read on.


  • Baga
    • Facilities: full of restaurants, shacks, beach chairs, boats...
    • Internet: available
    • People:  thousands of locals selling stuff & other tourists. Literally thousands.
    • Beauty: 3/10
    • Price: very high (by Indian standards)
  • Miramar
    • Facilities: capital of Goa, but less developed beaches. Restaurants & beach sports. 
    • Internet: available
    • People: maybe a few hundred tourists.
    • Beauty: 4/10
    • Price: high 
  • Colva
    • Facilities:  Less developed beaches. Some shack-restaurants on the beach, but still many people selling stuff.
    • Internet: available
    • People:  maybe a few hundred tourists.
    • Beauty: 8/10
    • Price: high (tourists density)
  • Palolem
    • Facilities: A full array of beach-side restaurants crowding this beach. Simple, but busy.
    • Internet: available
    • Beauty: 9/10
    • People:  several hundred tourists.
    • Price: affordable (because it is farther away to travel)
  • Talpona  RECOMMENDED!
    • Facilities: One hostel/restaurant.
    • Internet: maybe one day (in a few years)
    • Beauty: 9/10
    • People: A few dozen other other couples on the beach. 
    • Price: super cheap!
  • Polem
    • Facilities: One hostel/restaurant.
    • Internet: dream on
    • Beauty: 10/10
    • People: Only 2 or 3 other couples on the beach. 
    • Price: very high (because of the low supply!)

    Thursday, February 2, 2012

    Taj Mahal + better...

    In Agra, Kristen and I visited the Taj Mahal... here are the "tourist pictures" to prove it.



    Notice the reflection in my eye...

    Beautiful as it was, it was is not the most beautiful building in India.

    So far, Kristen and I favour Humayun's Tomb in Delhi the most architecturally.


    Our wonderful tourguide was Abhishek. 

    Abhishek - thanks for all your guidance in Delhi - we wouldn't have had much fun without you!


    The gardens around the tomb are just breathtakingly beautiful, and are based on Moghull architecture. Here is a bird's eye view model of the place for all to see (click to enlarge).


    Unfortunately, the Graffiti all around was quite repulsive. An almost 500 year old tomb, and the kids of today etching "me heart you" on trees and buildings because it's cool :( Well it's not.