Friday, August 2, 2013

Why Minimalism?

I have always been a slave of consumerism.  For example, I do not own a car and I do not intend to own one in near future, my thought is, I would better travel 20 more countries instead. I am in the process of breaking myself free from consumerism (inspired by Richard Proenneke) and embrace minimalism. There were few more blogs that I have been closely following on minimalism, but I could easily make out that they follow minimalism for the heck of following it but I enjoy every bit of it. I have been carried away by Richard Proenneke's craftsmanship, work ethic, simplicity, self-sufficiency and his ability to break free from societal conformity of . Importantly, being at peace with himself all the while, nonchalantly.  Very importantly, he was not running away from anything. He was not an escapist. He was not anti-social unlike Chris McCandless of “into the wild” whome we sympathize. The simple essence that took me away was, It takes 1 year for me to save 6 lakhs to buy a car, 10 or 20 years to buy an apartment. When I talk about years I am talking about exchanging those many days of my life to commute in a machine which a public transport could have done without much of hassle or build 4 walls around me... so the question is, Is this what I really want? And only I can answer that question. Secondly I was (and so many of you as well) leading an empty life chasing wrong things, just because my peers and societal conformity asked for it. Hence I chose not to go for branded clothing, unwanted gadgets.. etc. What I really want is to stay on the road as long as possible watching different cultures, making new friends and tasting different cuisines of the world (this is purely my need). I am no Osho or any gigantic saint the world has seen so far, but I am at the process of de-addicting myself from the things the society has tried to force me to be, a consumer.

            My definition of minimalism is the obsession for owning less,
  • Stuff I really need
  • Stuff I really enjoy owning
  • In quantities of optimal usage.


I am in the process of removing stuff that does not fit into any of these categories. This does not mean I am giving up materialistic pleasures. I feel much lighter by giving away the stuff I do not intend to use apart from the fixed assets that is shared by my entire family like, TV.. etc and the belongings that does not please me but pleases my peers. 

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

100 Places to visit before I kick the bucket

Finally the list is ready, 100 places I want to trip before I give up the ghost. Next project is to come up with an optimized low cost travel plan with cost estimates. Why to visit all these wonders? Coz they exist.. I have picked most of the places from Hillman Wonders.. Any suggestion to add or remove is welcome. 

Place Country
Sahara Desert Africa
Great Barrier Reef Australia
Ayers Rock Australia
Forbidden City Bejing
Rio Panoramic View Brazil
Carnival in Rio Brazil
Bagan Burma
Shwedagon Stupa Burma
Banff NP Canada
Great Wall of China China
TerraCotta Warriors China
Li River Cruise China
Yangtze Riv. Cruise China
Lijiang/Shangri La China
Angkor Wat Combodia
Dubrovnik Croatia
Prague Old Town Czeh Republic
Burj Khalifa Dubai
Burj al Arab Dubai
Pyramids of Egypt Egypt
Karnak Egypt
Nile River Cruise Egypt
Egyptian Museum Egypt
Valley of the Kings Egypt
Abu Simbel Egypt
Bora Bora France
Louvre Museum France
Versailles France
Chartres Cathedral France
Mont St Michel France
Eiffel Tower France
Chambord Chateau France
Neuschwanstein Germany
Delphi Greece
Santorini Greece
Hong Kong Hong Kong
Taj Mahal India
Mt Everest India
Kashmir Valley India
Golden Temple India
Meenakshi India
Varanasi/Ganges India
Ladakh India
Bali Indonesia
Borobudur Indonesia
Jerusalem Old City Israel
St Peter's Basilica Italy
Canals of Venice Italy
Pompeii Italy
Amalfi Coast Italy
Uffizi Gallery Italy
St Mark's Basilica Italy
Florence Cityscape Italy
Leaning Tower Pisa Italy
Portofino Italy
Golden Pavilion Japan
Petra Jordan
Galapagos Islands Latin America
Chichen Itza Latin America
Baalbek Lebanon
Stonehenge London
British Museum London
Carlsbad Caverns Mexico
Marrakesh Morocco
Easter Island Near Brazil
Kathmandu Valley Nepal
Metropolitan Mus New York
Teotihuacan North America
Banaue Rice Terr. Philippines
Acropolis Rome
Colosseum of Rome Rome
St. Basils Cathedral Russia
Kremlin Russia
Hermitage Museum Russia
Mecca Saudi
Machu Picchu South America
Iguazu Falls South America
Amazon Rain Forest South America
Alhambra Spain
Mezquita Cordoba Spain
Fjords of Norway Sweden
Matterhorn Switzerland
Damascus Old City Syria
Serengeti Migration Tanzania
Ngorongoro Crater Tanzania
Temple Em. Buddha Thailand
Potala Palace Tibet
Cappadocia Turkey
Hagia Sophia Turkey
Topkapi Palace Turkey
Yellowstone NP US
New York Skyline US
Niagara Falls US
Yosemite NP US
San Francisco US
Grand Canyon US, Arizona
Sistine Chapel Vatican City
Angel Falls venezeula
Victoria Falls Zimbabwe
Dhanushkodi India

Friday, June 28, 2013

100 things to do before i die

My "100 things to do before i kick the bucket" has been pending for a long time now and i have managed to identify 100, it would surely go beyond. Though i have managed to strike off quite a few items, I still have a long way to go. I am convinced creating a bucket list keeps me focused and a does not let me waste my time thinking "What next" and be a couch potato :)

1 Autograph from San Suu Kyi
2 Shake hands with Kamala Hassan
3 Attend Ilayaraja's live concert
4 Try Snowboarding 
5 Tour of Egypt
6 Visit Jordan Petra
Walk The Great Wall of China
See Terracotta Warriors
Yangtz River Cruise
10 Tour South India on the bicycle
11 Tour North India on the bicycle
12 Climb Kharjungla (Leh) in a bicycle
13 Go Couch surfing
14 Walk till you don’t feel your legs
15 Cycle 24 hours
16 Visit all the places recommended by Hillman wonders
17 Create a product that never existed before
18 Complete a brevet contests
19 Participate in Tour of Nilgiries
20 Sip coffee in front of Hongkong Skyline
21 See Tour de France
22 Take mom to a foreign country
23 Write a novel
24 Visit Barefoot collage
25 Never buy a Car
26 Tell someone the story of your life, sparing no detail
27 Travel Europe only by Bus, Train, foot and Cycle on a limited budget
28 Consult for a Fortune 500 Company
29 social entrepreneur
30 Become a Vegetarian
31 Visit Osho Ashram
32 Adopt a kid
33 At least One Violin concert 
34 Try Scuba Diving
35 Sky dive
36 Try 30 different cuisines of the world
37 Convert to Buddhism
38 Read all Ayn Rand novels
39 Own a library with at least 5000 collections
40 Own a farm house in Ooty
41 Visit Tibet
42 Get involved in a protest rally
43 Visit Bhutan
44 Tour to North east India 
45 Talk in TED
46 Switch off the mobile for a week
47 Learn Salsa
48 Keep a diary for a whole year
49 Run a marathon
50 Go on a holiday with no luggage
51 Set foot in all the 7 continents (Antarctica might be difficult)
52 Bungee Jumping
53 Cruise Nile river
54 Participate in Burning man
55 Take a dip in Ganges
56 Visit Sabarmati Ashram
57 Have my portrait painted 
58 Make a complete and utter fool of myself
59 Stay all night partying and go to work the next morning
60 Publish an article on my travels
61 Volunteer to any African country
62 Travel entire India by train (economy class)
63 Create my own website
64 Sleep at a road side dhaba
65 Be someone's mentor
67 Visit New York
68 Tour Sri Lanka
69 Travel in a House boat
70 Travel a year without any purpose or direction 
71 Get 3 Top Certifications in specialized subjects
72 Watch 200 imdb recommended movies
73 Taste some very Gross food
74 Spend a whole day eating junk food without feeling guilty
75 Create my Family tree
76 Travel in Trans-Siberian express
77 Spend a day at Varkala beach during the monsoon
78 Swim in Dead Sea
79 Loose the sense of direction at the rann of kutch
80 Chittorgarh Fort 
81 Visit Dhanushkodi
82 Eat at Delhi 6
83 Visit Maandu
84 Visit Kasi
85 Visit Laos
86 Visit Pakistan
87 Lead a life of a cave man for a week
88 Para-sailing
89 Learn how to take a compliment
90 Visit Dhanushkode
91 Renovate the house with a touch of french feel
92 Climb Mount Kilimanjaro
93  Bicycle tour to Africa
94 Teach some illiterate to read
95 Teach in a school/collage 
96 Spend a whole day reading a great novel
97 Overcome the fear of failure
98 Work for tips
99 Cycling Silk Route
100 Explore Hampi
101 Publish an Article in a renowned journal



Monday, November 5, 2012

Laos


I vacated the Bangkok homestay hostel in the evening though my train was scheduled to depart in the night to Vientiane border as I intended to take a long walk around Thai. Hostel mates and me exchanged good bye’s, all the best’s, facebook and couch surfing ID’s and I never knew I would meet few in Lao and Cambodia. After a 15 km walk I reached the train station without much hassle. I met Rick an Australian who has been working on a farm in Thailand on a Volunteer visa and we happened to be in the same compartment. In a while an old man in his 70’s sat next to us and he looked like a Brit, but he happened to be a Scottish. He was a history professor at Stanford, traveled over 70 countries so far, Cartoonist, an out cast without spouse or children, holding 4 passports..etc. Can I think of a better travel buddy? We stayed awake most part of the night chatting (more of me questioning and he answering) and in the morning the train was delayed by 3 hours, hence the Scotsman had to bare with me for another interview session. I was under the impression that he was travelling with us to Lao until we landed at the border. He was on his way to china and caught hold of a moped guy to get dropped somewhere along the mecow river in the hope of finding a boat. This is what differentiates a tourist and a traveler. I got my passport stamped for 1000 INR and was on my way to Vientiane in a tuk tuk.







Vientiane has two shades, ugly and gorgeous and we were dropped at the uglier side of the city. I started looking for a minivan to take me to Vangvieng, 5 hours drive from Vientiene. A mediator approached me at the bus station and asked me if I wanted to go to vienvieng in his cab and his cab looked neat and he said it was suppose to depart in 30 mins. 30 mins turned out to be 3 hours. I met Florian, a political scientist from Germany working closely with the Lao government to cultivate legal puppy (dope or grass or drug). He happened to be my travel buddy for the next 4 days in Laos.

Vienviang is a small village in Laos with beautiful landscapes, cheap hostels, relaxing climate, more Europeans than the local population..etc. I would not mind spending my retired life here. The prices goes like this, $1 to stay in a hostel per day with free WiFi, a breakfast consisting of a big egg sandwich with cheese and a big cup of cappuccino in front of the meckw river and random shaped huge hills at the backdrop costs 40 INR. The favorite pastime for a traveler here is to hire a tube for $1 and jump into the river, he is pulled with a rope at the first bar he finds and picks a bucket of vodka or whisky (literally a bucket with cubes, 180 ml vodka and sprite) and he keeps drinking and floating along the river and into the alcohol and this process is continued until he is completely slouched and found on the riverbed the next day.  
Myself and Florien hired a moped for 2$ each and setout to explore the village. Florien has never driven a moped in the past and to add to the misery the roads were in a horrible state, and it is a perfect combination for an India to showoff his capabilities in front of an European. I always stayed ahead of him, did not slow down at potholes..etc and he was amazed looking at my driving skills (I could laugh at myself).
Vienviang is also know for the caves in between the river and there are probably 20 or 30 of them and we met Nicha and Candice at one of the caves. They were 2 cute girls going be ladies soon from Thailand on a short vacation to Lao. We had a delicious lunch together and headed to blue lagoon as it slowly started to rain and within few minutes it was poring with roar and lightning. But that did not stop us from going to the blue lagoon, climbing another cave, maybe 1000 ft from the ground, slipping, falling, Florien’s camera slipping from his hand and a beautiful sight to see a Sony digital camera sinking 1000ft in the rain and landing on the ground and to see lenses, battery, body all spread across on the ground. After a good cheer up session to Florien we headed back to our hostels and freshened up and met in the evening for a party near the river which went on till late night.
The next day it was time to depart and bid adieu to all. Florien was leaving to another city in Laos to report on duty, Nicha and Candice to Thailand and me to Vietnam

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos

 
It was a hectic day, got back from the office, packed my stuff in the last minute as always and did not have any proper plan as to what I will be carrying or infact what kind of clothes I need. I just dig into the wardrobe and dump 2 shirts, 1 jeans, 2 T-shirts and 2 3/4th’s as that was all I could find. But I had made a mental note to carry my tripod stand which occupied 1/4th of my backpack. My entire packing was done in 30 mins and I was all set to depart to catch the 1.30 AM flight to Bangkok, My mother was sitting in the hall and watching me pack my stuff. I could sense her current frame of mind, she doesn’t like me travelling, but at the same time she does not want to start an argument when I am leaving as she knows it will not make any difference. In spite of it she still manages to watch tamil soap opera serials on the television and turns her attention towards me when there is an advertisement played in between. I bid goodbye to her and my friend is waiting for me downstairs to drop me till makhri circle and from there I will take an airport shuttle (no taxi as I am travelling on a awfully low budget). I reach airport by 9 and still had lot of time. I sit at an empty couch next to coffeeday with a cup of cappuccino and start thinking if my acts are really crazy, if this tour to 4 countries in such short duration and budget is really doable. But I encourage myself telling I will give the best shot and if not able to do it I am not going to loose anything, but still I can sense a bit of apprehension in my stomach for different reasons, like should I stop spending on travelling? Am I suppose to save my complete earnings for an uncertain future,..etc (empty mind is devils workshop) and when I start thinking deeper I realize these fears are something that is enforced by the society and not the ones that I have, I can think about it but not feel it, yes I need to save money and I have saved enough to take care of me and my family for 2 years (a good duration to hunt a new job or start something new) and I have insured for my mother’s health (I am true believer of the quote “any penny remaining in your bank account after your death is the additional work you have done for no reason”), hence the ambiguity is taken care of. The next thought is if I keep on earning and saving my earnings for the future when am I going to lead my life? And I am sure life after marriage will not be the same as you always have someone answerable to, hence today is the right time to travel and see the world.


 

When these thoughts were drilling my common sense an unfamiliar face comes and introduces himself as singer Vijay Prakash and says he has worked with AR Rehman and has infact given one of the biggest hit song “hosanna” in 2011 and says he is a big fan of me and I am his role model and he wants to take a picture with me to put it in front of his studio….. ok I am kidding. When these thoughts were drilling my brains I see a familiar face and in a jiffy I realize its Vijay Prakash and I like this guy for the song “Om Shivham” he has sung in the movie “naan kadavul” and I am also surprised that none in the airport recognized him. I go to him and say I like his song Om Shivoham and he thanks me politely with utmost modesty and says he will talk to me once he collects the boarding pass. I was sure he would not come and talk to me again as there was no reason, but he did and patiently answered most of my stupid questions. I finally took a picture with him and he went to catch the flight to Singapore for “Maatran” audio release. My flight took off to Bangkok on time.

Bangkok – I am given z security in the airport

            I have 50 rs in my wallet and I had decided to pull money from the ATM in the airport once I reach Bangkok and to my surprise there is no ATM in the airport until you cross the immigration!! The money exchange in the airport accepts credit card but unfortunately my credit card doesn’t work, I start to panic. I knew I could come out of the situation, but the fear is still there!! I come out with 2 plans, 1st approach the security and ask him to accompany me till the ATM to draw money with my debit card and second - ask someone in the airport to pay on my behalf and I will return it once the immigration is done and I always have my Samsung Galaxy note and Nikon 32100D to hold as collateral J. There were 3 security guards at the entrance and I explain my story to them. Two don’t agree but the third one gives a thought. He goes inside a cabin to talk to someone and comes back. I am followed by a security behind me till the ATM with strict instructions that I am suppose to follow the guard and not move away from him. Finally my debit card works and I come out of the airport by 10 am after the hectic immigration procedures. One hour bus ride in 556 with 5 km walk took me to Kha Son road, this is where you can find cheap hostels, dorms and backpackers around the world. I freshened up in the dorm I had booked which was value for money, a bunker bed, air condition and free WiFi is all you need. Most of the backpackers in the hostel were Europeans (mostly French), especially in their early 20’s, this is what I like in them, they start travelling at a very young age and get to see different cultures, people..etc. There were none who were going to Lao from my hostel. I took a long walk in Kho San road ( I didn’t like it) and went to Wat Phra Kaew Emerald Buddha temple in the evening, one of the 100 wonders of the world ( and my 7th) which was impressive. The nights in Kao san road are amazing, with lot of restaurants the serve almost every possible cusine in the world, thai foot massage, fish massage, shops selling printed and digital T-shirts, crowded tourists across the globe taking a stroll and the best being the kids of 12 to 15 dance in the middle of the road at midnight, which is a true delight in itself.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Terracotta Army - Xian

Xian is the capital of Shaanxi province in China and is one of the oldest cities in China with more than 3000 years history. This place was in my list and I wanted to visit the Terracotta warriors, in fact I was more eager to see the Terracotta warriors than the great wall. Xian is 1400 Km, 15 hrs by train from Nanjing. The cost of the train ticket was just 154 RMD and I was more than happy to book a two way ticket, starting on a Friday and getting back on Sunday morning. The adventure started even before the tickets got confirmed. The train that I was suppose to board goes till Lahsa in Tibet. As Lahsa is at a very high altitude a medical certificate is mandatory, but they were demanding a medical certificate from me even after me explaining to the travel agent that I would be getting down in Xian and Lahsa was 2000 Km’s from Xian. Till Friday morning nothing was working out and to be on a safer side I packed my bag and pushed off to the office. When I returned from the office the receptionist in the hotel told me that my ticked had arrived and the train was scheduled to depart at 7.30. It was already 6.30. I managed to reach the station by 7.20 and did not find time to have my dinner or pack anything on the way. While standing in the queue I could see KFC in front of me and my mouth was watering and an announcement was made and the people in the queue started talking among themselves.. My train was delayed by 20 mins. I ran to KFC, got two chicken burgers packed and entered the platform on time.
I was very impressed to see the train on my previous trip to Beijing, pushback seats, high speed engine without much notice, a beautiful lady to assist you if any help is needed, it made you feel you were in a low cost airlines. Hence there was no second thought in my mind to take a train to Xian, but when I had the very first glimpse of the train I got the true picture. Beijing is the capital and the government is more concerned in taking care of the reflection, but Xian is in a different province and who cares.. Though the train was a bit better than the trains we have in India, it was over crowded, we could see people resting in the toilets, beggars entering the screened-off area asking for money, vendors selling humming food inside the compartment and the passengers spilling the food all over the place.. all these was new to me in China, but it doesn’t bother me much as I have seen worse in India but  one thing that made me stay awake was, though smoking inside the compartment is prohibited, nobody cares. Almost the 60% of the people in train were smoking, not even near the door but at their respective seats. The stench of food and the smoke cloud made sure I had a wakeful travel. The train reached Xian at 11 AM. I immediately got down and went in search of the bus station and I had done my research well, bus 915 would take me to Terracotta warriors for 8 RMD and was 1 hr drive. I boarded the bus without any hassle and took a short nap. The lady next to me woke me up and I was in front of the terracotta museum.  

                When I saw KFC it reminded me that it was 12 in the noon and I had not eaten anything since last Night. I showed the picture of hen in my mobile to Order chicken burger and one coke, the waiter took the order and said “You will receive your Burger in 1 min”!! wooow she could converse in English. One burger did not fill my stomach and I went to the same counter and asked what else was there in Chicken and I ate 2 pcs of Chicken Nuggets.

                The entry ticket to get into the terracotta Museum is 160 RMD (1280 INR). Terracotta means a Clay sculpture. "Terra Cotta Warriors and Horses", is a collection of terracotta sculptures depicting the armies of Qin Shi Huang, the first Emperor of China. It is a form of funerary art buried with the emperor in 210–209 BC and whose purpose was to protect the emperor in his afterlife, and to make sure that he had people to rule over. The figures vary in height according to their roles, with the tallest being the generals. The figures include warriors, chariots and horses. Current estimates are that in the three pits containing the Terracotta Army there were over 8,000 soldiers, 130 chariots with 520 horses and 150 cavalry horses, the majority of which are still buried in the pits.

                It took 2 hours to see all the sculptures and I was on my way to see Qin Shi Huang’s mausoleum which was 5 Km’s from the museum. I spent good 2 hours walking around the never ending open lawns and occasional Pits still going through the excavation process. A bus was leaving back to Xian railway station and I reached Xian at 6 PM. I still had 3 more hours to board the train back to Nanjing. I made use of this time to visit the goose pagoda which was 30 mins walk from the station. To my bad luck the pagoda closes at 6 in the evening. I tried to tell the guard that I was from india and would just spend 10 mins to have a look around and tried to convince him to let me in. He just smiled and showed the CCTV camera. I left the place and came back to the station at 8.30. I would have walked close to 15 km and was feeling very tired. When I was in the queue to board the train in 5 mins, all of a sudden people started to talk something among themselves in disappointment. The train was delayed by 2 hours. I could not find a place to even sit in the station, quite understandable as it holds the world’s largest population. I went out to take a stroll around the station and ended up in front of a small Afghani hotel. I was served tea and the barrier asked where was I from. When I said India he played a song from an old Hindi movie Karan Arjun and was smiling at me to get an approval that I am impressed with his hospitality. Though I was bit irritated (nothing to do with the poor guy, but I was tired) I reciprocated his smile and ordered biriyani though I was not hungry. I wasted half and ordered one more tea, and one more and finally one last. I went back to the station and had one more hour.

                Finally I boarded the train and similar to my onward journey the train was crowded with people smoking all over but it did not stop me from sleeping. I reached Nanjing at 10.30.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

The Great Wall of China and Forbidden City


Till I reached China I never thought language would be a big problem to deal with.







Language is a huge barrier, so I had to put lot of effort in doing my research and also have mitigation or avoidance strategy in place for any unforeseen risk as I cannot communicate my need to anyone. Even asking for a basic left and right is a tedious task. Unlike India, here they speak pure Chinese and you cannot find a single English word in between. Can you imagine speaking with words like Bus, Train, Signal, road, Burger, Chicken, Bread, .. etc in your local Indian language, but here they do not understand these words as they communicate in pure Mandarin.

The second challenge is the food. I can manage to eat any reptile on earth provided it doesn’t smell different, but here even the rice has a weird smell that is new to me and find it really hard to gulp it in.
I booked my train ticket from Nanjing to Beijing on the Friday night from Nanjing station. I could go to the station either by Taxi (50 Yuan) or Subway (4 Yuan + risk) and I took the subway. I reached the station without much trouble. The train station here is a bit better than the stations in India, most of the people travelling by train are the lower middle class, we I saw one lady begging with a kid, people trying to board the train without ticket.. etc. The train was very neat and comfortable compared to our trains. I reached Beijing at 7 AM and the climate was around 5-6 C. Now I was pretty confident with my research and in case of any problem I had translated some of the common questions from English to Chinese with the help of my Chinese collogue. I took a train to the Beijing North Station and from there I took a train to “Bedaling”, 80 Km from Beijing which is the nearest station to the great wall. I reached Badaling at 11 AM. On the way to great wall, there is a Jade factory where they manufacture Jade Ornaments and Sculptures and I paid a short visit and reached the Great Wall at 12. Among the top 100 Wonders, Great Wall stands at number 2, which means the magnificence is self explanatory. The fog was blocking the view in all directions. I climbed for an hour and reached close to 3 watch towers and the climb is very steep. Small kids and Old people in their 60’s to 70’s climbing the Great wall was a good inspiration to go further, but the climate was playing a spoilt sport. I got down by 2 in the noon and that is when I realized I had not had breakfast. I got burnt sweet potato for the cold climate with some Taiwan sausage and boarded the return train to Beijing. I also got a T-Shirt that says “I Climbed Great Wall” 

I reached Forbidden city at 4 in the evening and it is a must watch place for tourists. After spending an hour I walked to wangfujing street. This is the place all dead reptiles goes into human stomach . I could see Snakes, Silk worms, King Spiders.. etc fried and kept. I made my mind and tried silk worm and I will not be able to give you the exact taste as I swallowed it for the heck of trying something crazy. For dinner I had Beijing duck (in China there is a saying, if you have not eaten Beijing Duck and climbed Great wall, you never visited China) which was more like chicken but a bit harder. I boarded the return train to Nanjing at 10 PM and was in my room by 8.30 Sunday morning.


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