Monday, February 1, 2010

writing about india

writing about india isn't the same as being in india. which is overly obvious, i guess. i'll try that again:

writing about india is hard--nearly impossible--when you're fresh out of the bath, when it's one in the morning, when you're between so-clean sheets, on your back, laptop on your stomach, listening to the huge silence that is the tiny new hampshire town where you grew up, in winter, in the middle of the night.

is that better? writing about india in a graduate school application essay isn't the same thing as writing about india for yourself which isn't the same thing as writing publicly about india "for yourself" (oh, blogging) which isn't the same thing as not writing about india at all. if i'd already reached that point, i guess it'd be time to go back again.

i painted my fingernails three different colors today before i found one that looked alright. a friend in kathmandu told me they're up to eleven hours a day of power cuts. after dinner, i watched an hour long special on kids who are addicted to huffing computer cleaning products. a friend in bodh gaya told me his aunt just arrived from tibet, and he is so happy to see her. now it's one in the morning and i'm trying to write an essay about india, and i'm supposed to make myself look simultaneously talented but humble, experienced but in need of education, young but worldly. i actually wrote it weeks ago, but now when i read it, it sounds like a shell of a story of a person. i could send them everything i've ever written about india--there's so, so much, and some of it is terrible and some of it is beautiful and most of it is somewhere in between. but i've got to write one new thing, a couple pages that sum it all up: the life i've lived in india that, right now, i'd rather just be living. honestly, i miss it terribly.

4 comments:

  1. :) I like the way you write. I haven't really kept up on following your blog, but it's interesting to hear about how you miss your life in India. That's how I felt after my first experience in India, but I know I won't feel that way this time around for myriad reasons. I'm sure there will be some things I miss, but less the experience as a whole. I'm in a really different place, both regionally and situation(ally), but I suppose it's good to learn that both (and many more, I'm sure) kinds of experiences can occur in the same country. Even just outside of the city I stay in, the other girls I work with are having a tremendously different experience. Anyway, as it is, I'm feeling awfully American and ready to go back. Still, it's interesting to see the striking observations you make about America. I know there will be a lot of readjustment when I return...

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  2. I just stumbled on your blog. I am hoping you are going to write more!

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  3. What a great picture at the top of your blog !

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  4. Thank you so much for a beautiful piece of work, it ios so refreshing to read something that is both inspiring and beautifully written.
    I spent a long time in Dharamsala living within the Tibetan community and I can totally identify what you are saying about India too.
    I am extremely proactive in the protection of Human Rights and when I returned to the UK I was blown away by how few people know about the Tibetan plight and their fight for freedom.
    I have made it my priority to raise awareness in the UK and feel it necessary for the Tibetans to have a voice and where better than the internet.
    I would love to follow your blog and would apreciate if you could check mine out.

    Thanks Julie

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