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| Monkey Temple |
As usual, I woke up well before my alarm to the defiant cock-a-doodle-doo of insensitive roosters (who I swear are in cahoots with Matt to carry out his life-long work of pissing me off first thing in the morning). Instead of rising, I remained cup-like under stiff musty blankets, awaiting my shrill alarm.
When it finally screeched, Ba (Nepali for “dad”) knocked gently on my
bedroom door as he does every morning, giving a slight bow as he passed me a cup of black tea (with 600
tablespoons of sugar). Groggily, I smiled, knuckled the sleep from my eyes,
thanked him, and began my daily ritual of forcing down the hot glucose in
undiscerning gulps as I hopped clumsily around the cold stone room pulling on
my baggy floor length skirt and equally shapeless, unsexy, top.
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| Laundry |
The fat white sun frayed onto our winding dirt road, eclipsed on both sides by labyrinths of cramped three-story three-family Newari homes. Lines of laundered saris linked small shuttered windows. Faded, forgotten offerings of dried-up marigold garlands slung themselves sloppily over wooden doorways and black iron gates embossed with bronze/gold swastikas (an ancient symbol of well-being or good luck).
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| Marigold garlands |
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| Sari laundry |
As I stood hunched with my rear stuck out, half-crouching (half playing that lovely dropped-soap prison game with the guy behind me), I stared out the window with a mix of exhaustion, boredom, and perpetual fascination. It was time for my daily worry session. Here's a sample of my mind's potpourri: there was a huge infrastructure issue at work and I wondered fleetingly and frustratedly how to "think outside the box". Could I sell my body to a customs official, or maybe even the Minister of Finance himself? Would CNN somehow get wind of it? My family and native society shun me like a second-string Lewinsky? What picture would they use for my headline? My facebook default? Should I change it first? Of course not--this is silly. Even if extorted with just cuddling a customs official, I think I'd prefer to continue with my streak of failure. Does that mean I'm not invested?
Next I wondered about my Aama (Nepali Mom), who had just been hospitalized for 2 weeks after an emergency gallbladder operation--would she be able to leave the house in time for next week's Lalitpur festival? Did she even give a shit about the festival, or was I being selfish? How was she still smiling after all that continual unrelenting drug-less pain? She should be screaming/ throwing herself into a hot vat of daal. Do I have that kind of grit? Am I a pussy? Are all Westerners pussies compared to Nepalis? It is not the first time I've wondered this. Interesting. Maybe there's a Western pain killer I could smuggle her. Is it arrogant to wonder that? Would she take it, or would she spat disdainfully at my cushy American decadence? I can't picture her ever being disdainful--let me try. What is it with Nepalis and spatting?
| Our house gate |
And lastly, as I caught sight of a Nepali woman at the front of the bus lovingly squeeze her daughter's chin, with a small poignant pang I reflected that it had been far too long since I’d sat down with someone who spoke native English. Someone who hugged.
I believe I underestimated the importance of this last bit.
The sorrow was a surreptitious one. When people back home asked over rushed
catch-up emails if I ever got lonely surrounded by Nepalis all the time, I
responded with a cavalier “psssh—no way, I’m in Nepal!” Yet after the first
few novelty months passed, I began to feel a small sneaking heaviness take root. It was as though there were an empty room at the back of my
chest that someone snuck a hose into and was gradually, continuously filling
with icy water—patiently waiting for an overflow. There was nothing loud,
dramatic, or urgent about it; it was just something I learned to carry. Holiday
weight.
But this was nothing new (or even noticeable), and
everything went on as usual today until I left work and began my daily journey home via the bus stop. I was
walking along my familiar high-traffic route past meat shops boasting decapitated pig heads and goats’ feet (hooves and all) swathed in
hot-red blood, and tea stalls emanating the sweet scent of creamy masala, when I
tripped over a jagged torn-up section of sidewalk (one of many).
| Butcher's proud sidewalk display |
Everything stopped. Everything quieted. A few seconds of
dazed confusion passed (or was it hours?) before a man ran to help me up. With shy fingertips I clutched his coat sleeves as I tried out standing
as if I were a toddler discovering her legs. After a bit of wobbling I had the
hang of it and he left me to balance while he began picking up my belongings,
which people were indifferently stepping over (my money is always on body so the rest is of no interest I suppose).
| Street leading to my office |
The city’s volume returned the same time as my thoughts. It
was like someone had replaced a pulled speaker-cord. A cacophony of car horns
haaaaanked in exasperation and motorbikes vroomed in and out like flies. I had no first aid
on me and not enough money for a cab. I was acting like a robot programmed to return
home (Eeeeeeeee Teeeeeeee phooooone hooooome). My thoughts were simple, direct, and in the imperative: make steps, get to
corner, board bus, walk, bedroom, must (MUST) clean. I knew my calm focus
would start to unravel if I let myself picture all the bacteria and filth that had just been mashed into my vital streams.
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| The neighborhood corner store |
Eventually (very awkwardly), I made it to the bus
stop and managed to squeeze and grope my way into a single seat on the right-hand
side of the van about halfway back, where I sat with my hands gently holding my
skirt out away from my bloody knees and (now) calves.
As the bus drove on, I re-entered my usual mental diatribe, adding a little section about my injuries, when the bus stopped again and a silver-haired Nepali woman wearing a grasshopper-green
sari and covered in a pantyhose-layer of filth sat squat-dab on my lap
(not uncommon on Nepali buses, but usually impolite to do without a
confirmatory nod/smile).
I winced loudly from the pain of my raw knees being
panini-pressed, but she did not seem to notice or care. We still had over 30
minutes before my stop and just as I feared, I was starting
to lose my shit: how can people just step right over
me/my things? Sit on me? Watch me get sat on? Spit so much? Not bathe or show their knees or
celebrate Easter or use utensils? Or hug? What is wrong
with this place?!?
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| My charming microbus commute |
The bus was trapped in a standstill traffic jam. I looked over my right shoulder to check the van for blood when out the window I could hardly believe my eyes! (I've always wanted to say that, and in this case it was true). Across the street I saw a giant ape-sized monkey (I’m no monkey expert) trying to balance on top of a messy
mix of about 20 different telephone wires way up in the colorless pre-dusk sky.
I had seen monkeys clamber up telephone poles and walk the wires before, but
never had I seen one this large—he was as big as Justin Beiber! Even now as I
recall him, I’m not sure who would have won in a fight, him or Kim Jong-un.
As I looked on, he (definintely he, with bragging rights) was beginning to garner some attention from the crowded streets below because of his sheer size and because of
how clumsy and uncertain he seemed. He was about 25 feet high now,
standing with both feet on the tangle of black wire, one hand on a shaky
parallel wire and one arm still nervously curled around the pole behind him. He
looked positively human. A man in an orange-brown fur coat.
I always assumed animals just instinctively knew what they
were doing when climbing. They’re born surefooted; it’s their
nature.
I watched with mounting interest as he took one tentative
step forward onto the sloping wobbly wires and tried to trust in their presence
as he let go of the pole. But it was all wrong. None of the wires were predictable, they were
splayed in different directions and too lax to hold him. He bobbed
slightly, for what seemed like an eternity. Then his arms went up and out in an
attempt to restore balance, just as most humans do in my yoga class when they are about to fall out of tree pose, and he stood flailing on the wires, wavering like
water, before plummeting --yes, he was actually plummeting!-- as if in slow-motion, back-first onto the pavement.
Everyone halted (for real this time, not like my fall). As he lay there, a giant hairy statue, the
jam cleared and the bus rolled forward like nothing had happened. And in a way,
nothing had. I twisted my neck back far as it would go, wringing it like a
towel to get some kind of last-minute closure. I glimpsed a blur of
colorfully-robed people converging in on a motionless orange-brown lump.
And just like that the world both broke me and fixed me. That's right, I
cried. First shyly and then unapologetically. Right there on the bus beneath a
dirty old lady, I cried like a child. Plump loose tears slid eagerly out both
corners of my eyes like they were fleeing someplace awful.
At first I wept for the monkey—so senseless! The terror and pain he must
have felt, the confusion, the uncertain death. But once I started, I realized
my list was much longer. Personal. Someone had hooked a vacuum into that icy inner water-room
of mine and was pumping out all the sorrow. I wept for the monkey’s family (Did
he have babies? A hot monkey wife?). I wept for all the animals who suffer untimely deaths from urban
jungles. I wept for my probably-infected knees, for Ama, for Siema, for the
women I help who were born into utter squalor, for my deep and unquenchable
loneliness, for the repulsive goddman sugary tea I have to swallow every
morning, for the countless devastatingly poor, deformed, degraded people I see every
fucking day and cannot save. That no one can save. I cried for failing and I
cried for crying.
I cried silently the whole way as people shifted
uncomfortably and looked on in thinly-masked fascination. A white girl riding the
bus is already interesting, but a white girl crying on the bus is like a fucking
unicorn. I could already hear the way they’d recount it for their families over
evening daal bhat, the children pausing with wide unbelieving eyes and necks
craned in enthrallment as they imagined the sight of a squashed bloody weeping
blonde riding alone amongst their people.
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| Holy Bagmati River, cremation ghats (right) |
So there I sat, laughing and crying until I was mostly just
laughing. And I was so relieved that I could see the absurd again. The laughter was fantastically freeing. It unburdened me. I felt deliriously light and buoyant and unafraid. Drunk and slap-happy.
But here's my point. I don’t know what happened to that monkey (though even now it
is upsetting to ponder), but that big dumb beast managed to teach me--a supposedly evolved version of him--two important things from it all; first,
that it wasn’t his fault. Monkeys were never meant to climb wires. It was the world that fucked up, that owes him, that has to
answer for to the price of a life. But so what? It doesn’t matter that
it wasn’t his fault. Not one bit. You can blame the world for your failures and, like the monkey, you can be well-founded--horribly, unjustly wronged--but it does not change
anything. It doesn’t erase the city, and it doesn’t make you nimble on wires.
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| Nothing makes you feel smaller than the Himalayas |
Blame, of any kind, is an aside, a footnote, a useless
afterthought muttered out of the corner of your mouth. Perhaps we would all do to forget the why and get to
work with the wires at our feet. Because when we’re done screaming and pointing fingers, we’ll still be up there in our unfairly precarious pickle.
And in honor of my possibly deceased primate friend, we can choose to do what he so desperately wanted but couldn’t do. When the stakes are high and our knees are bloody, our hearts icy, our failures painful and abundant--when we reach that tipping point and want to surrender to self pity--collapse crying--when we think it is all just too much and we might not be able to manage anymore, we can find it in ourselves to hang on.
And in honor of my possibly deceased primate friend, we can choose to do what he so desperately wanted but couldn’t do. When the stakes are high and our knees are bloody, our hearts icy, our failures painful and abundant--when we reach that tipping point and want to surrender to self pity--collapse crying--when we think it is all just too much and we might not be able to manage anymore, we can find it in ourselves to hang on.










