I love my India…?

Walking along the sea front on Marine Drive in Mumbai
Walking along the sea front on Marine Drive in Mumbai

Track spinning | Hum jo Chalne Lage, Jab We Met

I still remember my first real trip to India. Dozens of children swarmed the windows of our taxi with plastic butterfly hair clips, dinner towels, napkins, oranges, earrings, bracelets, everything and anything someone may leave the house for. I was confused and overwhelmed by the commotion and loudness that was Bombay, and as I looked over to my mum for an answer she quickly rolled up the windows.

But it didn’t stop my questions. I wondered why the carrots were red, why I couldn’t drink fresh milk or have a glass of water from the tap. I hated the way everyone stared at me strangely when I walked down the streets and when I spoke english. I didn’t understand where I fit in, and so, I wrote. At the tender age of 13 when nothing else made sense I turned to my journal, and 12 years later as I sit in Delhi after living here for 5 months, I’m still writing.

Ironically this country intimidates me more now than ever before. The version of India that I knew, the one my parents built for me at home coupled with the memories of that one short visit for my cousins wedding is so far from the one I’ve experienced living here.

In my first month while I endured episode one of the dreaded diarrhea curse (which would also mark the beginning of multiple illnesses), I started to question what made me come to India on a whim. Before leaving, all I knew was that I had been manifesting this dream to come live and travel extensively within the country for the last 7 years and the desire was strong enough to make me leave behind all the wonderful things and people I frequently dreamt of returning to in my many moments of sickness and solitude.

The sheer manifestation of the desire was rather peculiar considering that before choosing to live here I had only visited twice; as an infant and a preteen and both times were certainly no walk in the park. As I laid in bed miserable, I began to wonder whether I had made the right decision to leave and if this slow decline of my health was a sign to return home or the universe’s way of testing me to see how badly I wanted this dream….

***

I’ve been fighting for so many years. Unconsciously trying to repress emotional baggage I didn’t even know I was carrying from the 6th grade. It was the boy who sat across me in class and called me a paki that started it all. I remember that disgusted look he had on his face, like it was a dirty thing to be a paki, like I was a dirty thing. I should have stood up to him, but I felt ashamed. I was ashamed of my big bushy eyebrows, the dark thick hair that grew on too many parts of my body, the way my hips curved outwards, the way I tanned to a rusty brown in the summer. I often wondered why I didn’t look like my entourage of Asian friends who by comparison looked like angels to me. I envied them for being what I perceived as normal.

Although I grew up in a household with the strict rules and routines of any average Indian immigrant family in North America, I often pretended I was an outsider. That I didn’t know anything about this ‘Indian’ thing. That I couldn’t speak my language if someone asked me. For years I praised the tortilla and rejected the rotli. I dyed and chopped off all my hair so I couldn’t make the long iconic braid. I removed my nose ring and replaced it with an eyebrow ring. I insisted for two decades that unlike other Indians who live in Canada I was different because my parents weren’t born or raised in India and my last name was not an identifiable segment of the Indian population.

But on the other hand, I sometimes embraced my Indian. I took pride in the fact that I was brought up on a strict schedule of gujurati food. That I learned to tie my gungru in three perfect rows every Saturday morning for 6 years before my Kathak class. That I loved the way the dark kajol I wore beneath my eyes made me feel mysterious. That I couldn’t wait for my birthday every year because it meant warm, sweet, fresh, gulab jamuns made by my mum. That the best part of summer was slurping mangoes with my hands in a way that left a dark orange ring around my mouth. And that I entered a daydream coma every time I watched SRK’s latest romance flick.

I constantly battled with myself about whether to embrace or resent my roots. I switched on my Indian light, but even then dimly, when it was in my favour, and quickly switched it off when it didn’t suit my purpose. But I never realized that this internal conflict existed until I found myself strolling down the streets of Delhi as a young adult, my oversized glasses glued to my face, as an attempt to disguise myself as an outsider. I knew then that this was the reason I had come and this was the reason I would stay and overcome all the obstacles along my way…

***

In my first week here as I was sitting in a trendy little cafe sipping on a lassi in Delhi’s Hauz Kas village, I stumbled upon a book called ‘Maximum City’. I was intrigued by the cover so I began to flip through it, only to quickly learn that the Indian born, New York based author Suketu Mehta was highly acclaimed by every South Asian fiction writer I had ever known and adored. Instinctively I began to read it, and twenty pages in I was fascinated. The novel delved into the many conflicts Metha faced while having to move to America as a preteen Indian bred boy learning to fit in, and then again while moving back to India as an American bred adult learning to roll with the Indians. Amongst all the compelling things he revealed though, it was one line in particular that stayed with me throughout my own journey in India, in which he said:

“India is the country of No. That ‘no’ is your test. You have to get past it. It is India’s Great Wall; it keeps out foreign invaders. Pursuing it energetically and vanquishing it is your challenge….India is not a tourist friendly country. It will reveal itself to you only if you stay against all odds. The ‘no’ might never become a ‘yes’. But you will stop asking questions” (19).

***

Although I expected this journey to be challenging, I never could have mentally prepared myself enough for all the things I observed in the last 6 months. After two injured ankles, countless episodes of diarrhea, several hospital visits, bags full of obscure pills, injections, head lice, trains, buses, planes, boats, scooters, autos and too many indecent proposals… its almost a miracle I made it back home in one piece. I’ve cried out of fear, anger and frustration about the injustices I faced one too many times, and I constantly battled with myself on how to make amends for the things I witnessed and experienced but wished I hadn’t had to.

I grappled with how to accept the reality that inside my dream there was a nasty truth. Precisely that both living and travelling in India as a female from a Western country, on a budget and with minimal hindi speaking skills, is no walk in the park. It takes patience, understanding, and above all incredibly thick skin to overcome the things you see and feel on a daily basis. But even then, with the mental preparation, it often just implies that as a result of being a part of this demographic, limitations and compromises must be made about where you can go, what you can do and when it can be done, and this is the only way to survive the country.

Truthfully, I’ve come to accept that India is a country I simultaneously love and resent. I resent it for being backwards in so many ways, yet I love it for its beauty, diversity, and courage. Although it isn’t anywhere near to perfect; it often smells of the garbage that fills the streets, disease is rampant and unfortunately the media reports are not magnified, it is emerging to something better. Perhaps slowly, but I do believe that in my lifetime I will be able to say its a country I love in its entirety and one which I hope to be able to fully conquer one day, even on my own if I choose to.

***

Despite the many challenges I encountered on this quarter life adventure, I don’t regret my impulsive decision to leave behind my life for a second. It was a dream I’ve wanted to accomplish for so many years and I’m happy to be able to say against all odds I didn’t give up on it. Admittedly the journey wasn’t the way I expected it would be at all, but it introduced me to some of the most fascinating people who not only piqued my curiosity over and over again, but surprised me with a kind of graciousness I’ve never experienced in my life. It taught me more than I could have ever imagined about myself and a country that I had longed to understand for years. Most importantly, in a strange way, it saved me. I finally came to see that this identity I have, being Indian, is so much more than just a birth right, its a privilege. One which I’m proud to say I’ve earned, one which I’ll never question or deny again, and one which realizing has allowed me to fully love myself.

After returning from South America last year and successfully travelling solo for the first time, I had talked about how the experience made me feel closer to the fearless woman I hoped to be one day, and now at my return from India, I finally feel like I am the fearless woman I dreamed of being.

————————————————–

Look out for many many more blog posts to come where I’ll share some of my favourite memories that made me love my India.

Ciao for now!

xx

13 thoughts on “I love my India…?”

  1. Beautiful Sonal. I think you did what no ‘real’ Indian woman I know would dare to do, myself included. And by ‘real’ Indian woman, I mean those of us that were born and raised in India.

    I have a complete love-hate relationship with it too and I’m okay with that. For me it’s easy to switch to the other side simply because its home and its familiar. I have so many memories of my childhood, teenage years and some of my best friends still live there. That makes it easier to love 🙂

    1. @Jas – firstly, thank you for tuning in and for your continued support + feedback, always greatly appreciated. And I couldn’t agree more – home is where the heart is, and its the family, as well as the friends I made along the way that made my memories of India sweet and allowed me to find love for the country even in light of alot of the challenges, and its why I know I’ll go back…. and for your mum’s amazing food of course!! ❤

    1. @Amar – Thank you! I hope so sir, and definitely have you to thank as one of the people along my journey that helped me get to this point

    1. Thank you for your kind words and for tuning in – and hopefully I will have more to share very soon!

  2. Thank you very much for your story. It is truly very touching. I’m not Indian and I have never been there but after seeing the movie and reading the book – PASSAGE TO INDIA .- I have often been fascinated by India. Fascinated but not to the point that I have gone as far as actually visiting India. Maybe in my next life I will get to that point.
    I do, however, understand the parts you write about being and immigrant. They do not seem so far from my own – with a few differences because I am of European background and some of the problems you described I can’t say I experienced. BUT that sense of not fitting in, wondering who I really was – Canadian or Estonian? Fortunately, I do not really know the difference between teasing and making fun of so I can’t say too much about that aspect of your experience though I am sure that it was not pleasant for you.
    I am glad, howeverthat you have found yourself and feel at home with who you are. This, above all, is all that anyone can ask. How all the smart people and I think even Jesus and I am sure prohets of many other faiths always say – KNOW THYSELF !!! AND SO YOU DO AND ARE HAPPY. THANK YOU ONCE AGAIN!!! Mari

    1. Marialla – always a sincere thanks for your continued support and pearls of wisdom, it is certainly is such a treat to finally feel a comfort I never quite felt before with myself and I look forward to what comes next! Stay tuned 🙂

  3. Sonal, this is such an amazing piece. I can’t wait to read the other stuff that you’ve got planned! That’s such a brave and amazing decision that you made to quit your job and follow your dreams! I may need to pick your brain about South America because I really want to travel there. Also, not sure if you’ve read the book Born Confused by Tanuja Desai Hidier. I loved it when I was in high school. I have yet to re-read it, but it seems like you may enjoy it!

    1. Amanda – thank you so much for tuning in and for your feedback, always appreciated and hopefully I’ll have more posts that pique your interest sooner than later!

      As for the book reco – I love referrals and by the name of the author it looks like its my ultimate weakness in books – South Asian ficton so I will definitely check it out.

      As for South America – of course, anytime, please ask away and I would be more than happy to help where I can 🙂

Leave a comment