Banal… I know … I know…. But I suggest you kindly read on…. Nd I am absolutely positive that it is a much better topic than say…. My favourite teacher or One hour at a bus stop…. (what else do ya expect man… this is my first post.. )
Now…about the trip…. it all started when my dad had taken a month’s leave… He is one of those who wouldn’t want any of his things to go waste… nd his leave was no exception….. we had been to nainital just a week before (why manu why… why not write about “A trip to Nainital”…) and there he was… asking me… or rather telling me the trip he had planned to Govardhan (for those who don’t know…that’s near Mathura…and yes… it was the same mountain that Krishna ji used as an umbrella for the people living in braj)… nd all I could do was gawk…. Nd my father, I presume, took that as “yeah.. I would love to…. ”. I asked him “How long are we gonna stay?” .. nd again, I presume, he took it as “gee dad.. wow… how long are we gonna stay there”…I sometime wonder, how soon would I be old enough to do as I please but I have this strange feeling that no one has lived that long…
Anyways… the day dawned upon us… we had a long drive ahead of us… I was driving…. nd I was convinced that this activity would be the most enjoyable part of it all…. I had to take a right turn from the highway to travel 20km to reach govardhan… the road quickly turned from “okay….thats not bad by UP standards” to “man… are we on the right road”. The road (or was it?)...had myriads of speedbreakers which made me seriously doubt that each shop on the road had made its own speed breaker…. so that the people in the cars may have a second chance to look at them… My father was cursing the “godamn politicians”…. But I, on the other hand, am a firm believer that Ninety percent of the politicians give the other ten percent a bad reputation [;)]… A politician is the one who shakes your hand before elections and your confidence after. … anyways… we were to stay in an ashram ..… the person at the desk was not one of those cheerful types…. I mean… Every busy guy is entitled to be a little rude… but some guys, I guess, just abuse this privilege. I longed for my driving hours again… that would be three whole days before I could do that…. I felt a little guilty for not wanting to be here as a line by Sir Winston Churchill kept bouncing in my head. “I am prepared to meet my Maker. Whether my Maker is prepared for the great ordeal of meeting me is another matter.”
We, had to have a nice night sleep, so that we could have fresh legs for the long, arduous parikrama we had to endure the ensuing morning which was conveniently, later told by my dad to be just over 20km, which would be covered in two phases- the first phase was a semi circle of 12km (technically not a semi-circle) and later the rest of the parikrama was covered in the second phase nd in the end he added… it would be better if we would do this feat bare-footed. Now, although it may sound as one, but it wasn’t a suggestion. I, who is regarded as the most sybaritic person who has ever walked the earth, meekly mooted the idea of wearing socks but was cloth eared by my family and when I tried to show genuine concern for my beautiful feet, it was met with a terse reply from my mother- ”If your younger sister can do it… so can you”. Now, I challenge you guys to think of a counter for this one… this sentence is virtually unbeatable… it seriously damages your man-ego with nothing possibly left that could help you here.
Now, I am an agliophobic(fear of pain itself) person, but I guessed who isn’t, so I started the parikrama determined to find the point of such a pain staking journey where you start at a place and end at the same, considerably battered. As the sharp edged stones found their way deeper and deeper into my feet, I started to wonder if there ever were differences between a ‘bata’ or a ‘nike’. I looked longingly at the rickshaw where people were merrily and cheerfully doing their so called ‘parikrama’ and had a smug look on their faces as if they were doing the same thing as I was. I, then wondered why the hell did they even bother that much and why didn’t they complete it on their cars only. I had these feelings as I had long discarded the idea of hiring a rickshaw…. Why??... because I didn’t want any more of those “if your mom and younger sister can do it why not you?” and there I saw my mom walking some 50 metres ahead of me, completely enjoying it or it seemed.
I also saw many people very much into their seventies doing the parikrama as if they had come for their morning walk. I suddenly felt the guilt rise into my stomach and was determined to see this through, no matter what. As I walked with the new found confidence, I also started to notice a few other things that came my way. Now, there were some people, both old and young, who were doing the parikrama by a technique known as ‘dandvati’. I understand, your first thought after hearing about ‘dandvati’ would be the parikrama done with a dandi or a stick but it wasn’t the case. ‘Dandvati’ had to be done with a help of a stone, in which the person used to lie down on the road on his stomach and keep this stone as far as he could, he then used to get up, pick the stone and keep his feet at the position of the stone and again stretch maximum and recite “jai shri radhe”. Thus, effectively, the journey I had problems covering with my feet, these people were doing it on their bellies. I later learnt that they generally take 10 days to complete the parikrama this way. I was completely dumbfounded by what I had witnessed which would stay in my mind forever.
As we were doing this parikrama, one side was the great govardhan mountain on the other side were a variegated assortment of dharamshalas, temples, ashrams built with grandiose styles. They, I presumed, were places where the people doing dandvati stayed to rest before they were back on their bellies. As, one such ashram came, my dad beckoned us to come inside as he wanted us to meet somebody (a certain guruji) in the ashram. As I entered the ashram I saw a person doing dandvati, but instead of the one stone these people carried he had a bunch of stones with him with an idol of lord Krishna. I immediately asked my dad about what he was doing my father promptly replied “oh.. he is doing the lambi dandvati”. For a second there, I could not understand him, “lambi dandvati??.... how longer could it get?”… the normal dandvati according to my standards was already herculene task. My father encouraged me to ask guruji about it. As I entered the ashram, I forgot all about ‘lambi dandvati’ as I had entered an environment so pure and serene with the sounds of bhajans been recited somewhere. As we reached the ‘kutiya’ or hut of the guruji I saw the source of the bhajans was a place which had a large board that read “akhand bhajan”
We had a small talk with guruji, he had a very kind face and when he spoke, he chose his words very deliberately and with a lot of patience, he was always zen while answering our questions. He told us about the akhand bhajan which continued for day and night without halt. He later told me that the ‘lambi dandvati’ was similar to dandvati but had to be done with the help of 108 stones instead of the one. Here, the person would put these stones as he was doing a dandvati, with the idol in front, recite his “jai shri radhe”, get up take another stone from his bag and then repeat the exercise until all the stones in his bag lay in front of him in a heap. This was indeed one step for these people. So, effectively, ‘lambi dandvati’ was 108 times the normal ‘dandvati’ (so technically that’s 10X108=1080days). It took 4-5 years to finish in this fashion and it was not uncommon for people to die while performing this. Can you imagine for all the time we were in IT BHU, eating, sleeping, playing, studying, there would have been someone who would be engrossed in his parikrama with full devotion and love doing nothing but his parikrama. So after this heavy knowledge as I came out of the ashram I saw the same devotee doing his ‘lambi dandvati’, after about an hour we had stayed in the ashram, he hadn’t moved at all, only his heap of stones in front of him had grown a little bigger. I could feel a little warmth on my cheek from the newly found moisture on them, which I wiped before anyone could notice.
I remembered something I read on a library wall
“Ability is what you're capable of doing...
Motivation determines what you do...
Attitude determines how well you do it.”
I had learnt the meaning of each sentence separately today in a fashion in which I shall remember it for the rest of my life. These people weren’t the people who were made to do those things but there they were doing it as if there was nothing better, with a strong and positive attitude without a worry in the world as if a seraph guided them all throughout (or probably there was).
I had experienced a parallel universe where people, used a different language with even the rickshawalla instead of usual “hullo” used to call “radhe radhe” if we were in his way, here people did completely different things not worrying about their vanities or ambitions but involved in one activity that was of appeasing the lord. Here people were not bothered about the rest of the world although, they welcomed you if you came from it, with all their hearts (I have far excused the receptionist at the ashram we were staying) and help you get immersed in the holy water which washes away all your prejudices, hatred and jealousy and bring back the real you, the you which god had intended.
As we were back on the car and I wasn’t driving, I had time to muse about a famous saying from Angel Kyodo Williams “The answer to having a better life is not about getting a better life, it's just about changing how we see the ones we have right now.”
My dad asked me about the trip to govardhan I said it was one of the best I had ever had. He casually replied
“Tell you...you will forget.
Show you….you might remember.
Involve you...you will understand. “
I guess your dad becomes smarter and smarter with your age ;)