I loved every second of of our 4 days there. The Tamil cheer seems unrelenting. I remember walking down 4 flights of stairs and on every floor there was someone with a1000 megawatt smile for me. While riding a public bus, a chai seller on the corner smiled at me sitting on the bus and motioned to ask if i wanted a chai, a total impossibilty but funny. Everyone there just seemed to be buoyant. We took a bus 20 km out through small thatch hut villages yards from the sea to view land's end, and ended up riding in a truck with 6 guys from Delhi, including 1 rotund man who was described as a bodyguard, would rear his head back for some of the deepest guffaws I've heard, and insisted lolling on the tail of the truck rather than sitting down.

The ocean itself is beautiful, the water crystal clear, which is surprising as the Tamil coastline seems to have water that is suited for fishing more than swimming.
The other big thing to do in Rameswarem is get bathed at the temple. There are a series of wells that have water from 22 different places in India, and pilgrims from all over India come to be doused. Men with little buckets will take you from well to well(10Rs-100Rs) which Carla did one day
and I did the next. It is kind of fun running around the temple sopping wet amongst swarms of black skirted pilgrims wearing prayer beads. The last water that is poured over your head is water from the Ganges, and you are given a bit to sip from your cupped hands as well. I drank, though I pray the source was closer to the Himalayas than Uttar Pradesh. I'm okay so far.After a few days of snapping photos, eating great food, and enjoying the fresh night breeze blowing in from the Bay of Bengal, we decided to head to a place I knew very little about, Tiruvanamalai, fatrher north in Tamil Nadu. I did know that there is a mountain around which on full moon people walk around to get 7 years good karma (there are mathematical components to all this, evidently) and it just so happened that we arrived a day before the full moon. From the peace and quaintness of Rameswarem we were thrown into "Full power" India, as the Israeli youth around here might say. We stayed in the town proper the first night, which is ugly, screeching, rundown, jarring and full of beggars. It seems Westerners head here to make a guru connection, drawn in part by the Sri Ramana ashram, founded by a man who lived in a cave on the mountain for 20 years and then came down and founded the ashram. Near the ashram is where the Westerners are, and trying to get lodging here is nigh impossible so Carla and I ended up staying 4 km out in the country. Come full moon evening, we set off on our karma acquiring perambulation, 14km total, the roads crammed with people who are not walking at one place, as in a race, but are at all points around the mountain. Seeing the moon just over the mountain was worth the walk, as it reminded me of some of the work of Ansel Adams in Yosemite. There are food stalls and vendors and begging sadhus and women husking corn and mini-temples every other step of the walk, so it made it easy to do in that you basically put one foot in front of the other and don't have to worry about dragging water or anything else with you. Beyond the walk, there doesn't seem to be that much to do here if you are not staying at an ashram or involved in some course. The one moment of excitement was moving back to the periphery of the ashram after Carla left a few days ago to renew her Indian visa in Sri Lanka,. I tried to get lodging, and ended up with a 1-eyed psychopathic man in a skirt who tried shaking me down for more money after telling me that I'd have to sleep in the living room of the guesthouse of a cot. After seeing I wasn't a milquetoast, he found a room for me and promptly set about trying to get money from an older guru-seeking Kiwi, who did fork over the cash and slept on a cot in the living room. The shortage of beds here really makes people tolerate some strange things. I've been hanging out here trying to suss out anything of interest and reading (Atonement, Ian McEwan, pick it up if you haven't, incredible), and other than a few breezy mentions of morning lectures by gurus, nothing seems to be resonating. I'm due back in Madurai in a week to meet a friend of a friend, Julie, who's traveling in India for a spell, so I find myself in a killing time mode. I'm going to head out to a small village 30 km from here called Gingee, and then most likely go to India's #1 pilgrimage temple, a place called Tirupathy, which sounds reasonably crazy as I've heard 10,000 people have to sleep in the same room before getting a 2 second glance at a sacred idol.
In an aside, I've asked a constant reader of this blog and work-beleaguered friend of mine, Charlie, to buy a ticket to Burning Man festival this year. I've been 1 time before, in 2003, and it was an amazing experience. If anyone out there thinks they can get there this year, go, go, go with me. You'll never regret it and we can work out logistics together. I'm already getting giddy at the prospect of seeing Black Rock City rise from the desert, and I've got a few more mind blowing adventures on my platter before then. It's easier to get it together than you might imagine.


