Auroville Spiral

Auroville Spiral
The Bird's Eye View

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Pikkies for your Wikkies

I don't know what the title means. Don't ask... maybe i am just getting into my rhyming scheme mindset... you know, another way to express my creativity.
Okay, wait. I know... It is too sunny to be on the computer right now, so I'm going to go for a bike ride! To Kuilapalayam (I can FINALLY say that right!) I am going to get some yummy fruit and nuts and honey and make a RAD fruit salad. Then I am going to learn about hinduism for 3 hours. Then I am going to creep early in the morning to a sacred temple on a mountain, and meditate in ancient sacred caves.
I will let you know how it goes!
I am always watching. ;P 
Mama is Mid-birth!

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Today, I Witnessed the Miracle Of Life.

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Tonight is a Full Moon.
The night I arrived here, I stepped out of the car, and the first thing I noticed was the upwards-facing crescent moon.
The second thing I noticed was Mozambique.
All of the dogs here look alike. Today I asked what breed Mozambique was, and Kalsang replied, "the Tamil kind".
From day one, Mozambique was a source of comfort and kinship for me. When I felt out of place and lonely, I could go to here and feel love. She is the calmest, most zen dog I have ever met.
Today, she gave birth. And I arrived home just in time to witness the 6th and final pup be pushed out.
Since this morning, Mozambique had been shivering and whimpering; we all knew that today was her day.
Diane says that her having birth on a full moon makes total sense. Diane is our assitant teacher on the trip. She lives on Hornsby Island near Vancouver, and spent about 10 years as a midwife in India, traveling all over through rural villages. She has written a book on midwifery and rural India. She says that many births happen within 3 days surrounding the full moon. The moon pulls on the tides, and pulls on our watery bodies.
I think we are all glad that Diane is around, as she was able to give assistance to the exhausted Mozambique. We all sat with her and sang her songs and gave her water after she was done. She had been working SO hard, and all her pups looked like little closed-eyed wet seals, nuzzling their way to her breast. We were all amazed at how Mozambique and her pups knew exactly what to do. The process of birth is so instinctual!
The only person present with Mozambique throughout the whole process was Karen, our teacher. It must have been a pretty powerful experience for her, especially since this is her first year ever in Auroville without her only daughter, Maya.
Tapping into this incredible and natural rite of motherhood is giving in to the divinity of womanhood. The pain and instinct that birthing takes is like tapping into the most ancient tribal dance; the most universal song of creation.
And so, I suppose it was also instinctual that I began calling Mozambique "Mama" before I ever knew her name. She was a "student's dog", meaning she was originally a village stray and began hanging out with a student who stayed at the Tibetan Pavilion. Thus, I think she has found a beautiful home here. :) She is an incredible dog, and I will always remember this experience.
Now, my biggest thought is, "I want to take a puppy home with me!!"  :)
~*~*~*~

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

I am Relaxing in the Sunlight

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Today at Anandi's, we talked about the wisdom of our bodies. Our bodies have their own language, and their own wisdom. Rather than cull our symptoms of imbalance back with allopathic medications, we can listen to the cues our bodies give us. We can allow things to pass through us, and we can trust that if our bodies need to rest, they will sort out the balance. In listening to our bodies, we can "eat to optimize phenotypic expression." In other words, not every way of eating is for everyone. Some people may thrive on a meat-laden, diet, some may thrive on veganism. Our make-ups are each unique, and we need different things to put into our bodies to fully realize ourselves in this way. Body-wisdom is the key to realizing our optimal balance and nutrition.
Today at Anandi's we made hibiscus juice with fresh hibiscus flowers, pomegranate seeds, honey, lemon juice, fresh aloe gel, and water. We also had a salad and stuffed tomatoes, and a dessert "halvah" of beets, dates, and cardamom. ...SOOO yummy! I love raw food. :)
I have been reading the Tao Te Ching recently, as I will be presenting on it and its connections to ecology for my class. Here are a few excerpts that are inspiring:

All streams flow to the sea
because it is lower than they are.
Humility gives it its power.

I have just three things to teach:
simplicity, patience, compassion.
These three are your greatest treasures.

To find the origin,
trace back the manifestations.

If you want to know me,
look inside your heart.

Seeing into darkness is clarity.
Knowing how to yield is strength.
Use your own light
and return to the source of light.

~*~*~*~

I am enjoying the warming sunlight and the singing conversations of birds. I am reveling in my sustained moments of simplicity. I am drinking yummy kombucha, and I am relaxing. I am loving the blue sky.... and I am thinking about Christianity, what makes history (ideas versus actions), mortality (why do people cling to religion?), ecology (how to relate to it truly- through emotional connection, or to rational facts and statistical evidence?).

So you see, many things are going on for me.
How about you?
~*~*~*~

Monday, January 17, 2011

A Few More Pongal Pics

Pongal weekend was full of coconut, sugar cane, colors, flowers, kolums, smiles and singing children!
A cow cart full of kids making the rounds. "Pongal-o! Pongal-o!"

This boy was helping to prepare the sacred cow for pulling the cart. The family blessed the cow and fed her, and of course decorated her too!

This house had some adorable baby goats! This village girl was my model. :)

In-motion, passing another cartful of joyful, colorful children!

A village man and his wife. Many villagers ask to have their picture taken, many times. They love it! I like this man's face; he looks friendly and wise.

I got a quick henna job by a village woman, because my group was leaving me behind and it was getting dark! Here I am offering a mutual blessing to this angel statue at a local clay wheel hut.

A "kolam" in front of a Ganesh altar.

A family in the village of Kuilapalayam on Pongal.

The streets of every village are filled with colorful "kolams" during the 3 days of Pongal. The women of the houses make them everyday, and they take around 2 hours! This is part of the celebration weekend.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Pongal-o!

I figured out how to post pictures! It takes a really long time to load though, so here are just a meager few from the Pongal celebration yesterday! We drove in a big bus to a village where they celebrated by making rounds of the village on cow-drawn carts. The carts held about a dozen children- or 6 of us! Pongal is the Tamil New Year, and it is a festival of abundance and greeting. We drove around the village shouting, "Pongalo! Pongalo! Pongalo!" This means "Happy Pongal". The villagers were all so welcoming and happy to share their traditions with us. It was a great time! 
This villager was making a piece of art at a temple in the forest.

In the village where we celebrated Pongal, a father and mother celebrate together 

Baby cow gets some rest from all the festivities