Sunday, July 13, 2014

Ashrams.





With Simon gone life on the road got more serious. Arthur felt utterly alone. Yes, he was free to look at India through his own eyes without Simon’s cynical observations but he was still obliged to ask himself what he was doing in India. He had never envisaged being there on his own. Should he go back to England? Or should he press on in the hope that some kind of destiny would reveal itself?

India itself was becoming a blur of blue elephants, pink monkeys and brown faces. Crowds gathered quickly. Whenever he stopped moving there was a crowd of people staring at him…somebody would always ask, “Where are you coming from sir?” “Why did you come to India?” “Are you looking for God?” Reasonable questions, not unlike the ones he was asking himself. But they never stopped coming. Everywhere he went, in public parks on railway stations, in restaurants he attracted attention just by being.

Should he look for an ashram to take him in? A quiet place where he could seek the meaning of life in solitude? Or perhaps he should go to Goa and sit on a beach before that idea got too popular. Maybe he should go south to Madras, see if he could get over to Malaya somehow? So many decisions…  Perhaps he should just abandon the whole project, if indeed it was a project, and go back to England?

Perhaps, perhaps not. He had amoebic dysentery. He had just been robbed. He had no passport and no money. He did have a letter from his mother informing him that she and his father were separating and another letter from Lorraine to let him know she was pregnant. Clearly some kind of decision was required.

With some minor adjustments to the chronology it wouldn’t be too hard to imagine Arthur arriving at an ashram near Rishikesh. One can see him being shown into a simple white-walled room…a mat, a bed-sheet and a jug of water. He likes it. It’s wonderful to get away from the realities of India. The best time is the evening when cool breezes waft down from the Himalayas along the Ganges Gorge and the air is full of a gentle chanting from neighbouring ashrams. Not much happens. He is able to turn off his mind, relax and drift downstream. Meditation? Well he almost stops thinking about himself at one point. He might have been actually meditating. Hard to say for sure. Whatever it was it didn’t last long.

One morning Ram (ashram official in charge of accommodation) approached him outside his bungalow and told him the time had come to leave.
“Where are you going?” Arthur asked.
Ram chuckled. “No Arthur not me. The time has come for you to leave us.”
“You mean I have achieved enlightenment? It seems….”
“No, no, no, Arthur. We need your bungalow. We have a big group coming.”

Thus it was that Arthur started walking back along the dusty road to the town of Rishikesh. In the fields on either side farmers were watering and weeding their crops. The road itself was empty except for the ubiquitous cows and a few women on their way to market. Suddenly there descended upon Arthur a blinding light…a vision from the future in the form of a fleet of air-conditioned limousines and psychedelic Rolls-Royces sweeping down the road bearing the likes of John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Mia Farrow and, Mike Love all stoned on high grade hash and garlanded with marigolds. And lo, behind it all a large bus labeled ‘Press’ in which Arthur caught a glimpse of a familiar figure. Bloody hell it’s Simon!

But it wasn’t real of course. Never happened. Just a vision from the future. Instant nirvana. Some kind of parallel universe thing. A book in itself really.




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