%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%Author : Krishna Padmasola %%Written: May 1993 %%e-mail: krishna@scri.fsu.edu %%comments: this is a LaTeX document %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% \documentstyle{article} \begin{document} \centerline{\Large The Wanderer} \vskip 1cm Once upon a time, I was travelling in the remote regions of the mountainous Garhwal\footnote{a region of great natural beauty} district in northern Uttar Pradesh\footnote{a state in northern India}, when an interesting incident occurred. My plans were to witness the Dussehra\footnote{a hindu festival celebrated in autumn} fair annually held in a northern village. My friends were already there, having proceeded directly to that place as opposed to the circuitous route that I took. The simple habitations of the mountainfolk have always held a certain charm for me, which is why I chose to visit some out of the way villages before proceeding to our rendezvous. This particular village comprised of not more than sixty dwellings, most of them with mud walls and straw roofs. After the recent harvest, the wheat stalks were left to dry on the roofs, golden-yellow in the autumn sun. Terraced fields stretched on the gentler slopes of the mountain, their edges blurring into the dark-green of the surrounding deodar\footnote{a himalayan tree} forest. Some cows and goats could be seen in the distance, grazing in the fields. There was but one main street in the village, with small gulleys intersecting it at odd angles now and then. Most of the villagers were farmers who also tended cattle, while there were some who pursued the grocer's trade. The school stood at the edge of the village, and a Shiva\footnote{the god of destruction in hindu mythology} temple was close to it. After entering the village, I stopped at the local chai\footnote{tea} shop and chatted with some of the patrons. There were only a few of them, as most of the men, women and children were out working in their fields. They were happy to know that I was going to the fair, and informed me that most of the villagers would be there too, as it was a good time to meet their relatives. It was a big event in their lives and they were looking forward to it, making plans, and getting things ready. This was evident in the spring in their step and the smile with which they greeted strangers. I was told that I could put up at the school for as long as I wished, so after getting directions and thanking them, I set off for it. Soon I could see the temple in the distance and the school adjacent to it. As I neared the school building, I noticed that it was well maintained, and that someone took care to keep it that way. The front yard was brushed clean of leaves, yet not so completely as to leave an impression of sterile bareness. The school had two rooms, one was the schoolmaster's living quarters and the other served as a classroom, although I suspect that most of the time the classes were held out in the open. There were no classes now because of the Dussehra vacations. The classroom was well-aired, with some flower plants growing at the windows. There was a single chair in the room, with a blackboard near one wall, and a map of India hanging on the opposite wall. The students probably sat on mats spread out on the floor. I tried to imagine the teacher giving a geography lesson to the students. Perhaps he was able to transport them to exotic places by firing their imagination, even as they were seated in this prosaic calssroom, having a discussion about the locations marked on the map. Through the door, I could see the Shiva temple, a trident atop the shikhara\footnote{pinnacle of the dome} and the statue of a seated bull\footnote{according to hindu mythology, the bull is Shiva's vehicle} facing the temple entrance. A venerable man came out of the temple, and walked towards the school. I stepped outside and called out a greeting, to which he smiled in reply and raised his right hand in a gesture of goodwill. He welcomed me to the place, and showed me where I could stay. Then he invited me to share supper with him, an invitation I gratefully accepted. He was warmly courteous, friendly and accessible, and strangely I felt that we knew each other, but it was a memory buried beyond the reach of recall. We had been travellers on the same journey, a journey in quest of truth. Although we had embarked on the journey at different times and places, there was a constancy of purpose that was common to us and somehow we had known each other all along. We had supper by the light of an oil lamp, since there was no electricity in the village. It was a simple meal of rotis\footnote{wheat pancakes} and dal\footnote{a kind of lentil soup} with some raw onions on the side for taste. The mountain air was bracing, and I had a good appetite. He asked me where I came from and where I was going. I told him, but suspected that he meant something else. There was not much conversation, but the warmth of companionship made up for it. The sounds of the forest were pervading the night. After the supper, we went and sat outside. The moon was half full, peering at us through the latticework of deodar branches. He said that it was time for meditation and asked me if I would like to join him. I am not a religious person, and am more interested in spirits(of the alcoholic kind) rather than spirituality, but I wanted to try it and said yes. So he brought out two mats, and we sat down facing east, he in Padmasana\footnote{a yogic posture}, I in a cross-legged pose. He closed his eyes immediately, and one would have thought that he was asleep were it not for his upright posture. His eyes were slightly open, and his breathing was slow and regular. I saw the limbs of the trees swaying in the occasional breeze, and listened to the intermittent hoots of an owl as they floated by. I closed my eyes and watched my thoughts dying, the senses withdrawing into the mind, ceasing their incessant activity. It was then that I began to see the visions. I do not know if I was dreaming, but these images were so vivid, I doubt that I could have manufactured them. Interestingly enough, all through these dreams, I was conciously aware of my identity, and was present there only as an observer. Here I shall try to describe what I saw and felt in those dreams. It was desert with a fiercely blazing sun overhead. The two travellers were clearly tired from a long journey but the power of resolution kept them going. At dusk they reached a pyramid in the desert. Then they waited for the moon to rise. It was a full moon and the night was clear. Still they kept watching the eastern horizon for something. Ah, yes, it was Sirius! At this time the moon was halfway up in the sky, and threw the sharp shadow of the pyramid on the sand. They rose with quiet excitement, and gathering some implements, made way to the tip of the pyramid's shadow. For over an hour, they kept digging, till one of them brought out an object with a smothered exclamation. It was a box whose locks were easily broken to reveal an ancient parchment inside. They pored over the heiroglyphics in the document with intense concentration, and to my surprise, I found that I knew what they were reading. It was about specific ways of achieving absolute concentration of the mind and each of the ways was painstakingly detailed. Suffice it to say that they tried it out right away and were successful. The last I saw them was when after three days and three nights, they were still sitting there in deep concentration, a sandstorm of great violence blew and buried them under huge dunes. In the next scene, snow capped mountains stretched all the way to the horizon in every direction. The sunlight reflected from the ice was blindingly bright, and the air was crisp. The wind was a sharp knife carving its way through any obstacles in its way. A stone hut could be seen in the distance, a haven of refuge against the hostile environment. Here I saw two people clothed in the maroon robes characteristic of Tibetan monks. They chanted the sutras\footnote{buddhist scriptures} in the morning, and used the afternoon for yoga and meditation. They used the usual techniques and after mastering one they moved on to the next. For example, they meditated on the human cadaver and realised the source of the desire for life. Now they were trying to sift through the layers of memory, step by step. In this technique, one goes back and tries to recollect in detail the events of yesterday, the day before yesterday, and so on until one day one will recollect everything from the day one was born. But what if one goes beyond that? The scriptures say that one could capture the experiences of ones past lives this way. I could see the images in the minds of the monks. They saw two travellers in a hot desert; saw them find a parchment and practice the secret techniques. When they saw the sandstorm, there was an avalanche and the mountainside came slipping down into the valley, carrying the stone hut with it. The deafening sound of the fall echoed in the valleys for a long time afterwards. This was a dense forest on the Vindhya\footnote{a mountain range in central India} mountains, where the Narmada\footnote{a river originating in the Vindhya range} ran through a narrow gorge. In monsoon, the river would be a torrent clashing with the rocks, but now it was just a frayed ribbon of multitudinous rivulets finding its convoluted way downstream. A man came out of a cave hidden in the shoulder of the mountain and approached the crag overhanging the river. He took his seat there and for a moment, surveyed the surroundings. His slim, athletic body was attired in a scanty loincloth, and clearly he belonged to an ascetic order of yogis. Evidently, he had been living here for a long time, perfecting his practices. Achieving mastery over the physical postures, he was now venturing into those aspects of yoga that dealt with the mind. The posture he chose was as immovable as a rock, and he could hardly be distinguished from his surroundings. After several hours, he opened his eyes again and stepped down from the rock and was immediately greeted with a hiss. Inadvertently, he had stepped on a cobra which now prepared to strike him, spitting with fury. The dull reptilian eyes conveyed an impression of darkness and death. The leathery scales of the cobra glistened in the sunlight as it struck in a swirl of liquid lightning. However, it froze at the last moment, its attempt thwarted by an unseen force. As it slithered away into the underbrush, he noticed a man on the opposite bank vanish into the forest as silently as he had materialized from it. He owed his life to his invisible saviour, and as he walked back to his cave, faint wisps of memories came back to him, images of a fierce desert and snow-capped mountains and a lost companion. When I opened my eyes, I was alone and my friend had gone. I was perplexed and yet in a way consoled, for I realized that this was the way it would be. The villagers kindly allowed me to accompany them to the fair, and all along the way I mused over the incident of the previous night. I was grateful to my friend for reminding me of those days, and even now, whenever I go to places far from human habitation, I look without seeing, waiting for something to happen, I know not what. \end{document}