Monday, July 28, 2014

ON CLOUD NO.9

No phones! No 3G, so no WhasApp or smses! No internet connections, so no FB, Gmail, LinkedIn, Google! It is almost three days now since I got my last phone call. There is no ‘chaos’ except for some ‘angry birds’ in the tall pine trees, which are unimpressed by the non-stop chirping and sway its branches ever so gently in the rhythmic breeze which blow once in a while, with small intervals of light drizzles, while the clouds play peek-a-boo with the sun. The air carries with it a sense of calm and the chime of the huge prayer wheel located a short distance away! And from where I stand at the door of our room overlooking the valley below, the clouds come to kiss me all over as if seducing me to stay a little longer and dance with it! Ah, what bliss!
The serpentine and hair-pin bend road leading to Bomdila was perfect till we got to certain points, which needed a lot of expertise and patience not to get the car bottom bumped and grazed. But the BRO signage saying “Thankyou for your patience” and “Sorry for the inconvenience” somehow dissipated whatever animosity we would have harboured throughout the broken road. One particular aspect that impressed me was every car driving down gave way to us in the most courteous manner unlike what I have serially noticed in our roads, where it’s always like I-own-the-road-and-so-I-want-to-go-first-attitude! Very impressive! So, by the time we arrived at the gate welcoming us to Bomdila, we were well versed in the mannerisms of the people, at least, the etiquette of the road!
My body had been crying for a much-needed detox and ‘defragmentation’ for a long time and it looked like I was in the right time and place for Vipasanna. So when, after a restful night of sleep, we were woken up a soft-spoken care-taker of the Doe-Gu-Khil guest-house to a morning of heavy shower and clouds gambolling into our room, I just wondered if there could have been a better moment.
We had decided earlier on that this time during a holiday we would just sleep, eat, meditate, read and do them all over again every day of our stay. No shopping or site-seeing either. Just laze and do nothing. And that’s exactly what we did in our monastery guest house cocooned in a crevice at the bottom of the monastery at Bomdila at 8100ft above sea level. Yes. And that is why we had clouds hanging right near us as if we were on a flight and that was also another reason why I felt breathless and light in the head at times!
Far from the world I knew; the world of chaos, stress and strain, of anger and jealousy, I felt I needed to find myself, to search for that one thing I have been looking for so long; peace! I had as a little girl thought peace meant being happy, even against the odds. I actually did find peace then because of the simple thoughts I was attached to. But as I grew, the constraints and complicacies of life made me wonder if I would ever be able to transform myself to the little girl I knew so well but couldn’t touch anymore.
I was definitely breathless by the time I reached the Gontse Gaden Rabgyaling (GRL) monastery at the top of the hill after walking through the pine-tree lined road leading from the guest-house but I knew this journey was surely going to shape a lot of thoughts inside me by the time I left Bomdila.
After praying in front of the more than 20ft high gold-coloured Buddha statue inside the monastery, I turned the huge coloured prayer wheel outside the monastery and then the smaller prayer wheels lining one side of the road leading away from the shrine, while I chanted OM MANNI PADME HUNG. I was waiting for Tenzinjambey, a young monk.
While I waited in the reception area, like they say, around 60,000 lazy, nondescript, ambiguous, disconnected thoughts crossed my mind. I played with my phone, being interrupted from my reverie time and again by quizzical, yet friendly monks, who wanted to know the business of my visit. I said, I wanted to know some answers from the teachings of Buddha. Ah, Buddha and their face lighted up in sheer contentment!
As I sipped piping-hot yak milk-tea, the sereneness of Tenzinjambey talking of anger and how my mind can control almost anything was almost like a prayer in the darkness. I had always been so impressed by the teachings of Buddha, since I was a girl, I told him. The mind is the biggest creator and the Universe is a thought, Buddha had said and today several countries in the West are taking up Buddhism, its philosophy finding way into the chaos and indefiniteness of their lives. Buddha preached humbleness and humility and every day, we live by his teachings, he said. We talked of politics, of the degradation of the young generation and the responsibility of parents of making ‘good human beings’, of the environment; planting trees and conservation of the wild. Finally, Tenzin gave me a pamphlet and said, “I wish Buddha’s blessings for you.”
On turning the pages to Panchsheel, the Five Precepts, Tenzin said that these tenets are the foundation of Buddhism:
1.       I undertake to refrain from destroying living creatures
2.       I undertake to refrain from taking that which is not given
3.       I undertake to refrain from sexual misconduct
4.       I undertake to refrain from incorrect speech
5.       I undertake to refrain from intoxicating drinks and drugs which lead to heedlessness
As we sped down the same road from Bomdila back to the land of the 15th Century saint and philosopher Mahapurush Srimanta Shankardev, my Axom, I closed my eyes only to see the essence of Buddhism in the humility and the soft-spoken nature of the Mahapuruxiya bhakats (priests). My heart pounded in pride for being born in the land of this noble seer and breathed in deep contentment and peace!