I started this blog entry over 3 weeks ago.
Then I was still well immersed in life in Fort Cochin and wondering what it
would be like once we came back to Canada. At that time I started to reflect on
my time in India and what were the repetitive themes that became weaved into my
life patterns over the last few months.
Being back in North America and focussing
on settling in here on Gabriola, I’ve had time to consider.
Time passes so quickly and so much happens
each day. My life has been full these past 13 weeks. So many adventures, joyous
new relationships, and new faces that will be forever present in my life now. I
am becoming more and more amazed about the places I’ve been and how much I have
learned!
There is such difference between living in
the East and the West! I feel both a Western influence and also an Eastern. I am comfortable in either place. And each
place is extremely different! I can be Indian, at times, and North American if
I choose. Both fit!
I am recognizing with more clarity polarities
in life! There is good and bad, lightness and dark, love and hate, east and
west. Polarities are good, and the wider the poles, the better. I don’t see
them as mutually exclusive. Polarities comprise possibilities. Between good and
bad, there is everything else. Lightness and dark can be defined by the
continuum that binds the two together, east and west is way more interesting
when we consider what constitutes the meanings of what happens in the middle!
Learning is about seeing a whole picture.
It’s about the greyness of what is.
Extremes simply present the boundaries for everything that happens in between
the two sides! The broader the polarities, the greater the possibilities for
choice and diversity.
That is something I have come to realize
this year during my journeys in India. We are changing, all of us. That is the
fundamental nature of our world right now….change. Some of that change is out
of necessity. We have to do something
about our deteriorating environment. We have
to make changes to the way we live in this world in order for our earth to
survive. Many of us in the west are seeking a renewed spiritual deepening
because we realize the shallowness of seeking after money and surface
pleasures. Indian society is becoming aware of gender justice and changing
behaviours around treatment of women and anti-violence measures for women.
Recently, during one of my visits to the
Drumbeg Park, I saw a kingfisher bird. I am reminded about the kingfishers that
fly all over India. The kingfisher is even the national bird of the country. In
fact the local beer is called Kingfisher after the bird! The one I saw on
Gabriola was dressed in black and white feathers. In India the kingfishers are
colourful and diverse. The same-same but different idea applies. The kingfisher
share many common characteristics, and they become differentiated due to where
the bird is hatched and grows.
I find this change exciting. All over the
world we are coming closer together in harmony. Nature, social communication,
business awareness, and sharing of wealth is way more evident than before.
I recently read an article that describes
the advancements in developing countries because of the care and support, both
economic and personal that more needy communities are receiving from the more
advantaged. We are becoming more aware! And some of us are giving generously,
of our time, money and energy!
I stated something aloud when I
left a young battered woman in the solace and help of a community in Bangalore.
“The world is watching India!” I said. No longer can abuse and violence go
unnoticed.
There are many changes. It will not be easy to transition. But it is necessary. The world is changing. We are watching each other now, from the West to the East and everywhere in between, and most of us will do what we can to make it a better place to live!
There are many changes. It will not be easy to transition. But it is necessary. The world is changing. We are watching each other now, from the West to the East and everywhere in between, and most of us will do what we can to make it a better place to live!
No comments:
Post a Comment