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Thought it was time I dropped you an update, lots of things have happened since I got back from India!
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So... I got back in April, and promptly got the trots. 3 and a half months of fresh food (mostly vegetables) must have turned my belly into a food snob because as soon as I started eating food laced with preservatives and crap back here I was iller than I had been at any stage in my trip! I was the best (the very best) man at my best buddy's wedding about a week after I got back which was sweet, despite me almost bloody crying halfway through my speech (the less said about that the better eh?) and I also finally met the girl I had been stalking on Facebook while I was away. She's now my official licensed and bonded girlfriend (I'm running out of valium though so how long that will last I don't know!) and things are going fantastically well... more on that later :D
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After the wedding I went back up to Manchester to stay with Kev for a couple of weeks while I figured out what I was going to do with my life. With my compensation money dwindling fast i needed to get a job and be a grown-up again. I had kind of made the decision while I was away to come back home to Derbyshire and settle down, and hanging around with my old friends and being near my family for the 2 weeks running up to the wedding had re-enforced that decision. So I headed home and moved in with my old mate Jamie and his 2 cats, Dallas and Ramirez, in their little house in a village called Leabrooks only 5 minutes away from my bestest best friend Andy.
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I started the job hunt pretty much straight away, and found nothing. There was absolutely nothing about in finance, it was so bad that I interviewed for a couple of jobs as a Recruitment Consultant, but thankfully I seem to have left that part of my life far behind as I didn't get offered the jobs. Thank God. I even went as far as to go to the local factories looking for work, only to be told that they were only taking on Polish people which annoyed the tits off me. So I swallowed my pride and went to the Jobcentre to sign on. My days consisted of waking up and making Amanda a brew before she went to work, then settling down with the laptop and Jeremy Kyle to trawl the internet job boards. I must have applied for 100 or more jobs each week with absolutely no success whatsoever.
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It's lush being so close to my family and old schoolfriends though, I've seen my beautiful little nieces more in the last month than I have since they were born!
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So yeah, at the moment I'm living with Jamie, Dallas and Ramirez which is pretty sweet, though I'll be moving out soon as Amanda's asked me to move in with her. Though when this will happen I don't really know as we seem to be booked up every weekend for the foreseeable. Life's starting to make sense for the first time in ages and it rocks.
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Kev, I hope you like the capital letters!


my train from howrah to mumbai was scheduled to take 30 or 33 hours (i forget which) - and it took 40.... it wasn't that bad actually, what's 7 hours or so when you're on a massive journey? i was sharing my 4 berth with a really miserable old woman, her daughter and her daughter's young baby. they were the messiest people i've ever seen in my life! after day one there were crisp packets, cake wrappers, rice, curry and all manner of crap strewn everywhere on their bottom two bunks - i was glad to be in the top berth and well away from it all though the smell caught at the back of my throat which was quite annoying. actually the stench coming from the whole carriage after 2 days was pretty hideous! the baby was the cutest thing i've ever seen and was really well behaved, which was a blessing as when they got on i thought "uh-oh... screaming baby for 2 days... augh!!"
usually on the train in 2ac you get a plug socket so i didn't bother charging my ipod or mini dvd player thinking i could just plug them in when i got there. silly, silly david! had i learned nothing from my trip in india? of course there was no charge point, so i read my book for the most part, and got some good work done on the best man speech i have to give in just under 2 weeks... it's not worrying me at all i promise! ordinarily i would sit in one of the doorways smoking, drinking chai and watching india glide past but on this train i had a tyrant of a conductor. every time i got settled in he would tell me to get back to my seat, despite protestations that i had travelled all over india on the train and had never encountered a problem before. which really sucked as this journey was my farewell to india. i was crossing the whole subcontinent so it seemed the perfect opportunity to sit and reflect on my time here. oh well, the view from the window was just as good i guess.
so now i'm back in mumbai and i'm having a great time. i had yesterday to myself which was top, visiting the sights i had seen before to take one last look and chuckling to myself about how scared and shocked i was by the place when i first got here in january. compared to the rest of india this place is a little slic
so anyway, after a mediocre brekky i headed onto park street which is the main shopping drag. i don't know if i've mentioned this site before, but
where was i...? ah yes, after i bought my new specs i headed over to howrah station to try and sort out a ticket to mumbai. over a million people pass through this station every day, and i reckon most of them must have been there when i was. i thought cst in mumbai was busy - there was absolutely no way on this earth i was going to get a ticket before next week so i hung around a while people watching and then jumped on a ferry across the hooghly river to the main side of town. i sneaked a few photos of the howrah bridge (apparently it's illegal to photograph it for some reason) which made me feel all naughty.
my next mission was to get to the motherhouse of mother teresa's order. i knew that all i had to do was go down park street and chuck a left at some point.... but at which point i wasn't entirely sure... i used the metro to get to park street, something i had been looking forward to. i don't know what it is but i love underground systems, the ones in delhi, singapore and bangkok were fab, really clean and well maintained and reliable, who wants to guess what the one in kolkata's like? i'll give 50p to the winner... well, it was old, rusty, dirty, no signs or maps and actually what i expected a metro in india to be like. it was crowded, at each station it was every man for himself and every stop or so the thing would halt suddenly and unexpectedly in the middle of the tunnel. what an experience!!
i got hideously lost trying to find mother teresa's house which i am actually thankful for, as i got to see parts of kolkata i ordinarily wouldn't have. kiddies playing in the street, families going about their hard, impoverished lives on the roadside, people washing under leaking pipes, men sifting through garbage dividing plastics and metals up for re-sale and maybe food for the day. it really saddened me to see my fellow man in such a shit state, so hopeless and with absolutely nothing yet managing to cling on to existence by any means possible. for maybe a mile up to mother teresa's house i saw all kinds of horridness, so so many people in such a bad way. when i got there and looked around the motherhouse, saw her tomb and her simple room i was really humbled, and aware that i was in the presence of someone special. the pope blessed her in a way that means she's one step down from being a saint (forgive me for not knowing the exact terminology) and after seeing the poverty around her and reading about the sacrifices she made in her life to help those in need i could see why. i sat in the main chapel which houses her tomb for maybe 15 minutes as kolkatans filed in silently, pressed their foreheads against her simple white marble tomb and uttered silent prayers. it was altogether an overwhelming afternoon and another experience i will never forget.
i had an interesting time trying to get back to sudder street. the taxi drivers weren't interested as the one way system had switched so it would be a pain in the ass to get me there so i got in a rikshaw and waited for 3 others to join me, apparently they always fill up before they leave unlike the ones elsewhere in india. he dropped me off about a million miles away so i ended up walking the rest. before i turned in i bought a train ticket from one of the travel agents. well, i gave him lots of money and he said come back tomorrow.... so having achieved everything i set out to for the day i flomped in my hot, smelly skank-o-rama
so i'm back in india and i feel awesome! i don't know what it is about this place but i felt instantly at home when i landed. something about thailand never really sat right with me, i think it's because you get off the plane at bangkok and everything is so easy, everything is clean and (relatively) ordered. you don't have to graft for your travel. you go to a travel agent, buy a ticket, get on a bus and you're there - everything works and everything is done for you. plus there's the fact that i feel like a pioneer again now i'm back, i saw more westerners in a day in thailand than i have on my whole trip in india - i don't think i like that kind of travelling but i definitely needed the 3 weeks or so there to kick back and relax .
i'm in kolkata (calcutta) and the poverty is everywhere. lining every street are homeless people and i've lost count of the amount of naked kids i've seen playing in the rubbish today. i arrived pretty early this morning after a nightmare travel day and a half from koh tao. i shared a cab with a crazy girl called maya from new zealand who has no guidebook, no real idea about india and was just going to wing it here for a few months. when she told me this i grinned and said "you'll love it, watch out for rikshaw drivers they're bastards.. oh, and keep a stack of 10's in your pocket nobody in this country has any change" and couldn't really think of anything else to say. the thing about this place is that no amount of preparation, advice, hints or tips can really prepare you for this chaotic, contradictory, wonderfully nutso country. looks like the time in thailand has done the trick as when i left here i was pretty sick of it all.
so, after a fairly hectic cab ride i found a nice enough room for 300 rupees with a tv and (allegedly) a hot shower and had a wee snooze. this afternoon i have been wandering around the victoria memorial which is easily as impressive as the taj mahal. going to stay here for maybe 3 days to check out some colonial goodness before heading to mumbai on the 30 hour train - eeshk!!




now i don't know what to do next. part of me really wants to come home to the uk as i have been homesick for as long as i can remember now and this has just added to that. part of me wants to go back to india to get away from all the bloody travellers - harriet in singapore said that from the second i got off the plane at bangkok i would join a conveyor belt of travellers and i wouldn't get off it until i landed back in india - and she was so right! david and davina are in chiang mai which was kind of on my list so i might go and see them tomorrow after lunch with taj and cass (my warcraft friends) for a couple of days before coming back to bangkok to meet jaclyn and karen on the 19th. i have a flight booked to singapore on the 21st and i need to sort out a flight back to india from there.