Friday 9 November 2007

soul impression

First impressions, for most, are a paramount facet in any relationship. Given my own experiences with the diverse and unique souls I have come to know, hindsight has shown me that yes, my first impressions were indeed acutely accurate.

Do not confuse my reference to impressions with anything superficial. This is an instinct. A whisper soft knowing beneath my skull, smack dab between the eyes, and lower still—a feeling in my heart, in my gut. It’s this sweet whisper, ever so quiet that tells the truth. It isn’t intrusive, and it won’t try to dominate the other voice of consciousness, in your mind or wherever it may reside…for those whose consciousness lives in your heart I put my two weary hands together in applause for you.

This is something that must be approached with humility. Stop trying to think you always know what’s best. Surrender your voice, and the egotistical mode of thinking you know what’s best at all times, and just listen. If you’ve ever stopped to listen to a child without judgement, or to the gentle summer breeze that blows between the red waxy heads of tulips planted with care in rich garden earth, then you will find that listening to your voice within is a like experience. It’s not about reliance on logic but rather letting yourself be guided by a higher power, one that once you come to trust, will never misguide you.

A while back, when I lived in Peterborough, I often walked the twenty minute route to east city—crossing the wide Otonobee River on the Hunter Street Bridge. There is a health food store on the other side of this bridge where I used to shop for all kinds of delightful products such as vitamins, minerals and rice noodles. I knew the staff fairly well because it was a shop that I frequently appeared in over the course of a few years time. On one particular day, I entered the store looking for an iron supplement. I stood staring blankly at the hundreds of bottles of vitamins in search of my iron tablets…and though help would have been appreciated a salesman whom I’d never previously seen in the store appeared and began to aggressively sell me on his products. He stood very close to me, his six-foot-something frame towering over mine, and I have a clear memory of the way my gut dropped and the urge I had to run away immediately when he approached me. I left the store without my vitamins, dropping an excuse about having to make an appointment. The next time I passed by the store I saw him standing behind the glass store front window, and although I still needed to buy my vitamins, I chose to wait until he was not working.

Six months down the road, after designing a website for the owner of the same health food store I learned that the aforementioned salesman had recently been released from prison shortly before he had been hired to work in the store. Only a few weeks after my own experience, he abducted a woman who was shopping alone in the store. He bound her with duck-tape, took her into the back of the store, and raped her.

It was not a whisper-soft voice that told me to mistrust this man, but a scream. It was a reaction of my entire body, every cell recoiling from this man, pleading to persuade me to leave the store. It was so strong that I had but one choice and that was to listen.

But not all first impressions are so strong. It’s the times when I sense that someone has a controlling factor in their personality that I wish I’d listened more. Yes, these people might not cause direct harm, but do I really want a person in my life who will try to dictate and dominate? (Of course the answer is no).

And of course there are those where love is. Where being together is no less than heaven. In every relationship, there is always an element of risk. But to be brave and to refuse the ones who will harm, in order to embrace those who will love is the greatest way of life.

street clothes

A constant frenzy of action best describes India’s economy. It moves and swirls in an undeniable force that will pick you up and move you, like the undulating motion of the sea. There is the satisfying shear of scissors cutting through material. The delicious aroma of food pulled through air currents from the large aluminium vats on red hot coals where men hunched over—quickly stirring, quickly frying, prepare the goods. And there are the sweepers, moving the dust; and the labourers pounding brick into ash.


This is speaking from a “grassroots” level, literally. From the young boy who sits in the clouds of exhaust on the roadside before a giant mound of marigolds, to the shoe repair man planted firmly on the ground amid his assortment of shoes, and the children who sell issues of Vogue and other superfluous articles, it is all the same.


One more day of work, is equal to one more day where hand meets mouth, for one who is balanced every so precariously on the wire above complete loss and destitution. This threshold I tell you of now is so much lower in India—where people have nothing but a threadbare scarf that holds within its fibres a tiny frame, full of life and resilience. Any skill, or service is put to work here. Nothing is worthless, or inadequate. Anything, will do, for survival.


I have been there before. When I was sixteen, living on government welfare, without support from my mother, I became quite creative in the ways to earn money. And for those who don’t make the connection, money is life. There are those who have money, and those who do not. And there are those who will do anything for a shiny coin. It’s a means of survival.


Because I’ve lived that way (and yes, I begged for money, and sold everything I possessed), I can see things from the point of the ones here in Delhi who ask me for money. It isn’t easy saying, “no” when I see a tiny little child run towards me with both incredible hope and desperation. I want nothing more than to give them my entire purse and let them run away with my money. I treat them kindly though, and I don’t yell at them the way I’ve seen Ben* (a male Canadian volunteer) do so. Yelling at the children only dehumanizes them. I meet their eyes, and I tell them no, tell them in way that doesn’t hurt.


I believe that a universal purpose of life common among every living individual, is to leave this world a better place. We are here to leave a trail of love, compassion and kindness. If we can exit this world having done more good than harm, then we have fulfilled the base purpose common to all of our lives. It is possible to go about each day without leaving anything less than a footprint of kindness.


It is not my place to try to change this country’s problems, but perhaps if my heart is receptive to listening without judgement, I could see the greater picture, and understand the complexity of life, here in Delhi.


* name changed to keep the identity private