That is, the awkward period after a tourist has checked out of their hotel, packed up their suitcase and is all ready to go home - but several hours remains until their flight.
With the area around my hotel, where I'm currently waiting, well and truly traversed, and the nearby shops on Brigade Rd holding little appeal, I think it's the perfect time for a retrospective of my seven weeks in India.
I hereby present, in alternating order, five things I can't wait to see the back of and five things I will miss about India:
-One underrated aspect about life in New Zealand is being able to walk down the footpath without having to dodge small vehicles. Motorcycles and their ilk tend to stick to the road back home. That's not the case here and, considering the number of near misses, it's a miracle I haven't been run down by an overzealous bikie looking for a shortcut.
-Such behaviour is novel, however, when you're the one in the vehicle. I haven't seen any theme parks in India but I have experienced great thrills going from point A to B in an auto. Taking a tuk-tuk ride around the city is not only an effective and cheap means of transport but also an excellent way to watch India whizz by.
-I just wish I rode wearing ear muffs. If it's difficult to illustrate the chaos of the roads through photos, it's downright impossible to capture the noise. Indians like noise, and the road is one place they indulge in that passion to gratuitous levels. With no forewarning, I just thought my taxi driver from Hyderabad airport was incredibly poor and every other motorist on the road was berating him with their horns. How wrong I was.
-One thing I wish I weren't warned about (damn you, Lonely Planet!) doubled as my favourite Indian custom. I haven't seen so many men walking down the street hand-in-hand or with their arms draped around each other's shoulders since an eye-opening afternoon in Castro, San Francisco. But it's a bit different here - a common expression of non-sexual affection. I want to get this started in New Zealand.
-The illusion India was impressively progressive with regards to homosexuality would have been shattered soon enough, if the censorship on television was anything to go by. Along with the usual profanity, obscenities like 'sucker' and 'boobs' were forbidden, any time of the day or night. Another TV oddity: every scene showing a lit cigarette was accompanied with a warning about smoking being 'injudicious' to health.
-There should have been warning messages on the chicken. Reading: 'Chicken is delicious. Eating will render inferior all other chicken.' It's as if, with beef off the menu, India decided to completely dominate white meat. Along with the expectedly otherworldly curries, there were delights like Murgh Malai Tikka. I'm still not entirely sure what it is but, one thing I am certain of, I'm going to miss it.
-Of course, all that delicious local food does come with consequence. Though my prayers to Ganesha were answered and I escaped without a serious case of Delhi belly, that doesn't mean I escaped entirely. Without going into the gory details, I became quite accustomed to being woken by stomach pain. It would have been worse if I failed to steer clear of tap water. Damn, I miss tap water.
-Especially in this heat. I know I've had a good whine about the temperature previously on these pages, but I'll be looking back fondly on the climate the next time I head to work on a cool spring morning in Auckland. In truth, I could get used to 30-degree days. I just couldn't appreciate that while wearing shoes and socks.
-Perhaps the main thing I'm looking forward to leaving behind is the 'lost in translation' moments that seemingly littered my every day. I can look back and laugh about most of them now but I sure didn't feel like laughing at the time. My favourite: waiting in the lobby of the wrong hotel (in my defence, it had a very similar name) while trying to interview a New Zealand cricketer. I wasted an hour of my time and his. He joked the next day that he thought I must have been dead. Good times.
-But I don't want to seem like I'm blaming anyone for that type of thing because - sweeping generalisation alert - the Indian people are wonderful. The smiling faces, the hand shakes from strangers, the passers-by acting as translators for auto drivers. The people have made this trip special, and I will always remember that.
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