Perfect Happy New Year - Rishikesh
I write from such a beautiful place on the banks of the Ganga and at the foot of the Himilayas. Heaven on earth.
Yesterday when I arrived, Hem (pronounced Him) took me through the market and the ghats of Haridwar. Then we climbed up to a very high up fantastic Masadevi temple. It must have taken an hour to climb up there. He is very polite because he probably ciould have flown up being a mountain man, a true trekker. I had to stop many times.
Evidently the wishes one makes before going into this temple are surely granted by the great goddess. Or so I was told. Aside from my wishing for an abundant future where all my current projects become overnight successes, and my father's recovery from something like dimentia, I wished for the return of my silver hoop earring that I lost while making the climb as I shed some of my layers of clothing I was sweating so much.
While skipping merrily down the stairs from the temple in the sky, I did find it albeit not in the place where I had lost it. It had rolled down to about the 500th step in the thousand we climbed. Hem took this to be a good omen that the goddess would be granting all my wishes.
I bought a couple bananas in the market on the way back to the car and got them clipped from my hands by a fast monkey. What a scene.
We then traveled some distance to Rishikesh where what might seem like a budget hotel to most seemd like paradise to me - to have a tub and hot water again - what a treat!
Next we traveled to the banks of the Ganges and to the white sand beaches here. Very beautiful.
Next we crossed Shivanand Jhula (a beautiful pedestrian bridge) to the other side of the river to attend evening aarti ceremony in front of a huge Shiva statue sitting on rocks in the water. What a simple and different puja from the one in Varanasi. This one is full of saffron clad boys ages 8 to 18 singing their hearts out as they happily pray. And instead of thousands of people, possibly there were 300 - 400 making it seem like a very intimate experience. At some point a long-haired bearded swami arrived who clearly was the leader of said group, the center of the ceremony. Quite a moving spectacle.
After a light dinner of simple thali, I slept for 12 hours.
This morning I found my way to the Lakshiman Jhula and walked across to visit these tall temples that have layer upon layer of gods and goddesses maybe twelve stories tall in total. I hung with a family that was visiting at the same time and rang the many bells with the little girls.
I found my way to a German bakery and book store and learned from some tourists about the happenings this evening being offered for New Years celebrations.
I'll see what inner guidance says about whether to go or not, but I will have a great dinner and make a toast to all of you. I love you and miss you and send you love for the New Year from this heavenly place.
Namaste,
Laurie





