A quick telegram :
Mexico similar to India. Missing Bangalore. STOP. It's COLD! Unexpected, feeling stupid. STOP. Women smoke more. STOP. People stare! STOP. Should learn Spanish to visit. STOP.
If I could time travel to the 1960s, that is how my message would have looked. Sending message might have been costly then, but I guess Telegram beats Twitter any day, simply because of its ingenuity and necessity of the service.
A mild digression and here is the day-by-day account of our Mexico trip. This is September 21, 2012.
Day 1 ended with an early dinner and bedtime. The next day was definitely going to be more interesting. The Pyramids of the Sun and Moon at Teotihuacan awaited us!
Mexico similar to India. Missing Bangalore. STOP. It's COLD! Unexpected, feeling stupid. STOP. Women smoke more. STOP. People stare! STOP. Should learn Spanish to visit. STOP.
If I could time travel to the 1960s, that is how my message would have looked. Sending message might have been costly then, but I guess Telegram beats Twitter any day, simply because of its ingenuity and necessity of the service.
A mild digression and here is the day-by-day account of our Mexico trip. This is September 21, 2012.
Day Uno:
Though I consider myself a morning person, a flight at
7.15am was a bit too much, that too an international travel. The cab picked us
at 3.50am. Being in LA, Mexico sounds like just over the border but it was a
whole 3 hrs 30 mins journey in the air.
While chalking out the tour itinerary, we had settled down
on the major sites we would like to cover in our 2.5 days' trip. Conveniently,
we assumed that the country will be as hot as LA and sniggered at the people
who were wearing coats at the airport. Little did we know we were the actual dodos.
As we approached the airport, the one thing that caught our
attention was the roof-tops, all of them were red in colour, rendering a lovely
hue to the entire city. A small needle-in-haystack search later in the Mexico
City airport, we traced our hotel pickup chauffeur. The drive to the hotel was
smooth, especially with the chatty driver. She tried her best to convey her
welcome in broken English. And we literally were amazed by the sceneries around
- roadside outlets, peak traffic, mindless pedestrians, hawkers, a mix of
narrow and broad streets, flyovers - everything looked so similar to Bangalore
that we yearned to be back home.
The differentiation stood at road-signs, posters, graffiti,
and 'Viva Mexico' crying out from all around in Spanish. And of course, the
pain in conversing. It reminded me of my initial days in Bangalore where
dumb-charades had become a survival tactic. We almost cursed ourselves for not learning
the language before visiting. Even the hotel staff and the 'policia' are
non-English speakers!
The currency conversion is around 12 pesos per dollar
currently. A decent deal from Hilton and the conversion rate made our life somewhat
peaceful here. We reached the hotel room just before 3pm. A bath and lunch
later, we headed for a small walk to Metropolitan Cathedral. There was a huge
procession on the streets. All we could garner was, it consisted mostly of
college students and they were demanding some sort of employment rights.
Anyhow, it was a huge chaos on the roads. The combat policemen were around to
control the crowd.
The walk to the old church is quite interesting. The
buildings around are at least 300-400 years old, making the whole set-up quite
surreal. It felt as if the people here transformed over time, keeping the
background intact. And how the people stare! Young and old, men and women -
they just scan you top to bottom! Sounds so much like back home or maybe I have
got unused to the fact by living in LA, where nobody gives you a second glance.
Metropolitan Cathedral is the first church in the American
continent, built by the Spaniards soon after the conquest of the Aztecs. The
Spanish ruled the country from early 1500s to early 1800s, heralding Christianity to the land. They, of course, stamped
the culture remarkably on Mexico. The church is humungous, even my 18-55 had
trouble encapsulating it from up front. There are interesting underground pathways
on the church grounds, now covered by transparent thick glasses. The inside of
the church is a grand golden architecture, the striking feature is the black
Christ that we found unique. The exploration was cut short since it was past
the visiting hours (till 5pm).
A slow walk back through the crowd, we stopped at Starbucks
for some coffee and to gloat at the new culture. Quite an experience it was.Day 1 ended with an early dinner and bedtime. The next day was definitely going to be more interesting. The Pyramids of the Sun and Moon at Teotihuacan awaited us!
Ahh I never thought I would say this, but i DO miss Bangalore....looking forward to day 2 and day 3
ReplyDeletethanks! hopefully by this weekend :)
DeleteThe contents are really good…
ReplyDeleteGujaratonnet.com
Thank you! :)
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