Southern Sojourn
What is this life if full of care,
we have no time to stand and stare!!!
Life today has become so fast paced. It is almost like those high speed rollercoaster rides at the theme park in town. We are running around all the time - school children, working women and men, homemakers, senior citizens - all of us in a hurry all of the time!!! And when we are not running around we are busy setting our alarm clocks and popping vitamins and calciums down our throats. All this to stay one step ahead in this rat race called survival!!!
Mayavaram (or Mayiladuthurai as it is called now) is a small town in Nagapattinam district. It is located in the historic Thanjavur area on the banks of the infamous Cauvery!!!
My trip to Mayavaram and a couple of nearby villages was a wonderful experience. Truly refreshing and a welcome break from the hustle and bustle of Chennai. What follows is an account of this trip, quite clearly one of my favourite trips!!!
We took a bus to Mayavaram on Friday night. The bus was headed to a place called Karaikudi. We reached Mayavaram at around 4.15 am after a six hour journey. The bus ride was quite comfortable. The lodge where we were to put up was 5 minutes away by walk from where we got off. We dragged ourselves and our luggage to the lodge. Sleepwalking with a twist, I should add!!! To our surprise - the lodge was shut!!! We were amused and irritated at the same time. I have always been the urban pampered customer variety enjoying the pleasures of 24X7 services and the like - and now this kind of reception at an unearthly hour!!! This was my first brush with life in a non-metro. We finally knocked our way into the lodge and managed to catch up with some sleep.
The drive was simply enchanting. It took us around 30 minutes to get to the temple. The roads were good. There were some rough patches, but on the whole were a pleasure to drive on. The journey through the countryside was refreshing in every sense. The green pastures on both sides looked like soft green carpets spread all over. Goats of all sizes were running around the place. Young girls with stacks of hay on their heads were walking along the roads. We passed by some sugarcane fields in full harvest. Coconut trees laced the roads on some stretches. There was this sweet pleasant fragrance of freshness in the wind that blew against our faces as our car zipped by the fields and villages.
We reached the temple after a while. It's a really small and simple temple compared to the fanfare that bigger temples like the ones at Tirupati, Sabarimala and Vaishnodevi attract. We were the only devotees for the day. You have to actually inform the temple priests in advance that you would be visiting. The head priest was getting all the arrangements done for the abhishekam. We finished offering our prayers to Lord Ayyanar, had our prasadam and spent some time inside the temple premises. The temple has a stone elephant and mahout on one side. This elephant has always been my star attraction at the temple right from when I was a kid. I was so happy to be there again and took a couple of pictures too.
There is a small pond just outside the temple. The water in the pond had a soothing blue-green colour and a constant shimmer with the sunrays reflecting on it. There was nothing more to it, yet it looked so beautiful, so serene. I took my time to stand and stare - at the pristine waters, at the refreshing green trees and at the clear blue skies. Davies and his poem crossed my mind! I continued to stand and stare - this time with a smile on my face!!!
12 comments:
Hey kiddo,
nice article. feel exactly the same way whenever i visit coorg. i appreciate people who appreciate nature when they have the time to "stand and stare". on numerous occassions in bangalore when i wait at the traffic signal and watch every body in a mad rush to get to office, day in and day out doing the same thing for years on end without stopping to figure out what they r doing and why........
anyway in the end its all about "money" that makes the world go around........ but like you rightly said v need to take frequent time outs to "stop & stare".
nice pics kiddo...... there's this sony digital camera which has this "shake free" feature.......probably anu could gift u 1 the next time she comes down from dubai ;-)
keep writing
cheers
rajiv
thanx rajiv :-) i'll check with anu abt the camera ;-)
Hey! Great to see that you enjoyed with your bit of outing from all the hustles and bustles of the metro. I really liked the way it was all described. Not many have the ability to describe so elaborately and yet interesting. You did it. Keep on visiting and do keep writing. :)
thanx a ton karthick!!! it's appreciation and feedback of this sort that keeps me going :-)
This sounds fantastic... havent been reading stuff like this since i went to Law school....i guess i have missed the good things in life! Keep it going kiddo! - Gana
thanx sooo much gana :-)
Well Maasi..the article was BAD and the pics SAD ;-). Could not find the slightest glitch in them to croticize, you cant be writing so well and keep giving other writers bouts of inferiority complex :)...
The snaps were cool..but you could have tried out a different costume for every snap naa..like heroines in telugu movies..hee..hee.. Great going and hope you go for more sojourns like this so that we can get a good read.
thanx vinodh :-)
for ur feedback about different costumes for the pics... point noted ;-)
Dear Priya,
I experienced the journey while reading your article. Very well written kiddo. I'm sure it was a trip that remains fresh in your memory for a very long time.
I am always attracted by countryside. Only when you visit countryside, you can fully appreciate what William Wordsworth wrote in The Solitary Reaper. Women in villages have a natural flair for singing and they convey their emotions, all through songs - themmangu etc. What Wordsworth had written - "The music in my heart I bore, Long after it was heard no more" can only be experienced in villages.
Going to a village also reminds you to slow down on a few things - don't deplete natural resources, grow trees and more importantly, stop and listen to beautiful things which otherwise could go unnoticed. It is only when you observe such beautiful things, the observer and the observed become one and the same, an experience that can never be bought with whatever money one has.
The photos (nice captions too) nicely illustrate your article.
Keep writing more. I expect more blogs from you. Hope you travel more to share your experiences through travelogues.
Regards,
Ravi
Hey Priya,
Felt refreshing reading your travelogue about your urban escapade. I feel that such trips really do rejuvenate you to an extent and help you get away from the grind. Well written and some nice pics too!
Take care,
Abhi.
@Ravi Sir - Thanks a ton!!! Nice to read about what you think about the countryside too!
@Abhijeet - Thanks so much. You're totally right about how trips of this sort rejuvenate and refresh you!!
Well written article mixing your feelings in the right proportion. I had been to Veliyanad (near Cochin) recently for a week's stay. So, I could relate easily what you are saying.
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