The day after I got here, we were at an intersection where a guy was selling these plastic figures, and nothing but these— he probably had 150 of them or more, all this dark orange. We got one for Hema's car and one for me to take home, and I have spent the rest of the time looking for more of them without luck.
After that day, though, we've seen them in four other vehicles, and I'm glad to have one. They bounce along just as happily as can be, watching the road. It's about (as Raghu explained to me) when Hanuman went to get a certain plant from a mountain that would cure Ram's brother. He wasn't sure which plant, or he didn't have time or something, so he made himself big (which is his super power—to be huge or tiny if he needs to be) and flew back with his mace in one hand and the mountain in the other. Raghu told me that Hanuman's mace doesn't need spikes because he doesn't actually even need the mace. He can beat anyone with his bare hands.
See Hanuman there in the upper right?
The car in front of us had one, too:
Here's Hema's, candidly, out in the country. I was taking a picture of the roller, and the road work.
Chitra gave me these flowers. She wrote the name down as rajneekandh but said it might have a g. I found them as Rajanigandha, and the photo is the same.
Here's a photo of Pradnya, me, Hema and Chitra:
Here's a cool photo showing all five kids, doing various things:
I saw some in Hawaii, too, and I think they might have been what the lei was made of that Jihong brought when she met me at the airport. It feels the same and smells like Hawaii to me. :-)
The elevators have mirrors in them. This is my flash in a mirror in a fancy elevator I did not go into.
The first two are elevators. The third one is a supply closet. Nice, huh? Really nice camouflage. The elevator that never arrives.
Hema was having a beautiful hair day.
This ice was put into the glass at the table, with tongs, one cube at a time. Artfully arranged. Then he poured water over it. Very pretty.
A floral display without flowers.
The hotel had just bought three matching new cars and had them blessed/Christened [no, not Christened...] ...had a car puja... and the license plate numbers are all in a row.
Dusk, Laxmi Road in Pune, the stores with their lights on:
Here's the preview to the one above, a wild wait, while Pradnya got a second rickshaw and then gathered our party together so we could go back to her mom's place where she had left her car.
Chitra arranged a brief visit to Arvind Gupta's lab/workshop on Friday. He designs science toys that can be made by street kids from easily obtainable Indian trash. His site is linked below. Here's a brief video I made that day:
There was a flexagon with drawings of stages of evolution. In this video (linked from his site, to YouTube) he shows a food chain. Any four-part series could be illustrated on those, he said. (He told us who discovered/created this design first, too, but I don't remember the name, so if anyone does know, please leave a note.
Pictures of the building in which he and his team work, and some of the things we saw:
On the piece of cardboard on which I've been taking notes on which photos to delete and which are brooms and whatnot, I had noted: "Good 1454.mp4" I can't say at the moment what I thought was good about it, but I will trust my notes from day before yesterday and share it.
I wasn't tall enough to get the flag fully. Had I backed up more, other trees would have been between me and the moon. It was getting dark and getting cloudy at the same time. It's not a great photo, but will be a memory jogger for me. I was in the driveway of Pradnya's mom's house.
I got to be in a fancy sari shop while Chitra bought a sari for her mother-in-law. Because she wanted a typical local sari, Pradnya was advising.
This is the second floor (third, by American reckoning)--there was another place over the entry room). Shoes off for this one, and the floor was covered in pads about 3" thick, like old-style futons. There were three salesmen, and when we came in they indicated a corner for us to sit, and brought me a plastic stool (which I didn't mind, because I was really tired and would've had an awkward get-back-up).
Behind me was the entry, where the shoes were, and the windows to the street. I should've just captured everything, but I was the last of the people in our group, and anyway one can't capture everything.
When we went downstairs to pay, I started to do a 360° view, but was interrupted by a man having brought me a chair. How nice of him! How rude to interrupt my nosy, touristy capture of his store, though. :-)
Pradnya says, "Sandra, he's getting you a chair," so I stopped.
I'm scheduled to be back down on that street again before I leave, so I'll try to get a shot of the front of the store to add here.
There are old women with brooms cleaning paths and roadsides all over the place, but this one was at the zoo. She was taking a break. I took the photo for my brooms collection (to which I'm still adding, and I don't expect anyone else to care as much as I do).
The proper zoo photos will come later. I had an upload problem and need to figure out which images failed. I was glad to see this one come through, though.
Yesterday I went for a little "explore" with Tejas (on the bike, who lived there, and whom I'd known before), Shakthi and Shree (Chitra's daughters, who arrived from Coimbatore yesterday).
Tejas showed us how well he could ride his bicycle with one hand, and even turn.
Shakthi is an artist, and I had some of her work before by e-mail, but yesterday I saw some of her more 3-D art, and how quickly she can make beautiful things. She told me Shree, her younger sister, was a naturalist and cared about flowers and plants. When we went on the walk, sure enough Shree pointed out each new flower, and told me to take pictures. These were just along the pool and parking lot at the housing society where Tejas lives. Shree knew the names of a lot of them, but I didn't take notes. Tejas knew some of them too, and took us to the larger papaya tree for photos of those too.
The grandparents of unschoolers I spoke with the first week I was here were all worried about competitive tests. Since then I've seen what they're thinking:
In a library in Bangalore:
There does seem to be an atmosphere of competition, and that will affect unschoolers in the way they deal with others (and especially with other people's questions and fears).
The stylized image on the right, nearly to the bottom, is interesting. In figurines, there are round Ganesha's, very modern seeming, nearly round, with only the slightest of details.
He's recognizeable even in minimal or abstract ways:
Four minutes of a ride up the road on Monday. It's uphill, to a temple, and then we walked back down.
Up to then, I had heard these things called "rickshaw," which they are, but to hail one, the word is "Auto!" And Hema's mom called it "auto" the whole time.
The voices are me, Hema, and her mom, Uma. I will add some photos illustrating what we were talking about, but I've just woken up (at nearly noon Wednesday) after a late night arrival in Pune. I'm hungry, and I need to go and see what my social obligations for the day are. One obligatory thing is doing laundry, after five days away.
Each morning, Hema's parents (and lots of other people) get a small bag of flowers delivered. This morning I got to examine them. When her mom gets up she will do the morning altar cleaning/offering and replace a garland and a flower.
These are the shrine without the new flowers—yesterday's flowers.