18 October
We spent the first few days of Dashain re-visitng Kathmandu (it’s
amazing how a few weeks of language practice can boost your confidence when
bargaining for a hotel room!) before passing through to Nargakot, a town famous
for its mountain views. We fought
off tarantula-sized spiders, rabid dogs, and crowded buses for the view–and it
was all completely worth it!
Before I had the chance to unpack upon returning home, Didi
swept me out the door with Stutat, Spandan, and my niece, Urmica, to watch the
religious parade that kicks off the start of Dashain. I climbed to what felt to
be the top of Gorkha with Stutat clinging to my back – essentially trading a
full trekking pack for my 3-year-old brother– to watch the preparations for the
parade. Instead of clearing the path, like I had anticipated, a small crowd
gathered to coat the stone stairs with cow dung! “They’re cleaning the stairs,”
Didi told me in Nepali. “A Nepali vacuum!”
One of the biggest aspects of Dashain is wearing tikka, which is made from a red rice
paste and applied to the forehead. The elders in my family and around the
village doled out this concoction which covered my entire forehead for three
days, temporarily turning my skin pink and unfortunately giving everyone the
impression I was constantly blushing! In addition to tikka, elders give paisa, or money, during Dashain and the
amount varies according to your age. Unlike in the states where financial
information is usually a private matter, it is not uncommon for Nepalis to ask,
“How much did that cost?” or “How much do you make?” So I shouldn’t have been
surprised when at the end of the day, the family gathered to compare how much
everyone had collected. (Perhaps it’s because I have Halloween on my mind, but
it reminded me of returning home from trick-or-treating and taking inventory of
the night’s booty. Adults included!)
And eating. There. Was. So. Much. Meat. I think I may have
eaten more in one meal than the PC Yuck Truck serves during an entire weekend.
My usual strategy to eat faster than my brain can process what my stomach is
doing backfired when even more meat was loaded onto my plate because my hosts
assumed, “Gee! She must be hungry!” During Dashain there was plenty of meat to
go around; at one temple in Kathmandu alone, worshippers watched as 14,721
goats were sacrificed over the course of the day. 14,721. In one day. I’m glad
I was able to sit that one out.


I REALLY want to go to that house/deck with the view of the Himalayas. You went there??
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