Archive for April, 2009

25
Apr

All done!

   Posted by: Heze    in Uncategorized

We got my apartment cleaned up today and the keys are already with the next occupant, so I am free to start Wappu celebrations now.

No, wait. I already did. PARRRRRTYYYY!

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23
Apr

One more day

   Posted by: Heze    in Are we there yet?

I have really been on the fast lane since Monday. During office hours I have been running after visas, flight tickets, tax counselling and so on, while the rest of the days I’ve been packing like crazy. Somehow I’ve managed to stuff an ocean liner worth of furniture, stuff & things into my 76 square meter apartment and it takes forever to get everything out. Now it finally seems that yes, it’s going to happen.

I also wrote a couple of rental agreements today and it seems that I will have some extra income during my visit in India. Still I would need some extra for my apartment loan payments in Finland, and it sounds like transferring money from India to EU can be a bit tricky. I hope to find a feasible solution when I get there.

Apart from being really tired, homeless and dirty, all is well for me. Tomorrow is practically the last day of work in Finland for me. I have the coming week off from work and I’ll spend it by having an utterly biblically fabulous Wappu once I’m still here. Hopefully I can keep my feet unbroken this year :)

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20
Apr

And there they go

   Posted by: Heze    in Are we there yet?

My stuff & things are now on their way towards Helsinki and should arrive somewhere around early June. Luckily I have my new laptop for surfing, blogging and storage of photos, plus my 20 kilograms of luggage allowance for establishing a life in the jungle. Before that I have a bit more than two weeks to kill in Oulu, but I’m in luck: Wappu is coming! Maybe a couple of days off, a few cold drinks on the patio, driving around in Wesibussi and some well-deserved time off. We’ll see.

This actually isn’t the first homeless Wappu for me: some years back I gave up my apartment before the celebrations and moved in to the new one after all the parties and other mandatory ceremonies. This year I’ll take it easy and just relax – I’ve already seen all the wild  stuff of it.

Now I’ll try to clean up this place, make it ready for the next occupant and find myself a place to stay. Does anyone need a digital TV box for cable network?

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17
Apr

Small things

   Posted by: Heze    in Uncategorized

I used my 1337 h4x0r m4d 5k1llz to modify the code our blog is running on. My posts will have the usual white date number in the upper left corner, while Eve’s will have a red one. It should be a bit easier to identify the writer by a quick glance.

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16
Apr

We’re moving!

   Posted by: Heze    in Are we there yet?

No, not the blog, but my stuff. Suddenly I found myself arranging the move for next Monday, meaning that my things should be in Bangalore around early June. This also means that I will have to do without my desktop computer for two months, and my Acer Aspire One really needs an update before it’s usable. Oh well, at least I have my work laptop for reading and writing.

I have quite a lot to handle for my move, but I’m still on top of things. Visa application are almost on their way, travel dates are almost fixed, flight tickets are almost confirmed and so on. I still need to rent out my apartment, rent out my bike, plan my packing, attend a funeral and so on, but all in all everything seems to be going on as planned. We’ll see when the first catastrophe strikes…

In case you need me in the end of May, here’s where to reach me:


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16
Apr

Pincushions

   Posted by: eve    in Are we there yet?

So today I got my last shot of hepatitis B administered. I still need to get three shots of Japanese encephalitis and get tested for various diseases. So needles, and more needles it is. Good thing I’m not scared of being stung.

I also got the promise of Malarone for malaria medicine (the first thing the healthcare tried to give me was Lariam, which is not very effective and has huge side effects), so all is good. Not that Bangalore would be an area where malaria is a problem, but it’s good to have the pills in case of travelling. And travel – it seems – we will.

It’s hard to concentrate on my job at hand as I’m still halfway in India in my mind. Yes yes, it’s hot and crazy and chaotic, but theres a certain Something to the country. I’m waiting for the move very enthusiastically, it’s going to be a huge adventure.

Talking about the move, it seems it’s possible I’ll have my own set of transportation for my stuff to Blore, which is nice. Not that I’m taking much with me, but the mere essentials will take some room. Later on I’ll post a great deal of stuff that will be for sale / given away, as soon as I make up my mind what to take and what not to take. I would like to take my futon with me, but I’m not sure if it’s worth it to drag it all the way there and back again.

Can’t really believe I won’t be going until September, but then again summer comes and is over before I know it. Waiting is like sitting on a pincushion… of vaccines…

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12
Apr

How to employ 1.2 billion people

   Posted by: Heze    in Bangalore

The previsit is almost at its end as I am writing this in Paris, waiting for the connecting flight to Helsinki. It has been quite a week and I must admit it is a kind of a relief to return to Europe. The security checks may not be any more efficient than in India, but at least they have left out the hordes of people who just stand there watching your every move. There’s a sense of personal freedom in the air when everyone around you has something proper to do.

I thought the process of getting in a plane in Finland is overcomplicated, but it’s actually the opposite. In Oulu you check in with one person, go through the security check with at most two persons, and show your boarding pass to one person just before entering the plane.

India is… a bit different.

When you arrive at Bangalore airport, there’s a guard on the door verifying that you have tickets to a plane that leaves within some hours or so. Before the check-in queue there’s a person who hands you a departure card you’re supposed to fill before passport control. When you get to the front of the queue, another person tells you which desk you should go to, and only after that you can do the actual check-in.

Skip forward a couple of minutes to the passport queue. If it so happens that you didn’t get the departure card before, there’s someone to give you a new one. After filling in the details you wait in the line and finally get to a desk where one person checks your passport, visa and departure card. If all goes well, you get a new stamp in your passport and proceed to the next guard – about five meters after the desks – and he verifies that your passport and boarding pass have correct stamps in them.

Before you get to the security check, there’s an officer who gives you a tag for each piece of cabin luggage you are carrying (includes handbags and such). The tag must be filled in with passenger name, nationality, destination and other such details before it is attached to the bag. The security check itself is quite similar to the Finnish one, but every single passenger is scanned with a handheld metal detector, even if the walk-through one doesn’t detect anything. After scanning you and your luggage the guard stamps your boarding pass and all the tags in your bags. Before you get to the secured area, a separate guard – again about five meters later – checks the stamps in your boarding pass and luggage. If for some reason the stamps are not there, you have to go back and get them.

We’re finally through to the gate, but the fun is far from over.

The boarding process starts with a person checking your passport and boarding pass, followed by a check that all your luggage tags have security stamps in them. Half-way down the tube there is a table for random security checks as well as a person who separates the boarding pass from the ticket. Shortly after him there is a guard who checks your boarding pass for security stamps, and you finally get to step on board. Of course the flight attendants want to see your pass once more in order to guide you to the correct aisle. The you just sit down and enjoy the flight as usual.

Overpopulation, anyone?

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7
Apr

The new mindset

   Posted by: Heze    in Bangalore

Today I found out one of the difficult things in countries such as India, namely coping with the huge gaps in income. As a Finnish professional with enhanced salary and all the benefits I’m in the better end of the scale, but will also interact with people from all the steps of the economic ladder below me. This is not a problem as long as we are talking about random rikshaw drivers or beggars, but already I find myself a bit attached to the driver we’ve had for two days. He is polite, does his job well and clearly does his best to make our lives easier. All of these are qualities I respect in a person regardless of their occupation or social status.

I am not that used to keeping distance from people I find respectable, so I find it a bit hard interacting on a daily basis with someone whose financial problems I could easily solve for months by skipping a brunch or two. I have to wrap my head around the fact that his life is separate from mine and our relationship is purely professional, but I still have some thinking to do with that. Still it’s a must if I’m going to cope in this promised land of drivers, maids, personal chefs, guards, MacD doormen and toilet assistants (luckily they only hand you the paper towel after handwash). If I’m going to keep my place, I’ll always have to remember to keep the distance.

And it’s a lot harder than it sounds.

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7
Apr

More first impressions

   Posted by: eve    in Bangalore

I just keep marvelling at the trees that are everywhere. They’re absolutely huge, and what’s best, they haven’t been cut down to make room for the city to expand. And boy does the city expand. There are building sites everywhere, noises of banging and building are all around. The Finnish officials would have a heart attack if they’d see the working conditions, but hey, this is India.

One of the things that’s sort of difficult to grasp for a Finnish woman is that if you are with a male companion (husband, boyfriend, whatever), chances are you won’t be addressed directly especially by native men. They will ask everything from the guy in your company, and sometimes even ignore if you speak. Needless to say, this can feel very, very annoying indeed.

Of course there’s the language barrier even with people who speak fairly good English. Luckily it’s not rude to ask for clarifications if you don’t get something for the first or even the second time.

It’s scorching hot, +35 in the shade, and we’re about to hit the pool. Brilliant!

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5
Apr

First impressions

   Posted by: eve    in Bangalore

Riding in a rikshaw is pretty much like taking a ride in a joyride – keep all your limbs in the carriage, try not to fall out and enjoy. The beeping and tooting of various horns and the smells of the city (both in good and in bad) are a feature, not a bug.

The food is great, no doubt about it.
So far Le Méridien has been more than I expected, the pool is surprisingly long and the service is impeccable.

There are a huge number of hawks circling in the sky during daytime, plus some swallows and common pigeons. The hotel has its own geese, the function of which I haven’t yet grasped. Dinner…? Conveniently close, I’d have to admit.

Everyone’s been telling me how India smells bad and/or strange, but nothing too particular so far. Ok, there are open sewers in places and the waste disposal could be more efficient, but nothing impossible. And you get the whiffs of incence and fragrances of flowers and fruit every once in a while – something that’s very much missing from home.

And no, we haven’t been cold. Not in the very least. During the day it’s around +30 and above, but since it’s not humid, it’s very very tolerable, even enjoyable. Yeah, a sweat is easy to break by simply being there in the sun, but living is easy… ;)

So, all in all very pretty indeed, but the contrasts between poverty and richness are very striking as well. Makes me consider myself very lucky when I think the drinkable (free) water in our taps. Water is something of a sought-after resource down here, and it’s not a commodity that everyone takes for granted.

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