I decided at the last minute to go to Goa, despite the
condemnations of the place from my pretty devout Muslim hotel owner in Mumbai ('all they do is
drink,' 'there is nothing there but trance music and drugs,' etc. [after a month
here, that’s not completely inaccurate]). While waiting for my bus outside a
water bottling plant in North Mumbai, I met two guys about my age who were
going on the same bus as me. They were pretty clearly gay, but if you know me you know I don’t care about sexual orientation at all (I like to select
my friends based on things like coolness); we hit it off and ended up
rearranging our seats so we could sit near each other on the bus. It was a long
and bumpy overnight sleeper bus but I managed to get 5 or 6 hours of light
sleep. Over the course of the bus ride we decided to split a room for economic
purposes, and come to find out a friend of theirs had already reserved a room
for us. I always love avoiding walking in street clothes with my pack in a
tropical environment searching for a hotel, but I don’t love it quite enough to
actually plan or make reservations (it’s worked out for me so far!).
When we arrived in Goa, I instantly got the feeling that I
was in some kind of quasi-Latin American parallel universe. There was a big
catholic cathedral situated right next to a bright orange Hindu temple blaring
chants over the loud speaker, and the language in Goa is a mix of Portuguese
and local Indian languages, so I could understand about 12% of the words from my knowledge
of Spanish (a considerable improvement over the 0% of Hindi I could understand in Mumbai!). Once again the
slacks and mustaches made me feel like Ron Burgundy was lurking around the
corner; or perhaps people were earnestly discussing the battle between disco
and rock over a Tab© soda.
We ended up, despite our explicit questioning, on the wrong
bus to the beach. This was actually nice though, because it afforded us time to
have a morning tall-boy can of beer while we waited for the correct bus. We weren't quite finished with the second
man-can when the correct bus finally came, but I had the distinct feeling from
what I had seen around me that no one would say anything if I imbibed my
beverage on the bus… I was absolutely correct.
To get to the room we were staying in, we had to walk through
a back alley about 3 feet wide, dodge clothes lines of numerous households, and
walk through a few back yards, all of which included rubble, burnt
trash piles, and cows. Our place was actually really nice, and the landlord was
a big, sarcastic, dark skinned Indian man with a huge mustache and an outfit
that almost always included wearing boxers in the stead of pants and a silver
cross on the outside of his shirt or tucked away in his impressive chest hair
when topless. I ended up staying there almost a week, and I guess he
appreciated my sense of humor as much as I did his because he gave me a pretty
hefty discount when it came time to pay him, without me even asking.
We went down to the beach and wound up at a beach bar that I
would later become a regular performer at; we drank numerous big bottles
of Kingfisher© Strong beer and jammed out to some light-day-happy-psy-trance,
or something like that.
I love music, but I find it very hard to connect with
trance, a problem that very few others in Goa seem to have. I have been,
nonetheless, trying to make sense of it, though; I always ask a trance fan what kind of trance I am
listening to. It seems there is a gradient of light to dark, which refers to
the texture as well as what time of day that it’s good for, and then there is
psychedelic, which I believe means something different than the word describing
such psychedelic classics as 'Innagadadavida' or 'White Rabbit', because I could hear no
connection whatsoever. The beats per minute are also important, and it seems the later at
night a song is played, the faster the tempo is (just for fun, try listening to
a dark trance bass line at 220 BPM; if you are like me, it will likely bring you
massive amounts of distress).
After a month of daily exposure, I can say that
to get the full experience of trance, it might be necessary to take MDMA or
LSD, two things I have no desire to do (I like my current consciousness a lot,
so I ain’t fixing what ain’t broken, as they say). This brings me to another
thing I don’t like about trance; it’s really hard to talk to women when they
are twisted on drugs of such a caliber, which takes away about 60% of why I
like to go to dancing establishments in the first place. But I digress, and we wouldn't want that to happen on a blog... so back to the day at hand!
After about 11 hours of beer drinking and an hour of dancing
to inhumanly fast music, we took the next logical step: go back to the
guesthouse and drink liquor. It was there that my friends finally came clean to
me about their orientation… sometimes I feel like it’s a shame that we live in
a world where it takes inebriation for someone to peek out of the closet, but
that is neither here nor there, I suppose. Now that that was out of the
way, life was just that much more comfortable.
While walking on the little roads next to the beach and
through the backyards filled with livestock and the smell of burnt plastic, I
started to feel something. The hippies here didn’t piss me off that much; they
seemed pretty legit. The international array of women attracted me; options,
options, options. The law enforcement seemed lax to non-existent; a friend
would later tell me he loves living in Goa because you can ‘bend the rules.’ It
wasn’t the absence of cops, or abundance of girls, or the presence of homemade
clothes, though, that was making me feel this ‘something.’ I still can’t tell you
exactly what this ‘something’ in Goa is, but I can tell you that my weekend
trip to Goa has turned into a month, and I am still feeling it every day when I
wake up, and it makes me smile both to myself and those around me, and I have been
laughing on a notably regular basis (and no, the abundance of hash is
not to blame either, although it may play just the slightest of roles).
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