Writing: A city girl’s guide to roughing it out

Story: A city girl’s guide to roughing it out | Publication: Vogue India | Publishing Date: June 2018.

To see the published story, click here.

A city girl’s guide to roughing it out

What to pack when you’re taking the road less travelled

As a quintessential city girl who has lived most of her life in bustling Mumbai, I often take certain urban comforts for granted. However, over the years, my work in the social sector has taken me far outside my comfort zone, requiring me to travel to the most remote rural parts of the country in search of unique stories and inspiring development work, where naturally, fewer material comforts exist. I am also someone who enjoys offbeat travel, which often lands me in places that lack seemingly basic amenities.

Straddling the urban and the rural, I now consider myself to be somewhat of an expert on packing for the trips that require you to ‘rough it out’. I believe that I have cracked the code to making extensive, and sometimes difficult travels a wee bit more comfortable. And thus, I decided to let you in on some of my secrets to help you out for the next time you end up travelling to a remote location.

PACKING ESSENTIALS

Being an obsessively organised person, I want to give an award (or a hug, at the very least) to the person who invented packing cubes. A set of six cubes does the trick; organising your personal items neatly into different cubes for clean clothes, dirty clothes, toiletries, delicates, shoes, and miscellanea.

I purchased Longchamp’s large foldable canvas bag a long time ago, and it comes handy every time I travel. I always stow it into my suitcase, because somehow, I end up with more luggage than I started out with at the end of most trips. The canvas bag is lightweight and tiny when it’s folded, but it opens up to be large enough to take care of that last minute extra weight.

With the amount of walking I usually end up doing when I travel, a pair of comfortable slip-on sneakers is an essential part of my packing. I find sneakers with laces cumbersome, so the slip-ons win my vote—I think they make for the perfect travel shoes.

IN MY CARRY-ON LUGGAGE

I find it extremely difficult to sleep while travelling, Whether it is a somewhat comfortable flight, a long train ride or a bumpy car ride, some of the things in my carry on that help me get a little shut-eye include a comfortable neck pillow, an eye mask, and headphones. A smart stole that dresses up your outfits can also double up as a shawl to keep you warm.

IN MY TOILETRIES CASE

In terms of personal care products that help you look and feel better, I always carry a small bottle of dry shampoo for a quick hair fix, an easy-to-stash quick dry towel and coconut oil—for pretty much everything, including moisturising and removing makeup. And if you’re anywhere near as clumsy as I am, the Tide To Go pen is a magic wand for stains and spills.

IN MY PURSE

To combat mosquitos, a tiny bottle of Goodknight Fabric Roll-On—a non-chemical mosquito repellent that you roll onto your clothes—does the trick sparing your skin from that lingering smell that most mosquito repellents have, as well as any harmful chemicals.

For me, the hardest part of travelling rough (and I am sure the women reading this will agree) is tackling dirty and unhygienic bathrooms. The one product that has actually changed my life is the disposable, eco-friendly and innovative Pee Buddy, which lets you stand, do your business, and quickly (and hygienically) move on. Gone are the days of balancing precariously over a dirty toilet, desperately trying not to touch anything, while getting an uncomfortably painful thigh workout.

GADGETS AND ELECTRONICS

Anyone who knows me knows my crazy coffee obsession—most people know not to talk to me before my morning cuppa. While travelling to rural parts, the thing I miss the most is a good cup of coffee to get me started for the day. Enter the portable Minipresso machine, which is tiny enough to fit into a carry on and allows you to have your Nespresso shot wherever you go.

When it comes to electronics, I pack all the chargers for my various devices (like everybody else), but the one thing I won’t leave home without is a universal adapter when I’m travelling internationally. Power banks are essential for those who are obsessed with viewing the world through their Instagram cameras (and let’s face it, most of us are).

My Kindle goes with me when I travel too,so that I don’t add weight to my luggage with heavy books. Music lovers can look to the small but powerful UE Wonderboom speaker—it is waterproof, has great sound quality, and pairs with other Wonderbooms to give you a surround sound-like experience.

MONEY-WISE

I’ve recently discovered that using a forex card for international travel is far easier than carrying just cash. However, a mix of both is always a good idea, for small purchases and emergencies. Another superb find is the Splitwise app, which works well when travelling with friends. It takes away the hassle of calculating who owes whom how much money at the end of the trip—it does all the calculations of shared expenses for you, leaving each person with a final figure that they owe to others.

These tips and tricks are sure to make your travels somewhat smoother. However, while they cater to smaller material joys and comforts, the greatest joy of travel comes from experiencing what the world has to offer. The only piece of advice I would give is to travel and experience the world with an open mind and enjoy each aspect of the journey.

Writing: Memoirs from Mokhada (Part 1)

Story: Memoirs From Mokhada: My Transformational Journey Into Rural India – Part 1 | Publication: The Huffington Post | Publishing Date: July 2016.

Read the complete series here: Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3

A week-long immersion into rural Maharashtra with a grassroots NGO after a particularly difficult personal challenge proved to be a transformational journey for me. This three-part series showcases the challenges, successes, strategies and innovation of a unique organization that is trying to bring a holistic change to the villages of Mokhada and Jawhar talukas (districts)–much as I’m trying to do in my personal life.

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Day 1

Driving away from Mumbai I feel a weight lifting off my shoulders. As we leave the bustling city behind and drive into a greener, quieter and simpler India, (simpler in many ways–but complex in others) the stress of the past few days and months slowly seems to be fading away. I breathe in the fresh air and take in the quintessential village sights outside my window–women wearing saris and weary faces carrying stacks of firewood on their heads and walking for miles; sweat-drenched men in dhotis and turbans working on road building projects; naked children eating ice cream from the local kulfi vendor with big sloppy smiles; an assortment of farm animals running across the village with abandon.

A month ago I had a different life, and now I am stepping out of a comfort zone created out of years of fear and denial.

Life has been surreal lately. A month ago I had a different life, and now I am stepping out of a comfort zone created out of years of fear and denial. On some days I feel liberated and brave and on others the fear creeps in and I want to lie in a ball in a corner and wish everything away.

The village setting I have chosen pushes me out of my comfort in so many ways–here I live in a simpler way without basic amenities like hot water, western toilets, mobile coverage and television.

But the villages and villagers are beautiful. I wake up to the sound of birds and breathe in fresh country air. I plan to spend the next week speaking to villagers about their lives, and changes they have undergone since their association with the NGO I am volunteering with–

Aroehan. Can there be anything better?

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Day 2

The day begins with sunshine streaming in through the curtain-less window and the sound of birds interspersed with the sounds of the sleepy town of Jwahar waking up. As I wake, a feeling of excitement pervades my being as I ready for the day ahead.

We visit a group of seven farmers in the village of Khoz. In 2010 when Aroehan began their livelihood generation intervention, these seven villagers were the first to take a leap of faith and begin vegetable cultivation (apart from their traditional crops of rice and ragi) with Aroehan.

[A] feeling I haven’t felt in a long time surfaces, so new that I think I’d almost forgotten what it was to feel it–I’m inspired!

Entrusting their future to the organization they began in earnest with the cultivation of okra on a small part of their lands as an experiment. Today the land they once thought to be useless and burdensome is yielding them great profits, and affording them a better standard of living. Their children now go to school, their homes are made of stronger materials, they don’t have to earn meagre incomes through backbreaking daily wage jobs in large faraway cities. Instead, they have savings in the bank, and confidence in their own agricultural decisions. Today there are 35 such farmers in Khoz that earn a living by making productive use of their land.

The farmers’ stories and the natural beauty of the village filled me with happiness and hope but I couldn’t help but wonder about the incredible contradictions that exist across our vast country.

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A small village like Khoz had a perennial water source right next to it for over 35 years. However, the inhabitants of the village never could use the water to till their lands until Aroehan showed them how to five years ago. How does a government that works on isolated solutions expect development to take place? Why are there such glaring gaps in our system? What is the future of India if we address issues piece meal?

This, and many such organizations across the country work tirelessly to create sustainable solutions for development problems. But imagine the possible impact if we shift our thinking and address the larger problems.

As I think of the possibilities of such change, a feeling I haven’t felt in a long time surfaces, so new that I think I’d almost forgotten what it was to feel it–I’m inspired!

Aroehan was created as a project of the Nirmala Niketan Institute of Social Work in Mumbai, to address the issue of malnutrition in the Mokhada district in 2006. Having done an assessment of the needs of the community, the project realized the importance of an integrated approach to development and has over the past ten years worked on bringing education, health, governance and sustainable livelihood opportunities to farmers across Mokhada and Jawhar districts.
Namrata Tanna is a former television journalist who switched over to the social sector to use her journalism skills to create social impact. She has worked with several Mumbai-based non-profits through the initiative co-founded by her–Creatives against Poverty–and currently works with Concern India Foundation.

 

 

Video

Film: A Mosque of One’s Own

In the tiny village of Pudukottai, Tamil Nadu, Sharifa Khanam is battling for women’s rights and is trying to build the first women’s mosque in India. We present her story, her struggles and her fight for Muslim women’s rights.

A Creatives Against Poverty Film

Reporter: Fatima Najm | Camera: Namrata Tanna | Editor: Namrata Tanna