Sunday, December 2, 2007

Namaste (Hello) from India

Hello from the other side of the Earth! A week into our visit to Pune, we’re still healthy and having fun. We had only a few snags on our arrival: a delayed flight left us in Newark, NJ, for Thanksgiving, and one of our suitcases took an extra day to make it to India.


Pune is on India’s western coast, about a 4 hour drive on a winding mountain highway from India’s largest city, Mumbai (i.e. Bombay). The monsoon season is over now and the cool season has begun, meaning the sun is always up and the temperature in the 70’s. Pune used to be a quiet town for vacationers and retirees from Mumbai, but a boom in manufacturing and the tech industry over the last decade has made the population swell to 4 million. John Deere built a plant here recently, and Michelle’s dad is here to work on a transmission for a new India-specific tractor. The Johnsons have been in Pune since February and in addition to giving us a room and meals, have been excellent tour guides and culture advisors.

If you ask me, I think all of Pune’s 4 million citizens like to drive on the street at once. I’m fascinated by the traffic here, and I’ll try and post a video clip soon so you can see what it’s like. My first fascination is with the sheer variety of things all sharing the road: bicycles, cars, countless motorcycles, innumerable rickshaws, stray horses, wandering cows, oxen pulling carts, men pushing carts, camels, and even herds of goats. My second fascination is how they all share the narrow roads with so little injury day after day. I think their key to success is liberal use of the horn and 100% defensive driving. Lucky for us, the Johnson’s Indian driver, Feroz, knows the unwritten rules of the road here and gets us safely where we need to go.

Michelle has adjusted to the new time zone and established a good schedule of a mandatory morning hour for dissertation writing, a full day of shopping with her mom, and an evening of teasing Hannah. I’d better let her tell you her favorite parts about her market trips herself: “Hmmm, well Ryan, one of my favorite parts of the markets has been the clothing shops. I really appreciate their love of all things bright and shiny. All of my favorite colors are still in style here and frequently worn together- hot orange, lime green, bright magenta. I also like the food market, and lucky for me we get to go once a week. I have taken it upon myself to reintroduce everyone to the vegetables in season here. So far the asparagus got one star and the parsnips got two. Next week I think that we are going to try kohlrabi and eggplant. The ratings can’t really go down so we might as well keep trying new things. Dad is convinced that we need to try some of the seafood from the market, but I am not so sure that is the best idea. Something about the vultures frequenting that area of the market makes me nervous. Back to you Ryan.”

I get to spend my day seeing patients with Dr. R.S. Wadia, a neurologist at Ruby Hall Clinic just down the road. Ruby Hall is the best hospital in Pune with excellent facilities and a reputation that attracts the wealthy in town. It also has a large general ward for the underserved. The result is that I get to learn from excellent physicians and see the diseases affecting all levels of society. Dr. Wadia is a kind soft-spoken man who takes every opportunity to explain and educate me on the patients we see. He’s taught me more about stroke, seizure, and movement disorders this first week than I learned in my month of neurology at OSU, all on account of his passion for teaching. With him I’ve also seen some rarer diseases: Dangue encephalitis – a tropical viral disease of the brain, SSPE – a rare late-effect of measles that makes your body jerk every 10 seconds, and Tuberculosis of the spine.

Click on the photos to see more, and you can read more stories from this week on the Johnson’s blog: http://lucindajohnson.blogspot.com/. The only place with all the details though is Hannah’s journal and that is strictly confidential. We miss you all, though we don’t miss the cold weather and snow. Please enjoy the Christmas music on the radio and in the stores there for us, and we’ll be in touch.

4 comments:

Douglas & Lucinda Johnson said...

I'm really glad I got to be here and enjoy this great vacation. Doug does frequently remind me that I seem to be on permanent vacation here in India!

We will keep trying to find interesting things to see and do!
Love, Mom

Craig said...

I am really jealous of all that's going on there. I hope that there is still some teasing left for me when I get to India. Also, will I get to see rare tropical diseases (not in myself) when I get there too? That could be fun.

Amber F said...

I'm so glad that Michelle's fave flourescent colors are still in style. There really is hope for this crazy world.

Kirsten said...

I am so glad that you guys made it safely and that you are having a fun time. You guys tell things so well and so dramatically!! ;) Tell Michelle I want to see her in some of those limes and magentas!! Have fun and don't forget the pictures!