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Part Six: Pindamonhangaba, Brazil
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4 ] Images below
are thumbnails. Click on them to see a larger version.
Breakfast
featured locally-grown fruits, notably ripe papaya just picked from
the tree, home-baked breads, hot milk straight from the cows, various
freshly squeezed juices, jams, and sweets from the temple. After
saying farewell to our hosts we returned and assembled whoever was
around for a final group photo outside the stately entrance to the
temple. We had yet another class to prepare for back in São Paulo,
so soon we would be
'on the road again'.
We
drove down the long track that would lead us to the highway. The
whole duration of our visit to the farm had been accompanied by
the sweet sound of running water, but as yet I had not seen
the source of the sound. Avyakta took a quick detour and we sat
for a while and pondered the sweet River Yamuna, named by
the local devotees in commemoration of the famous river in India
where Krishna sported as a young lad. The crystalline Brazilian
counterpart snaked through the forests off into the distance.
Our
refreshing reverie over, we rejoined the highway and drove back
to the metropolis of São Paulo.
In keeping with the rest of my time in Brazil, the mood was light
and relaxed. Mahabhakta had to return to Rio Preto, so we
dropped him on the outskirts of São Paulo,
but not before we shared a big farewell hug. My last class in Brazil
was to take place in a Vegan Zen-styled Macrobiotic restaurant somewhere
in a well-to-do area of the city centre.
We
arrived at Natural Zen in time for a simple lunch before seriously
re-arranging the restaurant's tables and chairs to accomodate the
class. In the early evening our ten eager students arrived, and
it wasn't long before we were all washing, peeling, chopping, kneading,
stirring and cooking merrily into the night. I had lost count of
just how many classes I had hosted on this vast continent. I just
knew it was a lot, and there were many more to go! I was a seriously
wasted Kurma by the time the repast was shared at the end of the
night.
Day Nineteen
Well,
the time had finally come to leave the vast land of Brazil. I had
hardly scratched the surface, and it would take many more visits
to accomodate the massive diversity of the place. I was less than
half way through my tour of South America, and as is often the case
on trips like this, my whole perception of the movement of time
had blurred. I recalled one of my favourite sanskrit verses from
the great Bhagavata Purana..."With every rising and
setting, the sun takes away the duration of life of everyone, save
and except those who are acting in transcendental consciousness".
Well, I aspire for that day... I posed for a last photo with my
dear friend Avyakta in Madhava's little temple room, and then we
headed to the airport. Varig flight 8011 departed for Buenos
Aires, Argentina at 11.00 am.
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