Zone Drain (Mumbai)
For the first two days in India, it seemed a better idea to stay on the mat on the floor, letting the maid kick me around so she could sweep, and nodding whenever the cook spoke to me. The apartment was small and there were no screens on the windows. My only view was of a vacant lot, about two acres in size, with an unpaved footpath in front of it. All day long, there were two constant streams of people going each way. The haze cut off everything in the distance, and I wasn’t ready to deal with a rickshaw driver yet.
After a nap, I woke up and saw a child on the path struggling to pull an animal that looked like a cross between a goat and a horse, with large white circular blotches on brown fur. I had no idea what it was. Soon my host would be home and ask what I had accomplished that day.

I recorded the sound of this water in the bathroom drain of their apartment.
Travel Post #18: Bells, Dogs, Crows (Mumbai)


Travel Post #13: Mumbai Conveyor Belt Torture Technique
First, Take a night flight from Istanbul
Second, Make sure there is at least one crying baby on the flight. Find another crying baby to make a chorus of painful situations.
Third, go through customs.
Fourth, Wait for your bag
Fifth, make sure it is 4am in the morning.
Sixth, The conveyor belt welcomes you to India.
Mumbai is much like this sound, only slower. The city is an assault of everything at once. An explosion that rolls like a ball. Then again, sounds like this aren’t for everyone.

Waiting is actually quite easy.