It's already been some time since I've last let you know about my life in India. Many things happened (although all of them were rather small, no adventurous trips) and I'll try to briefly tell you at least about those most interesting.
Party at Peter's placePeter (the CTC guy) organized a Dance Party in his house. The house is in the south part of Chennai, it's huge, with several terraces and view on the beach. These conditions combined with a lot of nice people (Indian and foreign) and nice drinks are a guarantee of a great party. And it definitely was a great party!!! We spent many hours chating, drinking, dancing (it was my first real dancing in Chennai!!!) and it wouldn't be Peter if he didn't take us to the beach and made all of us get into the sea in our clothes (I had my office clothes which I was supposed to wear next day as well ;-)) Although we turned Peter's nice house into one big pool (imagine more than 30 soaking people in one house!), he was just an amazing host and we all had great time. The party finished quite late (4 a.m.) so I decided to sleep over and go directly to work in the morning. And I'm sure you can easily imagine how productive I was in the office ;-)
Quite a nice group of people...

...who is definitely not scared of waves ;-)
Art galery & volleyball matchOne Saturday, Sasha and Abdul came up with idea of visiting Art Gallery close to our place and hockey match. So five of us (Angelina and Lamy joined as well) set out for a cultural afternoon. We were quite disappointed when we reached the place because tickets for Indians were 15 rupees and for non-Indians 250!!! Although we're already kind of used to these double pricing, this was way too much. But Abdul showed his amazing negotiation and persuasion skills. He was able to convince the cashier that we were foreign students although we didn't have propre student ID's (just Lamy and Angelina did) but just a library card and canteen card without pictures. He explained to the lady that we were from four different countries and that in different countries student ID's looked different, sometimes they even didn't have photo!!! It worked out and we got our ticket for Rs. 75 each!!! The ticke was valid for the whole areal with some more museums so we saw some nice paintings in the gallery; bronze statues of Indian gods, coins and other stuff in a museum and very kitch zombie-dolls wearing traditional costumes of various nations all around the world. There was even Czechoslovakia! It looked really awful (the dolls were quite scary) but I was quite proud and happy to see it there ;-)

building of the gallery

Lovely dinosaurus in front of Art Gallery...we didn't get it ;-)
Then we went to a stadium to see a hockey (not ice-hockey, but hockey on grass) match. Well, finally hockey match turned to be a volleyball match but it was still great. It was really nice to see Indian girls (most of whom are normally just sitting at home and helping their mums to cook and take care of the siblings and house...at least here in conservative Chennai) wearing sport dresses and playing really good volleyball. And you can imagine how happy we girls were when men came to the court...Whow, big Indian guys without paunches and some of them even with some muscles!!! Incredible ;-) And next funny thing was that when the organizers saw us standing by the court and watching the match, first they offered us chairs and then even tea! Sometimes it's really good to be a white foreigner in India ;-)
Salsa classesSince my weekdays are sometimes quite boring (all other trainees work late and don't want to do much after coming back from office), I've decided to join salsa classes with Sasha. I know, it sounds funny to be learning salsa in India but it's definitely more useful and less humiliating for me (Indian dances are very expressive and I'm a bit worried I'm not gifted enough to learn them ;-)) We're quite a small group and have a very nice teacher Salman who is just too sweet with his belly showing us all the steps and sexy poses (damn it, salsa seems to be pretty expressive as well!!!). Well, so far I've completed only 3 classes out of 8 and while dancing, I'm everything but sexy. But let's see how seductive salsa dances I will be after the last one ;-)
New traineesA lot of foreign students and trainees have left Chennai (our Turkish flatmate Cagdas included :-() but new people are coming as well. We have a new French guy Guyaume in our flat (he's nice but still a kid ;-)) and two girls in another flat: Kim from Canada and Maryna from Ukraine. Both of them seem to be nice and since they're going to spend here just two months, they're quite active and willing to join me for any of my upcoming trips...whoa, finally somebody who wants to travel!!!
ClubingSince Chennai is a very conservative city, pub and club culture isn't developed here that much yet. However, you can find some nice pubs and clubs where rich Indians and foreigners go, drink and have fun. I have already visited one bar with rock music and some people dancing before but this weekend I was to real clubs for the first time since I've been here (and it's already almost 5 months!!!). It's especially because these places are usually in posh hotels and are VERY EXPENSIVE and thus quite unaffordable for poor trainees having Indian salaries and trying to save money for future traveling. But this weekend we were lucky and could visit two clubs without paying ;-)
One Friday, we went for a movie showed by Alliance Francaise (something like French cultural centre that organizes a lot of nice stuff) with Angela (Kenyan girl), Abdul and Melanie. Movie was quite nice but it got stuck in the middle and these guys just weren't able to fix it so we left and went for a dinner. Then Angela told me that her friend (a cricket player!!!) invited her to a club and she asked me whether I wanted to join them. OF COURSE I WANTED!!! Professional cricket player and club in one evening! Whow! He picked us up by car with his friend. Both of them seemed to be OK but soon I realized that they didn't want to go to club that much. They just wanted to drive the car around Chennai, listen to music (which was, I admit, really great) and drink beer (they had quite a nice stock of Corona and bought some more Indian beer later). They even came up with idea of driving to Pondichery (at least 3h ride) and Angela was like: "Yes, let's go!" I don't know if she was already drunk (it was just after one beer) or just crazy but she really scared me. When I was strictly against this idea, they proposed Mahabalipuram (which is just 1,5h from Chennai) and where quite surprised when I refused this plan as well (oh my god, how can these guys think that we're so stupid and will spend night in another town with them?!?!). I was even able to convince Angela that we should just go to the club and enjoy dancing. So finally, after 2 beers and more than an hour driving around, we came to the club. Unfortunately, they played techno music which I really don't enjoy that much (three tones repeting again and again just make me feel like braking something or killing somebody ;-)) so we didn't dance at all. But it was still nice to drink beer and watch the crowd dancing. Cricket player (I can't remember his name) was all the time touching Angela (well, he was just holding her around her waist but I'm sure next time he will be tougher). Fortunately, his friend understood quite easily from my cold reactions that there would be no "fun" with me and he let me be. But they were good boys, none of them tried anything more and they dropped us home after.
And since one's appetite grows with eating, we went to another club on Saturday. This time my Indian friend Bala (quite a nice guy organizing parties for expats who I met already in the begining of my stay but since then we haven't met) took us (Lamy and new trainees Kim, Maryna and Guyaume) to a luxurious hotel's club called Havana. He had some connections there (and everybody knows how important connections are in India ;-)) so we didn't have to pay any entrance fee and since we were drinking before geting there we even didn't have to spend money on drinks which were really expensive. And we had just wonderful time. The music there was absolutely fantastic. We went directly to the dance floor (which was sadly empty but got full pretty soon after we entered ;-)) and didn't leave it before closing time. It was really nice especially because most of Indian guys were not staring at us but at two Indian girls wearing sexy tops and showing some lesbian dirty dancing ;-) We had a wonderful time and I hope we will repeat it in close future.
Rock concertThere was a music festival organized by Alliance Francaise (I told you, they really organize a lot of stuff). There were Indian bands playing rock music whole day round on Sunday. We arrived quite late (it was right after the dancing night at Havana club ;-)) and were quite stunned. It wasn't rock music at all, it was rather metal or even heavy metal (you know this vomiting into microphone? that was it). Although this is not my blood group at all, it was another cultural shock for me. For five months you keep meeting these boring Tamilien men, most of them wearing dirty shirt, moustache and greasy hair (of course, some of them have clean shirt and nice hair...my Indian male friends, no offence ;-)) and suddenly you see these long-haired bearded guys wearing those scary t-shirts with sceletons and zombies and other disgusting things. And then you see them dancing this hair dance, jumping and pushing...I really felt like back home ;-)

And to make it more varied there was a short performance of Don Bosco boys. Don Bosco is an NGO taking care of kids (mainly boys) who are either orphans or have run away from their parents because they beated them. People from Don Bosco accommodate them, feed them, teach them and as we could have seen, they even teach them play music. It was really nice to see how proud these kids were wearing their uniforms and receiving a huge applause after their short march.
Planning my traveling in northAnd last piece of news is that I've already booked my return ticket to Delhi and I'm planning to spend 20 days traveling in north (Delhi, Varanasi, Agra, Jaipur, Udaipur and some places in Himalayas that are yet to be decided) with Carol (Colombian girl) and Lamy. None of them is the best travel partner for me (they're more into posh hotels and relaxing with a glass of cold drink than into real backpacking and seeing places) so I'm sure it will be really challenging but it will be a good tolerance training for me ;-) So now I'm a bit freaking out when preparing the plan of our trip (girls don't care much so it's just up to me). Although we're starting on August 15, since our main means of transport will be train and there are milions and milions of other eager travelers, we need to buy train tickets already now or within one two weeks. And once the tickets are bought and trains are booked out, there's no chance to change anything. So the plan needs to be really fixed. Well, at least I can see whether I would be a good or rather lousy manager ;-)
OK, that's enough, isn't it? ;-) I have some trips ahead of me so I'll be back soon with updates.