Tuesday 14 September 2021

Updates from India 95

 

Hello all,

Fi   

Well, these last few months have been very stressful for us, for various reasons.

Geeta







I took Geeta to see the plastic surgeon and he feels he has achieved all he can with the reconstruction and plastic surgery of her arm and has recommended we seek further intervention with a specialist in Jaipur with more skill and facilities, so were looking into taking her for consultation and treatment. This is on hold because of Covid and other issues. In a nutshell, we are not allowed to leave Udaipur district because of the restrictions on foreigners moving between states because of the Covid epidemic.

She is working hard at her school work and training, we had a few hiccups but it seems sorted now, just got to work through it. She began to worry about training and it seems that she was bored with running up and down the drive for forty minutes to warm up before her kick boxing, and was anxious about it at school and affecting her concentration, as her training followed this, we suggested running in the street which is safe but her trainer would not agree so we are changing trainers.

Since then both her attitude and work have improved.






She had a nasty bout of fever last month, nobody really knows why it happens, but lots of kids seem to get it as the weather changes into the monsoon. A week of sympathy cuddles and her favourite food dealt with it Most efficiently.

She is running around generally being loopy at the moment. We have just completed three days Hard work on her bedroom. She has new bookshelves and a workstation for a laptop and area for her to do any written homework. The whole room has been redecorated and extra wiring installed to put sockets where she will need them. It really is looking beautiful. I wish I had had a room like this!

 












I (Kris) had a fall outside a few weeks ago, just stepped off the patio onto the wet drive and went splat putting my hands down to protect my knees and hips, as it was, I landed heavily on my left hand and initially thought I had a scaphoid fracture which I’ve had before, but pain and swelling increased and wrist was out of alignment. Off to orthopaedic doctor following x-ray at the local hospital. Colles fracture of left wrist and not one but three breaks!!! Ho hum. So specialist it was.




I had manipulation under anaesthetic and synthetic pop applied.  Six weeks later pot is off and I’m undergoing intensive physio and boy is it painful.

Having to use taxis as I can’t ride yet. But I will not give up and I will get full function back even if wrist is still misshapen. Gita was worried as I passed out with the pain so that frightened her a little but we explained and she was ok. Chris put to me in the recovery position and I regained consciousness very quickly. I think I was only out for a few seconds. He Has been a star looking after me and doing most of the cooking.

But not to be outdone a couple of weeks ago Chris slipped in the shower and twisted his knee badly, he had to wear a steel knee support for a couple of weeks, but it’s getting better now however still painful if he turns the wrong way. A few more weeks and he will be back to normal.



We have just renegotiated our lease for another three years. The rent as we had expected, has risen, but we have an incredibly understanding landlord who knows we are struggling for money right now. It’s a lovely house and we have done a lot of improvements one way or the other. I think he realises that this is our home as long as we can live here. He has good reliable tenants who care for his property, not like so many in India, who rent a property then move out, leaving it like a tip with fittings missing.

Our asthma has been very bad this monsoon, worse than normal. We have both had to change medications and Chris got a really bad lung infection, at one stage where he couldn’t climb the stairs without having to rest at the top. Thankfully we have both improved tremendously over the last month or so. I don’t know if it’s the weather or some other factor, but this year, lots and lots of people seem to be suffering the same. We did wonder at one point, if it was Covid related... Talking of Covid we have both now had our second inoculation. We can’t believe that there are still some people who believe they don’t need to take any precautions, they won’t even wear a mask. To us, this has to be the height of stupidity, but despite all the warnings from the government, health officials and the huge death rate they just continue in their own sweet way.

Talking about Chris, he has for the last year been suffering stomach pains and diarrhoea. Living in India. Our first thought was food, were we eating from local sources too much? However, since I wasn’t affected and Gita will eat just about anything. It seemed unlikely. It was very much like food poisoning over and over again. Off to the doctor for tests. Well, we got the results. Chris is now suffering from irritable bowel syndrome. There is no known cure, and control depends a great deal on lifestyle and diet. Needless to say, he is not happy!

 

Chris.

To say I am not happy is an understatement. I have to now consider everything as a possible problem or not. For the first few months we have discovered, fresh peanuts, peanut brittle, Kentucky fried chicken (fried again at home its ok then), and what’s worse, my favourite beer. Funnily enough, a lot of curries don’t seem to bother it so my love of butter chicken goes on! Some very spicy soups seem to trigger it very quickly, so I still have to be careful, especially eating out.

People say it is completely debilitating. But I have found an herbal remedy that is used widely in India that really does work. It doesn’t stop it entirely, but it’s certainly a huge improvement on not taking it. Without it I would have been concerned to be out of the house too long. With it as long as I don’t break the diet rules while I’m out then it’s usually no problem.

Because of all these various problems I have not been able to ride for some time, so the poor outfit is sitting under the car port waiting for me. Maybe soon. I have to do one modification to it. Since Gita arrived, she has loved the outfit, now she has got too big to share the sidecar with Christine, so I have to refit a detachable passenger seat on the bike for her. I take it off to carry luggage. I put it back to carry Gita.


Christine has had the worst bout of food poisoning either of us has experienced since coming here. The culprit was some frozen fish, in retrospect, it had probably thawed and been re-frozen. vomiting and diarrhoea for three or four days, then stomach pain and continuing diarrhoea for nearly 2 weeks. I didn’t have the fish. The doctor has given her a range of tablets for her bowel and has heavily restricted her diet. Today is the third day on the medication and she seems so much better, even eating Dahl and other fairly bland foods. Apparently, according to Christine… This includes fried eggs and chips. I’m not sure I believe her, but it is really good to see her enjoying food again.

The monsoon is still dumping heavy rain as it has been for some weeks now. Please don’t misunderstand this is not continuous. Mornings seem to be fairly clear. Then around lunchtime thunderclouds move in and then rains on and off heavily too late in the evening. It is quite common for it to rain overnight as well. Seeds are coming up all over the place. Sadly, some get battered to death with the rain. In many ways it is a horrible time of the year. Hot and very humid. 90% humidity and 25° C temperatures means you sweat, but don’t evaporate... The whole house can feel damp and this includes bedding. There is nothing worse than climbing into bed on damp sheets. We resort to lighting our wood burner and leaving it to blaze away for a few hours with all the doors to the bedrooms open and the balcony doors open to get a through flow of warm dry air. This seems to work wonderfully. Although it does get touch warm downstairs. On the plus side, it is wonderful to see so much green growth and flowers bursting into life. The lakes are full and the underground aquifers are filling and everywhere you look there are young, newly born animals. So much life suddenly appearing all around is truly a wonderful site after the long dry summer.

It won’t be so long until our annual guest, a female panther brings her young to the area to hunt.

She appears inside the colony quite regularly depleting the puppy population. Although this seems sad it is the natural balance. Without her, we would be overrun with wild dogs. As it is, there are perhaps 15 in different groups on the colony. We have five or six in our street. Most of the dogs are fed and watered by the residents and in return they give fair warning of any strangers on the colony. They are also very protective of who lives here.

Snakes are appearing all over the place now Because of the wet ground. So, we have had to make absolutely certain Our chickens are well protected. Both of the dogs have seen a snake and thankfully, instead of attacking it, They both stand back barking furiously. We tend to leave them be as they are only passing through. This year we have only seen two Cobra and a small rat snake. We have mice and various other rodents coming and going to our pond.

We have also greatly reduced the mosquito population in our garden by providing them with a pool in which to lay their eggs. The larvae hatch and are promptly eaten by our fish. Really, truly, the mosquito population here has crashed!



Sadly, in a way, but necessary. We have sold our jeep. We have had is for five years or so and it has been a brilliant piece of kit. We have a friend who has always loved it and driven it many times more than once, who we gave first chance of it and he snapped it up. So, it is going to a good home and we understand, it is going to be modified, similar to an open top jeep. We had to make a decision was it really worth keeping? Now that we don’t use it. It is very rare, perhaps once a month that we take the jeep out. Besides which, the money for it came in very useful. My 12-year-old laptop couldn’t cope with the processor hungry Windows 10 and the voice to print system I have. The poor thing kept freezing halfway through a sentence, very annoying. I am actually writing this using speech to print rather than typing. The medication I am on for my asthma has given me a tremble. Normally it’s not a problem. It’s just one of those side effects that we have to cope with. But when it comes to typing it can mean WSs double letters missed all sorts of things. So, I now have a word to print system. I talk, it types. It has learnt my accent very quickly and now only needs correcting for words I may not have used before. We have replaced my laptop with a computer (desktop) far quicker with masses of RAM and a good high-speed processor. We have a good friend who builds and repairs computers, so this amount of technology we got for a very reasonable price. The same friend cleaned and refurbished my laptop. A new keyboard completed the rebuild. We have given it to Gita to use for the on-line schooling and to learn to efficiently use a PC. A skill we are sure she will use in the future. She is an extremely responsible child and understands completely that this is not a toy. 

 

In other not so good news…

This is time of year we have to renew our visa. Normally this is done in country for five years but then has to be renewed from the country of origin, unless you change employer then you have to return to the UK.

We have been working for an NGO here for two years since we returned. We were just coming up to renewable when they told us that they would not be renewing our employment. They had no work for us.

When we joined the NGO, we signed a three-year contract with them. Obviously, at that time, nobody expected Covid to disrupt society the way it has. In India, as in most other countries the effects of this have been life changing both were those who have lived through it and God bless them, those that have not. As foreigners we were banned from travelling so any work for the NGO had to be done at home. We have visited the main offices several times during this period when infection rates fell for a while and no mention was made was about any plans to cancel our contract.

Christine as usual, got the paperwork together for renewal and arranged that the money to pay for it, roughly about £ 800. She told the Son of the NGO owner; he then told his Father. Kris phoned the son the next day to see what his father had to say as the son implied that he may not wish us to continue working for the NGO, he said he would get back to us. The son then sent us a WhatsApp message which said “I had a chat with my father yesterday. He said ‘he won’t be able to issue the visa to you’.

This by WhatsApp, nice eh. 

A little more warning would have been nice as 15 days is not a lot of time to make alternative arrangements. We don’t blame his son. He after all, was just the Messenger and give him his due he had tried it appears to change his father’s mind.

To say we were very hurt by this attitude would be an understatement. The least we expected would be for his father to contact us direct, not to pass a message via WhatsApp through his son. Maybe it’s just our English good manners expecting this sort of consideration. Who knows? We were deeply hurt by the way, this was done. We both feel a little consideration would have been nice and certainly a little more notice.

Even the foreign registration office, whom we register through were surprised and asked why it had been cancelled. We told them due to lack of work and Covid. Interestingly, they had telephoned us at the height of the epidemic and insisted that we work from home because of the risks of travelling. Eventually I think half of the population here were working from home! An awful lot of people still are.

For a while, we were looking at the huge cost of having to return to the UK and be quarantined at our own expense. By the time you include airfares, hotel bills and travel costs. It is a really, really expensive business for us. Luckily, or perhaps I should put it a little better. God had other ideas.

Because of the Covid epidemic no flights are going to the UK so we have applied for an extension to our visa’s. We don’t foresee a problem until international flights resume, then we will have to make a quite serious decision about our future here.

Because of all the problems we’ve had with NGO’s we have decided not to work for another one. Never again will we put our futures here in the hands of an NGO. We are both quite determined on that point after the way we have just been treated.

Working at the college teaching before Covid was probably the happiest time we have had. Sadly, the college isn’t an available option for us.

Sadly, however, with the NGO not renewing our visa. It has proved seriously detrimental to our chances of citizenship. Part of the requirement is for continuous residency in the country. Within 12 years we can only leave the country twice. Obviously, if we left now is would negate our chances for the next two or more years. In simple terms, we just cannot afford to do that. That is why we were so pleased when the NGO agreed to a three-year contract. It would have completed our 12 years. So, we were very disappointed that the NGO was not a little more considerate. Anyway, enough on that subject!

We are working on a plan to solve all these problems. More to follow.

 

My first science fiction book is now available on Amazon. I have written several books, but this is the first that I have published so if you fancy a read, please support me. It’s called ‘The time traveler’ as there are so many listed it is quicker to go via author C R Hyde.

 

Well, that’s about it for this blog. No doubt we have forgotten things that we should have mentioned. Never mind we will include them in the next blog.

 



God bless you all and keep you safe in these difficult times.

 

Chris, Kris and Gita.

 

Rajasthan, India.