Kerala as seen through my eyes
The land of lungis
The first thing you notice when you land in Kerala is men in lungis-almost all men in lungis. Some in pure white with a thin border, some in this pale orange colour, and some in printed ones. I wonder if there is a community/caste/social class thing to it! Someone on facebook recently posted a video calling Kerala the ‘Land of Lungis’ and I totally agree with that. It’s actually fun watching them fold their lungi till knee length and tying it around the waist.
Green Kerala Clean Kerala
Green green and green everywhere. With small, medium and large water bodies- canals, lake and sea. Nature has been kind to the state. But its citizens have been equally kind to nature.
If there is one place in India that has impressed me with cleanliness, it’s Kerala. It doesn’t look like part of our country. I saw families carrying chips wrappers and looking for a dustbin. Children drinking frooti and not throwing it on the road. Men not urinating on the walls. No garbage dumps un-beautifying the villages. NO stagnant water post monsoon. I DID NOT see all this. Amazing experience for an Indian to have in India.
I feel this strong civic sense has a lot to do with the fact that almost every person (men and women) is educated. Kerala has the highest literacy rates in Asia (almost 100%). Education gives you discipline- a strong sense of what’s right and what’s not.
There is a very strong and visible sense of pride amongst people for their region. It’s obvious when they talk about it to tourists like us “sir, now you are in God’s own country. Just relax and have a good time”. Or in the signage boards you see all around you “Smile! You are in God’s own country”. This was quite a nice change from the attitude of people in Delhi where no one is a Delhite- they are Punjabis, Bengalis, Tamils and so on.
Smile! You are in God’s own country
People in Kerala smile a lot. They look so happy, contented and satisfied (could be due to all the toddy men drink…more on this later). Of course I have theory for this too. I feel it’s because families are much smaller than in other parts of the country. Which means you don’t have a large population fighting/competing for limited resources. They are well fed, well-educated and well –off. And that is the real beauty of this place.
Toddy and men
Oh they love their toddy. Every man (I felt) loves to have this drink made from cocunut in the evening. You can see toddy shacks all over the state. In fact if you go for an evening walk you will find a lot of men swaying while walking and you would know there is a toddy shack nearby.
I had heard so much about it on my way to Kerala that I was dying to see what a toddy shack looks like. As a woman I couldn’t go to one (they don’t think too highly of women who drink toddy and thus I couldn’t risk my reputation by visiting oneJ) I had to settle for a picture of a shack close to my hotel.
Coconuts and its many uses
Once in Kerala, you will find coconuts everywhere- on trees, in your food (coconut milk, grated coconut, coconut oil), on people’s hair (coconut oil), as a drink (coconut water), in houses (coconut decorations). Don’t think they have left out any possible use of this fruit.



Insightful and thoroughly enjoyed the read. Congrats babe on your very 1st write up. Looking forward to many more interesting experiences.
ReplyDeleteI am lucky...thank U Shweta for sharing the experience.
ReplyDelete