Hippie-Bashing in Arambol, India

April 23, 2013
Arambol

foreign-correspondent badge final On paper I should love Arambol.  I mean really love it.  There is an abundance of art and music, a multiplex of workshops in different disciplines ranging from ‘Indian Cooking’ to ‘Tantric Meditation’, a vibrant and eclectic music scene and, being a stone’s throw away from neighbouring party beach Anjuna or the uber-chilled out Querim, theoretically, there is really nothing to not like. On the contrary, there is just one problem.  The place is filled with stupid hippies.

Now before readers start clacking, “Stop being a hypocrite Little Miss Wasta, you’re hardly in a position to criticise,” allow me to demonstrate all the ways in which I am not, in any way, a tree-hugger of this ilk:

Hippie-Bashing in Arambol, India

1.  I enjoy yoga for its physical and mental health benefits and aim to practice in my own time as much as possible.

This practice is done in the privacy of my own room or practice space so that I can hopefully stave off cancer, mental illness, and physical injury from the extreme sports I frequent in my leisure time for as long as possible.

It is not done directly, and quite deliberately, in front of the mass conglomerating at the drum circle every evening (don’t worry I’m addressing that next), so as to show off my new hemp g-string and the lack of creases in my groin to an unwilling audience of families, confused Asian men, and other stupid hippies.  You know what you do, please stop.

You know what you do, please stop.

2.  Drum circles.

The pinnacle of hippie-dom.  These spots serve as the human equivalent to an African water hole, where creatures of all shapes and sizes come out of the woodwork to enjoy a nice refreshing drink–or in our case, a nice invigorating bash on the drums.

So why exactly can no one play the drums?!  I have no problem with beginners joining and learning, but if that is the case then surely it falls to the more experienced drummers to experiment with the sound and break up the seemingly endless monotone choir of out-of-time four/four drum abuse?

3.  Where are all the actual musicians?

Everywhere you look there are folk walking around with drums and guitars, yet all the venues are desperate for people to play for them. It doesn’t add up.

I know this because I went to perform at an open mic (just me and my ukulele, which isn’t even a proper instrument in my opinion–infinite joyride, yes, proper instrument, no) and I was asked by four different venues to play for them, and had two other musicians want to jam, and this was not because of my dizzying talent, I assure you.

It was simply because there were few who were willing to be genuinely creative and play something other than a wobbly version of Ben E. King’s “Stand by Me”.

4.  Where is the respect for the local people?

First I have to deal with the eyesore of trippies (trust fund hippies) that are just as, if not more, punchable than David Cameron and his band of Tory crones, clad in neon tie-dye, saluting the setting sun by fanning their arsecheeks eastwards (a move they probably call something equally intolerable like ‘Shiva’s Spirulina Solace’ ) in an apparent “trance.”

I then have to bite my tongue while they treat local people trying to make ends meet as though they were carrying the Bubonic Plague.  Having people try and sell stuff to you is how they make their money, and they have a limited time to do it in.

You are a rich, foreign, tourist.  They are the impoverished majority that exists within this developing country.

You are a rich, foreign, tourist.  They are the impoverished majority that exists within this developing country.  While the sales pitches can inevitably become tiresome from time to time, manners never cost anyone anything.  And another thing, a charity exists for stray dogs yet not for stray children–is this a world you want to be part of?!

5.  Have some respect for the environment.

I was really shocked by the state of Arambol beach.  As we would say in Britain, “It’s minging.”

Granted I am in India, a place hardly famed for its cleanliness but one would have thought that in a more upmarket state such as Goa, in an area that has a large western influence (or more to the point, sees a massive influx of supposedly eco-conscious hippies), the beach would have been in much better shape.  But no.  I was wrong.  I guess litter picking just isn’t any fun.

But no.  I was wrong.  I guess litter picking just isn’t any fun.

Incidentally, if you don’t believe me and you ever go there, try using ‘the little, shitty, river’ as a point of reference for giving directions.

I guarantee you will you find the exact one using this description alone.

6.  To all men who have grown up in Goa: stop trying to put crystals down my pants.

There were four occasions where I had to deal with what became termed the “chakra-porno-massage” by my Spanish companions.  This peculiar phenomenon appears to only occur in Goa and is so widespread that following a Skype conversation where I told one of my friends of its incidence, I was subsequently launched into a debate about porno-massage experiences with three other girls in the internet cafe who had overheard me.

So be warned, if anyone tries to ‘cleanse your aura’, ‘realign your heart or genital chakra,’ or tells you that a body massage is absolutely necessary to be able to read your palms–politely decline their kind offer and tell them that you are in fact the spawn of a dark underlord and no amount of massage is going to help.

For those currently attempting to use massage and karma to fleece women into sexual submission, just man-up and ask the girls out.

7.  Ban “Balanced View”.

I hate this organization PASSIONATELY.  In all honesty, they ruined Arambol. (My word limit will not allow me to explain why which is why you can look forward to a brand new article written in their honour very, very soon.)  Just believe me.  They are awful.

Maybe I’m being a tad cold, cruel, vicious and jaded.  It’s because I am.  I blame Balanced View.  Arambol isn’t all that bad.  The food is all first class and there is an enormously vast array of things to do, making it easy to maintain a good harmony between partying and being pro-active.

If the hippies become too much you can leave for one of the many epic beaches found in Goa, and not everyone you meet there is a soya-munching, self-righteous, new age hippie.

It’s just not the India I was expecting.  It’s not India at all in fact.

In fact, some of the best friends I made were a direct result of hippie hatred so there you go.  It’s just not the India I was expecting.  It’s not India at all in fact.  Great for meeting people, slowly integrating yourself into India, and performing (if you actually make it onstage), buying tie-dye items, and learning weird stuff.

Alternative paradise or land of BS?  I put it to you to find out yourself.

About Emily Morus-Jones

34 thoughts on “Hippie-Bashing in Arambol, India

  1. May 12, 2013
    Reply

    I love it! how titilating!

  2. Emily
    May 12, 2013
    Reply

    Holy shit! Certainly stirred some interesting reactions! In answer to your question Sean yes that is me in the picture, it was taken on the site of a film shoot where I was given the role of stanby sari wearer. The reason for that being that the girl who had been asked to star in the film was in a highly fragile state and so we were requested to go with her to help her stay grounded throughout the whole experience. For her role she had to wear a sari and when we went to get it fitted she insisted that we all tried on saris and naturally we all ended up taking one to the film set cuz it was fun. On reflection I would have perhaps chosen a different photo (you’re supposed to send a picture of you in the place you’re writing about)but I sent a selection of pics and that’s the one they chose, why do you ask? Cheers for the kind words, if you’ve be distributing it one the beach then I’d be interested to see what reactions you get!!

    Please don’t hit me with all this Balanced view stuff it only serves to infuriate me massively. I originally wrote an incredibly scathing article about them because of attitudes like this. If pushed on stuff like this I have a tendency to resist even harder, a lesson some of the members, not all but the majority of the ones I met, sorely need to learn. That said I have subsequently withdrawn the article, instead attempting a more objective one, but the constant preaching I keep getting from the members is really not doing the organisation any favours in that there will be some people who feel like I do and the members’ failure to accept this only serves to strengthen those reservations. It works for you. Great. It doesn’t work for me, that’s also fine. I’m happy that you all seemed to get something out of it but I really didn’t. No they don’t pressurise you into giving money, except for the posters I saw there that were suggesting donations of between 1000 and 30,000 dollars. Furthermore, the 4 mainstays themselves (if memory serves me right as it was ages ago and I have dedicated a great deal of energy to blocking them out of my mind) are a testament to their expectation that at some point you will be expected to run meetings and spread the word (ie;invest time and money). I would also be very interested to see whether or not the leader of this organisation (who likened my mentality to a garbage crusher – cheers for that) is making from it too. Like I say if other people get something out of it then I respect that so why then is it so hard to respect the fact that I don’t?! Some Indian gurus are way worse but they’re also probably a lot poorer (if only by merit of how weak the rupee is in comparison to the pound, dollar, and euro) and with no social benefit back-up scheme for when they are hungry. I’m glad you found them so friendly and nice, I did not, I found them creepy and preachy – again all experience is subjective.

    I fully understand that a lot of the problems stem from Indian attitudes to littering and I am stoked to hear of initiatives that have been set in place, it’s just that I didn’t hear or see any of them while I was there, so perhaps in writing an article highlighting this point it may serve to stir some action!

    With regards to men there, sorry but Arambol still wins for the worst place I have encountered in India. Obviously there are men there that are genuinely lovely but they are not the ones you need to watch out for are they?! Sure Indian men are a hell of a lot more blatant up north but that’s usually due to a genuine lack of education and of having never come into much contact with women (something that will hopefully change within the next generation). But the men in Goa knew exactly what they were doing as they had worked amongst the tourists for years. I was not putting it about in search of any attention whatsoever (which is why seeing women doing yoga on the beach in front of everyone wearing a thong and then shouting at Indians for taking pictures annoyed me so much). I, like many other women, had come there to do precisely the opposite and take some time out to relax and maybe learn some new skills, meet some nice people, and acclimatise to India. Had I been in search of male attention I most certainly would have approached men directly as I am a direct person but that’s not what I was there for (I find your statement about American and European women to convey a prejudice that you may need to address, perhaps you didn’t mean it like that but that’s the way it reads). If it wasn’t a problem that I and a LOT of other women had encountered I wouldn’t have had anything to write about. I did meet some nice people eventually but it was a lot more difficult than I was led to believe because of the closed off mentality of many that I met there that seems to go in direct opposition to the free love mentality one would expect. The majority of Indian men, particularly those who lived and worked in Goa were, in my experience, the worst culprits for presenting themselves as genuinely wanting to help you before letting their real intentions be known and did so in a very sly manner, so I think it warrants a mention.

    According to the net the term hippie means: noun
    a person, especially of the late 1960s, who rejected established institutions and values and sought spontaneity, direct personal relations expressing love, and expanded consciousness, often expressed externally in the wearing of casual, folksy clothing and of beads, headbands, used garments, etc.

    Or alternatively:

    A person who opposes and rejects many of the conventional standards and customs of society, especially one who advocates extreme liberalism in sociopolitical attitudes and lifestyles.

    Or according to the urban dictionary:

    A Hippie is a person who was raised under the ideological system that came out of the tumultuous 1960’s in North America and western Europe. They are either of the flower-child/baby boomer generation or that generations’ subsequent offspring. They possess a core belief set revolving around the values of peace and love as being essential in an increasingly globalized society, and they are oftentimes associated with non-violent anti-governmental groups. There is a stigma of drug abuse attached to the hippies that is prevalent to this day, specifically the use and abuse of marijuana and hallucinagens. Many rock movements,poets, artists, and writers from the 1960’s to today have associated with this movement, most prominently The Grateful Dead, Bob Dylan, Janis Joplin, and Phish. There are others too numerous to name. The movement, then and now, is considered a sub-culture by sociologists that associates itself with the left in all its political opinions. The conservative right often berates and abuses the opinions of people who associate themselves with the hippie movement and/or lifestyle, as the consider it dangerous and degenerative to a society to favor liberalism to such an extent.

    There are some who would argue that the term can be negatively interpreted as stemming from the word hypocrite, something that I am inclined to agree with in many of the people I met in Goa.

    Once more, all experience is subjective, how lucky you guys must be that yours was far more positive than mine.

  3. sean
    May 11, 2013
    Reply

    Emily, is that you in the picture? Curious of Brixton, South London.

  4. sven hansson
    May 11, 2013
    Reply

    Hi

    Read your article and the comments afterwards. This is the way I see it: I had no idea that Arambol was a worldwide known place for great experiences whoever you are. I went there first time 2003, had never heard of it, stayed two weeks and liked it ( now it has changed a lot since then, becoming more mainstream touristic, and lot more russians come, which I don´t mind, just that there are too many of one nationality). I thought the “scene” was the most multicultural then I had encountered so far. And I made some few friends, most I never talked to, but none was really unfriendly or aggressive. No one tried to steal from me or pick a fight. You don´t find a comglomeration of cultures and types of people in one place in Africa or Latinamerica in this massive way as in Arambol (or other similar places that I don´t konw about). And I have returned, now probably for the 7th time/season. And yes it is getting really dirty. But thats because there are no system in place that takes care of the carbage and in India the people there themselves has the “tradition” to throw everything on the ground that they don´t need or want. One reason probably being that just recently there were no plastic to talk about in India; things was served in leaves or other organic things. Even the toilets in Arambol were “eco-friendly” once: You just went where the pigs were, did what you needed to do and the pigs took care of it. Now the beach is dirty as hell sometimes, especially when people from Mumbai comes down to party and get drunk and leave everything on the beach. Mondays are all the same; piles of junk everywhere, thrown actually mostly by Indian people. Look for a bin to throw your garbage in. Nowhere!!! Not one that I know about. I take my garbage back to the room. And everyone are aware of the problem, people talk about it, some has tried to come up with solutions, some has arranged special days to come together to clean areas (I have been there myself, doing my part). Last season there was this young woman from England, that has started her own organisation, Wastewarriors, and she had a meeting about it and what that little brave organisation is trying to do, in all India!!! And that is cleaning up the sub-continent and get some system in place that works. Because it is not an Arambol-problem (I wish it was), It´s sadly an Indian one.
    When it comes to unfriendly people and being alone. I know what you mean about that. But Arambol is less unfriendly than many other places and in society in general. But there are some really extreme personalities there and that tends to make me at least a little reserved about who Í let close to me. Also, people go to that beach and have close to nothing in common; language, culture, social background etc etc. So it is not easy to “read” people and therefore you tend to be a little cautious with whom you start up a contact with, the place is small and once in contact you tend to be in contact, sometimes unwillingly so. And you do have some stuck-up middle class people thinking themselves being wow-how-hip by just bying a ticket to India, get to Arambol to hang out as a beach-bum and think the world of themselves. But that is what they do back home to; In Sweden where I come from, media, culture etc are completely dominated by the middleclass (not because they are more talented than others but because they have monopolized it for themselves and their likes). And they go to Arambol, a small ex-fishing village in Goa, India and replicate the picking order from back home. And they on top of course. But that type you have everywhere, ignorance is worldwide. Instant-Hippies recently off the plane, changing on the airport probably and then you find them in many places in Goa. Well what to do? Don`t be your own version of it, that is what I do; Don´t encourage the fools, I see many females doing exactly that and I do not understand why. Look for the friendly unpretentious men, perhaps the more shy ones (which most females completely ignore because they are not cool enough) or the ones who are not pushing themselves to the front all the time (which ladies encourage by going with, so next time they do it again). You cannot take responsibility for what others do, you can just react on it. But you do have a choice yourself to take responsibility, so do it. Take Action, be pro-active. Pick your own guys and ignore the ridiculous ones. And Arambol is not full of men that are a joke and only have one thing on their mind. Get real!! Men have lots of other interests, many times more so than most ladies have. I can understand that some woman react strongly on constant un-wanted attention with a feeling of being exposed. But what about wanted, even craved, attention? Then all is well, right? Well, perhaps women should learn to tell men more clearly when it is wanted and not. I have seen scenes in which that is not very obvious. Why? I send clear unmistakeable signals, which men tend to do and females tend not to. And also, why not approach the men you yourselves are interested to talk with. In many countries in Latinamerica that is exactly what ladies do. And it works! So why not Europeans, or North-americans?
    And Balanced View. Yes, full of middleclass people, which are the ones who can afford spending time in India anyway. Yes, some preach and some don´t. And some are not catching it at all. But if you don´t want to contribute moneywise you can go there, sit a while, listen to the speakers, who truly tell their story and openly so which I find invigorating. Then I relax a while and finally leave. I am not pushed into paying anything, I do not need to sign up as a “member” and forced into a sect or to have a special dress-code or behaviour. I took one short course out of my own volition. I did not like the two “teachers” i got and never did it again. But there are some really nice people in there, and I can still go there and sit for a while. It is calming, relaxing. I do not ask for more and are not a member in any way. I say hello to some of them outside the place, in Arambol, the ones I like, and some I actually ignore, since I don´t like them. And thats that.´Some Indian Gurus I have met are worse than this little organisation in trying to rip people of and talk a gibberish of stuff any one can find on the back of a self-help book. Be critical, that´s what we all should be. But have some perspective on things. It´s not an organisation that I put on the top of my list but they are not assholes out after your money and some do really try to change themselves to be more open to the world and others are already really nice and open people. In Magic park you have a lot more of the fake ones, because it´s more public, more in the center of things. I don´t go there and that is that. Out of my life, period.

  5. g
    May 11, 2013
    Reply

    hippie hatred??
    it is time to wake up beloved.try to find your balance…..
    come back to goa ,one day, learn something about the garbage chaos, from the point of view of an long time goa “hippie”, realize that even the “balanced view” wants to help us people.that people starting to wake up, and not being as negative on everything, what seems to be different.goa has more freedom, except that the garbage will take over one day, there is no garbage system, and believe me, we tried many things.check out, on fb:help cleaning goa….and other ideas have been provided by us in the last 10 years. but the government doesn´t care, yet. but soon something has to happen.indian tourists are coming in larger numbers now, india opened up for commercialisation of everything.unfortunatelly indian men see western women as porn stars, and the rape situation is out of hand…indian mentallity is here and now. western mentallity is in the future.now we have to find the balance.”balanced view” or not….it is difficult for tourist to find the real goa”hippies”(whatever that means), as we found different spots now, away from the mainstream.tourism is booming, and everybody wants its slice….we just want to hang out, and enjoy life.life is good….
    beloved grow up, wake up, keep on smiling…see you on the beach..
    hari om

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