The Tranquilo Traveler
The Tranquilo Traveler is a celebration of voluntourism, slow travel, and other interesting ways to see the world. Travel writer and award- winning Moon Handbooks author Joshua Berman created The Tranquilo Travel as a resource for world trippers and international volunteers, a window to the author’s travels in Nicaragua, Belize, and beyond, and an update of his books and articles.
The Ten Most Tranquilo Temples in the World
Check out these remarkable photos of The Ten Most Amazing Temples in the World (via Neatorama.com). The collection is exclusively Buddhist and Hindu (otherwise, I would suggest a Maya temple or two to the list). From the Tiger’s Nest Monastery, pictured here atop a 3,000-foot cliff in Bhutan, to the ruins of Angkor and Prambanan, this is quite an impressive gathering.
I’m happy to say that the Tranquilo Traveler has visited three of the top ten. Here are some flashbacks to my original posts about visiting:
Angkor Wat — Siem Reap, Cambodia
The Golden Temple — Amritrsar, India
Varanasi — India
If clicking through these quiet, beautiful places inspires you to sit and take a few breaths, mosey over to this online Zen meditation room: The bell rings…
New Article in Perceptive Travel

Please enjoy my spankin’ fresh essay in the new issue of Perceptive Travel:
Nothing to Achieve: In the Place of Enlightenment, Joshua Berman learns that being a pilgrim in the Mahabodhi Temple is about more than mere religion.
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So long, and thanks for all the dahl!

Our last few days in India rush up to us in a flurry of night trains, rickshaw haggles, and last-minute site-seeing in Agra where we squeeze in a few sublime hours at the Taj before pushing on. Exhausted and exhilarated, trying not to look backward or forward too much, half-heartedly picking out highs and lows, we pull into Delhi at 11 p.m. for our final 24 hours.
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The sun softly rises: Maa Ganga awakes

The pre-dawn boat trip on the Ganges is an obvious once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that we do not neglect. The most difficult part is not waking up on time, since the ancient energy of Varanasi fills us with restless wonder; nay, the hardest thing is enjoying the experience without a bulking camera stuck between my face and the awesome spectacle surrounding me.
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The Rough Guide to India

Our brick-sized companion during four months on the subcontinent has been The Rough Guide to India, 5th Edition, by David Abram, Devdan Sen, Nick Edwards, Mike Ford and Beth Wooldridge. Although I was a bit put-off with the book’s overly-vague price ranges (which sometimes spanned 2000 rupees, or more than US$50!), I know this is not the fault of the authors who, I am glad to say, did an outstanding job.
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Varanasi: Beyond words

“Older than history, older than tradition, older even than legend, and looks twice as old as all of them put together.” That is how Mark Twain described Varanasi. Peter Matthiessen goes deeper: “…in Varanasi there is hope of life that has been abandoned in such cities as Calcutta, which seems resigned to the dead and dying in its gutters. Shiva dances in the spicy foods, in the exhilarated bells of the swarming bicycles, the angry bus horns, the chatter of the temple monkeys, the vermillion dot on the women’s foreheads, even in the scent of charred flesh that pervades the ghats.”
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The Oldest City: Varanasi

A cold, pre-dawn train – the Doon Express – carries us from Gaya to the Cantonment Station in Varanasi, where we steel ourselves for the assault of humanity about which our guidebook and fellow travelers have warned us. Saddled with packs on chests and backs, Tay and I push onto the platform with the crowd, expecting an army of beggars, touts, con-artists, and pickpockets to mob these weighed-down foreigners and take them for all they are worth.
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Sunrise in Bodhgaya

On the last two mornings of our meditation retreat, Tay and I broke the rules and met each other at 6:00 a.m. on the roof of my dorm to watch the sunrise. Actually, we behaved ourselves, and (mostly) maintained our silence. I just needed to show her my discovery — that the sun rises almost right behind the giant Japanese Buddha statue, just east of the Root Institute compound.
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Traveling Mindfully: Root Institute, Bodhgaya

The name of the course is “Yoga and Meditation: Journey to Awareness,” and it is exactly what we were looking for, but did not find, in Rishikesh so many months ago. In one sense, this ten-day retreat at the Root Institute for Wisdom Culture in Bodhgaya, the place of Buddha’s enlightenment, is the kind of romantically spiritual immersion which Westerners have associated with India since the hippies and the Beatles came here in the 1960s; and, in fact, our 18 fellow participants are nearly all from Europe, Australia, or North America, as are our two instructors (though they both have extensive Eastern training). This originally gave us pause (a yoga teacher named “Jean-Claude” in India?); but the Root Institute’s reputation is outstanding and, after visiting its immaculate, lush, and peaceful grounds, we were sold.
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While my sitar gently weeps

I never did get to hear Sarmishtha play her sitar.
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BY JOSHUA BERMAN
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