Subscribe
The Carousel
No Result
View All Result
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us
No Result
View All Result
The Carousel
No Result
View All Result
Home Travel & Leisure Destinations

My Mid-Life Gap Year: Flying To India On A Mesmerising And Magical Adventure

Angela Galloway by Angela Galloway
04/06/2019
in Destinations, Travel & Leisure, Travel Advice
0
Travel to India
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Read how The Carousel reporter, Angela Galloway, fell in love with the beauty of India during what is her first instalment writing about her mid life gap year.

Angela Galloway in India

My much awaited Gap Year is finally underway and in a nod to the Eat Pray Love cliché’ of self-discovery, my first stop was India. From the second I stepped out of the airport in Delhi, I was overwhelmed by a cacophony of chaos. The sounds, the smells, the colours, the sights, the traffic, the heat … all immediately  “in your face” but also strangely mesmerising and magical.

It is almost impossible for an India ‘newbie’ like myself not to feel boggled by the traffic in India. It is overwhelming and the noise of horns was the soundtrack of every Indian city I visited. They are as incessant and unrelenting as the oppressive heat, but are not used as a tool of aggression. In fact, almost all trucks display a large “horn please” sign emblazoned over their rear ends. Horns are the equivalent to vehicular ‘chatter’ that helps drivers navigate the chaos of the roads. “I’m coming down beside you” or “Is it safe to pass?” All conveyed via subtle nuances in ‘honking’ etiquette. Aside from the compulsory honking, it seems that the only road rule in India is that there are no rules, (apart from giving way to cows). This is best summated by their driving mantra of “good horn, good brakes and good luck” and I suspect that all three came into play on my long drives between cities (with a strong bias towards luck). After a few days of near misses however, I became quite accustomed to overtaking on hairpin bends or the last second swerve out of the path of a bizarrely decorated truck fully laden with anything from gas bottles to people. But all this disorder is underwritten by a certain harmony that gives India its unique flavour. Sterile it is not, but amidst the chaos is the colour and character that is part of India’s unique but magnetic charm.

Related articles

Live Your Own Rom-Com At These Iconic Movie Locations Around The World

Style, Scenic Beauty and Spectacular Cars: A Weekend in New Zealand’s Southern Alps

Traffic can also be seen as a metaphor for life in India. Rickshaws, motorbikes, pushbikes, cars and trucks all coexisting in the chaos with very little room to manouvere. And so it is with life in India … a melting pot of religions and castes and cultures, coexisting peacefully but with little or no margin for error. For most people, life has very little wriggle room. Every day revolves around the serious task of survival and it is clear that some are faring way better than others in this regard. India is a country of extremes … abject poverty, obscene wealth, colours, sounds, smells, history and heat. It is almost too much to absorb and at times a little overwhelming.

City life aside, the natural beauty and the awe inspiring religious and cultural monuments that India is blessed with are nothing short of breathtaking. From the mesmerising beauty and grandeur of the Taj Mahal, to the Amber Fort, a multitude of exquisite palaces and more temples than I thought possible. But it is the history and stories that are woven through every layer of every monument and icon, that really captured my imagination and gave meaning to the magic. Varanasi is a city I had heard a lot about. It is the spiritual capital of India and ‘home’ of the Ganges. The river and the city have an intangible beauty about them that is hard to articulate but that pulses with history and spirituality. Over two hundred cremations happen every day on the banks of the Ganges, within plain sight of anyone who cares to observe. It is transparent, raw and ritualistic, but for Indians it is profoundly significant. Hindu’s believe that if their loved one’s ashes are laid in the Ganges in Varanasi, that they will break the cycle of life and death and lead them to salvation. A concept known as moksha. On my drive from Varanasi to the Nepalese border, I saw several cars with shrouded bodies strapped to the roof, en route to Varanasi for cremation. A sight that would be inconceivable in Australia, but does not even raise an eyebrow in India. The Ganges however, is home to far more than cremations. It is the soul of the city. People gather on its banks to worship and pray, wash in its shallows and swim in its (slightly murky) depths. It seems incongruous at first for daily rituals and celebrations to exist side by side with death and mourning, but not so for the Hindu people for whom life and death are inextricably linked.

The colours of everyday life in India are vibrant and rich and this rainbow of colour is perfectly reflected in the personalities of the people I met along the way. People like my guide in Agra, Guarev, who invited me to his home for a cooking class with his wife and to share a meal with his extended family, who, as is the custom in India, all live together under one roof. I cooked with Guarev’s wife, did yoga with his dad, played with his son and chatted with all his siblings about life in India, where arranged marriage is still the norm. Guarev, met his wife to be for twenty-five minutes before having to decide whether she was ‘the one’ … a decision that was then ratified by the stars. If their astrology charts had not been a favourable match, then they would not have been permitted to marry. Another one of our guides did not get to meet his wife at all prior to their marriage. It’s like a massive countrywide episode of Married At First Sight! But what is clear is that a marriage in India is not between two people, but rather it is between two families, which is not entirely without merit … I can think of a few families that I’d quite like to spend Christmas’ with and I may start putting out some feelers on my return! 

India is most certainly not for the faint hearted. It ignited all my senses, challenged my thinking and pushed me well outside my comfort zone. It is as captivating as it is chaotic and colourful. As it turns out, I did do my fair share of eating and praying and I most certainly fell in love … with this magical place.

Previous Post

The Ultimate Pride Guide: 10 Cities To Celebrate Pride In 2019

Next Post

Game Changers: Edwina Bartholomew Talks To Qnary CEO Andrew Davie

Angela Galloway

Angela Galloway

After a successful career in marketing and advertising, Angela Galloway devoted the majority of the last nineteen years to be support crew for a partner and two kids across three states and two countries. Now, as she emerges from the haze of ‘domestic pit alley’ she is faced with the familiar dilemma of trying to rediscover and reinvent in preparation for the the next half century. She has returned to her love for writing to help with this process (and as a cheap form of therapy!) Be inspired by her regular stories as she travels the world and writes a regular travel journal on her mid-life Gap Year for The Carousel.

Related Posts

110 Top Most Romantic Flicks EVER
Travel & Leisure

Live Your Own Rom-Com At These Iconic Movie Locations Around The World

12/02/2026
New Zealand Southern Alps Ayrburn Classic
Destinations

Style, Scenic Beauty and Spectacular Cars: A Weekend in New Zealand’s Southern Alps

09/02/2026
Destinations

Cultural Survival and Ethical Tourism in Northern Thailand’s Hill Tribe Villages

06/02/2026
Chinese New Year
Arts & Culture

Chinese New Year Celebrations Just Got Bigger And Bouncier

06/02/2026
Augustinus Bader Spa Hotel Costes
Luxury

From Paris with Love … And Luxe Skin

28/01/2026
View of the Porch of the Maidens, part of the Erechtheion on the Acropolis in Athens, Greece.
Destinations

A Love Letter to Greece, Written Over a Lifetime

24/01/2026

Recommended

In-flight-Hydration-Saviours

In-Flight Hydration Saviours

28/06/2024
Beyonce Backstage Coldplay

Beyonce Backstage Video: What She Really Thought About Coldplay

31/07/2021

Recent Posts

Gut health and stress
Health

Five Ways to Focus on Gut Health to Reduce Stress

by Marie-Antoinette Issa
12/02/2026
0

Digestive discomfort, bloating and changes in bowel habits are often dismissed as food-related, But, science suggests stress plays a far...

Read moreDetails
Summer Hair Saboteurs

Hair Saboteurs – Solve Tress Stress With Our Expert Advice.

12/02/2026
nature

Sustainability Expert Alex McDonald On How To Improve Your Plastic Footprint

12/02/2026
110 Top Most Romantic Flicks EVER

Live Your Own Rom-Com At These Iconic Movie Locations Around The World

12/02/2026
Valentine's Day Beauty

15 New Beauty Products We Tried This Week: The Valentine’s Day Edit

11/02/2026

Subscribe to Newsletter

Be the first to get daily fitness news & tips from JNews Fitness.

  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us
Foyster Media Pty Ltd Copyright 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us

© 2025 Foyster Media Pty Ltd. All rights reserved