May 2019
How good a job is cashier in an
orphanage?
I wouldn't have thought to answer that
question except recently my wife's brother Lloyd was in Toronto for his annual
visit having flown in from India.
It's not that Lloyd lives in India. He
was there because he is, more or less, always travelling. He doesn't have a
home of his own. He had one in the past but not now.
Lloyd has two home bases. My address is
his Canadian residence so he can avail himself of a health card and a driver's
licence. He sees his doctor when he's here.
He also stays for weeks at a time with
his girlfriend, Varda, at her rented house. She is an astrophysics professor at Cal
Poly San Luis Obispo in California. That's near the Hearst Castle. They travel
and hike together quite a bit. For example after Toronto Lloyd and Varda were going to meet up in Heidelberg, Germany for a month where she
would be doing research. From there Lloyd will be off to Corfu to relax for a
few weeks. I'm not exactly sure what he'll be relaxing from.
Lloyd is parsimonious so money is not
an issue. He inherited some money. (Here's a pro tip. You want your parents to
die owning a house in Vancouver.) Varda's research, paid for by grants, takes her to interesting
places three or four times a year. And Lloyd joins her. As well he can poll his network to find a house sitting gig wherever he's going without
Varda. Consequently Lloyd is able to live on not much.
A little more background. Lloyd
started travelling in 1972 when he left Vancouver to do pre med at Hebrew U in
Jerusalem. But wires were crossed. There was no English pre med program so
Lloyd dropped out and started travelling. He went to India. It was all the rage
at the time. I had been there the year before.
In India Lloyd became a member of the
Rajneeshi ashram in Pune. The Rajneesh was the guy with the 92 Rolls Royces
preaching a hedonistic life style. Lots of controversy in India first, and then
Oregon where the group moved in the 80s before being booted back to India.
There's a documentary about it on Netflix.
Lloyd learned to be a fine carpenter at
the ashram, an avocation that sometimes gets him invited, via his network, to
jobs entailing more travelling. He once worked on a half million dollar kitchen
in Denver. And he built a deck for Margie and I during one of his Toronto pass
thrus.
The network that Lloyd uses for house
sitting and carpentry work is the Sannyasins, disciples of the Rajneesh, now
spread around the world.
One thing about the Sannyasin Diaspora
is they dance a lot. That's how Lloyd and Varda met and there are dances
regularly around the world which have brought in a many new disciples. Varda is
twenty five years younger than Lloyd and was never at the original ashram.
So when Lloyd arrived in Toronto last
month from India and told us that he recently had been working as a cashier at
an orphanage we were only partly surprised. Arriving from anywhere is no big
deal with Lloyd. Last year he flew in from Germany where he was visiting his
two step-grandchildren. He was married for awhile.
It was his work at the orphanage that
had us asking questions. Most people don't think of cash registers and orphans
in the same thought bubble. But in this case the guest house where Lloyd stayed
was near an orphanage and the guest house had a cafeteria run by a
friend. So Lloyd was doing shifts on the cash register to pass some time
and older orphans were earning an unfair days wage working in the cafeteria. Ah
India.
Lloyd and I had a conversation about
the fun of cashiering. I had been a cashier for several years while in
university. We both see a certain something in the job.
It was my all time favourite job and
it's something I'd like to do even now in my semi-retirement if a cashier job
where I could sit landed in my lap.
The great thing about me as a cashier
was that I was able to develop a brief relationship with almost every person as
they were paying. “Hi. How are you doing today?” was an easy way to start a
conversation that was destined to end before a reason for conflict would
surface. I liked that.
So Lloyd and I have a lot in common.
We've both been in Afghanistan, Nepal and India on the cheap and like to talk
about it. We both like cashiering and his sister is my wife.
And we have our differences. I have a
home. He doesn't. I travel a bit on $250 dollars a day. He travels almost all
the time at little cost. He dances. I don't.
I think I should dance more.
I love this story, thank you for sharing. Doris
ReplyDeleteThank you. Just reread. Lots of fun to see you this week.
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