My first visit to the exotic subcontinent of India was not in Delhi, nor in Rajasthan, nor anywhere along the well-trodden backpackers trail. It was to Sirsi, in the UNESCO Heritage region of the Western Ghats.
That year, I went on two volunteering expeditions. The first was a personal volunteering trip, to the Perhentian Islands. The second time, I went to join colleagues of my company drawn from across the world, to the forests of Karnataka state’s Western Ghats.

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Perhentian Islands and Sirsi: A tale of two volunteering programs
I say ‘the second’, but it was actually my first attempt to realise my pledge to give from my free time that year. With the encouragement of my boss-dad, I applied for a company-sponsored volunteering programme at my place of work. It was a corporate responsibility and employee awareness building programme on sustainability issues, and was run in partnership with an NGO called Earthwatch.
It’s a pretty competitive programme, and quite hard to get in. I submitted my application, but did not get a placement. However, I did get onto the waiting list, which was still considered pretty good.
Nonetheless, since I was not going to bank my year’s commitment on getting lucky on the waiting list, I concurrently booked myself to volunteer in the Perhentians with the Blue Temple.
How I ended up volunteering abroad in India
When I was finalising my Perhentian volunteering plans, I received an invitation to take the place of a colleague who had to decline an Earthwatch Borneo project. However, as the schedule was no good for me either, I turned it down.
Besides, if I was going to volunteer through this programme, it would be a very managed experience. So I could afford to take more risk, and should take the opportunity to experience conservation in an unfamiliar country. After all, I could go to my own country by myself – I was preparing to do exactly that!
I had preferred the Kenya project, because Africa would be a totally new continent for me (I’m not counting Morocco, which is really more Mediterranean). And besides, the project was a coastal one, and marine ecosystems are dearer to my heart.
I got asked a couple more times, for other Borneo batches. I declined both.
The special expedition to the Western Ghats
And then they finally invited me to a project in Sirsi, India. It was a ‘special expedition’. This means the program included awareness activities related to learning about sustainability issues of the day, alongside the typical environmental research fieldwork segment common to all the projects. The one in Sirsi was a forestry research project in the Western Ghats.
To be honest India wasn’t near the top of my bucket list. Not because I didn’t want to go – I did. But it seemed too risky for a single female to go on her own. So India stayed near the bottom of my bucket list, tagged for ‘later’. Besides, there were no coastal projects offered in India.
But I was on the coveted waiting list, and have been asked… how many times? Sirsi was not in my own country, and this batch did not clash with my work schedule. I had just about enough leave to do both Perhentian and the Western Ghats. Is it that big a deal that it wasn’t a coastal project? After all, I was doing a coastal project already, on my own effort.
I had no excuse to refuse it – except my attitude. So I did not turn down the universe another time.
Sirsi: My first introduction to India
Sirsi is a modest little town in the shadow of the Western Ghats range in Karnataka, India. We were driven there from Goa, where Earthwatch gave us our first briefing on the programme. There, they housed us at a local guesthouse, which was to be our base for the next two weeks.
The impression that I had in my mind, when I thought about India, invariably involved hyper-dense populated areas, ascetics, questionable water quality, and uncertain safety for lone females. This had always been the counterbalance to the things that I wanted to come to India for – the Taj Mahal, Rajasthani architecture, and a culture of sheer, overpowering variety. (I did return to India for some of these things, and through the experience I learned which of my impressions were true, and which were not).
However, Sirsi was nothing at all like these impressions. It was peaceful and quiet and rural. It was not crowded in the least. Sirsi felt safe and respectable, and generally just very clean. In fact, it felt quite relatable and familiar. Why, it’s not so different from villages in Southeast Asia!

Culture shock in Karnataka
The people in Sirsi are Hindu, so overwhelmingly the cuisine is vegetarian. As a Malaysian, I could roll with this because South Indian food is a beloved component of Malaysian cuisine. But the vegetarian aspect of it bore down on some among us by the end, whose nations are more culturally carnivorous.

One thing I found very interesting about Sirsi – and the whole state of Karnataka – was that it was teetotal. Like, alcohol was actually banned. As in, respectable people would politely decline to even drive you to the one seedy bar that exists in the village (which seemed to be of uncertain legal status anyway, as you’d have to bootleg the booze from Goa).
No, this was not because they’re Muslims, nor was there any local Muslim community at all. But because the local Hindu community valued sobriety. (This part of the culture bore down on the Australian of us within the first week!)
I read the local newspapers and learned a little bit about the local views; it was illuminating. Up to that point, I had not heard of a non-Muslim community that took sobriety in a similar vein as we do.
Corporate environmental volunteering
There was a reason why I had not chosen one of the ‘special expeditions’ initially. It’s because I am already an environmental professional. Surely, it was pointless for the programme to spend the effort on me, to make me aware of sustainability issues. I already knew the stuff. Surely, this would be more valuable for my colleagues who were not from environmental departments, as they urgently needed to be exposed to these issues.
In fact, I purposely chose the expeditions which were solely about contributing to the research itself, because I missed being around practicing scientists. When your job overwhelmingly involves trying to guide business decisions towards environmental compliance and responsibility, and mostly involves explaining things to non-scientists, it kind of gets old.
It’s often very frustrating for all of us corporate environmental scientists worldwide, but especially so when you work in Asia, where the business people have an extremely low awareness of environmental issues and just, well, science. (I guess it’s why this corporate program was founded in the first place).
And that’s nothing to do with the corporation’s willingness to be better. It’s just because neither of those things are embedded into the modern cultures in the region. I mean, both were once embedded in the traditional cultures, but modern Asian culture is characterised mainly by social and economic competition. And a corporation is nothing more than the people who are drawn from the cultures that the companies are based in.
So I avoided the ‘special expeditions’, because my intention that year was to give, not to receive. I wanted to give all of my volunteering time to the research projects.

There is more than one way to give.
This was going to be a waste of time.
I had just returned from Perhentian Islands, where I got along stupendously with the more vagabond, unmoored types of travellers. I had just learned that in fact, these were the people I clicked with, but simply had never crossed paths with, due to my family background.
So I had misgivings about going on a volunteer project with ‘corporate types’ with whom I could never really relate to. Doing fieldwork together was fine enough, but having to sit in classes together? And what could we possibly have in common? I might come away with my eyes permanently rolled back in their sockets.
Still, I got a place in the programme. I might as well see what I can gain from the experience.
And once again, the universe in my Blue Period showed me that I really do not know how to choose. Not knowing who I was evolving to be, I still thought I knew how to get there.
You asked to give, didn’t you? Wish granted.
To my surprise, I discovered it was far from pointless to send an environmental professional to participate in activities aiming to teach basic environmental awareness.
No, I personally did not learn very much that was new. I was right on that score. (We did, however, get to hear a lot of entertaining gossip from an invited speaker about the delegates and world leaders negotiating climate change deals at the UN – that alone was worth the expedition!).
However, I was shown (again) that you can be right, and still miss the point big time! Even though I never felt I could relate to dedicated corporate types, I do spend a huge amount of time in my day job sincerely trying to explain important things, in however many ways corporate executives can understand. I never thought I was very good at it, though, since the outcome had always been mixed.
But there, removed from routine organisational pressures, everyone put the expedition first. Everyone shared, and listened, to the frustrations and dilemmas we all face in trying to make changes for civilisational norms too tightly locked in.
For once, an internal corporate audience reacted the same way that an external audience usually does when I facilitate training forums and workshops – they understood. And I also discovered that I could help the non-corporate facilitators explain environmental issues.
There, I learned that communication is as much about how well you give the information (which I provided), and crucially also about the state of mind of the recipient (which the setting provided). Something about the corporate atmosphere, makes people not listen as well.
It gave me many things to think about in the year ahead.

The mirrors that speak
It’s true that in life, you attract situations and people that hold up a mirror to yourself. But how much more of a blessing it is, if the mirrors would speak!
We think that incredible things we see in people must be as obvious to them as they are to us. The better those things are, the more real and authentic, the more we think it must surely go without saying. They must know. Consequently, most of us never tell others the good things that we see in them.
So we all end up going around, never knowing the ways in which we are special.
That’s the thing about travel. You go to new places, and you meet people you wouldn’t cross paths with had you stayed home. They may tell you different things about you than you’ve heard before. Like the internet, there’s a degree of transience and anonymity that makes it easier to people to take a chance and speak out, when they would not do so with people they’ll see again.
Revelations from volunteering in the Western Ghats
I had a revelation during this trip, that made me question the entire way I saw myself, and the way I engage the world.

I am a logical, analytical person by nature. This is probably why my social skills lag behind all others, to begin with. The way I answer queries and explain things, would be rational, methodical, with a clear structure. For reliable precision, nothing beats this approach. This is a mindset very much aligned with my company’s corporate ‘personality’.
But in recent years, I went through experiences which taught me that not everything needs reliability and precision. And at that point I made a crucial choice.
Instead of choosing to disparage this insight and continue as I was (as regrettably very many intelligent, analytical people do), I went with my faith and leaped to learn another way to be.
I opened my mind.
(Then was told by the universe I was getting it wrong. Tried again. I opened my heart. Was patted approvingly on the head…)
The sustainability project
So what was this revelation I had in Sirsi?
Well, there was a point in the programme when we were all asked to come up with a sustainability project. We were supposed to work on it after the programme ended, as a way to keep the momentum we had gained from this programme. I had my misgivings about this, because I could not think of a ‘project’ that would truly be useful, original, as well as within my power. I don’t like starting projects I didn’t know upfront that I could finish.
Two choices were before me. I could think up one anyway, and do this extra thing for the sake of doing it. Something easy and probably not impactful. I didn’t like that choice.
Or, I could refuse.
The controversial (un)project
Or… could I create an option that no one has dared before? Have a project, and refuse, at the same time?
In one of the sharing sessions, I had shared that I am neither a visionary instigator, nor a follower who carries out the visionary’s project. Rather, I am a third kind of person – the catalyst. I connect the two; I make things go faster.
The real project I wanted to do, was not to change bulbs to LEDs, or phase out paper cups. They are excellent projects, but not for me. My epiphany was that it was a better project to upgrade me. A me with expanded skills would be a more versatile catalyst. I could quicken or untangle many, many more projects that others are already working on, resolve the things they tend to get stuck on.
The problem was… this wasn’t a ‘project’ that a corporation would recognise as a ‘project’. Could I get away with it? After all, I couldn’t describe ‘milestones’ and ‘measures’ for this project in the way they wanted. It wasn’t a scheduled, precise sort of project.
Well, I could shoehorn some milestones in, but I did not want to confine the way that I ought to learn. You can’t make milestones for completely new things. It was already made clear to me that I don’t know how I ought to learn. My own choices to improve myself pale in comparison to simply listening to the universe’s guidance.
But the universe does not tell you beforehand what it plans for you in the form of Gantt charts. That’s not how people learn wisdom.
I made my decision.

Come into the (spot)light
I made no lists, and drew no charts.
As my colleagues worked on their flipcharts to flesh out the ideas that were important to them, I did something completely unprecedented for me. I lay back and just… meditated, I guess.
When my turn came to share my project, I mentally shut off all my rational circuits. Then, I just… spoke.
Not from my head, where the defiance lies. But from the heart, where I could give my refusal as gently as the welling of a spring.
It was the first time I had ever done such a thing. If it wasn’t because my audience was made of strangers I would likely never see again, I don’t think I could have done it.
Sustainability begins in your heart
There was no presentation aid – nothing but my voice. Because I shut off my analytical mind, I don’t remember the speech. I can’t reproduce what I said, nor how I said them.
All I knew was that essentially, what I was offering as my sustainability project, was myself. Though I was also supposed to describe how I would execute this project, I did not. I would let the universe take the lead, and flow pliably – evolving in submission.
But I became aware of a strange thing that happened as I continued speaking, a most unprecedented thing.
My audience was rapt. Every single one. I did not know why. You could hear a pin drop, it was so incredibly still. I felt a panic rising – what was happening?
I kept going.
And when I was done, the spell eased gently as a breath. And I was told by my mirrors, my blessed mirrors, that my speech – the speech that defied what the activity actually asked for – was the most inspiring thing they had ever heard.
Damn, if only I had heard it myself.
The sustainable sustainability project
By this time, I was already convinced that the heart was a stronger path than the head, to change people’s minds. But that was the first experience that made me believe that maybe my heart, perhaps, could do it.
It took me over a year full of ups and downs, and attempts that seemed to be failures. But yes – via its own meandering, baffling, emotional, humbling way – mine was the project that was completed. And still continues to be completed, over and over again.
It did so in ways that it could not have, had I tried to confine its path with my old limited mind. It has revived, sustained, connected, spurred, and fertilised different projects, some of which you can read about somewhere on this very blog. Each interaction grows it – and me – still more.
It is now a living project – self-sustaining.
Sunset in Sirsi
I think Sirsi was where my Blue Period set. I think it happened when I chose to decline my analytical approach, and gave that speech.
It was like waking from a long dream. My experience in Perhentian may have nudged me awake. But in Sirsi, I got up.
I engaged. I was social. It was somehow doable, to wander about and presume to join others in random conversation. I could assert myself – my genuine self – and felt people respond positively to it.
It baffled me why this was working, when all through my formative years, it did not. But new me decided it was more important that it was happening, even if I would never understand why now.

A new dawn over the Western Ghats
There is a place near Sirsi with wonderfully curious karst rock formations, Yana Rocks. On a free day near the end of the expedition, we were taken on a day trip there. It was nice to be outdoors but not have to classify trees for a change. We hiked leisurely along the trail to where the rock formations were.
For me, the hike was easy, even though I still wasn’t quite fit enough to speed along it. Being Malaysian, I did not have as much trouble with the heat as some of my colleagues did. The vegetation, humidity, and overall feel of the forest trail felt very like home, so I felt confident.
Yana Rocks looms imposingly tall on the approach. It looks almost like a sprawling church organ, with its merging vertical columns. There were beehives under the overhangs, and we watched as swallows and bees face off against each other in the air in the predator-prey deadly dance.
There’s no turning back!
There was a temple by the rocks. You could go on a footpath all the way around the back of the rock formation, which was what my fellow participants did. However, as the base of the rock formation is sacred ground, you have to take your shoes off and walk it barefoot.
I felt like keeping my shoes on, which were difficult to remove. So I chose not to walk by the rock formation. One of us had ranged ahead, further down the trail. There was supposed to be a waterfall nearby that we were all going to hike to next, and I assumed he had pressed on to the waterfall. I decided I might as well catch up with him and be early to the waterfall.
The way did not seem to be difficult, since there looked to be just the one trail. But I briefly felt misgivings when the first snake crossed my trail. It was a black one, and I did not see the head.
The sight stopped me dead in my tracks. Could it be a cobra? However, the snake did not take any notice of me, so I took a video while I waited for it to pass.
Then I contemplated the situation. I could turn back. Or I could press on, knowing that snakes cross the hiking trails of Yana.
It took me hardly a second’s thought – I pressed on.
I caught up with my colleague and we explored the rest of the trail. It turned out that the waterfall was not actually down the trail. So we had to double back after all.
Fly now, butterfly – out into the blue.
In my whole life I had never achieved growth as fast as when I stopped presuming I knew how to do it, and let the universe guide me instead.
Throughout my Blue Period I had gone on hikes where I have chosen to go past my anxiety. But this hike in the Western Ghats was different. This time, the choice came with no anxiety at all. For the first time in my life.
Despite the snakes, I was only calm. Yet in Katoomba, within the same year, I was neurotic and doubtful.
As we made our way back up the trail, we suddenly came upon a celebratory rush of white butterflies. And among them, just a single one – a butterfly with wings of blue.
A fitting closure for a blue-themed year.
Carbon offset information to India
A return flight between Kuala Lumpur and Goa (Vasco de Gama) produces carbon emissions of approximately 2,700 lbs CO2e. It costs about $14 to offset this.
Thank you for reading! Want to be reminded to try something outside the box? Pin for the future!
Sounds like an amazing opportunity to go and I’m glad you took the leap! You can never know what you will find! :)
I think I would enjoy Sirsi because I’m recently becoming more and more vegetarian and I would like to see more of their cuisine. Sometimes the universe has a way of giving us what we need. Good to see you kicked back and mediated!
Oh Indian vegetarian is the best! It got a bit repetitive for two weeks though – but that’s because I’m Malaysian and we’re used to being spoiled for choice food-wise. Actually I would guess pretty much all of India would be good, for vegetarian transitioning.
Wow! this is the first time I heard about a town who practice sobriety. Usually when someone goes on a holiday chilling while drinking is part of socializing. Sirsi is green and lush and a lovely place. I was not aware that there are volunteering opportunities there.
No, you see… apparently all of the Karnataka region is sober. But then, it’s not really an international tourism spot, so the locals are more able to go with what they feel benefits their own social outcomes, I guess. Without conflict with tourism revenue loss. There were even border checkpoints with Goa to check for smuggling.
It’s not the first time I know of it. Some inhabited islands in south Thailand are sober. All the local inhabited islands of the Maldives are. But that was certainly the first time I encountered a place that was sober – but not Muslim. But yeah – it was incredible how much it improved the *quality* of socialising with my international co-participants. It was much more real and honest. Much less bragging and pretense.
I can relate to you. India is not the first country that I would want to add on my bucket list. I am still hesitant to go even I have read a lot of good articles about India. Well, let’s see.
I understand your thought process because you are smart. You think all the things that could happen whether positive or negative. I like that you are taking chances and doing things outside of your comfort zone.
LOL smart only goes so far. First, you still need faith and courage. :) I’m still terrified every time I push the boundary still further, like I plan to this year.
I’m a true believer that the universe send us little signs all the time. And what a journey you’ve been and followed your gut, put yourself out of your comfort zone and come out the other side. I’d have to say India has never been top of my backlist either and my partner wants to take me this year.. lets see. Maybe good things will come from it too! Perhentian island also sounds nice, I have a friend working in a resort there.
Kristie – you.theworld.wandering
India is sooo big! I’m sure it must run the gamut of experiences. I’m going again this year, to a different part, so… don’t know whether that’ll be more intimidating than the relatively comfortable Goa/Karnataka. :) Which resort? I probably know all of them by now.
I’m from India. Goa to be precise but I stay in Karnataka at the moment. I have honestly never heard of volunteering programs in Sirsi. It is an interesting aspect that I have never thought off. Thank you for enlightening me on a different aspect of travel.
Our group met up in Goa before being taken to Sirsi! It was quiet when we were there though, which I thought didn’t match what I heard about Goa. There were these lantern things hanging everywhere, with tassels at the bottom. I thought maybe it’s because there was a festival recently and people were still away.