Story: The Dirtiest Place in India - My Ear

Derek Baron

By Derek Baron
Written on 8 April 2008
3 favorites, 815 views

With the assistance of a half-naked man armed with a small stick, I quickly discovered the dirtiest place in India.

Seaside Wall in Colaba

Seaside Wall in Colaba

The wall provides calming views across the waters and a resting place for a variety of characters.

I focused intently at the ground as the stick inched deeper and deeper into my ear. The hardened, dirty fingers holding the stick seemed steady, but not steady enough to completely ease my fear of upcoming pain or perhaps even worse.

I was on my first trip to India and had spent an afternoon roaming the streets of the Colaba District of South Bombay. Having meandered through the somewhat leafy and quiet residential lanes, I came upon PJ Ramchandani Marg. Stretching along the coast from the Gateway of India monument, this road offers excellent views from its seaside wall, where one can watch the dark waters of the Arabian Sea push out towards Elephanta Island. I took a seat on the wall, among resting taxi drivers, snack-sellers, a few young, hand-holding couples and a strange-looking man carrying a wooden box slung over his shoulder.

The debate was difficult. I had chosen to visit India in order to immerse myself in as many aspects of this fascinating culture as possible. As a result, I had already accepted and participated in the concepts of the squat toilet, street food, holy pujas, second-class train journeys, baksheesh and human-powered ferris wheels (a whole different story!).

But there was just something different about this man. He was tall and dark, barefoot and shirtless, with long, grayish black hair tied up into a haphazard bun. He bore a mysterious smile that could have easily belonged to the most good-hearted soul or to the devil himself. The fact that he wanted me to pay him twenty rupees to ram a five-inch-long stick of wood into my inner ear also added to my hesitation.

He had introduced himself as “The Cleaner of Ear” and from the start kept repeating a variety of unintentional yet catchy slogans such as “Clean ear, good ear” and “I clean, you hear better.” I brushed off his initial sales pitch but as any good Indian salesman learns to do, he proceeded to inch closer with his wooden apparatus despite my rejections. “Get that stick away from my ear!” was a demand I used often but quite unsuccessfully. I actually had to use a considerable amount of force to keep his hand away from my face, as if I was defending myself from a knife attack.

After thirty seconds of squabbling back and forth, the usual crowd of two dozen curious Indian onlookers surrounded us. It is almost as if a group of twenty Indians are assigned to every arriving foreigner, with the sole purpose of gathering around in a tight circle whenever any heated, strange or comical interaction takes place.

I thought about screaming at this man, this self-proclaimed “Cleaner of Ear”, and just running away. But as I built up the courage to yell, he made one last attempt to convince me.

“One ear I clean for free – no rupees,” he suddenly offered.

Well, how could I turn that down? So, as any good Jewish boy would do, I immediately took advantage of this excellent bargain, not wanting to disappoint my mother. I heard a taxi horn, some children giggling and the sound of waves splashing against the wall upon which I sat. Accepting that those might be the last sounds I will ever hear out of my right ear, I released the man’s arm and allowed him to begin the procedure.

By the time he reached the depth he had been searching for, there did not seem to be much of his ‘tool’ left sticking out of my precious hearing cavity. For about ten seconds he kept that crude, and most likely re-used, stick in a location that felt unsafely close to my brain, using a technique that involved some gentle scraping and wiggling and several quick bouts of twisting and turning.

Finally, with my personal crowd of spectators still standing around, the stone-looks on their faces providing no reassurance that this was not just a trick the locals played on unsuspecting foreigners, the ear cleaner removed his twig from the depths of my ear.

“See, look. Dirt. Shampoo. Soap…” he stated, so proudly listing the items he had apparently removed. He then put the end of the stick only a few inches from my eyes. Speechless, I stood up, horrified by what I saw. An almost one-inch-in-diameter glob of multi-colored gunk stared directly at me with a look of extreme anger at being uprooted from its home. I cursed and cringed at the grotesque sight.

The ear cleaner moved to the other side of me, clearly interpreting my visible disgust as an agreement to proceed with the other ear. But I was not having any more of that. The nastiness of what came out of my right ear produced the opposite effect. I did not want to see that happen again and I wanted to be as far away as possible from this man and his stick. I started to walk away, forcefully clearing a path through the still present crowd, as the ear cleaner clung to my arm, confused at my escape yet determined in his efforts. I dragged him for nearly twenty feet before I finally stopped, turned around and spoke firmly, “No more ears.”

At this point, he understood that he was out of options and that my left ear was going to remain unclean. “Ok, no more ears,” he repeated as he began his retreat. As I continued walking towards some unknown destination, stepping over piles of trash and animal waste and thinking of the stenches and living conditions that I had witnessed during my travels in this country, I suddenly found it to be quite absurd, and quite revealing, that I was most disgusted by what came from within my very own self.

Comments...

  • 9 April 2008, Sloan Schang said:

    I love your retelling of this, but don't be too hard on yourself. Foreigners in Colaba (and Goa and Delhi) are regularly targeted for scam ear cleanings by disreputable ear wallahs who use a slight of hand trick to convince you that your ears are disgusting; instead of pulling a coin from your ear, they're pulling an impressive ball of goo from their personal stash. When you see the foul mess supposedly removed from one ear, you're meant to pay handsomely for the other. I've seen them ask tourists for upwards of 900 rs.

    Yet lots of Indians do seek out these guys for streetside ear cleanings that may or may not be legit. It's been practiced for centuries, a favorite remedy of emperors, and is often touted as an "orgasmic experience." Indian doctors and health officials decry the practice but believers stand by it. Exactly the kind of gray area that makes this country so irresistible.

  • 9 April 2008, Derek Baron said:

    You are very right...I am actually off to India again in three days, can't seem to stay away for very long!

    This story is from my trip last year and even if it was a scam, it still makes me love India even more! If I am ever going to be scammed, I would much rather prefer the relatively harmless (usually) yet creative attempts in India! I can't wait to see what kind of odd situations I fall into this time.

  • 21 May 2008, Sam Scholes said:

    What a story! Gross.

  • 21 May 2008, Jacqueline Rodman said:

    This piece had me literally laughing aloud! A good Jewish boy accepting a free offer to make his mother proud. Too funny, yet I know exactly what you mean (Jewish girl from NY), even it did involve a man sticking a filthy stick into your ear. Icky icky visual I got reading - yet once again, your words created such a vivid mental image. Keep up the writing!!!!

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