Driving at dusk to have dinner under a Chhatri, whose oxidised dome shimmers against the night sky, Rambabu Meena, or Rambo for short, who has worked with Amanbagh for 16 years tells the tale of the haunted Bhangarh Fort. The magic of folklore in the landscape is palpable here. The thrill mixed with trepidation as you walk past ruins of bazaars in Bhangarh Fort, (which, according to hearsay, comes alive on certain nights with the ghosts of the past), not only adds to the enigma, but helps in the preservation of this ancient ruin.
As a delicious thali of local Rajasthani fare arrives at our table, foraged from the surrounding forests and farms, we wonder, can the forests of Rajasthan teach us spiritual sustainability? It seems obvious that they can. Drawings of the Hindu symbol, Om, appear on walls and paintings in most villages. The wisdom within these symbols is succinctly delivered in a Vedic chant: Tat Tvam Asi or “You are That.” You are the land that you stand on. You are both the mirror and the reflection of All That Is. You are both the one looking, and that which you are looking at. You're not in the universe, the universe is you.
This daydreaming takes us into spiritual wellbeing while we wait for Shere Khan.