If you are a guest in India, you should say hello to the host family first. Rinse your mouth and wash your hands before eating. In traditional Indian families and rural areas, guests usually eat with men, the elderly and children first, and women eat after the guests finish eating. Even if people of different sexes eat at the same time, they can't talk to the opposite sex.
At the Indian dining table, the host will help you wash the dishes. Guests can't help themselves, and they can't refuse food and drinks offered by their hosts. Food is considered as a gift from God, and refusing food is ungrateful to God. If you can't finish the food on your plate, don't give it to others. Once you touch food, it will become a pollutant. Many Indians will find out whether their food has been touched by pagans or people from other social classes before eating.
Although the rural economy is not optimistic, people get along well with each other and have a strong environmental awareness. Pastoral landscapes are everywhere, with full of green on both sides of the road, clean roads and fresh air.
In the fields, we will see herds of cattle and sheep and some villagers, similar to the rural areas of our country, who make a living by farming. Moreover, people's travel tools are generally bicycles or motorcycles, and there are really few cars. We will also see some villagers going up the mountain to cut wood. Everyone is carrying heavy firewood and riding bicycles.
In some cases, there are also some small enterprises in rural areas, and they bring fruit trees here for sale. It is very common in rural areas of our country. Villagers will come and have a look and try to buy some. If in the afternoon, you will see some shepherds walking in the street with a herd of cows.