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Showing posts with label thailand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thailand. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Southeast Asia #1: When you see "if it swims we have it" keep on walking (3/3/2008)

I am at the close of my time here in Bangkok.  Tomorrow morning, very early, we depart for Laos.  We are on a 8:30a direct flight, which we have been advised is often cancelled, so we're holding a second booking to fly to Ubon as well.  We are dearly hoping the Pakse flight goes, as otherwise we fly to northern Thailand, rent a cab to the border, manually walk all of our stuff across the border bridge, and meet a Lao driver on the other side...keep your fingers crossed!
 



Saturday Kecia and I headed to Jatujak market.  It is like a rabbit warren - rows and rows of stalls burrow along internal passageways, with the occasional peep of light filtering through the tin roof into the darkness below, and then you burst into blinding sunlight of the main arteries and there are flutists playing for donations, steaming street grills, giant furry peanuts...or rather, some really unlucky guy who got to dress up as a giant furry peanut cartoon on 100-degree day...we wandered and haggled, then rested with a glass of lime soda and some mango slices...and then got back on our feet and trekked around some more, looking for cool stuff and good bargains.  I am happy to say I have resolved some of my gift issues! But Vietnam will provide me other opportunities, I think...
 
After we had exhausted Jatujak, or...rather, Jatujak exhausted us, we got back on the skytrain (wish LA had something that modern & efficient!) and took it to the Siam station, where we got off and got in a tuktuk to go to Wat Po.  I had wanted to see Wat Po last time I was in Bangkok, but didn't have the chance, and Kecia had never been, despite this being her 10th visit to BKK!  Our tuktuk took the most roundabout random route - we had negotiated the price in advance, so it wasn't to cheat us, but rather to avoid the nasty BKK congestion (which actually is worse than LA, if that's imaginable!).  We teetered precariously around corners in Chinatown, looped around traffic circles with monuments in the middle, and turned so many times I lost all sense of what direction we were going...and then screeched to a stop outside Wat Po.


 
We went to go see the massive reclining buddha.  After taking our fill of the slumbering giant, we decided we should support the temple, and so we paid $6 to have a 45-minute foot reflexology massive.  It was lovely - we sat outside and drank lychee juice in the courtyard of the wat having our sore, Jatujak-trekking feet rubbed.  It was so relaxing.  When we were finished, it was close to 6p, when the wat closes to farang (not to Thais, though), and the courtyard was empty, and the scene breathtaking: the grapefruit-colored sky and the thin arching spires of Wat Po, and the Chao Phraya passing by slowly a block away.  Beautiful.
 
We then met up with Sophie, a Vietnamese/French conservator, who told us about this "jardin tropical et si beau" so we decided to go check it out for dinner.  We went down to the water ferry dock to begin figuring out how to get there.  We were waiting for the north-bound water ferry, when the south-bound ferry arrived.  The boat doesn't really stop, but more slows down, the ferry boy tosses a rope onto the dock to anchor the boat there, and then you have to haul it very adroitly to make the boat.  This is not a transportation method for sissies.  The boat started to pull away, and a woman standing in the entry area on the rear of the boat started calling and motioning to a guy on the dock, maybe her husband?  Anyhow, he made towards the boat.  Instead of jumping immediately, to slide onto the open rear deck of the boat, he hesitated, and with his giant camera bag and socks-under-sandals, he jumped about 5 seconds too late.  He leaped out over the growing 2-ft gap between the dock and the boat, and managed to grab the pole at the back of the boat - but couldn't hold it and tumbled down into the river.  Everyone on the deck gasped - we had seen it coming but were all rooting for him.  He didn't fall very far down, maybe 5 feet, but into the murky brown of the dirty, lotus-filled Chao Phraya...and completely soaked himself and unfortunately his camera.  It was such a surreal experience.  I couldn't believe we actually saw it!
 
Therefore when our boat pulled up, Sophie Kecia & I made quickly to board, and held on to the handrails, grasping tightly for fear of repeating our German friend's mistake.  We took the water ferry nearly 45 minutes up the river - far outside of the BKK city limits, to the end of the line at Nonthaburi.  Then we grabbed a cab, and after another 45 minutes, this time negotiating and calling the restaurant and trying to figure out where exactly we were, we eventually arrived at the Suan Thip restaurant.  It was a beautiful garden, with small pavilions/pagodas with tables interspersed with the lakes, fountains, and jungle-like greenery.  We selected a small pagoda in the center, not far from the river, and settled in our cushions to (finally!) eat dinner.  It was delicious, but unfortunately so was I - having no idea we were dining al fresco, I hadn't worn bug spray, and my right leg is now covered in mosquito bites.  Welts, really.
 
Yesterday our coworkers arrived, and we had a dinner meeting at Cabbages & Condoms.  It was begun by a man named Mechai to promote his family planning foundation - all the profits from the restaurant go to family planning and safe sex education for Thais.  The clientele was mainly farang.  It was a great restaurant, outdoors with lush foliage and a live musician, with sparkly lights and yummy food, but the decor was all...made of their primary materials.  So, the lamps were made of condoms.  There were mannequins by the entrances dressed in clothes made of condoms and birth control pills - it was very odd to be there with coworkers...
 
Today Jeff, Kecia and I worked on putting things together for the workshop.  We depart in the morning from the Massage Parlor King hotel, near the neon sign of a giant lobster that reads "If it swims, we have it" - behind Tops supermarket and the Starbucks...this is all soon behind us for the wilds of southern Laos!

Monday, November 22, 2010

On the Road: the Cultural Heritage Tour of Southeast Asia



2-28-08
from Bangkok, Thailand

I am at the end of my second day here in Bangkok, and it has definitely been an education. I am exhausted but full of delicious Thai food and completely ready for bed...in the Massage Parlor King's hotel.

What?

Our troubles at the Davis started yesterday when Kecia, who had requested a nonsmoking room, was assigned a smoking one. I’m not entirely sure how the desk clerk didn’t see this coming; if he had any discerning capacities he’d have understood from her long, unbound hair, her organic-textile skirt, and the beads bejeweling her neck, ears and fingers that she’s not the kind of woman who smokes. In fact, she’s the kind of woman who walks around barefoot to “feel the earth,” eats seaweed, and uses nontraditional grains in her bizarre salads. She doesn’t even have a chair in her office; she uses a burgundy inflatable ball. A smoking room is something she didn't take lying down. Picture a righteous yogic anger compounded by transoceanic jet lag, and you’ll arrive at something akin to the clerk’s experience.

While we waited for the scurrying clerk to rectify Kecia’s room situation, we went to collect our "welcome drink" at the hotel bar. When we requested wine (necessary to dull the edge of the jet lag), we were informed that the welcome drink was 7-Up only. Rolling our eyes, we ordered a wine chaser with our 7-Up. We were quietly sipping our purchased wine when out of nowhere, two scantily clad Thai ladies clambered aboard a makeshift stage in their knee-high leather boots and proceeded to sing cheesy pop songs into microphones, about two feet behind us. All signs indicated that a restful trip to Bangkok wasn’t in the stars for us.

Then today the bombshell dropped.

Yes. We discovered today that the owner & designer of our hotel, Chuvit Davis, is a notorious character around Bangkok. He made a fortune on massage parlors, which he then parlayed into a massive hotel complex (that mistakenly brands itself as a boutique hotel - it is certainly not). While I can make no comment about his political qualifications, the hotel décor is a hideous, sour version of the W hotel meets traditional Thai decoration. Something about the whole scheme is saccharine, fake, artificial, like you could just peel back the entire wall, the entire hotel suite. But now that I know that I am staying somewhere decorated by the "massage parlor king," everything makes more sense...Every Thai we told where we were staying (including cab drivers) has smirked. Also, Mr. Chuvit is trying to run for public office, on the platform of being a watchdog for Thai decency and morals and culture. Jay told us that he puts huge billboards of himself all over Bangkok. We unwittingly are contributing to his advertising campaign! His marketing campaign for the hotel (which is on free postcards, and the calendar in the room, and everything) is "The Way We Live in the Davis, Bangkok." Living as a madam? Pimp?

Yesterday Kecia and I had gone to Siam Paragon to get cell phones and do some basic shopping, and today we headed over to SPAFA (our partner) to do some workshop business. Our partner Jay is wonderful (she also very kindly informed us the true nature of our hotel owner). She sent us out with her colleague Mo and a driver to do some shopping. We had thought we were being clever by not buying most of our supplies in the US, but instead planning to buy them in BKK. After all, BKK is sophisticated and a business capital of the world.

Not so much a capital of laser printer labels or flipcharts of white paper...our lovely friend Mo did the best she could do, with all five feet of her tiny adorable self leaning over various counters in her sparkly shoes and speaking rapid-fire Thai accompanied to hand motions ("big paper" "flip" "stick" "divide") but to no avail. We were met only with blank looks, not blank paper, and squiggly eyebrows. We are label-less, and our flipchart will be man-made. As in, large pieces of paper that we literally clip together. First class all the way, Getty.

As we drove the streets of Dusit and Phra Athit (n. Bangkok), we noted that many Thais were wearing black and white. I remembered from my visit last year that many Thais wore yellow polos with the royal crest on them. The Thais love them some king. Mo explained that the black and white is for mourning, and for 100 days. The King's sister, a beloved princess, passed away earlier this year, and there has been ordained 100 days of mourning, during which all government employees are required to wear black and white (for the rest of the population, it is merely a recommendation). The Royal Garden outside Wat Pra Keow is now a mourning ground, where mourners come to the royal palace to pay their respects to the princess. There are buses of students and country folk who come in, as well. It is difficult for me to imagine something similar in the US for a political figure or ruler - I cannot imagine us wearing black and white for 100 days as a nation to commemorate anyone...

Mo also told us as we passed the ministry of defense that originally all the canons decorating the carefully manicured lawn had been pointing out towards the street - and across the street at the Royal Palace. A few years ago, someone made a stink about it, saying it was inappropriate for even decorative canons to be hinting at firing at the King, so in the middle of the night the canons were turned, and now face north and south instead of west towards the palace. The idea of an army of tiny Thais grunting to turn canons 90 degrees in another direction in the middle of the night is hilarious to me.

Tonight, after braving an hour of traffic to at rush hour to cross the town from SPAFA to return to our hotel, Kecia and I stopped to have dinner at the Lemongrass restaurant, near the Emporium mall. It was amazing - we had a dish that was eggplant, yellow bean, and peanut, pomelo salad (well, Kecia did - I don't eat shrimp), and the spiciest green curry ever. Our waiter didn't tell us it was spicy - perhaps because Kecia is Asian he thought we were able to handle it? No. I thought my lips were actually burning off.


Now, I'm back in my hotel to finish up a few loose ends for the workshop while I watch Chinese MTV. (I know! I didn't know they were allowed to have MTV). The music here is so amazing - Kecia keeps making fun of me for knowing all the pop songs in malls, taxis, and lobbies - hey, a girl's gotta have some Backstreet Boys knowledge if she lived in Europe in the 90s, right? My choices are Chinese MTV and something called the Australia Network, which, when I watched ten minutes yesterday, was an instructional video on how to casually invite people to hang out with you, and featured a 50-something gentleman repeating phrases slowly and with subtitles. "Would you like to join us? It would be great if you could join us. Do you want to join us?" Since I already speak English I didn't find it super helpful, but it was interesting to see Western manners of hospitality reflected, detached from their standard cultural context.

Anyhow, meetings with UNESCO tomorrow, probably more shopping for things we won't find, and then finally some relief on the weekend - shopping at Jatujak, Wat Pho, massages. And hopefully more 3-flavor mangos to dip in chili sugar!

Sunday, November 21, 2010

From the Road: One Time in Bangkok

I’m coming up on a year of blogging, and looking back and trying to figure out what works and what doesn’t. When I initially started, I wanted to use the blog as a way to share my writing, both creative and academic. As life sort of happened (Lennon’s famous note about life happening while you’re busy making other plans, anyone?), I felt the pressure to blog and post but I want my posts to be worth reading rather than just numerous. As a result, I’ve started to edit some older pieces…so, here we go. I am now fairly critical of my early travelogues, as I don’t want to essentialize or exoticize the places I have been and the people I have met, but to share my experiences in an honest way. Let me know what you think.
April 2007
From Bangkok, Thailand, and Phnom Penh/Siem Reap, Cambodia

"This is my first time in Bangkok. When I landed and got in the car to drive through the brightly lit streets of Bangkok after midnight, I felt like this was so different from anywhere I’d ever been: Eastern, Western Europe – Turkey – Russia, I was wide awake. I was excited to see a part of the world I’d never seen before, and to visit my friend who was working on his Fulbright.
Hong lives on "Little Arabia Street" in Bangkok, so I was surprised to be able to read something (it is incredibly disorienting to lose your literacy). It was a last taste of something familiar, before a lot of unfamiliar. We toured Bangkok under Hong's brisk knowledge of every method of public transportation (including river ferries!) We visited Wat Arun, the temple of the Dawn, one of the oldest temples in Bangkok, as well as making it up to the Chatuchak market in the north of the city (where Thais shop). For most of the day, we didn't see many tourists or white people; because Hong had learned Thai, our experience was so different. We were off the beaten tourist track, and visiting spaces that were the spaces of Bangkok residents, not visitors. The next day, when we went to the famous backpacker's Khao San Road, we found them....all of tourists! I overheard backpackers talking about where to get the cheapest food, fighting to get 3 scarves for $5 instead of $2, arguing down to pennies with the Thai. Many of these tourists come to Bangkok and stay on Khao San Road, dealing with English-speaking Thais in the hospitality industry, meeting and hanging out with other white tourists (Australian, Kiwi, Brit, Canadian), drinking cheap Tiger beer and exchanging stories about where to get the “best” authentic street food or pashminas. In a way, there is a village of international tourists within the city of Bangkok, and they barely overlap. One is a village of long cotton skirts, dreads and braids, textile bags, and bragging about how long they’ve been off the grid; the other is a bustling, vibrant city, with incredible smells and tastes and people trying to make their way.


We also were surrounded by international tourists at the Vertigo bar at the Banyan Tree Hotel. Bangkok has a mix of very poor areas and very wealthy areas - there is a slum behind Hong's fingerprint-entry, 2-security-guard-patrolled apartment; there are food stalls where you can get meatball skewers, chili dipping sauce, and some mango slices for $1 and rooftop bars like the Vertigo (62nd floor!) where you can pay $10 for a (watered-down, if I may say so) martini. The Vertigo was amazing - to see all of Bangkok spread out at your feet at night, all lit up, the bridges over the Chao Phraya - it was breathtaking under a crescent moon (it was still 100 degrees at 10pm though).
We woke up early on Monday morning to make our flight to Phnom Penh, where we spent 3 days. Hong still has family there who stayed during the Khmer Rouge and subsequent Vietnamese communist occupation, so we got to meet his grandmother, aunt, and some random family members. After Bangkok, Phnom Penh seemed quiet. BKK has skyscrapers, it’s vertical, it’s buzzing with cars and activity and lights; Phnom Penh has no buildings (that I saw) over 5 stories and few "positive" tourist attractions. There is a Golden Palace and a Silver Pagoda, as well as Wat Phnom, but none are distinctive or historically significant enough to attract tourists en masse. What Phnom Penh does have is genocide - the Killing Fields, about 15 km from the city, and the S-21 Prison of the Khmer Rouge, now a museum. Somehow this sense of loss permeates the city. We visited both of these places, first taking our tuktuk out to the Killing Fields. It was incredibly difficult to see, because several placards clearly stated what each part of the field was used for ("Here a loudspeaker was hung to drown the sounds of the dying", "Here is the tree they flung the babies against", etc). There was no sugar-coating, no careful wording, no sanitized history. Also, only 4 of 20-something mass graves have been excavated...like the concentration camps of Germany, death hangs in this place, sitting in the humid air, stirring in the trees, pressing down from the sky. Afterwards, we sat quietly, our words sucked out of us, rattling along in our tuktuk as we drove through the outskirts of Cambodia’s capital city to go to the S-21 Museum. We hired a guide, who had herself lost members of her immediate family to the Khmer Rouge. She told us that none of the Khmer Rouge had stood trial for their crimes, and that many of them had come out of the jungle in the early 80s to take back power from the Vietnamese Communists...she said, "I do not want revenge, I want to move forward." Fellow traveler and Fulbright Sarah wondered if this was because Cambodians believed in karma - I want to be understanding and culturally sensitive, but it made me angry and sad to know that a quarter of the population of Cambodia was killed and that (my Western ideal of) justice would never be served...that someone got away with killing a quarter of his own people and making refugees out of another quarter of the population...and it scared me to think how close I came to never knowing Hong. His family survived the Khmer Rouge to live in Vietnamese labor camps, from which they escaped over the border at night into Thailand, and from there sought asylum in the United States. How many Hongs will the world never know? And in these circumstances, what is justice, and who has the right to ask for it? If a society holds other ideas of justice than “an eye for an eye,” do outsiders have the right to push for a different iteration of justice? Is there something to be learned from a desire to move forward, rather than holding accountabilities from the past?


That day was really heavy, and after our trek through Cambodia's darkest chapter, we met up with Hong's aunt for dinner. A sharp negotiator, she paid a few dollars for all 6 of us to pile onto a belabored tuktuk and headed across town to eat dinner in an alley cafe. An empty garage-like room, cruelly lit with fluorescent tubes, long picnic tables in plastic tablecloth had Bunsen burners with soup broth and meatballs cooking. The waitresses brought us bowls of noodles, pork crackling, vegetables, and more meat - we were literally to make our own soup. It was really good - but hot sitting on the updraft of the burner! Hong sat in the middle, with his family speaking Khmer and his English speaking friends waiting patiently for his back-and-forth translations! Hong's uncle (we think) kept toasting us, so, after my time in Cambodia, the only real Khmer word I know is "Swa-khum!" and I hope that means “Cheers.”


On Wednesday, we went for luscious breakfast crepes, topped with dazzling fresh fruit, down the street, dropped off Sarah at her volunteering gig, and then Hong, Razz, Jeremy and I rented a driver from our hotel to drive us up to Siem Reap, a four-hour drive through the jungle next to the Tonle Sap lake that marks the heart of Cambodia. It was a beautiful drive, allowing us to see much of the countryside we otherwise would not have seen. Most of the houses were built on stilts, because the Tonle Sap floods, but in the hot/dry season, the Khmers were relaxing during the day's heat in hammocks strung up between the stilts of their homes. We whizzed through the countryside in our black Mercedes (now, when I say Mercedes, I mean, the most broken down, seats-caving-toward-the center, pleather-seated, A/C "works" style car with a Mercedes doohickey on the hood you've ever seen), and stopped for a lunch break at a beautiful open-air restaurant built over the Tonle Sap. Here we had a chance to relax in the hammocks as we waited for our food, and overlook the lake with its fishermen and water lillies.
It was really beautiful, and after eating we relaxed in the hammocks over the lake, but the road was calling us north. We got to Siem Reap at 4pm or so, and checked into our hotel, the Golden Banana (of much fame at my job...apparently no one else at a commercial real estate firm would think of staying at a gay-friendly hotel in the jungle called the Golden Banana!). It was an oasis, with a POOL! I averaged 4 showers a day in Southeast Asia, because it is SO hot and sticky and it is hard to feel clean when you have only a certain number of clothes in your bag and the weather is that hot. So I nearly got on my knees in thanks to see a pool. We freshened up, and then Hong, Razz and I went to the Angkor Mondiale hotel for dinner and a performance by some Apsara dancers. These women were incredible - wearing these intense and detailed costumes, and then standing almost still, moving only their hands and fingers in these complex and joint-defying movements! Afterwards, we went back to the pool and dove in to cool off before bed. We ended up hitting the sack fairly early so we could wake up and be at Angkor by 7am.
Angkor, oh Angkor...long on my list of places I have to see before I die, I still wasn't prepared for its beauty. It was such a contrast to see Cambodia's darkest past, and then two days later, to see Khmer civilization's pinnacle of accomplishment! Our tuktuk drove us to the gate, where foreigners pay $20/day to get in (there is no entry restriction for Cambodians, who literally drive right past the toll booth), and then we drove up to the first temple, Angkor Wat. Angkor itself is a 400-km park, with so many temples you could buy a week-long pass and still not see them all. A bunch of Khmer kings decided to build temples up there, so there are at least 20 "big" temples, and more yet undiscovered in the jungle. We came around the side of Angkor, next to the moat, and I couldn't believe it....Angkor is stunning in its size. The outer wall, inside the moat, is imposing...and then you walk through the gate (careful not to step on the monkeys, though) and all of a sudden you see the classic view of Angkor, with the beehive towers...and the sun is rising behind it. And even if you think you're going to get through it just fine, you find your breath catching in your throat and maybe (if you're like me) you tear up. It is incredible to me that this amazing temple has survived reigns both Hindu and Buddhist, has survived 1000 years of life in the jungle, survived the Khmer Rouge's plundering of Cambodia’s cultural heritage...and as Phnom Penh is haunted by its terrible past, in a way that the visitor can feel palpably, Angkor Wat overwhelms, it gives you goosebumps. You feel profoundly, immediately, that you are on holy ground, and that changes how you come to these temples. There is a quieting, a calming – you feel yourself small in comparison to this magnificent, enormous and imposing temple complex that has outlasted so much.
We walked up into the heart of the temple and climbed up into the central tower. This may sound easy, but it is not for the faint of heart (the American idea of “sue them if you get hurt” does not apply here; the safety industry hasn’t quite taken off). The stairs up to the central tower are tiny, half-stairs; the top half of my foot only fit on a stair at once. These steps are not built for fat white tourists who eat Big Macs. Or for wussy little girls who are afraid of heights! I admit I had a rough time coming down - looking at giant flat rocks just waiting for me pancake myself was a bit intimidating. But the view from the top was worth the climb...you can look out over the jungle, and see the perfect symmetry of the temple. There are several Buddhas up there (it is completely unfathomable how those ponderous Buddhas got up there, just from a physics perspective, and Angkor Wat was constructed as a Hindu temple, as the Hindu bas-reliefs on the outer walls attest, from an ideological perspective). Attending the Buddhas were several monks, who seemed to have no trouble on the stairs (the key is a sideways walk, it seems).
On our way out, after about 3 hours, we saw a group of monks removing a tree from one of the reflecting pools outside the temple. It seemed incongruous to see a monk wielding a buzz saw, dismembering a tree! Perhaps because the act was so destructive, but I admit trouble reconciling priests with modern tools, like chain saws.
We then got back on our tuktuk and headed up to the temple of Bayon, with all its faces staring ominously into the forest...smaller, and in a bit more disarray than Angkor Wat, but still beautiful...and then lunch and Ta Prohm, the "Tomb Raider" temple, and one of the few that has been completely abandoned to nature...so you climb over tree trunks and vines and giant fallen stones. The jungle seems to be slowly encroaching on the temple, but that just renders it more beautiful. There is no "path", so you carefully pick your own. I felt like an intruder, and worried about tourists coming to deface the temples or destroy them with their shoes, boots, knives, breath. As I gingerly picked my way through the cluttered maze of stones and trees, I entered into a doorway and blinked my eyes in the darkness. An old Buddhist nun came into view, and then a seated Buddha, and some lit incense sticks...she grabbed my arm and said a prayer over me, and tied a red bracelet on me. I couldn't help but smile; her smile as she tied my bracelet on was so encouraging, generous.
After Angkor, we prepared to return to Thailand. Friday saw us get on a plane and head back to Bangkok, where we hit the Southern Bus Terminal (Hong's "You have to do a bus trip if you come to SE Asia; it's required" echoing in our ears) and hopped a $4, 1st-class bus trip out to Hua Hin, a beach resort town. Perhaps because I hadn't gotten sick yet and it was inevitable or perhaps because we had the foolish idea to eat dinner in an American restaurant, both Razz and I got horribly sick, to the dismay of Hong, who shared our hotel room. I spent my final day in Thailand curled up in our hotel room, under the gently blowing (read: intermittently functional) A/C and watching Thai pop music and Al-Jazeera Asia. Another bus trip back to Bangkok, a quick shower and the final cramming of the bags, and I was back at Suwarnapum Airport, headed home."