April 2007

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Or Myanmar. Maybe both. OK, just Myanmar. The visa came through without a problem and I’m flying out early tomorrow morning. (First, I’m going to spend the night in the airport, something I’ve always wanted to do. Expect many photos from my not-quite-fixed-but-it-will-have-to-do camera. Does anyone have a Nikon D40 that they don’t want?)

I don’t take the decision to visit Myanmar lightly. Conscientiousness will be my 18-letter buzzword. So will forethoughtfulness.

Also, antiferromagnetism. And of course, gedankenexperiment.

Seriously, I’ve thought a lot about it. Ultimately it’s a selfish decision–I just really want to go to Myanmar because it seems so different from anywhere I’ve ever been. I’ve met Burmese immigrants here and they’ve encouraged me to go. Other travelers have said it’s been a highlight of their trips. How not to do damage; how to try to shift the balance to positive, or at least neutral? Is it possible? I know that tourism can help some people there on a one-to-one basis. There are also volunteering opportunities; I’ve already been in e-mail contact with a Burmese guide who can arrange this. Any thoughts/suggestions/information welcome.

A few Myanmar links:

Daw Aung San Suu Kyi (The Nobel laureate and leading voice discouraging travel to Burma.)
Free Burma Coalition (Another viewpoint, from an anti-boycott group.)
The Irrawaddy
Mizzima News
Burma News International
BurmaNet News
The Burma Project
UNICEF Myanmar
The Myanmar Times (state-run)

My return flight to Bangkok is on May 21st. Internet access should be no problem in Yangon and Mandalay and other more-visited sites; beyond that, I’m not sure.

As I was passing one of the many clothes/assorted junk/used CD street vendors in the Khao San Rd. orbit last night, I noticed the CD of some Finnish guys I know from New York. I did a double-take and ended up getting into a conversation with the vendor, A. (I’m not doing the Victorian-era literary conceit this time. That was his name. He later introduced his younger brother as B.). He and his friends seemed cool and they invited me to join them for a beer on the sidewalk. After a few minutes, A. turned and offered me a 7-11 Big Gulp cup. “Here, I want you to try this,” he said. It was very cold. I took a tiny sip to be polite. “Do you know this?” he asked. “It’s called . . . it’s called . . .”

“Sure, it’s a Slurpee,” I said. “They have these in America, too.”

A., however, was still finishing his sentence, looking for the word. “It’s called . . . methadone.”

Dang, they have everything at 7-11.

thomasdanny.jpg
“No more methadone-laced Slurpees for you, young man!!”

I’ve worked out a way to compress and post the videos I’ve shot on my camera. There aren’t many, and they’re not of very high quality, but I’ll upload a few and dump them on the new Videos page. Now that I know how to get vids on the site I want to shoot more–when I get my camera back, that is. I dropped it off last week at a big chain electronics store in the MBK Center in Bangkok, and was happily surprised when they returned it all fixed in a couple of days. I soon discovered, however, that in fixing one problem they created another; I could move my lens again, but they screwed up the the autofocus.

I’m supposed to pick it up tomorrow; I’m also scheduled to receive my visa to Myanmar. We shall see. Neither the Myanmar embassy or the PowerBuy superstore left me soaring on wings of confidence. PS Can we take up a collection to buy an air conditioner for the Myanmar embassy? In the meantime, I’ve posted many new photos–all of which were shot post-accident and thus at the same middle-distance focal length. It was an interesting challenge to take pictures without relying on zoom or wide-angle. I leave it to you to judge the results.

The first video is 1:48 of young monks chanting at a wat in Luang Prabang. . . .

Again. Songkran (April 13-15) was the second New Year in two months that I’ve celebrated in Bangkok. And just when I was getting used to 4705. Well, Happy 2550 everyone.

Songkran is a kind of karmic spring cleaning; traditionally, houses are tidied up, Buddha statues are washed and doused with lustral water at the temples, and elders’ hands are sprinkled with water in a sign of respect and renewal.

Songkran Songkran

Practically, though, Songkran has turned into an insane, multi-day, nationwide water fight. Everyone, young and old, is in on it, armed with water pistols, cannons, buckets, and hoses, as well as plaster made from talcum powder. There is no escape. In Bangkok, the water festival went on for four days straight; in Chiang Mai, Songkran is said to last a week or longer. It was fun for a couple of days, this drenching and getting drenched, but by the fourth day I had hung up my water pistols like a grizzled Clint Eastwood character and just stayed inside my guesthouse. No more damn water.

Songkran Songkran

Can you even begin to imagine what a disaster this festival would be in the US?

Das ist the title of a trashy-looking German novel I saw lying around in a guest house a while back.

Well, I too am alone with the angst here in Bangkok. L. has returned to Germany, and I am temporarily camera-less. (I dropped my Kodak P880 off to get repaired and won’t have it for a week or so–it was functional but the lens was stuck in one position after the big moto crash.)

What to say about L.? It’s hard to describe, and still hard to believe, how intensely our paths collided and converged, how much we experienced together over such a short time. As she wrote to me when she got home, it’s like sharing a secret that neither of us can ever fully explain.

Read the rest of this entry »

disembarking-good.jpgAfter three days on Koh Phangan (more to say about this place), and four more on Koh Tao (not so much to say here–it was beautiful and touristy; I snorkeled but did not dive), L. and I decided to stop off at a seaside resort town called Prachuap Khiri Khan on our way to Bangkok.

From Koh Tao we booked passage to the port city of Chumphon on the last ferry of the night–a rusting hulk used primarily to transport cars. Cramped, split-level sleeping quarters offered mean accomodations (the name “Golden Venture” popped into my mind.) Restless and hot, I wandered out to the back–er, stern–of the ship. There I espied a ladder and climbed onto the roof (which I think may be correctly called the poop deck?!? I hope so.) It was empty and I went back down to retrieve L.

We laid out on the rusty steel deck, she with a tire for a pillow, me with a bunched-up towel, and looked up at one of the biggest, most beautiful night skies I’ve ever seen. The moon shone brightly in its last quarter. Shooting stars streaked overhead and darted at the corners of my eyes. The only sounds were the thrum of the ship’s engine and the churn of the water being left in our wake. Single port and starboard lights glowed red and green, and a red siren light turned silently between them.

As we we made our way across the Gulf of Thailand, I suddenly thought that there was nowhere else on earth that I’d rather be. I wouldn’t have traded that view, that moment, that unyielding steel beneath me for the most comfortable bed in the most expensive hotel room in the most exotic place in the world. This is why I wanted to travel, I thought. This moment and this place, right now. An unexpected euphoria swept across me like a breeze.

temple-and-sky.jpg

From Chumphon, we caught a bus five hours north to Prachuap Khiri Khan. In total contrast to the island beaches we’d just left, Prachuap struck me instantly with its faded fishing-town charm. It’s visited primarily by Thais; there were hardly any other farangs around. We took a room at the Suk Sant Hotel, an early 60’s concrete-and-plaster behemoth painted bright yellow, tangerine, and electric lime. Of course, I couldn’t have liked it any more, although this is as much a function of my idiosyncracies as it is an objective commentary on the hotel’s standard. Still, I can say it was fairly cheap (390 baht for a double room), and we did have a balcony looking right over the bay.

As if its slightly sad and lonesome seaside charm weren’t enough, Prachuap Khiri Khan also has monkeys. Hundreds of them. They rule a mountain in the center of town (called Magic Mirror Mountain), which features a temple, Wat Thammikaram, at its peak. For more than a moment I thought maybe I had invented this magical and wonderful place.

(I have to say, though, much as it pains me: one relatively tame monkey is cute; dozens of them scurrying around and shrieking and ripping your friend’s 7-11 bag open and baring their teeth and stalking towards you menacingly–I didn’t like this as much. On the way up the mountain to the temple, there were a couple of covered sitting areas that were honestly frightening to walk through. The monkeys were just hanging around like a bunch of bored, menacing 1950s juvenile delinquents. I had to stomp and yell “NO!” in a deep caveman-like voice a couple of times to ward off an aggressive advance.)

boat-and-anchor.jpg

Other things Prachuap Khiri Khan had going for it in my book were a run-down and almost empty funfair, and a strange outdoor Thai costume drama performance which seemed largely improvised and featured malfunctioning microphones, children wandering on stage, loud bursts of feedback, and a man who looked like the Thai David Bowie wearing a scout uniform.

Also, the town is home to a Royal Thai Air Force base, Wing 53, right on the beach. During World War II, the Japanese invaded Prachuap Khiri Khan the day after they bombed Pearl Harbor.

Walking on the beach, L. and I watched fisherman repairing their colorful boats and nets, and noticed the slow-motion trails thousands of hermit crabs were leaving in the wet sand. We wandered the streets with their salt-worn wooden homes; in places it almost looked like a New England fishing town. Every meal we had was excellent: fresh seafood in curry soup, whole fish–a cottonfish covered in garlic at one meal, a sweet-and-sour seabass at another. I could have stayed for a few more days, but Bangkok and the Songkran festival and L.’s plane awaited.

postcard2.jpg

I had a bad feeling about this place.

hand

 I’ve been a little under the weather the past few days; I don’t know whether it’s all the Mekong River water I ingested while swimming, or the monkey bite, or just the air quality in Southeast Asia, which, as I think I mentioned, is lethal. Northern Thailand was declared a disaster area a few weeks ago, and the haze over the region is the worst in 14 years.

monkey
(This monkey really did bite me, by the way, but he didn’t break the skin and he only did it because he was scared and he is still my future sidekick.)

Anyway, I find myself back in Bangkok. Wha? The day before yesterday, in Don Det, I changed my mind 3 times within a couple of hours about where I going. First, I wanted to take a bus to Phnom Penh. Then I decided to stay another couple of days in Laos, in a city called Pakse, to recuperate a bit. Then, on the minibus to Pakse, I overheard people talking about the beaches and islands of Thailand and decided to follow my friend L. there for a week or so. (We’re heading down to Koh Phangan on an overnight train later today). I’m starting to feel like the electron in a quantum physics demonstration. But I really do like the idea that instead of choosing among, say, baked, mashed, or french fries, I was choosing which of three countries I wanted to be in.

One thing that didn’t factor into the decision at all was travel time. I can’t believe how accustomed I’ve become to insanely long bus rides–something like 8 or 9 hours is starting to sound short to me.

It’s rare that the reality of travel meets your expectations, especially when those expectations are founded upon some of the most tired and obvious stereotypes. But riding the buses across a poor, developing country like Laos really lived up to everything I imagined. Foggy bus rideI crossed the Annamite mountain range three times, and in addition to the previously-mentioned blind curves on high mountain passes, we had: flat tires; overheated engines; comical, clown car-like overcrowding, with passengers sitting in the aisle on tiny plastic chairs; frequent stops to deliver mail and run errands; live animals on board; hill-tribe villagers throwing up; impenetrable fog high in the mountains; and oh so much more. It was both funny, and truly scary. At some point during each ride, fear was tangible; it was another presence in my body, limp and white, like ectoplasm from old seance photographs.

What to do in such cases but be a good Buddhist and accept your fate? Traveling makes the balance between volition and chance so much more obvious than it is in everyday life. You choose to get on a bus, or go to Thailand instead of Cambodia and you set a series of events in motion that you soon recognize you have very little control over. It’s like some kind of crazy story with 40 possible endings or something.

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