May 2008


Xin chao (hello) from Vietnam! I’ve already been here for 14 days and time is FLYIN’- must mean I’m having fun! I flew into Hanoi, the capital, located way up in the north, relatively close to China. I spent my first day there learning some Vietnamese basics (I always try and learn “hello” and “thank you” as my passport is getting stamped) and tasting some local specialties- always my favorite part of getting to a new country. The coffee here is fantastic. They brew it fresh right in front of you on the table and add the most delicious sweetened condensed milk. I like it best over ice (made from bottled water, of course). I’m sure it’s terrible for you, which explains why it’s sooo good.
The day after arriving, I left on a tour to Ha Long Bay, a UNESCO world heritage site three hours north of Hanoi, filled with thousands of limestone islands jutting out from the ocean. I boarded my junk (my junk is you…inside joke for Spring Awakening nerds), which is really a wooden Chinese sailboat. There were six other people on my boat- all around my age and all backpacker types. We got along perfectly! We spent the day tanning on the sun-deck (we had gorgeous weather), exploring the ‘amazing’ cave, and swimming and kayaking around the little islands. Our guide told us some very interesting information about Vietnamese burial rituals. After a family member dies, the family will bury them. Sounds normal enough, right? Well, after 3 years, the oldest son in the family has to dig up the deceased and move their skeleton (with all the bones lined up correctly) to a new burial site. This is to give the person in heaven a new home. Sometimes, if the person had a lot of skin on their bones aka they’re a little chubby, there would be more than just skeleton left, but they’d have to move them anyway. This is because people rent their burial spots from the govt and they only give 3 year leases on the land in bigger cities! Can you imagine having to do that? They also burn ‘heaven money’ (not real money) for the deceased to use in heaven. Very interesting indeed. Anyway, I slept on board that night in a very cozy room filled with some baby cockroaches and sadly had to leave around noon the next day to get back to Hanoi. I definitely could have used another day, at least, in that magical place.
That night I met up with my junk friends for pizza and beer (they had Stella Artois!) and some good conversation. This German guy and I had a very interesting discussion about being an American in Vietnam or being German in many places around the world, due to the monstrosities caused by our respective countries. It’s a really strange feeling, because obviously I am not responsible for the Vietnam War (or the American War as they call it here), nor was I even born during it’s run, but I somehow do end up telling the Vietnamese people that I’m an American with a twinge of guilt in my voice. He said he felt the same way when he visited Poland. Only one moto driver has made a comment to me about the war (he just informed me that he fought in it when he was 19, but nothing negative) and some have even said, “I love America!!,” but it still makes me feel weird.
The next day I had some cheap prescription lenses put into my cheap Moschino glasses frames that I bought in Thailand and caught a traditional water puppet show. The puppets are really incredible and the show is all performed in a pool of water, but the lady in front of me was being obnoxious and kept blocking my view, so it ruined things a bit. My favorite way to get around town is by xe om, or motorbike taxi. Basically, you hop aboard someone’s motorbike and they drive you to your destination for less than $1. Don’t worry Mom, they give you a helmet. It was pretty scary at first, though now i love it, and I always hold onto the driver’s shoulders, but it’s such a rush to be caught in the middle of the zooming traffic and a wonderful way to experience the true local way of getting around the city. I’ve heard that the motorbike traffic in Ho Chi Minh City aka Saigon is out of this world and it’s nearly impossible to cross the street. I can’t imagine it being any crazier than Hanoi, so am excited for that experience. At 8:30pm that evening, I caught a train to Sapa, 11 hours north of Hanoi. The ticket was really pricey, but I splurged for the ‘luxury’ cabin after hearing two accounts of people having their luggage/passports/money stolen from the normal train cabins. And luxurious it was- the wooden cabin housed 4 beds, comfortably spaced apart, with free water, coffee/tea, snack, A/C, door with lock, and a cozy pillow and comforter!
Sapa is known for its gorgeous mountainous scenery against green, lush, terraced landscapes and the presence of hill-tribes and their handicrafts. When I got off the bus, it was pouring rain and so foggy that I couldn’t see two inches in front of my face. I’ve never seen fog like this is my life. Anyway, a man came on board and told me that I was at the hotel where I’d booked and I went inside and noticed that the name of the hotel was not the same as the one I’d booked. The receptionist mumbled something about this being the same one and I was so tired that I decided to stay, even though I was totally weaseled into staying there. That was the first time I let myself get scammed like that this whole trip! Oh well. It was a gorgeous room for $4, so who am I to complain?
I braved the blinding fog and pouring rain to explore the Sapa market. The handicrafts are pretty cool- lots of very bright colors and embroidered patterns, but unfortunately the dye runs all over the place, making the tribe women’s hands and arms a mix of green and blue. The most interesting part of the market was where they sold the food.
First off, I kind of veered off the tourist path and walked through a village and was watching a lady kill chickens. She first broke their neck and threw them into a little pile (they were dead, but still moving) and then put them in a huge pot of boiling water and de-feathered them. The feathers came off really easily- I guess because of the hot water? Then she put them in a GRINDER!!!!!! It was vomit-worthy to say the least. It was just blood and guts and gore coming out the other end. Yuck. So then, in the actual food market, they have horse heads(complete with eyes,fur and teeth), horse hoofs with the fur still on the toes, but then the leg is just bone, pig feet and pig heads, tons of whole chickens, just de-feathered, and the kicker was a CAT. The poor cat was just hanging from a rope, with it’s fur still on and everything, only the eyes were gorged out. It was awful. The locals were trying to make me touch it and were laughing at me for being so grossed out. Guess they do eat cat here! Dogs too, as I found out the next day at the Bac Ha Market, 3 hours north of Sapa. This market had even more tribes than in Sapa selling their goods and a live animal market. They were selling live pigs, ox, and dogs. I couldn’t believe it. Unfortunately, despite what I wanted to believe, these animals were being sold for food.
A new friend told me this very interesting story about a Indian Hindu student who conducted an ‘experiment’ at a university in the States. He made up some Chinese restaurant letterhead and on it wrote to all of the dog pounds in his town asking for all of their dogs. As expected, he got hundreds of hate mail and calls. He responded by saying how, as a Hindu, he has to walk past McDonald’s on a daily basis proclaiming, “One Billion Served” of the animal that Hindus worship, so it’s really all about perspective. We think of dogs as man’s best friend and we put them up on a pedestal, but I suppose, as much as it PAINS me to say this, fair game to people who need to eat them to survive.
Anyway, I got back to Hanoi the next morning and met up with my Swedish friend Emma from Chiang Mai and it was great to have a little reunion. That afternoon, I flew to Hoi An, which tops the list for best destination in Vietnam for many a traveler. Hoi An is the town for “walkers and primitive vehicle users,” which basically means it’s all motos and bicycles and a rare taxi or bus every now and then. It was very refreshing to get a break from the mad traffic. I spent nearly all of my time ordering clothes and shoes to be tailored for me. It was heavenly. Basically, you go into a shop (there are thousands, at least!) and either tell them what you want based on pictures you have or based on examples they have in the window. Then they take your measurements in about 30 seconds and tell you to come back 8 hours later to pick up your garment. It’s incredible how fast the whole process is! In the end, I had a bunch of different tailors make me 6 dresses, 2 jackets, 5 shirts, 3 pairs of shoes and 1 pair of boots and I was there for three days. I really like most of the stuff, though the shoes aren’t that great. While walking around town, I noticed a great abundance of chihuahuas! They are everywhere and seem very out of place.
On my last day, I rented a bicycle and rode all over town, soaking up the tranquility. I journeyed the 6km to the beach and back. All of the Vietnamese ladies on the beach cover themselves up from head to toe. Literally, the only part of skin showing on their entire bodies are their eyes. They wear gloves, socks, jackets, pants, hats and “SARS masks” over their nose and mouths and must be boiling in the 90 degree heat, but I bet it’s to keep their skin fair.
To get to my next destination of Mui Ne 20 hours south of Hoi An, I opted for the normal sitting bus, as opposed to the sleeper bus.  A of all, it was cheaper. B of all, and most importantly, I was traumatized from that sleeper bus that Dee and I took in India from Hampi to Goa.  It wasn’t too bad. The first 11 hours flew by (and when I say flew by, I really mean it was horrible and painful) and I made a friend on the second half of the trip, which is always nice.
Mui Ne is a beach town with a really strange set up. Everything, all hotels, restaurants, and bars are in a 10km strip along the ocean, which makes it difficult to get around and see everything, unless you get moto rides everywhere. I took advantage of my clean air-conditioned, cable-tv’d room and had lots of lazy time. It was WONDERFUL! One morning, I was feeling ambitious and I woke up at 4:30am and hired a moto driver to take me 10 km out of town to see the sunrise from the red sand dunes. It was really beautiful and I got to see that pink sky that I love so much.  He also took me even further out of town to see the white sand dunes, which were spectacular! I befriended these two little kids and they let me use their sand sled to slide down a dune. I was a little scared and pictured myself flying down the hill at 60mph, but it was more like 1mph- very pathetic. The 11 year old girl turned out to be an amazing photographer and took all these cool shots of me on the sand. I gave them some delish mini bananas as a thank you.
One thing to note is that I have suprisingly encountered a few extremely rude people in this country, which is bizarre, because other than the horrible taxi drivers in Bangkok, everyone I usually meet is overly friendly.  It’s not just me either,  every traveler I meet has the same experiences.  I’m not really sure what the deal is, but I’m not a fan of the rudeness. Of course, not everyone is like that at all! There are so many wonderful people going out of their way to help, but I just have encountered more than the usual levels of rudeness here in ‘Nam than anywhere else I’ve visited.
Anyway, today I finally made it down to Saigon where the heat is on (more musical theatre references for ya) and tomorrow I am meeting up with Emily, one of my all-time favorite people from TWC! CANNOT WAIT!!!
Also, I uploaded the start of my Vietnam pics. My jillylawrence photo site was full, so started a new one under my fake travel name of Julia Rye. The link is on the right, nevertheless.
xox and see you all in about a month!

Hello Singapore! After catching up on the latest movies in KL, I hopped on a bus to cross the border  into Singapore. It was a hell of a lot easier than the bus from Chile to Argentina- this one only took about 5 minutes and was a cinch. I’ve heard lots of hellish stories about people having to pay bribes in order to get their entrance stamp or visas, which is why I’ve been flying across most borders. I’ve been lucky.

While in Malaysia, millions of bed bugs decided they wanted to be my best friends. They wouldn’t leave me alone and decided it’d be fun to sleep with me and ride around town all day on my clothes. Talk about clingy! No, seriously, it was absolutely awful. Their favorite area to munch on was my face- I looked like a 12 year-old with major acne after they finished their feast. Besides how awful I looked, the bites itched like crazy. They were way worse than mosquito bites simply because there was no relief. No matter which creams I applied or how much/little I scratched, the itching didn’t cease for 5 days. NOT FUN! The bites were also all over the rest of my body, but I was mostly concerned with the ones on my face. I stayed in three different rooms at that hostel too, so I guess the entire place was infected, even after they claimed they’d fumigated the joint. They wouldn’t give me any money back either because they insisted it wasn’t their fault. After doing 2 loads of laundry and making my way to Singapore, the bites finally began to subside and are all gone now. I repeat, NOT FUN, but very happy my new bug friends finally decided to ditch me.

Luckily, my hostel in Singapore was bed-bug free and in a central location by this big Mosque on Arab Street. I ended up spending a lot of my time with my Japanese pen-pal Shizuka. I met Shizuka in New Zealand at a hostel in Queenstown in 2005 and we only talked for a few hours in person, but have kept in touch via email ever since. She had moved to Singapore a few months prior to live with her Canadian boyfriend Neil. We spent a day at Sentosa Island, which is this little Disneyland-esque piece of land about 2 minutes away from Singapore itself, complete with fake sand beaches, foam pool parties, and the most southern part of continental Asia. We enjoyed tea poured by the local “tea-master” from a golden pot with a 4 foot long spout, drank some Tiger Beer (made in Singapore), and did some luge-ing down a hill on little sleds. That night, Neil and Shizuka took me to Newton Circus to try some Singaporean specialties from the hawker stalls (basically a giant food court). If you’re alone, you have to find a seat, mark your place with a non-valuable item (most Singaporeans use a pack of tissues or water bottle), go get your food and return to your saved seat, in hopes that no one stole your place or your tissues! I learned the hard way that if you get your food first, you end up wandering around for a good part of an hour trying to find an empty spot with a tray full of boiling soup. 

During my long weekend in Singapore, I tried the following: avocado mousse topped with strawberry ice cream, an avocado/coconut milk shake, Eight Treasures Chinese tea, stingray, and lots of carrot cake (neither carrot nor cake, but actually made from radishes I believe). There’s actually a film at Cannes now called Conversations over Carrot Cake, which was made in Singapore.  

That night, 3 more of Shiz/Neil’s friends joined us at Newton Circus and we searched for a bowling alley for 3 hours and finally concluded that they simply don’t exist in the city/country. We settled for a few games of pool and I stayed out ’til the wee hours of the morning. It was SO nice to have a group of friends to play with!!

The next afternoon, I took the MRT to Orchard Rd to check out the shopping scene. I was way too overwhelmed by the ubiquitous malls. They were EVERYWHERE and all GIGANTIC. I love shopping, but this was just too much. Plus, nothing was cheaper than I’d get at home, so I didn’t make any purchases. I met up with Shizuka and Neil for Moroccan food and a pot of delish mint tea that night and then headed off to Vietnam the next day!

Overall, Singapore IS very very very clean. There are garbage cans on every corner with signs proclaiming, “Singapore- litter free.” The fines for littering are huge. People aren’t even allowed to bring this smelly fruit called durian onto the trains and busses. Of course I asked about the no-gum chewing rumors. Turns out, you are allowed to chew gum…if you can get your hands on it. It is illegal to sell gum there, but if you happen to have it from someplace else, I guess you’re allowed to chew away. Even though I did have some delicious blackcurrant mint gum from Thailand, I didn’t want to risk getting my ass caned!

I think it was really good for me to spend a few days in such a modern country. Being in a place so much like home totally revitalized me for my last month abroad.

I added a link to my Singapore pics in the blogroll.

xo

 

I arrived in the capital of Cambodia, Phnom Penh, early in the morning and got to work right away on seeing the sights. After lunch, I hired a tuk-tuk driver to take me to The Killing Fields and Tuol Sleng Museum of Genocide. Basically, from 1975-1979 the Khmer Rouge, with Pol Pot as their sociopath leader, killed around 2 million Cambodians (no one knows the exact figures).  One of the Khmer Rouge’s mottos was: To keep you is no benefit. To destroy you is no loss.

The killing fields is the area where they actually did the killing. It wasn’t too interesting to see…since it was mostly just a large field with signs indicating where different things were during the genocide times. There is this there bone memorial, which is this huge Khmer style temple/building stacked high with real skulls of the victims that they dug up when the camp was liberated by the Vietnamese in 1980. Isn’t it fascinating that this went on so recently to our lifetime? It’s just crazy. I don’t think that many people my age even knows about it back home. I had no clue before I first came to Cambodia in ‘04. Crazy. Anyway, to save bullets, the Khmer would just smack people over the head with clubs. Or they’d get their kicks from throwing babies into the air and kicking them them. UGH. it’s really just too awful for words. Sorry to be depressing!!

After the ‘fields,’ the museum was even worse. This is an old school that the Khmer turned into a place for torture. Since this happened so recently,  many of the tools of torture are still in tact and laid out for viewing along with photos of the dismembered bodies on which the instruments were actually used. There is also lots of  clothing, along with the victim’s skulls and bones. It all reminded me a bit of going to  Auschwitz. The eeriest part was the haunting photographs of nearly everyone who entered. There were also many photos of the Khmer soldiers, many who  were young boys and girls, as young as 12 years-old. They joined so they wouldn’t starve or be killed like everyone else. For record keeping purposes the Khmer soldiers also took pics of the dead and tortured victims so they could prove to Pol Pot that they were doing a good job. Those pictures are there too, in all their bloody horror. While walking around, I just kept thinking I was literally stepping in blood. It was seriously beyond AWFUL. Our tour guide’s father, brother and 1 sister were killed during Pol Pot’s time.  She, her mom and other sister only survived because they walked into Vietnam as refugees. Did you know the the US bombed the shit out of Cambodia too? Yep- during the Vietnamese War- or as they call it over here- the American War. The name makes sense I guess since they weren’t at war with themselves. The US was trying to get the Vietnamese soldiers out of hiding in Cambodia, and it seems that they couldn’t care less about what it would do to an uninvolved nation. Okay, enough about the horrors I saw in Phnom Penh.

The next day I travelled down to the coast to a little beach town called Sihanoukville and stayed there four days.  I laid out by the beach as much as possible, but it was awfully rainy, so I did a lot of reading and going to the ‘cinema,’ which was fantastic. This American guy had set up a huge screen in a room with couches and ottomans and comfy chairs and projected dvds onto the screen. He played three movies a night and I saw at least one every night. One night I watched The Killing Fields, which was nominated for Best Picture at the 1984 Oscars.  It was very moving, especially watching it in the country where it took place. I got a little bored there, being friendless still and all,  so decided to head back up to Siem Reap to revisit the temples of Angkor a second time.

On the 11 hour bus journey, I met a Dutch guy named Ron and finally had a new friend! At the bus terminal in Siem Reap, I picked up another- a Belgian lady named Leila. The three of us stayed at the same place and hired a tuk-tuk to go ‘temple-ing’ the next morning, starting with surnise at Angkor Wat. Our pick-up was at 5am and it was too cloudy to actually see the sunrise, but still great seeing Angkor Wat in that beautiful dawn light. This is what it is supposed to look like at sunrise (not my pic and not what I saw): angkor wat at sunrise

The entrance fee for one day around Angkor is $20, more than the Taj Mahal! Just a random FYI- they use US $ in Cambodia, just like in Ecuador. There are such random countries that use our currency.

Anyway, I’m so happy that I went back to the temples.  My Godmother Linda passed away soon after our trip to Thailand and Cambodia in a Scuba diving accident, so going back makes me feel closer to her- especially since the places are so spiritual. I did the “Little Circuit” from 5am-4pm and only saw a few of the 70 temples/monuments of Angkor, including Angkor Wat, Angkor Thom, Bayon (my favorite one with the faces), Elephant Gate, Ta Phrohm (aka Tomb Raider  temple), Chau Say Tevoda, and Elephant Terrace. It was especially exhausting in the heat and humidity, but since it’s currently low-season in Asia, we had some of the temples to ourselves!

The next day I made a spontaneous decision and booked flights to visit Malaysia and Singapore for 10 days and pushed back my flight to Vietnam by 3 days. Those countries were in the original plan, but since I’d cancelled my flight from Singapore to Indonesia, I thought I would just stay in Thailand, Cambodia, Laos (which I won’t make it to), and Vietnam. Ron was heading to Malaysia on May 2nd, and I decided to join him to check it out and stopover in Singapore for a few days too.

That evening, I saw an ad on a tuk-tuk for Raja Yoga and a free hour meditation session so decided to check it out. I thought it would be yoga, as in the postures, but turns out that Raja Yoga is more a type of guided meditation. Yoga actually means “union,” but my mind is just so trained to assume it always means “exercise.”  After the calming session, I asked the Aussie lady running the place what I should do on my last day in Siem Reap and she suggested teaching English at this local school. So that’s what I did!

Ron and I arrived at the school at 8:30 the next morning and stayed until 11am, teaching and playing with the children who ranged from age 3-16. The school is comprised of 3 classrooms with the children separated by skill-level, as opposed to age. There they teach the poorest children in all of Siem Reap and lots of orphans as well who live with the nuns on the school grounds. I visited all of the different classrooms and helped the teachers wih the lesson plans. The teachers hardly spoke any English, so how the hell were they teachingit to the kids? I definitely give them major props for doing their job for probably very litle money. It was difficult jumping right in and teaching because I had no idea what system they used to learn and couldn’t tell if what I was saying was actually sticking with the kids or not. Plus, it was my very first time teaching anything to anyone. We sang a few songs (If You’re Happy and you Know it and Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes) and learned a few phrases in the classroom, but recess time was the best. I taught about 60 kids “duck, duck, goose” and they LOVED it! I don’t think I’ll become a teacher anytime soon, but it was an extremely rewarding experience and I’d love to participate in another volunteer teaching day somewhere in Vietnam. Definitely the highlight of Cambodia for me.

On May 2nd, I flew to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, where I am right now.  KL, as the locals call it, is a big, modern city filled with mega-mall complexes and yummy street food. I was originally planning to travel around Malaysia and possibly go to an island for some snorkelling or the jungle for some canopy-walking and trekking, but ended up just staying here. I’ve really been enjoying being back in a modern city and have seen five movies, so far, since I’ve been here- Lars and the Real Girl (***1/2), Iron Man- at the Imax- (***), Street Kings (**1/4), Fool’s Gold(*) and Over Her Dead Body(*). Today starts the French Film Festival here so will see a few of those today, before making my way by bus down to Singapore tomorrow.  I’m obsessed with the beautifully silver, giant Petronas Towers, but confused about how they rank as far as the world’s tallest buildings go. Let’s just say they’re up there.  I’ve visited the Lake Gardens complex, including the bird park & Islamic Arts Museum, the Batu Caves- a Hindu temple set in giant caves outside the city, the Central Market, Chinatown, Little India, and a riduculous amount of shopping malls, including one with a roller coaster andtheme park inside.  Some American chains they have here include: TGI Fridays, Chilis, Starbucks, Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf, California Pizza Kitchen,Gloria Jean’s, PIzza Hut, KFC, and a McDonald’s on literally every corner. No, I have not eaten at any of them.

Ron and I did a day trip to Malacca, where the Dutch ruled from 1641-1795.  We mostly wandered around the colonial city, seeing tons of different sights, but the highlight came in the afternoon. We had just finished dining at a Chinese restaurant (so much Chinese cuisine in Malaysia), when we heard this loud banging and singing coming from somewhere nearby. I thought it was a parade, but turned out to be a traditional Malay wedding celebration. We ran over to see what was going on and the bride’s mother and family invited us to join in the festivities! First, I was led into the bride’s family home to participate in the formal ‘blessings’ of the bride and groom. I wasn’t exactly sure what I was doing, but her Aunt talked me through it. I had to pick up little green leaves/herbs from a bowl and sprinkle them over the seated bride and groom. Next, I cleaned off their hands and picked up a giant portion of yellow sticky rice and placed it in the groom’s hand and guided his hand to feed the bride the rice. Next I did the same with the bride feeding the groom. I suppose it’s a bit like our cake-feeding tradition, except neither bride nor groom were smiling and looked pained eating the rice. I wonder how much they’re force fed during the ceremony? I was given a hard-boiled egg in a porcelain basket as a thank you. Afterwards, we had to eat with the family, even though we had just finished lunch and it was also the Aunt’s birthday so had to indulge in some cake as well. I was stuffed to the brim, but I felt it would have been rude to turn anything down.  I kept saying terima kasih (“thank you”), but everyone insisted they were absolutely honored to have us ‘white folk’ present at the celebration and it made them all very proud! Wow. So strange how some people in the world would admire me just for my pale skin color. I also find it fascinating that nearly every skin product in Asia contains whitening cream- just the opposite of our self-tanners. I chatted with the Aunt for around two hours and asked about the head scarves that a lot of the Muslim women wear. She said that girls start wearing them when they get their first period. How embarrassing- everyone knows when you first start ovulating!!

Last night, I had an interesting conversation.  I was checking out at my internet cafe and the guy behind the desk asked ‘Are you American?’

I replied  ‘Yes.’

He said, ‘Which part of america?’


i answered, ‘Illinois- have you been?’

He says ‘No, I’m IRAQI”


Stunned, I could only muster up, ‘Oh, well yikes, sorry about all
that!!!!’

I’m sure it wasn’t the best thing to say, but the whole exchange was honestly very pleasant and he gave a little nod and a ‘oh, that’s okay’  as I left.  I felt a tad  uncomfortable, since I felt a bit guilty.

Anyway, off to Singapore tomorrow!

I uploaded new pictures to my website- links in the blogroll under Cambodia and Malaysia. Enjoy!

xoxox