Twenty+ hours on a plane can 
teach you a lot. It can teach you how much room your body really needs 
to maintain appropriate circulation, it can teach you just how 
physically close you are willing to get to another strange human being, 
and it can allow you to get in touch with your roots. Functioning much 
like an infant, eager to shove your face full of whatever sustenance it is the 
ladies who have the privilege of standing in the aircraft distribute between turns of napping and using the loo.
Much like an infant, being on a plane for an entire day gives you nothing to do but eat, sleep and shit.
As
 sexy as the beginning of my first Asian adventure may sound, don't 
worry - if my last evening spent perched upon the pillow-less third tier bunk atop 2 friendly, if dim Brits is 
any indication of the how romantic an alluring my interaction with the 
far East will be, just sit tight because this is bound for the steamy pages of 
Cosmo.Much like an infant, being on a plane for an entire day gives you nothing to do but eat, sleep and shit.
A couple of restless sleep atop said third bunk which I had been banished to after the intoxicated lads from London came back late night to discover an American Goldie Locks who had mistakingly seen their bed as a vacant one, and I am up for Internet and breakfast before the sun rises an the streets fill with noise and exhaust.
A
 benefit of staying in a youth hostel, despite the fact that mine is 
ever waning, is that it allows one the opportunity to meet fellow 
travelers, as I did over bread and bananas this morning.
Maria
 and Paola, two devastanginly beautiful 20-somethings from Argentina 
suggested I tag along with them to visit the Cu-Chi tunnels, essentially the former playground of the Viet Cong. I accepted and paid the 
100,000 dong (coochie and dong - my maturity is certainly being put to the test here) and 
hopped on what I soon discovered was a 2 hour bumpy bus rode out into 
war country.
Here is where I become a bit maudlin. Passing fields of uniformly lined rubber trees I
 could not help but think of my uncle and the boy he must have been 
before he went to war. It was a visceral realization that these fields were the battle ground for such a tragic war, both for Vietnam and America. When at the site of the tunnels our gregarious guide, 
Lan, spoke at length about killing the 'enemy' while showing the various 
contraptions used to booby trap a generation of men, resulting in their 
ultimate demise. As interesting as these archaic and what I can only imagine incredibly useful traps were, something about murder traps just doesn't sit well with me. 
I do not 
purport to be some sort of patriot and I am still too young to recall 
any war of that magnitude in any real way, yet I felt guilty, as though I
 were betraying my uncle Danny and the friends he lost in the war by 
being a member of the fanny packed throng anxious to crawl into these 
infamous tunnels to get a feel for combat when, there is no way to even 
begin to estimate the terror and loss of war. I had not intended on 
doing war-related activities and this outing proved to me just why. 
Though
 I did crawl through a tunnel and merely listened to the Aussies shoot 
off AK-47s, which was an additional cost to the tour, I felt connected 
to a piece of my family, my history and my country by seeing such a 
thing, first hand.
The ride
 home was no less comforting and I attempted some Lamaze breathing to 
keep from retching all over my Argentianian seat mate (jet lag and motion sickness are a wicked cocktail). The bus did not 
return is to our start point and as I parted ways with Maria and Paola,
 I realized I was on my own to navigate the dusky, chaotic streets of Saigon. Stuck in my head all day, all
 I can hope is Billy Joel would be proud.

























 

2 comments:
I love you
Wo Ai Ni !!
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