Sunday, November 23, 2014

ME-inmar: Tangerines and Layer Cake






















Travel tip #1: if at all possible have your period while on an overnight bus in a third world country. If you can manage to make a middle of the night stop to take a piss over a hole in the ground in the middle of nowhere for 100 kyat, you know you're on the right track.

After spending many hours trolling the hallways of DMK airport on Bangkok I finally made it to Burma, a country I've been anxious to visit for a while now, largely due to its recent introduction to tourism and, therefore, a less tainted if less convenient culture.






























After having my very first Dairy Queen experience with a very excited Laura I figured I'd reached the pinnacle of international exploration yet the airport in Yangon is flanked with man in long cotton skirts and, once appreciated, I realized perhaps there was one or two more things to do on this journey.

Taking out a seemingly arbitrary amount of money, as we were unfamiliar  with the exchange rate as well as the value of kyat we blindly extracted funds and secured an 8,000 kyat taxi ride to Agga Youth Hostel, discovered on my trusty hostels.com and located in the Burmese hood if I've ever seen one. This particular hood seemed to be called Chinatown and after depositing our bags in a more than sufficient room for the evening we decided to hit the rubble and rubbish lines streets well after dark looking for some action.

Feeling adventurous, and hungry we pulled up to a street vendor under a pop up tent and single florescent bulb and ordered 'one' as we didn't really know what she provided. A small bowl of mystery noodles was served moments later and devoured by two hungry American girls who had no clue what they were eating.

A stroll down the street revealed lots of outdoor napping for Burmese men and very few women. We managed to locate a bodega to pick up some water and snacks before heading back to our very chilly room on the third floor. We were heading to the big pagoda in town for sunrise and we couldn't be late!

The alarm sounded at 5.15 am and Laura and I were both up and at 'em, ready to make the 45 minute walk to Shwedagon Pagoda, a mammoth gold orb in the sky we quickly spotted from our cab, illuminated in the night sky when we came into town.

When we exited the hostel and immediately found a cab I can say at least I was relieved because navigating streets and racing the sun can be a tricky business in a foreign land.

Dropped at the front gate, te sky just turning to dawn we were able to ride the elevator into the atmosphere an arrive on the cool white marble floor of the pagoda just in time.

The birds were shipping, the sky was turning a hundred colors of love and an old British bitch behind me was sodomizing me with her Nikon trying to get in just the right position despite te fact that VERY few people were at the pagoda at that hour of the morning.

The expansive temple provided plenty of people watching - I found a hot monk that most definitely reconsidered his spiritual journey when he spotted me in mg sister wife ensemble) and picture taking. When we were the ones asked to take photos with a group of young gregarious monks we were just getting a taste of what it is to be white and in Myanmar. I'd say we are essentially the equivalent of the Angelina Jolie and Julia Roberts of the country at this point simply because we are so foreign. If only I thought J-LO had a stronger hold in the Asian market...
 
























































After a several hours marveling at the temple and all of its inhabitants we made our way back to Agga with nothing but my sense of direction and a shoddy map to guide the way. The almost hour long walk was easy breezy , for the most part.

It was time for Laura's favorite part of the day - siesta- and we rested while we plotted out the next couple of days' travel. Having to check out before noon, we schlepped our bags downstairs and went in search of the mythical railway station we never were quite able to find. A straight shot down the street and through the lives of the Burmese people, we saw sandalwood colored faces, colorful adornments and huge smiles from the majority of the passerbys when a) spotting a western and b) being greeted with a smile and hello from us. Laura felt like the rock star we all secretly know she is inside and I felt glad to be in a place where affection between heterosexual men an genuine friendliness is out in the open, expected, and encouraged.

Never having located the station, with the help of a very emphatic man we did locate Pagoda Sule and, in turn a local travel agency that was able to get is on the Elite night bus to Bagan at 9.

With plans set we had the rest if the day we had time to rest, and after locating a Washington Monument knock off in a park across the way we copped a squat with sugary beverages and rice cake surprise to sit, and chat and sweat.

The park's pedestrian fascination with the whities was momentarily thwarted when as Asian commercial, featuring lots if Asian acting began shooting, featuring a coquettish couple and an unidentified product.

With the walk back to the hostel along what is supposed to he a riverfront but its mostly construction and exhaust we felt it necessary to stop into the Strand Hotel mid-journey to take refuge in the air con and, with provided wash rags, clean up like we are homeless and this is the local McCy D's.

Back to the hostel to grab my now overflowing bag and in a cab who tried to hustle us - fool, don't  you can't hustle a hustler. A deal was reached and a nice young man with a very strong jaw line drove us through the never ending rush hour of developing countries for well over an hour to get to the 'bus station.' I use quotes because buses were a plenty but a station, not so much.




















 







































Hopping on the night Elite, or E-Light as it is called here, bus was a luxurious experience. Laura and I had been assigned the back two seats and when the other row was not occupied we were able to stretch out across two seats each that reclined. All this while staying cozy under their plush and seemingly insect free blankets and noshing on their complimentary layer cake from a local bakery. It was basically like I was on my own personal Air Force One that stopped every two hours to shake you awake and make you pay to piss over a hole in the middle of no where. Basically, I am Obama.

The ride came to an end at our next destination: Bagan, the city of 4,000 temples and one main road. We chose to Nyaung-U, the area located north of Old Bagan that shits a mile or so above New Bagan. At 5:30 am when deboarding a lengthy bus ride, I don't know about you, but there is little I want more than a half dozen Burmese men invading your personal space and shouting exorbitant cab fares in your face. After a long and sleep deprived, New York infused conversation with these fine gentlemen, we did secure a ride along with a fellow Malaysian traveler and 20 minutes later were dropped at the front door of Golden Myanmar Guest House, a bike shop from the outside, a log cabin on the inside, and a family run business through and through.

The front desk clerk spoke very good English and allowed us to eat breakfast on the roof terrace with the guests prior to check in, so we were happy. After yet another pancake with banana and honey - perhaps my most favorite meal these days- we gained access to room 203, a room with the feel of a Lake Tahoe lodge and the noise level of a Vegas casino. Luckily we were not spending much time here. I dropped my bags and made transition from Sister Wife, as I had resembled in Yangon, to housewife, with a complete gym ensemble to climb the many pagodas of Bagan.

Renting a red and purple bike respectively Laura and I took a left outside of the driveway to our place and began to explore. With a purchased map in hand we were out to find a specific set of temples, none of which were found. When there are 4,000 temples, of which all were built before the term city planner came into existence, it is awfully hard to locate a specific location. Stopping in at a random spot about 3 miles down the road we were met with adorable puppies and friendly monks who asked to take their photos with us - not the first and not the last time we would experience such adoration on this voyage.

The souvenir chicks here are hustlers with a capital H and if they want you to buy their elephant pants, or longies, as are popular in this country, you might just have to. The woman selling shirts that interestingly proclaimed 'Remember to - I heart Bagan' didn't have to even catch our eye. A bright yellow shirt with poor grammar from a far off land - we bought twinsies t's immediately!

Eventually we made our way to Mingala-Zedi, a medium sized red brick pyramid with very few tourists, allowing is for some time to sit atop an ancient construction and chat about work, life, and demography - Laura's chosen field of post graduate study that she has dedicated her life to and that I find to be rather fascinating.

Shortly thereafter a greasy lunch of noodles and Myanmar buffet was had for us, and a lunch of white girl legs and asses was had for the local bugs and we quickly hopped back on our padded seats and set off back toward 'home' for the midday siesta all of the guidebooks seem to recommend.

We took full advantage of a roof top terrace on which breakfast is served and after showering and beginning to feel like real people again, we did what the MAIN event in Bagan is. We made our way out to one of the various high rise temples to watch the sunset behind the river.




























I am quite confident that I do what I do well. I am a good photographer, and I know when I am traveling and see something that maybe only I can see, I can put it on film and make it speak. That being said, a sunset in Bagan cannot be put on film - at least not by me. Despite the tourist congestion, which I am certain will only get worse as it becomes more and more common in Myanmar, there is a power to the colors of the sun and a serenity to the surrounding green fields that makes this experience unparallelled. If only I did drugs I could write some epic poem or stream of consciousness prose about such an experience properly.

The kind taxi driver who had brought us to Pyra-tha-da Pagoda waited till the sun had gone down and the bumpy dirt roads had grown dark and, per our request, brought us to a local restaurant, but not before introducing us to my new favorite band, the Bon Jovi of Mynamar - Bayview (or so it sounded with his accent). The 'More Than Words' induced jam he played on repeat for us allowed us time to bond without the restrictions of language as we Wilson Phillip'ed the whole experience, harmonizing on this power ballad that, according to him, is about a cyclone. Needless to say, it was epic.

The meal was not. I seem to have started my period, gottan a UTI and gotten the flu simultaneously so strange tasting food was not my bag and with a nosy neighbor in the form of a pushing POrtugeuese woman we left the restaurant not a moment too soon.

Ice cream on the way home helped.

And a good half an hour watching a Korean soap opera with subtitles in Burmese and the sound turned all the way down with the old man who runs the joint put a perfect ending on the perfect day. Liking Bagan's uncomplicated charm and small town feel, we have decided to stay for 2 days and with a sunrise on the horizon (get it?) we were off to sleep in a Nyquil induced stooper.

When the alarm went off at 5 am getting up and rushing to the great outdoors to have special moments sounded a lot less appealing than saving the energy I have been using to simply breath out of my facial orifices. Energy was saved and, at least a little, more sleep was had.

I love the Guest House at which we are staying, but I loathe the noise factory that seems to play Korean Nickelodian on repeat and on FULL volume at all hours of the day. Honestly, I cannot figure it out. It is concert acoustics with unidentifiable instruments and incoherent babbling all the time. No one seems to mind - except the girls in room 203.

Not sleeping in all that much, we were up and fed by 8am and in slightly less douwdy clothing were ready for an E-bike kind of day. They don't seem to have motorbikes here, perhaps they are a green country, and with Laura never having ridden a motorized bike of any sort before, it seemed like a smart move to scoot around all day on the electronic bikes rented at our abode for 6,000 kyat a day (approx 6 US Dollars).

After a few trial runs, Laura's training wheels were off and so were we, at the break neck speed of 2 miles per hour. Never quite gaining her biker confidence, it was a little more of a Jessica Tandy vibe, but I can dig it - not everyone is born for the open road such as I!

Finding a bumpy sand path that led to a handful of small pagodas we were escorted by a man who wanted to show us his hand made, paint by number paintings and made Laura nervous for our safety - I tend to be too confident in situations such as those. He was not too hard to shake, nor was the dog guarding the door at the front of the pagoda in front of her own pound of puppies. Finding herself on the wrong side of the law, or the puppies as the case may be, Laura carefully made her exit and we were careful not to mess with a bad bitch and her babies again.

A treasure was found in Treasure, a clear tourist draw with it's abundant menu and cool shady atmosphere. So popular was Treasure that we both ran into Laura's boy toys from the flight into Yangon and the old German lady who tried to hit it from the back at the Temple in the city of the same name. It is always strange how small the world really is - especially when you're all falling pretty to the same attractions through travel.

This time our siesta lacked some siesta as I dealt with flights back to the US and Laura managed the cleaning and re-installation of the air conditioning unit that had fallen off the wall and onto her the night before.







































Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Summer Lovin' Had Me A Blast, Summer Lovin' Happened So Fast...






















In the back of a red minibus driven by Michael Knight of the Far East and I am misty. Melancholy melodies floating through my head and salty water gathering at the lashes edge.

I am leaving Chiang Mai, and Thailand and heading to Burma - country 33 I believe - to have an adventure with my dear friend Laura and perhaps gain some spiritual awareness in the land so deeply rooted in Buddhism it is brand spanking new to the tourism game.

My last couple of days in the Northern town of Chiang Mai have been almost delightful and that, in no small part is due to my Canadian Danny Zucco, my travel mate for this week and an undeniably nice man from the Great White North by way of a little Caribbean country.

I'd venture to say we met for a reason. If only I believed in that sort of thing...

Both hurting, both grieving, both lost in Thailand searching for the answers to regaining composure after the loss of a parent; the loss of a best friend.

I'd like to think my dad was playing matchmaker in the sky, trying to keep me safe, and trying to make me a little less lonely in this big crazy world.








The woman who had booked our transport for the Monkey Show monstrosity had told us we were not to miss the Sunday Walking market. It is an expansive market, blocking off one main thoroughfare in town and splitting off for different arteries, offering local crafts, noodles served by hand, literally, and the same old shit available at every 'market' in the world (key chains, magnets, etc).

Living in a city with nearly 9 million people it takes a lot for me to use this word- but it was overwhelming.

Throngs of patchouli scented travelers, Bermuda hatted tourists and assertive locals push their way down the streets, bartering deals and tasting exotic cuisine.

Traveling with a slightly less adventurous bloke we did not eat off of the street and instead ate at a local restaurant with a sole employee and prix fix menu featuring a plethora of pork with the bonus of provided entertainment in the form of the real housewives of anywhere USA pontificating on how people swore they were essentially in utero until they gave birth to their progeny. I'm suspect. Stomachs full and people watched  accomplished, we meandered the streets until late into the evening, stumbling across a town square and a sparkling temple to which I had not yet been privy. Stories were exchanged, as we're hugs with Luciano, an old eccentric man from Italy who perches atop his bicycle, offering an embrace for free, at the entrance to the old city. Rubins wasn't up for the task feigning the flu but Luciano had a sparkle in his eye and I was feeling one love, so I gave it a shot.



























































Back in our beds at the Royal Guest House I had the mosquitoes and my stolen Air Asia blanket to keep me warm till morning came.

The perception of who I am seems to lean more toward the ball buster than the doting pretend wife persona but I am a woman, and as women tend to do, I acquiesced to the wants and desires of my partner, even if it was just a pretend boyfriend for a week, and agreed to go to the cooking class on which he seemed so keen.

We signed up for an all day course at Asia Scenic Thai Cooking School and after handing over 1000 baht for these 7 courses of instruction all I knew is that I was going to eat. After being picked up by Marin, our teacher for the day at 8 am we wound through the back alleys of Chiang Mai before arriving at this charming outdoor instructional center with our motley crew of foreigners fixed on the culinary arts.

There was a small quiet Filipino girl who seemed very excited about the prospect of learning a new style of cooking and perhaps equally disappointed to discover that Thai and Filipino food are perhaps not all that different. There was a Swiss couple comprised of a friendly chef and his older yet still trophy worthy wife. A lion of a young man named Leo who had left his girlfriend back in Bordeaux to spend a month in Thailand taking as many cooking courses as possible in order to master the field - and who insisted I was Brazilian so I immediately adored, Rubins a gentle and cautious young man from Canada on his first real foreign adventure, a sassy American who will remain unnamed, and Peter, a very granola and very friendly farmer by way of Massachusetts who had attended a family wedding in Malaysia and decided to stop on over in Thailand for some cooking and some very heavy conversation with aforementioned American.

The papaya salad and spring rolls went of without a hitch, but as the day progressed and my spacious belly ran out of vacant area and my cooking suffered. We had completed 3 courses when it was time for a very lengthy lunch break and it seemed as though, though all of us spoke English as the common language, we paired off into groupings of those who could understand minutae in conversation that only a native speaker can really grasp.

Rubins and Leo chatted enthusiastically in French while Peter and I began a conversation across the table on a lazy, sunny afternoon. Small talk has never been my strong suit and I greatly appreciate those who, like me, appreciate the 'heavier' in life but looking back I can honestly not say how Peter and I went from chatting about coriander to him very emotionally speaking to me about the loss of his mother a couple of years ago and me needing only a few minutes before reaching for the 1 ply tissues available all over Asia. At one point he was speaking about the actual moments in which his mother lost his life and I was crying and though I had not told him anything about what has been going on with me or why perhaps this trip is so meaningful to me at the moment - he looked at me and said - I can tell you've been wondering the same sorts of things.

It was not flirtatious and playful - it was very real and very raw and, if Peter ever reads this - very appreciated. I don't find comfort in other's pain, but there is some sort of club I now seem to be a member of and it feels like a friendly hug or knowing nod everytime someone reveals the secret handshake.

By the time we were to soups and curries I must have checked out because although I added plenty of fresh chilis and followed my teachers instructions to a T, the meals were beautiful, yet bland and I was hitting limit with food fascination for the day.

I stand by my statement that food just tastes better when someone else makes it.

After  there was yet another siesta - a favorite for the mounty man.

More evening walks by the waterway and we were ready for big changes. We were ready to shake things up - we were ready to step out on a ledge and - eat Mexican food. A Californian snob at heart, I will give El Diablo, though suffering a bit of a cultural identity crisis, it's due respect. Pancho Villa it was not, however, the enormous (and pricey) burritos that were served were pretty darn good and though their homemade chips were unorthodox, after you eat one or two you realize the thick cornmealy taste is a hearty flavor worth further exploring.

Time for bed.







































Eating and napping all day can really take it out of a girl - leaving me to lazily rise close to 9 am, the latest call time yet. A main draw for the Royal Guesthouse was the bright blue pool featured on their site that looked clean and crisp and refreshing. It did not disappoint. During sunny hours there seem to be a litany of young European woman doused in coconut oil and little else catching some rays. I chose to be that young ingenue, if only in my head, and grabbed my recently purchased novel, my cell phone connected to the hostel's wifi and a bottle of water to spend an hour or two lounging by the pool and earning my Brazilian good looks - Ha!

I had already gone for a run and I deserved it.

When I could no longer justify lounging, I went to wake my chilled out chum and suggested we do SOMETHING, anything. I took a quick look at my Lonely Planet, as well as the map handed to me from the front desk and decided on Doi Suthep, a temple situated high in the hills above Chiang Mai that is supposed to be relatively close, which in Asia means anywhere from 20 minutes to 3 days away.

After negotiating a red minibus to the zoo one is expected to catch another vehicle that costs 40 baht or so. This is the way prices are quoted to you, but costs seems to be all in the fine print in this Buddhist paradise because only if 10 of you get on the same bus at the same time going the same direction is the cost of a ride 40 baht. Otherwise you'll get a quite closer to 400 and, being in a foreign land with a foreign language and not used to foreign 'customs' - they know they pretty much have you from the short and curlies.

We waited a good 40 minutes or so before 3 other travelers were on board and perhaps seeing that business was not booming on this particular afternoon the driver agreed to bring is up and down the mountain for 50 baht.

Drawing upon memories of nausea along Highway 17 during childhood road trips the route up the mountain was difficult, at least for someone as prone to motion sickness as me. After the windy road come the 300 steps or so up the ceramic dragon lined steps to the temple. My only altercation en route took place with an 8 year-old girl dressed in traditional garb out for blood who, when hearing my shutter shoot from my hip stated in no uncertain terms - 'money'. I dismissively said no and stepped around her, with her cutting me off at the pass as repeating 'money.' My guess is this manipulation is most successful due to the enormous amounts of white guilt that take on those stairs.

Luckily for me my self pity leaves me rarely experiencing such things.






























Once I reached the summit I was met with magic hour light and a pagoda of reflective gold so beautiful it almost sang. After a loop around the property to take in the luscious pinks and greens of blooming bougainvillea and views of the city below as far as the eye can see.

Once we approached the center of the square we each took turns scribbling words of love, remembrance, and classic rock on the long golden scroll meant to be inscribed and wrapped around the pagoda.

A book on Karma written by a local monk with hopes of Buddhism helping me see the light in life and a handful of prayer bells in my bag and we were off down the steps, in the bus and back into town.

With no real direction in mind we hopped out once the minibus seemed to have reentered old town and, almost as if the gods were answering my pretend boyfriend's dietary prayers, we were right in front of a burger spot. A chicken burger ordered, and a pork burger delivered I consumed this lackluster meal replete with fruit shake before looking over and noticing Guest House Art Gallery 24.

Just then is dawned in me - Peter from the day before had mentioned an interesting if rather amateur photo exhibit there and it felt like kismet that we would randomly stop here, get the burgers he needed and the art I craved.

Upon entrance it feels more like a home for the young family who owns and runs the establishment, adorable toddler in tow. When you enter the 'gallery' which is a simple room with colorful snaps of reflections from the flood a couple of years back in Bangkok, scotch taped up in a haphazard manner along the walls you're instantly entranced. The photos are interesting and engaging. Essentially, they are just different - I bought 3!

A long walk home and quick break to rest my barking dogs and drop of my book of good vibes and we decided to take a romantic stroll down the ho littered streets to the Night Bazaar, where yet more shopping is not only encouraged. It's expected.

Eureka! I finally found the last gift in the trilogy of nephew trinkets for the most unforgiving of the bunch and all I can hope is he doesn't look at me with disgust and spit in my face at such a puerile attempt at a present. Wish me luck.

Rubins ran into a friend from Bangkok and being only of the only black man in the country was treated like a Backstreet Boy by the locals feeling compelled to yell out, touch or offer 'sexy chocolate man come inside of me' when excited by his mere presence on the street. It was like being with a celebrity, in a tank top.

The heat here really does take it out of you and I had to leave for the airport in the morning, Burma bound, so some sweet pillow talk of life's struggles and love and travel was shared from our respective pillows, in our respective beds - it's not that kinda party - in a humid room.

I realize this is how life works, just in a microcosm when traveling: people come and people go; places matter and then they don't. Sometimes just as something seems to be beginning, it ends - as did my time in Chiang Mai and my week-long platonic romance with a kind man from Canada who offered me friendship and understanding in a time when I needed it most.

Merci, Fancy Pants...