Friday, December 14, 2012

Really? Another post about haircuts?

So there's this tiny neighborhood barber shop around the corner that Lian and I pass on our way to the good duck soup & noodle shop on Thapae Road. The owner waits expectantly at the door, casting puppy-dog eyes on passers-by. His eyes are all we can see of his face, as he wears a white surgical mask on the job. He and Lian chat briefly and the price sounds pretty decent -- did I hear him say 150 baht? What the heck, all I need is a quick clipper-cut, so I decide to give him a try.

Awaiting my turn in the chair.
After selecting my style preference from the gallery of male celebrity photos clipped from magazines and taped to the wall (I go for the close-cropped Sam Worthington look), I plop down in the chair and he sets to work. Ever ... so ... slowly. He seems to be progressing hair by hair, always asking after every snip: "Is this OK? Is this OK?" At last we are finished. Or not: this barber then proceeds to give me a scalp massage, followed by a shoulder massage. And then he breaks out the shears again for a few finicky touches.

Rising, I pull out my wallet and ask how much. He replies almost apologetically: "Ha-sip baht, khrep?" Fifty baht, roughly a buck-sixty. In other words, ten times less than a Super Cuts slash job back in Oregon. I hand him a 100-baht note and signal to keep the change. He is overcome with astonished gratitude and will not let me leave the shop until he can do more for me -- "Shampoo? I give you shampoo!" So it's into the reclining sink-chair for a long, luxurious wash-and-rinse, followed by yet another scalp massage.

Lian watches this extended pampering and announces: "I have a wash hair, too." So then it's my turn to wait and wait.

---

A haircut reminder for Lian's son.
In the Thai school system, when a teacher is dissatisfied with the length of a male students hair, he informs the parents not with a written note or a phone call, but by shaving a divot into the student's scalp! One night Dao comes home with these mangy-looking gashes cut into his hair, and I ask Lian if she is OK with this. She has no idea what I'm getting at. "Every secondary school in Thailand, children cannot long hair," she says. "Is not polite."

Thai parents do not see it as a personal violation the way most American moms and dads would. Thais simply have a different relationship to authority and it's always fascinating to note how it manifests itself, from deference to teachers to reverence for their king.

---

For the longest time I've stuck (pretty much) to a "when in Rome ..." policy about food, eschewing western cuisine in favor of noodle joints and open-air markets. I would stroll smugly past the sidewalk diners at the fancy American restaurant, The Duke's, and think: "Just look at those wide load farang in there scarfing on ribs and burgers and pizza," while on my way for a steaming, spicy bowl of tom yum or som tam or whatever Thai food name I'm forever mispronouncing. 

A dessert so huge, it requires two utensils.
But you can deny who you are and what you're made of for only so long. And lately my thoughts about The Duke's have taken on a Homer Simpson voice: "Mmm, ribs and burgers and pizza ..." Finally I relent and drag poor Lian along for a mid-afternoon American-style dessert.

Keep in mind, a Thai "dessert" comes in a small dish and might include kidney beans, water chestnuts, squash and other such salad-bar detritus, only modestly sweetened. So Lian is unprepared for the massive sugar-bomb apple pie and softball-size scoop of vanilla ice cream set before her. She gamely picks at it but prefers my carrot cake, also mega-portioned.

Am I satisfied? Not yet! A few nights later I up the ante.

Lian has a two-hour customer in the evening, so I promise to take charge of dinner. After she leaves, I ask Dao: "Ghin pizza, dai mai?" He grins and nods. I know that his mother has never tasted the stuff, but she's about to get her first opportunity.

Before ...
Waiting in the bar at The Duke's for my pie -- large pepperoni, Italian sausage and garlic chicken pizza, to go -- I bask in the Stanford's-like vibe, watching the parade of comfort food float by: medium-rare steaks and mashed potatoes, ginormous burgers and fries, racks of ribs from the real smoker out back, spaghetti and meatballs, all my favorite culinary porn. Twenty minutes later my pizza arrives and it is ridiculously huge but beautiful.

... and after.
"Oh boy, lots of leftovers for me," I think. But no: the pizza, which I doctor with sauteed onions, Thai peppers and tomatoes, is enthusiastically received. The 100-pound Thai lady and the skinny child manage to consume all but two slices; OK, I helped a little.

---

That's it for another episode. Tomorrow evening I enter the big silver cocoon once again to begin my 24-hour transformation from sweaty farang into freezing Oregonian. Sawat dii khrep, Merry Christmas and see you soon.

Festive Christmas attire from sidewalk vendor.




Friday, December 7, 2012

Dude looks like a lady-boy

One day after lunch I follow Lian to her haircut appointment -- she arrives on her motor-bike and I come huffing along on foot a few minutes later. I walk in and Lian is talking to what I think are two people at the back of the shop: a fetching young woman with flowing dark hair in a delightfully short dress, and some fellow with a booming baritone voice, just out of sight.

Uh, my mistake: the girl and the guy turn out to be one and the same individual.

Thailand has a warm and tolerant place in its heart for its kathoey, the Thai word for transgendered or effeminate gay men, better known in English as lady-boys. Many Thais consider kathoey to be a sort of third gender.

On Thai TV, most sitcom casts include at least one screamingly flamboyant gay/cross-dressing comic-relief character. Night after night at Anusan Market, farang male tourists pose nervously with the gaudily costumed Thai lady-boys outside their nightly revue. Kathoey use the feminine polite particle of speech, ending sentences with "kaa" instead of the male "khrep," and they often work in occupations dominated by women.  Lian herself uses the pronoun "she" when referring to her lady-boy stylist.

Sure, we farang come from the land of clean drinking water at the tap, not-treacherous sidewalks and artisan bakeries. But I might not live to see red-state America ever catch up to the so-called developing world in this one cultural attitude.

---

Carrot cake and vanilla ice cream. The fifth season of "Breaking Bad." Really good pizza. Driving my own car with my kick-ass sound system reinstalled. Cooking in my own kitchen. Blu-Ray on a 92" projection screen. 21st century broadband. Conversance in the written and spoken language around me.

I am ready to come home. Home.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Fire, I'll take you to burn


Not stars -- lanterns
My iPhone camera cannot possibly capture the trippy theatricality of a night sky dotted with Thai fire lanterns – especially as they rise into the burst zone of a tremendous fireworks display alarmingly close overhead. For the hundreds of revelers packed onto the narrow Iron Bridge at the climax of Loi Krathong, there is no lag time between flash and boom as cinders rain down our upturned faces. "Gangnam Style" blasting from the Bus Bar next door totally works for this spectacle.

Everyone else is playing with fire, so we join in the fun: I buy a 40-baht paper lantern from a street vendor – there’s one every 10 feet, and they’re all mobbed with customers. He assembles the contraption for me: each lantern includes a solid fuel ring suspended by cross-wires at the base of a flame-resistant fabric hood. You ignite the fuel ring, wait for the hot air to fully inflate the hood, and then let go. The important word is “wait” – Lian and I launch our lantern off the bridge too soon and it plummets into the river, fizzling out. A while later we try our hand at the small floral Loi Krathong candle boats that people set adrift on the river to honor the water spirits. But our candles sputter out before we can even get our boats to the river’s edge. We would suck as pyromaniacs.



Awwww!
Lian is intent on not missing “the profession” and for the longest time I have no idea what she is talking about. Once again our very dog-eared Thai-English dictionary clears things up: proCESsion, i.e., parade. But she still calls it the profession.



Loi Krathong rocks Chiang Mai long into the evening, but after four days of music and pyrotechnics we can pretty much tune it out, like living near train tracks. By Friday the entire town looks like The Morning After, a landscape of fallen fire lantern carcasses strewn everywhere.


The Mae Ping River is clogged with banana-leaf floral boats. Serf-class street sweepers with their twig brooms are scraping spent bottle rockets and firecracker remains into loose piles that someone eventually will pick up, or maybe the rains will wash them away.

---

Amazing crispy fish, one of many courses.
Friday evening we meet up with our old friend Mr. Tong at the terrific open-air restaurant he turned us onto a few months back. We feast with abandon over beers and scotch. This time it’s my treat and the entire evening, including tip, comes to $24. We get home around 11 and I check email before turning in. Surprise! A client has scheduled a last-minute phone conference that begins 3:30 a.m., Thailand time, which I force myself to stay up for. I predict that there’s an afternoon nap in my future.


Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Happy Loi Krathong!

I should get some sleep this afternoon because I sure won't get much tonight -- not if yesterday's pre-festival partying is any indication.

It's Tuesday just before midnight and Loi Krathong isn't until tomorrow, but the sidewalks along the river are already jammed with revelers and vendors selling floral candle floats, fire lanterns and all manner of street chow. Live musical performances bleed into one another as we walk, punctuated by the bam-bam-bam of firecrackers and the occasional ka-BOOM of M-80s, which set off car alarms up and down the road. The night sky is dotted with constellations of soft orange light as fire lanterns float in unison silently southward.

Lian and I fight our way through this crush to reach the Buddhist temple across Narawat Bridge. We are toting bagfuls of nonperishable donation food for the monks, who are lined up along the sidewalk with their beggar's bowls ready to receive. (Is there a holiday in this country that doesn't  involve these moochers getting their taste?) Lian transfers the contents of our plastic Rimping Market bags into her decorative metal donation bowl -- "is polite more" -- slips off her sandals and kneels in reverence before approaching the dole line. I hang back and guard the footwear.

Nothing gets in but sound, and every torrential downpour.
At home, long into the night we hear the muffled thump-thump from the music stage across the river ... and the not-muffled yips and coos of the young lady upstairs entertaining her gentleman caller. I should mention, the back windows in our apartment building have no glass, only bug screens and cyclone fencing for security. Do we know our neighbors? Like you wouldn't care to imagine!

---

There is a growing body of evidence that I might be a spoiled brat:




She is muttering: "You take photo MAID, la kaa?  Am maid you, chai-mai, MISTER William?"

In my own defense, I did buy her the best mop in the store.

Monday, November 26, 2012

How (and where) the other half lives

Surrounding funky, grungy old Chiang Mai roughly 5 to 10 kilometers outside the moat is an asteroid belt of modern residential construction: shiny new single-family homes clumped into pristine gated communities. Prices start around US$89K.

Because I encounter mostly service-industry folks, I sometimes forget that not everyone in this town drives a tuk-tuk or pushes a som tam cart. CM in fact has a healthy middle class of professionals who work in banks and law offices, academics at the universities, doctors, engineers, etc.  And as Lian puts it, "People who have money live outside."

"The Classic" -- 3 bed, 3 bath. Anyone want to come visit?
Our sub-studio nook down a tiny soi by the river is ... let's call it "cozy." But for those 3 a.m. client conferences on Skype, I need a better privacy option than the bathroom floor. So one afternoon we flag down a Red Car and go exploring in suburban Chiang Mai. Our first stop: The Luxury Home gated community.

Three basic house styles, all of them a bit sterile in their variations on a theme of beige. But impressive: rock-solid construction, literally, no stick framework around here, and thoughtful use of space. This being Thailand, some floor plans even include a "Buddha room," i.e., an alcove for the candles, flowers, graven images, etc. The middle-of-the-road option with the amenities we like totals 3.2 million baht, just north of one hundred grand, American.

Maybe we can rent for a little while longer?


---

Flash back to May 2010 when I am living for a month in a studio apartment in a gated community outside Bangkok, where I am studying for my English teaching certificate. My old friend and former Brookings newspaper colleague, Frann, herself now an English teacher, connects me with a delightful young Thai woman, Pan, whom she met while earning her Master's at PSU. Pan is by her own admission upper middle class Thai: her family operates an English school in Bangkok, her father is a commercial airline pilot, and she balances teaching with various business ventures. A Bangkok native, she grew up in northern California around Chico and speaks English with a flawless American accent. Pan is a work-hard, play-harder kind of girl; we hit it off well and have stayed in touch -- in fact, it is Pan who connected me with her old Chico chum Nick here in Chiang Mai, the dude who got his head bashed in a year ago in a bar fight.

Fast-forward to last week and Pan is in town to stage some software sales event or other at the hotel where I belong to its fitness center. She reminds me on Facebook that I owe her a beer. So I meet up with Pan and a friend of hers, John from Australia, and we kill the better part of the afternoon at the new Bus Bar -- literally a bar in an old red bus parked by the river. Three quarts (each) later Pan runs off to catch her flight back to Bangkok and I lumber home to explain to Lian how I missed the lunch she cooked for me because I am busy drinking with a 29-year-old Thai lady. Domestic hilarity ensues.

---

Launching fire balloon from the bridge.
Loi Krathong is still two days away and the party has already begun with a bang. And a ka-BOOM! And a krackety-POW-POW-POW-POW-POW! long into the night.

Candles for Loi Krathong
The apartment manager warns everyone that he will be shutting the entrance gate at nightfall to keep out the firecracker tossers and other riff-raff. Roadside stands have popped up to sell banana-leaf candle boats to honor the water spirits and fire balloons to illuminate the night skies like airborne jack-o-lanterns. All the stores sell these yellow candles that at first I thought were lemon tarts but in fact are used to send the fire balloons aloft.

Throngs of young people have already begun to jam the sidewalks of the Iron Bridge, and the open spaces by the river are lined with food vendors. Music is everywhere. Monday night is our reconnaissance mission to check out where all the good stuff will be -- and we're just an easy five-minute walk from all the action. So maybe there ARE some advantages to living in town.




Saturday, November 17, 2012

Heffay Hears a Ho'

Tourists are pouring into Chiang Mai in advance of Loi Krathong, the big Thai festival that occurs on the evening of the full moon of the 12th month in the Thai lunar calendar -- this year, November 28. More about Loi Krathong later.

Lian is super-busy and a call to work can happen at any moment. So when we're out and about, we travel separately -- she on her motor-bike, I on foot -- in case she needs to leave in a hurry.  Which is exactly what happens after a late supper at Sunday Walking Market. So I hoof it home via my shortest route, running the bar-girl gauntlet at the seedy end of Loi Kroh Road. It is 9:30, way after dark, and the carnivores are lurking in the doorways of the go-go bars, waiting for farang man-meat to come stumbling along.

"Hello, meester! Want massage?" they sing-song. One porcine creature in a too-tight cocktail dress even takes me by the waist and tries to pull me inside, but I slip away with a polite "mai ao, khrep" (no, thanks) and continue on. The idea is to stride purposefully, smile confidently and make only fleeting eye contact -- acknowledging without engaging.

And truth be told, I wish these ladies good hunting. Life in Thailand offers them few opportunities and so they're making the best of their one god-given asset while they've still got it. If a hard-working bar girl can pluck a few thousand baht (or much more) off some drunken white whoremonger who can afford to fly here for the express purpose of diving snout-first into debauchery ... well, who am I to question divine justice?

---


When Thai property owners say "keep out," they mean it. Where in America do you ever see a barbed-wire fence flush up against a pedestrian walkway?

---

Most days around mid-morning, the local police set up a traffic checkpoint in the exact same place on Thapae Road at the east end of the Narawat Bridge. Motor-bike riders who are not wearing helmets are stopped and ticketed. This is not a sporadic enforcement; whenever I walk that way to Warorot Market, eight times out of ten I will see the helmet patrol in action. Half of Chiang Mai knows that the police will be there, and yet amazingly they catch a great number of repeat offenders, usually women who are willing to risk getting busted (or brained against a curb) because -- well, let's ask one:

"Lady have a hair make beautiful, don't want helmet," explains Lian. I ask her how many 400 baht tickets she has accrued at that one checkpoint, which every local knows about. She holds up three fingers.

---

Do I really want to spend the equivalent of $1.32 (plus the cost of milk and butter) for this little taste of home? I'm thinking no.

---

Lian and I have a lazy, free afternoon.  I want to work a crossword and goof around online. This is what she wants to do. Wants to do. We are vastly different people.






Thursday, November 8, 2012

Toggling between two realities


Monday night in Chiang Mai, some 30 hours after fleeing Portland, I arrive back on Lian's doorstep. I knock. Behind the curtained window, the lights go out and a soft orange glow illuminates the room from floor level. Then the door opens.

"Sawat dii kaa! Happy birthday!" Lian greets me with a hug, ushering me in to ooh and ahh at the wonderful western-style cake and nine candles waiting for me. (The number nine is considered good luck here.) Fun fact: Thai people sing the "Happy Birthday" song, in English, and I am duly serenaded.

I had sort of hoped that Lian's homemade fried rice would be my first meal back in Thailand, but hey -- birthday cake does just fine. And the fried rice, when it comes along a few days later, is spectacular.

---

It figures that the minute I touch down in Chiang Mai, a slew of new work comes crashing in, including a Skype interview with a promising new prospect, which is set for Thursday afternoon, east coast time ... Friday 2 a.m., my time. So as not to disturb anyone's sleep, I set up my workspace on the floor of the bathroom.

Once we connect, I learn that my prospects want it to be a video conference, and the two co-owners of this agency are attending. So I quickly pull on whatever rumpled shirt is within reach and adjust the video cam so there's not a commode in the background. Even so, the tile walls are a giveaway, and eventually someone asks: "Uh, Jeff, where exactly ARE you?"

Busted. So I pick up the laptop and give them a video tour of an actual Thai bathroom: the toidy, the shower, the sink, the--

"Wait a minute," the agency president interrupts. "Did you say Thailand?" Apparently his marketing director, who knew where I was, neglected to mention it to the others. "What time is it there?" By now it is close to 3. "Oh for pete's sake!" he says. "Go back to sleep." So the meeting wraps up pretty quickly and I have not heard from them since.

Maybe work will come of it, maybe not. OK, probably not. But at least it makes for a memorable interview and anyway I've got lots of other stuff happening, work-wise.

---

If you had to bet on how soon I would return to Wat Rampoeng, the Buddhist monastery of meditation retreat infamy, the smart money would be on "never." But Lian wants to attend Donation Day, where local worshipers come to "make merit" in the eyes of their gods by forking over hard-earned baht to the vagrants-- er, the monks. But there is music and dancing, and lots of free food, and I am one of the few farang among hundreds of Thai people.



---

Wednesday morning I am hard-wired into the presidential election returns: a streaming NBC news feed, multiple live-blogging sites, the NY Times and HuffPo front pages with wildly inconsistent electoral maps, and even Thai TV, which tracks the returns much more closely than I would ever have imagined.

Only after Barack has it in the bag can I bear to turn on Fox News, where Megyn Kelly soothingly tries to explain reality to a weeping, jabbering, totally-in-denial Karl Rove. Delicious!


Thursday, October 11, 2012

New adventures begin November 1

Cook up some khao soi and clean up the kii maa, Chiang Mai: I am coming back!

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Music up, roll credits


If the locals were to vote on an official Chiang Mai theme song, I’m guessing they’d choose this northern Thai folk tune that I hear constantly around town. As background music in shops and restaurant, from street musicians, on local-music CDs, it seems to be everywhere. One evening at Sunday Walking Market I count three different renditions within 10 minutes by performers young and old alike. Some nights I awake to the sound of my idiot neighbor upstairs tootling out the melody, terribly, on his wooden flute.

Curious to learn more about the song, I run a Google video search of “Thai folk music” and instantly strike pay dirt – all kinds of performances, from teeth-gritting single-chord traditional instrument ensembles to modern soft-pop vocals, and everything in between.

I still don’t know who wrote it or when, although Lian thinks it might be the musician who produced this simple and headphone-worthy version that I first heard in her spa when we met. She tells me he’s been dead and gone for a good many years.

All I know is, it’s the perfect melody to play me out of Chiang Mai once again – for how long this time, who can say? Final post for now. See everybody soon.

Oh, I do know one more thing: the song is called Long Mae Ping.


Sunday, August 26, 2012

Old Man Funky and the Monks

Every day is trick-or-treat for the monks of Wat Rampoeng

Buddhist temple Wat Rampoeng, on the outskirts of Chiang Mai, offers meditation retreats of up to 26 days where white-clad spiritual seekers can immerse themselves in mindfulness training to guide them in their quest for higher planes of personal insight. By the way, everywhere it says “insight,” please read “zombification.” And, for all instances of “mindfulness,” you can substitute “self-lobotomy.”

Intending to mock, intending to mock ...
Early Saturday morning Lian and I get into costume and call for a Red Car to transport us to our 10-day reprogramming. We stop first at the sidewalk flower stalls beside the Mae Ping River for our requisite temple offerings of 11 lotus blossoms, 11 yellow candles and 11 sticks of incense each. Thirty minutes later, toting double-armfuls of luggage and swag, we present our matching white selves at the foliaged entrance to Wat Rampoeng.

Shopping for temple offerings
Lian and I are promptly separated – she is led off with the other Thai women visitors for religious instruction and meditation, while I hike up to the far end of the temple grounds to check in at the foreign office. After processing, the dour little teacher-monk on duty shows me to my modest private room, which he condescendingly demonstrates how to clean, as though I’d never seen a broom or mop before.

Back at the foreign office entrance, where other farang students are now waiting inside, our relationship goes south in a hurry.

“You have timer?” he asks. (Meditation exercises are self-timed.) I produce my iPhone and am about to point out its stopwatch function when he cuts me off.

“No phone. I keep,” he demands, palm extended. I explain that it’s in Airplane Mode and cannot function as a telephone in Thailand and that it’s a clock now, darn it, a clock. I hand it over to show him.

“What is this?” he says, holding it up.

“An iPhone,” I reply.

“Aha! Phone!” he says, pivoting on a bare heel and disappearing into his office.

I gape in astonishment. “The son of a bitch just stole my cell phone!” I sputter to myself, following right behind him. “Give it back now.”

“No phone! Do you read rules?” he shouts back. Well, as a matter of fact I did, and here is what it says: “Please switch off mobile phones during the course.” Nothing about confiscation. I pick up the rulebook on his desk and shove the page under his nose – but now we are WAY beyond debating the letter of the law.

“You want me teach you, no phone!” he hisses. “Or else you can stay in your room and teach yourself.” I consider the prospect of explaining to Lian how I got myself banished from a Buddhist meditation retreat on the very first morning. So I relent.

The other students, who watch this exchange in horror, meekly surrender their mobile devices like good little lambies. And then we all march off to begin our mental tranquility training.

---

Covering perhaps 20 acres, Wat Rampoeng comprises a temple or two, library, meditation exercise room, dining hall, and lots of housing for monks and visitors alike, all built around an immense and ancient stone stupa. I should mention, participating in the retreat is entirely on a donation basis – you pay what you feel it’s worth and what you can afford.

It really is a calming and beautiful setting, and I should be enjoying this … except that the whole proposition seems designed to deny or suppress everything that humans are engineered to like and do:

*  We are sexual creatures, so they impose gender separation. And no touching!
*  We are social animals, so chit-chat is discouraged. Even in the dining hall silence is strictly enforced, lest anyone's mindfulness process be disturbed.
*  We are blessed with tastebuds, so the mealtme prayer admonishes that our food is not for enjoyment or fun, only to sustain our bodies for a while longer. (So why do they bother adding salt and spices? Good question!)
*  We value individual expression, so we must wear only white, even in the room, even in bed. And white is SO NOT my color.
*  We crave intellectual engagement, so naturally they prohibit diversions of any kind: no reading, writing, music, none of it.
*  We appreciate visual beauty, so our mindfulness exercises call for the eyes to be closed or cast downward.

Throw in low-level hunger and sleep deprivation – no meals past noon, no sleeping before 10 p.m., and a 4 a.m. wake-up bell – and you’ve got a population primed for mind control.

But I promised to give meditation a fair shot, so I go along with the program.

---

“Standing, standing …” the teacher-monk directs in a low monotone as we all stand side by side, barefoot on mossy garden stones on this lovely Monday morning. This is the walking exercise, but we are not yet walking.

“Intending to walk, intending to walk …” he continues slowly. “Now walking, walking …”

We move forward in deliberate half-steps. “Right goes thus, left goes thus, right goes thus, left goes thus …”

Midway across the garden we stop, with deliberation. “Stopping, stopping … now intending to turn, intending to turn … now turning, turning … now intending to walk, intending to walk … now walking, walking …”

Then we do the standing exercise, which consists of, uh, standing. That's it. We stand there with our eyes closed for 15 minutes envisioning our own breathing. “Rising, falling …” goes the teacher. Then it’s back to the walking exercise.

We do this for two hours, until the 10:30 lunch bell. And then again, on our own, into the afternoon and night.

---

Every day the farang students report to his eminence the abbot and/or his young translator, who records how many hours of exercise we put in, answers questions, and generally makes sure we’re sticking with the program. The universal complaint is the lotus position: “My legs are killing me!” The (to me) shocking response: “Everyone’s legs hurt always. You must work through the pain.” Or … change positions? But I guess if they can get us to accept the other indignities, hell, why not throw in a little agony?

Every day they ratchet up the target number of hours and the complexity of the exercises. On Day 5, I am sad to report that I could not put in my required 10 hours, only eight. (Really less than three.) The monk smiles benignly and says: “You are not perfect and it's in the past now.”

Married friends, if ever your spouse catches you in bed with someone else, I hope you'll think to use this line: “Honey, I am not perfect and it’s in the past now.”

---

Girls-only section of the dining hall.
My fellow white-boy meditators are a hoot, and I'm not the only one who thinks so.

“Why farang so serious?” Lian asks over coffee after breakfast. (We consistently scandalize the congregation by talking in the outdoor public area by the wat’s convenience store.) Slowly and oh-so deliberately these western novitiate wanna-bes pace the grounds with heads bowed and hands locked behind them, Prince Charles style. Working on the look.

A few of them are actually horrified by the most basic overtures of social courtesy. Leaving the dining hall one day, I hold the door for a hippie chick-looking woman behind me. She visibly shivers in horror at my gaucherie.

Has mindfulness training damaged these people or did they arrive that way? Lian tells me about a woman she met who has been studying at the temple for four months. “Is Level 6!” she marvels. “She hardly eat, don’t shower, her mind is very calm. Why you smile?”

I smile because … really? “Hardly eat, don’t shower?” Isn’t that what junkies do?

---

By Day 5, I am the Randle P. McMurphy of Wat Rampoeng.

The 4 a.m. wake-up bell tolls and I hear the chirp-chirp of my next-door neighbor’s digital timer as he begins his day’s mindfulness exercises. I roll over and go back to sleep until the 6:30 breakfast bell.

The room.
Every once in a while I put in an appearance at the library or the stupa courtyard for a little walking practice. I argle-bargle, yabber-jabber my way through the spoken prayers at breakfast and lunch. But by now I am spending most of my time in my cell – I mean, my room – napping, writing blog notes and doing push-ups and crunches.

---

On Saturday morning after breakfast, Lian smiles weakly and in a small voice concedes: “I think seven day enough.” Yesssss!!!

Before she changes her mind I race to the foreign office and arrange for early release, which the abbot grants. But this is Buddha Day in Thailand and the temple is bustling, so they cannot arrange a closing ceremony for us until the next morning. No problem-o! I spend my final day scouring my room and striding purposefully around the grounds, eyes up. Because it really is a gorgeous place.

Happy Buddha Day
As I am kicking back outside the library contemplating the retreat experience, up walks my old buddy the teacher-monk. “Abbot say you can go?” he asks. I nod. He thrusts my iPhone at me and says: “Next time, TEN day!” A little prick to the end.

That night I am happy to join the monks and worshipers in their ceremonial candlelight walk around the stupa. If only the rest of the retreat could have been this congenial.

---

Flash back to the very first day of walking practice, when I realize: “I know this. This is like plowing the Island.”

The back 50 acres of my grandparents’ farm along the McKenzie River we always called the Island. Every spring, back and forth the tractors would go – plowing, disking, grooming the soil for planting. Later in the summer would come driving the harvester. And you absolutely had to remain focused and in the moment, keeping your speed just right, your tool on the line, your work-side front wheel aligned just so. Even the “intending to turn, intending to turn” part: you had to plan your turnaround ahead of time, and know when to raise or drop your plow. You’d be surprised at how quickly the time would go, and you actually accomplished something useful.

The moment I make that connection, I am ruined for the rest of this wankery.

But it gives me an idea for my farming friends: rebrand your operation as an “Insight Retreat.” Take out an ad in the new age-y magazines, get city folks to actually pay you for the “mindfulness therapy” of driving tractor, setting irrigation, picking crops.

I will even provide a testimonial: it sure worked for me.

Friday, August 17, 2012

Coming soon: 'Flub Med 2'


I promised Lian that we would take another shot at the meditation retreat at the Buddhist temple outside town, and come Sunday I get to make good on my word.

Our first attempt in January was cut short by poor planning: although Thai people can just show up unannounced, we arrived to learn that foreigners need advance notice and documentation. But this time we are prepared! I already own the white duds and I've cleared my work schedule for three Internet-free days of blissful enlightenment.

"Ten days," Lian corrects.

"Huh? What happened to three?" I want to know. Turns out that three days might be fine for Thai people, the monks tell her, but my polluted Western brain will require the extra-heavy wash cycle, maybe even a pre-soak. So I'm down for ten.

I know little about what's in store -- why spoil the surprise? -- but from what I've gathered, I'm pretty sure that my favorite day will be the last one. For starters, each day begins with the ringing of the big gong at 4:30 a.m. "Is call to prayers," Lian explains.

"OK, stop right there. I want to be polite, but please understand," I warn. "If anyone tries to tell me 'here's your chant book, now you pray,' there WILL be an awkward moment." She thinks that maybe I can go do some independent study during the Buddha parts.

Also: no meals after 12 (as in noon!), only liquids. So I'll be power-loading on the monk-gruel they serve up at breakfast and lunch, and afterward I'll have my smuggled stash of whatever meal-replacement powders I can find at Rimping Market today.

I should mention, the temple offers this carefree getaway on a donation-only basis ... but no one is giving me a clue as to what would be appropriate. "Up to you," the monks tell her. So, fine -- I'm bringing a one-thousand baht note for each of us. But I'm also bring hundreds and twenties, depending on how blissed-out I'm feeling at the end. Results, guys, show me results!



Sunday, August 12, 2012

Step aerobics, Thai style

Here is a rare and amazing sight in Chiang Mai: a stretch of even, unbroken, obstacle-free sidewalk. People come from all around northern Thailand to behold this marvel, and to walk a few steps on it with their eyes closed without fear of breaking an ankle (or worse).

Now look at a typical Chiang Mai sidewalk: the crumbling concrete drain covers you dare not test your weight on, the oddball utility poles and outdoor advertising and whatever that leaning metal pipe is supposed to be ... and this is a pretty tame example. For extra obstacle-course points, throw in parked motor-bikes, vendor carts, crazy up-and-down curbs, feral dogs and, when it hasn't rained in awhile, the minefield of kii maa they excrete everywhere. You don't dare let your feet fall out of your peripheral vision, ever, or you will get hurt.

Last year Lian gave me a Buddhist tract on the topic of "mindfulness" -- the notion of being vigilant and deliberate as you do whatever you're doing. I think about that little book every single moment that I am on foot in this town, and it has saved my aging bones more times than I can remember.

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Sunday is Mother Day in Thailand. The temples, the shops, the streets, all full of sons and daughters taking their maternal units for an outing.

At noon the checkout lines at Rimping Market are overflowing with multigenerational customers. So I guess it's the one day you can honestly say that everybody and their mother is there.

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I'm not sure what exactly happens in this place and I hate to ask, for fear of looking dumb.



Monday, August 6, 2012

Southbound trains, northbound planes

Friday afternoon we board a second-class sleeper out of Chiang Mai to begin our nine-day trip to the south -- first a few days' R&R among the farang tourist villages that line the island of Koh Samui; then it's on to Lian's hometown of Na San, just an hour inland, to visit her aged mother.

Here's a helpful tip when planning your train connections in this country: don't even try. Unlike, say, any northern European railway system where civilized folks care about schedules, their Thai counterparts are extremely mai bpen rai ("no worries!") about that stuff. And so your train will arrive in Bangkok two hours late; you will spend most of a day staring morosely at insipid sitcoms and pop videos on the big screen in Hualamphong railway station waiting for your next train, which is also late; and it will take you a day longer than you planned to get wherever you're going. So take a deep breath and just go with it.

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Hot afternoon in Bophut, Koh Samui.
Two trains, one shuttle bus, a high-speed ferry and a taxi ride later, we arrive in the coastal village of Bophut and at Eden Bungalows, the hotel where I stayed five years earlier on my first trip to Thailand. Maybe I should have gone back and re-read the TripAdvisor review I wrote at the time before booking a reservation: I had forgotten how the owner personifies and perpetuates the stereotype of the arrogant snotbag Frenchmen. As we approach the reception counter, he is slumped over the adjacent bar, his beardy puss buried deep in an issue of Le Monde. Not so much as a "bienvenue" or a simple grunt of acknowledgment from our host; instead, it falls to his Thai counter girl standing nearby to see this latest riff-raff up to their room.

Later in the afternoon we return from a long stroll. But now the owner is animated and jovial: he is joined at the entrance bar by a clutch of his expat countrymen, who occupy every stool -- same as five years earlier, I remember. We scurry past quickly so as not to disturb their private party; it feels as though we're tramping through a stranger's living room.

"We go another place, maybe?" Lian suggests; I'm thinking the same thing. So we self-banish from Eden after just one night (we reserved for two) and find a much more congenial place just two doors down for a less money and a lot more amenities. Another Thailand traveler tip: unless you're visiting on a special holiday in high season, don't bother with online reservations -- just show up and see what looks good, because Koh Samui is stinko with hotels and guest houses.

By the way, a big thumbs-up to Smile House Resort and its two fine pools, jungle-themed landscape and beachside restaurant with complimentary buffet breakfast. Bonus satisfaction points: I am even able to pirate Internet from neighboring Eden Bungalows -- the owner is a big merde-face, but they do have killer wi-fi.

---

Gotta say, I am no fan of resort towns, whether in Thailand, Mexico or anywhere else under the tropical sun. Despite their boost to the local economy, the local power structures debase the indigenous culture, defile the landscape and siphon dollars to the white owners who call the shots. In fact, the only reason we are here is because Lian grew up close by and never once had an opportunity (or the wherewithal) to cross the water and visit.

So we kick back by the pool, stroll the waterfront row of tailor shops, pubs, jewelry stores and other standard-issue tourist town commerce, and hike inland twice a day for real Thai food. (The natives who work in the hotels and restaurants have to eat and live somewhere.)

If this all sounds extravagant, it's really not: the nice, mid-priced Smile House Resort runs me all of $58 a night, and that includes a generous buffet breakfast. I'll give them this, they keep things affordable.

Sunday morning we catch the ferry back to the mainland ... and back to the real Thailand. If Koh Samui is the disease, Lian's hometown of Na San is the cure.

A scrubby little farming community an hour south of Surat Thani, Na San has no shopping malls, no fast-food joints, apparently no bars, and not much in the way of diversion. But the local produce markets and food carts are superb and we go crazy on southern Thai flavors: fresh durian and homemade durian chips, curries, rambutan fresh off the tree, and other fruits from Lian's family gardens.

A brother-in-law takes us for a drive to a Buddhist temple built flush against this sheer, crumbling cliff that overlooks the town. Standing at its base is terrifying -- its craggy face rises up and out, obliterating the sky overhead. Pictures cannot to it justice.

One night we (meaning I) host Lian's family at a local restaurant that serves Issan food, the notoriously fiery northern Thai cuisine. Our party of 13 keeps the kitchen hopping, and I suspect that someone handed the menu back to the waitress and said: "Yeah, this all looks fine. Two of everything." The check, including tip, comes in at eighty bucks -- about what I'm paying for four nights in the nice room at the local hotel. But I score points with the fam, so that's fine.

---

Two days to roll down south, two hours to fly home to Chiang Mai. God, I love air travel!

Old auntie under the rambutan tree.


Monday, July 23, 2012

'I think long time my god hate me.'


“Will you have dinner with me?” asks my new massage therapist before our session even begins.

“Uh, absolutely!” I reply, flattered at the invitation but a little taken aback. So we set a date for 9-ish the following Thursday evening.

“Mr. Tong wants us to join him for dinner,” I later tell Lian.

“I think he want friend for drink whiskey,” she figures. Lian knows that Tong indulges alone most every night after work, so it’s a special treat for him to have a new drinking buddy. And sure enough, come Thursday night when we meet up at the open-air family style restaurant near his shop, a smiling Tong arrives packing a tall bottle of Johnny Walker Red Label.

This is a hardcore Thai establishment, no English translations on the menu, so Lian and Tong handle the ordering. My job is to sit there and eat whatever’s put in front of me (no problem – well, except for maybe the steaming pig intestines), and to keep pace with Mr. Tong’s bottomless scotch and soda. Tong himself eats little and consumes mostly Johnny Walker and the occasional smoke. (Luckily, Chiang Mai eating places are largely smoke-free, and smoking at the table is considered "not polite," so he steps outside.)

Fed, watered and feeling no pain.
Many plates and pours later we close the place down. The bill arrives and it’s Tong’s treat, for all of 459 baht – a little over fifteen bucks. As we part ways, Tong gives me the Thai version of the backslapping man-hug and we agree to do this again real soon.

I am just whiskey-buzzed enough to try riding home on the back of Lian’s motor-bike even after last week's spill, and together enough to jump off after one block and walk the rest of the way home.

---

"Delicious"? Maybe not so much.
Chiang Mai probably has scores of truly delicious restaurants. Optimistic signage to the contrary, this new place around the corner is not one of them.

Saturday night we give The Delicious Restaurant a try. Ominously, we are the only customers. The menu offers an unlikely mash-up of Italian and Thai cuisine: “spaghettis” with green curry? Or with tom yum? Weird. We play it safe and order a chicken dish off the Thai side of the menu; what arrives is this pile of freezer-case breaded chick-fingers with sweet chili sauce glugged over vegetables on the side. We look down at the red mess and then at each other.

I remark: “This sauce is …”

“Bottled,” Lian finishes. Which is almost a felony in the foodie heaven that is Chiang Mai, where every roadside wok-jockey can at least throw together soy sauce, nam pla, sugar, lime juice, chilies and whatnot.

I’ll be surprised if this place doesn’t fold before I fly back to America in seven weeks.

---


“Wang tan”? “Hang dong”? Do these people have ANY IDEA how awesome their language is to a filthy-minded adolescent like me?

---

Several times a day we walk along the tiny soi that connects our neighborhood to the road into town. Halfway down the path sits this ramshackle wooden shanty, its dirt yard littered with all manner of junk for the family’s laundry business – plastic buckets, hoses, clotheslines and such. Most mornings an elderly woman is squatting in the dirt, scrubbing and slapping away at the bucketfuls of laundry that surround her.

One night on the way home we pause to look in at the darkened dwelling. Through an unscreened window, its canvas drape pulled back, we can make out the old mama-san seated inside, just visible in the lifeless grey light of a bare LED bulb.

I ask Lian: “Are these poor people?”

“Yes, poor,” she replies somberly, staring in at the dark dwelling for the longest time. Finally we move on in silence.

At home, Lian motions for me to sit with her. She picks up my clipboard and a scrap of paper and starts to draw: first a rectangle, then diagonal cross-hatching inside. Staring down at the paper, she explains:

“Many years ago when I am married I live in the garden with Dao father. We have no …” and she gestures to the light.

“Electricity?” I guess.

"Electricity, yes. And window cover is this,” she says, pointing to her scrawled rectangle, which I realize is not a window screen but a rattan panel. Now I get it: living with a newborn in a hovel on her husband’s farm in the sticks, her choices at night were either fresh air and 10 million tropical mosquitoes, or suffocation. “Dao is baby, and so hot!” she recalls. “Every night quiet and dark. Many time Dao and I alone. And when Dao father come home, he drink whiskey and talk-talk-talk, not make sense.

“Then I understand: we are poor people! Cannot tell my family, not tell my mother, or she worry me. I think long time my god hate me.

“Now when I see poor lady who work hard, I want to give her money, touch her arm,” she continues, her eyes misting. “Because I know her. I know.”