Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Cambodia continued.









postscript

in case anyone, besides my wonderful mother, ever wants to write me a letter (which would make me oh so happy!) right about now, i'm rolling my eyes at my shameless hinting, here is my address. send away! no really.

151 Moo 2
Mae Kue, Doi Saket
Chiang Mai, 50220
Thailand

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

liaison with insanity


Laos Part Two:
Friday I drop my visa off, and surprisingly enough, there's no issue - it will be ready Monday. Finally, it's time to leave this not so charming city and head to Vang Vieng, the place I've actually been excited to go. There are six other passengers in the car. I think it's a little strange that the woman in the front seat looks really nervous to be getting in. She keeps smiling at me and the driver and well, everyone. She should be used to these whack drivers by now I think. 
I ask the driver if it's about 3.5 hrs to get there. "No," he says, "it will be three or four hours." Ok. We get there in exactly 3.5 hrs, but not without difficulty in the form of the Communist "police" or whatever they claim to be. These imposing men in brown uniforms with red striping and braiding flag our minivan down and ask for everyone's passports. Yep, you got it, my passport is still in Vientiene with the Thai Embassy. I explain this to a Lao woman in the seat behind me who lives in England and consequently, speaks English. She apparently tells me to stay in the car, but you'd think I would've heard her say that. The officials are more interested in the Lao people than me or the other western person in the car. They get on their phones and are pissed that front-seat lady (the Lao/English woman's mom) has left Vientiene. Now it makes sense why she seemed nervous/excited to be going somewhere else. The Lao/English woman's boyfriend, an English guy, explains that his girlfriend went to great lengths to get the paperwork and stamps saying her mom could leave for the weekend. For some reason, these guys are angrily explaining that the Vientiene office never should have authorized her to leave. 
We're about to board to freedom when they approach me and ask for my passport. I think they're joking, that the L/E woman must have told them my circumstance. I suck down my cigarette (yes, this week has brought me to buying those smoky treats with their magical calming powers) trying to look nonchalant and play along without coming across as cavalier. Inside I'm about to start panicking. Two of them are hiding smiles (that's why I think this is a joke), but the one pressing me with the questions looks beyond unamused. He's telling me I can't go any further with the van without my passport, that in a communist country, you must always travel with documentation. That I'll have to stay with them until we can find transport for me (in the middle of nowhere). There is no way, besides physical detainment, that I am staying/going anywhere with these guys. My head is dizzy. The L/E woman comes up behind me, "Just get in the van," she says under her breath. I start moving away, smiling at them like I don't understand what they're saying even though they're speaking English. We climb in the van. He's still talking to me. I smile and wave goodbye, and by the grace of God, the driver lives up to his profession. "I can't believe you didn't stay in the car! I can't believe they let you go. They were very strict, very serious," my new best friend is telling me. Lady, let's drop this, I'm thinking. I can feel the anxiety building. I try tactics to halt it before it fully develops, but this country has taken a toll on me so that I'm just completely realizing right now how shaken up I am/have been.  
I'm reciting Bible verses, listening to music, focusing on my breathing, and praying when God reminds me that he has a plan for me - a specific one - one that does not include me dying within the next three years at least. I start to calm down somewhat. By the time we reach Vang Vieng, I'm good to go. 


This place is far and away one of the prettiest places I've ever seen. I'm going to rank it second only behind the Olympic Peninsula. The limestone cliffs are towering - absolutely monstrous. Because they're limestone, they erode erratically lending to their dramatic visuals. They become more beautiful the further they crumble in decay. I check into the nicest place I've ever paid for for under $9/night. The staff are friendly, the place is ultra clean, I'm on the top floor with a balcony and a view of the cliffs and the river, it's pouring rain through the blanket of mist, and the two English girls I'd met the first day are in the room next to me. 



The rest of the day and the next two are . . . interesting. This place is a drug mecca, and because of that everyone here pretends they're living in the 60s. They dress the part and act the part (I'm assuming). It's all full on hippie wear, or bikinis and body paint. The only form of "glassware" are buckets for drinks (which seemed to be continuously free) or buckets for shakes laced with anything you'd want, or wouldn't want depending on what your definition of a good time is. I do see teacups - for the opium tea. I cannot believe how straightforward all the bars are in their advertising. I have no idea how every "happy pizza" place isn't shut down. I suppose it's half the draw for the tourists. 

Anyway, there are other things to do like hiking in the rain, swimming in blue lagoons in the rain, tubing down the river in the rain, and exploring caves to get out of the rain. I find friends the first night who will participate in these aforementioned activities in the coming days. They sit waiting at a bar where I am drawn like a moth to the black lights. 

Bridge - I love what the raindrops are doing.

Here I meet the owner, a guy from Seattle oddly enough, and two other girls who are traveling solo. We have the place to ourselves. Green laser lights dance over the grass looking like fireflies gone mad. The outdoor bar is strung up with hammocks and Sigur Ros blasting from the speakers lends to the unworldly, dreamy quality. 


By the time I leave, I'm ready to go, but I will definitely come back someday that is not soon. 
Blue Lagoon in the rain

The rest of the trip is pretty uneventful. I pick up my passport and exit Laos as quickly as I can. Quick enough to walk by the "exit fee" booth undetected. I spend a day in Nong Khai and a day in Udon Thani - two relaxing towns back in the comforts of Thailand. These days are pretty uneventful due to my lack of vision. I left Vang Vieng with one of my eyes swollen shut and by the time I pry it open, there are red spots all over the former white part. It must be pink eye, I think. (Do I think this because I conveniently happen to already have the medicine in my possession? Probably, definitely.) So I proceed to douse my eyes (both for good measure) with this antibacterial medicine and unknowingly destroy all the good bacteria in my eye. By the time I'm in Nong Khai, the pain is so bad, and my vision is so blurred, I decide to visit a couple of pharmacists. They both prescribe me eye drops for "minor irritation." What about massive hemorrhaging is giving you the idea that there is anything minor going on?  
Once I hit Udon Thani, I make a beeline for the international hospital. Within an hour, I'm out of there with four medications (in a gift bag) for my hemorrhaging eyeballs caused by a "viral infection" which is apparently different than a bacterial one where you should be using antibacterials. Note to self: self-medicating = bad. Also in tow, is my complimentary clock which is given to patients arriving between 5 and 8pm to celebrate the hospital's 12th anniversary. Still trying to figure that one out. 
Twelve hours later I'm greeted at the door by three-year-old Sammy hugging my legs saying, "P. Lauria, P. Lauria." Thank you “home” that wherever you are, you always feel the same. 

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Laos

To my dear readers: This is long. 
I leave Chiang Mai a little upset after having a “confrontation” with the woman who runs the orphanage. The Asian way is to just pretend like nothing is wrong to save face. She was being rude to me (for the billionth time), and for some reason, I couldn’t handle it that day, so wiping my tears of frustration away, I took a deep breath and “confronted” her - “Malee, is something wrong?” We were in the car on the way to bus station. Dead silence. She then starts talking in Thai to another person in the car. After their conversation ends, I prepared myself to ask her again. She must have sensed it because she abruptly changed the subject. “So, Lauren, you have a boyfriend yet?” All of a sudden she’s my friend again. I guess she realized that I realized she had crossed the line, and this was her roundabout way of fixing things. She asked questions until we got to the bus station. I was glad to let the subject drop.
So I get on the bus eyeing where I’ll spend the next 11 hours of my life. I go to the bathroom, flush - and the toilet overflows onto my foot. Awesome. I climb out as it continues flooding the floor. I prepare myself for a fitful night of sleep - iPod, check; eye mask, check; Chang beer, check. The bus is one of those double decker ones, the kind that if you’re on top feels like the bus is constantly swaying and could tip over at any point. The monsoon that follows us the entire way doesn’t coax the sleep to come anytime soon. Around 6am I wake up to part of the storm dripping onto my forehead. I look around for a seat to switch to. All full. I go downstairs and happily find one empty seat. It’s drier, quieter, steadier, and warmer than on top in Narnia Ice World where I had spent the night shivering and trying to find a place to put my feet. (I cannot sleep with my feet on the ground the whole night. I’m sure there’s some perfectly good explanation for this; I just don’t know it yet.) 
I get off the bus at 7am in Udon Thani, meet a couple of British girls and decide to travel the rest of the way (3 hours) with them which includes a bus to Nong Kai, a tuk tuk to the Thai border, a bus to the Laos border (who knows why they’re not closer to each other?), and a tuk tuk into the Lao capital Vientiene. 
I quickly come to realize that the tuk tuk drivers here are real crooks with bad temperaments vaguely hidden beneath smiles. I tell our driver where the British girls need to go, and where I need to go. I even show him a map. He quotes us a price, we agree, then we wait while he gets the tuk tuk. Then we wait while he does a U-turn with us in the tuk tuk to “see if his friend wants to come.” Then we wait while he tries to recruit more passengers. I tell him we’re in a hurry: the girls have a bus to catch, and I need to get to the Thai embassy before it closes at noon. It’s now 10am. He says “we leave now” as he continues to try to recruit people. “We’ll find someone else if we can’t leave now,” we tell him. “Why are you angry at me?” He asks looking pretty angry with us. “We’re not angry, we’re in a hurry,” I explain. I feel like I’m reasoning with a child - something I’m not in the mood for after traveling for 1000 hours. “We leave in five minutes,” he says, avoiding eye contact. “Well we’re leaving now,” I say, climbing out. “Miss, ok, we leave now,” he gets frantic. I turn around, “If I get in, we’ll leave right now?” “We’re just waiting for you to get in,” he says sarcastically. I get in, and lo and behold, we wait. “Can we go now?” one of the girls asks. By this point he’s just ignoring us. A woman gets in the tuk tuk. Now he’s waving over three guys. We must have met some quota because then he gets in and starts driving but still slows at every person walking on the street to ask if they want to go the Morning Market. We squeeze someone else in, his neighbor supposedly. Then a couple gets on. Then a woman with three children. We are cramped and one of the children is practically in my lap. 
He drops everyone else off at the market even though I had asked him to drop me off first since my hostel was closer, and I was in the biggest hurry.  He tells me when it’s just the two of us, “You have to pay extra because now it’s just you.” “No, I told you where I needed to go, and you told me a price, and that’s all I’m paying.” He quotes me a price triple what we had agreed on and explains that petrol is expensive. “Give me a break.” “What?” he asks. “No,” I answer in a typical Asian way - giving a negative to a question that can’t be answered with a yes or no. “Ok, I discount for you,” “Yes, 50 baht, what we agreed on, sounds good.” I say irritated. “I give it to you for 140.” “No.” He drops me off at a pretty disgusting looking place where the dormitory rooms are $3 a night. He tries to argue about price, but I put the money in his lap, flash him a smile and thank him, “Kop jai.” He’s muttering something as I walk into the hostel. 
I check in, look at the clock, and realize I’m not going to make it to the embassy today. Thank you infuriating tuk tuk driver. I go upstairs feeling almost as gross as the place I’ve just checked into. A shower is a necessity. The shower has slats in the bottom half of the door so I can see people approaching. The door locks, but it doesn’t seem sturdy. I try to shower quickly and watch the feet come and go. There’s a sink right next to the grimy shower. I see someone walk toward me and hear them use the sink, then I watch them leave. Another person comes - I watch their feet get closer, but then instead of turning to go to the sink, they start side-stepping out of sight. Ok, that’s strange, I think. I don’t hear any water coming on. I take a step over so I can check the lock again. Through a tiny crack between the door and its frame, I see an eyeball. It sees me and disappears. I watch the feet walk away into the room where I’m staying. The sound of crunching paper like someone’s eating from a potato chip bag drifts from the room. I turn the shower off, towel off, and get dressed all the while watching to see if the feet leave the room. They don’t, and as I walk back into the room I look at the only other person in the room. He’s a tall, thin Japanese man sitting on his bed folding plastic shopping bags. He doesn’t make eye contact with me. I debate whether or not I should say something to him or to the front desk. Should I leave? Should I just forget about it? After all, there will be other people in the room at night, and he’s ignoring me now. I think about what I would tell my best friend if this had happened to her. I decide to tell the front desk. 
“Sabidy, (hello), um you know how there’s a crack between the door and the door frame of the shower?” She nods. “Well, when I was taking a shower, someone was watching me,” I’m trying to talk quietly because for some reason I’m embarrassed even though I didn’t do anything. She just stares. “We don’t bother with things upstairs,” she seems bored, “we stay down here.” “Um, I don’t think you understand, the guy who’s in bed 6 was watching me take a shower, so could you ask him to leave, or should I leave?” She checks her computer, “The guy in bed 6 is a nice guy. You can leave.” “Ok. . . I’ll go get my stuff.” “I’ll refund you your money,” she calls as I walk up the stairs. Unbelievable, I think. If only I knew how truly unbelievable it was about to get. She comes upstairs with three other girls who work there. “He’s a good guy,” she says pointing at the creep. “Ok,” I say really just wanting to leave. Maybe I should jump off the balcony. “How do you know it was him?” I explain my feet watching technique, and point to the fact that he’s the only person in the room, etc. - she’s not listening. “Show me how you saw him,” she says, walking to the bathroom. She goes in the bathroom and closes the door all the way - holding it shut so it actually is completely closed. “How you see him?” she yells through the door. “Well, you have to lock the door and let it go.” She opens the door and for some strange reason looks really smug. “There is no problem with the door,” she stares at me with venom seething out of her dead eyes, “the problem is with you.” 
At this point, around 567 smart-ass remarks pop into my head. I’m on the verge of saying them; I’m shaking, and then something in my gut told me to bite my tongue and just get the hell out of there. The man has joined us. “This girl say you watch her shower.” He steps closer to me, “No,” he says, “I brushed my teeth, that’s all.” “You’re a liar,” I say, the adrenaline doing the talking for me. His lip starts quivering. His eyes are raging. “You should have talked to me about this before talking to them,” he takes another step closer, “that is very impolite of you.” “I think it’s impolite to watch someone shower. I’m not concerned with being polite - I’m concerned for my safety.” The woman steps in, “I believed you at first, but now I believe him. He’s a good man. He lives in Thailand. He’s here to get his visa,” she adds as if that speaks volumes about a person’s character. “So am I, exactly the same thing. What does that matter?” And then that voice telling me to leave these idiots to their dementedness and get out of there. I start walking away. “Get lost,” the guy says to me. I turn to say something - oh, the things I want to say! but I just shake my head and head down the stairs. The lady follows me and tells me she’ll only partially refund me because I used her disgusting shower and stale towel. “Ok, that’s fine.” “He’s a good man,” she says again. “I guess we have different definitions of good,” I said taking my $2 and walking out into the dripping heat. 
I’m already crying before the door closes. I turn down the first alley and keep walking. I feel furious, a little scared, dirty, furious again. I contemplate calling the police, realize they’ll probably do nothing, and decide instead on pizza. I call my parents as I wait for my pepperoni and pineapple pizza. We get disconnected. I feel really alone. And unsafe. I think about what my dad or my friend Will would do to that creep if they were here. Somehow, I take solace in those hypothetical situations. 
I find a hotel as far away as I can walk in the heat. 
Now I have a tuk tuk driver who will run me down on sight, some Japanese pervert who is quite possibly deranged, and one disconcertingly weird woman to avoid in this small city. My mind, inclined as it is towards the dramatic side, starts thinking of what is going to happen next. Being mugged or bit by a snake are the two options I decide are most likely to happen. They haven’t yet for the record. 
I wander around the city for five hours and finally sit down at a Belgium restaurant to enjoy a Duvel on the banks of the Mekong river - yes, the good Lord knew what I needed. As the sun sets, I walk along the water’s edge and watch the bats swoop low over the currents and ripples. I’m hungry and decide to go back to the little heaven that is a piece of Belgium. I order a salmon steak with Belgian fries and a salad. I try a hefeweissen that has raspberries and peaches added to it. A little kitty hops up on the seat next to me, so I share my fish with him or her. 
“Would you like to join us for dinner?” I turn around where a couple of guys sit. I debate what to do thinking of the series of unfortunate events that’s happened so far. This is either a chance to add to them, or to try to improve upon the day. “We’re just eating,” he says. “Ok.” And so I meet David, the 40-year-old Australian who will ask me to marry him by the end of the night, and Oliver, the 28-year-old Belgian who explains that it’s “his pleasure” to continue letting me sample all that Belgium has to offer. Come to find out, he’s a tennis teacher and lives about 15 minutes from me in Chiang Mai. David recruits another lonely diner - Mel, the 68-year-old retired music professor who has been teaching English for the last 18 years in 18 different countries. He moved to Laos three days previous. Mel is awesome. He was a music and humanities (literature and religion) major from Stanford. “We’re probably reading or have read the same books!” he tells me. He’s tall, wears round glasses, a black beret, and rides a bicycle. He got a gig playing piano at the second nicest hotel in town Monday-Friday in exchange for free use of their pool. He’s one of those rare older people who takes the time to listen to younger people talk. We decide to find a place with a piano. Surprisingly, we do - a lovely French restaurant. He plays Chopin, Mozart, and the Beetles. He turns down a request for The Bumblebee saying he hasn’t played that since 1967. Mel takes his leave, and David, Oliver, and I go to a rooftop bar that overlooks the Mekong. White, orange, blue and red lights shine in wavy streaks on the blackness of the water. Oliver tells me in his French accent, “please don’t ask for a cigarette, just have one whenever you want.” We spend the rest of the night talking, drinking Beerlao (their dark lager is delectable), and being hypnotized by the lights’ play on the inky ribbon of the river. David suggests that I forget about the visa process and come to Vang Vieng with him. Not only do I really want to do this, but it also seems like the logical choice. From somewhere deep within, I find the strength to stay the visa path. : )
My tuk tuk driver takes me to the wrong hotel after I’d showed him on a freaking map where to go, and then tries to charge me extra for taking me to the right one. “Sorry my friend, your mistake,” I tell him. My room almost feels cold when I get in, and there are no creepy men in the bed next to mine. Sleep comes easy.
The next morning, Thursday, I go to the Embassy. Oliver is there as well as my friend from church, Rochell. The embassy informs me that they won’t put the visa on either one of my last two pages because visas “don’t go there.” Last time I checked, visas go wherever you put them. Oliver comes to the American Embassy with me - it’s conveniently right next to his hotel which I decide to check into (it’s cheaper and closer to the waterfront). The embassy tells me to come back at 1 pm because that’s the only time they can add pages to my passport. I explain that I absolutely have to get it done now because the Thai embassy closes at noon. If I don’t get my passport back to them before noon, I’ll have to take it on Friday and won’t be able to pick it up until Monday which means my bus ticket that I’ve already bought is worthless and that I’ll miss another day of school. “I’m sorry miss, I’m obliged to tell you that you have to wait. It can only be done after one. And it costs $82.” “What?! It’s free in Thailand!” I’m flabbergasted. “It used to be free here too, but it changed 3 days ago. Sorry miss.” 
I go back to the Thai embassy to beg them to put it on one of my last two pages. A guy bumps into me, asks me a few questions, then asks for my number so we can hang out tonight. “Um, no, I’m busy right now.” The woman at the embassy answers my question before I ask it. “Mai dai (I can’t),”  she says, not willing to budge. 
Back to the hotel. It’s time for me to eat some traditional Lao food. I order larp moo - meat salad with pork. It’s ok at first - fresh basil and mint, green onions, pork, and something white that I can’t identify. Halfway through, I see a big piece of the white stuff. It has hair on it. Not human hair - pig hair. Ughhh, it’s the skin! I can’t finish my meal and  go sit outside the embassy to wait for one when the people can magically insert some extra pages. The security guards are good-natured and keep me entertained until the doors open. They even call the bus station for me to see if I can switch my ticket, but we keep getting disconnected. 
I can pay the astronomical fee in kip or dollars. I go to a bank and change all of my Thai baht into kip. I go back to the embassy and the woman tells me the price. It comes to over $100 when I convert the kip to dollars in my head. Their exchange rate she explains, for paying in kip instead of dollars. I go back to the bank and ask them to change the kip they just gave me into dollars. They can’t. They don’t buy kip. A woman who works at the embassy who I’d seen earlier has dollars! She offers to trade money. I go back to the embassy. Who should be there but Mel wearing the same clothes he was wearing yesterday I think. We talk about the bureaucracy of these stupid embassies. Later, I see him riding his bike in the town center. I swear I see the same people multiple times per day in this tiny town which just contributes to this I’m stuck in the twilight zone feeling. 
Tomorrow I go back to the Embassy with my thicker, more valuable passport. Wish me luck.  

Monday, July 12, 2010

the great descoverly

by Daniel age 11

Once upond the time in a deep jungle their live a monkey name Lauren. One day she was climing in a tree when she found a house and it was big. Then she open the door and found all kind of animals and they all have name from the bible. Like Becky the little fish, Debbie the kitty, Abby the zebra and a lot more. So she decide to stay for a while. When they wake up they found a lot of visitor so they go and talk with the visitor and they are takking them to camping for 1 month and will take the kids too. When they are at the camp she had a lot of good time with the kids so she decide to stay with the kids forever. The end

Saturday, July 10, 2010

holy moly

Don't you love it when you're searching God's word for something specific, and you're led to passages you'd otherwise never look at and then BAM! - it totally applies to what you were looking for? God is so so faithful. He continually blows my mind. 

When you come looking for me, you'll find me. Yes, when you get serious about finding me and want it more than anything else, I'll make sure you won't be disappointed. I'll turn things around for you. I'll bring you back from all the countries into which I drove you, bring you home to the place from which I sent you off into exile. You can count on it. - God's Decree
- Jeremiah 29:13-14

If you seek GOD, your God, you'll be able to find him if you're serious, looking for him with your whole heart and soul. When troubles come and all these awful things happen to you, in future days you will come back to GOD, your God, and listen obediently to what he says. GOD, your God, is above all a compassionate God. In the end he will not abandon you, he won't bring you to ruin, he won't forget the covenant with you ancestors which he swore to them.
- Deuteronomy 4:29



Wednesday, July 7, 2010

"I think that sounds like a completely normal and good idea."


- Faith Zimmerman on my suggestion that I should write her a love song.

Monday, July 5, 2010

Italy

Some photos from when I went to Italy in the spring of 2006.

St. Mark's, Venice





Capri


Pieta, St. Peter's Basilica, Rome






Florence was my favorite. 

Saturday, July 3, 2010

You know you live in Thailand when

you realize it's ok to take a nap in public whenever, and more importantly, wherever you want.

you're inclined to carry an umbrella to shield you from the sun.

sparkly-pink isn't offensive to you anymore, and you actually develop an affinity for it.

you feel like you haven't eaten all day if you've lacked rice in any three of your (main) meals.

you're reminded of just how much you used to love Hello Kitty - and see who really reigns supreme (move over Buddha).

you want to snack constantly. Note: a snack's worthiness is constituted based on whether it's fried or sweet or bonus - both.

About Me


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