| EMAILS FROM HONG KONG, MACAU AND THAILAND Subject: i am drinking a tall skim latte in HK Date: Tue, 5 Jan 1999 18:44:18 -0800 (PST) Got into HK last night after a LONG flight. My friend Ashraf lives in a neighbourhood called Mid-Levels... called that because it is halfway up the hill. So you take the escalator down. Literally... there is an incredibly long escalator that commuters take down in the morning and then up for the rest of the day. Goes through several neighbourhoods... takes maybe 20 minutes. So that's what I did this morning... and got off in a maze of malls, walkways and ferry terminals and now I am trying to find my way out. But I stopped for a coffee at a Starbucks clone and they have free Internet. So here you are. I like what I've seen so far... lots of tall buildings, lots of smaller mildewing ones, lots of rushing about business people, lots of old Chinese men sitting around in odd placesreading the paper. So now I'm off... see if I can find my way around. John, I've addressed this to my "everyone" group so I hope you get all the addresses. If not, let me know. Everyone, Johnny Cohen will be fowarding my email to you from his address whenever I think the service might be really slow or when it is not free (like it is here!). LOVE, MARIA Subject: my cow? no, macau Date: Fri, 8 Jan 1999 21:01:24 -0800 (PST) Went to Macau yesterday on the Turbocat ferry. It was so incredible that I'm thinking of starting a fan club. Though I don't know if the atmosphere will change next New Year's, when the Chinese take over and the Portugese go home. It is definately a singular place. Well, HK is as well... but Macau is good Mediterranean singular, as opposed to HK strange corporate-blends-with-British singular. All blended with Chinese. Though I do like HK...this place has views like no other... the top of Victoria's Peak at night... the crossing on the Star Ferry at day.... the promenade along Kowloon's waterfront....the lobby bar at the Regent Hotel. I liked that one best cause you could sit in a comfy chair and have a glass of Cab :). Floor to ceiling windows looking out at the bay and the whole skyline of HK Island glimmering by night. Cause all the views glimmer... in the smoggy mist at day or the many lights past dark. And they are all of skyscrapers. But Macau is piazze newly paved with mosaics and colonial architecture all painted gold and pink and mint green and pedestrian walkways and Portugese out door cafes. And everything Chinese as well... temples (a woman was watching TV in one) and strange food stalls and funeral shops with piles of paper money to be ritually burnt. And (on the Protugese side) lots and lots of Catholic churches. Including the ruins of Sao Paolo, which is just a gorgeous facade at the top of a magnificent flight of stairs. And everything is beautifullly lit at night. And the people are much friendlier and laid-back than in HK... again, I would suppose the result of being colonized by the Portugese, rather than the British. And also (perhaps even more) the result of having casino gambling rather than high finance being the foundation of your economy. Lots of casinos, though I spent more time in church. I might even go back to Macau tommorrow or Monday. I want to go to at least one of HK's outlying islands, but today I'm taking a little break from the sightseeing. I have, finally, gotten over the jetlag. So now I'm off to take a walk around Ash's neighbourhood and have some lunch and pretend I live here and see what that's like. LOVE, MARIA Subject: bangkok Date: Fri, 15 Jan 1999 04:52:51 -0800 (PST) Dear Everyone --- I'm in Bangkok...got here on Tuesday, It is HOT! Not too bad in the evening and in the mornings, but my tolerence is very low. I think it is my curse that I love hot weather places and hate hot weather. Thailand is really lovely...and the people live up to their reputation...so friendly and easygoing. Even the people who are trying to scam you don't seem to be trying very hard (especially compared to my experiences in India). I'm staying near Khao San Road, which is a big travelers' scene, but also cheap and very convienent. The boat down the river to all the major sights is just around the corner and by walking they're not very far either. The first day I got here I just rode the boat back and forth (the temple spires peeking up on all sides among the low level crush of buildings and the haze of smog) and had dinner at a riverside restaurant. And then went and bought a cheap dress on Khao San Rd. Then on Wednesday I went sightseeing...went to a great museum...Jim Thompson's House. A crazy guy from Delaware stayed on after WWII and rebuilt several traditional Thai houses he gathered from around the country...and decorated them really, really well. Amazing collection of Thai antigues and art. And beautifuly landscaped grounds...very peaceful, away from the urban cacophony. Jim himself disappeared mysteriously in the forests of Malaysia in the '60's. Then wandered down the walk along the canal that Jim's house is on and met some people who live along there...very friendly. It was a Muslim section of Bangkok and the man I spoke to was Muslim, though he was not dressed in traditional Muslim clothes (and neither was his wife, who was busy cooking on her little roadside stall grill..."muslim food" the man said). Several men in traditional clothing did pass by, on their way back from the mosque. I wonder if they were from the southern part of the Thai paninsula, where there is a strong Malay-influenced Muslim community, and the man I meant was more native to Bangkok. Ah, but then I theorize.....When I said I was from Chicago, he said (immediately and of course and with a big grin ) "CHICAGO BULLS!" His son hailed a passing boat-bus for me and off I went along with the commuters, passing all the little houses and shops hanging over the water's edge. Then toured some wats (Thai temple compunds which encompass schools and community centres as well as places of worship and monks' quarters) and climbed to the top of the Golden Mount ( a temple built on a hill which gives you a great view of otherwise flat BKK). Then walked home, stopping in a wat for a while a chatting with a monk and some students. The monk had been to the US (Alaska, NY, LA and South Dakota!) and said every day he dreams of America! So even monks aren't exempt from USAfascination. He's returning in June to Seattle for the opening of a temple. I ate Mister Donuts with the students and the monk had a popsicle. Yesterday some heavy duty touristing... National Museum, the Grand Palace and the Temple of the Emerald Buddha, and Wat Po, which houses a huge reclining gold Buddha as well as the School of Traditional Massage. I got a one hour massage in a big open room filled with mats on reaised platforms, the Thai massage students chatting, children playing in the temple courtyard outside and traffic clunking by outside the temple walls. Then I met 3 American guys there to take a massage course...Sage, a professional skateboarder who was amusing the crowd outside the school with his board, Aman, a Goth whose card identified him as a Reverand Magus as well as a licensed massage therapist, and Dicken, who didn't seem to have anything extraordinary to identify him. They were all from the Northwest and so said "wow, harsh" when I said I was from Philly. Sage ate fried locusts from a street cart...deep-fried baby birds and bugs were also on hand. He couldn't convince me to try it, though I have been loving the food here. I think one of my favourite experiences has been wandering (both yesterday and the day before) through the amulet market by Wat Maharat and having lunch there. They have rows and rows of stalls selling amulets of the Buddha, as well as the King and Queen, which the Thais collect with a passion. And little resturants where I could point to what I wanted (dished out like a cafeteria) and then eat with the lunch hour crowd. Tommorrow I leave in the morning for Ko Chang, where I will hopefully find an island paradise (or hopefully, at least, a room... hordes of travelers here). BYE BYE! Love, MARIA Subject: swim, dry, sleep , eat, swim, dry, sleep, eat.... Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1999 07:47:51 -0800 (PST) Dear Everyone --- I woke up at 6 AM this morning so that I could see the sky go light my last day on the island. It was splendid. Ko Chang was really fantastic. It is getting built up, but still is quite deserted. I stayed on the quieter, lass crowded, less raving beach... a little palm hut two steps from the water. An amazing view from my little front porch... the outlying islands, framed with trees and facing west for the sunset. Great food, too, as has been the case everywhere here. (I just came back from dinner on the street...tom yum soup and a Singha beer at a roadside restaurant, followed by a chicken satay from a satay cart that was so good I had to go back for one more...and at 5 baht a stick, a bargain, given that it is 35 baht to the dollar.) But back to the castaway island... on my third day there I discovered Lonely Beach. You have to hike 20 minutes through the jungle, up and down hills to get there, but your reward is a pristine beach, surrounded by a coconut palm farm and the mountains right behind. Maybe 25 people scattered along the long beach, in various stages of undress, the perfectly clear water stretching out in front.......... and luckily for me, little palm shelters providing some shade for very white skin. At the end of the beach was the Tree House Lodge, run by a German couple...a total hippie place, but really beautifully done, with gorgeous huts and a big open restaurant where you could lie around on mats looking at the water and listening to Hendrix for as long as you pleased. And, again, really great food. Next time, that's the place to stay. (Greg --- it was like Kovalam maybe twelve years, fifteen years ago, but with better water and mountains. And no ladies with machetes.) Later that night, I met two girls from the States who had just finished two years in Russia with the Peace Corps, a Dutch couple, a Yorkshire couple and crazy older French-Canadian-now-a-Californian lady who were all hanging out together. I joined them and we had very fun dinners, as well as a day snorkling on one of the outer islands. I guess the snorkling wasn't too good---coral wasn't colouful and not too many fish---but since this was my first successful snorkling attempt (Martina, remember Mazatlan?) I was bowled over and had a fantastic time. Getting back to BKK is a shock, especially since I know that with India coming up, any thing resembling the peace I experienced on Kai Bae Beach won't be around for awhile. But I am completely relaxed now, especially after the hour-long, lying-on-the-sand Thai massage I had yesterday. I think the little massage lady rebuilt me muscle by muscle and vertarae by vertabrae! See you in that magical land known as... LOVE, MARIA Subject: one last bangkok word Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1999 06:11:45 -0800 (PST) Frustrating and amazing day... after going to the post office to send my dirty clothes back to my parents (isn't that sweet? They are clothes I won't use in India, but unfortunately are quite dirty... sorry, Mom.), I tried to get to the Weekend Market, a huge, huge bazaar selling EVERYTHING you can imagine. But a combination of bad directions and buses that you had to wait for for 1 hour meant it took me three to get there. but when I did... WOW. Miles of tents with booths upon booths. I kept ending up in the fish section... there were a choice of them, however. Tropical fish, goldfish, bait fish and flattened and dried fish. Needless to say, the flattened and dired variety were the hardest to take. I also saw *My first cockfight *Very healithy live pigeons for sale (and not in the pet section) *Lots of little gerbil/squirrel/chipmunk things on little leashes (in the pet section) *All of Bangkok punks. There seemed to be 5. One was a little boy about age ten with an orange Mohawk. The neader of the group was tattoed everywhere including his face and was shouting into a microphone accompanied by the little boy on drums. They were selling beads and things. There was lots of dried fish next to them. *A lot of Hello Kitty stuff. *A lot of fake fruit. *A lot of real fruit. *A lot of different satay stalls, including sausages on sticks, which, I think, needs to be introduced into Chicago Thai restaurants. *More fish. It was very interesting. And, again, the Thai people are so great. Ever so nice when you bother them... and they basically ignore you if you don't. The only really disturbing thing, that I still really can't stomach, are all the Western men with their bought-for-a-day Thai girlfriends. There were quite a few of those on Ko Chang... take a beach vacation and bring along an instant eighteen year old girlfriend for the week. I find it especially disturbing when you see (and there are quite a few) young, twentysomething guys, not bad-looking, doing the tourist sights with one of the women. Really pathetic. But otherwise...... MARIA |
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