Wednesday, April 24, 2013

May I Suggest

Just some words I'm finding a lot of connection to lately.

"May I suggest
May I suggest to you
May I suggest this is the best part of of your life

May I suggest
this time is blessed for you
this time is blessed and shining almost blinding bright
just turn your head
and you’ll begin to see
the thousand reasons that were just beyond your sight

the reasons why
why I suggest to you
why I suggest this is the best part of your life

there is a world
that’s been addressed to you
addressed to you, intended only for your eyes
a secret world
a treasure chest to you
of private scenes and brilliant dreams that mesmerize

a tender lover’s smile
a tiny baby’s hands
the million stars that fill the turning sky at night

Oh I suggest
Yes I suggest to you
Yes I suggest this is the best part of your life

There is a hope
that’s been expressed in you
the hope of seven generations, maybe more
this is the fate
that they invest in you
it’s that you’ll do one better that was done before

inside you know
inside you understand
inside you know what’s yours to finally set right

and i suggest
and i suggest to you
and i suggest this is the best part of your life

this is a song
comes from the west to you
comes from the west, comes from the slowly setting sun
this is a song
with a request of you
to see how very short the endless days will run
and when they’re gone
and when the dark descends
we’d give anything for one more hour of life

may i suggest
this is best part of your life"







Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Blessed In This Life, Adventure seven, Railay Beach

Railay Beach is an adult playground. This place is where the Thai rastas and the climbing fanatics meet in one beautiful beach town. Put simply, this has been my favorite destination in Asia thus far (maybe even my favorite vacation ever).
Shelly and Carissa and I left Thursday night. Per usual, transportation took a long time and with many different types of vehicles. First was an overnight bus to Surat Thani, then a public bus to Krabi, then a tuktuk to the beach, then a boat to Railay. The first step once we got there was to find an affordable place to stay, so we found refuge at Rappala Rockwood and booked three nights in a cute little bungalow fit with three mattresses on the floor, an outdoor-ish bathroom, and a hammock on the balcony.
Friday consisted of hiking to the beach, meeting nice people, eating dinner, and seeing a fire show. On Saturday we climbed up a bluff that overlooked the ocean with our climbing instructor named Tom. Although he got a little rushed at the end, he was an excellent facilitator. Sunday we ocean kayaked. Not something I've ever done before, like ever. But we got a three person kayak and spent an hour and a half rowing our way to an island to snorkel. That is an hour and a half one way. Once on Poda Island, we snorkeled and got in a fight with a monkey for our bag; he got super territorial. On Monday Carissa and I deep water soloed. Deep water soloing, for those of you, like me, who had never heard of it before, is an activity consisting of climbing up cliffs that drop off into the water. You get on a boat, swim to a ladder, climb up the ladder, climb up the cliff, and then jump into beautiful blue-teal ocean (sans ropes).
Each day I was in Railay, I did something I had never done before. I pushed my mind and my body beyond what I thought possible. I'm tired and happy.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Cambodia, adventure five

This post is has been a long time coming, but I finally have time to reflect. Here it goes.
Almost spur of the moment, I decided to head to Cambodia (Siam Reap, to be exact) with a different group people than I normall travel with. The idea sounded super exciting because I was going to be able to travel with a new possy, and as I had recently learned, traveling with people really does bring a group together.
We left Wednesday afternoon and headed via minibus from Mochit to Aranya Phratet (a 3 hour journey), the last city in Thailand before you can enter Cambodia. Weary of the fake border scams, we took to the street headed for the real border which from far away looked like a large temple. Stop one was leaving Thailand, stop two was getting the Cambodian visa, stop three was entering Cambodia, stop four was getting into another minivan to take us to Siam Reap (another 4 hours from the border). We had a "guide" of sorts wearing a Cal hat take us through to make sure we made it into Cambodia safely, and then once we did, he tried to get us into a "free bus," which was another scam that we read about ahead of time. Once we got to Siam Reap and finally made it to Dynyka, we put our bags down and went immediately to Pub Street (Siam Reap's version of Khao San Rd) to get dinner. Shortly thereafter we went back to the hostel and passed out, 7 people in one room sharing 3 beds.
Thursday we went to Preah Vihear Temple, a temple that borders Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand to learn a little about the conflict between Cambodia and Thailand and to view of first of 5 major temples that weekend. We left early-ish in the morning, and after 3 hours in a mini-van, arrived at the base of the mountain. We quickly learned that we were going to be split into 3 pick-up trucks from there in order to head to the top of the mountain to view the temple ruins.
The next day we woke up at a whopping 4am to leave Dynyka to head to Angkor. We split again into three tuk tuks and drove with our guide to the most popular temple in Cambodia. Watching the sun rise behind Angkor was incredible, to say the least. At first, it was pitch black. Slowly but surely as the sun rose I could start to make out the outline of the temple, then the lotus flowers on the pond, and then finally the carvings in the temple. Although I was super cranky early in the morning, seeing the magic that the sun was able to do on Angkor was well worth it.
After touring Angkor we headed to 3 more temples that day-my favorite being the tree temple where tomb raider was filmed. The way the trees grew out of the stone was also so magical, the way life can blossom from nothing.
The next day after half the group departed, the remaining half spent the day waking up late (such a blessing), eating, and riding bikes to a beautiful lake. I biked like 15 miles!! WHAT? (Also I ate two bacon cheeseburgers).
The last part of the journey was getting home, and after the many hours from Siam Reap to the capital and spending 3 getting through the border and another 3 in the minivan (we sat in the way back, no leg room), we finally hit Bangkok.
What a long trip.
Things that surprised me: Cambodia is more expensive than Thailand, the Cambodians on the street were less friendly than the Thais were, Cambodians use American dollars as currency and rial (their own currency) as cents.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

A Normal Day in the Life...

So here goes the post about a normal day in the life living as nak suk saa in Bangkok:
Wake up about an hour before class. Get dressed, usually in shorts and a t-shirt unless the weather dips into the high 80s. Pack my backpack, go downstairs. Get breakfast, usually khaaw phat kay (friend rice with chicken and veggies) or friend dough balls or fruit. Visit coffee lady and get americano yen, waan nit noy (iced americano, slightly sweetened). Walk and ferry or motorcycle taxi to campus. If I have two classes that day, I will be on campus from 9-4, if I only have one I will be on campus from 9-12 or 1-4. Head home. Hang out with friends. Get dinner with friends. Maybe study. Maybe read. Maybe watch tv. Maybe go shopping. Sleep time.

I know it doesn't sound super exciting, but laughing with friends and making plans and spending time with like-minded people is quite an amazing experience.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Kanchanaburi, adventure four

So it has occurred to me that I only really post about adventures, so expect something soon about a normal day in the life living as a Nak Suk Saa Thammasat (university student at Thammasat). However, this one could not wait. Kanchanaburi has been my favorite adventure thus far.
First things first: we got on a bus at a different bus terminal this time called Sai Tai Mai. The ride was about three hours, and once we got to the station in Kanchanaburi, we met our new best friend, the taxi driver. He said that for 15B each he would take us to the street with the hostels and wait for us to make sure they had a room available, and then drive us to the next destination just in case we needed to check out a new place. He was a life saver. And, it turned out that the first hostel we tried was all booked, so we used his services to take us to Blue Star Guesthouse.
Blue Star was beautiful. Bungalows right on the river. The shrubs and trees and water plants made the place look like something out of a movie. The staff was super friendly and I shared a room with Huong and Shelly. The first night consisted of seeing a spooky lit up bridge and going to a local bar.
Erawan Waterfalls is also something I cannot easily put into words. We went to Erawan on day two, and after a two hour bus ride from Kanchanaburi, we made it to paradise. Erawan consists of a seven-tiered waterfall and a hike that leads you all the way up. Each waterfall was more unique and beautiful than the one that came before it, and the higher up we got, the less people there were (the hike got a little too strenuous for the tourists of the larger variety, of which there seemed to be quite a lot). We swam, we slid, we hiked, we took pictures, we reveled in the beauty. We also stayed past the last bus, which led to our use of our taxi driver friend again who drove 65km away from Kanchanaburi to Erawan to come get us.
Sunday we went to two temples as per a recommendation from Shelly and the same taxi man. The first, Wat Ban Tham, is a cave temple. Not really any other way to say it. You hike through a dragon's mouth into the first cave and then you hike up a long distance to a lookout point, and then even farther to the next cave. It was one of the most spectacular and interesting things I have ever done or seen. Real live bats in a real live cave with real live dripping stalactites. We then went to Wat Tham Sua, a temple nearby because the taxi man said it was "suay maak" (very beautiful). Just like Shakira's hips, he did not lie. It was stunning. There was a huge Buddha statue and beautiful architecture that looked similar to Wat Phra Khaeo (the Grand Palace).
After leaving Wat Tham Sua, we headed back to Blue Star to collect our belongings and then headed to the bus station. Even though the bus on the way back took a lot longer than expected, we made it home safe and sound.


This weekend, I fell in love with Thailand.













Thursday, I plan to fall in love with Cambodia at Angkor Wat.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Thai Cuisine, taste test

Yesterday in Thai Cuisine, we finally got to eat! Instead of learning the theory behind food (don't get me wrong, theory is extremely important, just not exactly what I signed up for), we got to taste! We ate three different kinds of basil, a flaky coconut sugar, tamarind, and some more that I seem to be forgetting.
But, the taste that left its mark on me spiciness; and of course this came from biting into raw chili peppers. Raw. Chili. Peppers. The big green one tasted like a bell pepper, no spice. However, the smaller the pepper the more spice it has jam packed into its seeds. I was a little weary at first about biting into the third and fourth ones (the really small red one and the small greenish one), but after some Thai girls bought me some milk and Carissa peer pressured me, I finally gave in.
It. Was. Spicy. Wow. Phrik Maak (very spicy).
Wish I had the sour patch that Anya and Sarah Beth got me just for this purpose, but alas, I had to make do with the sour tamarind and the milk.
I did it. 

Koh Chang, adventure three

So far, I have spent four weekends in Bangkok, which means that my semester here is about a quarter of the way through. WOW! Time flies when you can't stop eating! Anyway, after the first weekend we spent in Bangkok (weekend three) we decided to go away for weekend four to Koh Chang. In Thai, "chang" means elephant, and the island was named "elephant island" because of it's shape, but alas, I did not have the privilege of having an elephant allow me to sit on it while it strolled through the river. Instead, the highlight of the weekend was a boat tour of five other island in the surrounding area. This was the complete package: cruise, snorkeling, swimming, kayaking, eating, and all for only 600 Baht! Although my typical sea-sickness did rear its ugly head on the first leg of the trip, I remained healthy the rest of the time and really really had a blast.
Even getting to Koh Chang was really fun! We ended up accidentally taking a VIP double-decker bus that gave us blankets and snacks and water, and even had an on-board flush toilet. Flush toilets are hard enough to come by when you are not on a mode of transportation, so this was a special treat.
Living and eating on Koh Chang was cheaper than on Koh Samet, but still not as cheap as Khao Yai. Carissa, Shelly, Lexi, and I split a room for 300 Baht a night and even though the food was more American-priced, it did not disappoint.

The sunsets were beautiful and spending two night away this time instead of just one was really worth it.