Category Archives: Personal

Personal blog

America

I’m back in Seattle. I’ve unpacked only the basics, leaving most of my boxes of “stuff” unpacked in the basement. I just don’t want to fill my house up with so much stuff again. It’s strange being home, yet not strange at all. It’s hard for me to explain it. I really don’t feel like I’ve stopped traveling yet. Tomorrow, I am flying to Iowa where I will get a car and drive back to Seattle. So I still have 2 weeks of travel ahead of me. Maybe when I get back I’ll finally feel more settled. I have yet to write about my last month of traveling around the world. I had some amazing experiences in Dahab Egypt, Jordan, Israel, Palastine and Cyprus. Writing about them and updating my photos is a priority for me, but I don’t know if it’s going to happen until after I get back from Iowa. So any of you who are wondering if I am ever going to add anything more on this blog the answer is YES! I have so many more photos to show you all. So many, in fact, that I will need several days just to go through them and pick the ones I want to show you. So please be patient…photos and stories will come soon enough.

Grover

I miss my kitty. I will be coming home soon Grover! However, I will be
going to Iowa soon after I return to attend my (gulp) 20 year high school
reunion and to buy a car to drive back to Seattle. The whole trip will take
me about 2 weeks to do, so…

Anyone want to house sit for a couple of weeks while I am in Iowa? The
dates are: July 17th-31st.

India (reprise)

I just want everyone to know that despite my last posting, I actually thought India was a wonderful place. The people, for the most part, were really good people and I was offered genuine kindness time and time again from many people. It’s a wondrous country with really good people and it deserves many visits. My first visit, I’m afraid, was badly tainted by the theft by the Nepali assholes, so my head was in a bad place for pretty much my entire visit. India is a country you must surrender to. Fighting it, as I did, will only cause more grief. I struggled in India only because I let that theft take over my head. Near the end of my visit, I was nearly moved to tears when a poor shoeshine boy ordered me a chai tea and offered me one hundred rupees after I told him that I lost my wallet. (Yes, I lost my wallet, just 2 days before I left. I still don’t know how. I know exactly when I had it last, and that I put it in my camera bag pocket. When I got home, it was gone. It fell out of my bag somehow along the walk home. Totally bizarre. Lost 50 bucks, my atm card and my credit card. BIG pain in the ass, not to mention embarrassing. It’s embarrassing because nobody who was being as paranoid as I was about my money should ever lose their wallet.)

Anyway, this poor young man had the warmest heart, and when I told him I lost my wallet, he wanted to help me any way he could. So this guy, who only had a few hundred rupees to his name, was going to give me about a third of all his money. I let him buy me a chai. This guy was not the exception. Most Indian people are very kind, but you have to sometimes deal with the occasional jerk. You just can’t let these people give you the opinion that all Indians are cheating, lecherous assholes. I really didn’t give India much of a chance. My head was elsewhere. I knew all along that I was missing out on India because of my attitude. I really wasn’t even present. So, I must return when my head and heart are in a better place. I skipped the Taj Mahal even though I had a chance to go on my last day because I want it to be yet another good reason to return. So let me repeat: I think India is a great country and that everyone should visit it at least once in their life. It will definitely change you, whether you want it to or not. My advice for India is to be PRESENT, be AWARE, and SURRENDER to it, but be ready to fight the jerks. Sometimes it’s the only way.

Time to get out of India

Sunday 5/7/06 New Delhi.
I have just arrived after a long, hot, uncomfortable overnight bus ride from McLeod Ganj. The monk I was sitting next to refused to open the window, so I sweated and hardly slept all night.

I’ve had it with India. It’s really time to go. Getting on the bus in McLeod Ganj, I’m told that my ticket is wrong, I can’t have the front seat that I reserved nearly a week ago, and that I have to go sit in the back of the bus. I try to explain that I really need that front seat, that I reserved that particular seat far in advance because of my long legs and that I certainly need that seat more than anyone else on this bus. He refuses to listen to me. “Your ticket is wrong, it’s a different agency. Back of the bus!” “How can it be wrong? It’s says right hear Cityland Bus, seat 4. “ I try to remain calm about it, but he’s not hearing me. “Your ticket is wrong, you sit in back of the bus!” I angrily stomp to the back of the bus. I sit in the back seat and my worst fears are realized, it’s impossible to get my legs in front of me, even with the seat upright in front of me. I see nobody sitting in the front seat, my seat. People are staring at me, wondering what I’m going to do. “This is not acceptable.” I head towards the front again and try to talk to the ticket man again. This time, I’m angry. ”Look, I’m 6’6”, I need that see more than anyone on this bus, I reserved it far in advance! It’s not my fault that somebody screwed up and double-booked my seat!” I’m really pissed now, and now everyone on the bus now knows what’s happening. “No, those seats are booked by another agency, my friends are sitting there. You sit in the back!” His friends?! “I’m not sitting in the back!” “Then you go tomorrow!” Laughter in the bus. But I’m not laughing. “I can’t go tomorrow.” He ignores me. That’s enough for me. I go back to my seat in the back, grab my bag and announce so everyone can hear me, “Fuck this shit, I’m sitting in my reserved seat in the front! If they want me to move, they can fucking try to pry me from my goddamn seat!” An American guy on the bus cheers me on, “Now that’s the right attitude!” And it was. This is the attitude one needs in India just to be treated with respect and fairness. It requires a strength of will and of stomach that I have never really needed before, just to get treated fairly. After more cajoling and my demonstration of how it is for me to sit in a normal seat, he relents. His friends sit next to me across the isle. Everything is fine, I sit next to a monk who refuses to open his window. It’s the only window in the bus that isn’t wide open. I don’t try to argue with him, because he’s a monk. I’m sure he’s got his reasons, I just hope it’s not some kind of Buddhist self-punishment.

At our first rest stop, after standing in the crowded “cue” to order drinks, it’s my turn up, and I order a fresh lemon soda. The man comes back with a bottle of plain soda water. “20 rupees.” “No, I want a fresh lemon soda, and it’s 10 rupees.” I grab the menu and point it out. He seems confused. “ Ok, you wait. You want a glass, right? “ “Yes.” That’s what a fresh lemon soda is; It’s a bottle of soda water and a glass that has some fresh lemon juice in it. It’s not complicated. He takes several more orders before a glass is produced and the soda is poured into it. I’m not sure what he’s doing, as there is clearly no lemon in the glass. There is some discussion, and I’m again starting to lose my patience with this bullshit. He’s trying to give me a glass of plain soda water. There’s a long cue behind us now, and I’m starting to raise my voice. “You know what, forget the lemon soda, give me a Limca.” Finally I’m given the soft drink and have to explain that I already gave him 10 rupees, so I only owe him 5 more. At last it’s all sorted out. I’m now labeled the trouble-maker on the bus. Jesus, you almost have to start breaking chairs just to be treated right. I’ve got to get out of India.

The bus finally stops in Delhi. I don’t know where we are, but lots of people are climbing out. I step out of the bus, not sure if this is the final stop or not. I’m immediately surrounded by touts. “You want autorickshaw or taxi?” “I don’t know yet.” “Autorickshaw? Taxi?” “I don’t know yet.” “Rickshaw?” “I don’t know.” Jesus, It’s 6 am and I’ve hardly slept. “You need taxi?” “My friend! Taxi? “ It’s too much. I just put my finger to my lips. A tall taxi driver with a big mustache and dressed in a white gown approaches me. “Where do you want to go?” “Main bazaar” I tell him. “ Ok, I take you.” “Where are we? Is the bus going further?” “No. This is the last stop.” Just then, I hear someone inside the bus “this isn’t the last stop.” I turn and look at the man. He just smiles and shrugs his shoulders. Fucking assholes.
I climb back on the bus. I’ve really got to get out of India. I’ve had enough.
This is just how it is in this part of the world. I don’t like it, and I don’t have to like it.

Cairo, I’m sure, isn’t going to be any better.

The Little Prince

I just read The Little Prince. I know, it’s a classic, and I’m sure I read
it before, but I must not have been ready for it, because now it really
reverberates for me. And, little did I know, one of my favorite quotes in
the world comes from this book:

“It is only from the heart that one can see clearly.
What is essential is invisible to the eye.”

Yes! I so agree. Yet, I always find myself judging by what I see with my
eyes.
I just finished a 2 hour hatha yoga class. It kicked my ass. Every stretch
that my body hates, we did. My body hates these stretches because they are
the ones it most needs work on. The forward bends, the stretches to the
hamstrings and lower back, everywhere this is always always tight on me, we
stretched. I am going to come to this class for the next week and see if I
feel any change. It’s a very shanti place I am right now. Bhangsu. I have
my own little hut, with a garden in front for lounging in the sun. It’s a
nice day, a little overcast so not so hot. A perfect day for hiking up to
the waterfall above the town. I am finally getting on with my trip, not
just physically, but spiritually, mentally. It’s been 2 weeks of dealing
with my anger. Yesterday, I spent most of the day writing my story of Nepal
and my betrayal. It’s definitely helped to go over it all again from the
start, as I now see the story more clearly. I have gotten a little distance
from and can see it more clearly now…from my heart. What I see is that it
started from the very beginning. They have been conning me from nearly the
first day. I don’t know if they ever told me the truth about anything. And
as one lie became the foundation of the next, I didn’t see that is was all a
house of vapor, until it was too late. It’s like a wind came and blew it
all away, and I can see it all so clearly now. I was seeing with my eye,
and ignoring my heart, which was telling me to not trust them. I didn’t
listen to it. I didn’t even hear it. I drowned it out.

Betrayal

I got ripped off. My Nepali “friends” took all of my cash and ran off. After a few days of frantic attempts to get the Indian Police to help, and complete confusion as to what to do and where to go, I have decided to give it up. I’ve done all I can, contacted everyone I can, and have come to realize that I’m just not going to catch these guys without help which isn’t forthcoming. So I am just trying to get over it, and hope that karma gets them eventually. I am heading to Udaipur to be alone and try to get some peace.

Things I’ve Lost

When you are traveling as long and moving as much as I am on this trip, you are bound to lose things. Everything you lose is important in some way, or you wouldn’t be carrying it, so it’s always painful to discover that you’ve lost even the smallest thing. When it’s a big thing that you’ve lost, it becomes that much more painful, especially if it’s difficult to replace and/or expensive. So, as a cathartic way for me to get over my losses, I am listing everything I’ve lost up to now, three months into my trip, listed roughly chronologically.

—-
My Journal. I lost it before I even got to Bangkok on the stopover in Taipai. Not a great way to start the trip. Fortunately only two days were written in it.

Vancouver baseball cap. The second thing I lost after my journal. Left it hanging behind a towel in a room, I think.

My Wallet. Don’t know how or where, but somewhere in Sihanoukville. Only 10 bucks in it, and it was falling apart anyway, so I wasn’t too upset.

My shark bag: Left on bus from Hanoi to Halong Bay.
I loved this bag. I’ve had it for years and I took it with me almost everywhere I went. I made this small bag from leftover silcone-nylon when I made all of my ultralight gear for Hawaii. II called it the “shark bag” because it had a small plastic shark attached to the drawcord. Inside was a collection of bits and pieces that I liked to have with me with regularly. Fortuntately for me, I had just slimmed it down for my trip to Halong Bay, where I only brought my daypack and my camera bag, so I only lost some dramamine, some band-aids, a blister kit, emergin-c, insect repellent, a lighter, earplugs, glass cleaner, lip balm, and some assorted drugs for pain/poops. It normally also contained my headlamp, swiss army knife, and my compass, all of which I would have been additionally bummed to lose. I’ve replaced it with a sandwich baggie that I’ve drawn a shark on.

Big red bandana. Lost in Vang Vien when I had a bag of laundry done and it was never returned to me. Remarkably, hard to replace here in Asia.

Red plastic carabineer. used it to hang my daypack on bus seatbacks. Lost on bus from Vang Vien to Luang Prabang.

A nice pen I bought in Vientianne. have no idea where or when exactly.

An almost brand new cell phone. Bought in in Saigon the end of October. Disappeared less than 2 months later sometime between leaving Luang Prabang by bus and coming back to Luang Prabang by boat 10 days later. Very irritating that I lost it so soon after buying it, I really liked it, and it wasn’t cheap.

A lens cap and a lens end cap while hiking in villages around Moung Ngoi.

Canon SD500 Digital Camera. Ouch. This one hurts. Lost on boat from Nong Kiow to Luang Prabang. I’m sad about this one. I loved this camera and all the images on the card are obviously also gone. Hopefully I can replace the camera in Bangkok. It too was almost brand new. I bought it in September just before my trip. I am hoping my travel insurance will cover it and the cell phone loss together, because combined, they are a considerable chunk of money, and there is a 200.00 deductible on every claim.

A 1000 Bhat note (worth about 25.00) Lost most recently in the night market in Luang Prabang. It must have fallen out of my pocket or something. Still a big mystery. This was my holiday spending money, so I’m still quite vexed about it’s disappearance.

It seems buses and boats tend to eat my stuff, so I must learn to be VERY careful about my gear when traveling by bus and boat. It’s very easy for gear to be jostled from pockets and seats and fall to the floor where they are often never seen again. Also, if you determine that you’ve lost the item after the bus or boat has left, you are almost guaranteed never to see them again, as the busses and boats aren’t reachable or identifiable once they’ve left, and, chances are, someone has already grabbed it anyway. Your stuff is gone gone gone. Take my word – be very careful of gear on boats and buses. I fairly certain that nothing I’ve lost was stolen, except perhaps that one red carabineer. Everything else has simply dropped away from me never to be seen again. It sucks. I don’t consider myself a clumsy or bumbling traveller nor overly burdened with luggage and gear, but here I am losing things left and right and I hate it. So, I have to try to be even more careful in the future. Here’s to not losing anything for the rest of the trip!

Things I THOUGHT I lost, but then found:

My digital camera

My ability to take a decent travel photo

My sunglasses

My SE Asia Phrase book

Things I’ve found:

Lots of friends

Cool culture

Great people

Unforgetable memories that I will probably forget by the time I reach India.

Grover is fine!

Just to let everyone know, Grover is recovering from his ear infection. Hooray! On the down side, my cat-stter/subletter Ahsha’s Grandfather is ill and she wants to go to Oregon to visit him 1-2 weeks a month….so if anyone has any ideas that would be great. I’d hate to have to use my NUCLEAR OPTION of having to fly back home early to take care of my kitty. Anyone know how much it costs to have a cat sitter come in and hang with your cat for a week?

Vang Vien

Finally feeling up to moving again, I took the afternoon bus from Vientiane to Vang Vien. By the time the bus arrived it was pitch dark. We are dumped out of the bus out into the noisy street. Everyone on the bus is completely disoriented as to where to go. First impression: There are restaurants everywhere and they are all filled with young stoned westerners who are all pointed towards the big screen TVs that every restaurant has. At least 4 of them are playing reruns of Friends, all next to each other. It’s the Friends block. Then there are the bar/restaurants that are showing movies like Star Wars, The Longest Yard, Chicken Run, Big Fish, Action flicks, etc. It’s really sort of sick, but mesmerizing too. I found my way to the river where I wanted to stay, but all the riverside rooms were taken… Oh yeah, I guess it’s now the busy season here in SE Asia. I have been used to easily finding great, cheap places to stay, but now I am here Vang Vien and I swear it’s like SPRING BREAK. I sat down to eat dinner at one of the few restaurants WITHOUT a TV, and across from me was this bar playing obnoxiously loud music, LOADED with drunk, tanned tourists, and I saw in the middle of the crowd…a beer bong being raised. Hoots and hollors. Obnoxious young college guys and scantily clad women, which seemed so offensive to the locals, if a pleasant view for me. I found a cheap box of a room to sleep in for the night, only three bucks but ice cold showers and the ceiling fan was broken. I got up the next day with the hopes of moving into an opening room in Saysong Guesthouse, right on the river. I was wondering what the big deal was here. Unless you we here to get drunk or stoned off your ass and watch Friends reruns, it seemed like a rather boring, dumpy little town… Then I took a look outside my guesthouse from the balcony. Wow. Beautiful mountains. Gorgeous river. Too bad it’s a bit ruined with beach umbrellas, loud speakers pumping out Bob Marley, and “chill out” bars right along the riverbank. Anyway, there’s kayaking/tubing to be done, caves to explore, and “happy” pizzas to be eaten… …who am I to judge before partaking of this particularly westernized kool-aid? I’ll find out…tomorrow. Today, I’m just going to chill in my new place, swinging on the hammock on the balcony overlooking the river valley and mountains beyond, while reading Anna Karinina, an 800+ page Russian classic by Tolstoy. Life has just gotten a whole lot better. However, I am still awaiting news about Grover, so I am still uneasy about things. I pray he’s ok, and I don’t pray often.

Hanoi Hijinks, Hemmorhoids, and the Onion Bus






There’s a place in Hanoi you should avoid. The hotel is called Camellia Star hotel. Their address is 37 Yen Thai St. The email address is t&ttravel@hotmail.com. Be sure to email them a nasty letter, and if you happen to be in Hanoi, please give them the finger for me. They seemed nice when I was checking in, as they all do when you are perhaps going to spend money at their business. They were actually pretty nice all the way until I was checking out, then things really went downhill.

I’ve heard a LOT of similar stories while traveling in Vietnam about being lied to, ripped of, misinformed, and just getting serious attitude from the people if you don’t want to buy something, so it may be something to do with the culture, but I don’t want to sound prejudiced. I DID meet many wonderful Vietnamese people. Anyway, on with the story…

In order to stay a month in Laos, you have to get your visa ahead of time at a Laos Embassy. Two days before I wanted to leave Vietnam for Laos, We all rented bicycles from my hotel to do our visa business. We waited around for nearly a half hour, and when they finally arrived, two of them were the usual upright one-speeders, and then there was the shitty little mountain bike. I immediately went for the tallest bike, and Marc went for the other. Nada got on the mountain bike for about 10 seconds and then flat out refused to ride it. I did the chivalrous thing (and I didn’t want to wait around for another half hour) and took the little bike. It was to be a key element in my future horror. After spending too much time getting fruit shakes and coffee, I left Marc and Nada to go to the Laos embassy to get my visa. It was only about 3 kilometers away at most, but it took a few stops to refer to the Hanoi map to be sure I was on the right track. Although my guidebook said otherwise, the Laos embassy closes at 4 pm. I got there at 4:06. 6 minutes too late! As I was riding home through the Hanoi traffic, I started to notice my ass was getting mighty irritated by the skinny, tiny, rock hard seat on this little bike that had my knees nearly hitting the handlebars when I peddled. Hotels, agencies, and guesthouses all over town advertise that they offer visa services, and for a few extra bucks, I thought it would be worth it to use my guesthouse’s services to get my visa just to be sure I got it in time. I made it very clear I needed the one month visa, and that I needed it by the following day. “sure sure, one month, 40 dollars plus 3 dollar commission.” They were certain they could do for me, and I would even “get it cheaper through them” than if I bought it myself since they “knew someone at the embassy”…so they said. The next morning I ask about my visa, and they show it to me, and it says Laos Visa type TR-B63. Nowhere does it show how long the visa is for, so I ask them,” is this a one month visa?” ” yeah yeah, one month, don’t worry. ” Ok, fine. (Cue the ominous music…)

That morning, I feel my hemorrhoid swelling up painfully. Fabulous. I take baths all day, visit a pharmacist to get prep H and constipation pills (don’t ask how I explained it), and start popping the codeine I brought from home, but nothing is working. It just keeps getting sorer and sorer. By late morning, it’s a trial to just sit down on one of the tiny chairs that seem to exist everywhere in Vietnam. Getting up from them is even worse. I move in slow motion. If any of you have ever experienced the joys of a swollen hemorrhoid, you know what I’m going through. If you haven’t, let me suggest that you get your thumbnails removed with a pair of rusty pliers rather than the constant discomfort and embar-ass-ment of this. Traveling with a swollen hemorrhoid comes recommended only if you love pain.

So, I’ve been at this Camilla Star hotel for several days. I bought my visa and bus ticket to Laos from them, and I brought them more business by having Nada stay here too. The night before, I sat down with them and had rice wine and food along with their friends, and felt like I was really starting to develop a little friendship with them. So that morning, since my 22 hour bus to Laos didn’t leave until 6:30 that night, I explained to them that my ass was killing me from the bike they rented to me, and could I check out of my room a little later, say, 2 pm instead of the usual 12? Oh no, if I want to stay longer, I have to pay for another night. “But, my ass is killing me, I gave you a lot of business…how about a discount for just a few more hours..” No no. Nothing doing. I stay longer, I pay for another night. End of story. I could have paid the 6 bucks and stayed in my room, but it was the principle of the thing. So, I pack up, check out and hang out at cafes all day, trying to give my poor bum a little rest before embarking on what is sizing up to be a wonderful little voyage into the depths of hell.

The bus is supposed to leave at 7 pm. The motor scooter driver picks me up at 6:30 sharp to take me to the bus. I sit very slowly on the back and we take off. Every little bump feels like hot needles. The 5 minute ride to the bus…no wait, to ANOTHER hotel is mercifully short. I sit at the hotel along with about 20 others, waiting for the bus to Laos, but the others aren’t going to Laos. One by one they all are whisked off to other places by taxis and scooters. By 7:20, a new moto driver arrives to take me to the bus. My backpack is stacked in front of the driver, nearly blocking his view and giving him little ability to turn, while I sit ever so carefully on the back with my camera and daypack hanging from me, and praying for a short ride or a quick death…

…25 minutes later, we arrive at a dark parking lot well outside of town. I tried to just leave my body during the ride, so I can’t tell you what I saw or where we were exactly. In the middle of this dark lot is a big shitty bus. I am asked to take all my bags on board, which I thought was unusual, since normally the bags go in the side of the bus. Getting on board I’m nearly knocked back from the stench and am simultaneously greeted by the 4 other fellow riders; A young Scottish guy, two women from San Francisco, and a Japanese woman who is traveling with them. I then see the piles of onions in the back third of the bus, and the backpacks stacked on top of them. It reeks of onions, and the floor is wet with red liquid that looks frighteningly like blood a la “The Shining”. This should be an interesting trip. We all introduce ourselves and I just can’t resist telling them my current health problem in order to receive some sympathy and perhaps break the ice. We start taking bets on how many times the bus will break down. We all settle on three as the magic number. After about a 1 hour delay, the bus rumbles to a start with about 7 people on board, thankfully, and we start out of the parking lot….only to stop and back up again. Trouble with the transmission. Breakdown #1 is underway. Two hours later, we head out again. It’s after 10 pm at this point, and after reading with our headlamps for a short while, everyone tries to settling in for a sleep. We were naively hoping to awake at the boarder at 6 am, as we were told. At around 4 am, the bus stops and the drivers get out to start loading the inside of the bus with…more onions! I mean about 50+ more very large bags of onions…not only filling the back half of the bus, but overflowing into the empty seats and stacked high into the aisles around us and all the way to the driver up front. Getting out of the bus would now require climbing up on the bags, and nearly crawling our way to the front. The good thing is that now we have a place to put our legs – on the onion bags, and the other good thing is that onions keep the mosquitoes away. At several points in the early morning, the bus picked up a few more passengers, and let some people out for peeing, and at one point, the bus stopped on the side of the road for about an hour or so so the drivers could sleep. By 8 am, everyone was up and hungry…but there would be no stops for breakfast, no stops for water…we were obviously quite late for the boarder. The boarder didn’t come until around 11 am. We all climb out and walk about a half mile to the Vietnam customs building in this dusty ghost town of large empty government office buildings. The mountains around the “town” were beautiful towering misty mountains which I only barely noticed because I was sore, hungry, and had a burning ass which demanded most of my attention as I slowly walked to the customs building.

The customs office was like something out of a movie. The very stern, frowning customs officials came in behind us and then proceeded to dust off the counters so they could get down to business…leaving a cloud of dust in the air. Three officials each took long looks at each of our passports in turn, using a magnifying glass on some of them, and a special scanner on others, and murmured things to each other about each of our passports. After a considerable amount of examining and discussing, we eventually each got our Vietnam visas stamped USED with a tiny red rubber stamp. So, off the four of us go to Laos… but first, we have to hike there. The bus sat back beyond the boarder, so we were told to walk to the Laos customs up the road, actually quit a ways up the road, and over the summit, and back down the hill around the corner, about a 30 minute hike in fact. We were all hungry, thirsty, grumpy, wondering if we would ever see our bus and belongings again, and I was certain that soon blood was going to start seeping down my leg.

We turn another corner and finally arrive at the Laos customs “office” which is little more than a roof over a concrete table and 4 chairs. The officials are very friendly compared to the Vietnamese freaks, and we all feel relieved about finally getting out of Vietnam…but there are problems. many problems. The Scottish guy and the two Californians were told by their travel agents back in Hanoi that they could get their Laos visas at the boarder. Well, apparently not at this boarder. The customs officials didn’t know a lot of English, and not surprisingly, there was no phone here either. It seemed there was nothing that could be done for my three new friends but for them to turn around and head back to Vietnam, hopefully get their visa cancellations cancelled (that could take some time), and then somehow get a ride to a different boarder that WOULD give them a visa upon entry. What a nightmare! The Japanese woman and I had gotten our visas in Hanoi so we weren’t about to turn around and head back, so we handed our passports over to get stamped. Surprise surprise, my visa also had problems. The one month visa I was assured I got…turned out to be a 5 day transit visa. A transit visa is the most ridiculous visa imaginable. It allow for only 5 days of travel, assuming that you are only going through the country on your way to some other country. It’s clearly not what I asked for, and after checking my Laos guidebook about it, it costs 15 dollars. Those bastards at my hotel ripped me off and got me a 5 day visa for 15 dollars, pocketing the other 27 dollars I paid them. Well, at least I am going across the boarder, right? I figured I’d just explain my situation at the immigration office in Vientiane and all would be ok…

The Japanese girl, Chieko, said a sad goodbye to her two American travel companions and the Scottish guy who all had to go back. After an additional 90 minute mystery delay at the Laos boarder, the onion bus and it’s remaining 2 foreigners, along with 4 other Vietnamese/Laos people, started down the mountain into Laos. There was a little trouble in the bus, because a woman on the bus took Cheiko’s 2 liter bottle of water, opened it, drank about half of it, then put it back where she found it while we were out of the bus at the customs office. Cheiko was so sweet about it it made me immediately like her. She was angry, but she has such a good nature, she couldn’t even show her anger on her face even though she tried. She didn’t know what to do. She handed the bottle back to the woman trying to frown and explain that this was not cool. The woman just shrugged her shoulders and said that her little girl drank it. She didn’t even apologize! She just pretended it wasn’t their fault. She tried the give the half-consumed bottle back to Chieko like that would settle everything. So I gestured that she should keep the bottle she stole, and buy Chieko a new bottle at the next stop. That seemed to be understood.

I don’t remember much of the rest of the afternoon. I tried to stay on my back as much as possible, trying to keep my butt from contact on the dirty vinyl seats and ignoring my hunger pangs. I realized that I hadn’t taken a poop in about 3 days, mostly out of fear, but I knew that I would have to soon, and this made me very nervous considering the smallest fart was bringing tears of pain to my eyes. Mercifully, at around 4 pm, our bus blew a tire. I say mercifully because the timing of the blowout was perfect. The bus came to a stop directly across from a Laos restaurant, and about 100 meters from a tire repair shop. So, while the tire got repaired, we got to finally stop and eat something. Getting out of the bus was a struggle. There were so many bags of onions to crawl over, my back was stiff, and my brain was only functioning at about 10%. The restaurant had no menus, and nobody could speak English. Walking into the kitchen and pointing also proved to be useless, as there seemed to by only a bowl of weeds on the floor. Fortunately, Chieko had a Japanese guidebook for Laos that has photos of all kinds of Laos food. She just pointed and they made it. I pointed at the same thing and finally we had fried rice and my first Beer Lao in Laos. That cold beer tasted like nectar from the gods. The woman who stole her water bought two small bottles and gave us each one.

Back on the bus an hour later, we heading through some beautiful limestone karst mountain/jungle scenery, but I couldn’t be bothered to sit up and take a single photo, I was just trying to get though this journey with as little movement and pain as was absolutely necessary. It was a struggle to get on and off the bus, so at a certain point, after that beer has passed through me, I really really really had to pee. So, I cut a hole into one of the empty 1.5 liter water bottles laying on the muddy floor and nearly filled it up, Then, at an opportune moment as I saw a big garbage pile on the side of the road, I chucked the bottle out the window into the garbage.

After another several rounds of reading, sleeping, waking, gazing out the window, reading, sleeping…we finally arrived in Vientiane at midnight. the total duration of the bus trip from the moment we first started up the engines in Hanoi to stopping in Vientiane was 27 and a half hours. My clothes were filthy and reeked of sweat and onions. Climbing off the bus only half awake in yet again a dark parking lot well outside of town, we were left with the option of either paying 2 dollars each for a single tuk tuk driver who waited there for us, or walk. Since we had no idea where we were, it was very late, and there were no other options, we settled on the tuk tuk driver, after talking him down to 3 dollars for the two of us. I picked out a hotel from the guidebook that sounded promising, but arriving, we found it full except for one room with a large bed for 9 bucks. Chieko said she would look elsewhere if I watched our bags. She’s very clever. She came running back after about 5 minutes and said there was a dorm available up the street. We wearily checked in and after begging, were made some fried rice for dinner for a dollar each. The dorm bed cost $1.50. After showering, we both climbed into bed at around 2 am. Today I got up, found a better, though much more expensive place to stay, where I have been typing this story, and after leaving Shieko a note about where I am staying, headed to the immigrations office to try to straighten out my visa problem. Naturally, it was closed when I got there, so I went to the market across the street to kill some time. Who do I meet but my Japanese friend! We walk around a while and agree to meet for beers later. I head over to immigrations and am given the bad news. I can’t buy a one month visa here. I can only extend my visa 15 days max at an additional cost of 2 dollars a day. If I overstay my visa, it’s a $10/day fee. So, my current rip-off $42 transfer visa ends in 4 more days. I guess I will buy the 15 day extension and try to get though Laos quickly.
It’s sad, I really wanted to spend a whole month here, but fate has forced other things. In order get a one month visa, I would have to go back to Bangkok, get a 1 month visa there, and come all the way back. Why does that sound completely retarded? Because it is. Those fuckers in Hanoi have forced me to cut my trip to Laos short. I’ll be sure to post complaints online at the lonely planet thorn tree, and boots ‘n all, and as many other traveler’s web sites as I can to warn them about this hotel scam. So, now I’ll just stay here for a few days in Vientiane, letting my poor ass recover, prepare for my journey, and get my emails/website/finances in order before traveling on.

12/3 Many things have happened to me while I’ve been recovering here in Vientiane. I have writing many stories about it, but I will spare you the details for now. But here’s the lowdown:

1.) Got my visa worked out. I now have a MONTH in Laos. It took crossing the boarder into Thailand and coming back (about 3 hours), then a few more visits to the immigrations office for an extension.

2.) Catherine emailed me to tell me that we couldn’t be boyfriend/girlfriend right now. This wasn’t a surprise since we’ve hardly spoken in the last two months. It was inevitable, and we both knew it. Back to being good friends.

3.) Grover has an ear infection or polyp or broken eardrum and is getting an operation today, Friday. Please send good thoughts to the little guy. I miss him very much. I just had a dream about him the day before I found out about him.

4. Now I must go because I’m going to Vang Vein now!!!!