My Thailand Trip- Landing and Arriving in Bangkok- Leg 1
Yes,
it has been ages since my last post. I do apologize and I promise I
will not forget my first blog and will stay faithful to my first, though
I have others now....:)
I
am now teaching in Taiwan, after a busy summer working at camp in the
states, I am glad to be overseas again! I know I disappeared for a bit
and it may have not the best idea not to update for so long, especially
since leaving to Thailand was my one of last posts. How worry-causing
of me to let readers think I disappeared in Thailand or never made it
past customs from China ;) (I did write another post, I know, but
still!)
Anyway,
this post on Thailand was much overdue, I know, especially after seeing
how many readers it attracted. I know that even though it's ages later,
I still need to share my awesome trip to Thailand with you, my dear
readers!
Coming off the plane
I went through customs fine even though
I had been scared about not having the return/outbound ticket- so was happy I
got through fine- I had thought there would be a problem. I was a little
unsure, as one of the guys in front of me did not have an outbound ticket
either, and they told him to step aside for a moment, so I got worried. But it
turned out fine for both of us and we both got through.
Getting a taxi from the airport was a little confusing at
first. I had to stand on a line and show my ticket from the plane and then I
was handed over to a taxi driver waiting in line. I tried to bargain the price down caused it
seemed high, but then figured that’s the airport price and it was quite far-
plus a lot of traffic.
I
saw kids walking through the traffic and on the sidewalk
in between the highway selling flowers to passerby. It reminded me of
reading
about this- how some kids in Thailand are made to sell flowers all day
on the
street, no matter the weather and some parents will even make them stand
out in
the rain all day or until they sell a certain amount. But I didn’t see
any one
with these kids. I don't know what's the best way to help these kids. I
wish I could do something for them. But you hear how giving them money
will not actually help them- it just continues the cycle. What can you
actually do to help them? Here are some ideas.
I stayed at the Rainbow Hostel on
the famous Khao San Road in Bangkok. I had reserved this one- it was
owned by people from India. Unfortunately I was on the third floor- it
was very hot and carrying my heavy suitcase up three flights of stairs was not
fun!
I went to the market, bought some sandals, then got some
dinner at the hostel- cheese naan. It reminded me of the time I had Indian food
with my brother who lives in New York City, in Manhattan.
I met a guy from Germany
and a guy around my age from Japan.
We went to the night market together.
I met some people from Israel- one of them was smoking
hookah at the table outside the hostel. They talked about how they were going
to Seoul for
Passover.
The
night market is a very exciting place. It has a carnival-like
atmosphere, there are so many brights lights and different things to
see, that you feel like a little kid again trying to take it all in. It
had lots of different
cheap food and tons of clothes, shoes, accessories, movies, souvenirs
and even tattoo artists.
I was going to go to bed early. But then I met a couple of
guys and we went out on the town. The next day we hung out and talked about
going to see Muay Thai boxing, but went to Chinatown
first and lingered there drinking coconut milk from straws in the shade, so we
didn’t make it.
I
also got to see some temples on my own. It was quite the experience. I
liked how they did their chants, it was quite peaceful. Temples were on
every other corner in Bangkok.
We
also looked at water guns for the Thai New year that had
been coming up at the time. One of the guys, Brett, brought his Thai
girlfriend along. I talked with her and we had fun together hanging out.
Thai New Year, called Songrakan is a big holiday event that takes place
all over Thailand-
it’s basically like an all out water fight with everyone you see when
you go
out. But water fights would not be the first fight I would see here.
The Break-Up: or what to do when getting threatened by an angry Thai girl
We
had Thai and western pizza for dinner. Brett's
girlfriend had hung out with us during the day and dinner. But he
decided it
was time to break up with her—she wouldn’t leave his place and said she
had
nowhere to go. He wanted us there for support because he knew she would
not take
it well. She put up quite a fight- asking why he had a problem with her
and
yelled at his friend when he said something... he asked us what to do
and we suggested he try to give her her stuff so she could leave and not
drag it out.
This was not cool with her and she literally held onto him when he tried
to get
up and wouldn’t let him leave. He had given her an option- she could
stay at
the room for the night, but he would be going out or she could leave
now. She
didn’t like either choice. I left the room as the guys tried to get her
to leave.
Brett's friend had to help pull him out because she wouldn’t let go of
him as he
tried to leave the room to go.
(Don’t try this at home or anywhere for that matter this is
merely a description of events and is not meant to be advice in any way. You
may not want to turn and walk away- especially if there are any beer bottles or
heavy/glass/sharp/throw able objects around. I had heard warnings about this- about
getting hit in the back of the head with a bottle if you make someone
angry. Is there witness protection in Thailand?)
After
we all went outside, we were waiting in front of the hostel. Brett was
trying to get a taxi for her, which he paid for. I got out of the way
and sat at one of the tables, away from the girl, as she was quite
angry. She had lashed out and yelled at me in the hostel when they all
came out of the room, accusing me of being the reason he was leaving
her. I had nothing to do with it and was not overly friendly to Brett in
any way. But she said that she knew how "you teachers" are. I left
after this so she could cool down.
I
was at the table and the other guys joined me. Then she came charging
behind me with a bottle, which I didn't see. Brett thought she was going
for me. He got up and went to intervene. But she wasn't going for me.
She was going for Brett. She almost hit him, but the bottle fell and he
tried to subdue her. After that, I went inside to stay clear of her. She
finally left in the cab with no further damage.
We
went for dinner and talked about changing hostels. Brett didn't know if
he should just change rooms, but then he said she had said something
about her cousin being one of the workers there. So maybe it would be
best to leave the place... go to a different climate perhaps?
I
longed to get to the islands, myself, so I planned to leave the next
morning. I did not want any trouble with this girl trying to get revenge
or her telling her cousin there anything. I was not afraid, but knew I
should be careful. I decided it was a good time as any to get out of there.
After
all, I had come to Thailand to get to the islands and see the beautiful
ocean. Not to deal with this drama in Bangkok and get a crash course in
how not to date the locals. It was too hot and humid here
anyway. With visions of palm trees, walking barefoot in the cool sand
and waves rushing at me as I swam, I took a cab to the bus station the
next morning and was ready for island paradise.
Stay tuned for the next part of my Thailand travels series: Getting to the Islands!
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1 comment:
I stayed in Rainbow Hostel when I was there as well! I wasn't so fond of it...
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