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Category Archives: colonialism

Talat Rot Fai

Yesterday we explored Bangkok’s public transit, taking the tourist boat up and down the river, then the sky train and metro to Lumpini Park, where we met with The Expat Teacher, her family, and her friends for a classical concert. The park was a bit confusing, but it seemed a safe bet to find the concert by following the white people carrying a picnic blanket and a baguette.

After the concert, The Expat Teacher got a free pass to go out for fun with no kids, so we three hopped in a cab for Talat Rot Fai, whose best translation seems to be traffic light market, although traffic means busy/congestion, not necessarily the signal at an intersection. It’s a large open market around a small trendy shopping building, whose distinctive feature is a large number of small fly-by-night bars based out of old VW buses. They cater to a college crowd, although there were some older and younger people there too. Lots of street food of course, along with retro toys, vintage electric fans, gadgets, and of course clothes. As we walked around, The Expat Teacher said she thought the place was cool, but also represented a newer Thailand, one very different than the place she first came to 7 years ago. Now, she said, you can buy anything. There’s all this stuff. She commented that the Dalai Lama had said that Thailand has “lost its way.”

Something I hadn’t realized before this conversation is how much American values and Buddhism are at odds. Part of the American Dream is that you can have anything you desire. If there is something that you want, you can and should pursue it and obtain it, whether it be an award, an achievement, an object, or some property of your life or lifestyle. It’s ok to get what you want. But a core tenet of Buddhism is the rejection of desire, because desire creates unhappiness. An enlightened person wants nothing.

This tension between being happily content and wanting more is easily to resolve in isolation; one can choose either and be well either way. But in a global or shared arena, the people who seek and pursue more typically end up with more power. I recall one discussion over a fire in the backyard of The Vegan Taxidermist in Berkeley, when someone commented that there’s more to life and government than GDP. I agree with the sentiment, but also think it is dangerous. Because if someone else thinks only of GDP, eventually they will have more money and therefore power. Cherishing your life/work balance is fine until someone buys all of your land because you’re so poor in comparison. Economic strength is a very good way to protect what you have.

But so far all we have seen is Bangkok. Our plans seem to be shaping up to head north, first to Ayuthaya with The Silamander, then Chiang Mai on our own, then meeting up with The Expat Teacher in Chiang Rai for the New Year. Who knows if this plan will stick, but it seems pretty good right now.

— The Professor

 

markets, reunions, and weighty thoughts

Our first day in Bangkok was pure tourist bliss. We ate pork cracklings and green mango at the house, and then saw some wats – Buddhist temples. Wat Arun was a big favorite with us, as we got to climb up a step stone stair with a rope-wrapped handhold to a high platform on the central tower, and view the beauty of the recycled mosaic work up close, while simultaneously looking down on the city, the river, the boats and the flags. It was so gorgeous. We felt so happy to be there with the Silamander.

Our second day was also very fun, but put me in a more pensive frame of mind. After a long discussion of personal logistics, the kind which plague all couples, the Professor and I went to Chatuchak (sp?) Market, a giant crazy warren of indoor and outdoor stalls in which we thoroughly enjoyed eating fried dough, fruit drinks and an assortment of meat on sticks, but whose actual shopping experience I found overwhelming. We did save ourselves heartache by skipping the pet section, though we saw a lot of great clothes for dogs!

Then we went to the home of the Expat Teachers! We hadn’t seen them in 10 years, and they haven’t changed a bit. They are as gorgeous, warm and wonderful as ever, and now each has a funny, active little mini-me who could make any parent proud. They have a life many teachers would envy, with a beautiful home in a green, pretty compound; nannies who love the children and make the teachers’ professional lives far easier than they are for juggling American-type parents; and students who are so respectful, some of them bow and thank their teachers after class.

Our friends enjoy their life. Yet, thoughtful people that they are, they think about the issues of their adopted country. The environment looms large; Thailand was 70 percent forest in the 1970s, now at 17 percent. The furniture stores responsible, Ethan Allen, Pottery Barn and the like, all have stores in downtown Bangkok. And like a lot of environmental stories, this one is complicated – Thailand was barely affected by the recent recessions, and the nation is both prosperous and cheap – partly due, no doubt, to this cash-in on the natural resources. And the nation is now the rice basket of the region, with farms where all those forests used to be.

Right behind their home is a clearcut rectangle of bare dirt. It used to be a patch of forest, and was home to Burmese pythons. It’s an example of the ugly but prosperous boom going on all around us.

So we went to dinner, and escaped from all that at a beautiful, old, teak open air restaurant on the river, watching the sun set and dye the river pink and gold and aquamarine. a hammock swung under a tin roof next door. We ate delicious crab curry, and somtam with crispy catfish, and tofu rounds that exploded in the mouth like luscious goat cheese. We made plans to hike at a national park later in the week.

We missed the boat home, but a lady gave me some bread on the pier, and I fed the writhing mass of catfish just below us.

Since then, I have been thinking a lot about our role as tourists here, what I can learn that will make this trip more than just a holiday, what I can offer in return. I don’t have a lot of answers yet, but The Professor and I have talked and a few things seem clear:

– We are viewing a region in the midst of rapid change, and we’ll be getting a snapshot of history. It’s fine to want to view things timeless, but labeling those as the only authentic things… Is inauthentic and untrue to the reality of life here. staying where we are in a resident section of the city, we are already off the tourist path – the interactions we are having are real, if not full of simple beauty that travelers idealize.

– This place is so affected by the Vietnam War and so many other exercises of Western powers. it’s the first time I’ve been to a region powerfully impacted by colonialism, and I am going to be processing for a while!

– The Private Eye