Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Day 491: Back in Germany - or: Time for a Summary!

So, about three months after the end of my big trip I guess it is time to get my lazy ass back to the keyboard for a final wrap-up.

When I got back to Germany, the weather put on its best behavior to greet me with a sunny day and heaps of fresh snow. So beautiful!


Unfortunately, I wasn't used to the cold anymore. At all. So for a week or two I sat around indoors wearing two pairs of pants, long thermo underwear, a t-shirt and two fleece jackets, all the while still being cold. Luckily, the body can acclimatize to pretty much anything, so this phase passed, too.

In total, my trip lasted 16 months. Here's the list of the fifteen countries I visited and the time I spent in each of them:
Cuba: 30 days
Argentina: 57 days
Bolivia: 43 days
Chile: 43 days
Peru: 35 days
Ecuador: 64 days
Colombia: 25 days

Costa Rica: 23 days
Guatemala: 8 days
Mexico: 23 days
Philippines: 21 days
Vietnam: 28 days
Laos: 13 days
Thailand: 46 days
Cambodia: 30 days

In total, I traveled 95.000 kilometers (I had a perl script add the distances between all pairs of subsequent pictures I took - possible thanks to my GPS-enabled camera - so in reality it was probably even more than that). Of those, 54.708km were done in planes:

Frankfurt - Holguin7.902km
Habana - Panama - Buenos Aires6.939km
La Paz - Rurrenabaque - La Paz478km
Lima - Easter Island - Lima7.534km
Guayaquil - Galapagos - Guayaquil2.346km
Barranquilla - Medellin - Panama1.083km
San Jose - Guatemala856km
Mexico - Los Angeles - Hongkong - Manila15.327km
Manila - Puerto Princesa584km
Coron - Cebu - Manila1.035km
Manila - Ho Chi Minh1.614km
Bangkok - Frankfurt9.010km

The remaining 40.000 kilometers involved countless long-distance bus rides, some trains, some boats, several bicycles, a few cars, my own two legs, and on one occasion even a horse.

I shot 17.000 pictures totaling 78 gigabytes of data. Of those, I picked 410 to appear in the 365 project (the map of which gives a really nice graphical overview of my trip), and used another 1.692 in a total of 409 blog posts. 502 of the pictures were shot at an altitude above 4.000 meters, with the maximum altitude being 5.000 meters above sea level at the Pastoruri glacier in Peru.

I seriously doubt that I'll ever look at all 17.000 pictures again - so it's lucky that I have already selected the best ones on the go :-)

Taking my Kindle on the trip was definitely worth it: I read 51 books on it (not including travel guides), which is an average of a little more than three books per month. Yes, I do like to read. Here's a list of the books, if you're interested.

A comparison that I was really keen on making was the average number of words in my blog posts. Why did I want to know this? Simple: I wrote on my phone with Swype for the first nine months, and on a laptop after that. I suspected that being able to type quickly on a keyboard would lead to more wordy posts. And I was right: as my perl script tells me, the average phone-typed post has 273 words, whereas the laptop-typed posts average 382 words. This is a difference of about 40%! The delights of speed typing ;-)

Now I only have one final bit to share: the crime statistics. This is rather boring - and rather pleasant at the same time. There was one incident of theft (but I got everything back, so no harm done). Other than that, there were no robberies, no assaults, no disappearing luggage, no credit card abuse. Nothing. Very nice :-)

So, this is it! Big trip done. It is kinda hard to wrap up this big an adventure in a sentence or two. I've seen and experienced and learned so much it seems almost surreal. Most certainly it is an experience I wouldn't want to miss and would wholeheartedly recommend to everybody! Money, jobs and relationships are just excuses - if you really want to do a big trip, there will be a way!

Since I've already started a new adventure - involving a new country and a new job - I'll keep blogging here, albeit not in a daily frequency. So stay tuned and see you soon!

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Days 489 + 490: Souvenir Shopping in Bangkok

My last two days in Bangkok were spent mostly on markets of various kinds. First was a huge wholesale market in Chinatown. The market was really big and really busy. It was also really focused on just a few types of shop: jewelry shops, bag shops and shoe shops. The flashy, glittering world of jewelry shops has never been my thing anyway, but this was exponentially worse than any single store I'd seen before.

Unfortunately, we didn't know which types of shops we would find in the market, and so we soldiered on until neither of us could remain standing or walking for another minute. Since the market didn't have what I wanted to buy - some nice wooden bowls and utensils - I only bought two re-usable shopping bags that can be folded into tiny bags.

After the frustrating chinatown disaster, I went back to my hostel with the intention of spending the evening putting up my legs and writing my blog. However, I made the mistake of asking where in Bangkok I might find wooden bowls. The answer came promptly and without hesitation: at the Phat Pong night market in Silom. When I got there, I found that the market didn't have my bowls either. Instead, there was a variety of bars and locations with 'adult entertainment' - almost-naked girls dancing on poles could be seen through the open doors of most of these venues. I didn't count how many advertisers tried to get me to come to their "Pussy Ping-Pong" show. I was really frustrated after a while - but at least I found a hairdresser on the way back to get a final cheap haircut ;-)

The next morning, I gave up on buying bowls and went grocery shopping instead. And what do my sore eyes see on the way from the BTS station to the supermarket? A wood-carving shop that has bowls! Chance made my day, and I happily proceeded to buying kilo after kilo of Thai groceries.

In the afternoon, I had the monumental task of repacking my backpack. Somehow, I had to put all the groceries in there, while paying attention that all the glass bottles were stowed away safely. Surprisingly, I managed to fit everything in. Granted, I had to use all of the 10-liter addition my backpack has, but: everything was in there. Lovely! The downside, of course, was the resulting weight. I can now speak from experience when I say that carrying a 25 kg backpack is no fun. For the first time ever, I was really happy about the luggage carts at the airport ;-)


Day 488: Back to Bangkok

We had booked a ferry/tuk-tuk/train combo to get back to Bangkok from Koh Tao with the least hassle possible. The ferry left in the afternoon, giving us an entire morning to swim in the ocean for the last time, hang out at our favorite restaurant for the last time, and being happy to finally escape the party island that Koh Tao has become ;-)

The ferry was crowded with the scantily-clad, drunk tourist crowd you'd expect on a party island, and so I settled down listening to music and keeping my eyes closed to avoid becoming seasick. In Chumphon, we were transferred to the train station in a tuk-tuk, and then only had to wait for about an hour for our train to arrive. Despite it being only 8:30, our made-up beds greeted us already, and I fell asleep instantly.

Day 487: Beach Bumming in Koh Tao

On this day, we decided to take it slow and enjoy the beach. And how couldn't we, with views like these:


A few days ago, we had discovered a nice restaurant that made absolutely delicious milk shakes (and good food, too), so we brought our books and relaxed and ate and drank in the shade of a big tree until the sun set. Life is hard! ;-)


Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Day 486: Birthday Diving in Koh Tao

To celebrate my birthday today, I gave myself a lovely gift: two dives! Unfortunately, the morning dives left at 6:30, so we had to get up really early. On the boat, we were told that the dive sites had to be changed because of bad weather on the island's east side - a stroke of luck for me, because I had wanted to see one on the west side, anyway.

The first dive site was the Chumphon Pinnacle. The dive was beautiful, in spite of the murky water. We dived through swarms of small fish who really didn't care about the two divers in their midst, and saw some huge groupers lurking around on the bottom. The second dive site, Twins, was even nicer. I saw a few moray eels who came out of their house - I'd never seen a whole eel before, just their face. Another fascinating thing I saw was the symbiotic relationship between shrimps and gobys: the shrimps are almost blind, but have claws to dig houses in the ground. The goby lives in the same house and stands guard while the shrimp works. When a predator comes, the goby warns the shrimp and both go hide in their house. Very cool to watch!

Not as cool to watch were the exhaust fumes from our dive boat. The amount of black smoke the boat produced was pretty gross.  


After the dives, we walked around the island eating lots of nice food, just as it should be on a birthday. The highlight was a freshly caught, grilled red snapper. Very good!

We also saw some beautiful flowers growing right next to the path without any apparent caretaker.

Day 485: Kayaking in Koh Tao

Today, we decided to rent a kayak to paddle over to the small island Koh Nang Yuan, just off the coast of Koh Tao. Kayaking towards the island was hard work though: the currents worked against us, and the waves produced by all the small and big boats constantly threw us off course. On the bright side, we got to see the fancy bungalows at the north end of Koh Tao's main beach.


And, of course, the colors of water, sky, beach, rocks and vegetation were just fantastic.


When we arrived on the island, we discovered that we only had 170 Baht with us - but the island's entry fee would have been 100 per person. The girl in charge of collecting the fees called her boss, and he decided that a 15 Baht discount wasn't possible. Instead, he insisted on kicking us off the island straight away. We managed to negotiate a five-minute break - I was really exhausted from paddling against the currents - but then we had to be on our way again. Luckily, the way back was much easier, and we even found a tiny secluded beach where we could do some snorkeling. Beautiful!

Day 484: Koh Tao

We arrived in Koh Tao late last night and were happy to stay in the first reasonably priced place we could find. In the morning, the owner of the place came knocking at our door at 7:30 to tell us we would have to move to another bungalow if we wanted to stay. This episode made it very clear to us that we didn't want to stay there: knocking at guest doors in the early morning is a big no-no.

So we made it our first task to find a new place to stay. We looked at many wooden sea-side bungalows, but were never quite convinced - most of them smelled either musty or smokey. We were about to give up when we finally found a nice place. This is the path leading to our bungalow. Lovely, isn't it?


After moving our luggage, we decided to go ahead with the next bit of necessary planning: the return trip. We found a ferry company that offered a combined ferry/night train ticket for a reasonable price. At that time, it was already afternoon and we felt we had earned a day relaxing and satisfying food cravings. We found a beautiful cafe overlooking the bay...


...and some homemade beach swings on the way back:


In the evening - surprise, surprise - there was another lovely sunset:

Day 483: Koh Samui


In the morning, we walked around Nathon, trying to find a ferry to Koh Tao. Much to our surprise, we found out that the morning ferry was already full. Planning ahead was something that both of us had to re-learn after being in the sheltered retreat setting for ten days. Luckily, we found that another ferry company had a new afternoon ferry that still had space for us. So that left us with almost a full day in Nathon. We mainly walked around and enjoyed all the diverse sense impressions the town had to offer: breakfast at a nice cafe, random blue-and-white walls...


... colorful shops...


... and the lovely pains of a Thai massage. Waiting for the ferry, we also had the opportunity of watching the fishing boats unload their day's catch. It is hard to imagine that just 20 years ago, the island lived almost entirely off fishing, not tourism.

Day 482: The World of Sense Impressions


Today marked day 11 of the silent retreat - in other words: the day when we were released into the world again. Silence was lifted after the last meditation session at 5 am. The noise in the dining hall with everybody talking all at once was quite overwhelming, and many people, including me, went wandering the retreat grounds once more.

Then it was time to walk to the highway to have breakfast at the main monastery. The highway was overwhelming, too. So many cars! And so fast! And loud! I was happy to have survived the crossing. The German monk had been right to encourage us to take the transition back to the world slowly and to be kind to ourselves.

Breakfast then felt like a huge travel planning session. Everybody read their guidebooks and discussed where to go next and how to get there. I was lucky enough to find another girl who also wanted to go to the island Koh Tao and so we decided to stick together. To get to Koh Tao, we took a bus to Surat Thani, the next big city. The bus was the next overwhelming sense impression - just look at the colors and imagine the sounds:


In Surat Thani, it turned out that the next ferry to Koh Tao would be a night ferry. Since we didn't really want to spend another uncomfortable night after the concrete beds in Suan Mokkh, we decided to go to Koh Samui instead and catch another ferry from there. In the evening, after looking for accommodation and dealing with the noisy port town Nathon, we were rewarded with a quiet stretch of beach and a beautiful sunset:


I can't even begin to describe how incredibly soft and comfortable the bed felt that night! No more waking up from back pain... ah, that must be heaven!

Day 471 - 481: Silent Meditation Retreat at Wat Suan Mokkh

I had planned to do a meditation retreat somewhere in Asia. I was really glad to discover that the retreat at Suan Mokkh monastery in southern Thailand would fit in very nicely between the job offer I received and my flight home.

My first contact with meditation a few years ago had been the book Mindfulness in Plain English. I tried meditating with the book as my sole guide, but quickly gave up again - partly because they insisted that people sit cross-legged on the floor, which is not a comfortable position for me. A few years later, I discovered Headspace. They offer a few free guided meditations, and have a comprehensive series of meditations on a very reasonably priced subscription basis (and they don't pay me to write this). They do away with all the religious connotations that often accompany meditation, and also explain that it's perfectly ok to sit on a chair to meditate. I followed their meditation programs for about two years, but recently felt that the meditations were a little short. So I was curious what the retreat setting and the long periods of meditation during the retreat would feel like.

The Participants


At the start of the retreat, there were 112 participants. Some of them were experienced meditators who had done more than one retreat already, but there were many beginners, too. The youngest participants were just over 20 (they were the first ones to leave though), and on the upper end there was more than one white-haired lady. Although I had read beforehand that many people drop out, I was surprised to learn that only 80 of us stayed until the last day. I was almost shocked when two girls who had been sitting in front of me in the meditation hall were the first to leave on the fourth day.

On the organising and teaching side, there were quite a few people helping. The most important ones were the monks giving all the talks. There was a German monk, Tan Sukkhacitto, who was a really kind and gentle person. The English monk, Tan Dhammavittu, had great stories and a wonderfully British sense of humor to sweeten his talks. There were also two Thai monks, Tan Medhi and the 81-year old former abbot Ajahn Po. Two lovely Thai nuns were responsible for chanting and loving kindness meditation.

The Rules


We had to submit to a strict regimen of rules during the retreat. In Buddhism, this set of rules is called the Eight Precepts. Basically, the precepts forbid killing, stealing, sexual activity, 'wrong speech', intoxicating food/drinks, eating after noon and before sunrise, singing/dancing/music/entertainment, and perfumes/cosmetics/jewelry. I certainly wouldn't want to obey all of this in everyday life!

The Schedule

The day was divided into four blocks. The morning bell rang at 4 o'clock.




The first block started with the morning reading, where each morning a different participant read an inspiring or insightful piece of some sort. Then came a meditation session, followed by almost two hours of yoga practice. Since I didn't think too highly of our yoga teacher - for advanced people, she may have been good, but for inflexible beginners like myself, she was absolutely useless - I replaced yoga with a stretching routine, putting all I'd learned about stretching in Cambodia into practice. This was the only time of day I felt really awake. After yoga, there was another short talk by the monastery's abbot. I had great difficulty understanding his English, so these talks were rather useless for me. Then came another sitting meditation session. All the talks and sitting meditation took place in this meditation hall:




Between the first and second blocks was breakfast (boring rice soup, tea, and some sweet cakes), and a long break where we could do our chores, take a bath in the hot springs, wash clothes, or take a nap. My chore was to clean the toilets in the dormitory. The task itself was alright, but I was quite annoyed by the fact that the length of the chores was not distributed equally. For example, there was one girl who had to clean the footbaths in front of the dining hall. There were two of them, but only one was filled with water. Cleaning the footbath would take at most five minutes. In contrast, I had to clean four and a half toilets, empty the waste paper baskets and sweep the floors there. This task took me at least half an hour every day. Like with many other things in the retreat, it paid to arrive early for chore distribution, and in my opinion this just doesn't contribute to the atmosphere a retreat setting should provide.

The second block was the most difficult for me because I had difficulty to stay awake - no small wonder after a big breakfast and no time to take a nap because of the long chore that had to be done after breakfast. The block started with an hour-long dhamma talk. These talks, given by different people, consisted of meditation instruction in the beginning, and then changed to providing information about Buddhism. Then came a bit of walking meditation, and then another sitting meditation. The grounds we could walk in were lovely and provided plenty of shade:




After the second block, it was time for lunch. After lunch, I was so tired that I went straight to sleep on nine of the ten days.

The third block started with another talk, given by the English monk. This was the part of the day that I looked most forward to because I loved his British humor and the jokes he constantly made. He gave very thorough meditation instruction in the first few days, and then gave in-depth explanations of some Buddhist core concepts (more on this in the Buddhism section). After the talk, we did walking and sitting meditation, and then chanted Buddhist sutras for half an hour. If you can't imagine how Buddhist chanting might sound like, it is not unlike the songs you sing in Christian churches, maybe a little less varied to make the chants sound less like song. The lady who led the chanting was the kindest and gentlest soul I'd ever met. Since chanting was the only thing close to music we were allowed, the chants stuck to the mind like glue. I became so annoyed with this that I purposely tried to replace them with other songs in my mind. Finally, we did a guided loving kindness meditation.

Tea break was another event to look forward to because that's where they served delicious hot chocolate (or at least some sort of drink made from sweet chocolate-y powder). After drinking two cups, I either visited the hot springs or took another nap. Unfortunately, the hot springs were infested with mosquitoes at this time of day, so I switched to napping after three or four days.

The fourth and final block started with a sitting meditation. Then we did a group walking meditation. In group walking, everybody walked behind a leader, and the leader determined the pace of the group. They recommended walking barefoot for the meditation - but the leader was allowed to wear shoes, and thus her pace was much too fast for me to get anything like meditation out of the event. After group walking came another sitting meditation session, and then it was bedtime.

Living Conditions

To call the living conditions 'basic' would be a gross overstatement. We slept on a concrete bed, with a wooden pillow:


We also got a mosquito net and a blanket, and I padded my bamboo mat with an old yoga mat I found in storage and a towel. Still, the bed was extremely hard and I woke up several times every night with an acutely aching back.

The showers were Thai-style: a water pond and small bowls to pour water over your head:


Another element of Thai-style showers was that everybody was obliged to wear a sarong for showering. No underwear, no swimwear, only sarongs were allowed.

Outside of the shower, everybody was asked to wear 'loose' clothing to be able to meditate comfortably. At some point I noticed what the result of this policy was: it looked like everybody was in their pajamas for a slumber party!

The retreat center was a little more than one kilometer from the highway, and about six from the closest village, Chaiya. The silence surrounding the center was quite profound. The only sounds of civilization we heard were the planes starting from Surat Thani, about 50 km away, the trains passing about 6 km away, and the railway station announcement jingles in Chaiya.

The Food

On the first day, I thought the food wasn't going to be a problem. However, it turned out to be more or less the same every day, and unfortunately it wasn't too healthy. There were not enough greens and fruits for everybody - another thing where it was vital to arrive early, much to the detriment of the retreat setting, in my opinion. Aside from scarce greens and fruits, the food was pretty much cooked to death, and the only spice they seemed to have was a little chili. People with allergies weren't taken care of either: I noticed peanuts in the food quite often, and peanut allergies are both widespread and tend to be really bad.

Another objection I had to the food was the two-meal rhythm. If you only have two meals, you tend to eat more with any single meal. Food needs to be digested, and if you eat much, you need much time to digest. The result of this was that I regularly fell asleep during the meditation sessions after breakfast, and to a lesser extent also after lunch. In my opinion, several smaller meals would be much more beneficial for the meditation, at least physiologically.

This was our dining hall:


The Day-to-day

The first few days were kind of exciting because the daily routine was still new. The only major problem I had was waking up with back pain and the resulting lack of sleep.

Then, on day 4, I experienced a huge disappointment. At the end of loving kindness meditation, the nun sent us to tea break with the words "Enjoy your chocolate milk!" In the dining hall, we found out that the chocolate milk had been swapped out for soy milk - and it wasn't the kind of soy milk that tastes well. No doubt the swap was engineered to teach us not to be too attached to things and rituals, and maybe also to show us the emotion of disappointment clearly, but it took me more than just a few minutes to appreciate this. On the following days, we were back to chocolate milk, but there was always some apprehension, followed by relief, when I looked into the milk bucket.

In the dining hall, a few books on meditation were provided for those who had not understood (or slept through) some part of the meditation instruction. Along with the books, they also provided dictionaries. On day 6, I walked past the table with the books and suddenly felt a strong urge to sit down with one of the dictionaries to read it - just for the pleasure of reading again! I resisted, but it showed me that reading really is a huge part of my life.

On day 7, my mind felt incredibly dull and depleted. I held fast with the expectation of another of the English monk's talks on the next day - not knowing that I had already heard the last of those!

On day 9, there were no more talks. None. There was nothing but silence. My experience of the day was brutal. There were absolutely no more distractions, and only one meal to top it off. I survived thinking of day 11 when I would be free again.

Buddhism

I learned a lot about Buddhism during the retreat. What I found most fascinating concerned the concept of rebirth. As it turns out, Buddha never explicitly said what happens after death. Rebirth was already a common concept in his time, and is quite valuable as a moral teaching: the promise/threat of a next life keeps people on track in this life.

However, it can also interpreted as taking place during one's life. Whenever our state of mind changes, this can be seen as a rebirth of sorts. Being reborn as an animal can then be interpreted as taking on that animal's characteristic for a while (e.g. the greedy cockerel, the deluded pig, the hating snake). Training the mind in meditation can slow this cycle, and achieving enlightenment would stop it altogether - the enlightened being having full control over his mind. This interpretation seems to have been strongly supported by the founder of Suan Mokkh monastery, the well-known monk Buddhadasa Bikkhu.

This is a painting that depicts the whole cycle of rebirth:


Even though I now know more about Buddhism and value some aspects of it, I'd never consider myself a Buddhist. In general, I wouldn't consider myself a disciple of any religion that classifies people as second class based on their gender (the Buddhists also have an issue with women, inexplicably).

Lessons Learned

So what did I take away from the retreat? I think I now know my own mind a bit better. I know that I can cope with silence well, and also with most of the other precepts - but not with the absence of reading, or the presence of too little sleep, or a bed that gives me back pain. I also learned a lot about meditation and Buddhism, which I am really happy about since I always love learning new things.

That said, I would think twice before returning to Suan Mokkh, but maybe consider doing another retreat in a few years time.

Friday, February 15, 2013

Day 470: Food Walking Tour


Today I went on a food walking tour through Bang Rak, an old part of Bangkok. The goal was to visit five restaurants and taste ten dishes in total - all in the course of three hours. Needless to say, I didn't eat breakfast.

Our first stop was a restaurant called Charoen Wieng Pochana. The 80-year old owner sat at one of the tables and waved at us - I'm guessing the walking tour comes by almost every day. Their specialty was roasted duck, and so we had a small portion of traditional roasted duck on rice:


The restaurant was Thai-Chinese, so the food wasn't as spicy as Thai food usually is. That doesn't mean  that it wasn't good, of course. The mild, aromatic sauce complemented the roasted duck flavor very well.

Next, we stopped at a Muslim restaurant. They had a variety of dishes in a long showcase, but our guide chose something that was hidden in a big metal pot, called curry lava on egg. This was the most delicious food I'd had in a while, and definitely the best of the day. It consisted of some freshly cooked rice noodles in a curry soup, garnished with egg, onions, peanuts, tofu and a bit of coconut cream. Yum!


After this meal, we walked for a little bit to reach the Chao Phraya river ferry. We crossed the river and sat down in a small restaurant called Yum Rod Sab, right next to the small footpath leading away from the ferry pier. Their food was delicious too, but I was slowly getting to the point of being too full...

We didn't eat the fish on this tray, though I thought it looked very good. Our guide explained that the lemongrass stalks in the fish mouths are there to counter the typical fishy smell.


The final restaurant, Kallaprapruek, was quite fancy in comparison to the other places. They served a green Thai curry with Indian roti - apparently the owner is a big fan of Indian food. The curry was excellent - but I was full to the point of bursting.


Desert was a big scoop of coconut sorbet; anything more substantial, and they would have had to deal with an exploded human. Luckily, ice-cream always seems to fit :-)  

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Day 468: Shopping in Bangkok

Bangkok is a shopper's paradise. There are several huge malls that carry all the luxury brands. There are several more malls with slightly-less-luxurious goods and local designers. There is (at least) one entire mall only for gems and jewelry. There are huge outdoor markets with goods of varying quality. And, of course, the streets are lined with shops and stalls, too.

While this seems all nice and fancy on the first glance, it is just too much for me. I wonder how anybody ever finds something specific in these mazes of malls? There is just too much - and much too often it's more of the same, instead of some kind of variety.

I spent a fair amount of time looking around malls and markets - if only for the aircon and the huge English-language bookstores - but aside from the excellent food courts I haven't spent any money there. Maybe I don't belong to the typical target group of large shopping malls? ;-)

Day 465: Grand Palace

The Grand Palace is one of the major tourist attractions in Bangkok. I arrived by river ferry, since both my hostel and the palace were located conveniently close to ferry piers. When I walked towards the palace entrance, I quickly realized that the bulk of visitors arrives in another way: the road circling the palace was one big parking spot for tour buses.

After I had passed the ticket gate, I was already overwhelmed by the amount of gold and grandeur all around, as well as by the amount of people and the level of noise produced by tour guides trying to make themselves heard above the crowd.

Luckily, I discovered that a free guided tour of the palace was scheduled to start about twenty minutes after I arrived. So I sat down in a corner and passed the time reading the palace brochure. (It wasn't a quiet corner, unfortunately; I doubt that there are quiet corners in the palace during visiting hours.)

The first few buildings we visited were not strictly speaking palace buildings: they belonged to Wat Phra Kaew, the king's private temple on the palace grounds. This is the main temple hall where the famous Emerald Buddha (made from jade, despite the name) is enshrined:


Next to all the entrances to the palace compound were these giant statues that are said to guard the palace:


After the Royal Palace in Phnom Penh, this palace was the second one to feature a model Angkor Wat in its courtyard. The area around Angkor Wat changed hands more than once between the Khmer and Siam kingdoms, and so both kings apparently wanted to send a message along the lines of "Angkor Wat is ours!"


The monkeys and demons that are present throughout the palace come from the Thai creation myth Ramakien. Supernatural monkeys were helping the hero of the story, while demons fought against him.


Many of the gold decorations in the palace are made from real gold. As a consequence, it is strictly forbidden to touch anything. Unfortunately, tourists seem to find posing with statues more appealing than following rules. Our guide was really annoyed with all the statue-touchers and told several of them off - no small wonder if you consider how the statues' hands look after a while:


Here are two more views of Grand Palace buildings:



My next stop was Wat Pho, right next door to the Grand Palace. The statues that stood guard next to some doorways in Wat Pho seemed a little out of place with their fancy Western hats:


Wat Pho is home to a huge reclining Buddha statue - look at how small the people are that are standing next to it! The statue takes up all the space in one big building.


Outside, Wat Pho has many, many stupas decorated with colored porcelain pieces. These are just five of them - there are many more on the temple grounds.


Another feature of Wat Pho are its many courtyards that are lined with hundreds of Buddha statues.


Monday, January 28, 2013

Day 464: Back to Bangkok

Before I left Ayutthaya for Bangkok in the afternoon, I made a small walk through the park directly opposite my hostel. The park being in Ayutthaya, it was filled with temple ruins, of course. Since it is out of the way for most tourists, it was very nice and quiet (apart from the usual noise coming from the busy road next to it). I really enjoyed wandering around for a bit without having to deal with the tourist bustle.


Later, on my way to the train station, I saw this vending machine:


Initially I thought it was a vending machine for cigarettes - but when I stopped to take a second look I noticed pretty quickly that what it was actually selling was gas for motorcycles. I found it quite surprising because I had never before seen a gas station without any kind of attendant. Even the rustic Cambodian "gas stations" that displayed their gas in old whisky bottles always had staff nearby. Not so at this one. Why do gas stations have attendants, anyway?

Day 463: Ayutthaya

For a period of several hundred years, Ayutthaya was the glamorous capital city of the Ayutthaya kingdom - until it was sacked and partly destroyed by the Burmese army in the 18th century. Today, temple ruins are dotting the city, and treasures excavated from the ruins are on display in Chao Sam Phraya National Museum. The amount of gold in the museum is very impressive - especially when you consider the involvement of looters. In the 1950s, the museum explained, excavations found a number of relics that had been enshrined inside one of the stupas. After these findings became public, looters started robbing some of the other stupas in Ayutthaya. When the government realized this, they quickly reacted and accelerated their excavation schedule, thus limiting the extent of damage the looters could do.

Unfortunately, the museum didn't allow photography, but the front page of the brochure they handed out to visitors had a lovely picture of the most stunning exhibit: a richly decorated golden elephant.


After visiting the museum, I went to explore some of the ruins. I first stopped at Wat Mahathat - or, in the words of the Japanese tour guide who happened to pass by me: Watto Mahathatto (Of course, I knew from my time in Japan that the Japanese language is no friend of consonants at word endings, but still, his pronunciation of the temple's name amused me to no end.)

The first thing I noticed on the temple grounds of Wat Mahatat was the leaning tower of... umm... Ayutthaya.


As I saw later, this tower isn't the only leaning one in Ayutthaya. Funnily enough, Wikipedia has an entire list of leaning towers (on which South-East Asia is grossly underrepresented, by the way).

Wat Mahatat also has another proof of the power of nature: a sandstone Buddha statue that has been completely dissolved inside a tree - except for the head which gazes at the visitors from its prison within the tangled roots.


The majority of the ruins in Ayutthaya are built from red bricks. However, I saw the remains of something like stucco covering the bricks on some of the buildings. I assume that back in the day, the buildings were either white or painted in some other way, and no bricks were visible at all. Must have been quite a different atmosphere! (The University of Melbourne has done a virtual reality reconstruction which shows white temple buildings.)


My next stop was Wat Ratchaburana. This temple has a row of stupas that are either very well-preserved or very well-restored. In contrast to all the other buildings, these stupas are made from a different white-ish material.


I then decided to cycle to a temple a little way out of town, Chedi Phu Khao Thong. In contrast to all the temples in the city, where it's strictly forbidden to climb on top of anything, you're free to climb up this one.


The top revealed a nice view of the surrounding landscape, but the coolest part was when I discovered that a little tunnel led to the inside of the spire at the top. At the end of the tunnel, there was a small opening where a lovely red glass Buddha statue was enshrined.


On the way back, I had a quick look at Chedi Suriyothai...


... and then I decided that I had seen my fair share of ruined temples for now ;-)

Friday, January 25, 2013

Day 462: To Ayutthaya

Traveling when sick is no fun, really. I had already booked accommodation in Ayutthaya for tonight, otherwise I would have stayed in my Bangkok bed all day. But instead, I dragged myself to the train station, onto the train to Ayutthaya (only two hours from Bangkok, luckily), and into my new hostel, where I promptly decided to spend the rest of the day... in bed.

This was one of the best moments of the day, actually - one of the best moments you get whenever you have a cold: after exerting yourself (in getting up to get a glass of water, if you're sensible, or in making a four-hour journey to a new city, if you're me), when you settle back down into a lying position - that feeling of relief, that's the best part of having a cold. 

Day 461: I have a job!

.. or should I say, I have a calling?

According to psychology researchers (I'm reading about it in Tal Ben-Shahar's Happier right now), how you look at your employment has a significant influence on how much satisfaction and happiness you derive from it. If you call it a derogatory 'job', you are likely to see it as a chore and do it only for the monetary benefits. Doing things only for the money doesn't make anybody happy. If you call it a 'career', you'll see it as a rat race: once I achieve this next promotion, I'll be happy. This, of course, never happens: when you get a promotion, you are happy for a while, but then your happiness level adjusts and you're right back in the rat race for the next promotion. However, looking at work as a 'calling' puts you in the position to actually enjoy the process - you enjoy the act of doing your job. Now THAT's a big step towards happiness, isn't it?

What I found most fascinating about this research is that it's all just a question of perception. Even if outside circumstances do not change, and you only change how you perceive your work, job satisfaction and happiness rise. How you look at things changes things! Isn't that amazing?

But now, back to what I wanted to write about in the first place: updates from my job hunt.

I put a lot of hard work into my attempt towards rejoining academia in the past two months: I wrote cover letters; I crafted a research statement detailing my past research and plans for the future; and I put my thoughts about what good teaching should incorporate into a teaching statement.

I used these documents to apply at some universities that had posted suitable job openings. I was quickly invited to a few interviews, and much to my surprise none of the universities insisted on seeing me personally, but instead agreed to do it via Skype. I did two interviews and, in the end, received much praise - and two offers. Last week I accepted one of them, which is for a position at the Lecturer/Assistant Professor level. It seems all my hard work has paid off and I have successfully rejoined academia!

I have to say, I would never have expected my applications to be such a big success. Especially with the huge gap in my publication history (results of my extended travels, of course). One of the interviewers even asked about it, and then almost apologized for not remembering that I had explained it in the cover letter. I had expected (and prepared for) a few very critical questions, asking for reasons and justifications of my trip - but apparently, a gap period spent traveling isn't an issue for anybody at all in academia.

Overall, I am especially pleased that my new strategy worked out: put hard work into all the tasks; keep at it even if it is difficult at times; and only worry about the task at hand - neither future nor past tasks are important.

So, I worried about cover letters when it was time to write cover letters. I worried about research and teaching statements when I needed them for the next application. With the help of many Internet resources and a trusted friend who gave me valuable comments, I slowly wrote and improved all my documents. At times, I was tempted to think ahead and worry about possible interviews - the presentation I would have to give, the questions I would be asked - but I am proud to say that I managed to see the temptation for the unproductive waste of time that it was, and stayed focused on the task at hand (most of the time, anyway ;-)).

When the first interview invitation came, I started worrying about interviews - good that I hadn't done it before! The preparation for the first interview was horrible. I was scared shitless and had trouble concentrating for fear of being taken apart by the interview panel. The interview came - and it wasn't half bad! The interviewers were really nice, asked perfectly polite and constructive questions, most of which I had even prepared for using lists of questions-to-expect I found on the Internet. Preparation for the second interview, then, was a lot less terrifying, even though I expected to be taken apart once again. Needless to say, this didn't happen and the interviewers once again were really nice and friendly.

Now, with the end of my trip in the near future and the beginning of my new job shortly after, I have a whole new host of things to worry about. There are so many things waiting for me that I've never done before, but that are now part of my job, that I would have plenty of reason to be terrified. Instead, I'll just do the same thing I've done throughout the application process: I'll take it one task at a time, put in hard work, enjoy the things I learn on the way, and everything will be fine.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Day 460: National Museum + Khaosan Road


Today I went to visit two sights of a very different nature: the National Museum, and the infamous tourist trap Khaosan Road.

The first part of the National Museum  provided me with a detailed overview of Thai history, with a special focus on the monarchy and its two predecessor kingdoms: Ayutthaya and Sukhothai. I learned a fascinating bit about Thai history that I wasn't aware of, but that perfectly explains why Thailand is more developed than many of its neighbors: they haven't had major disruptive events for more than 200 years - no civil wars, no colonization, no occupation during the world wars, and most certainly no genocide.

The newest really bad event seems to have been the invasion by the Burmese, leading to the fall of the Ayutthaya kingdom in the 18th century. But after retaking the city of Ayutthaya a few years later and founding a new royal dynasty (which is still ruling today, incidentally), things went rather smoothly for the Kingdom of Siam.

When the Europeans came to South-East Asia to colonize, Siam negotiated smartly and gave away parts of its territory in exchange for independence. Siam territory was a plentiful resource back then: it included much of what today is Burma, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia and Malaysia. (Wikipedia has a map if you're interested in details of what was given away when.)

Many of the objects on display in the history section are items used by one of the kings - such as this wheelbarrow:



It was used when the king opened construction of the first section of Thai railway. Apparently, you can't just use any old wheelbarrow when you're king; you have to have a properly ornamented one.

One of the other buildings on the National Museum grounds is a Buddhist temple - Buddhist temples in Asia may even be more prevalent than Catholic churches in Latin America, incredible as it may seem.


The remaining buildings were dedicated to the display of art objects from all periods of Thai history. Most were gathered at various archaeological sites, like this beautiful statue:


Leaving the ordered sanity of the National Museum behind, I then plunged into the tourist abyss of Bangkok that is Khaosan Road.


Khaosan Road itself is a rather short stretch of street, but it is filled with guesthouses, western food chains, bars, and street stalls - and with too many tourists who seemingly invested all their money in drinks instead of decent clothes. The crowd frequenting Khaosan Road, I'm sorry to say, seems to be exactly the type of crowd that gives tourism a bad name.

The locals adapt, of course, and offer exactly what the spoiled tourist brats seek - and what they seek seem to be fake documents:


There were at least five of these little stalls. They offered everything you can imagine: student cards, press cards, driving licenses, TEFL certificates, bachelor's and master's certificates. I have to say, I was a little shocked by two aspects of this: first, that there seems to be a fairly high demand for document fakers; and second, that they seem to be tolerated by the police - how else could they set up shop in broad daylight like this?