Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Laos wow


Well,
Laos is the most delicious, relaxed, happy, peaceful country I've ever been to, it's like a beach town but with rice patties and mountains. I'll give you all a little taste of our first 3 days in Laos:

Day 1: we arrived in Laos sometime in the morning after a very easy transition from China,. A very relaxed Laotian asked us if we wanted a ride to town and charged us $2. We found a nice hostel for $7 a night, ate at a place called The Banana, had a few beers with a big lunch for about $3 and then took a lazy walk. Then we found another little restaurant with a patio and had a few beers, we met that cool German couple I mentioned before, got advice about India, went to the night market to people watch and then went to bed.
Day2: Woke up around 8ish had eggs, toast and a banana milkshake for breakfast $2 and rented two bicycles for the day, $1 each. Went on an amazing bike ride through some of the villages around town. We skipped rocks with some of the local children and said hello to about everyone in the town. We took a break and had lunch and beers at a little restaurant that overlooked the village. Then we got back on our bikes and rode through the rice patties and saw some stunning landscapes. We went back to our hostel, showered and then met the German couple for some beers and ate some Laos food. Lovely
Day 3: Woke up late, signed up for a 2 day trek through the jungle. It involves a 6 hour hike though the forest to a little village, we stay in the village for one night and then kayak back to town on the river. We also met a cool American couple that signed up with us. Then the laziness took us over, we ate and ate and ate, wrote in our journals while sitting in a swing. Had some beers then I took a nap while Craig interneted. I told him to wake me when it was feeding time again, then I ate some delicious soup and hung out with the American couple for a bit.

Tomorrow we are going to rent bikes again and ride to more villages and check out a crazy Chinese market then the day after we leave for our trek. Very very happy out here. So happy in fact that we have changed our itinerary to stay a month in SE Asia and fly out of Malaysia to Southern India. Love you all. And know that your daughter/friend/relative/shining star in the darkest skies is having a great time. Sorry this email isnt very well written but this is the new Laos version of me :).

Pics
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lindseycochran

Monday, November 2, 2009

Stein update


Tonight, we say farewell to China. Tomorrow we board a sleeper bus to the border of Laos and 20 hours later we will be there. 20 hours on a bus. It's a fitting way to end our trip through China. China has been awesome, and we will miss the heck out of it. Sure, China's got some issues. She smokes too much, is loud and obnoxious, dirty as hell, spits on the streets, gives us food borne illnesses, blocks the coolest internet sites, and laughs, stares, and points. Oh, and lets its children pee and poo on the street.

But dangit, China has got something special. There's beauty past those smoggy skylines and true friendliness and gentle curiosity behind the stares, laughs, and points. She means well. (Except for that encroachment upon freedom of speech, no meaning well there). And you know what, it's actually kind of cute to see kids pee and poo on the streets. They designed special buttless kiddie pajamas just for this specific reason!

China is awesome. Lindsey and I had a conversation where I pointed out that it would be difficult to tell someone exactly what to do in China. Beijing for sure. Yunnan Province has been really cool. But just being in China and seeing the culture and the cities and experiencing everything we've seen has been really phenomenal.

Here is a list Lindsey and I compiled of "China stuff":

whenever our bus or train would arrive at a destination, especially in a smaller town, a huge rush of people would greet the disembarking passengers, especially the foreigners, to offer us rooms, other buses to other towns, or other incomprehensible things to sell. They really wanted to have us come with them RIGHT NOW but we were never quite sure where, and they definitely couldn't tell us. As a Scottish dude told Lindsey one day, "bless their hearts, the Chinese, they so badly want to rip you off, they just lack the language skills to do it". Today a man held out 1 Nike shoe and said, "Hello, Nike!" so I grabbed the shoe, said "shie shie" (thank you) and started walking away. Lindsey and him both laughed a lot. Ido what I can.

we will miss speaking our broken Chinese. highlights: me, for no reason, repeating every number in Chinese - someone could speak in perfect English "146 yuan please" and I would reply, "yi bai suh shi liu yuan?" just to show them i could say 146 in Chinese. Other favorites of ours:
hao chr! = delicious - said after every meal to the waiter, no matter how delicious it was or not. once an older man was so touched he went outside to the sidewalk to tell his friends that the foreigners said his food was hao chr. lindsey pointed at a pile of cooked baby birds and snakes in a street stall and said hao chr. The baby bird proprietor laughed heartily

ni hao! = hello - very arresting to the Chinese people who would greet us with a loud HELLO! and receive a loud NIHAO!!!! Also, "hello" is usually accompanied by giddy waving from people of all ages
liang ge piao (insert city name) = two tickets to...wherever. I was our official train/bus ticket purchaser, and it filled me with a victorious joy to successfully buy a ticket to the correct destination, usually speaking to a person with no English skills at all.

lines, or the lack of them. Getting onto a bus to the Great Wall was a fantastic example of the freak outs that happen when Chinese people plan to board a bus or train. Every person held a ticket to the bus. There were plenty of seats. When the bus doors opened, however, what ensued resembled a panicked group of gazelles running to freedom, where freedom was a seat on the plenty large enough bus.
Chinese people are LOUD. China is LOUD! Horns honk for no reason, people talk on their phone on the sleeper train at 5:30 AM, and talk very loudly. As a test, we started yell-talking on a crowded street to see if people would react. "MAN, THIS STREET IS CROWDED!" "I KNOW! SURE ARE A LOT OF PEOPLE WHO CAN HEAR US!" Nothing. NOTHING!
We were at a park in Chengdu and were approached by two girls who asked us to fill out a survey about tourism in the Sichuan province. We began, and within 2 minutes were surrounded by about 20 curious people trying to see what we were doing and why. At the same park, we went to the craziest low-rent haunted house of all time, 10 different circles of people doing choreographed dances while admiring eyeglass-shattering Chinese operatic singing, saw a possibly dead turtle wrapped in cellophane being sold, and witnessed people feeding coy fish with a baby's bottle taped to a stick.
Trying to order anything at a restaurant without an English menu. We would say, in very broken Chinese, "ni you jiaozi?...shuijiao?" asking for dumplings. Sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn't. I said it would be the equivalent of a Chinese guy walking around American streets shouting "you havee freeench frieee?" Tonight we snuck out of a place after being sat at a table because we didn't want to risk ordering something gross on our last night in China.
Chinese people won't give you their opinion when asked. "Is this dish good?" "Depends on personal taste" ok. "Is there a good place to eat here" "Some people think yes, some people think no" ok. But what they will give you...handfulls of free fruit!
Yesterday's train ride was pretty great. For those of you not on Lindsey's email list, here's her description of it:
We had a ten hour train ride yesterday from Dali to Kumning and a very energetic Chinese man started chatting us up. He peeked his head over excitedly and said "oooh hello, I very nervous I never speak to foreigner before" and plopped down right next to us on the train. We talked with him using various Chinese, English and sign language phrases for over an hour. He said that he didnt have an English name and asked us to name him, so we decided on the name Charlie because his Chinese name was Lu Chao. At times he was sitting so close to Craig it looked as if they were about to kiss. Our little Charlie, I wanted to bring him home with me.
McDonalds is known as "mac-don-ard" and KFC is "kentujee" and will not be understood by any other name

we've seen tons of people with wonky eyes. Wonky can mean crossed, missing, drooping, or bulging. Lindsey pointed this out first.
At least one person has vomited on at least 50% of all our bus rides, which means we've seen about 8 vomiting people on buses. One was sitting right next to me while she spewed into a trash can. She had to first remove her doctor style face mask to do it
Lindsey has developed a rare involuntary form of bulimia. She has now vomited 6+ times, and is surprisingly upbeat following each bout. The reasons:
1. eating a vitamin on an empty stomach in Korea
2. getting "the sickness" in Korea after a long hike and a large spicy ramen noodle cup
3. on the boat from Korea to China from sea sickness. She told a guy we met the next day, "i felt kinda sick last night." He replied, "oh yeah, what happened?" She said, "I threw up twice." "Oh, so you GOT sick."
3.5 almost vomited from eating a large chicken sandwich too fast at an Irish Pub in Ulaan Bataar
4. Food poisoning in Lijiang due to undisclosed meat on a stick. This one was not so funny
5. We began our malaria medicine today for our Laos trip. I told her I read that we were supposed to take it with food and lots of water. One label on the bottle said the same. Another said "take 2 hours after a meal". Lindsey stubbornly took the pill before we ate anything "to see what would happen" for future reference. We sat down to eat lunch. She felt sick. She got up to go to the room. Came back 5 minutes later, smiled, and said, "I just puked my guts out"
(I only vom'd once, and that was in Mongolia. I stood up from breakfast, walked to my bed, slowly put on my shoes, went outside, puked, kicked some dirt on it, then went back in the ger and ate my bread.)

We've probably risked our lives only twice in China. Once we were hiking on a small trail next to a cliff through a herd of goats and a broken pipe. Later that day we drove on a mountain rode in a van where the driver looked up above to look for landslides, then proceeded to drive over a pile of fallen rocks while biting his tongue nervously. This doesn't count just crossing the street, which is death-defying in and of itself.
We're leaving tons of stuff out for sure but we've both kept journals of events and will continue to do so throughout our trip. We will be in Laos by Sunday, eventually getting into Thailand, then flying to India on Thanksgiving Day.


Love you guys! Happy Halloween! Miss you!

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Travel Nutter


We are heading back to Beijing tomorrow and it'll be a nice break from the chaos that can be Mongolia. I absolutely love Mongolia, hell I proposed to the country but the UB can be a little dangerous at times. The motorists have a tendency to speed up when you're crossing the road, everyone is pretty much obliterated on vodka by 5pm and petty theft is rampant. BUT other than those few examples things are really wonderful.

I think I rather talk about Mongolia as a whole rather than the specific adventures I've had. The country has always held a strong interest for me. Most of Mongolia has no signs of modern society. They live in tiny gers during some of the harshest winter months in the world. Since they are generally nomadic they have had to form a tight family unit (also because they share such small accommodations). They are herders by trade and they have to live off of what they kill, make and grow. They are absolutely dependent on their horses yet take them to the slaughter houses to make sausages. Which may sound weird because they have such an attachment to their animals but there are 13 horses for every one person.

The families are extremely hospitable and friendly and I think this is in part due to their nomadic heritage. You have to be able to rely on the kindness of strangers for a warm place to stay when you are moving your family across a land that is completely uninhabited. I feel very lucky to have been extended this hearty hospitality. I was able to share meals with families, ask questions, play drinking games, ride their horses, sleep on their floors etc.

In Mongolia I realized that I really enjoy getting completely away from all signs of life. I like the vast and the desolate. I like not being able to have access to a computer and not knowing what is going on in the outside world. I love exploring something that is totally unique to my own personal experience. It's usually never comfortable but I enjoy that in a weird way, it makes my home comforts seem like heaven.

Monday, September 21, 2009

My Mongolia


I love you.
I have been in love with you for a long time but now I know this is the real thing. This is no puppy love, this is no ordinary love. Now that I have experienced you, you've ruined me for other countries.
I love your people (sober), I love your landscapes (sans wolves), I love your untouched innocence (sans wolves and drunks). You've made an honest woman out of me. I am ready to commit and pick you, above all other countries - as my favorite.
Some days the constant barrage of goat meat and horse milk wore me down and some nights your harsh weather and roaming yaks made it impossible to sleep. But I am willing to look past all your imperfections and accept you as a whole. Beautiful, vast, majestic, alcoholic and kind. Will you marry me?

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Adios Korea


It's been a good run, you've taught me a lot about Korean life, especially kimchi and sleeping on the metro. This is my farewell.
I have lost 8 pounds in your country. Slept on your floors, ate your bulgogi, hiked your mountains, bewildered your citizens, taught your children, sang in your nori bangs, watched your melodramatic tv shows, drank your soju and I loved every minute of it... or every other minute.

Truly an interesting and complex culture. I always felt safe and was constantly astonished at the integrity and honesty of the people...exmp: you can leave your bags pretty much unattended, cab drivers will never pocket an extra penny, students will freak out if you accidentally check a answer correct when it's wrong... and countless other examples. A great start to this year long dream.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

The Sickness


C-rag and I have been laid up for the past two days from The Sickness. The Sickness is an all encompassing term for poopsies and general malaise. I think we are dying from an adverse reaction to the Japanese enchiladas vaccine or from the Buddha mountain water we have been drinking, Craig thinks we're fine. Well, we will just see in due time.
Before The Sickness hit us we climbed to the top of a mountain at Seoraksan National Park and hooooooey was that beautiful! This mountain climbing sojourn was different from my previous expeditions. I felt like I really climbed to the top, despite my fear of heights, rock stairs and carnivorous animals. I love mountains, I am obsessed with mountains, I have all my best moments on mountains.. if I were any part of nature I would be a mountain... yes Rusty you can pick one.
Ok I am going to go put myself to bed and read my books.

New Schedule:
Wed and Thurs: we are going to Inje
Friday: Long boat to China. (we had to postpone due to The Sickness,China will not hesitate to quarantine your ass for weeks if need be) We'll probably stay in Beijing for a week and then take a train to Mongolia. I know Beijing will be amazing but I am really excited about getting to Mongolia.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Teaching

“This is not real.” I can’t recall how many times I’ve uttered those words as I’ve gazed out onto a bizarre, unwonted scene. Tonight specifically hit me hard. I’m in a foreign country, it’s late at night and I hear children screaming. Not screams of fear but screams of undulated joy that only the youth can possess.

I’m sitting on my dorm balcony hiding from people. My room is dark so I can see each human silhouette across the hall. I can imagine each ragged t shirt and mismatched sock, and I can imagine the smell of urine wafting from the dorm bathrooms. I can not see their expressions but I can guess. The children are elated, high on peer interaction and freedom. Their guardians, the Korean task masters, have a vaguely concealed malignance. They are emotionally checked out. Their minds must wander to keep their psyche safe in the chaos. I know this because when I’m in my classroom trying to teach Korean children English on their summer vacation, I have to occasionally check out myself.

“This is not real.” I mutter out loud again. I open my eyes and the scene is still the same. Children running wild and the task masters are slouched over, slowly following them from room to room. Tonight I am hiding in the dark from the children, but tomorrow the hard florescent lights will glare down on me. Every smile, frown and moment of vexation will be blaringly evident to them. There is nowhere for me to hide in this 10 hour a day, 7 days a week English camp. Luckily I can get away with my mercurial moodiness due to my foreignness but the other foreign teachers give me away. I can hear their laughs, songs, and praises from my classroom. **

I love my students and I enjoy teaching but my sensitive system is easily tempered with. Their impulsive shrieks startle me; their whines quicken my heart beat. Their boundless energy envelops my own. But I find such delight in their young glow., in their desire to please and in their desperation to communicate with me.
Since many of my students can not speak a full sentence of English their main lines of communication are through physical gestures and adjectives. In these moments of linguistic desperation I love them the most. Their soft blacks eyes full of expression, their hands repeating the same gesture wildly and their mouths forming incoherent adjective after adjective.

On the most basic level they want to be understood. They want to convey an emotion; they want to tell their story. In these moments my patience is endless, my sensitive system knows no bounds and I sit at my desk and help them find the words. And when the moment of that discovery is made their thin mouths form an O, they light up and exhale “oooooh.” This coo wraps around me and in our moment I have helped give their wild gestures meaning. They have found the words and I have found my meaning.
**note that the author was sick with the flu during this story, therefore author's moodiness was impart due to the fact that said author had a fever and lacked the energy to battle a ten hour (children filled)work day.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

The future is no place to place your better days


So I had a really emotional moment on the mountain, (which I am prone to have on mountains) but something about this particular mountain touched me. I'm not sure if it was because I climbed it on my own, or the music that I was listening to on my ipod, or that I was in a foreign country but I felt truly alive. I was living, breathing and experiencing something in the deepest, fullest sense.

I feel like I've had a lot of these moments over the past year or so, most of them occur in nature and most of them bring me to happy tears. It seems as of late that I have been experiencing this feeling/rush with more frequency. At Big Bend I had a few of these moments, in Colorado looking at the stars, hiking on the moutains in VA, new years eve.. and countless others, some too personal to share.

This is what it means to be alive, This is what it means to be alive to me. I am living and I feel it in my bones. I'm not stuck in a routine (which personally drains me of all life) and I'm not slaving away at a job that I feel luke warm about.
That is what I wanted from this trip (and my life), a little bit of danger, a little bit of adventure and a lot of time outdoors. So far so good.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Still alive


We are still alive. 3 very long plane rides and countless xanexes later, I am on Jeju island. Holla! Camp officially starts today at 2:30, I am teaching level five english (smarties) to a bunch of kiddos ranging in ages from 10-12. (That is the Korean age, subtract 1 to 2 years if you want their US age).

Feelins': I am excited to teach for the first time. For the most part the food here makes my stomach churn so "asia diet plan 2009" is working out well. I'm happy, I'm busy, I'm running around all day, I'm learning korean and my life is simplified. All of my belongings fit into one backpack and that feels amazing. I like simplicity in my exotic endeavors.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Day One



Here is me looking at the eclipse with four pairs of sunglasses on.

After 24 hours of non stop travel, Craigifer and I arrived in Seoul last night, we took a bus to our hostel and immediately passed out. This morning we woke up at 645 am - holy moses and wondered around the streets aimlessly, enjoying all the novel foreign shops. And then much to our surprise we saw a SOLAR ECLIPSE, random I know but what luck! Later we walked up a giant hill to gaze upon a beauteous temple and I was yelled at 3 different times by random korean bystanders, for what I still dont know. Well one time I think the lady yelled at me for trying to save a worm from burning to death in the sun.

Ok so the feelins part of the journey: I am pretty much blissed out. I am so out of my mind happy that I cant even take everything in. I love to travel, I love adventures, I love my boyfriend and I love those cute little asian caricatures on every ad. I am living my dream and it feels absolutely amazing. I feel so so so so lucky and thankful. This is the best thing that I've done with my life thus far and if it all ended now I'd still feel pretty lucky. Day one, great success!

Monday, May 25, 2009

The ants

My dad has always said 'it's not the bears that kill you, it's the ants' and I feel like we're finally tackling all of the little ants.

I've told my boss that I am leaving and I have been slowly explaining to my kids that I wont be around next year. Kinda sad, kind of freeing. Most of my kids look at me like I'm insane...one asked if Mexico was in Asia.

I've saved more monies than I expected which leaves me a lot of room for aimless wandering and maybe a nice hotel here and there. Or pizza, oh how I will miss pizza. Craig really likes Asian food...me not so much. However, I have decided this is an excellent weight loss plan and I should not feel guilty for stuffing myself with junk before I leave.

We've also received our visas from China...expensive and a pain but that has been a weight off our shoulders. We are waiting to get our Indian visas in Beijing because they are only valid sixth months after the issue date (the year long multiple entry is way more expensive).
The camp in Jeju island has finally sent us our work info and our official start date is July 24, so that means we have two weeks to travel around in S. Korea before our month long stint teaching engrish.
And I was finally approved (biggest pain in the arse so far) for a capital one credit card, it's the only credit card that has 0% overseas transaction fees. Atm fees are expensive and travelers checks make me nervous.

I am still making constant to-do lists but it feels like all of the little things are falling into place. Which makes my neurotic planning side, very happy.

Ants:
Storage unit
Travelers insurance, we're using Nomad
Background check for Korean work permit
Vaccinations

Bears:
Getting into Tibet
Staying alive

Friday, February 27, 2009


Here is an article about the path we want to take sans Iran. I am getting really, really excited now. The author recounts his adventures through Mongolia, China, Tibet and India.

http://www.apogeephoto.com/oct2007/jubide102007.shtml

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

The tickets have been purchased...




I have been saving all my pennies for the past two years for this 12+ month trip abroad and my plan has finally come to fruition. The first step has been completed, the one-way tickets to Seoul, Korea have been purchased! Whoopty!

Craigo and I are leaving July 8th to teach for a month at a camp in Jeju Island (which is insanely beautious, the pic above) to earn some extra cash. The plan after that is to head on over to China and later take the train up to Mongolia. After we are finished gallivanting around with ponies and Genghis Khan's decedents we want to go back through China to Nepal and then India (all of this is overland travel) http://www.seat61.com/.

After Asia we want to end up in South America but that's round two of this adventure. Now the visa hell must begin.