As the calendar turns to November, and the crisp Cambodian
winter sets it. Just kidding, its 82 here today with relative humidity of geeze
I’m so sweaty. BTW Phan and I were watching the San Diego morning news the
other day (thanks again Dave) and the weather/hooker girls are getting better
or worse depending on your point of view. This chick had a black, skin tight
short leather S&M outfit on, and no it was not Halloween yet. Bob Dale
would be ashamed of these hussies. In all honesty it is cooler then when we
arrived in June, but still very warm.
So Phan’s Dad arrived in Battambang and we made the trip
over there a few weekends back. It is only $5 to take the bus, but we decided
to stay classy and opted for the private taxi, with the added benefits of
leaving Friday afternoon instead of Saturday morning. It was a harrowing, horn
laden adventure, but we made it to the village in one piece. Phan and I were
excited to see some of the family members that we had met a few years back and
see the work that her Dad had put into fixing up the house. They even have a
small storefront, oh and 3 dogs, which were very well behaved and even accepted
Hooner into their pack.
We went out for dinner and drank, it was by far a better
experience than our visit in 2011, when the house was literally empty and
lacked many of the creature comforts we enjoyed this time around.. One of the highlights for me
was learning to play Khmer chess from Phan’s Dad. It is a lot like regular
chess actually, so Troy and I both took our turn getting schooled, but then her
Dad played some ooooollllddddd guy from the village who made Phan’s Dad call
him “the master.”
Here are a few pictures of Battambang and the village.
Central Market BattambangHoon in his spot
Phan looking out to the fron from the balcony.
Pa and Ming came back to Siem Reap with us and spent a few
days seeing the sights, visiting Angkor Wat, it was Hooner’s first opportunity to
see the temples, shh no dogs allowed. We
took them to the circus and they had a good time.
Hoon at Temples
Cambodian Circus
Work is going just fine, we recently finished the 1st
quarter of the school year. The students are great, admin has been nothing but
supportive and I have a beautiful view from my classroom. I really have no
complaints. One interesting thing that occurred was when the issue of slavery
came up. In the United States there is a built in social stigma associated with
race relations and often our sensitivities can hinder our objectivity or depth
of investigation. Usually the conversation ends with it was a dark time in
American History….lets talk about reconstruction.
These Cambodian kids are approaching the situation with an
outsiders perspective. In the U.S., this perspective may be viewed as callous,
but I found it extremely refreshing to go beyond the baseline slavery is bad, and
delve deeper into issues like the economic advantages of slavery, without the
emotional burden of black and white. It was truly group A and group B and from
a Historians perspective, removing such a powerful bias like race was
intellectually very exciting.
Sorry for the nerdy History stuff
Some exciting developments in the travel department. We’re
headed to East Asia in early November, I was honestly looking for a nice beach
in the Philippines, but the airfare went up and that made it around the same
price as going to Japan, so Tokyo here we come. We’ll be spending only 4 days
there, but it is sure to be exciting, really looking forward to the food. Two
other teachers from work are joining us, accommodations are pretty pricey so
between the 4 of us, we should come out ok.
Earlier this week we also booked a flight for Christmas
break to a new continent. (for us) Anywhere north in Asia is pretty chilly in
December, so we’re leaving Christmas day to Sydney, Australia for 10 days. I
have some weird dream about seeing the new years eve fireworks in the Sydney
harbor, so maybe we’ll get that opportunity. There are quite a few Australians
in Cambodia so we have been getting a lot of advice about possible itineraries.
Japan and Australia are expensive when compared to Thailand and Vietnam, so we’ll
have to be a bit more frugal, but it’ll be a great adventure. Also it is in the
Southern hemisphere so it’ll be summer time over there, yeah more warm weather.
Phan and Hooner have opened up their own nail shop, which
consists of one client, Hooner who receives daily massage and nail treatments.
They are both doing good, Phan is enjoying the space to breath and think and
observe and appreciate and read and relax. Things are going good though, a little
homesick, man a double double sounds so good.
I’m still playing soccer. I hate it, don’t know how much
longer I’ll last, I give up like 9 goals a match. I know it sounds bad, but
that doesn’t take into account the 50 shots on goal other teams average. It is
a bloodbath, we’re slow and I hope I don’t have to do it anymore. Additionally,
there are loads of ill tempered brits and aussies who are reliving their glory
days of JV soccer. It’s a mess, I gotta find a way out, oh I know I’ll just
roll around on the ground holding my ankle like all the real soccer players do.
Alright, your all caught up. Send us emails, keeping us
updated on your end, it would mean a lot to us, helps us feel connected.
BugDragon Bug
Getting the canoe ready for water festival races
My main man
Mcains Flight suit (hanoi hilton)
Reffing a soccer match, dang streakers
We got a lot of funny looks, usually it is a white guy on the back of a moped being driven by a Cambodian guy, this must be one incredible Cambodian.
I’ve got a doozy of a post about Cambodia in the pipe, not
sure if its meant for human consumption.
Stay Tuned for pictures from Tokyo in the next few weeks
enjoyed life on the other side in your words...Glad you had a nice visit to Battambang and picked up some local culture (Cambodian chess and drinking.) Nice going smuggling Hooner into one of the wonders of the world. He needs culture too. Soccer sounds miserable but what can you do? Misplaced values by the Aussies and Brits...and London is clamoring for an NFL team. Come on. glad you are doing lots of things...You don't get many comments on your blog because they make signing in so hard! It is easier to hack the pentagon.
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