2009-11-07

SYDNEY, SYDNEY, SYDNEY!

Soy Latte at Glebe Point

for Andrew

are we speaking words?
always is a strong one
traffic was being slowly soothed
by her

silence

no rush putting letters together
there is always only one way
this moment
no matter what or

who

can you trust? he asked
she’s been always full of doubts
no answer came
to her crowded

mind

numbers? they always there
fearless
only sometimes
change

the order

she always eats
the coffee foam
from the top
first



Sydney, 24/10/2009

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2009-10-22

REVERSE CULTURAL SHOCK

After 8 months of traveling around Southeast Asia and slowly sinking in Asian, mostly Buddhist culture, I came to Australia. Nice huh? Yeah... Though, my very first reaction was: I want to catch the first plane back to Bali!!! Surprisingly, I felt very uncomfortable and much reluctant to be here. To see clean streets and identical suburban houses, wide perfectly sealed roads with sidewalks, to have procedures for everything due to safety standards, to eat food I haven’t been eating for a long time, to be among Caucasians! Nevertheless, I ended up going to Asian restaurants in Perth, trying to be among Asians, smiling to them on the streets. I was having a problem do adjust myself to „my own” culture!

First day in Perth. Watching TV... Commercials every 15 mins. Pain killers! Take them immediately, you don’t have time to think why your body is painful, do you? Is it headache starting? Tranquilizers! If you don’t take, you gonna be nervous! O gosh, why suddenly I’m so nervous? Wrinkle and anti-cellulite creams, oh shit, I’m getting older, I should be using them already, hurry! Food, more food, the best food, McFood! Am I hungry? Insurances! You have to insure everything, from your nail polish to your house and life, otherwise, you are going to be screwed up, because what if...? Oh my Goddess, I’m screwed! I started to change channels compulsively... Oprah Winfrey’s ridiculous show, something about how to manage your money. So there is Miss Great Financial Advisor in studio, who spent obviously a lot of money on her education, and is enough qualified to say, listen everybody!, you need bloody big dough to have a huge house with nice garden, two cars, kids in collage and descent retirement! But even though you work your ass off, forget about having another kid (you really want to have!) or go for holiday to Hawaii (as you are knackered from earning money)! Inflation, economic crises, currency ups and downs! We have to save, invest, multiply, we have to have, to have more, to have...! It took me a while I finally switched the TV off. The thing is: I DON’T HAVE TO! I don’t need to use any bloody expensive creams, I have nothing to insure, and hopefully my son will manage to earn money by himself without counting on millions from my untimely death! If I get older, or sick, or even die, well, it happens to people, doesn’t it? We are afraid of everything and everybody around! We pass these fears to our children by over-caring and constant admonition: don’t touch it! don’t trust! watch out! How much money corporations make on these threats we all submit to…? Yeah…

What a nice silence! My pulse slowly is coming back to normal. My thoughts are becoming more focused and happier...

I’ve been to places in Asia, where these threats did not arrive yet, where people have nothing to insure or the insurance fees are too expensive for them, they are very bad clients of McFood, so none of them are fat or die from heart attacks, they don’t know about workaholism, how to manage their money and how to use computer or internet... Some of their kids cry in horror seeing the white person for the first time! Don’t you think it’s funny? People in these remote areas still live very slowly and without so many “civilized” fears. They accept their lives as they are. They treat suffering as a natural part of human condition, but it doesn’t mean they don’t suffer. They are not over-caring towards their children, let them explore the world, although all children are looked after well, happy without all this nagging and without sophisticated toys... This approach to life is dying...


On the other hand, to more and more young Asians, either in their own countries or living in „white” world (where they, of course, long to live), Western model of life is the most attractive and desirable! The desire to be white reached its most ridiculous level in case of Michael Jackson, but try to find in Asian malls a cream or body balm without the words: white or whitening! Real challenge, believe me! The whiter you are and the more Caucasian your face looks like, the better!

Generalization? Maybe. Probably. Whatever...

However, I’m Caucasian, the daughter of Western culture! All in all, the Western culture serves me well. I can talk to people all over the world using modern technology, I can travel (alone), I’m well-educated smart ass, I’m self-sufficient, I can be promiscuous, nobody would ever dare to say when or to whom I should be married, or how I should be dressed, I could be educated equally to men... None of those things would be easily accessible for me in poor, traditional and remote 80% (or so) part of the world! Last but not least, I’m happy to be in Australia. All the experience here is simply fantastic: trip to bush, getting to know lovely Aussies and their easygoing lifestyle, taking photos of beautiful cities with my expensive camera...

Yeah, it’s just this uncomfortable feeling on the back of my head, that wherever on this world whites appeared, they gave themselves right to kill people and their traditions, to exploit their work, rape women. Australia has its own history of shame! Steeling the land, genocide, the case of "stolen generation"! They were taking half-caste children from their families to convert them to the Western way of life, to "civilize" them. What a lovely intention! And on the end - what a surprise! - they could have “civilized” servants, nicely dressed and speaking English. They did it to Aboriginal people for more than three decades and stopped not so long time ago, in 70s. Many Caucasians (sadly, mostly Polish immigrants and sadly, not to much surprise) I spoke to over here still have this narrow-minded Europe-centric point of view, which is based of the superior and arrogant certainty that our culture is the best and the rest of the world should adjust to it, even if they’ve been living in this land for 200 (sometimes 20) years and Aborigines have been here for thousands of years. Whites complain about violence and drinking, but who introduce the alcohol to them? They complain that Aborigines destroy their government issued houses. So what? Their culture was nomadic for ages, how can anybody think about changing it within a few generations? And why would anybody think about changing it in the first place? Because it doesn’t fit our way of life? Of course, now is now and Australian government tries to improve what is there to improve, but it looks like still they do it without really concerning the cultural differences...

I guess, everything is exactly like it should be and heading in the direction of somehow development. But... what a shame!

---

2009-10-02

ROADSIDE PEOPLE


they inhabit Roadsides

squat sitting

no batting an eyelid

aimless

you could think they do nothing

but it’s not true at all

they have the most responsible

work to do

they watch

world moving

that is why

they are There everyday

 

sometimes they can sell

bunch of bananas

some sweets or drink

you might get hungry

or thirsty

on your way to Somewhere

they could teach you

tranquility and stillness

how to be

but you usually

pass them by

on your way to Somewhere

 

they make love

at their roadside Houses

their dirty children are brought up

by Roads

they collect rain water

and stars in big jars

just for fun

they recycle your fancy Life

but you usually

take your eyes off

their shabby clothes

covered with dust or mud

 

roads need them

and they need roads



Kratie, Cambodia, 12/07/2009


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2009-09-27

SOMEWHERE IN CAMBODIA


Yes, I’ve seen Angkor Wat. Yes, it was exciting. Yes, I liked it. But real Cambodia is far from Siem Reap. For me it starts somewhere between Krakor and Tonle Sap Lake...

When I got off at Paris Guest House (where they take this names from? oh, from France :) in Krakor, I thought my fate with being overcharged everywhere is not going to end, cos if it’s the only guest house in the town, they always take advantage. So, I didn’t agree to pay 6$, they didn’t agree with my 3$. I left the place with the silly hope that I will find something anyway. I was asking people along the road about any possible accommodation, but nobody spoke any English. Already a bit frustrated, sweating and tired, I saw the guy who was teaching maths to a bunch of students at the porch of the wooden house. I thought the teacher might speak English. A bit embarrassed I approached his „class” and asked if he knows about cheap accommodation in this town apart from Paris. Rina without any hesitation invited me to stay in his house. After the nice conversation with some unavoidable questions (name, age, marriage status, children and why I travel alone), I was ready to reach my final destination, Kompong Luong, amazing town settled on the waters of the biggest lake in Southeast Asia, Tonle Sap Lake.

Tonle Sap was absolutely amazing experience! People there live in floating houses, and the town moves with the level of water which depends on the season, lower in the dry one and high up starting from July. I rented a paddle boat only for myself, avoiding high prices and noise of motorboats and having woman as a sailor :). They have everything they need: schools, clinic, shops in floating houses, shops on the boats, Buddhist temple (but no sangha there, for ceremonies they have to invite monks to come), Christian church, gas station, bars, restaurants and Goddess knows what else. Inhabitants of Kompong Luong are almost all Vietnamese. My lovely boat driver took me to the temple and then we stopped at the tiny bar near gas station for sugar cane juice (yummy!) . I soaked up the atmosphere of this boat life with delight. I couldn’t take my eyes off children playing in water, women in their conical hats running the one boat grocery shop, man working. Or children working, woman taking care of children and man lying down in their hammocks. And if they wanted to change the place of where they houses were, they were just... moving them. Everything were going on slowly and with its own everyday rhythm. On the end my sailor invited me to her house, as far as I understood, there were her parents and two small children. I scared the older girl to death, she couldn’t stop crying :)

(By the way, I really don’t understand why Lonely Planet Cambodia guidebook didn’t put it as a Cambodia highlight. The other wonderful „living” lake, Inle Lake in Burma, made it Burmese highlight from which the whole town of Yang Shwe live on.)

Back to Krakor, where Rina introduced me to his lovely friends, usually teachers in high school there. Even though I had planned to leave the next day after being hosted by Rina, I stayed one day longer staying with Bun Thep, biology teacher.
These two sweet guys showed me around. I’ve been to beautiful countryside with bamboo huts and rice paddles, buffaloes splashing in water, people replanting rice, smiley and curious faces everywhere... I’ve been to English lesson where my revelation was not as important as unavoidable questions of marriage status, children, age and so on... I’ve been for delicious dinner to the restaurant hidden deeply in the jungle village I would never found myself. I’ve been invited for friends gathering and drinking Angkor beer together...

Then I went to Phnom Penh. I spent 3 hours seeing S-21 Genoside Museum, former Tuol Sleng High School before it became Khmer Rouge investigation arrest n 1975. It’s so hard to describe how sad it is to see what people can do to other people.

I guess that was „a real Cambodia” too...

---

2009-07-12

HRABAL W HANOI, LAO-TSE W SAJGONIE

„(..) i oto zrozumiałem, że na świecie w ogóle nie ma znaczenia, jak co się skończy, ale wszystko jest jedynie życzeniem i chęcią, i pragnieniem podobnym do imperatywu kategorycznego Immanuela Kanta, który ćwierć wieku temu objawił mi się tutaj, na placu Karola, kiedy deszczową nocą kupowałem kiełbaski z rożna, a stara sprzedawczyni grzała sobie ręce nad rozżarzonymi węglami.”
Bohumil Hrabal, „Zbyt głośna samotność”, s. 50

“Stillness and tranquillity set things in order in the universe”
Lao-tzu, “Tao Te Ching” (Ch. 45)

Kiedy pakowałam swoje warszawskie życie do kartonowych pudeł, wpadło mi w ręce zabytkowe, podziemne (Wydawnictwo Krąg, Warszawa 1982) wydanie „Zbyt głośnej samotności”. Pomyślałam, książeczka trudna w czytaniu bez szkła powiększającego, ale może być na czasie i mała, cieniuchna, łatwo się będzie pozbyć... 1 czerwca przyleciałam do Hanoi z Hrabalem w plecaku. Czytam. Na ławce przy Zachodnim Jeziorze albo przy najlepszej kawie na świecie w kolejnej kawiarni Nguyena jakiegośtam na rogu, albo na kanapie u Chrisa, który cierpliwie gości mnie w Hanoi przez blisko dwa tygodnie, nie licząc wypadu do Zatoki Halong i w góry Hoang Lien Son. Bohater Hrabala za swojego mędrca-przewodnika wybiera Lao-tse. A ja nie wybieram lektur, tylko one mnie, więc w bibliotece Chrisa wygrzebuję co? Oczywiście „Tao Te Ching”. Robię kopię (potem odkrywam linka: http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/core9/phalsall/texts/taote-v3.html). Wojny, ustroje, walki szczurów w podziemiach, młodość, starość, wszystko toczy się swoim kolistym rytmem. I w ogóle nie ma znaczenia, jak co sie skończy. Bezruch i spokój? Pełnia przeciwieństw yin i yang? Droga, a nie cel?

“Weapons are instruments of fear; they are not a wise man’s tools” (Ch. 31)

„Niebiosa nie są humanitarne, ani człowiek humanitarny nie jest”. Czytam o masakrach, jakie urządzali Amerykanie Wietnamczykom, ile bomb zrzucili, ile ton chemikaliów, napalmu, ile to kosztowało. Czytam, ile kobiet zostało zgwałconych, ile starców i dzieci zamordowanych. Czytam, jak cierpiała ludność wiejska, jak walczył Viet Cong z Ameryką, jak walczyła Północ z Południem, jak Północ prześladowała Południe po zjednoczeniu. Czytam jak kobiety, które urodziły mieszane wietnamsko-amerykańskie dzieci, cierpiały ostracyzm społeczny i biedę po wojnie. Czytam o zdeformowanych powojennych noworodkach z ziem, gdzie Amerykanie użyli chemikaliów... Oglądam w Cu Chi tunele, kopane niemal gołymi rękami na Francuzów, pomysłowe pułapki na amerykańskich żołnierzy, recykling odpadów po armii amerykańskiej doprowadzony do perfekcji, żadna puszka po coca-coli się nie marnowała, żaden niewypał, nawet amerykańskie mydła używali do zmylenia psów, które miały wywąchiwać wejścia do tuneli. Słucham przewodnika, który opowiada swoją historię. Tu, w Cu Chi, się urodził (pokazuje ulicę), stąd ojciec zabrał go do Sajgonu, tu wrócił jako dwudziestojednolatek w 1968 służyć w Viet Congu (zna tunele z autopsji), tu został ranny (pokazuje bliznę na ramieniu, drugą ma na nodze), tu się ożenił, tu urodził mu się syn, tu zmarła mu żona, śpiewa żołnierskie piosenki, pełne dumy i patriotyzmu, specjalnie je przetłumaczył na angielski, żebyśmy zrozumieli... Na koniec wycieczki można sobie postrzelać z karabinu...

“That is why a victory must be observed like a funeral” (Ch. 31)

A jednak ręka mi zadrżała, w końcu kawał historii ląduje w koszu. Może powinno trafić do muzeum… Ale jak się podróżuje i szanuje swój kręgosłup, to trzeba się rzeczy pozbywać. Pozbywam się więc Hrabala, jak mnie pouczył Lao-tse. Jak i świat pozbywa się co jakiś czas rożnych ideologii, systemów politycznych i religii. Komunizm się w niektorych krajach skończył, chociaż mało kto wierzył w tych krajach, że się skończy. Demokracja i kapitalizm też podzieli ten los, chociaż trudno to sobie wyobrazić. Być może skończy się rewolucją, którą wywoła powiększająca się w ogromnym tempie rzesza biedoty. A potem skończy się rewolucja, chwilę po tym, jak załopoczą na wietrze świeżo odzyskane prawa i wyschnie krew burżujów. A nadzieja, że coś się zmieni być może jest jedynie życzeniem rodem z imperatywu kategorycznego Kanta…
Przyglądam się miłemu z pozoru mariażowi komunizmu z kapitalizmem. Zastanawia mnie, czy i w Wietnamie wychodzą podziemne wydawnictwa. Jak tu ludzie radzą sobie z brakiem wolności. Niby wszystko ładnie, biznesy się kręcą, produkt krajowy brutto rośnie, ale korupcja i nepotyzm kwitną, bilbordy z wujkiem Ho, gołębicami i dziewicami obok reklam proszku do prania, hasełka na czerwonym tle, wysławiające zapewne nasza piękną mlekiem i miodem płynącą socjalistyczną ojczyznę oraz wspaniałą partię jedyną, która bez wątpienia pilnuje, aby nasze skośne twarze były grzeczne i w szeregu. O ile w Polsce za komuny wszyscy czuli się spiskowcami, tu nie ma takiej energii. A może się ukrywa w tunelach...

“Others have more than they need, but I alone have nothing” (Ch. 20)

Hrabal pisze o świecie starego prasowacza, który za sprawą wielkiej automatycznej prasy odchodzi w przeszłość. Wietnam się modernizuje. Buldożery zmiatają kolonialne kamienice, a na ich miejsce stawiane są pałacykodomki z balustradkami, kolumienkami i lustrzankowymi oknami… Bez cienia refleksji, za to pewnie przy pomocy niezłych łapówek, masakrowany jest krajobraz. Całe wsie są wysiedlane bez należytych odszkodowań, bo się budują drogi i betonowe hotele. Antena satelitarna i telefon komórkowy to wyznaczniki „pewnego” poziomu. Cały kraj siedzi przed telewizorem i ogląda jedną mydlaną operę za drugą. Konsupmcja, komercja, zasyfianie środowiska naturalnego…
I mogą sobie ci z Pierwszego Świata buzie wydymać z niesmakiem, a tu nikogo to nie obchodzi, nikt się tu smakiem nie przejmuje. Nie to co u nas, w Polsce, gdzie co najmniej jeden poeta – a wielkim poetą był i miał niebo gwiaździste nad sobą, a prawo moralne w sobie – był przekonany, że jednak smak się liczy. Tu najważniejsze jest, żeby się wybielać, nie wyróżniać i gdzieś przynależeć. I nikomu nic do tego, jakkolwiek nie byłoby żal „koników na drucikach” i wszystkich ładnych, burżuazyjnych domków, jakkolwiek także wielkie byłyby ciągoty niektórych większych krajów do zaprowadzania demokracji (ludowej czy kapitalistycznej, do wyboru, do koloru)… Tak to przez niewiele ponad pół wieku zmiotło ze sceny monarchię feudalną, Francuzów, Amerykanów, zapanował komunizm, potem radośnie dołączył kapitalizm, a wszystko to zapewne z ludzką twarzą. Została dobra kawa, zgubny nałóg palenia tytoniu i bagietki.

“Give up learning, and put an end to your troubles” (Ch. 20)

I oto zrozumiałam, że w ogóle nie ma znaczenia, jak mi się ta podróż skończy, a cała reszta jest jedynie zbyt głośnym przywiązaniem do kartezjańskiego „myślę więc jestem”, który niemal ćwierć wieku temu wtłaczali mi do głowy wśród wydm i sosen nadwiślańskich, ale od którego (słusznie poniekąd) zwabiona pierwszym wiosennym słońcem oddalałam się wagarować w Lasku Bielańskim oraz pić piwo w kawiarni piątej kategorii „Oleńka” na rogu Marymonckiej i Podleśnej, gdzie stary cieć podawał mi numerek do obowiązkowej szatni z wyrazem śmiertelnego znudzenia na twarzy.

Król popu nie żyje. Przekraczam granicę Kambodży.

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2009-06-21

ANOTHER

„(..) może to był ten sam człowiek, który przed rokiem koło holeszowickich rzeźni dobył na mnie w nocy fińskiego noża, a gdy zmusił mnie do skupienia uwagi, to odczytał mi wierszyk o pejzażu pod Rziczanami, a potem mnie przeprosił, że innego sposobu zmuszenia ludzi, by wysłuchali jego wiersza, dotychczas nie zna.”
Bohumil Hrabal, „Zbyt głośna samotność”
(Warszawa 1982, tłum. Paweł Heartman, s. 48)


another

train is knocking me away
to another city
to another goodbye

once again I wanted more
but I was given a hair gel
and nobody's-fault-tears

awaken from another dream
with your name
I'm wrapping it carefully in a grey paper of memory

in my empty heart
slowly I’m planting
one smile after another


27/05/2009

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2009-05-28

ORPHANAGE

For many years I didn’t like children. Not that I hated them, just felt uncomfortable in their presence and I used to say that the only child I like is my own… But even this was not the whole truth. The knot in my heart disturbed me to love my own son as he deserved. Then I discovered the term ‘inner child’ and what’s behind it and started to work with my own hurt and sad little girl. It has been hard work and probably not finished yet, because when Irene asked me if I want to go with her to one of the Chiang Mai orphanages she often volunteers in, I was both scared and delighted by the idea… And yet not sure will I go there to heal my own traumas or to volunteer for children?

So one Sunday afternoon I entered the orphanage on Wu Lai Road wondering where is Irene and what I’m gonna do with all those children… The moment I approached the doorway few kids run towards me with their hands up to hold them. So I did. And then I had a thought which almost made me cry that there is not many such wonderful things in this world like a child’s hug… Then immediately my heart opened up, I stepped down from my adult pedestal and was trying to be there for them. I sat or lay down on the floor and let them pull me, embrace me, crawl over me, spit chewed rice with meat on me… Watching their smiling, frowning, crying, sleepy or energetic, but always true faces made me want to take them all home ☺

Having in my head all those cliche pictures of poor children in orphanages which TV usually shows on news, I had thought that this might’ve been sad experience. It wasn’t. Even when kids cry it’s temporary or it’s just the way they seek for attention, but anyway it’s much more smiles than tears there. I had thought the kids might’ve been treated badly. Not at all. Women from the staff are lovely and cheerful and they take care of kids with a sweet tenderness. I had also thought that after some time with kids I might be tired, but I was leaving the orphanage with a feeling that it was another way around, that there were kids who overwhelmed me with their wonderful energy…

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2009-05-18

LIKE WAVES


For A.


like waves
like breaths

things come and go

not to last
just to feel

over and over again

tides of love
breezes of peace


28/04/2009

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2009-05-17

DAVID SAID: YOU’RE A BUDDHIST

“‘Normally we are so identified with our thoughts and emotions, that we are them. We are the happiness, we are the anger, we are the fear. We have to learn to step back and know our thoughts emotions are just thoughts and emotions. They’re just mental states. They’re not solid, they’re transparent.’

‘Once we realize that the nature of our existence is beyond thoughts and emotions, that it is incredibly vast and interconnected with other beings, then the sense of isolation, separation, fear and hopes fall away.’

‘What we need to do is to learn to come down into the heart, the seat of our true self. It’s not a theory, an idea. It’s something you feel. The heart opening up is real.’

[And...]

And what is a difference between detachment and being cut off from your emotions anyway?

‘One goes into a retreat to understand who one really is and what the situation truly is. When one begins to understand oneself then one can truly understand others. (..) That understanding naturally arises love and compassion. It’s not based on sentiment. It’s not based on emotion. Sentimental love is very unstable, because it’s based on feedback and how good it makes you feel. That is not real love at all.’”

Vicki Mackenzie, "Cave in the Snow. Tenzin Palmo Quest for Enlightenment"

I don’t know David is right or not, but that’s what I’m learning at the moment. To help me understand I was given a great lesson of love and detachment from a teacher, who had briefly came into my life... So now I feel like it’s the time to do retreat. No, not like Tenzin Palmo for 12 years in cave in Himalaya, but maybe just 10 days in one of the temples of Thailand ☺

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2009-05-15

HMONG, MEANS FREE PEOPLE

Laos, Plain of Jars, amazing place with hundreds of ancient stone jars, nobody knows where from and what’s the story behind. Scattered here and there around Phonsavan, the ugliest city I’ve ever seen.
This is also the place, where Americans dropped 2 milion ton of bombs (spending 2 mln dolars a day for 9 years during Vietnamese war). Nobody knows how many people lost their lives. And still huge amount of UXO wound or kill 300 people every year...

Me and Jane, American girl I met in bus from Luang Prabang (and my roommate in Phonsavan), booked the trip to Plain of Jars. Three more people joined making our trip cheaper, 80 000 kip instead of 120 000 each. Team occured to be very international, there were Australian-French couple, German guy, Jane, American, me, Polish, and – last but not least – our driver, a round-faced Lao with the great nice smile. We agreed to visit Hmong village first.

Hmongs are perceived as the proudest of Northern hill tribes people. Hmong means free people. They came to Laos from China in XIX century where they had suffered atrocities. They settled down in high parts of mountains in Northern Burma, Thailand and Laos and started their jungle-burning and planting opium agriculture life style. In XX century they were offered citizenships and land ownerships from Thai government, but of course they were smart enough not to take it. First, there was no point to expose themselves for a quick recognition, second not to loose identity and freedom. The land was theirs anyway, as long as they were living high enough, hidden deeply in jungle, not speaking any official languages, and yet every 3 or 4 years changing the place of living according to soil impoverishing.
They had been doing it for years untill the 70-ies when international community was horrified by a huge amount of Southeast-Asian opium which flooded Europe and America. (Yeah, really it’s not that nice to smoke opium ☺) So they decided to do something. That didn’t change much apart from the opium prices went highier and highier as the thing were getting harder to get, increasing opium kings’ profits and deteriorating hill tribes’ life conditions. That also meant brutal wars for power between kings, Kuomintang and corrupted officials. As Hmongs were well-known for being good fighters, they were often used as soldiers in those wars, as well as earlier in 60-ies by CIA in a “Secret War” to fight the communists, being vaguely promised an autonomy.
They paid the biggest price for their freedom-loving nature, either in Laos, as well as in Burma and Thailand. They were used and then persecuted, many people lost their lives. Governments, doesn’t matter, monarchist, communist or democratic, don’t wish to have any free people in „their” countries… From Laos a lot of them managed to escape to USA, but the soul of the nation was destroyed forever...

So we entered the village, sad and miserable remains of the proud and free nation they once had been...

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2009-04-08

MEKONG RIVER

Two days trip over Mekong river was my the most beautiful experience in Asia so far. The only thing I’m very, very sad about is that my camera was stolen in the overnight bus on my way back to Chiang Mai. And it’s not the camera I’m griefing over, but the pictures I took ☹
I left Chiang Mai 2 weeks ago and went to Chiang Rai, small, sleepy town on the north. I found cheap guest house on the nice sleepy street and went sightseeing. After a few hours I could work as a tourist guide there. However nice, sleepy street at the daylight turned out to be annoyed and noisy at night time. Loud music and screaming prostitutes didn’t let me fall asleep for a long time. Next morning at 6 am local bus took me to Chiang Khong, Thai border town. On Lao side of the Mekong river the town was called Huay Xai and there I got in so-called slow boat to Luang Prabang.
My rush in the morning was pointless, cos the boat didn’t sail off before noon and at 9 I had already fixed my visa and changed my bahts to kips, Lao currency. But this is part of Asian way of life, waiting ☺ If you’re not patient, Asia teaches you that, or you will hate it here. And also to always have a pillow on you if you travel with a local transport, including slow boats ☺
Although my ass was hurt by hard, unstable and narrow bench (even though I had a pillow), my eyes experienced immense beauty of nature landscape. From the very beginning Mekong river just mesmerised me. The river flows surrounding by mountains. Once in a while the villages appear, settled on steep slopes, almost invisible in the jungle. Down on the sandy banks women do laundry, men fishing, kids play in water. I had a fantasy that the boat could drop me on one of these beaches and after few weeks another one just would collect me from there...
Between Huay Xai and Luang Prabang the boat stops at Pak Beng, a village totally devoted to these trips, where almost every house is a guest house. I found a room in an awful, nouvorish style one. The room was at the back and all I needed this evening was shower and quiet. That was something else I could’ve had if needed: opium. „Madam, madam, it’s not a problem, you can smoke opium in Laos!” But it’s also not a problem for me not to smoke opium in Laos, so I skipped this unique attraction and went to sleep... Next morning I bought a tuna sandwich for lunch (later on I tried my best to find any fish there, but I wasn’t succesful) and got in the boat again...
After 9 hours I landed in Luang Prabang, refurbish town with its fancy restaurants and spa places in small post-colonial tenement houses. Some people love it, some think, it’s not a „real” Laos... Well, that was cute indeed, but rather boring after 1 day... So I moved to Plain of Jars...

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2009-03-23

REIKI


I can’t believe I’m so busy all the time. There are so many things around me going on at the moment. Busy with massage schools, partying, meeting friends, reparing my bike... Small accidents on the streets happen all the time, but why to me??? Wghrrrr... But I’m still alive, no worries, just a few scraches and one bruse. Also there is a constant issues with my friends. Whenever you get close to one they have to leave ☹ That the case of Renato, Lynn (photo), Emilio, Anna and many others...

Last Saturday Lynn taught me reiki. She wanted me to give her some Polish music in exchange, which was fair enough and I was happy to spread some of my culture around. I gave her Justyna Steczkowska, Aga Zaryan, Novika and, last but not least, my idol, my absolute favourite, Maria Peszek. I even translated some of MP’s lyrics to English to give Lynn an impression of her genius. But of course lyrics are deeply grounded in Polish language and some parts are just untranslatable...
But lets go back to reiki. It was one of the most amazing experience in my life! At first Lynn was explaining to me how it works, how it should be done and that energy will go through me... Yeah, great, but I was still confused, cos had no idea how to DO IT! Then she did it to me and I did it to her... And doing it I felt it. All of a sudden my body was in a fire coming from my Solar Plexus Chakra. And then cool down again. And when my hands touched another place of her body the heat started again... Oh shit, I thought to myself, this is something, man!

Reiki started to work sometime around Sunday afternoon... It hit my stomache very hard. For the next 3 days I had been lying down in my bed, having stomache pain, not eating anything. But nothing else was happening apart from I was also very weak. On Thursday I got diarrhea, but my stomache stopped to bother me. I guess, there is no other explenation for this, but that my body was cleaning itself from all that rubbish which was stored there for many years. Little by little I regain my strength and on Sunday my body was rised from the dead.
I noticed many changes. First, my back pain, which I’ve had for like 5 last years, are almost gone. Second, I can’t eat artificial food, cos I can feel chemicals on my tongue after first bite. Third, I got very emotional and introvert, which is a sign that it’s not only a phisical process...
I hope Lynn will enjoy Polish music like I enjoy new knowlegde she introduced me to!

Isn’t it wonderful that we have in our bodies such a powerful tool to heal ourselves? Without any pills, any doctors, any other treatments, it just takes a bit of energy... The Great Godess and Her Husband God really gave us everything we need... ☺

To settle my new me in myself and to renew my Thai visa I’m heading to Laos tomorrow for my lonely 2 weeks trip ☺

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2009-02-15

TRAFFIC

I bought a bicycle. It’s old fashion used one from the 2nd hand shop. First time in my life I was riding on the left side of the street! In Asian traffic! I thought they’d kill me after a minute on the road. Suprisingly all road users are friendly and very careful. Thousands of motorbikes, cars, tuk-tuks, red taxi cars have passed me by like I’d have a note on my T-shirt: THIS IS SILLY „WHITE” WOMAN RIDING THIS BIKE, WATCH OUT!!!
But I did it! I didn’t make any mistakes like I was almost born to the left side traffic ☺ For one reason it’s similar to Polish style of driving: nobody obeys the rules on the road, but drivers are far more relaxed and easy-going than agressive ones in Poland. In the red taxi (pickups taking people from the street for 20 BHT, instead of buses, cos there are no buses in Chiang Mai) I whitnessed another driver bumped into the back of the taxi. Taxi driver jumped out to see damages. At first both guys smiled to each other and then had a little friendly chat after taxi driver had realised nothing bad happened and after 1 min we all could go to our destinations.
Asian traffic. The subject is long as the longest traffic jam. Although it doesn't look like 20 years ago it still a bit chaotic for Europeans in Thailand. But go to Burma! Gosh, they drive like crazy, seem to not care about pedestrians at all. Traffic lights are rare luxury. In Mandalay you could wait for ages to cross the street, cos even if there are lights all cars just drive very fast, turning right and left. By the way, lights are only for drivers. Actually all the public space seems to be only for drivers. And for advertising, of course.
But they are masters of wheels. Sitting in so-called bus (old Japanese one from 50s or 60s, no bolsters, no air-cond, all windows and door open) to Inle Lake at first I was terrified. The road (so to speak) was full of holes, sometimes there was no road but sand. We were in mountains, and if there was a passing of two buses on the curve one had to stop and wait for another. The one who stops almost hang above the precipice. But after a while I relised the guy was driving this road thousand of times and he has to be master of wheel dealing with this circumstances on regular basis. Also they are perfect mechanics, cos of course they have to deal with junk cars all the time. Our „bus” was broken down as well. They fixed it 15 mins.
In Burma traffic is on the right side, which is strange, cos they were under British (or... maybe that’s why), but they buy (very) old cars in Japan, so all wheels are on the right side of the car. It caused the situation that in buses there has to be the guy who watches the road and tells the driver if he can overtake or do any other manoeuvre, cos the driver can’t see anything sittin on the right side. There is anoyher guy to watch the door, scream the destination places and collect money (tickets, five times more expensive, are seem to be only for foreigners). Of course there is also manager of the bus. So four people staff work in one minibus. Isn’t it wonderful? Isn’t it great way to avoid unemployment problems?
So after 12 hours of journey (about 300 km!) I was covered by dust, stressed out, my neck almost broken, but I was alive and had the greatest „bus” adventure in my entire life!

I can only imagine how it looks like in India. But... I'm gonna see it!

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2009-02-04

SO GOOD TO HAVE FRIENDS AROUND

Rob left Chiang Mai the night before. We’ve been friends for more then 2 years now. He was supporting me after my last relationship had fallen apart. We talked a lot. We know each other very well. I’ve learned from him, he's learned from me. We’ve been traveling together. Anyway, I made him come with me to Asia and I’m so glad he liked it here. He didn’t want to go to Burma at first, but he ended up being bigger Burma lover than me! We went through many adventures together, New Year spiritual blessing in one of the Bangkok temples, Koh Phangan accident on motorbike, Bagan’s beauty, so-called bus to Inle Lake (300 km in 12 hours!), mountain trekking and many others. Rob, I’m gonna miss you!
Lucy, my CouchSurfing host, was so sweet to offer me staying at her beautiful house in Chiang Mai as long as I want, although I feel like my own place. So, I found my apartment yesterday! Hallelujah! After I had walked my ass off for the whole morning and afternoon trying to find something nice (I mean peaceful and with window which is not so obvious to Asian standards) and for resonable price, I got tired and a bit frustrated. To be on the right track again I stopped having some Pad Thai (fried noodles with vegetables and cashew nuts, delicious!) and smsed my Thai friend, Pern, asking for help. She took me on her motorbike and patiently was showing me one place after another, explaining in Thai what my expectations are to the landlords. After some time she took me to the place she lives. That was it! For 2500 BHT per month I will have a decent room with big balcony (window, hurray!), with a cupboard, desk, chair and a bed inside. The bed is huge but the mattress is hell taugh. I asked for replacing it, but Lucy said is avarage Thai mattress, so I shouldn’t expect too much. There is a bathroom with a hot water (paid extra 100 BHT).
Yeah, but... I’m staying with Lucy one more night. To be honest, I could’ve moved today, but... it’s so nice to be with Lucy!

2009-01-31

I HAD A DREAM

Kasia poszła się zdrzemnąć. Miała sen o Polsce. Jacyś ludzie popychali ją i byli agresywni. Kasia mieszka w Bangkoku 6 lat i odwykła.
Ja w tym czasie – błąd! – przeglądałam polską prasę. Powiało nudą i przewidywalnym polskim piekiełkiem, skandalikami szytymi na zaściankową miarę oraz projektem ustawy o in vitro przewielebnej komisji Gowina. Żeby zobaczyć, co naprawdę w trawie piszczy powłaziłam na kilka feministycznych blogów. Gowin odmieniany przez wszystkie przypadki i... znowu to samo: bardzo konserwatywni, trzęsący portkami przed kościółkowymi, i udający-mniej-konserwatywnych (też trzęsący) oraz kościółkowi decydują, które kobiety mogą (zasługują?) na bezpłatne dziecko. Tiaaa. Singielki, stare baby po 40 (a może by tak na Madagaskar?) mogą się pożegnać lub płacić kupę forsy, resztę czeka seria bolesnych zabiegów, bo nie wolno zamrażać, tylko świeżutkim mężowskim plemniczkiem zaciążyć... No i o co ten krzyk? Wściekłe feministki z włosami na nogach może w końcu przestałyby się tak egzaltować, bo złość piękności szkodzi, a przecież wiadomo, że baby same za siebie decydować "nie umią". A jaka kobieta powinna być, każdy głupi wie. Powinna być kobieca, przestać spotykać się z koleżankami, jak już szczęśliwie wyjdzie za ten mąż i być jego „cackiem z dziurką” (kocham Cię, Mario Peszek!).
No i dlaczego ja sobie to ciągle robię? Czy naprawdę wciąż jeszcze wierzę, że za mojego życia w moim kraju będzie lepiej? Mniej kościółka, więcej rozumu? Więcej (mądrych) kobiet w parlamencie? Więcej tolerancji? Gdyby choć była jakaś nadzieja, ale nie mam jej, cholera! Nie mam też na kogo głosować. Owszem, mogę ciągle patrzeć sobie w twarz, bo: NIE GŁOSOWAŁAM NA PO! Tylko co z tego. Tak, można wyjechać. I na litość Bogini, nie czytać polskiej prasy!

It’s been exactly a month since I left my country, Poland. After Bangkok, Koh Phangan island and Myanmar (Burma), then again Bangkok (being a lucky guest in Kasia’s apartment), I finally arrived to Chiang Mai, my destination for a while (or a bit longer, if I’m lucky). My overnight train was 3 hours late. Who cares? I don’t, as long as I could have my 8 hours of sleep and watch beautiful sunrise in the jungle through the window. And I have time. It’s amazing feeling: not to care about time! I guess I should thank my parents now, cos it's their money allows me to do that (Mum, Dad, thanks!)
After brief look around the town seems to be really nice place to live. I’ve already searched some apartments for renting. I found one room flat for minimum 3200 BHT per month, means about 80 USD, not bad, huh? I will keep going tomorrow. Let’s see what happen!

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2009-01-29

STH WHAT FITS

As a woman proceeds on a heroine's journey, she confronts tasks, obstacles and dangers. How she responds and what she does will change her. Along the way, she will find what matters to her and whether she has the courage to act on what she knows. Her character and compassion will be tested. She will encounter the dark, shadowy aspects of her personality, sometimes at the same time that her strenght become more evident and her self confidence grows, or when fears overtake her. Grief will probably be known to her, as she experience loss, limitations or defeat. The heroine's trip is a journey of discovery and development, of integrating aspects of herself into a whole, yet complex personality.
Jean Shinoda Bolen, "Goddesses in Everywoman. A New Psychology of Woman"

I guess this quote of Jean Shinoda Bolen fits me. After 2 years of griefing and going through hardest feelings, finally I managed to sort out what I really need, what I really want, and what IS my reality. Finally I started to be not affraid of my life but enjoy it. Finally I allowed myself to be happy and do what I want. And what I've always wanted to do was traveling. So I went on to traveling. First part of this adventure, a journey inside myself, I've started 2 years ago. I'm starting the second part. Geographical one.
First destination was a simple choice: Asia. Being 20 years ago in Thailand I realised Asia is a place I want to explore. I guess it's because I'm opposite to everything what Asian. One of my friends told me once I'm very Western. I think it's very true. I'm individualistic, attached to my personal freedom and responsibility, I'm very direct, active, spontanious. I love spacy, not crowded places, clean streets, and I hate spicy food, and so on. Oh, and last but not least I feel uncomfortable with dirty feet :) So... isn't it Asia the best place for me?

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