Thursday, March 20, 2008
someone made your six dollar sweater, and they didn't make six dollars.
separate
individual
case
of poverty and need is separetely individually heart-wrenching and demanding of your pity, of the one thing you, as a first-class citizen of the world, can surely do to rectify it: give money. i dont need the bracelets i bought tonight, i dont want them--i just thought it woudl be too humiliating and direct to refuse what these girls were offering and give them money directly... Larry gave the rose he bought from the little boy to his mother, and her face for a moment was a theater of conflicting emotions... i am sure that rose was on sale again-- what is the fine line between buying and charity? its a line thats walked and walked-upon in the night markets here. in the clink of loose baht in the cup of a man with no right leg, the eyes of the child laid behind the racks of t-shirts advertising beer and 'IM SHY--but ive got a big dick', the most crude decorations of a society these people know nothing about, aimed merely at the pocketbooks of those here for fun, for a few days or weeks in a tropical paradise they will then leave and forget--but this need is ever-present. its not something i solve with the patronage of silver bracelets or a few coins in the cup of a mother with no place to go with her two children, on a street thats not safe at night, her belly holding another-- how is it solved? i think you are like me, you are a citizen of the developed world, you have never had to beg for money on the street or go wtihout food for lack of money, or put off retirement becuase you cant financially plan next week much less the final years of your life--we are, and i really deeply want you to know this, financially rich. we're wealthy. we're loaded. we're every word available in several languages for rich. when I, as an American, imagine a poor person, what do i think of? an older house, a used car, a staticky television, TV dinners, spousal abuse. do poor Thai people have any but the last? do middle-class Cambodian people have those things? are we fucking rich? yes! we are fucking rich! does this make us happy? answer for yourself in your own heart. i wrote tonight in my journal about how much i feel i have to learn from these people, and how little i feel that i have to teach. what can i teach--English? they speak everything theyll need to know, and dont have time in teh day to give to studying more. philosophy? things are too simple to need that--one needs to survive, to provide the basics for living, before one can think of how best to live. the only thing i can think of is to spead the word about america as it is, or japan for that matter, about how life really feels in the richest countries, about how happy or unhappy people are there. about how meaningful or not our lives are. these things i think it woudl benefit Thai people to know, because all they know of our culture is the crass t-shirts they sell and the pirated music that comes from speakers in the night markets, and the overweight tourists who patronize their bars and young women. im sorry if this is direct, or negative, but its real. this is a learning experience for me, nad if you never get the chance to come here, id like you to have a taste of it. feel free to skip to the next journal entry if this is more self-examination than youre comfortable with, but im painfully in teh midst of it and want company. Larry was my company tonight, a Japanese-American from Wyoming, so close to ND/NE/wherever it is that im from, and we hashed and rehashed the whole issue over drinks, on teh corner of the night bazaar here, constantly being offered silver or silver-looking bracelets by girls with no choice other than to offer them, despite our best-practiced looks of disinterest. everything is cheap here, but it is their livlihood, it si cheap in the English language, in the first-world economic society, and not elsewhere. i met a guy today, Jade WangKlon, he's a painter. i think he has a delicate eye for color and line, and his paintings are better than almost everything i saw come from 30,000$ college training while i was in school. his 20x35 inch acrylics were 400baht apiece, the originals, or about eight dollars and fifty cents. i bought two. i asked him how long it took to make one, and he said a day or two. his easel was there, and itd obviously been the seat of many a painting... he said hed been painting for fifteen years. 400 baht a day-or-two. plus the time spent selling those paintings. youre talking about an income of 300 or 350baht a day, at best. thats 6.5o$ or 7$, around 700yen. thats nothing. i made that in my spare time at AEON, i spend that without second thought in any bar in any developed country in teh world. it is a day bent over an easel with an artist's touch to color and line for him, and more spent in midday heat in front of his paintings, hoping some tourist will feel theyre special enough to take home as a souvenir. strictly portraits of rural thai life and buddha images and the sort of thing youd want to remember as a tourist. there were no limbless beggars, there were no corrugated-roof houses. im sure if he has any artistic spirit under that technique, that the paintings he puts passion into never make his shelves, both because they wouldnt sell to foreigners and because he couldnt stomach selling them. but i bought a nice scene from rural thailand with some oxen and birds and mountains, and a well-balanced canvas of bamboo leaves at sunset... what is my point? im leaving you to draw it, friend. peoples lives are not the same worldwide. what we take for granted other people take at great labor from the hands of those who, like us, value it little. im not saying we are evil. im not saying they are pathetic. this is the situation. this is what the world looks like. is it what we want? is it beyond our control to repair? i absolutely say 'no' to the second. i told Larry, whos 60something, i'm too young to give up on it, to accept it as a damn shame, but one i can do nothing about. i can and i will do something about it, period. we can do something, as those in power. they cant do anything, they can scrounge and stretch whatever ability they have to the limit to try and inch up the ladder we're born miles higher on. they can do next to nothing. we can do something. will we? thats all for today folks. sleep well.
fate and prostitutes
anyways, the train was.. um... there was this 56 year old thai woman who didnt speak any english who decided to make good friends with me, sitting across from my seat on the train and gesturing rapidly, none of which i reall yunderstood--but the main gesture of importance was two pointer fingers laid together... i took it as either 'girlfriend' or 'sex,' both of these important questions, requiring very different answers--so i just laughed with her and tried to sleep after it got scary. but it didnt stop--she stuck her legs across the aisle and was rubbing my thighs with her toe, or would rest her legs against mine after id move--the train was crowded so i couldnt really change seats--i stuck my legs across the aisle to be more comfortable, and she reached down and sort of scratched my bare foot with her nail, blinging clanging into my mind a lesson from AEON about how rubbing the inside ofsomeones palm when shaking hands means 'lets have sex' in some coutnry, maybe the phillipines... maybe it was all my imagination. or maybe she was a prostitute.
anyways, she got off at magical and ancient ayutthaya, a spot further blessed in my mind because thats where she got off. the rest of the trip, and there was a lot of it (about 15 hours), was uneventful, but uncomfortable even after the train cleared out a bit, trying to sleep. i had a greyhound night, one where there are about three positions that half work in the fucking uncomfortable seat youre in, anbd none of them work well or for long, so you halfwake out of half sleep and adjust positions hoping the part that gets sore in that position has had enough time to rest, and that youre not impinging on anyone elses space too badly, as they struggle through the same third-class public transportation dilemma. id wanted to take 2nd class, with a sleeping cabin, but they were all full. the difference was only 30 baht, or 60 cents. worth it, but they were out or the army-uniform-wearing fellow behind the ticket machine didnt like me too well. foreigner suspicions, im suspicious of my own suspicions after seeing my friends distrust japanese folks cuase they couldnt understand teh language, but because i could knowing the people were treating them fairly... anyways. im from a rich country and get to go back to it and dont have to stay here all my life sweating behind a tuk tuk wheel for 200 baht a day, so i think in the larger scheme i deserve a bit of it. im staying in a nice place tonight, 150 baht, theyre doing my landry, two beds and a window, not smelly, hot water, trekking trips leavin gdaily for bamboo river rafting, elephant riding, jungle hiking... love to go, but heres my dilemma.
heres the crux.
heres the A and not-B or vice versa of the day, possibly of the week or the whoel rest of the vacation:
first thing i did after i settled into the hotel was call Wat Ram Poeng, the meditation center here thats foreigner friendly and was recommended by that buddhist scholar fellow a couple days back at wat mahathat (ps! http://www.watrampoeng.org). i was hoping i could just come for a few hours a day, but they are hardcore and unrelenting. as a favor, it seemed like, as the bare minimum possible, i can stay there for ten days iwthout leaving, without writing, without reading, etc etc (read the website), trying to meditate 20 hours a day. the usual course is 26+ days. apparently 10 is the bare minimum, but because ive got some experience at wat mahathat and with zazen in CA, ten might be alright for me... but the dilemma is, is ten alright for me? do i wanna use ten days of my 30 in thailand for a meditation retreat? do i wanna cut off all contact with teh world and y'all and all that delicious thai food and fun treks on elephants backs and white sand beaches to eat rice porridge sleep on wood slats and meditation twenty hours a day? i guess i know what youre thinking the answer is, but i am really torn about it... its something ive always wanted to do, and what an amazing experience to do it here... something i can talk about the rest of my life... not like everything else i do here isnt also amazing and life-experience material... so im torn. im flip-flopping. im the fish out of water not sure if i wanna slip back in and be an average tourist and try to socialize and wring some meaning out of idility, or if i wanna be hardcore and wring meaning from myself and do something really difficult that will most likely be really rewarding and require some sacrifice on my part. to be honest, i really wanna do it. as i was thinking about it, i realized my biggest reservation was that i wouldnt be able to do it, and that that reservation in itself is total bullshit and all the more reason for me to do it. i dont wanna lose contact with everyone for ten days, and sort of wonder if ill be able to hack not really having conversations with anyone for ten days--- but, thats the draw of it. can i do it? im sort of over 'is it worth it?' -- im sure its all worth it, that no matter what i do ill be like 'im so glad i did that.' like i said before (did i say this before? i know i wrote it somewhere) every experience is valuable if you know how to find the value in it, and there are some paths that are better or seem fated, but they are all worthwhile and hvae good endings if you make those endings happen. ive thought for a logn time that to be a volunteer and really help people you have to already have helped yourself, and i dont know if im really there yet. i guess its a never-ending quest to be perfect, but i know i could be better than i am, and use that for the forces of good. plus, being idle all the time and just wandering gets old, even in a crazy totally foriegn country with all sorts of shocking and never-before-seen stuff. i need to be gainfully employed doing something. dont i sound like im gonna do it? yeah... but i promised Mie id correct the grammar on her pre-thesis paper, and would feel really bad after promising so many times to do it if i didnt do it... i think thtas the only thing holding me back. hope it can be worked out.
other interesting experiences today include: thai peanuts, which are purple adn soft, having tasty clear soup for 15 baht, coconut milk from the coconut, which is popular here, angry thai postal worker telling em they were gonna close an hour early and implyign that i oughta get my business finished up already, hanging out with thai police officers next to teh riverfront, eating the peanuts (well OK we weren treally hanging out together, but we were on the same set of benches...), being accosted by people wanting me to stay at their guesthouse upon leaving the train, the internationally-awarded Vienpiang suit store having its yearly grand celebration and being recommended by two separate people to me as a must-see, suits for 8000baht, top quality, today only low price, one singaporean man just stopped me on the street and started talking about it... he mentioned a novice initation session tomorrow too at the spot where we were standing--apparently 1000 kids are going to be initiated into the monkhood--so itd be an auspicious day to start the retreat at wat ram poeng, if i do it... getting a lesson from the woman at the suit shop, yes i went, about real and fake cashmere and silk, night vendors of all smiles and temperaments, new german friends, giving money to another single mother on the street at night, this one with a two year old and seven months into another baby... obviously nowhere to go if she was still out then. i felt so bad for her, rubbed her childs head (oh shit! i just remembered thats really rude here! anyway), we all smiled, he seemed really happy, i gave her the water i was drinking and 500 baht, which is enough to do some good things for them for awhile. i know i cant purify my karma with money, but im a softy. i feel guilty for not giving more, which is surely christianity and buddhism dancing in my heart. thats todays installment--if there isnt one tomorrow, there wont be one for ten days. but stay tuned! love and good wishes, in untold but substantial amounts, showering upon you unexpectedly in teh form of good or bad weather from overseas, from Chiang Mai Thailand--
good will comes welling uncontrolled up out of the earth
i went back to section five of Wat Maharathat today, adn did some more meditation in teh basement with Steven, the red-and-gray haired fellow who was there yesterday (hed asked whether buddhism had a creation story, it was the only thing he said during the whole talk yesterday, and Helen just told him it was irrelevant--the buddha said there was no need to think about that sort of thing, because it had no bearing on teh immediate problem, the extinction of suffering. i think he was abashed. i waited for her to tell the rad story i know about the buddha that illustrates that point, btu she didnt... so OK im going to tell it. sorry. here it goes: one of the buddhas followers, like Steven, was askign him those sorts of metaphysical questions, and the buddha told him he was like a man who'd been shot with an arrow, and before he would let anyone pull it out, he demanded to know who had made the arrow, and what sort of wood it was, and which bird the feathers had come from...). another red-haired american looking guy showed up later; he somehow seemed to me like an all-american football player (his shoes, outside the temple door, were printed with american flag and had come from old navy). it was so strange to see him sitting in half-lotus position trying to focus on his breathing.... but no stranger than Steven or I, i guess, or any of the other thai people there who were just learning.
anyways, todays session was so nice... vipassana seems a lot easier to do than zazen. i sat for forty minutes or so, then did walking meditation, and it felt really clean and fresh, and the time wasnt long at all... somehow sitting there i felt like this was more worthwhile than most of the things ive been doing for teh last stretch of my life... i left my job and everyone i knew in Japan to do volunteer work, but ive believed fora long time that you cant really help other people unless youre in a good place yourself, and i dont think i really am--i get frustrated iwth people much more easily than before, etc... so maybe this feels right because its a good first step on the road to being a really great volunteer, and doing what ive been trying to do for a long time, work for otehr peoples' benefit. teaching sort of did that, but (i hope) volunteering will be even more directly so, becuase no money will be involved.
anyways, after an hour and a half at the temple (including some chanting in Pali, which was interesting), i took a tuk-tuk (the three-wheeled cabs) to Wat Sakat, which is a temple built on the ruins of a temple that collapsed, and so sits on a little hill. i didnt expect much, but the hill has waterfalls and all this vegetation, and the stairs up are long, curling around the hill, with level points now and then with rows of bells you can ring... and once you get to the top, theres this huge golden stupa in the middle ofa rooftop with all these bells, and the breeze you cant feel on the streets blowing through and ringing them--and all of bangkok spread out in the four directions. such an open peaceful place... i wanted to stay longer, it was only open for forty-five minutes more or so by the time i got there... but i soaked it in as much as possible, and felt really bad for teh people who got there after it was closed. i met a couple from singapore up there, and verified that 'alamok' is a curse word in singlish (singaporean english), though they told me it actually comes from malay... they sort of reminded me of japanese people. anyways, im grabbing some sidewalk cafe thai food and heading for the train station--taking the non-aircon diesel train to Chiang Mai, which Steven (from the plane) told me is so rad, cause you just roll all night with the windows open and the breeze coming through, and the sound of the old engine chugging... its gonna be a 13 hour trip, but i cant wait. and my guidebook says Chiang Mai has all sorts of classes you can take on thai cooking, yoga, meditation, and lots of trekking tours to take.. i think its gonna be great. ill let you know. love and well-wishes- -
robot levi says 'standing, standing, standing'
zapping the emerald buddha with toe rays