Monday, May 24, 2010

DSIL's Meditation Retreat: Or, How I Learned to Quit Thinking and Accept the Pain

One thing I decidedly am not is: flexible.

My body is stiffer than a two-by-four in a blizzard. Despite a brief dalliance with yoga, I have hips as creaky as the rusted hinges of a neglected gate, ankles that pop when I flex them, and a thrice-operated-upon knee that’s about as stable as a house of cards hastily erected in the drafty attic of a dilapidated San Francisco guesthouse perched precisely on the San Andreas Fault. Like Dennis Kucinich’s stature or Sarah Palin’s command of the English language, the rigidity of my lower body is a glaring, crippling liability.

And no position (outside the baroque postures of Rodney Yee’s Advanced Yoga instructional video series) poses my balky legs more problems than sitting cross-legged. Good ol’ Indian Style, preferred position of kindergarten story-times and campfire sing-alongs the world over. Second nature for most sitters, and a torturous contortion for Yours Truly.

Scrunching my legs beneath me is like trying to refold a gigantic AAA roadmap: the kind where, baffled, you spread it across the steering wheel and scrutinize the recondite chessboard of creases until the air conditioner blows the thing up into your face and you flap it around your head like a fucking accordion and you’re traveling 97 mph on the wrong side of the highway while being assaulted by a paper pterodactyl, and finally you just wad the map into a ball and shove it in the glove compartment and fishtail back onto your side of the road seconds before you would’ve been pancaked by an 18-wheeler. That’s what trying to sit cross-legged is like for me.

So, one thing I’m decidedly not cut out for is: meditation.

I could’ve predicted this, but confirmation came courtesy of a recent DSIL staff meditation retreat, a three-day process involving lectures from a monk, numerous breaches of Thai etiquette, and so much sitting cross-legged that I feared that my coworkers would have to bear me back to Bangkok on a divan, my legs frozen in permanent pretzel.

***

Most people pursue meditation to heighten spirituality, achieve mental clarity, or score hippie chicks; but the fruit that the Darunsikkhalai School of Innovative Learning apparently expected the retreat to bear were more pragmatic. Our school, you see, is run by ex-businessmen with little background in education. Therefore, when the school’s owner announced the retreat, he did so through a plenitude of charts and graphs dubiously demonstrating that companies used regular meditation to increase worker productivity – and profits. Far from pursuing nirvana, we would be meditating to boost revenue! (Or the educational equivalent: improved standardized test scores, I guess.)

This, to me, seemed somehow inimical to the spirit of meditation… but who was I, an unenlightened Westerner who can’t even sit on the floor for five minutes without setting off fireworks in his patellar meniscus, to pass judgment on what was or was not in keeping with said spirit? So I went.

***

The retreat took place at a hotel. The hotel, inexplicably, was situated at the heart of a gigantic tapioca plantation.

I didn’t know much about tapioca before the retreat (besides that it was the key and titular ingredient in a barely-palatable pudding), and I still don’t. At least I realize now that it comes from umbrella-shaped plants with shiny, yellow-splotched leaves – I’d always imagined tapioca pudding sludge being siphoned out of, like, a peat bog or a tar pit or something.


Who knew?

The plantation was stark: endless rows of churned clay either bristled with scraggly tapioca plants or stood barren, raw and red like the earth’s exposed flesh. Stagnant, murky puddles that you could just tell served as mosquito larvae nurseries dotted the tilled land. The farm was immense, miles in diameter. I abandoned the secret aspirations of escape that I’d been harboring. I had a hard time imagining who the hotel’s clientele was: maybe it typically served as a conference center for meetings of the agrarian minds. The complex itself was nice enough, but if you’ve seen a gated Floridian golf course community, you can imagine: palm trees, spiky grass crawling with red ants, a cloudy little water hazard, cottages with red sloping roofs. The biggest novelty was that the cottages were dubbed “Tapiocasas.”

Forty-two teachers showed up to the first meditation class wearing white shirts and dark slacks, customary meditation attire.* (The white represents purity and cleanliness; needless to say, I spent three days splashing luminous curry broths on myself.) We filed into a frigidly air-conditioned conference room and sat down on blue velvety cushions – forty-one of us immediately and effortlessly assuming proper cross-legged positions, and one lonely dissenter with legs stretched and crossed before him in heedless defiance.

*Besides reasons of symbolism, you also wear white to avoid distracting your fellow meditators. This precept seems reasonable, but uniform whiteness isn’t always a guarantor of non-distraction: one of the instructors, a woman named Ploy, wore a sparkling white shirt with the word Freak printed in huge green letters. This shirt proved an immense diversion, as my flighty mind wasted untold minutes pondering what the illegible fine print below Freak could possibly read. I’m guessing …in the bed. (Incidentally, Ploy’s shirt was the latest example of my favorite phenomenon in this country: Thai people wearing shirts that bear bizarre, perverted, or nonsensical English slogans. I can only wonder if they know what the slogans mean; I usually suspect not. I once traveled with a tour guide whose t-shirt declared, “I’d rather be smorting cocaine off a hooker’s ass.” Yep, smorting. With an M.

***

The monk who led the retreat turned out to be quite the character. Far from the taciturn figures of stolid piety I’d encountered in the past, this man was animated, wise-cracking, and, thanks to years of education in Canada, Germany, and the Netherlands, surprisingly Western in speech and attitude. He spoke excellent English, and he delighted in telling stories about his secular past – about his years as a university student hell-bent on pleasing his father, about his time as an economist and banker, and, with the most relish, about some “nighttime outings” that sounded distinctly unmonastic in nature.

But although learning of the monk’s tribulations provided some human-interest value, I was expecting him to deliver the philosophical and spiritual goods. In that regard, I was disappointed. His monologues were familiar and blandly aphoristic: topics included disavowing materialism, self-identification and labeling, and self-acceptance. As Elise cynically but succinctly put it, “If he’d been wearing a suit instead of orange robes, we could’ve been at a self-help seminar.” (Cinematic analogs include Obi Wan-Kenobi and Greg Kinnear's character in Little Miss Sunshine.)


A heretical comparison? Maybe not. (Also, this is actually not the monk who led the retreat... but, you know, all those guys in orange robes...)


Although he framed his talks as ‘inquiries,’ they were almost totally one-sided; instead of sparking dialogue, his questions were leading and mostly rhetorical. (“Should you identify with your Mercedes Benz and your Rolex or with the person inside?”) He had a rubbery, emotive face, and every time he posed a Life Coach-ish query or recited a maxim, his mug stretched into this pop-eyed expression of joyous disbelief, as though he’d inadvertently stumbled upon the secret to lasting happiness and wanted to be sure that we were sharing the revelation. He was congenial enough, and I liked him, but nothing he said came close to rocking my mental boat.

When we weren’t absorbing treacly wisdom, we were meditating. Sitting cross-legged proved as untenable as I expected. Thanks to my intractable hips, I couldn’t sit in true knee-touching-the-floor butterfly posture; my legs kept popping back up like squeezed-and-released bedsprings. And thanks to my balky knees, I couldn’t even maintain that half-assed facsimile of Indian style for more than a few minutes before my tendons began to twang like plucked banjo strings. I was constantly fidgeting, readjusting, complaining. The first time we attempted meditation, I almost instantly attracted a small crowd of instructors and well-wishers offering me advice* about how to sustain a proper meditative posture, their frustration deepening as I failed to heed their suggestions: “Relax your hips… Breathe deeply…. Not that deeply… Okay, now a little more deeply… Straighten your back… Don’t be rigid… Why don’t you just breathe normally?” Through it all, I was in orthopedic agony, pain that proved incompatible with maintaining proper breathing rates.

*I knew I could count on the monk for a meaningless shibboleth or two, and he didn’t disappoint. His words of wisdom: “Instead of thinking about what the pain should be, or what you want the pain to be, or what you hope the pain to be, accept the pain for what it is.” Cue eyes widening, brows rising, toothy grin broadening as though he’d just given me the formula for turning lima beans into M&Ms.

Now, among the first culture mores you learn upon arriving in Thailand is that one should never, ever, under any circumstances, point one’s foot at another human being. I don’t know why, exactly, but doing so is gravely disrespectful, an act of appalling insolence and insult that only a truly uncouth, ill-mannered lout would ever be thoughtless and/or malicious enough to perpetrate.

Of course, every time I crossed and uncrossed and recrossed my legs in desperate search of a comfortable position, I was inadvertently pointing my bare, calloused, broken-toenailed, size-15 dogs directly at the monk.

This faux pas was brought to my attention by the audible gasp that escaped from my Thai co-teachers whenever I twitched, the kind of not-quite-stifled exhalation of shocked embarrassment that was probably breathed by millions of puritans during Janet Jackson’s wardrobe malfunction. I was, it seemed, bringing deep dishonor to DSIL whenever I moved a muscle. Eventually I was pointedly asked to sit elsewhere, so that my enormous feet would direct their toxic insults away from the holy guy.* The ignominy!

*While the Thai teachers were stunned, appalled, etc., I’d like to point out that the monk didn’t seem to notice that I was dissing him; or if he noticed, didn’t give a shit. Or at least his saccharine patter wasn’t affected. Which, I mean, good for him.

***

Even in the best of times, I might not have been able to sustain three days of meditation. But Bangkok, as any person who’s lately picked up a newspaper knows, is not enduring the best of times.

Wednesday, May 19 was the first day of the meditation retreat, and the climactic day of Thailand’s ongoing political conflict. The Thai military finally followed through on its threats of a crackdown, invading Ratchaprasong Square, where the Red Shirt protestors had amassed. Although the Red leaders surrendered, the radical Red fringe went nuts, burning thirty-six buildings in downtown Bangkok, including the nation’s largest shopping mall, before finally being quelled. (Weirdly, a lot of the most violent rebels weren’t Red Shirts at all, but Black Shirts – the term for politically unaffiliated rabble-rousers who seemed to exploit the breakdown of law in Bangkok as an opportunity to act out anarchical fantasies.)


A Thai soldier subdues a Red Shirt.

Although the government suppressed the protesters within 24 hours, we had little way of knowing what was happening in Bangkok during the isolation of the retreat. We clustered around the TVs in our hotel rooms, trying to parse scraps of news from the disquieting cycle of images, most of them involving some edifice being swallowed by flames – or if not that, then Red Shirts operating grenade launchers; or casualties, perhaps corpses, being toted away on stretchers; etc…

Then, sometime Wednesday afternoon, most of the TV stations mysteriously malfunctioned: live feeds were replaced by test patterns and the national anthem on repeat. Classic disaster movie cliché. We imagined the worst: Bangkok razed, thousands dead, enraged and machine-gun-toting rebels tearing through the streets. Many of my co-teachers were unable to contact their friends and family. I began to plot my escape from Thailand. Only later did we learn that, though the TV stations’ power sources had been destroyed, most of Bangkok was still intact, and that the uprising had effectively been put down – for now, at least*.

*I’m still trying to decide how to feel about the Red Shirts being so thoroughly vanquished. Their cause isn’t unjust, and the government committed some real atrocities during the standoff, often using excessive force. But the Red Shirts’ methods were equally barbaric, if not more so, and I never quite cottoned to rooting for terrorists. And then there’s the fact that the end of the protests means a dramatically increased quality of life for moi, in that I can now go almost fearlessly into downtown Bangkok again. I’m glad, selfishly, to see it end, but I also hope that the Reds someday accomplish their aims – next time, non-violently.

Anyway, in the middle of this chaos and uncertainty, we were whisked away from our TVs by the unyielding demands of the retreat’s schedule. If you can clear your mind when your own city is in flames, you’re made of sterner mental mettle than I am. I struggled to forget the conflict raging just a few hours from our bucolic tapioca paradise, and just a few miles from my apartment. Focusing on the synchronized movements of my breath and navel proved beyond the powers of my distractible mind. To my surprise, though, most of my Thai co-teachers seemed remarkably sanguine (at least compared to us distressed English teachers). Either they knew something we didn’t, or they felt the numb faith in Bangkok’s ultimate invincibility that comes with having lived safely in a place for a long time. (Think: the people who stayed in their homes on the slopes of Mt. St. Helens.)

Regardless, the next couple of days vindicated the Thai teachers’ nonchalance, as the fighting died down and the TV networks were resuscitated. Even so, my concentration never recovered.

***

What with the formulaic talks and the pain of meditation, I don’t think I got a whole lot out of the retreat (aside, that is, from a renewed appreciation for tapioca). There were times when I thought I was maybe on the verge of a breakthrough, when I nearly managed to tune out all external stimuli and extraneous thoughts, when I was conscious of the pain in my legs without allowing my mind to be its captive. I think I came to understand why meditation is valuable for other people*.

*I suspect that sitting meditation may never be for me, but I also maintain that physical activities can be equally meditative: I’ve always found that a special focus comes over me while running or biking; I grow attentive to the movements of my body to the exclusion of all other thoughts, and often – especially while biking – find myself miles from my place of origin without realizing that any time had elapsed. That, to me, seems like the kind of utter mindfulness (manifesting itself as absent-mindedness) that seated meditation is aiming for.


I probably 'meditated' more successfully in Glacier National Park last summer than I did at any point during the retreat.

Mostly, though, I felt restless, and my leg muscles tighter than tennis racquet catgut, and by the third day the weather was too nice and my mind too errant to stay seated in a small, crowded, air-conditioned room, and Elise and I wound up wandering the grounds amongst the Tapiocasas. And that, I think the monk would’ve said (if he hadn’t been sleeping serenely in his armchair), was okay too.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

A Layman's Explanation of Thailand's Political Situation

Bangkok, of late, has been jarred by political turmoil, and I’ve received a handful of emails inquiring after my safety. In response to these missives, I’m dusting off the keyboard to offer an appraisal of the situation. (Since conditions here are evolving rapidly, this post may well be obsolete by the time you read it; I've already had to revise it extensively in response to sudden developments.) Hopefully those friends worried about my well-being will be mollified, those who’ve been incommunicado will remain silently sanguine, and both groups will have a better idea of what's happening in my adoptive nation.

***

Thailand is dominated by two political parties: the Red Shirts and the Yellow Shirts. The Reds are, almost universally, poor, rural, agrarian – a sort of pastoral proletariat. The Yellows are urban (read: Bangkokian) and wealthy and white-collar*. The conflict, then, isn’t just Red v. Yellow, but Rich v. Poor, and Bangkok v. The Rest of Thailand.

* Thai political parties’ compositions seem to me much less diverse than American parties’. Within America’s Democratic Party, for example, limousine liberals from New England rub ideological elbows with poor blacks in Oakland; the Republican Party unites even stranger bedfellows (which births logical fallacies like uninsured Texans universally despising health care reform). Thailand’s parties, perhaps due to the country’s comparative ethnic homogeneity, aren’t nearly so jumbled in constitution; so, while the above descriptions might be overly simplified, I think they’re apt enough.

Until recently, Thailand’s Prime Minister was a man named Taksin (like Cher, he needs no second name), a businessman and politician as Red as they come. During his stint in office, Taksin passed a litany of policies that benefitted his poor, rural constituency: for example, he dramatically improved access to affordable health care (the baseline cost for a visit to a Thai hospital is something like $1.50), and granted farmers generous subsidies. As PM he was, by all accounts, a champion of the lower classes.

But the primary beneficiary of Taksin’s term was – surprise, surprise – Taksin. Prior to becoming PM he owned Shin Satellite Corporation, a company that builds (you were expecting?) satellites. Instead of dropping this conflict-of-interest business holding upon taking office, Taksin (perhaps taking his cue from Dick Cheney) remained head of Shin, and proceeded to shamelessly line his own pockets. To name one infraction among many, he granted a sizable loan to Myanmar on Thailand’s behalf, expressly so that Myanmar could purchase goods from Shin. The upshot was that Taksin, who’d entered office a billionaire, was soon able to stick the prefix multi- at the front of that sobriquet*.

*One of the stranger things about the Color War for me personally is that it’s very hard to know whom to support – a weird feeling, after years of loathing an irrefutably despicable Republican nemesis. My instinct is to side with the poor farmers and cheap health insurance, and thus the Red Shirts; but my other equally reflexive instinct is to side against corrupt politicians, and thus against Taksin, whom I find slimy and exploitative. This fight isn’t being waged under familiar terms, and so I’ve stayed more or less unaffiliated, in the vain hope that one party or another will seize the moral high ground. At first it was thrilling, being here during an epoch of percolating political change, and I was pulling hard for the Reds; but since those heady early days my esteem for them has dissipated, and as the death toll has mounted I just find myself wishing that the struggle would end. I’m basically a glorified tourist here anyway, and my interest in Thai politics is dilettantish, and to choose and staunchly support a side when I’m so poorly informed and have so little at stake feels frivolous.


Taksin, looking as ruthlessly savvy and politically calculating as ever.

Taksin didn’t see his term through, however, because, like many a corrupt and autocratic ruler before him, he was victimized by a coup. I’m a little hazy on the details of how/why this happened, but basically the Thai army swept in and bloodlessly removed Taksin from power*, installing as PM the mellifluously named Abhisit Vejjajiva, who continues to rule, albeit shakily, to this day.

*The deposed Taksin escaped Thailand, and, after an ill-fated stop in Cambodia, is floating around in exile. I’m not too certain of where he’s squirreled away – Dubai, I think.

But though Taksin is out of sight, he is by no means out of mind. Far from it: the Yellow Shirt govt has prosecuted the banished ex-PM vigorously, first indicting him on charges of corruption and then, in mid-March, confiscating his ill-gotten gains. Forty-six billion Bath (Thai currency unit) worth of gains, to be precise, or $1.5 billion. Before you bend bow across a tiny violin in lamentation of Taksin’s loss, bear in mind that he still has over a billion dollars in the bank, and is probably sunning himself on a palm tree-shaped island or coasting down an indoor ski hill or freebasing caviar or whatever extravagant things people do with themselves in Dubai.

And this is why Taksin gives me the creeps: while he’s enjoying steaks and blowjobs paid for by his Saudi sheikh friends, his constituents, the people whom he’s riled up and summoned from Chiang-Mai to wage his battle, are camped out on the streets and fighting and dying on his behalf. Because for some reason, the Red Shirts – many of whom can’t rub two nickels together – took the seizure of Taksin’s assets as like a huge personal affront. Shortly after the government announced the ruling, now over two months ago, Red Shirts began pouring en masse into the city, preparing to wreak havoc. But why should the Taksin ruling incense the Reds so badly? Why do these impoverished farmers give a shit about whether a billionaire loses an extra billion? Truthfully, I don’t know. To me, though, it smacks of rhetoric and manipulation and obfuscation: Taksin has so inflated his own legend as Champion of the People and Defender of the Little Guy that his backers are willing to die for him, even though he’s (pretty transparently) interested only in himself*.

*When pressed, the Red Shirt attitude about their hero’s malfeasances is, Yeah, he’s corrupt, but so is every other politician in this country, and if we made a big deal about this kind of thing we’d never have anybody in office.

Of course, the Reds aren’t up in arms solely over Taksin’s financial loss; the confiscation of assets was merely the proverbial camel-straw. Their real objective is to get Taksin back in office. The Red Shirts’ argument – and it’s a fair one – is that Vajjejjiva wasn’t democratically elected, but militarily and unconstitutionally installed, and that the government needs to permit elections ASAP. Taksin would certainly win such an election in a landslide.

To that end (i.e., getting Taksin back in power), Red Shirt protestors have continuously occupied strategic sectors of Bangkok for the last two months*. They poured in from the Northern provinces by various forms of ad hoc transportation – pick-up trucks, tractors, bicycles, feet – in significant numbers (though just how significant is hard to say, since the Reds claim they’re 500,000 strong, and the Yellow government puts the figure closer to 5,000). They came with pickets, with banners, with bullhorns, and – a recent and alarming revelation – grenades.

*None of which sectors are near my quiet and isolated suburb, I should add, which has remained unaffected and will continue to remain unaffected, and as long as I’m not a total idiot and go out and screw around near known Red territory, I’m totally safe. Sure, my movements have been slightly restricted, but never once have I felt endangered.

Their aims, as I understand them, are twofold: they seek, first, a democratically elected Prime Minister; and second, they wish to dissolve parliament. The Reds initially pursued these goals through nonviolent means – speechifying, clogging traffic and public transit, generally inconveniencing and irritating people by making it hard to get between points A and B. But when these docile measures got them nowhere, their actions turned more pernicious.

The Red Shirt action that seemed to escalate tensions from ‘simmering’ to ‘boiling over,’ that lent these previously benign demonstrations a deeply disturbing cast, occurred in late March. To wit: the Reds collected blood from their supporters and used it as artillery, hurling it on government buildings and officials*. (A large quantity of the blood later proved HIV-positive, making the whole thing much creepier and more malicious.)

*Somehow it wasn’t the action itself that was so sinister, but the threat of the action: the drenching was well-publicized beforehand, and the red-puddled, rust-smelling, spattered downtown crafted by my imagination (blood churning in the gutters like slow lava, viscous red drops coming off the eaves, the whole city echoing with falling liquid as in a cave) was far more powerful to me than the actual consummation of the act, which proved actually not very graphic. It was the mental image of Bangkok as gory war zone that did more than anything to convince me of the Red Shirts’ seriousness, and of the situation’s gravity.


Red Shirts spill blood as riot police look on.

Since that incident, the protests have intensified and contorted and blackened; they have turned horrifying and terrifying and everybody in this city wishes desperately that they would end. The army has been called upon to contain the protests, yet they’ve done far more exacerbating than ameliorating. Deaths are sporadic but not uncommon: three killed when a grenade struck a subway stop; a soldier slain by a bullet through the eye (for some reason the ‘through the eye’ bit was never once tastefully omitted when this story broke, and for some reason that detail makes the soldier’s slaying even more appalling – I picture, always, the kid that Tim O’Brien kills in The Things They Carried, the star-shaped bullet wound obliterating, too, that VC’s eye). The worst carnage, by far, occurred in early April, when twenty-one Red Shirts and soldiers were killed.

It’s never clear, when the Red Shirts and the army come to blows, who exactly the initiator is. Whenever troops and demonstrators have historically clashed, the military seems the aggressor – eg., the Boston Massacre and the Vietnam protests in DC and Tienenman (sp?) Square. And it’s not hard to imagine a bunch of nervous trigger-happy soldiers, youthful and combat-untested, bearing assault-rifles and an inflated, govt-promoted sense of the Reds’ combustibility/weaponry, firing the first shots.

At the same time, there’s some sinister and sober quality to the Red Shirts – it’s maybe the grim strength of their convictions, the life-or-death import of the protests for them (that they’ve persisted despite heavy casualties is both admirable and awful), their willingness to do evil and batshit-crazy things like dumping blood on people and firing grenades onto crowded train platforms – that makes me think that maybe they’re actually the instigators, the first-stone-throwers. After all, they have an incentive to make this conflict a violent one. Every day of the Red Shirt occupation is a financial catastrophe for Thailand. The nation’s economy relies heavily on tourism, and not surprisingly tourism has etiolated during the protests; Thailand’s GDP takes a measurable hit with each Red sunrise. So the more dangerous the country appears, the more imperative it is that the conflict resolves itself, and the more likely (the thinking perhaps goes) that Vajjejjiva will cave and give the Reds what they want.

***

The Red Shirts’ political passion, the immutable willpower that keeps them in Bangkok despite heavy losses, is awe-inspiring and kind of shaming for me. Shaming in that they care about their cause more than I can imagine myself caring about any cause, ever. It’s clear to them now that their lives are at constant risk, yet their numbers have not appreciably decreased; they are not cowed by the possibility of death.

I don’t mean this reverentially: their methods are strange and cruel and their desperation scares me. They’re probably in the right, but they’re impossible to root for. I mean, rather, that their passion is awesome (in the real sense of that word), and that my own convictions feel milquetoast by comparison.

A not-so-far-fetched scenario: if George Bush had fabricated a war right before the end of his second term and exploited a constitutional loophole and, for the ostensible good of the nation, remained in executive power for a third term: would I have risked my life protesting that? Would I have occupied Washington DC for months, under fire from the National Guard, even as my fellow protestors were cut down around me? Would you have? I suspect I wouldn’t have. I would’ve held a picket sign; I would’ve marched circles around the Lincoln Memorial, I would’ve written strongly-worded letters to congressmen and editors and all the other traditional recipients of strongly-worded letters. I would’ve gotten arrested, I think. I would’ve chained myself to the front bumper of the presidential motorcade. But I wouldn’t have let myself be killed, or even put myself in a situation where death was at all a possibility. No way.

And that, I suppose, is the difference between the privileged and the un-. When I get sick, the private health insurance that my family and I can afford foots the bill, no matter how extravagant the treatment. When a Red Shirt got sick before Taksin, he couldn’t afford even the hospital stay, and he died. No wonder, then, that the Reds view a lower-class-friendly government as a matter of life or death. Wealth is insulation against political change. My yuppie brethren and I aren’t going to be drafted to fight in Iraq, or have to fall back on welfare, or rely the asphalt-laying jobs provided by a stimulus plan. My quality of life won’t be much different under Barack Obama than it was under GWB. I am, therefore, anesthetized. That’s why I – and most people, I bet, in my comparatively filthy-rich homeland – don’t possess the Red Shirts’ fuck-everything courage. We don’t have as much at stake.


Red Shirt protesters on the march.

***

So the whole sad frightening mess has dragged on, as implacable and slow-moving as WWI-style trench warfare, each side making microscopic tactical gains and sustaining equally minute damage, not much, really, happening besides the senseless loss of life. A massive military crushing of the Red Shirts was rumored for weeks, and the prospect of such a savage denouement was alarming – the Reds’ reaction to an incursion could well have been not dispersal, but civil war. A violent climax to the conflict seemed inevitable.

And then, only yesterday (after I’d written the above post and come to a gloomy conclusion about the said inevitability of violence), the Red Shirts appeared to turn the attritional tide decisively in their favor: PM Vajjejjiva agreed to disband parliament and hold elections in November. That’s a remarkable turnaround, considering that elections are a radical step, and obviously inimical to Vajjejjiva’s interests. There are still details to be hashed out – the Red Shirts want elections much sooner than Vajjejjiva’s willing to hold them – but it appears that a truce may be coalescing.

It’s too early, I think, to declare the conflict ended; although both sides appear to have finally tired of brutality, I don’t trust either’s sudden magnanimity. But if, in fact, Thailand is out of the woods, I wonder how that rewrites the last two months. Is violence that a week ago seemed senseless abruptly justified? Now that the Red Shirts have emerged as putative victors, and the bloody rigmarole has yielded a righteous and noble solution, should I look more kindly upon the protestors? Democracy has won (or at least is winning) out; why, then, does this conclusion not feel triumphant? Perhaps because the methods through which this triumph was achieved are reprehensible: the product is admirable but the process deplorable. Posterity will tell us whether the ends justified the means.

Friday, January 29, 2010

The Darunsikkhalai School of Innovative Learning: Part One

I’ve been teaching at DSIL for nearly a month now, and so I feel qualified to expound on the nature of my job and the efficacy of this school. Offering a few snap judgments, though, won’t be easy: DSIL operates under a complex and opaque educational doctrine, a set of uniquely Thai cultural mores, and –

I’m sorry. I’m less than a paragraph into this post and already I’m spouting misinformation: namely, I had the audacity to call what I do here “teaching.” I won’t make that mistake again.

What I am, according to my contract’s verbiage, is a Facilitator. No doubt you suspect, as I did before I began here, that the distinction between Teacher and Facilitator is primarily a semantic, and not functional, one. But the two positions actually confer very different roles/responsibilities, and to refer to myself as a teacher is grossly inaccurate*. To understand why that is, it’s necessary to know something about Constructionism – DSIL’s organizing philosophy and its raison d’etre.

*All the students do, in fact, call me Teacher Ben, though maybe that's just because Facilitator Ben would be kind of a mouthful. They've also taken to calling me Ben Ten, which delights 'em endlessly.


Students (and Teacher Steve) get psyched up at Sports Day, the entire point of which is to inflict migraine headaches via the incessant enthusiastic thumping of an unholy arsenal of bongos.

How the school is supposed to work

Constructionism, in a nutshell, means that the students teach themselves. That’s an oversimplification, but if you take away any salient point from this dissertation, let it be that. More precisely, Constructionism refers to project-based learning: children in constructionist settings design and create their own projects, and the process of creation often provides greater educational value than the project’s content – in other words, the doctrine is more concerned with how children learn than with what they learn.

According to constructionist thinkers*, each child has his own diverse interests, aptitudes, and learning style, and it’s the role of the school to develop those interests/aptitudes by catering to that unique learning style. In that sense, say constructionists (and I tend to agree), traditional, lecture-based education is ineffective: by treating every student as an identically vapid receptacle for facts, Classic Ed. is stifling their natural love of learning, inhibiting creativity, and not actually teaching them anything of lasting value.

*The leading such scholar is MIT’s Seymour Papert, revered by DSIL’s administration for his sagacity and by me for his epic beard.


When he's not raiding dumpsters, this crackpot is DSIL's patron saint. Just kidding, Seymour: you're an inspiration.


In place of traditional fact-deposit-and-regurgitation systems, Constructionism offers a model called “learning-by-doing,” or “learning-by-making.” The idea is that creating the aforementioned projects helps students foster their aptitudes and learn skills applicable beyond the classroom; and, because they’re ostensibly completing a project of their own choosing, the whole experience is much more positive and engaging to them. (I’m convinced that if all of Phil Goldfarb’s classes dealt with basketball and girls, he would be Hastings High School’s most enthusiastic attendant.) The constructionist framework does not cram academic trivia down students’ throats; instead, kids gain all knowledge organically, and that knowledge has practical application within the project, making learning natural, relevant, and, hopefully, fun.

***

Before every trimester at DSIL, the students congregate to propose project concepts*.

*For some reason the tone of this article resembles a National Geographic documentary voice-over… I imagine “The students congregate…” being read in much the same voice as “Every spring the elephant seals gather on the rocky shoals of the Valdez Peninsula to partake in a mating ritual as old as time.”

The projects range from the quotidian (Psychology) to the whimsical (The Beginning and End of the World) to the demanding (Chemical Engineering) to the completely incomprehensible (Funtrolegology – try finding that course offering in even the most liberal artsy New England college)*. Oftentimes, when students can’t agree on a single project, multiple proposals are shoehorned together: one class is currently attempting to combine Biology and Military History. Funtrolegology is also a portmanteau: as its facilitator, Ram, describes the class’ inception and naming, “Tro because they wanted to do astronomy, Lego because they wanted to play with Legos, fun for obvious reasons, and 'ology' because clearly it’s a legitimate science.”

*One interesting phenomenon is that the projects grow less bizarre and adventurous as the students get older. The kids tend to choose more fanciful ideas in their youth – classes have names like “Miracle World” – but, as they approach teenagedom, they tighten up, and their newly conservative proposals – eg., Economic History – would look right at home in any college curriculum. This, I suspect, is due to increased pressure both from parents and selves to gear up for the looming threat of University; more inventive projects are regarded as too facetious to serve as adequate preparation. I think this concern is pretty specious, for what it's worth.


Students immersed in Thailand's national sport.

Once the students have chosen their projects, each newly-formed group has a massive brain-storming session about what topics fall under their project’s umbrella, what activities they’d like to attempt, what field trips they want to go on, etc. At least in theory, the class plans the entirety of the project itself; the facilitator exists not to dictate a syllabus, but to, yes, facilitate their thinking – to propose directions in which the project might veer. Ultimately, however, the students decide which, if any, of our suggestions are worth heeding; usually my ideas don't pass muster for them.

After the brainstorming has spit its last lightning bolt and the class begins in earnest, the facilitator is charged with ‘guiding the students’ learning.’ To wit: in my class, Business Economics*, my kids decided that, among other things, they wanted to learn about accounting**. The fact that I am woefully unqualified to teach anybody about anything pertaining to business, accounting, or, for that matter, numbers, was almost irrelevant – since it’s not my job to teach them anything, I didn’t have to, say, prepare a lecture on profit margin (or experience the sweaty nightmares that surely would have attended such a duty). Instead, I merely drew up a loose activity: I had them research different measurements of corporations’ economic health, then look up the annual financial reports of various companies and decide, using those prior measurements, whether that company was thriving or in deep shit. Being a facilitator, in short, means being a Creative Activity Designer (except, as you’ll see in Part Two, when it means being an Innocent Bystander). The kids, ideally, are almost entirely self-directed and self-motivated – they dictate what they want to learn, and the facilitator creates unobtrusive methods of leading them toward knowledge.

*What you’re undoubtedly wondering right now is: how did an English and Environmental Studies major who spent four years at Amherst railing against the very existence of economics (let alone the unfortunate gravitation of his friends to that vile discipline like investment banks to a government handout) wind up teaching a Business Economics class? (For that matter, how did a fresh-out-of-college shmoe with zero teaching experience even get this job? That’s maybe the deeper mystery.)

The answer is complicated, but in a word, it was politics that landed me Business Econ. As the New Guy, I had no pre-associations with any of the project proposals, whereas many of the other teachers had certain groups of students they had to work with, or certain subjects they’d taught in the past, etc., and thus had dibs on their pet classes. Also, none of the project proposals really lent themselves to my narrow areas of expertise – try as I might, I couldn’t talk any of the kids into a Fishing Project. Also significant was that Teacher Take (she of the impeccable chicken-foot-stew-eating technique) had already signed on to co-teach Econ. Take was reportedly irascible and unfriendly, and many English speakers dreaded the prospect of co-teaching with her. Confident in my ability to coexist with anybody, I accepted the challenge; and sure enough Take and I have been almost entirely harmonious.


**Or, just as likely, their parents decided that the kids wanted to learn business accounting, because what 12-year-old in his or her right mind would give a shit about asset liquidity and debt ratios and balanced budgets and all that jazz?


On paper it sounds like a wonderfully quixotic place. But, as with most of life's wonderful quixotry, this school comes with a catch: nothing at DSIL ever goes smoothly in practice. Ever.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Supposedly Delicious Things I'll Never Eat Again

Part of my motivation in coming to Thailand was to have a sort of epicurean picaresque, and this country has, as advertised, introduced my palette to wonders. I could, I suppose, enumerate all those incredible and commonplace dishes that make each day a small gastronomical adventure - the gang kiaow, the tom yam goon, the pad si-iew (sics all around, I'm sure), the innumerable delicacies I've ordered by walking into nameless hole-in-the-wall noodle shops, pointing at an adjacent table, and saying, "I'll have what that guy's having." The promise of delicious food is one of the temptations that coaxes me out of bed every morning.

Still, there are exceptions, moments of queasiness embedded like knots of gristle within the general scrumptiousness. And, since culinary oddities are bound to be more fun to read (and write) about than ordinary comestibles, I present the aforementioned supposedly delicious things.

***

Thai cuisine isn’t as industrious as Chinese when it comes to making use of every dubious anatomical scrap. I’ve had fish bladder soup and fried pig intestine (both terrific, incidentally), but I’ve actually been a little disappointed by the lack of esoterica on Thai menus.

Last week in Phuket, though, I partially sated my hunger for random body parts with a bowl of chicken feet stew. The stew’s presentation was impressive, in that gleaming and terrible way that weapons can impress: my bowl brimmed with fierce, denticled talons that looked still capable of scratching out the eyes of an incautious farmer. I fully expected a claw to spring to life, clutch me by the wrist, and plea that I spare it the acidic rigors of my digestive tract.


You can barely control your salivary glands right now, I'll bet.

Once I resolved to show the feet no mercy, I was confronted with the conundrum of how to consume them. Chicken feet are essentially skeins of rubber stretched over a lattice of fine, inedible bones – tarsals and metacarpals and phalanxes expressly designed to choke diners. I set about meticulously removing shreds of plasticine skin from the tiny bones, no doubt expending more calories in surgery than I stood to gain in consumption*. It was a task for scalpel and forceps – even knife and fork would have been inadequate – yet I undertook the operation with only plastic ladle and wooden chopsticks, a woefully indelicate arsenal; I might as well have tried to defuse a bomb with hammer and chisel. Five laborious minutes later, I’d picked pebbled skin fragments from about two toes; the cairn of bones perched on my plate seemed an unjustly miniscule monument to my tenacity.

“Come on, guy,” my dining companion, Take (my co-teacher at DSIL) sneered. (“Come on, guy” is Take’s standard expression of reproach whenever I’m particularly obtuse, which, in Thailand, is often.) “Whatchoo doing?” I looked up from my toils and across the table at her: a chicken foot dangled from her mouth, a tableau that conjured images of foxes and henhouses, and two more claws lay on her plate, as clean and intact as skeletons in an anatomy class.

“Like this,” explained my vulpine friend, and she sucked at the talon – apparently ladle and chopsticks didn’t figure in this procedure after all – and tossed the skinned foot aside with a velociraptorish grin.

“Oh,” I said, duly shamed.

Chicken feet, it turns out, aren’t especially delectable even once you’ve solved consumptive difficulties (or had the mystery cracked for you). They’re rubbery, of course, and have an almost neutral flavor; the myriad bones, I learned from accidental experimentation, aren’t big enough to choke you but still feel damn unpleasant when they’re rattling down your esophagus. Intrepid diners might enjoy feet for their novelty, but, speaking strictly gastronomically, you might as well peel the skin off a drumstick and dip it in beef bullion.



One of the few classic Thai foods I'm reluctant to try: dried squid, which typically smell like they were scraped from the cargo hold of a shrimp trawler after about three unrefrigerated weeks at sea.

***

Many Thai soups and curries come packed with lueh: suspicious cubes, the color of charcoal and the texture of tofu, that bob within the matrix of stew like bergs in a floe. The iceberg analogy doesn’t end there, either: lueh is as likely to scuttle the appetite of an unsuspecting consumer as a submerged glacial mass is a tanker. That’s because lueh’s composition is as unsavory as its appearance: the gray blocks are congealed pig’s blood**.

I’ve only tried lueh once, and that one taste test was less leonine chomp than rodentish nibble; but my sole sample was enough to convince me that I never need to try it again. Much as I try, I can’t come up with a more suitable adjective than rancid. Pig blood may be a taste I’m capable of acquiring – its ubiquity suggests that it must appeal to many palettes, and mine is as omnivorous as any – but I’m not willing to subject my taste buds to the pain of acquisition.

Even though lueh tasted, I’ll forever maintain, objectively disgusting, I do wonder how much of my revulsion had psychosomatic origins. There’s something about the phrase “congealed pig blood” – couple it with the word "gelatinous" to maximize nausea! – that gives me the willies. But it’s not like blood is inherently more disgusting than other nasty organs I’ve chowed on w/out compunction – bladder and intestines, brains and thyroid glands; all down the hatch with nary a hint of rising bile. Blood, rationally, is neither more nor less foul than any other part of the animal body; in fact one could argue that eating blood is more natural than consuming the mystery meats found on western buffet lines: any idiot knows what blood looks like, but could anyone besides a meat packer identify the bacon portion of a porcine corpse?

But my rationality loses out to whatever cultural proscription forbids blood from the American diet, and I can’t stomach a single lueh blob; even the sight of it wobbling on a soup spoon like an obscure flavor of Jell-O is enough to dampen my appetite. (Albeit only very temporarily; and my appetite is certifiably un-ruin-able.) Could it be a fear of turning vampiric? A latent respect for certain Kosher laws? A pathological aversion to any food that can be described as gelatinous? All possible. Regardless, I quickly learned two Thai words, words never heard on a Transylvanian moor nor on the set of a Quentin Tarantino movie: Mai lueh. Hold the blood.

***

*I’ve heard that if you kill a chipmunk in the wild and are in desperate need of food, you’re supposed to eat it whole, inc. fur, for that very reason. There: I just saved your life.

**Lueh, which is blood in cubed form, isn’t to be confused with the liquid blood (name unknown) sometimes poured into soup water, actually a not-half-bad addition to broth if lightly applied. The last thing you want is a blood bath in a bowl, though.

Sunday, January 3, 2010

A First Update; or, Thai Toilet Protocol: An Episstemology Gap (w/ endnotes!)

One month in Thailand without an update constitutes criminal blogging negligence, so to the tens of semi-avid readers who have been, if not exactly starved for news, at least amenable to a light news nosh, I proffer this post in hopes that it'll take the edge off your mild hunger. Hopefully this post represents the beginning of a flurry of mental note transcription.

Actually I think my silence thus far has been for the best, since it’s spared you the reader from the idiotic incredulity with which I’ve greeted even my most banal discoveries, eg. “Ew they eat scorpions here that’s so gross!” or “OMG you guys none of the toilets here are outfitted with T.P. but instead they have this kind of powerful hygienic hose that not only cleans and massages your ass but also buffs it to a gleaming waxy shine and isn’t that crazy?!?!!!” (1)

Detailing the many small and mundane ways in which life in Thailand differs from life in those United States isn’t very interesting (endnoted toilet protocol excepted, of course), and I’ll try to avoid the trap of the quotidian.


Facts of daily life in Thailand on display in this picture include: a) occasional elephants; b) Forrest Gumpian haircuts, where the barber makes this sort of swooping gesture in query and you're too cowardly and language-impaired to do anything but fearfully nod consent to The Swoop, and the next thing you know your carefully cultivated sideburns and, indeed, any and all hairs that had once resided below your ears are drifting to the floor and you look like a cross between a Franciscan monk and a 1950's teenager and goddammit.

Such avoidance is made easier by the fact that I’m steadily going native (2), to wit: I hold the lease to a fully furnished apartment; I boast a steadily burgeoning repertoire of Thai phrases, including but by no means limited to my address (3), “How much for a Singha? (4),” and, “Ba mee giaow mu dang! (5)”; and, like most Thais, I do 97% of my shopping at 7-11. In sum, I may still (and always) be a tourist, but I like to think I bear a stronger resemblance to Bill Murray in Lost in Translation – wry, observational, and fitting in as well as stature/caucasianness allow – than, say, Clark Griswold in Europe.

That said, my transformation from stumbling, uncouth ex-marine to sure-footed, assimilated Na’vi tribesman has scarcely begun: my skin has maybe taken on a bluish tinge (6), but I’m a long way from acquiring ponytail genitalia (7). It’s fitting, then, that my first true post (8) deals with a bald-faced bit of touristic cavorting: my first Thai camping trip, to a place called Phu Kradueng National Park.

Coming Soon! (9)

***
Endnotes

1) Although, come to think of it, that may not be the best example, since the bathroom rigmarole here is truly arcane and may well remain so for my entire year in Thailand. The thing is: most public toilet stalls contain not only the bowls so recognizable to Western posteriors, but adjacent to the bowls this sort of large stone basin built into floor/wall and filled with water of dubious, unfit-for-piscine-life hue, and when you’re finished doing your business I think you’re supposed to release some kind of lever or turn a faucet that somehow empties the water level in the toilet bowl (which bowl, by the way, is usually set into the floor at about ankle height, making for a splayed and uncomfy affair for any person long of hypothetical leg) and correspondingly raises the level in the basin, thereby “flushing” the toilet after a fashion; except, upon faucet’s turning, the water levels only fluctuate about 2/3 of the time, making me wonder whether flush-by-faucet is proper procedure at all; and further murking the already (literally & figuratively) murky waters of the situation is the occasional presence of other esoteric paraphernalia in certain bathrooms, like for example plastic buckets floating aimlessly in the cloudy malodorous basin water, making me (yet again) wonder whether I am in fact supposed to fill these buckets from the basin and empty them into the toilet, thereby washing down or at least diluting my emissions; and basically the entire operation is completely opaque and frustrating to the extent that several times I have risked ruptured bladder/colon by holding it in until such time as I can reach a restroom which I knows contains a familiar Western-style toilet instead of attempting, and likely botching, what should be a really fucking routine maneuver.

2) Some of my Thai friends have taken to calling me Jake Sully, after Avatar’s Stranger in a Strange Land protagonist.

3) Pracha Uithd, Soy Sam Sip (sic??)

4) Singha being my favorite ubiquitous Thai beer; other common brews are Leo (tolerable) and Chang, employed to dual use as a paint thinner.

5) My favorite cafeteria dish, a soup of rice noodles (ba mee), wontons (giaow), and BBQed pork (mu dang by default).

6) Possibly due to excessive consumption of suspect mu dang.

7) If you haven’t yet seen Avatar, this analogy admittedly makes no sense and is probably more than a little disturbing.

8) Still pending – this entry is more of an advertisement for future updates than an update in and of itself; though I maintain that the prior description of toilet situation represents a piece of serious and useful information for prospective travelers

9) -ish.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Smoke on the Water

Last Wednesday a thin plume of white smoke spiraled above the tree line to the west of Yellowstone Lake. From our gillnetting boat we watched the nascent fire. Nobody much remarked upon it – the unseasonably warm, dry weather that had been lingering for weeks had provided perfect conditions for a conflagration, so the plume was hardly surprising; and we assumed the Arnica Fire would, like most little brushfires, quickly burn itself out.

A week later, nine thousand acres have been consumed, the southern half of the park is effectively closed, and Lake Village, where I live, is on the brink of evacuation. I write this post from my trailer bedroom, only a few miles north of the blaze. I, and all of my fisheries coworkers, are ad hoc (?) fire marshals; in the event of an evacuation, we’re to direct traffic and help coordinate the mass departure. Our office has been turned into the de facto fire-fighting headquarters – every morning two dozen firemen, or ‘hot shots,’ descend on our parking lot to discuss strategy. A small village of tents has sprung up on our front lawn, the dwellings of hot shots and the volunteers who have swarmed to Lake Village to help combat the Arnica Fire.

Sunset at Mary Bay. Fires may be destructive, but they're sure photogenic.


***

The National Parks Service has a complex and notorious history with fire management in Yellowstone National Park. For decades the official, misguided NPS policy, spearheaded by Smokey the Bear, was to quench every single park fire. But that policy of unilateral suppression proved catastrophic in 1988, when a gigantic inferno, fed by years of accumulated fuel load, threatened to destroy the entire park, and ultimately burned down 800,000 of acres.
Since then the park’s policy has been, for the most part, to let fires burn until they become a threat to people and property, and that's how this one has been treated. The main pocket of flames has already grown too large to douse, but helicopters have been dumping water on auxiliary fires for the last couple days, and, by spraying down our area with fire hoses, the hot shots hope to prevent the fire from spreading to the fisheries facilities.


The sun rises through a veil of smoke at Bridge Bay Marina.




Forest fires are inherently unpredictable, and nobody really knows where this one is headed next, although every shift in the wind brings with it a new round of speculation. As of now the blaze is crawling south, away from my home, but that could rapidly change. And so we remain on standby, prepared to flee, and help others do the same, at a moment’s notice. We stay alert to any sensory stimuli that might indicate a change in our circumstances: the gauzy haze drifting across the southern sky, the distant thump of helicopter rotors, the acrid smoke in our lungs.

The chaos, the volatile situation, and the disruption of our normal routine are thrilling, despite the (admittedly remote) prospect of calamity. As Erinn, another intern, pointed out: it’s like our first snow day since high school. And in fact, it's supposed to snow tonight, suppressing the fire for good. I might miss the entropy, just a little.



A helicopter dumps water on the Arnica Fire, near the marina. Not to brag, but have you ever seen cooler photos outside National Geographic?

End.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Fun With Aquatic Mammals, Part One.

As testament to my ability to have normal, touristic interactions with wildlife – i.e., ones not involving either slaughter or mortal terror – here are some pictures I recently snapped of a clan of otters (!!!). We encountered the family of six while conducting a cutthroat survey on Yellowstone Lake, and, like any slack-jawed group of tourons, followed them around (read: harassed them) for a while. I’d never before seen an otter in the wild, let alone a family of them, and so witnessing their complex, eerily humanistic social interactions was incredibly exciting. I always feel uncomfortable with ascribing animals anthropomorphic traits, and with comparing them to a human measuring stick – it’s arrogant to assume that our species is the gold standard for intelligence, considering the near-impossibility of measuring intelligence in animals. Yet otters so demonstrate all the behaviors and attributes we most admire in our own species – sociability, lingual ability, familial attachments, a frolicky joie de vivre that, say, a lake trout could never evince – that it’s impossible to watch them without thinking of them as an aquatic analogue to Homo sapiens.


Anyway, time to interrupt this ramble with some pictures:







The otters in the third picture are chowing down on suckers, a bottom-feeding fish with a vacuum-like, toothless mouth that slurps up vegetation and detritus off the lake floor. Suckers are an invasive species (though an apparently harmless one), so, good job, otters. But these otters are far from the only organisms with an affinity for suckers:

Going in for what promises to be a very wet Sucker Pucker.

I’m not sure why I love these fish so much, but I suspect it has something to do with their indestructibility. Suckers are invincible, I’m convinced, the Rambos of the fish world. We’ve left suckers high and dry on our boat’s deck for up to an hour, then released them and watched them swim off, totally unfazed. How could you not love such a resilient fish? Any creature with a will to live so intense and a respiratory system so well evolved deserves some affection. The Fisheries Program has a tradition that every newbie kiss the first sucker they encounter; let’s just say the first sucker I met was far from the last one I smooched.

Suckers and otters were among the highlights of the cutthroat assessment, but they weren’t the only perks. We spent the week setting nets at several sites known as cutthroat strongholds, monitoring the species’ health; this brought us into contact with some gorgeous cutts – and, given the population’s failing numbers, it’s always exciting to haul up healthy and huge cutthroat.

Crew chief Brian Ertel holds up a cutthroat too heavy to register on our scale, earning the coveted "really damn heavy" on the data sheet.

Because many of the cutthroat population centers are located in the lake’s extreme southern reaches, to which the insidious lake trout haven’t yet migrated, we sometimes found ourselves setting nets several hours from our home marina. On those nights, we stayed in NPS cabins: fully furnished, albeit very cozy, houses dedicated to rangers and researchers. The first such night, on tiny Peale Island, was predictably fantastic: although a stiff wind prevented us from leaving the island via our canoe all day, the weather cleared up enough for me to take the craft out at midnight, under a canopy of stars so dense that the white swatches of Milky Way overhead nearly dispelled the blackness of the sky. The only sounds that night were bestial: the whistling howl, or “bugle,” of male elks in heat, and the eerie wail of loons echoing across the still water, the cries’ iterations reverberating from shore to shore until our island was veiled by a keening shroud of animal calls.

Sunset down the Southeast Arm of Yellowstone Lake.


***

That night on Peale Island was spectacular, but not unusual: many times Yellowstone has rendered me euphoric through its wildlife, its scenery, the solitude it provides. These last few months have been some of my life's happiest (Australia/New Zealand excepted), and that happiness, interestingly and somewhat discomfortingly, is predicated upon natural influences, and not human ones. I've gotten a bigger kick out of grizzlies and geysers than, well, people. That isn't to say I've been feeling misanthropic, but this realization demands the question: how will I do in Bangkok? Could any two places, Wyoming and Thailand, occupy more extreme ends of a spectrum? Without otters, cutthroat, and sunsets to thrill me, I'll have to squeeze my joy from societal and cultural sources; will I find such joy in the polluted, claustrophobic din of 12 million people? I can honestly say that I can't say. Stick around to find out, I guess.

End.