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Ive
arrived.
After
35 years on this earth, Ive finally arrived.
This is my paradise. Its a town called Mae
Hong Son, next to the Burmese border, nestled
in the mountains and forests of northern Thailand.
This
is my home now. I share it with my fiancé,
Supalak. Its the place where I write and
work and think and live. From my porch, as I drink
my coffee in the morning, I see tree-covered mountains,
rice fields, a tamarind tree in my yard and a
road stretching off into nowhere.
Later
in the morning, alone with my laptop and the rising
heat of the morning, I hear a cat in the brush,
mewling and crying over hunger or loneliness or
pain and a chicken squawking its head off from
across the street. A random motorcycle growls
and roars and disappears down the road.
In
the evenings, I watch students plodding home while
shadows slowly stretch across my porch.
Im
a phone plug away from the internet and an on
switch away from HBO, CNN, the BBC, and ESPN.
Western movies and shows with Thai lettering at
the bottom, British Premier League soccer games
and rugby matches, its all there for me
if I want it. Sometimes I do.
But
Id rather plug myself into the natural rhythms
of this small town in Thailand. Enjoy the days
in my teak wooden house and hear the birdsong
and the rising buzz saw of cicadas in the heat
of the day. Nod my head to the villagers as they
make their way to the fields, the town, and the
schools in the morning mists. Hop on my bike,
explore town and practice my Thai with some random
merchant.
I
love this place.
My
house seems far away from town. Its north
of the airport, a big wooden testament to history
and culture. Thailands architecture suffered
after the countrywide logging ban of 1989 (which
was enacted to stem deforestation of the country).
Now most buildings are made out of concrete. This
house is almost all wood and has all the things
the concrete apartment blocks and condos of Bangkok
dont have: creaking floors, sun-baked teak
wood porches, an old windup clock ticking away
the hours on the wall, a set of rotted deer antlers,
and pictures of old Thai kings scattered on the
walls. Theres a large wooden gate in the
front. It breathes and moans with the winds in
the evening, and creaks as you walk about during
the day. Ive put a few small testaments
to my other lives up, a New England calendar,
a Nomar Garciappara bobble head doll, a few kitchen
magnets and a U.S. mens soccer team calendar.
Ive
lived in the countryside before, in New Hampshire,
and even here in Thailand. Im suited to
it and I know Im suited to this house. The
temperatures, the mountains, the quiet and the
foreignness of this are the right mix. The house
here reminds me of another special place I lived,
in New Hampshire, in a 19th-century farmhouse,
when I house-sat for a couple over the winter.
I produced one of my best pieces of writing in
that house, a horror story based on H.P. Lovecraft.
Old wooden houses in the countryside imbue me
with a special feeling.
Town
is ten minutes away by bicycle. Its a downhill
breezy ride past the airport and a lung-punishing
hill climb on the way back. Especially in the
middle of the day. Sometimes I sprint back to
the house, beating one of the jets as it taxis
to the north end of the runway. Im enjoying
my trips into town and my slow garnering of knowledge
of place, of the right stores to go to for supplies
and of the right market stalls for fruit or flowers
or spices. People are starting to recognize me
(Ive been here too long for your average
tourist) and my dusty mountain bike. I go in at
least once a day just to take a break from things
and to get some exercise. Sometimes, I go to shoot
hoops at a rutted old court near the town hall.
Thats down the road, through the rice fields
and past other teak houses. Im in no hurry
to make new friends here. That will come. I enjoy
the time alone during the late mornings and afternoons
and sharing evenings and weekends with Supalak.
I
love finding out the best routes into the shops.
Little nuances to the town. Like combining lunch
with a stop at the combination coffee shop/newspaper
place (the days paper doesnt come
in until the first flight into town). The coffee
at that shop is prepared in the traditional way,
brewed in a long burlap bag and served with tea
as a chaser. Or knowing that the best banana bread
in town can be found at the cake stand in the
middle of the night market.
The
only thing missing is decent ground coffee (you
can only buy instant coffee here in the stores),
technical items (like computer parts) and a decent
bookstore. Other than that, this town has everything
anyone could need from the modern world.
I
also have someone to share all this with. Supalak
is my benefactor, as she is providing an opportunity
and a home. When we were planning this move late
last year, we discussed our futures and I said
I wanted to finish my novel, to sit on a porch
and hammer out the plot and characters and really
pull together this semi-amorphous story that has
been floating in my mind for over five years.
She said this was the time, we should move north
to her new job, find a house to live in where
she could take care of both of us while I tried
to do that. How many times in life do you have
someone believe in you that strongly? Paradise
is defined as much by the power of this belief
as anything else.
Supalak
teaches in the refugee camps with Karenni (Burmese)
refugees. The Karennis fled their own country
more than ten years ago and havent been
back since. Youve probably read articles
about Burma (officially called Myanmar) in the
paper under the headline "Generals Crack
Down on Rogue Populations" or "Human
Rights Advocates Accuse Burmese Generals of Abuses"
or something along that line. Suffice it say,
its a police state. Burma is also one of
the leading producers of opium and illegal methamphetamines,
which doesnt exactly endear them to neighboring
countries and to the United States. But theyre
only runners-up on the Axis of Evil list and are
thus largely ignored. All their infractions are
regional.
I
already have gotten a taste of life in the camps.
I attended graduation at the teachers college
next door to one of the camps this last weekend,
and acted as the semi-official photographer for
the event. Its the first ever graduation
for the teachers college and the program
was an intriguing language mix of English, Burmese,
and Karenni. The officials crowded the room in
the beginning, for the certificate ceremony, ate
lunch, and drifted away, leaving the room to local
children and mothers. The children and mothers
filled the vacuum in the room, watching in wonder
as the graduates showed off their English TV video
and grouped together on the stage to perform a
concluding dance.
The
graduates are now set to head out into the world,
a world that is limited to their camp. I wondered
how the graduates really felt. How does it feel
to know that your world consists of a small plot
of land, that you must bide your time, make the
best of your situation, and wait for democracy
to return to your country? I feel incredibly lucky
to hop in the company truck and return to my home
in the city, free to do whatever I want with the
rest of my day.
Were
full swing into the hot season now in Mae Hong
Son and I can feel it when I take my bike into
town in the middle of the day. The sun hangs heavy,
but the nights are still cool enough that I need
to pull up a blanket in the middle of the night.
Theres crispness to the air in the mornings.
Thats part of what I love. Its the
only place in Thailand where I feel cold. The
thickness of skin I had growing up as a New Englander
is being replaced by a thinner Southeast Asian
skin.
Im
already seeing the fires that are set in the hot
season, as the local farmers burn their fields.
In the evenings, from my porch, I can see the
sides of the mountains red with flame an
eerie yet beautiful sight. During the rainy season,
most of the dirt roads become impassable. During
the cool season, the night air dips to 0 degrees
Celsius. Ive been through the cool season,
but have yet to negotiate the swamp-roads. Theres
a big dirt road between the house and the airport.
Im looking forward to seeing what happens
to that. My new mountain bike will be baptized
when the rains start, probably in June.
In
fact, Im looking forward to settling down
for a while. All last year, I traveled the length
and breadth of this country and Laos. Ive
been back to the U.S. and traveled around the
East coast. Now I need a home. I need to watch
the changing of the seasons from this house. Watch
the rains come over the mountains on their way
into town.
Its
almost been like a dream the way this has happened.
The way my life has turned in over a year from
the non-profit caffeine and workaholic world of
Washington, DC to the simple rhythms of the Thai
countryside.
A
few months ago, we attempted recently to get a
gardener to work on the grounds of the house,
to cut away some of the dead foliage from the
banana and mango trees. A local Thai landscaper,
named Andy, arrived at my house early in the morning
at the beginning of the week, and told me that
the gardener wouldnt be arriving for a few
days. He said his whole staff was at a party,
celebrating a local festival in which young men
enter the monk hood. Everyone was too drunk to
work, and thus the gardener couldnt come
until Thursday. Andy lived for many years in Utah
and Canada, and we both had a good laugh about
this. Something like this would never happen in
D.C. The gardener was drunk
you dont
get upset about this. You just wait until Thursday.
Mae
Hong Son is one of 76 provinces in Thailand. Its
not particularly big and is far away from the
beaches and islands of the south where the bulk
of the tourists go. Its northwest of Chiang
Mai which is the biggest city of the north and
the second largest tourist destination in Thailand.
Its not all that easy to get here. From
Bangkok, youd have to take an overnight
train to Chiang Mai and then hop on for a seven-hour
bus ride around hairpin turns and endless switchbacks.
You could also fly, either from Bangkok or Chiang
Mai.
Interestingly
enough, the first question any Thai asks me when
I mention that Im living in Mae Hong Son
is "Have you been on the bus that has to
go through 1,869 curves yet?" I have yet
to do this. Some day I will. Im in no hurry.
I
live in the main city of Mae Hong Son, the provincial
capital, a home to about 6800 people of Thai,
Burmese, and Thai Yai (Shan) descent. Plus a handful
of hill tribe villagers, who come in and out to
sell handicrafts. Hill tribe villagers are Thailands
native population and are as beset as our Native
American population with alcohol abuse, poverty,
and other debilitating social conditions. The
names of the hill tribes sound like letters in
an alphabet Akha, Lahu, Lisu, Mien (Yao),
Hmong, and Karen. By the main lake every day in
town, Lisu women, clothed in their traditional
black embroidered clothing, spread their blankets
and sell handbags, hats and other woven masterpieces.
Day in and day out, they are there.
I
notice time in Mae Hong Son. Youre allowed
to notice time here. Its marked by the passage
of the sun, by the passage of days and by the
incoming and outgoing flights of Thai Airways,
which runs three roundtrip flights a day through
Mae Hong Son out of Chiang Mai. After the final
5:30 p.m. flight, the airport runway becomes a
joggers track and the airport parking lot
becomes a soccer field. Ive biked by the
runway late in the afternoon and seen the crowds
gathering just before the final flight out of
town. The house is close enough to the airport
that it shudders with the noise of the jets
engines as they gear up to take off.
Ive
also climbed nearby Wat Phra That Doi Kong Mu,
the temple on top of the mountain, a few times
and looked down over the town. The town is easy
enough to see from the temple, laid out in a small
valley with a lake in the middle of it and the
airport framing the north end. The temple is lit
up starting at dusk, a sight that always amazes
me as I glide into town on my bike. As you take
off from the airport, you pull level to the temple
as you ascend, before leaving it behind and head
into the clouds. In its own way, it acts as a
holy lighthouse for the city.
I
used to live in Southern Thailand and became accustomed
to the darker-hued, fast-speaking Southern Thai,
the Muslim and Malaysian influences, the sea gypsy
populations of the islands, and the sprinkling
of Chinese and others. In Mae Hong Son, its
subtle mixes of Burmese, hill tribe villagers,
Shan, and Chinese. Even the local temples are
intriguing mixes of Buddhist spires and Burmese
lattice-work.
Theres a sizable foreign population in town,
courtesy of the myriad refugee organizations in
Mae Hong Son, and enough tourists make their way
through to keep the center of town active in pizza,
internet cafes, and souvenir shops. The tourists
here tend to be a hardier breed, who shun the
beaches and who seek out mountain biking territory,
caves, and treks into the forest.
I
first came to Mae Hong Son in 1996, with two other
friends. I thought at the time how wonderful it
would be to settle in this town, to live in one
of the old wooden houses I saw from the road.
Its finally happened.
Im
here for a while. Ill enjoy my stay, but
when I leave Ill remember this gentle, quiet
town in my dreams. This mountain town on the border
of Burma, with its soft sunsets, mountain mists,
squawking chickens, and a road leading to nowhere.
This
is my paradise.
Mae
Hong Son, Thailand.
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