chiang mai meandering no. 1

In Chiang Mai, Thailand, there is a moat, seven centuries old, that surrounds the entire city, separating old Chiang Mai from new Chiang Mai. Crumbling remains of a wall built to keep out marauding hordes encircle the moat, in some places full height still, in others, just a flimsy stack of eroding bricks. The water in the moat ranges from a deep blue to a muddy brown. Fish jump out at regular intervals, although, from what I can see, more fish do seem to jump from the blue water than the brown. Despite that, each day, lingering fishermen tend their spindly hopeful rods in both the blue parts and the brown parts. They don’t seem to care. A fish is a fish, I guess. So they hope and they wait and they sleep. Around the moat, all around the city, really, scooters buzz like bees of every shape and size and color. Dozens of them swarm the front of traffic at every red light in town. Entire families seem to stack themselves on a single beleaguered bike, one on top of another — one, two, three, four — like circus performers. They like to wave to you as you walk by. I wave back, happy at the crazy sight of these dark-haired columns, these cheery balancing acts.

The Thai people think I am Spanish, somehow, with my blond hair and blue eyes. I am alien to them. A fascination. Are you Spanish, they keep asking in broken English. No, no, I say, American. They nod, Ohhhh. I try hard to speak the meager Thai I taught myself. When someone in our group needs a songtao, a taxi, I’m the only one who can barter with the driver. They were told to learn some basic Thai for the mission trip, but, eh, they’re young. College kids. What are you gonna do? So they get me to haggle with the driver. Tracey, get me a sweet deal, okay? this one says. Sure, kid, I laugh in mock confidence. I have no idea if I can get him a sweet deal.

I approach the window of the songtao.

“Tao rai ka?” How much?

“Sahm sip baht” 30 baht. Whoa, tourist rate. (I did my homework.)

Behind me, my friend shakes his head; shows me he only has 20.

“Yee sip baht?” 20 baht?

I smile at him hopefully. He looks at my hair. Nods. The hair I can’t help, but the smile is on purpose.

“Kup khun ka,” I say. Thank you.

My friend gets in the songtao, murmurs, “Thanks, Tracey.”

“Sure.” I laugh and walk away. I am the den mother.

At the orphanage where we work, the smallest kids cluster and squat around metal bowls of lam yai, a local fruit. They motion me over, invite me to squat with them as they peel the thin brown crust from each tiny piece of fruit. The peeled fruit looks like a cross between an onion and a grape. Once several are peeled, they dump the pieces into my hand first, faces shining expectantly. I’m not a picky eater and I’m willing to try most anything, so I do. They are sweet and sour. Juicier than I expected. As I bite into the piece, the entire group of children seems to break into one huge white smile. They are so beautiful and small and innocent, they make my heart hurt. We eat lam yai and play hand games. After a long while, I get up to leave — an obligation to meet elsewhere. No. No. They pull me back, fighting over who gets my lap. So we sit around the metal bowls, a child constantly in my arms, and eat more lam yai in the steamy dying sunlight.

oh, do stay tuned

I’m working on a very angst-ridden post about my waning days in Seattle and a certain fellow I dated who helped spur my fateful decision to move away.

It’s all very serious and heartbreaking and not silly at all.

Also, I’m working on a post about the falling-in-love moment. The moment when you KNOW: it’s happened. It’s done. Something my sister and I were talking about a while ago that inspired this post in progress.

You know, just a coupla withered crones sittin’ around talkin’ about when people used to love us.

I told MB I was writing this post and he basically shrugged.

So now I am definitely writing it. Not in a vengeful way, of course — no, never — but in a VENGEFUL way. You know, just to be clear.

Look. The man doesn’t have a jealous bone in his body and it is a HUGE HUGE HIDEOUS flaw. I don’t think he could even list the names of the men I’ve dated because, you see, in his mind — HAHA! He has trumped them all!! To him, the other guys mentioned in the post — not by name, of course — are basically Guy A, Guy B, etc. Forever anonymous. So what is there to know?

All right. Fine. Whatevs, Linus.

It’s okay. Later, I will suffocate him in his sleep.

Actually, I’m not sure the other guys would feel “trumped” at all; probably more like they escaped shrieking into the night with their lives and sanity barely intact.

But I’m not just writing it for, you know, VENGEFUL purposes alone, but because I will be interested to hear what it’s been like for the rest of you, that moment when you just KNEW …. you were in love. Toast.

I’m nosy, let’s not forget.

Okay. In all seriousness, I guess I’m writing this huge disclaimer before I even post the piece because I can almost feel a nasty email brewing out there in the ether. Some people may not understand. How could you write about that, etc. But look. MB knows and accepts that I write. He knows I had a life before him and accepts that I will sometimes write about it. People I knew before him, experiences I had before him, these are part of my life. They make up who I am. They impacted me, for good or bad; changed me for better or worse. And these falling-in-love moments I’ll be writing about taught me something about myself. About how my own heart works and responds. About the kind of person I needed in my life.

So I’m writing about it.

And dodging my inbox.

pie day! pie day!!

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Calm down, little Tracey. The pie will still be there when you get there.

I mean, one assumes. But what do I know? Maybe the whole town will be out of pie. Let’s be realistic. I mean, I can’t guarantee there will be pie. I can’t. Sorry, kid.

Probably what you should do here, little Trace, is take your gun with you, that teeny tiny gun you have, so you can start an old-timey shoot-’em-up if the town ain’t got no pie. That’s what they do in them little mountain towns. Remember, MB is from a little mountain town and you are constantly dodging bullets every dadgummed time you go up there. You know, consarnit! and whatnot.

But honestly, all that silliness aside, it’s my birthday and I want to say that all of you who read this blog are a shining gift to me every single day. I’ve never met any of you in person, but the immeasurable ways you’ve touched my life for nearly five years now are as real and vital as anything. You all blaze with compassion and wit and heart and one of my true joys is that I can hang out with you — any time of day or night.

Thank you for being such friends, such champions, such goofs, such true blue hearts. I love you all.

Thank you, dear pippa, from the bottom of my pie-lusting heart.

the strikes against: strike five

I’ve gotten off the track here, what with taking care of The Banshees and a visit from Piper.

But here’s another strike from our Trip to the Resort Up North. I think I can manage to keep with my “no-commentary” policy on this one. Even though I’ve previously blown it, I will try to be strong here.

(The first four are here, here, here, and here.)

So we asked Resort Dude what would our hours be, what the work day would look like, what our days off would be, blahdie blahdie blah — the basics, you know?

He said, “Oh. Uhm. Well. It’s certainly not a traditional work week.”

We said, “Meaning?”

“Well. Okay. Uhm. Well, it’s basically seven days a week.”

“Oh.”

“Weekends are very busy.”

“Oh.”

“But the beginning of the week is slow.”

“Oh.

“So you get a little bit of time to breathe.”

“Oh,” we said. “And are there set hours?”

“Uhm. Well. It’s like maybe 10 or 12 hours a day.”

“Oh.”

“Sometimes more.”

“Oh.”

“But in the winter, it’s really slow. You’d have, like, a month off.”

“Oh.”

annie

So My Beloved shows up at this little house to film the testimony of a retarded woman named Annie. Inside is a room of plastic-covered furniture, coffee table doilies, and wallpaper featuring pastoral scenes of pheasants and hunting dogs and whatnot. Four attorneys in attorney suits are crammed onto one of the plastic-covered sofas, decidedly uncomfortable and out of place, but they need to get to the bottom of this pressing legal matter, and obviously, Annie, the 40-year-old retarded woman, is the key to everything, so they forebear; they endure.

My Beloved sets up his camera, swears in the witness. They’re good to go. Annie just looks around the room as one of the suits stuck to the plastic starts to question her as if talking to a child.

“Annie, are you going to tell us the truth today?”

“Yeaaaaaaaaah.”

“Annie, are you going to tell us lies today?”

“Yeaaaaaaaaah.”

A pause.

“Annie, did you have breakfast today?”

“Yeaaaaaaaaaah.”

“Annie, did you fly in a spaceship today?”

“Yeaaaaaaaaaaah.”

Hm.

Moments later, the proceedings are terminated and four frustrated attorneys leave Annie alone with her plastic and doilies and pheasants.

uhm, thank you?

For the button hat? No, the totally extreme button hat? That also looks vaguely like a mushroom?

Wow. I am speechless with something like gratitude
, is what I would say if that were even remotely true.

Please excuse me. I’m trying to figure out how one wears a be-buttoned woolen mushroom atop one’s head. I mean ……

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Do you tilt it forward? So people in front of you can see more buttons? I mean, I don’t want people to misunderstand the point of the hat which is, obviously, that some old gammie went nuts clearing out her button drawer and in an act of both relief and passive aggression, made this hat and sent it out into the world for you to purchase and give to me, a person you claim to love. Or perhaps to re-gift to me, a person you claim to love.

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Do you push it back? So people behind you can see more buttons and laugh at you behind your back but you just don’t care because they’re behind your back? This option appeals to me.

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Do you try to make it flat, like a saucer of buttons atop your head? Is that what you do? And, I ask you, what girl hasn’t yearned for a saucer of buttons to adorn her head at some point her life?

You know, honestly, it’s all too much. The responsibility and mental energy this cap requires is more than I can handle. It’s truly beyond me. Plus, with that army of buttons weighing it down, the thing is just a migraine in the making. I also worry about being dive-bombed and pecked by random frightening crows searching for food.

So, again, thank you? You shouldn’t have? I am so looking forward to ….. uhm, leaving this outside on the next rainy day and — que lastima! — shrinking it to a size way too small for my giant head.

Tsk, tsk.

Unfortunate.

These things happen.

Tough break, you know?

Or ….. wait. I may have just found the new prize for The Best Thing Ever: America.

michael jackson and appropriation

So Michael Jackson has died and that’s all very sad, of course, but now the circus has begun in earnest. The frenzy of mourning. The collective “falling over ourselves to get all of the misery right,” to quote “Evita.”

I mean, random people are now posting YouTube videos of themselves weeping over Jackson’s death while his music plays in the background, for God’s sake.

Honestly, I find it ridiculous, the narcissism there, the appropriation involved, strangers making Jackson’s death about them.

When it’s not. It’s just not.

I remember the day of my aunt and uncle’s memorial, a week after they were killed on Egypt Air 990 in 1999. Family and friends gathered at a nearby church — along with reporters and cameramen from every TV station in town, big, small, and medium. It was titillating, oh, yes, it was, this “local connection to the Egypt Air crash.” And it was total mayhem. A circus. My cousins were sobbing and frightened by the reporters. Cameras were set up across every inch of the back of that church. There was crazy jostling for position, for the best shot. MB, shooting footage for the family with his own professional video camera, was bombarded by media who thought he was “one of them.” Once they saw him talking to us, it began in earnest:

“Hey man, do you know the family?”

“Can you get me close to the family?”

“Can we talk to the family?”

Literally, there were more of them than there were of us. A mob of media. Just a tad menacing, you know? And God bless him, MB stood a stubborn sentinel for the rest of us, his shattered family. NO ONE got past that man. There we were, this broken little clan, huddled in a corner trying to keep our wits about us, trying not to be ripped apart, at the memorial service of our OWN family members. The media basically chased us into the shadows and forced us into hiding, before the service had even started. Our private grief was cheapened because the public insisted on sharing. It was total insanity and a violation of something sacred.

And, no, it wasn’t the same kind of situation that Jackson’s death is. It wasn’t the death of a worldwide icon — no, it was an unacknowledged terrorist action, you know, whatevs — but, still, some of it echoes with me right now, watching the current feeding frenzy.

Every story of public tragedy becomes an act of appropriation to some extent. People crave a piece of it, there must be “a local connection,” however flimsy, the insatiable beast of curiosity must be fed. And in the process, precious private things are wrangled away from their rightful owners and tossed to the crowd, who gobble them up unthinking.

People seem to forget a basic lesson from childhood:

There’s what belongs to you and what doesn’t.

For me, as a member of the general public, feeling sadness and shock over Jackson’s death is appropriate, I suppose. That level of reaction “belongs” to us, all strangers to Michael Jackson. (And, honestly, I’m more sad than shocked. I mean, did anyone envision that man living to a ripe old adulthood? Really?) So I’m “sad,” yes, but in an oblique, distant sense.

I didn’t know Michael Jackson.

These other public reactions I’m seeing, the weeping, the wailing, the sobbing — are, I’m sorry, inappropriate. Weeping and wailing belong to his family and friends. People who actually knew him. Because, let’s be honest, how much of Michael Jackson have any of us really lost? Nothing. I have no less Michael Jackson in my life than I had four days ago and neither does anyone else in the general public. We had his music when he was alive — I worked out to it, as a matter of fact, the day before he died — and we still have his music. We’ve lost nothing more of Michael Jackson than we ever had to begin with. Our personal lives are not affected by his loss. I’m not trying to be callous; I just wish the great sobbing masses could have a more measured response. (Which is a really stupid, Trace. I laugh at you.) What have you lost? What have you lost? The hope of meeting him someday? Not likely. The man was a recluse. A chance to see him in his final concert tour this summer? Well, I guess that’s a loss, but it’s not a weeping-and-wailing loss. Get your money back. Enough with the wailing. Please.

Don’t appropriate grief that doesn’t belong to you.

Again, there’s what belongs to you and what doesn’t and shrieking grief over Michael Jackson’s death does not belong to you.

I’d rather people be honest enough to name what the maudlin spectacle is really all about: Fear. Fear for yourself. If an untouchable icon — a megastar — can fall so suddenly, what does that mean for me, a mere earthbound mortal?

Honestly, I don’t think people are crying for Michael Jackson — at the core of this. No, at the core of this we all feel a little more vulnerable. When might our number be up? We freak out when our icons die because we feel small compared to them so why, we wonder, have we so far been spared?

Well, why, indeed? I’m pretty sure it’s not so you can sob into your hands on YouTube while “Man in the Mirror” plays in the background.

So stop it.

I know I sound irritated and I guess I am. It’s bringing back things I’d rather not think about right now.

Honestly, there’s what belongs to you and what doesn’t belong to you and, oh, how I wish more people understood the difference.

Genuine grief belongs to the people who have truly lost Michael Jackson, family, friends, whose personal lives will forever be altered.

Leave it to them.

the strikes against: strike four

Continuing my list of No-Commentary Episodes from The Trip.

Number four.

(First three here.)

RESORT DUDE: Another part of my witness for the Lord is that I don’t carry any debt.

ME: Oh. I see.

Okay. I can’t do it, okay? I can’t not comment on this. I can’t. Look. It’s nice that he doesn’t carry any debt, really, it is. But how, how, is that part of his public witness? How do people know this unless, uhm, he tells them? How does it come up in casual coffeehouse conversation? I had many many casual coffeehouse conversations with my customers and it never once came up.

Just how does that come up??

CUSTOMER: I’d like a hazelnut latte, please.

RESORT DUDE: Hey, do you know I don’t carry any debt?

How???

I’m not trying to invalidate his decision on this point. I think it’s probably wise, although, with the kind of business he has, I don’t know how that’s entirely possible — not carrying debt. He wants his business to “go to the next level,” wanted us to be the people to “help make it happen,” and yet, after ten years in business, he hasn’t gotten there. Maybe he needs to take some risks, take on a little bit of debt, and market himself to the next level, you know? He clearly needs some kind of a springboard to get there. Just sayin’.

My issue with this is how is that decision part of his public witness? People notice how you treat them. They don’t notice whether you’re carrying debt. It’s a private issue and his is a private conviction. Don’t make it something else. I mean, my first impression of him wasn’t, “Wow. I bet he doesn’t carry any debt.” No, my first impression of him was, “Hm. For someone in the hospitality business his hospitality needs some work.”

If someone were to ask his opinion on it, then I think he has an opening to discuss it — in principle. But to bring it up unsolicited takes a careful private conviction and brings it out into the marketplace of public opinion and praise. He wanted me to praise him on this private unseen conviction and I wasn’t going to play the game. I was actually less impressed with his private conviction because he was willing to sell it for a compliment. That’s like saying, “Hey, do you know I gave a thousand bucks to such-and-such charity?” No. No. You don’t do that. You do it and shut up about it.

Strike Four.

the strikes against: strike three

Number three on my list of Episodes from The Trip.

My rapidly unwinding experiment in just the facts.

(Like here and here.)

No commentary. Or as little commentary as I can manage. It’s hard for me. I mean, I’m basically in agony here, but I want to see how you guys respond to these episodes and I don’t want to poison the well. Oh, but I will surely fail at this. Just so you know.

And, yes, I do understand that three strikes means you’re out, but, well, not for purposes of this unfolding story. Oh, no. Not by a long shot.

So at one point:

~ We were in the kitchen, after hours, helping Resort Dude prepare our dinner. His girlfriend was also there and let’s just say her name is Beasley. It’s really not, but, again, let’s just say it is and you can make of that whatever you wish.

~ I began to chop some garlic cloves.

~ He corrected me. “No, no, no. Do it like this.”

~ Beasley was touching him and groping him and pawing him while the dinner prep continued. And that’s just straight factual reporting. It is.

~ We were making scampi.

~ They were groping.

~ Once dinner was ready and we all sat down, Resort Dude said, “I didn’t have fresh parsley. It needs fresh parsley.”

“It’s fine. It’s really good,” we said.

“No. I needed parsley. It’s not the same.”

~ The subject of the problem with the scampi was dropped for a few moments.

~ Then I said, “Whoever chopped this garlic sure did a good job.”

~ MB laughed, but no one else did.

~ Moments later, Resort Dude said, “Darn it! It needs more salt.”

“No, we like it. Thank you. It’s really good.”

~ The subject of the problem with the scampi was dropped for a few moments.

~ It’s worth interjecting here that God taught Resort Dude how to cook.

~ I swear that isn’t commentary.

~ “Okay. I know what I can do. Lemon,” he said, as he disappeared from the table.

~ I brought up the subject of gay people on purpose.

~ Beasley had some opinions on the subject with which I did not agree — based on her personal acquaintance with precisely zero gay people.

~ Resort Dude returned a few moments later with freshly sliced lemon wedges which he squirted atop our already half-eaten scampi.

“There. That’s better. Taste that. It’s better.”

~ He sat back down and the mutual pawing resumed.

~ Moments later, he said, “Part of my witness for the Lord is that I don’t kiss Beasley. We don’t kiss. Because I know I wouldn’t be able to stop.”

(O DEAR BABY JESUS, I am fighting further commentary with every FIBER of my being!! This experiment is going to break me!!)

Uhm, so, yeah. Strike Three.

Oh, but there’s more to come.

I haven’t even gotten to the worst of it yet.