But Honestly...
My own blog is officially behind a firewall and I cannot view it, at least not in Vietnam.
This is part of my current frustration with this country. Traveling alone, I am constantly being watched, sized up. It is paralyzing to know that every time I go outside someone is going to see me as a walking wallet and do their best to get some money out of me.
So as Lizzy, my friend in Cambodia, said "it ain't all sunshine and Buddhism out here." Being white in a place where nationality is indicated by race can be tiring.
The other day, in Hue, I went into a place called the Camel Cafe. They gave me a menu which was entirely in English I ordered, in Vietnamese, Ca Phe Su'a, (coffee with milk). While they weren't looking I found a Vietnamese menu and saw that the coffee was priced 1000 dong less, which is about 2.5 cents -- nothing. Maybe it was low blood-sugar, or maybe I was just looking for a fight, but I pointed it out to them when they brought the bill, charging me the English price.
"Why is the price different here?" pointing to the Vietnamese menu.
"This is Vietnamese menu."
"So? It's the same coffee"
"For Vietnamese people."
"So I pay more because I'm a foreigner?"
There was some discussion and eventually they gave me the Vietnamese price, 9000 dong. I handed them a 10,000 dong bill and told them to keep the change.
In Hue, I think I was also nearly hustled into an arranged marriage. While eating dinner at a little guesthouse, a twenty year old Vietnamese guy started talking to me. He was nice enough but his English was terrible, and I would soon become the victim of a terrible miscommunication.
Telling me he had some friends in town, he suggested that we go out for a cup of coffee or a beer somewhere and meet up with them. He knew some girls too, maybe they would join us. I said "fine." It seemed like a good way to kill the few hours between dinner and bed time.
But the next thing I know, I'm sitting at the kid's house, on a leather couch across from him and his parents, next to a girl, who is not the kid's sister but lives in his house. She will not look at me, but the father, an old tough guy with a fresh wound under his eye that looked like he had been raked with a fork, eyed me up and down, not smiling. There was no way I could face this as regular ol' gabe joselow so I tried a variety of different personas. As I switched from tough guy, to dandy, to seventeenth century British lawyer, to latin-scholar, I went through a variety of facial expressions; I tried a frown, a stern but understanding nod, a smile -- just to see if I could get an agreeable reaction from the parents.
Nothing worked. And it didn't matter what I said since they didn't speak English. So, in a very calm voice and with a suave smile I said, "homo sum, nil humani me et alienum puto." Finally got a smirk out of the father.
It turned out, however, that the kid was trying to convince his parents that this girl should come to Hanoi with me -- which I didn't want.
"Maybe you come back, three or four days, get coffee, she go to Hanoi with you."
"I don't want this. "
"OK, she go and maybe girlfriend, then go to English school, no problem."
The situation was very strange, and I did have to bite my lip a bit to keep from laughing out loud at the whole thing. It seemed like the girl and the kid were arguing with each other, but he would keep saying to me: "she say you very handsome."
So who knows what that was all about.
But that was Hue, a horrible little city near the DMZ, which no, I did not want to take a tour of. Now I'm in Hanoi which is a special kind of city. It's the only city in Vietnam that is still divided into different merchant districts, at least in the Old Quarter where I stay. Each street has a different trade: I live on Hardware street, just before it turns into Chinese medicine street, and around the corner from bamboo road. It is a complete maze here and easy to get lost. Now, to walk around, I just choose one street and walk straight down one side and straight back on the other.
It can't be that big, but it feels enormous. The sidewalks are crowded with people frying chicken and noodles. Motorbikes block the path elsewhere. It's like being in New York except that nobody speaks English -- so it's exactly like being in New York. (Did I use that line already?) It is also very French still. Men with Ho Chi Minh beards in turtlenecks and berets go ambling around or flying by on motorbikes. This afternoon while strolling around the lake, an older Vietnamese guy said "bonjour" to me. We spoke in French for a little while as we walked, it was exciting for me to try my high-school French out, and he was a sweet old guy.
I'll try to make the rest of the day about getting some photos of this place, I like it here.
Friday I fly out to Bangkok. I'm tired of bussing around, I'm tired of a different hotel and unfamiliar people every night so I'm skipping Laos for now and going back to Thailand. I'll meet up with Will, Liz and my friend Keith who happens to be flying in. I'll also be trying to get some work. Soon I should have a better idea of what the next 1-6 months will be like.




