Bangkok was teeming, as we disembarked from our long
flight into a wall of heat and humidity, thick with filthy air and the
wall-to-wall traffic that was 1981 Thailand. We were carried along
helplessly by the crowd into a cluttered street where frantic cabbies
vied for our attention, fighting over the scrap of paper held tightly
in my fist with “train station” scribbled in Thai. The most aggressive
grabbed my arm and dragged me into his tiny cab, and before we could
say, “Where the hell are the seat belts?” we were catapulted into
arguably the worst traffic nightmare in the world - it was New York
City on steroids!
The old cab sputtered through the orange, murky
air as the driver’s bloodshot eyes riveted themselves in some kind of
supernatural concentration on the maze of shifting machinery that
danced before us, one hand on the horn and the other flying between the
shifter and the steering wheel. I glanced at Janet - her face was as
white as a sheet.
I finally had to admit to myself that this
nutty idea was probably a mistake. Janet trusted me implicitly, she
always had. After all, I was her knight in shining armor, but now I was
risking her life, not only in this insane, uncontrolled demolition
derby, but with what I knew might lie ahead. My sheltered, middle-class
yuppie concepts were being shattered in the naked reality that was
Thailand, and the cold truth; that Janet could die here, hit me in the
pit of my stomach. I promised myself that I would not let that happen.
We
made a single vow to each other at our little informal Buddhist wedding
ceremony a year ago — the only thing that kept me going at times - and
already I knew that I would never back off from it, no matter what. So
far, we had stumbled, blindly, across three of the Great Freedoms, as
we called them, and this radically changed our wild lives, but we knew
there were more. How many more, we weren’t sure of, but we would search
until we found them all - that we agreed upon.
The driver was
competent, apparently a veteran of the endless bedlam that only begins
to describe this chaotic city, but the rural highways were even
scarier. At least the congestion in Bangkok kept speeds down, but in
the hinterlands the speed limit was only limited to how fast your bus,
car, bicycle, or push cart could go. It was a no man’s land; accidents
were frequent and horrendous — bodies lying all over the roadway until
local villagers might (or might not) come by and drag them to the side.
No ambulances in 1981 Thailand, and police . . . hah!
After an
eternity of white knuckled maneuvering, squealing brakes, and
eye-popping acceleration, we lurched to a blessed halt in front of the
cavernous Bangkok Train Station. I checked Janet . . . she was still
breathing.
This whole thing began as a pick-up game, running on
bad judgment and good karma, or maybe the other way around, but we knew
where we were going, or at least we had an address. The ticket vendors
studied the Thai inscription on the aerogram we fished out of our
backpacks, and after an animated discussion (not sure if they were
excited for us or incredulous about our destination), pointed to a line
of people across the station. We were yet to discover that the ticket
we were about to purchase was for the most destitute region of Thailand
– the parched, northeast countryside bordering Cambodia.
At six
foot two, I towered over the little Thais in line who looked up and
smiled as if I were a god of some kind. Thais had a way of making us
feel that we were special, and as if they were nothing; they still
respected Americans back then, not long after the war. The fact is; we
Americans can be downright arrogant at times, while the people of
Thailand are for the most part genuinely generous, friendly, and
self-effacing.
We purchased the ticket with little difficulty and
in the process discovered how much a Thai “Bhat” was worth. I had
overpaid the cab driver ten times! No wonder he smiled broadly and
bowed twice. Oh well, I guess it was worth it; he saved our skin in
that traffic. Anyway, I made a mental note to pay more attention to
money exchanges in the future.
We had some time to kill so we
drifted over to the Bangkok Snake Farm. What a great, snaky place, full
of snake pens and exhibits. Why not get a good look at what might do us
in out there in the brush? I figured if we could identify the critters
that could easily punch our one-way ticket to an impromptu cremation,
perhaps we could avoid them. This is how farang (westerners) foolishly
think when they first arrive in Thailand, as if they still have some
kind of control over life and death.
I asked the curator what
species was particularly dangerous, prompting him to proudly hold up a
scarred thumb and vividly recount his “oops” with a Banded Krait that
landed him in the hospital for two weeks despite the immediate
self-administration of anti-venom. The reality was that we would be far
removed from any hospitals in the poverty-stricken areas we were headed
for, and far removed from anti-venom for that matter. But of course,
ignorance is bliss, and we didn’t know that yet. We naively believed
that medical clinics were everywhere, just like at home in the good ol’
US of A!
We gawked at the snakes, and they gawked back, and for
some reason I was mysteriously drawn to the large black and yellow
rings of the Banded Kraits. A premonition perhaps? And as we studied
the identifying characteristics of the Cobras, Russell Vipers, Pit
Vipers, Scorpions, and other fierce characters, I never thought for a
moment that we would actually ever come in close contact with any of
them. . . . Right.
Planning to remain in Thailand forever, (the
best laid plans), we passed on the recommended inoculations back home.
They were not only expensive, but only effective for six months, so we
figured we’d take our chances, after all, we had always been healthy,
plus, we were full of youthful perceptions, such as the false
self-confidence that results from basic stupidity and an ignorance of
the real world.
We were smart enough not to eat in Bangkok,
however, or at least we were careful of what we ate, thinking that once
we arrived at our destination (a Buddhist monastery), we would be safe
from disease. In hindsight, that was really fogged-over, to say the
least.
So, with horror stories of dysentery, hepatitis, malaria,
and typhoid fever dancing around in our childish brains, reinforced by
open sewers and unregulated, smiling street vendors handling their
skewered chickens and rice dishes with filthy hands, apparently
unfamiliar with the word hygiene, we bought a huge stalk of tiny Thai
bananas and some Cokes, which became our breakfast, lunch and dinner. .
. . Delicious!
Returning to the train station after our
exhilarating romp through Snakeland, we curled up on an empty wooden
bench and awaited our train. When I happened to roll on my back and
glance up, I noticed ants crawling all over the ceiling towering above
us! No . . . wait! They couldn’t be ants that high up. My God! They
were Thais, working feverishly on the massive, curved ceiling and
barely hanging off scanty, lashed-together bamboo scaffolding that
swayed dangerously back and forth. OSHA would not have been happy about
this!
Watching the Thais work so devotedly in these hazardous
conditions, I began to feel vulnerable, as if I had been pampered and
privileged my entire life, and as if I was just beginning to wake up to
reality. It was a haunting feeling — akin to that feeling I had playing
football . . . just before the kickoff.