Monthly Archives

July 2011

One hundred awesome things: #100-76

July 12, 2011

Many people have asked about my favorite experience from my year-long trip around the world. But adventures are like Lay’s potato chips — you can’t have just one — and I am a total glutton. I’ve had at least 100 incredible moments over the past year, and I’ve loved each one of them.

I figured some of my favorite moments might slip through my Swiss-cheese memory if I don’t write them down, so I finally put fingers to keyboard tonight.

Here’s the first installment of 100 Awesome Things From My Year Abroad, numbers 100 through 75. How many of these are on your bucket list too?

 

100. Took a boat down the Amazon River.

 

99. Hiked all night to watch the sun rise over Mount Sinai.

 

98. Drank sketchy, home-brewed liquor out of a gourd.

 

97. Attended the opera in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

 

96. Spent the night in Jordan’s Wadi Rum desert, just like Lawrence of Arabia.

 

95. Went sandboarding down the dunes in Huacachina, Peru.

 

94. Took an overnight train through India.

 

93. Survived a political revolution in Egypt.

 

92. Jumped off a traditional junk boat into Ha Long Bay, Vietnam.

 

91. Got freaked out on a farm full of Hare Krishnas in rural Argentina.

 

90. Took a gorilla trek through the volcanos of Rwanda. (Bonus: It was the same area where Dian Fossey researched “Gorillas in the Mist.”)

 

89. Saw coffee go from berry to mug.

 

88. Couchsurfed in Calcutta.

 

87. Ate my weight in tofu pho from street vendors in Vietnam.

 

86. Fell in love with Cambodia all over again.

 

85. Met a capybara in the Amazonian rainforest.

 

84. Suffered several near-death experiences on Indian scooters.

 

83. Walked around the pyramids of Giza.

 

82. Stayed the night with a family of strangers on an island in Lake Titicaca.

 

81. Went on a safari.

 

80. Had a tiger pass gas on my head.

 

79. Met a king in Uganda.

 

78. Rafted down the Nile River.


77. Penetrated North Korea. Successfully left North Korea.

 

76. Endured a horrific, four-day excursion through the Bolivian salt flats. For my efforts, I was rewarded with salt — and lots of it.

 

Stayed tuned for tomorrow’s installment of 100 Awesome Things From My Year Abroad!

 

The time a monkey went bananas

July 10, 2011

My wounds were open and gaping, blood running down my hand in hot, thick rivers.

And I was in small-town Bolivia, alone with a mediocre Spanish-English dictionary.

I approached people on the dusty street for assistance.

“Far-mah-SEE-yah?” I sounded out the word for pharmacy in hesitant Spanish.

One by one, each person cast their gazes downward.

“Far-mah-SEE-yah?” I said again.

Everybody quickly shuffled away from the crazy, bleeding lady.

“Far-mah-SEE-yah?” I asked an old man, who was sweeping dirt from a dirt patio onto a dirt road.

Nope, he shook his head.

Sobbing, I shook my fist at the sky and cried out to the heavens. “Far-mah-SEE-yah!”

“Oh. Far-MAH-see-yah,” the old man said, changing the emphasis ever so slightly.

“Yes! Si, si,” I said, gratefully.

“Why you not say so? Is right here.”

He ushered me inside his unmarked store. A long glass counter ran the length of the room, crowded with untidy stacks of boxes. The shelves along the wall sagged under heavy glass bottles and a rainbow assortment of pills. Near the window, several fat mason jars were filled to the brim with urine-colored fluid and pale spirals of snake bodies.

The man tossed a stained white coat over his clothes and looked at me expectantly over half-rimmed spectacles.

I held out my hand, which was Swiss-cheesed with several fang holes.

“Mono es loco!” I said, in my best Spanish. “Mono … uh, el bite-o my mano.”

Then I bared my teeth, let our a guttural growl and pantomimed the tearing of flesh, though I probably looked more like a grumpy Cocker Spaniel than a terrifying monkey.

“Si,” the doctor agreed. “Loco.”

“Necesito medicines,” I said, asking for pills.

He wanted to know what kind.

“Antibiotics. Er, antibiotico?”

His coat swirled as he turned, shimmying around the shelves, grabbing a wide variety of pharmaceuticals. He fanned them out in front of me.

“Which one?”

“No se. Which one for mono bite?”

He shrugged.

“No se. Which one you want?”

I shrugged and pointed at something that had a lot of important-sounding Zs in the name.

“How many?” he asked.

“How many should I have?”

“How many you want?” He held out a handful of pills and looked hopeful. “Viente bolivianos for all.”

I was pretty sure antibiotics didn’t work that way. That is, just swallow a few dozen at random and keep your fingers crossed.

I excused myself and jogged to the Internet cafe down the street. A few quick searches later, I had my answer.

Back at the pharmacy, I gave the man a piece of paper with the name of an antibiotic, plus the strength and quantity I needed.

“No have,” he said. Then he pushed a long package of orange and red-striped pills across the counter. The foil was old, peeling off the back of the tamper-resistant strip. “Good enough.”

I didn’t have much choice. This place had five internet cafes and several watering holes, but only one pharmacy. It would take many hours by bus through coca fields to get to the next sizable town. In addition, labor protests had shut down some of the major roads, leaving me practically stranded in this rural village.

That said, I didn’t want to take unknown pills, since I was fairly certain they would send me down the rabbit hole to wonderland.

I firmly said no, declining the strange antibiotics.

Later, I had my wounds sewn shut in a cluttered, moldy room. The local hospital was dirty enough that everyone recommended this place — a veterinarian’s office — as a safer alternative.

The vet, a small but sweaty man who had a mild command of the English language, asked for details about my monkey attack. My friend Deborah helped me translate the incident.

The vet knew I had been volunteering in the surrounding jungle at a primate sanctuary, a place where formerly abused and mistreated monkeys are reintroduced to the wild. I told him that during my shift, a stocky monkey named Reno hopped on my lap for an afternoon snooze.

Reno was the size and shape of a muscular basketball, but his fur was as soft as a plush toy. When I stroked his back, he snuggled deeper into the crease between my legs and hips. The sun was shining, and the air smelled like fresh rain and papaya. It was a good moment.

Just then, Reno pissed all over me.

As I opened my mouth and blurted out, “What the –?”, Reno hopped down, grabbed my hands and sunk his teeth into my flesh.

The bites were vicious, deep enough to hear fang make contact with bone. As the blood began to flow, Reno lapped at the liquid like some kind of Robert Pattinson vampire monkey.

“See, mono es loco!” I said, wrapping up my story.

He tugged at the black thread that now zig-zagged through my skin, tied a knot and trimmed the string.

“Better,” he said, gently patting my stitches. “Come back if the pus gets too bad.” He dabbed a purple fluid on the wound. It looked terrible.

With viente bolivianos in my pocket, I walked back to the far-MAH-see-yah for a handful of pills.

 

 

Order in the court

July 6, 2011

My round-the-world trip ended with a summons for jury duty. Because nothing says “Come home!” better than a letter that threatens to put me in jail.

I’m actually one of those weird people who doesn’t mind going to jury duty. While it’s not my ideal way to pass the time, I do think it’s my civic duty and it’s an integral part of my country’s justice system. Plus, if I ever land myself in court, which is a good possibility, I would want a smart gal like me deciding my fate.

However, there was a little matter of me being in Bolivia.

My husband contacted the county court and notified them that I would be out of the country for at least one year. My date was postponed.

Two months later I was summoned again. This time I was in Uganda.

My husband contacted the courts yet again and told them I was out of the country. He was told that we had to provide my itinerary, scans of my passport stamps and details of confirmed flights. We did the best we could, but as a free-form traveler, I didn’t have all of that information.

Unfortunately, the court-bots didn’t understand the concept of travel without a return date. Or travel without a set itinerary. Or travel without pre-booked flights.

A few months later I was summoned again. This time it was for real. I was told that my date, now set for early July, couldn’t be postponed again. Failure to appear would result in a fine, a jail term or some wonderful combo of both.

It somehow felt like an appropriate way to end my trip. What’s more American than serving on a jury right after Independence Day? Throw in some apple pie, and you’ve got yourself an Uncle Sam orgy.

So I flew from Seoul to San Francisco to Palm Springs, arriving home two weeks short of my one-year goal.

Yesterday I drove 45 minutes to the courthouse. I was directed to a beige room and plopped in front of a flat-screen TV to watch “LIVE! with Regis & Kelly.” It was scintillating programming, of course. You know a TV show is good when they include an exclamation point in the title.

A judge thanked us for being good Americans. He also said they would pay us each $15 per day, starting on the second day.

$15? Heck, that’s the best job opportunity I’ve had since returning to U.S. soil. And it’s definitely better than selling blood.

I was determined to get selected. Looking around the room, I didn’t have much competition.

The woman seated to my left told me she breeds miniature dachshunds. She trains them by repeatedly slapping them with a sandal until they behave. She dreams of visiting Italy, but she has a fear of bridges and believes Italy will have too many of them. She travels to Mexico on a monthly basis to buy pharmaceuticals.

The woman to my right sat with her legs spread, both hands jammed inside her stretchable denim pants. She removed one hand long enough to eat a small bag of SunChips multigrain snacks.

The chatty duo behind me said they wanted to serve on the Casey Anthony jury, so they could “fry” her. “I’d give her the death penalty just for getting’ a tattoo,” one lady said.

Out of everybody there, I was certain to be picked. I was a picture-perfect juror. Not only am I bright, attentive and interested, but I’ve been out of the country for a year and haven’t kept up with any local news. It would be 11 Angry Men and One Completely Unbiased and Slightly Uneducated Woman.

Two hours later, I was excused from jury service. They didn’t even interview me.

What a travesty of justice!

Justice league.

 

By the way, if you’re looking to get out of jury duty — (shame on you!) — I learned a little trick when I was part of a jury selection two years ago.

A judge asked a potential juror if there is any reason why he shouldn’t be selected.

“Yes. Because I can read minds,” said the potential juror. “It gives me an unfair advantage.”

“Fine. If you can read minds, tell me what I’m thinking,” challenged the judge.

The potential juror replied, “You’re thinking that you don’t believe me.”

He was excused.