Tag Archives: hotel

 Often you know when a journey will be difficult, when it with wear you out, when it will numb your bum and tire your mind but hell it will be memorable and etched in your head and so this was one – one, of 100s – that I’ll remember (assuming that a mind-rotting disease doesn’t kick in) but hell for now it’s here. But how did it begin …? I forget.

on the road - guinea

On the road towards Guinea

NOTE: Presently I am in Labé in the Fouta Djalon region, the lush, canyon-ed high plateau of north-eastern Guinea, writing this on battery by candlelight …  and I’ve drunken several beers at a friendly, hole-in-the-wall bar shortly after the Ramadan fasting came to an end today.

So where was I? Remembering … Okay, let me listen to my audio diary and get back to you …

Koundara: just been talking to Captain Thomas and friends – very drunk soldiers, missing teeth, red berets slopped everywhere. They came into this shack-bar/disco/hotel where I was staying – few other choices … the boss-chick has just gone out to appease them; I fucked her when I arrived – in the morning & in the evening … don’t know where to start … this was on the eve of Ramadan, drinking amid drunk, ragged, aggressive soldiers in a scene from a twisted movie.

dawn hut

Lone hut in the early morning light

This is a country that is deemed the next failed state – here a history of dictatorships and coups and economic mismanagement despite it being a major Bauxite exporter and having other vast mineral riches – Guinea is driven by a general who for the last 20 years has succeeded in keeping himself in power by cheating at the ballot and by changing the rules to suit himself, and who was last shot at in 2005. Even his soldiers, after a pay revision, revolted, but he survived despite an artillery siege at the presidential palace and then after an agreement there followed the sudden execution of mutineers. Today Conte still rules; this is another banana republic that we don’t know or care about. (And I read on the internet this morning that the soldiers just this week are threatening violence again unless pay owed from the late-1990s is paid. But I also hear that nothing will happen until after Ramadan). 

There is no running water; electricity is either occasional in major towns or more likely not at all unless supplied via private generator. And, most roads are appalling.

Which brings me back to the roads – the journey … a test of the will, or at least this western will. Not the most difficult but (that was yesterday on route to Labé – shattered roads that are red clay hard ruts, deep festering holes, thick mud eating trucks; to avoid holes one side of the car driving along road’s outermost edge and other down lower along the mud track, car riding at a sloping 45 degree angle – branches hitting windows. Fucked up but … the mountain slopes often the best traction – less erosion uphill apart from some deep rain ruts that channel down; early in the day passing thatched huts and long green red-tipped grass then and later jungle and  grouped chimpanzees on huge rocks seated calmly in dusk light as we struggle uphill. Followed by cattle and goats across the track – kids waving – when I wave at then – astonished at my white presence – Foto, they call – meaning white in the local tongue. Women with bowls on heads going nowhere obvious but greenery all around and our journey slow, bumpy, broken; painful.

labé

Awaiting more passengers in Koundara “taxi” station

I woke at 6:30 AM in dark, waited till 7:30 for the car to fill and we arrive in dark at 9:30 PM; we have only covered 265 km … we have 4 people in the front including the driver, 3 in the back – only cos I paid double for an extra seat/space, and then 3 more cramped in the boot-bench-seat of the Peugeot 505 over the rear wheel, and one more in the tiny actual boot and two more on top of the heaped baggage on the roof-rack. And so a humble 5-seater hatchback is a 14 seat slave … But this particular journey of Guinea is another story. 

So I forget, I forgot, my mind is rotting … back to this day, this journey: Her name was Monica, 3 babies at age 25, tribal slit cut down along the rims of each ear-lope; when I arrived she offered me sex … fingers placed together then the in-out motion is understandable in any language – especially mine, her washing the rooms – dusty, concrete, lino-clad floors, spider web corners, sunken thin mattress, showers equal water in a bucket, a fan when the generator kicks in at 7 pm … She got on top of me. Twice … actually, five times by the time it was over that evening.

Anyway before that there was the border crossing between Guinea-Bissau and Guinea in a crammed car, no room for legs or arms or beer bellies … that lasted checkpoints and past villages to the now searing mid-day heat of the frontier, where the Immigration officer in a small tatty concrete office was pleasant, decent, friendly but the Customs across the dirt road made me empty my backpack. But I threw off his ambitions of a full search straight away by showing him my dullest aspect of my bag first – here’s my towel, my books, my toothpaste, my … after wanting something from me – he got nothing, he actually thanked me, keen to have met a New Zealander, a nomad who had nothing but his bags – for he understood slight English and I explained my life to him. But then the soldiers in the thatch hut wanted me to enter … Alert: nasty dumb fucks ahead.

river crossing

River crossing on route to Labé; the barge was broken, so cables welded for 2 hours and then we crossed … by two men turning a wheel we were pulled along the cable to the other side

They tried to intimidate me: 5 of them; unfriendly. They didn’t acknowledge my greetings in English, Islamic salutations, or French. They wanted me to empty my backpack and electronics bag on the dry dirt floor and I realized there was some real danger here of a huge bribe or other hassle. I got shitty, growled – fuck this shit, having already deflected the same nonsense minutes earlier at customs and so said loudly and slowly each item. I got out my towel and mentioned its name – like a teacher – and demonstrated drying myself. Then I got our my tooth brush and brushed, my book and I read … trying to delay the search of my valuables – a Nikon SLR D80 with expensive lenses, Sony video camera, lightweight powerful laptop with extra hard drives, MP3 player, etc, etc … I got out my toilet paper – “here’s my toilet paper, this is for wiping my butt” – and held it high and started to wipe my arse – and they cracked up! That was it, I could pack my pack, and out … they asked my nationality and were pleased to meet me – although I’m sure they knew nothing of where I was from. Even the mention of Australia washed over them – but no more search. No money paid; nothing lost.

The next stage was much easier: but no vehicles were going from this deserted border post to the next deserted border post. There was only one other traveler. A guy from a Guinea, as the others in our shared taxi had raced off into a waiting friend’s 4WD, and that left us with 10 seats to fill; just 2 people and not a person or vehicle coming within hours to complete the journey and so I offered to pay the bulk of the distance: 45 km = over 1 hour of rutted track to get us to the next village and there next shared taxi probably awaiting passengers – as maybe you don’t know: but taxis, cars, buses in Africa don’t leave until full: there is never a timetable for departure – just when a vehicle is full, which by my previous experiences of Africa can mean mercifully just 30 minutes or even less but usually up to several hours waiting … so I paid nearly-the-complete taxi fare which, in this case was nothing – $10, but often it can be too much, as in 10 x $10 +/-. 

When we arrived at the Guinean border – about 1 km away – I hopped over the wire that stops traffic – like there’s any – and the soldier go shitty, didn’t understand what he was saying but realized I had to go around the now limp wire down on the dirt – Not over it, like I was walking on the flag or something! Got to the Immigration shack where lines of tired Africans were waiting and was stamped immediately, without fuss. Wow.  Thank you. Then as our taxi was rearing on – the Customs guy on the other side was calling to the driver to stop – but he could not hear – as we were walking on to the next post – I also ignored him while urging the local with me to stop shouting to the driver to stop … and so we cleared Customs by ignoring them.

fouta djalon

Truck on the road in the mountains of Fouta Djalon, Guinea

The next soldier post was gentle. And that was it, across more broken mud tracks – too easy, with seats to ourselves – for an hour towards the town of Saréboido.  And then it was back to cramming – should have paid a few bucks extra to avoid this but … got in the back – as in 3 people crammed in over the rear wheel for another hour of banging heads, crammed legs room, scarping shins.

And so I arrived in Guinea, in the sleepy town of my chosen stay in Koundara, found a “hotel” and gotten laid within minutes of arrival, had endured hours of cramped spaces over rough roads, had defused greedy soldiers and gotten drinking with deluded others to realize that indeed it was a lucky day; a relatively easy journey.

(PS: in Part 2: Leaving Guinea to Sierra Leone was just as crazy – soldiers, bribes and bad roads abound.)

Was wanting to sleep but had a hot arse too close to my face  … she sleeps as the traffic rakes the street downstairs as I lust over this bottle-blond’s varnished nails, her lightly tanned neck and wrists chained in gold – maybe I’m not her first customer … maybe it’s not love, afterall.

mrp-giving-the-finger-to.jpg

I can remember – bits, anyway, of last night; she sucks so well – but not her name. Half a dozen beers, a bottle of red and half a litre of whisky and not even a headache now – yeah, age has blessed me with a tolerance to alcohol: getting old’s fun.

I’m 36 soon. An old cunt (or maybe, just a cunt). In a recent e-mail Mum asked me how I intended to celebrate my birthday and I had to reply nothing different: Drunk and in bed with a babe (it’s not my birthday for 2 weeks but I thought I get in shape for the event …).

Been doing a lot of soul searching these last few days. You know, age and getting old and what’s my life about shit. 

Thought it time for a change … Surprise. I’ve found Jesus – thought I read the bible this evening – yeah right; or maybe I’ll marry this bleeding blond – intense fucking bought her period on prematurely – beside me. Wrong again TV game-show losers, not you, my friends, but the glamour-hungry wankers on TV which I have with the sound down; yeah, I’ve finally found the meaning to life: to CONTINUE.

With that insight clarified I drink another beer on this fine non-stop afternoon… and solemnly swear, to continue to be a toxic prick addicted to sex, stimulants and wandering. MUM: a thought: maybe you should censor this for the grandparents: I feel it may get …

Check the flesh. Today -  “I shot the sun … “  yeah, right. Actually I’m hallucinating. BUT I believe I’ve been in Buenos Aires a month and have been a total slut (Do sluts pay for sex? Cos I’ve been cashing in the pesos rapidly in hope of getting automatic entry to heaven, you know, my charitable, selfless work supporting women internationally … )

Ahh, yeah … Actually all the chicks I’ve been with here have been pros. And all of them have been very loving … I remember her name now, cos she’s just left at 4.13 pm. Shayla, a some-what Arabic name. She wants to ring me … PLEASE, yeah, habitacion viente-ocho (Room 28). Before she left, like the other ladies, she cleaned my room: ashtray emptied, condoms disposed from the floor, even, folding my clothes. A very inclusive service – indeed (house keeper and lover). 

I met the last lady in the same club as Shayla, she’s an exotic dancer for it’s an Arabic / Greek-theme night – sex, not disco – club. The other woman, Angelina, has left yesterday for her native Brazil and wanted to take me with her … tempted but probably would’ve been disasterous (reading my past serious relationships with loving but crazy pros: RE: Erica, Indonesia.). Both ladies are bottle-blondes with dark eyes (and shaven pubes) as was the one before these two.

I’m seeing a trend here … I usually adore dark skin and dark hair … but all the woman here are white and of Spanish or largely Italian origin. In fact BsAs is the whitest place on earth: I’ve counted four blacks, 2 dozen indigenous brown Andeans and a million whites in a month in this city of 11 million. Surely, the least colored city in the world (in the large downtown districts, anyway). 

Last week I tried to get it together by leaping from a small plane. SKY-DIVING. Tumbling, falling -and freaking, yeah, floating fast at 210km/hour for 5000 feet … parachuting the last 5000 to land fuckin’ ecstatic. Wonderful hit, but it didn’t last long. I believe I’ll take the slow, emphasis slow, ferry across the River Plate to Montevideo, Uruguay – soon, another country to kick my latest mind-less addiction.

Must leave Buenos Aires, where the prettiest – white – woman in the world reside (forget my raving about Santiago de Chile some months ago; BsAs is it. Immaculate bodies and supermodel looks – pity I land all the fat chicks – not really, anyway, Latino women are the true goddesses). Heaven help me in Rio; God save me in Colombia … (where life’s, and the powder’s too cheap and the girls too easy). Ahh, fuck it: life’s to be explored …

Went to a football – soccer – match in a huge stadium of manic supporters: I have the Latino fever; the passion.

At 36 I’ve resolved to go all out … Breasts or bust … Having not slept for days (or is that, daze) you can dismiss this ramble as shit; maybe, one day, I’ll grow up.

My 36th birthday resolution: NEVER SURRENDER (or not for another year, at least).

Love flowers & &&, &, something real sexy – MRP

PS: Maybe I should write a book titled: ‘How to Impress Whores, DESPITE Having a Beer Gut’  

Never did I anticipate problems adjusting to altitude, but since Golmud and then that cold, uncomfortable, 28 hour bus trip to Lhasa, the capital of Tibet, I got progressively worse with what was AMS.

nirvana-surge-express

Nirvana surge express (c) MRP ART

INFO: “Acute Mountain Sickness (AMS / altitude sickness) is caused by the reduction in atmospheric pressure with altitude, meaning less oxygen reaches the muscles and the brain, and the heart and lungs must work harder to compensate. Most people who ascend rapidly to heights above 2500 metres have a period of unpleasant acclimatisation. But individual susceptibility to AMS is highly variable. Males are more susceptible than females. Youth and fitness do not prevent AMS. Symptoms are “Headaches, dizziness, fatigue, loss of appetite, nausea and a general feeling of being unwell that is often compared to having the flu or a hang-over … Most cases of mild AMS will improve with rest. This often takes only 1 or 2 days. Warning signs for severe AMS include: Unsteadiness on one’s feet, inability to sit upright, severe headache not relieved by aspirin, shortness of breath at rest, and mild AMS which does not resolve in 2 – 3 days.”

I had been drained since Golmud (3000 metres) and dead since arriving in Lhasa (3600 metres). I spent 10 days in Lhasa feeling like shit.

THE FOLLOWING IS FROM MY DIARY:

Wow, Lhasa – TIBET!! Yet my europhia is short-lived. Something’s wrong with me. Was starving – no ‘real’ food for a few days – so I ordered a yak burger (two large steaks with fried potatoes and vegies). But as I stood waiting, suddenly dizziness, along with the feeling of a massive weight being exerted on my shoulders – like pistons pushing down on each shoulder. I sat down. Head on my hands on the table; spinning. Sally nursed me until her meal arrived. Mine still hadn’t shown – just as well, cos I’d lost my hunger.

Now, fully-clothed – thermals, t-shirt, shirt, scarf, woollen Tibetan jacket – I lie between sheets beneath an elephant-heavy duvet; and still I shiver. On the opposite bed Sally smiles, slouched casually in leggings and sweatshirt. I ask a favour of her. Sal replies – “Are you sure you’re hungry?” “Yeah, I feel okay – as long as I’m lying down; no dizziness.” Sally laughs at the idea of me lying down and eating. 10 minutes later she returned with a plate of french fries. She watched – amused, as I ate while remaining horizontal. (Who says nurses have seen everything?) A full stomach feels great.

*

Between 7.30 and 10 P.M I felt like death. A drilling gouged into the top-most part of my skull. A throbbing, needle-pricking pain in my brain as I alternated between cold shakes and wet sweats. I couldn’t decide whether to drop Aspirin or Valium. (I took the latter and was informed later that sedatives are the last things, along with alcohol, I should be taking while adjusting to altitude.) The pills kicked-in and was feeling mellow. Warm. Had stripped some of my layers off. Content, drifting gorgeously, when I farted. Straight away I knew: I reached down with toilet paper. Brown and stinky. I staggered along the corridor – out-of-it on altitude and Valium – to finish the fart. During the night my bladder ached me awake. Woke again in sweat-soaked sheets. Then needed another piss. A night of up and down the corridor, of cold and then way-too hot.

*

Walked for an hour this morning before exhaustion forced to bed. Sometime later Ross (Scotland) and Dave (Canada) arrived at our room. Lots of madness to tell me what I missed out on – they’ve had some wicked sessions with Thomas. They all went to a party held by Aussie geologists the other night. Mega FREE beer. Dave doesn’t remember pissing on a sleeping someone in his dorm. Or how he managed to pass-out beside an Aussie woman, nor did he recall her boyfriend removing him from their bed. Anyway, it’s their last night in Lhasa before they head to Shigatse, and I have to join them for a few beers … but am I up to it?

*

Woke with a busting head – and I didn’t even go drinking last night. Throbbing got so bad I took a handful of Aspirins. And then Digestics, but even these stronger pain killers only eased it slightly. Daggers piercing the top of my skull. Have lain in bed all day, wanting to shriek from the knife thrusts – but they don’t last long enough, just spit-seconds. Lightning pains. Even to cough or turn my head I get short sharp jabs. Running my hands through my hair causes discomfort.

*

Late afternoon: Aching body. Smashed head. Eyes throbbing and then the shits struck. Real task to dress, lock the room and walk to the toilets. As I squatted everything swirled. Am leaning hands against the wall, head on hands and spinning. Legs unsure as I crouch above the hole-in-the-floor. Twice I nearly fainted. Am washing my hands and looking out the window to the street of solid white-washed buildings, flowerboxes beneath their thick black window surrounds, when suddenly the scarlet robed monks, the colourful cycle rickshaws; everything’s gone grey – colourless silhouettes. Nothing but glowing white. Losing feelings … passing out … darkness.

Sally found me passed out on her bed. Soon Dave and Ross – they’d missed their bus! – arrived. Their humour and some sleep has helped. I feel okay … Woke in the night dripping wet. Armpits, chest hair, legs and face a waterfall. Sheets like baby’s diapers. Felt cold much later; put on a t-shirt. Then very much hot and wet, again.

*

Ate breakfast (first food in a day). Was feeling okay, but had trouble shaving. Black-outs every 5 -10 seconds. Sally’s gone to check another monastery; I’ve decided to work on a recovery.

Got ugly in the afternoon. Was reading Heart of Darkness with my back against the balcony railing, sitting half in shade and half in sun. But these bits either fried or froze. No happy medium. My body took me to the very extremes. Meantime others strolled in t-shirts, shorts and sandals. I went back to bed. Got cold. Covered myself with Sally’s sleeping bag and an extra jacket and duvet. I shaked, shivered uncontrollably for 30 minutes. (The creaking spring bed gave the impression to anyone outside that lovers lay bonking berserk where I lay shaking.) I muttered unflattering sentiments. Dickhead! Wimp! Weasel! Loser! And laughed. Warm went to hot and overheating fast, so I stripped down, my face the colour of beetroot, my body weak and frying. Sally returned to a cold, feeble freak who wanted more socks.

*

More midnight pisses. It’s gotten to the stage where getting dressed and wandering the corridor for a pee is too much effort. I now piss in a bowl in the room, steadying myself with one hand holding the door jamb and knowing that those first few seconds I feel will feel dizzy, standing with my vision briefly disappearing; and that’s when I’m most careful to get it in the bowl – and not, on the floor or my feet.

*

Felt okay this morning. Made my way to the Nepalese Consulate by minibus. Walked the last few hundred metres and became dizzy. Rested head against street railing and threw up the soft drink I’d started. Sal led me back … to bed.

*

Another wet-night awaking induced by sweats. Drenched. Hung out the damp bedding to dry. Ate scrambled egg – needed some energy. Felt confident I’d adjusted. Walked 20 metres to buy some water.

*

This afternoon I met Katie, an Aussie who’d cycled with two male companions from Islamabad in Pakistan, up the Karakorum highway and into China, then cycled across western Tibet to Lhasa where she now rests, waiting for her companions to recover from Giardia. Their final stage is to Kathmandu, Nepal. They’ve spent a month at 4000 metres and have no need for their altitude pills (Diamox). Katie has kindly given me the bottle. I’ve dropped my first Diamox. (Apparently it alleviates the swelling – (water on the) – brain, which altitude causes. Side effects include, needing to piss alot.)

*

A massive headache. Downed paracetamol. Rubbed Tiger Balm across my forehead. Tried Chinese folk music – played at low volume on my walkman, to soothe and distract. The pain persisted. And in desperation I prayed / meditated, fingering the Celtic cross around my neck and muttering the affirmation – “Move to the top of my skull, and into the sky. Move to the top of …” – while visualising the pain disappearing. Something, or a combination of something’s, eventually worked.

jokhang-monastery.jpg

Pilgrims at the Jokhang monastery – a holy of holies within Lhasa (c) MRP ART

I feel alright, but usually do first thing in the morning. 100%??? Or is this just another temporary recovery? Yet another sick mind game which this illness keeps playing with me?

Mid-day: I’m disorientated, dizzy, weak and have a pounding head. One of the Tibetans working in this hotel has suggested she arrange a doctor’s visit. Through the window I watched him climb the veranda stairs. He had a Red Cross badge pinned to the lapel of his tatty suit. And he put his glasses on seconds before entering the door, like he’s eager to make it known he’s a doctor (and not a black market medicine salesman). Who knows? He entered the room smoking a cigarette. He placed a thermometer beneath my armpit, counted my pulse, felt my forehead, checked my tongue. And from my answers to his questions via an interpreter, he gave me many medicines.

I’m to have 500ml of Glucose (mixed with two other solutions) pumped into my body via the needle in my arm. The Tibetan woman has used one of my boot laces to tie the plastic drip bag to the light bulb above my bed. It will take 90 minutes for me to absorb this medicine. Meanwhile, flies harass me – flying up my nose, landing on my eyes, and in my fuckin’ ears! Fuck you! (For the entire week of being in bed I’ve been dive-bombed by flies. I’ve squashed many; but there’s 100’s – and they never leave me alone.) When I’m well, I’m determined to kill them all. The only joy I have now, is to watch the air bubbles in the bag suspended above me and feel liquid pulsing into my arm, and looking out the dusty, fly-guts-stained glass, to the glaring whiteness of what I know is clear blue sky.

I believe I’m ill. The doctor’s left me two vials and a syringe to inject into my butt – I said Sally could do that, no problem. He’s also given me a host of multi-coloured pills. Five different varieties. I’m to swallow a total of 27 pills daily.

                                                                              *

Today, rebirth, I think. More energy. And no headaches or dizziness. The only side-effects from the feast of Chinese pills was that I felt my skin being pulled from around my eyes, and twitches and tightness. But mostly I felt sedated, mellow, calm, like a slow motion zombie.

Despite me convincing myself that I was on the mend, I met Eugene, a Dutch tour guide who said otherwise. He’s had 8 years experience in China and the Himayalan region. And according to his assessment of me – after consulting his medical manual – my condition lies between medium and severe AMS. Eugene’s advice is to leave immediately for a lower altitude, the nearest place being Kathmandu at 2000 metres and hundreds of kilometres south in Nepal.

>>>>> flash of PANIC: I’ve no travel insurance. I don’t wanna be hospitalised; don’t wanna be flown to Kathmandu or Chengdu or worse, flown home. I can’t face leaving Tibet, not without seeing Lhasa – let alone any other place – and not, after all the effort of getting here. The thought of fleeing Tibet makes me very depressed. I haven’t really improved. Am fooling myself; this recovery was merely temporary. However, I know I’m not getting any worse.

                                                                              *

I don’t want to write, but I must record my feelings now, as I lay like a vegetable, again. While I’m far from dying, my body refuses my brain’s commands. Sure, I can write while lying on my side, and eat, drink, talk, read – just alittle; but when it comes to standing up, showering, peeing, hanging up my towel, fetching a mug of hot water, then it becomes a task. And if too many tasks mount up, I’m totally sapped. I lie in bed unable to move – cos my body refuses. Yet my mind remains sharp. In this comatose state I’m aware of nothing around me. Well I am, but I’m not. Travel conversations drift from outside, colourfully painted rafters stretch out above me, doors and sky, they all vanish. My surroundings are dead, and I’m dying the same way; fading temporarily from life as my mind surrenders. Nothing matters. Not even the fact that, I’m on the roof of the world – in mysterious Tibet.

                                                                                  *

The hotel manager suggests I try traditional Tibetan medicine. The Chinese doctor’s recommended another I.V. drip. Meanwhile I try more Diamox.

                                                                                *

Some progress. On the way the sun was blinding – even with shades, as I walked thru the market – sun in eyes I saw no faces, no details, just silhouettes coming towards me. My vision went completely a couple of times. I had to stop. Blind for some seconds, before walking, dodging my way with Sally leading me to the Jokhang Temple: Tibet’s holiest shrine: 1300 years old—————–but … on all the drugs, the experience became detached, surreal. I was not there.

                                                                                  *

I had to get out of the room. Getting crazy stuck in bed. I swallowed Diamox and felt okay as I wandered narrow, dusty backstreets – high walls of white-washed stone with black framed, deep inset windows with flowers boxes beneath sills. Many smiling, friendly faces. A few growling dogs; but most lay asleep in the sun. Saw no other foreigners. Met a local woman who invited me into her home. Drunk two yak butter teas, then she offered me stuff for sale. A large ceramic bowl, jewellery … I was starting to shiver. Ended up buying her personal knife. (A small blade with bone handle studded with bits of turquoise in an ornate sheath attached to a solid silver chain clipped around her waist.) She would’ve been in her late 20’s. She’d long black plaited hair threaded with coral and turquoise beads, and a large amber broach above her forehead. She wanted me to stay awhile longer; being suggestive … But I indicated to her – I had to go. I was beginning to shiver uncontrollably, despite it being a sunny day, despite being warmly-dressed and inside her home. Went back to the hotel in a rickshaw with a killer headache. Sal arrived later with grapes and chocolate. (This nightmare would be twice the shit without her.)

                                                                             *

Dave, Ross and Thomas showed up in our room this evening, after each returning from separate trips. Ross had stayed in Gyantse and Shigatse, while Dave abandoned his plan to sneak across the border and into Bhutan. Thomas had gone to the Rongbuk Monastery near the Everest Base Camp, trekking via some villages, but on route the second day he’d unknowingly passed the village he should’ve stayed in that night – his guidebook was inaccurate, and he ended up sleeping on a slope that night! Luckily, he had a minus-20 sleeping bag. He said he’d froze all night, eagerly awaiting dawn.

Sally and I have said good-bye to the others, tomorrow they’re returning to China. All five of us have shared some fun times. Thomas and I were teary-eyed as we said good-bye, well knowing that out of all the chance meetings we’d had over the past 4 months, that this would definitely be the last. (He’s heading onto Beijing for the Trans-Siberian to Moscow, then home to Copenhagen.) It was a touching, see-ya-forever moment.

                                                                                  *

More brief vision loss and days of pill popping, feeling faint, walking slow, restful visits to the Sera Monastery and the Potala – the Dalai Lama’s fortress-palace – and I was feeling okay, not brilliant, but okay with the help of Diamox and Sally’s nurturing.

After 10 days in and out of bed, I was now desperate to travel further, to see and experience a slice of Tibet on my way to Nepal.

FROM MY DIARY:

SAIGON (Ho Chi Minh City): 24th June 1994: Monsoonal torrents drenching the city; rain pounding for hours; damage confined to flooding streets, slower scooters, scattered commuters. Unconfirmed reports indicate that the siege has lifted, that Saigon has been relieved by the sun.

                                                                              *
 
It’s great to be back in Saigon. Am staying in the same hotel. The view from my (4th floor) window shows worn-out urban Asia: shabby, decayed concrete blocks jumbled, half-finished, and continuing to grow, roof-tops with low brick walls and bamboo-scaffolding, balconies sprouting gardens, or boarded-up for extra room. And above this crusted, hap-hazard skyline looms mist and drizzle.
 
All day – splattering.
  Rain and iron.
  Rain and wood.
  Rain and concrete.
  Been rainin’ since I woke … since I woke in this room with a vibe: like G.I Joe has been here before me: bonking with a Vietnamese gal to sound of a storm.
 
Nothin’ seems changed since the Yanks left. Military radar, and row upon row of concrete hangars and miles of old tarmac at Saigon airport. The streets crowded by cyclos (cycle-rickshaws), scooters, bicycles, conical hats … but clearly lacking cars. On the hotel wall the SAIGON TOURIST agency rules state:  

1. Show your passport with valid entry / exit visa at the reception …
2. Do not bring into the hotel: weapons, toxics, explosives …
5. Prostitutes are not allowed in the hotel …
 
Maybe something has changed during the 20 years since the Communist North seized South Vietnam. Once, Saigon was famous for it’s sex.

                                                                                  *

At a cafe I met a woman selling postcards. She wanted to talk. I bought her a bowl of noodles and a Coke for lunch, and during our conversation – in broken English – came her offer of sex. The idea attracted me. (An unexpected mid-day romp … why not?) The problem was being busted by the police – she was afraid. So instead of going back to my hotel she took me to a discreet, family-run place; up some stairs, behind locked doors then into a room overlooking the street; the noise entering thru the shuttered windows as she showered, as I lay on the bed drinking beer, fan-blades swishing at the humidity. I paid for the room. I paid for the beers. I paid her price – 10 American dollars. But I forget her name.
 
She looked younger than her 23 years. Her body tiny, skinny, weakened by the birth of a baby (a year ago). Since then her boyfriend had left; she now lived with her mother. And that afternoon I was drawn into her world, lured by her beautiful but sad gaze, by those eyes of despair.
 
But our encounter brought me more. Whenever we met in the street, she demanded gifts or soft drinks or food. My (lust-induced) goodwill became an unexpected sponsorship. A contract I’d not foreseen. An English-speaking cyclo driver, who I’d befriended and who knew this woman said, “She says, you belong to her”.
 
But I, like G.I Joe, left Saigon to fend for herself.

FROM MY DIARY:

Tonight, as I rest on my bed and write, I feel uneasy, still queasy, you see, I’ve several reasons for feeling sick.   

Earlier I’d bought a hard-boiled egg from a street vendor. I sat on a stool beside her bucket as she cracked the shell, then handed me the spoon to scoop out a well-cooked yoke. Firm white and yellow – but containing the tiny black body of a nearly-born bird. Fuck! I thought. I can’t eat that! I ain’t eating that! I must’ve looked pale: I felt ill. I paid the woman, excusing myself after the first teaspoon of hard-rubber. She smiled. So did I. My first taste of Cambodian street food – this a national delicacy, has killed my desire to eat another egg ( … for many months).
     
This afternoon, I rode on a motorbike along a lonely rural road to arrive at fields of healthy green grass surrounding dozens of dirt pits – littered with decayed human bits, rotting rag and bone poking from the earth; cows grazing as an Autumn breeze swept the spindly coca palms across a cloudy grey day, yet, still the sun shone, there in the chilly vibes of sudden death. There at one of Cambodia’s many Killing Fields.

There stood these signs in the pits:    
 
GRAVE  No. 6:  Mass grave of 450 victims.
GRAVE  No. 5: Mass grave of more than 100 victims. Children and women whose majority were naked.
GRAVE  No. 7:  Mass grave of 166 victims without heads.

I wandered round the Killing Fields with a Cambodian in his 40s (the motorbike-taxi rider; he’d survived the onslaught, his family had not). He pointed to clumps of flax bushes – their large branches edged with hard serrations, and these he said were used by the Khmer Rouge to hack-saw heads off living people (In the Bangkok Post I’d read about recent atrocities in Cambodia; how KR guerillas had hacked-off the heads of Cambodian Army officers with a blunt, rusty saw.)

At the pagoda serving as a memorial to the dead, peering through the glass-side walls were zillions of busted skulls and bones, bits stacked from floor to ceiling. Near this human pagoda a sign read: ” … 86 of the 129 mass graves were unearthed in this extermination camp and 8985 corpse were found … All the victims (peasants, workers, intellectuals, ministers, diplomats, foreigners, women, children) detained and tortured during interrogation at Tuol Sleng (S-21) were later sent to Choueng Ek (where I stand; peaceful farmland) for liquidation … We are absolutely determined not to let this genocidal regime to reoccur in Kampuchea.”       

Down the hotel corridor – amid the early-evening noise flooding from the street – comes the reverberation of a person puking. I anticipate more …and again comes his heave and splatter. Then for a third time, he violently vomits, then blows his nose, raking his throat and gobbing. And me, I still feel sickened. Dead chickens in edible eggs. Decapitated people in pits. Then there’s S-21…
 
A bleak prison camp … one of the interrogation rooms is empty, bar a steel bed-frame. A large photo on the wall shows the same steel bed with a mutilated body upon it – dead, and the floor wet with blood; another victim hacked with rakes, hammers, hoes. It is said that KR guards often laughed, as victims screamed, as skin was torn, shredded, ripped by steel.

                    THE SECURITY REGULATIONS
                     (quoted / translated from the walls of S-21)

 1.  You must answer accordingly to my questions. Don’t turn them away .
 2.  Don’t try to hide the facts by making pretexts this and that. You are strictly prohibited to contest me.
 3.  Don’t be a fool for you are a chap who dare to thwart the revolution.
 4.  You must immediately answer my questions without wasting time to reflect.
 5.   Don’t lie to me either about your immoralities or the essence of the revolution.
 6.   While getting lashes or electrification you must not cry at all.
 7.  Do nothing, sit still and wait for my orders. If there is no order, keep quiet. When I ask you to do  something, you must do it right away without protesting. 
 8.   Don’t make pretexts about Kampuchea in order to hide your jaw of traitor.
 9.   If you don’t follow all the above rules, you shall get many lashes of electric wire.
 10. If you disobey any point of my regulations you shall get either 10 lashes or 5 shocks of electric discharge.

Phnom Penh’s night is noisy and humid as I draw on a joint, as I reflect on the Killings Fields and S-21. Still I feel the vibes, hear the victims, their fear and suffering remains in my head. My $2-a-night room – is a windowless cell; with only a bed and a fan – with only one speed. It rattles fast; whirling and mocking me: chop-chop-chop. (Like them, I could lose my head.) Here on my bed, knees hugging chest, I’m near-blinded. The fluorescent-white-light, the formica-white walls, the shiny-white floor tiles are glaring; as traffic hums, as horns beep / shriek from the street. It’s too much. I try to shut it out, imagining angels singing – suddenly a southern gospel, becomes an air-raid siren, then the sadistic laughter … of prison guards. Everything in my room, in my mind – is tortured. I see cows chomping human-fertilised grass, trees that hack-saw heads, a pagoda of busted, smiling skulls. I am sick from the killing of a country.

Recent U.N. discoveries of more Killing Fields brings the latest estimates of the number of Khmer Rouge victims now at 2 MILLION MURDERED.