Laos into China

I flew into Laos and I had some plans to explore the town, which I still got to do, just not in the way I anticipated.

When I first landed I was stuck in line for 1-2ish hours getting my visa on arrival and stamp in. They were not that quick about it. It wasn’t to bad though, because there Canadians in front of me and Americans behind me to talk with.

I split a van with some of them into the main part of Luang Prabang where we flew into. Upon, flying in it felt as if we were dropping right into a secluded remote valley. In a way, as I would learn, that’s pretty much how Laos is.

In town I went first to a tourist agency to see it I could get a price for a bus ticket from Luang Prabang to Kunming, China. She told be there would be no buses for the next several days because of the Chinese New year. That totally freaked me out because if that’s the case I would miss all of the Chinese trains I had already booked.

Determined not to give up I took a tuktuk to the actual bus station where the girl working said there would be a bus tomorrow morning, which is what I had planned on. I still wasn’t confident in her reply, but still least I had some hope now. Then from the bus station I got back to the town center to look for a place to stay.

Needless to say, I learned a lesson in the cultural significances of Chinese New year in Laotian communities. Since a lot of Lao people have Chinese ties or we’re originally Chinese immigrants the entire family had come to visit and in turned booked all the hostels and hotels right up. So 3 older, probably mid 50s, Canadians and I searched for 4 hours walking up and down every street in order to find a place. I got quoted $90 for a place and they heard quotes for $200 plus! Let’s remember that a hostel in laos, much like Thailand should cost from $3-12. So those prices were absolutely absurd!

I did get a chance to check out the local stadium. Incidentally on my way to the bus station at 6am I met a European player under a pro contact with the local team heading to practice. We shared a tuktuk.

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Laos into China

If there’s a Mountain…

…I’m gonna climb it.

Just a note, this is pretty much a short essay on thoughts that came to me in the park and while running.

If there’s a Mountain

I got out of work a little early today, so I decided to go to the park early and get my workout done and out of the way with. However, when I got there I felt compelled to sit down a park bench and think. So that’s what I did.

As I sat there I asked myself, “How did I get here?” I am sitting at Lumphini Park in the middle of Bangkok in 95 degree heat during February while back home there is likely several feet of snow and certainly below freezing temperatures. So how did this happen? How did I get from Chicago, 134 days ago, to this park bench in Bangkok?

It’s a pretty easy answer, to be honest. Anyone can read through my blog to see the different places and modes of transportation I took to get here. But I guess my questions more lies in why rather than how. So why did I decided to do this? Why do I decide to do a lot of the things I do?

The more I thought about the why of my journey the more I started to think about the why of everything in my life. Why do I truly decide to do anything I do? My first initial answer to the why of this trip was, I simply felt compelled to. It was one of those deep down, better do it or you’ll regret it, type of feeling that made me just know this is what I should be doing. I have a lot of those feelings, but I’ve never really contemplated them.

Now, with this sudden realization, I am looking at some of the biggest decisions and “mountains” I’ve climbed in my life and I’m suddenly racing back to them and asking why?

Looking back, as a kid you don’t really get to make a lot of your own decisions, so some of my first memories of these “mountains” I decided to climb surface in high school. Wrestling was the biggest mountain, by far and away, I decided to climb in high school. Then in college, for whatever reason, I felt compelled to graduate in 3 years. I thought, “why not?” I also felt compelled to climb as quickly as I could in my college athletic department as well. It was in college that I felt compelled to go to Nicaragua alone at age 19 resulting in my first backpacking experience. On this trip, however, the major compulsion was to get in a Muay Thai ring; not just as an artifice or gimmick, but to really mean it.

Now, with these previous “mountains” in my head I really start to question the why for each one. If anything I determined my biggest goal in life is to be all that God created me to be, and if by my own sheer laziness or lack of effort I fail to squeeze any amount of talent and ability from the gifts I was blessed with than it would only be a shame and considered a loss.

So to me each of these “mountains” came with the same goal, but maybe different initial motives. Wrestling just seemed like a given since my oldest brother, Clifton, wrestled. Graduating college early seemed a given as well, because if I could put in more effort why wouldn’t I? Taking 4 years would have been like climbing a mountain in a blizzard, but instead of hurrying and summiting quickly to minimize time in the storm deciding to take a casual stroll up instead. Well, maybe not that extreme, but you get my point. When I consider trying to climb the ladder in my college athletic department, I’m not quite sure what my motives were. I hardly know what I want to do with my life now, so it surely wasn’t to achieve a dream or goal of being an athletic director. While parts of me may like that Idea, my conclusion is that this mountain got climbed simply because it was the only “mountain” in front of me. The trip to Nicaragua was an attempt to push me outside of my comfort zone and climb a “mountain” of personal development.

After running those thoughts through my mind I think I am finally ready to tell you why I am sitting here on this park bench in the middle of Bangkok. I ended up half way a crossed the world with 20 new stitches and a professional Muay Thai fight under my belt simply because I needed another mountain…

I mentioned early I still am not entirely sure what I want to do with my life, so what’s the point in rushing up a mountain that might not have the view I’m looking for? I know parts of me still wondered what athletic talent and ability I still had to prove. I am obsessed with being all that God created me to be, and it sure would be a shame to be 60 years old and wonder what if.

The real reason I have been missing from home and been gallivanting around the globe is because it seemed like the best mountain at the time. And, truthfully, it still seems like the best mountain. While I’m not at the top yet, the views along the way have been nothing short of breathtaking. From here I have nothing else to do, but continue climbing. I’ll let you know when I get to the top….

If there’s a Mountain…

Last Week in Thailand

It seems I’m coming to the close of another chapter. This approaching Saturday (February 17th) I’ll be flying to Luang Prabang in Laos. While I’ve been in and out of the country a couple of times, I’ve spent a total of about 4 months in Thailand and it has been a crazy adventured filled journey. Looking back on it seems like a lifetime instead of a mere 4 months. I couldn’t have ever predicted the things I would do and how the journey would unfold.

Thailand Recap

Getting sentimental, I remember my first week in Thailand. I came over by bus from Cambodia. I spent a day in Bangkok and then really enjoyed myself in the unbelievable islands in southern Thailand. There I met so many awesome to people to adventure with and I even stepped into the ring for the first time. If you didn’t see the post, there was a bar on the island that had a Muay Thai ring. If you volunteered to fight another amateur volunteer you both got a free bucket of alcohol, so that was a win-win. It’s fun to look back at that video and compare it to my actual fight video. Definitely learned a few things since then!

Then it was all Chiang Mai for the rest. In this post I recapped my time there. Chiang Mai was one of the most incredible experiences of my life. Even if things didn’t go exactly how I planned (20 total stitches later), I wouldn’t have it any other way. I remember my struggles finding an apartment there in the beginning. That’s when I first experienced the extreme kindness of the Thai people. There was that time I bike up a mountain only to get there an hour later than I anticipated at dark. The ensuing ride down a mountain at night on a bike with questionable brakes is something I won’t ever forget either. My experiences with the church there are something I will also cherish in my heart forever. Then there was my fight, the main reason for me coming to Thailand. From those major highlights to everything in between I have nothing but fondness for the country and people of Thailand!

Current Updates

Like I said this is my last week working here in Bangkok. Just a couple more days of working filming English lessons. The flight to Laos is on the companies dime to which is nice! Since I am going to be on the road for a long time I thought I’d spend my last weekend relaxing.

On the walk after spending the day at the pool.

I didn’t work Friday and just spent a good chunk of the day in the park reading and watching Netflix. After being so lazy on Friday I decided to go to a hotel to sneak into there pool for a chill Saturday. First hotel I tried I walked right in and got to the pool no questions asked. One of my many privileges traveling and being white and being a native English speaker. I forgot to take pictures at the pool, but it was nice on a rooftop with a nice skyline view! I did some reading there as well.

Then today (Sunday), I headed to the Channel 7 Boxing Stadium. This is one of the top Muay Thai stadiums in Bangkok, and all the matches are televised. It was almost like a TV studio/stadium. Since they get there money from TV ticket prices were free compared to the approximate $30 US I’d have to spend to go to one of the other top stadiums.

In classic Thai style, even though these guys are top level pros, they are cooling down outside on some chairs right outside the entrance. No locker rooms in Thailand I guess. In the video I am posting below you can here the bookies screaming, another part of classic Thai culture.

…and that’s the week! Next post I could be in Laos!

Last Week in Thailand