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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.

 

 

More than words

June 9, 2011

“What is your name?”

“Do you have family?”

“Where are you from?”

“What is the meaning of hodgepodge?”

I was tutoring English students in Luang Prebang as part of the Big Brother Mouse Literacy Program.

The printed word is rare in Laos. Many children are lucky to have textbooks in school. Very few have ever read a book for fun.

Big Brother Mouse began publishing books in 2006 as a way to change that. The not-for-profit organization makes cheap, accessible books and distributes them all over the country. They host book parties, encourage children to read and demonstrate how reading can improve lives.

But that’s not all. Big Brother Mouse also hosts an open classroom for English practice at their Luang Prabang office. Travelers are encouraged to devote a couple hours each day in helping young students practice their conversational skills. And that’s exactly what I did.

I mostly worked with a 14-year-old named Bousou. Every chance he gets, Bousou rides his bike for over an hour to reach Luang Prabang, hoping that native English speakers will be there for mentoring. Sometimes they are, but often there are no volunteers. Still he continues to pedal to the city, desperate for the opportunity to learn.

When I was first introduced to Bousou, he spoke halting, nervous English. As the hours passed, the words warmed like butter and flowed easily.

“How do you say this words?” We leaned over a workbook with English stories. He pointed to a sentence about a dining room.

These words,” I corrected. “That’s dining room.” We sounded it out. I explained what it meant. He mastered it.

He had more difficulty with the word “lizard.” I don’t know why we were talking about lizards.

Our conversation whipped back and forth, covering school, siblings, families, hopes, dreams. Bousou likes animals, but he has no pets. He doesn’t know if he can afford to go to school much longer. When he grows up, he wants to be a policeman. Someday he would like to visit Vietnam, the most exotic place he can imagine.

He asked me what is the best thing about Laos.

“You,” I said.

Learn more about Big Brother Mouse here. http://www.bigbrothermouse.com/

 

How to make a dream come true

June 2, 2011

First: Make a list of things to do before you die. Realize that you are always inching toward death and still haven’t done a single thing on that list. Decide to do something about it.

Quit your job. Leave home. Travel around the world.

Tell yourself, “If I make it to Ha Long Bay, this trip will be a success.”

Go to Peru. Go to Bolivia. Go to Argentina. Check off some things from the list.

Meet a couple of Americans and drive around South Africa with them. Live in a village. Learn to carry buckets of water on your head. Hike into Lesotho, the country that nobody else has ever heard of.

Go to Uganda. Ride across the country in a minibus with 24 people and a pregnant goat. Get work as a country-western DJ for the local radio station. Learn to harvest rice.

Go to Rwanda. Spend your days teaching English to genocide survivors. Cry. Teach them to play bingo. Laugh.

Fly to Egypt. See your husband for the first time in six months. Find out your grandmother died. Find out your mom is dying. Fall down an endless tunnel of darkness. Hole up in a yoga camp on the Red Sea.

Go to your mother’s funeral. Wrap yourself in a blanket of grief. Return to Egypt on the day a revolution begins. Feel like you’re comatose.

Take a boat to Jordan. Leave when protests begin. Go to Bahrain. Leave when protests begin. Get the nagging feeling that you are creating a trail of destruction around the world.

Go to Ethiopia. Still feel comatose.

Go to India. Love it. Embrace it. Drink in every hot day, every fragrant spice, every bit of eye-popping color. Move into an ashram. Pray.

Go to Thailand. Work with elephants and cuddle tigers. Meet a friend from home in Bangkok. Travel with her to Cambodia. Have a lot of fun. Say goodbye.

Take a bus to Vietnam. Battle Saigon’s scooter-clogged streets and get a feel for the city. Slurp down bowls of noodles. Take a bus north. When the bus breaks down for 12 hours, sleep at a bus station. When the bus works again, it’s the hottest part of the day and the air-conditioning is now broken. Sweat. Make an unplanned stop in a beach town just because you desperately need a shower.

Take more buses. Take a train. Sleep in a dirty train car on soiled sheets. Arrive in Hanoi.

Schedule a boat tour. Pack up. Get picked up at 7 a.m.

Go to Ha Long Bay.

 

Spend a night on a boat.

 

Jump off the boat and into the ocean.

 

Swim in emerald green water.

 

Lap up the sunset.

 

Live your dream.

 

Elephant in the room

April 20, 2011

“Non. Too sad,” said Random French Dude, dismissing me with a wave of his hand.

I was in a ramshackle outdoor bar in Pai, Thailand, having drinks with some stray travelers. They asked about my weeklong experience volunteering with elephants.

“Were these animals sick? Injured?” Random French Dude asked.

“Yes, most of them have had difficult lives,” I said. “Some of them still have injuries from abuse. But they’re happy now. The park is a sanctuary.”

“Non. I do not like that kind of thing,” he said, scowling. “I like happy things only.”

“Oui,” his friend nodded, then lit the end of a Marlboro.

Random French Dude proceeded to tell me about his recent two-hour elephant trek, in which a metal seat was strapped to an animal’s back, carving out deep, raw divots in its hide. A guide led the creature by hammering a metal hook into its neck.

Oh, yes. That sounds sooo happy.

As a volunteer, I spent a week at Elephant Nature Park, located about an hour outside of Chiang Mai. Our group of 30-some volunteers was split into smaller clusters that rotated chores throughout the week.

Sometimes we chopped corn, which is a delicious elephant snack. Other times we scrubbed bathtubs full of produce, since the pesticides on watermelon rind and squash skin could hurt delicate elephant tummies.

Elephant kitchen. And you thought I ate a lot.

 

We shoveled elephant dung, we dug mud pits, we prepared squishy food for elephants with bad teeth, we even patched the potholed road that leads to the sanctuary. Twice a day we helped feed the gentle giants, and every afternoon we took them into the river for a bath.

Rub-a-dub.

 

Overall, it was a memorable and magical experience.

What impressed me most about Elephant Nature Park is that they never solicited donations for themselves. Instead, they taught visitors and volunteers about the issues plaguing Asian elephants, they encouraged us to tell others, and they asked us to get involved in whatever way possible. Their message wasn’t focused on the park — it was all about the animals.

Happy mudpit elephants.

 

The huge problem for elephants began when the Thai government banned logging in the 1990s, putting thousands of elephants out of work. Likewise, elephant mahouts (handlers) had few options. They could abandon their animals, sell them to trekking companies or panhandle with the elephants on street corners.

So an out-of-work elephant, begging for a tiny baggie of fruit, is not an uncommon sight on the streets of Chiang Mai and Bangkok. Though the practice is technically illegal, the police often turn a blind eye. Meanwhile, the elephants are stressed and agitated from the traffic, lights, congestion and noise of the cities. They rock back and forth, a sign of distress.

The elephants lucky enough to get work with a trekking company face grueling labor. They often don’t receive the proper food or veterinary care. When injured, they aren’t allowed enough time to heal. Their backs are blistered and wounded from metal chairs, their spines compromised by heavy loads, their skin wounded from beatings with metal hooks.

Weepy eye.

 

The elephants also go through a brutal taming process before they interact with humans. This involves squeezing a young elephant into a small cage and keeping the animal chained for weeks at a time, poking it with sharp objects and beating it with sticks. After enough abuse, the spirit is effectively broken. In the end, the elephant is dominated.

This elephant stepped on a landmine.

 

Compounding these issues is the fact that elephant numbers are dwindling. At the start of the 20th Century there were 100,000 elephants in Thailand. Now there are about 3,000.

As Random French Dude says, too sad.

As I say, screw that.

Real change can only be achieved by recognizing injustice and refusing to close your eyes. It means purposely looking at the sadness in the world and making a conscious effort to help.

The good thing is that Elephant Nature Park didn’t turn away. They are a haven for glorious creatures who have already lived difficult lives. Their goal is not only to take in wounded animals, but to eradicate the cycle of abuse and exploitation. Their guiding philosophy is kindness.

Roam if you want to. And if you’re a big freaking elephant.

 

Nom nom nom.

 

“Muffy, shall I make another pitcher of mimosas?”

 

Volunteering there was worthwhile not just because I helped smooth over ugliness. Rather, I witnessed the wild beauty of freedom — and that’s something extraordinary. Not sad.

Nobody puts baby (elephant) in a corner.

 

Interested in visiting or volunteering with Elephant Nature Park? Get more info over here. Visitors can make day trips or stay overnight for up to eight days. Volunteers can stay for many weeks. I paid nearly $400 to volunteer for one week, and that included accommodation and three delicious (mostly vegan!) buffet meals per day.

Kissy kissy.

 

I also got to kiss elephants every day, which is priceless.

A self-portrait with an elephant is impossible.

 

 

B-I-N-G-O!

December 10, 2010

I was trying to come up with an interesting method reviewing numbers with my English students in Kigali, Rwanda.

Bingo!

I’ve never given too much thought to the game until I started making cards from scratch. (Like, why there is a free square? I’m still puzzling over that.) But I had a hunch this would be a great way to integrate learning with fun.

Armed with my new paper cards and a jar full of bottle caps, I was ready to go.

And so were they.

The most best part of the lesson: Teaching everyone to stand up and scream, “BINGO!” when they have five bottle caps in a row.

As prizes, I bought a stack of English-Kinyarwandan pocket dictionaries. The books are intended for tourists in Rwanda, but they contain enough practical English phrases that my students can use.

The game was a definitive hit. So much so that I made new cards, using words they’ve learned instead of numbers. (In addition to helping them quickly recognize written words, the winner had to define each word on their card for the class.)

My class wanted to play round after round, begging me to extend class just a few more minutes … and then a few minutes more.

Of course, bingo here means much more than bingo. My class is made up of people who have had trouble making ends meet ever since the 1994 genocide. Now they come to the school to learn a trade, like sewing, jewelry making and basket weaving. With some English under their belts, they can sell their goods at the market, local gift shops and hotels, as well as communicate with tourists and visitors.

Here bingo is not just a game — it’s a ticket to something better.

And I couldn’t be more proud of them.