Sunday 1 September 2013

Bhutan to Scotland.....

Recent article posted on the Bhutan Canada Foundation site. 


As I stride on into my next adventure in Scotland, thoughts stray back often to Bhutan. Whenever I see that picture of my house up on the hill, nestled in jungle, light streaming down the valley, I fly back there and hear the chirrups, smell the lush clean high air, hear the voices of the kids from downstairs, the creak of my floorboards, smell the earthy woodness of my home, see the mists rolling up, loitering over the school, drifting towards me. The walk to school is something I will always remember - 10 minutes of disappearing into the forest, birds of prey 20ft above me, water trickling and gulping around me, gravel crunching, then breaking out into a chorus of smiles as I ventured into the school. Such great friends made, such good times had, despite the difficulties that every now and then felt as tho they were besetting me. All growth. Extension. Experience. I hear now of teachers going back, some to teach, some to visit, and I wish I'd managed it before leaving Asia, but at the same time, it's probably not going anywhere.

Now I'm in Scotland, having somewhat landed on my feet in a very good school in the countryside (I've heard it referred to as remote several times... remote it ain't!). Who knows what's coming next. Trips into the mountains, no doubt, and hopefully, visits from friends :-)

Dollar Academy - my new school

View From My New Home

That's My Home Up There on the Left

Up on the left Again... passing in a blur
  

Wednesday 24 July 2013

From Kathmandu to Manchester... Reflections of Asia

All things come to an end. All things must begin. Nothing stands still. 
I left Kathmandu nearly two months ago and haven't written a thing here since. Should I stop blogging? Maybe I should. But I can't leave the Bhutanical Adventure hanging from a paraglider like I did. Here's a blog for all the amazing people I met along the way on the streets, cities, villages, fields, mountains and airports of Asia.

As I cast glances back over the last 16 months it's interesting to see what comes bubbling up from recall first. Inevitably, it's people. I've never really understood the 'bomb around the world fast as you can ticking off sights' type of travelling. Temples are buildings, stones neatly arranged, often stunning, always symbolic with stories that go back far and inevitably have some interesting or disturbing aspects to them, but no matter how striking their sunset silhouettes, no matter how compelling their symbols and stories might be, there's no actual life in them; they don't look back at you. They don't question or challenge or reach out to you the way a person does.


So what do I see in those first flash images of remembering? I see Charles and the staff of the Atlanta gathered on the street to wave me off. I see my friend Arvind splayed out asleep on the floor, taking a break from his own wild party, Mayoor harmonising with me on Across the Universe, my friend 'Satan' rolling his eyes.

Bee and Om leaning lazily on Baby Rasta'a counters. Hari's character transforming  as the first glass of rice wine hits his belly. Sipping outrageously expensive red wine with Sigi in the Garden of Dreams or tucking into yet another Red Snapper with the American lad who wanted me to help him overcome his fear of fish. 


Martin and Tara diving deeper than I ever could do to get the scuba mask I let fall into the tropical waters. Being smashed against the rocks with Linnea. The BCF-ers, cocktails in hand, dancing madly to 'Firework' in Mark's living room. The buzz of the couple of hours spent playing with a band in Thimphu. Ashley laughing, Iman, laughing, Reidi, laughing, Martha making weird noises (rest in peace you beautiful and funny soul). 



Gold-panners in Burma showing off their haul, the kids shouting out A for Apple at the top of their voices, drowned out by all the other classes crammed into the 1-room school. The mysterious Snow telling me she loves me and me not believing her (!). Ayurveda acolytes assaulting me with endless reductions to vata-pitta-kapha. Noorin's surprise birthday jollies. Late night narrative structure conversations with screenwriters on the streets of Bangkok. Devouring Chinese New Year fish with Zoe. 


Epic snooker-a-thons with New Yorkers in backrooms of Burmese bars. The walk to the waterfall that wasn't there. Strangers approaching with probably menace through the late-night haze of Kathmandu. Desperate runs through Bangalore to save friends in trouble, policemen like robots, impervious to my rage. Paranoid Cumbrian climbers. Endless games of chess. Paul and his big planets, trying to sell me his shoes! The way Robyn giggled at every one.

The way my crazy Russian friend sang 'Start Wearing Purple' as he prepared the infamous Russian Smoking Machine that I never tried (his disappointment at my polite refusals). Riding through the jungle in the exhaust fumes of people I hardly knew, no clear idea where we were going. The monk who saved me when I was lost in the jungles of Myanmar (3am) and the music festival stumbled upon prior to my addled walk into nowhere. The kid with the tattoo tears who killed a man in prison and taught me some moves. French-gypsy guitar madness in the reggae bar.

Ahsley throwing her arms around me and planting a smacker as i took my final taxi to my final plane home...

...the list could go on and will never be complete. Thanks to everybody who made this latest adventure more sparkly than it might have otherwise been. You're all fabulous. I hope to see you all again. 


What drew me home? Family. Friends. My new nephew!!! And the next grand adventure of life, whatever it may be... 
     

Thursday 11 April 2013

Paragliding in Nepal

Flying...



Tuesday 9 April 2013

Out of India and into Nepal

Well. India happened pretty quickly and with hardly any blogging. It was bonkers. I'll try to cover it quickly here and leave room later for some reflections. This is quick - I've got to dash with no sparing of the horses. Time for my first bullet-point blog...

1) It was hot. Too hot. Nothing to do but die in the afternoon hot. That hot. Sweaty me.

2) I went in to a recording studio one very hot afternoon with an ice cream and met two fabulous fellows and we turned the random trip into a commitment of sorts - a day of recording. This was traumatic. I had completely forgotten how dead a 'dead room' sounds. Like your singing into a piece of concrete. So I had a hard time digging out any kind of feeling, but I think we got there in the end. Should hear the tracks in a week or so. Good version of the Hat Song, one hopes, and another one I wrote about returning home from an all-nighter with the girl of your dreams, only to find out she's dreaming about the guy of her dreams. Who is not you. Oh dear.

3) The toilet hose is a magnificent invention and should be exported into our culture. I may export it into my bathroom if I ever get one.

4) The couch surfing guys I met opened my eyes to couch surfing, which is a good thing to have one's eyes opened to and a far more engaging and connecting way to see places - straight to the locals, but straight to more broad-minded and open-hearted folk generally.

5) The police are painfully useless. Sorry, but I found myself screaming vitriol into an officers face while a friend of mine was in serious trouble and he was doing nothing whatsoever about it. He somehow managed to keep smiling afterwards. Awkwardly, I hope, but still. Smiling. And doing nothing.

6) India has a remarkable amount of people. Remarkable and unmanageable. I can't imagine how governance works here, but then again, from conversations I've had and from experiences too, I'm led to believe that it sorta doesn't.

7) I rode a jet ski for the first time

Now I'm in Nepal. It is COOL. Temperature-wise. 

This is the culmination of the dream and I've patiently waited 15 months to go see the big mountains, having been tantalized by their proximity during my time in Bhutan but given no opportunity to get close. So tomorrow I'm rafting and camping. The day after I'm paragliding near the Annapurnas. Next week I head out to Langtang with a port/guide for 3 weeks of trekking. Of course, I've got my back problems to worry about, but drawing inspiration from Jane McGonigal, I've devised an ingenious gaming strategy to minimise my discomfort and defeat my evil nemesis... the sciatica. It''s all about keeping them discs happy and grabbing as many power-ups as you can ;-)

For those of you who haven't heard her remarkable story - click here... 

Jane McGonigal

(http://www.ted.com/talks/jane_mcgonigal_the_game_that_can_give_you_10_extra_years_of_life.html)

(why is everything suddenly so remarkable?)

Monday 18 March 2013

Relaxing in the Great City of Bangalore

I'm in Bangalore. It's great. I'm staying with a few friends. One is Mayoor. I met him in Bhutan when he was couch-surfing in Gedu with Professor Istvan, the Professor in question being the closest and pretty much only 'westerner' friend near my school in Pakshikha. One day he arrived with Istvan, clomping along the feeder track and, finding me well-disposed to the offering of tea to pilgrims, he tarried a while and we became friends. He stayed again on the way back from his travels, filled my hard-drive with some of the best films ever made and then kindly offered me his couch whenever it might come in handy. I took the offer very seriously and now here I am in Bangalore. 

The other guy is Arvind. His home seems to be a nexus of the international couch-surfing community and a social hub in the local area - a great place to hang out and find good conversation or sneak up to the roof terrace for a spot of reading or the figuring out of a song. In short, it's the perfect place to take a rest from the whizziness of India and find some inspiration. 

Next week I have a job interview for a position I'm really keen on. I need to get work starting in September so I can enjoy my own work and the travel, but this one is a really good one that excites me. Fingers crossed. Tomorrow I'll leave all my stuff here and travel light to Goa, where I could rent another bike and spend a few days exploring the coastline and the countryside. I'll be back here for the Holi festival - a nationwide technicolour snowball fight of bright powders. 

Having met two very amusing and seemingly talented music producers this afternoon, I may record a few tracks before I move on, just to bottle the songs that I wrote in Bhutan, and because its fun to go into studios, especially when it doesn't cost hundreds of pounds per day! This notion got me thinking about music a bit and I dug out some old recordings. 

Here's one... a live-ish version of By The River, and incidentally the one I remember my mother saying she liked the best. Apparently the song suited my singing. A convenient happenstance.



Wednesday 6 March 2013

An Idiot Abroad - First Travels in India


So I'm in India. In Calicut, Kerala, to be precise, and the getting here was anything but straightforward. Before I hopped over the ocean from Bangkok to Chennai, fellow traveler folk kept saying the same things about India to me over and over again, focusing on the relative difficulty of travelling in such an outrageously big, unregulated and poorly infrastructured 'country'. It is staggering that a landmass this huge and varied can get by with just one central government and that everybody takes its authority seriously! How can they possibly govern? Small is beautiful, they say, and something this massive is just plain daft, any notions of government fundamentally unfit for purpose.

Anyway, comments from friends and fellow teachers in Bhutan, along with the general banter that you hear 'on the road', made me question whether or not I really wanted to do this - travel in India, a place of caste systems and dowries, of commonplace and 'acceptable' destitution, where the ratio of men to women is 10:1 (I have been told this twice but haven't checked it out), and where the hottest news stories all seem to focus around the rapes that are purportedly commonplace. I'd seen evidence of most of this on forays over the border from Bhutan, but I'd also seen the colour, the vibrancy and felt the buzzy energy that people get hooked on. It was time to have a go, I decided, and besides, one of the Canadian teachers from Bhutan is currently studying Ayervedic massage in Kannur and needs 'models' to practice on. Off I verily went...

Chennai was big and dusty and looked exactly the same as Jaigon, the border town with Bhutan, only bigger. The same mounds of festering rubbish filled the streets, the air was a cloying fug of exhaust fumes and food, everybody seemed to be busy buying or selling something with furrowed brows. But nobody hassled me at all. I took a 3 hour walk around the city and not one person approached me. The next day, it took only 20 minutes of the 45 autorickshaw drive to the bus station for my eyes to start stinging from the pollution. Happy to leave Chennai behind, I boarded an Aircon sleeper bus at 8pm for Kodaikanal, a mountain retreat town where the temperature would be lower and the pollution less!

I had hoped to sleep. I didn't. Every time the bus lurched around a corner I nearly fell out of the narrow bunk, and with my backpack wedged in at the foot of the bed, I couldn't properly stretch out. I ended up watching Amelie on my laptop and then catching a few hours kip before arriving at 5am in the refreshingly cold air of Kodai.

Three days later, I left Kodai for Calicut, but this is where the idiot in me found ascendency. To be fair, regular injections of lies and misinformation by Indians didn't help. Trains are hard to book in India. For one thing, they're always full because there's simply too many people here. For another, you can't book them online if you don't have contact details in India. Thirdly, you have to know where your train came from and where its final destination is in order to book a segment of its route. I decided to put my fate on this first occasion in the hands of a booking agency. They told me the trains were all full, but noted that the third class air con sleeper carriage only had one person on the waiting list.

'What happens if the waiting list doesn't clear?'
'You will be accommodated – 101% sure.'

He told me that a waiting list of 1 would usually clear, and I saw that in other classes, there were waiting lists of up to 50, so it seemed reasonable. He told me that if it didn't clear, then seats are always held back in different classes for emergencies, and that even more seats were held back for idiots abroad. I had 3 chances, hence his 101% surety.

The first stage of the travel was a 3 hour public bus to Pakapal (or similar) at 12pm, followed by a 2 hour bus to Coimbature, where the train to Calicut would be waiting. At 11:30am I was still in the post office waiting (reasons of delay: unknown) to send a parcel of wooden toys for my nephew. Priorities David!!! It was in this post office with the clock ticking that I realised I didn't have the pen drive with my friend's contact details on. I walked briskly back to the internet cafe where the agency was and, lo and behold, it was still there. Phewee – an early reprieve for the idiot. I took a motorbike taxi back, hurled the parcel into the international parcel-shifting leviathon and then jumped onto my bus for a 3 hour bounce down to the plains.

Pakapal. As I disembarked, the bus driver called me back. I'd left my Nalgene water bottle and fancy karabiner on the bus. Thanks!!! Idiot reprieve number 2. I found the connect and had 50mins to wait, so I wedged my big pack in behind some seats on the bus and indulged in a chai in a nearby stall that gave me a good view of the bus and my bag that was sequestered therein. Then the bus started moving. People started piling in. The bus was leaving. I leapt from my chair and bolted out across the tarmac, leaving behind a half-drunk chai... and my Nalgene bottle... AGAIN. Only this time I had no way of getting it back. Idiot abroad; Nalgene bottle lost forever. Irritating misinformation: that was not 50mins at all! It was less than 10.

Coimbature. I had to get across town to the train station and a couple of policemen kindly told me the way. I made my way through the backstreets in the darkening twilight, cursing the bottle of wine and the chocolates I'd brought from Bangkok as a gift to my friend in Calicut. I hate travelling with a big bag, the immobility, the sweatiness and the spectacle of it. It was dark when I reached the train station. I made my way to the information kiosk:

'I have this ticket. Is it okay?'

She checked a computer, smiling. Then she scribbled something on the paper I'd given her and the smile vanished.

'WL3'

Which meant – Waiting List: 3. There had only been 1 there when I bought it! But no, she told me, there had been 5. It was there clearly enough on the ticket if you knew where to look and could understand the code: WL5. In the time it had taken the booking agent in Kodai to march across town and book the ticket, 4 more people had jumped the queue ahead of me, a fact that the booking agent had made no reference to whatsoever. I wonder how this would have affected his 101% surety? It didn't escape my notice that 5 going down to 3 was the same as 2 going down to zero – that I would have been on the train had the waiting list information I'd booked with been correct. The information woman directed me to the booking kiosks. Off I trundled.

When I finally reached the front of the line, sweaty and heavy, I handed my ticket over and asked the same question:

'I have this ticket. Is it okay?'

He asked for 60 Rupee. I gave it to him. Best not to quibble.

'This ticket... It's okay?'

'Yes.'

'It is valid?'

'Yes.'

Irritating misinformation. Outright lie.

On the platform I asked around and two security guards told me to stick with them, that they'd help me. When the train came they ushered me onto the 3rd class AC and told me to wait until the ticket man came – he would accommodate me. But the ticket man was a busy individual, and, to my chagrin, the grumpiest man I've thus far met abroad. After waiting for nearly 15 mins I pushed gently through a small crowd of refuge seeking kow-towers and proffered my ticket.

After a summary glance:

'No chance.'

'What?'

'No chance. No vacancy.'

'Well, what do I do?'

'No vacancy. Go away.'

So I did. With no where else to go, I sat by a bin/sink combo at the end of the carriage and read some of Rupert Sheldrake's book about the failings of science to see through its own axiomatic dogma and take itself seriously. It's a credit to Rupert that I was so easily distracted from stink of the bin and the dollop of curry 3 inches from my feet that seemed to move when you didn't look at it, freeze when you did.

All of a sudden the security guards were looming over me with expressions of confusion. At the precise moment I looked up, the ticket man came through the other door, and there we all were, players in a dumb farce all staring at each other.

'I have no idea where to go or what to do.' I said. Honesty seemed the best policy.

'You can't stay here. You must go.' The grumpy ticket man replied.

The chief security guard laid his hand on the ticket man's arm, but there was no shifting him.

'You must go to general class.'

'Where is it?'

'All the way down. Just keep going.'

General class. It sounded ominous. I picked up my stupidly big bag and started walking the length of the train. For anyone who has never seen the trains of India, they stretch from one end of the galaxy to the other at least, if not further. Some scientists, unable to measure them using the tools available at the time, mistakenly ascribed to them the quality of being infinite. And like everywhere else in India, they are rammed with people, with corridors narrow enough to permit the movement of one person at a time. I donned my finest and most polite Englishman-abroad voice and I do beg your pardoned myself all the way down the train. Everybody was very nice to me.

Pushing through a throng of people I came to a dead end. Where is general class? I was told that it was sectioned off, that you can only get there by getting off the train and walking down the platform. My fears about general class were compounded; it was isolated from the rest of the train.

In the little crannie where the door would have been to the next compartment, I spied a space, the only one I'd seen that was big enough to accommodate me and my bags. I pushed my way through and put my big bag up against one wall. Against the other, I put my small bag, and then, with ass on big bag and feet on small, I wedged myself in and closed my eyes. The air was full of filth. I was sitting next to two toilets. Every time a door opened, a cloud of human waste gas came spilling out to surround me. Why? I thought to myself. Why do people do this?

At the next station I jumped off and walked down the platform, but where General Class was supposed to be, I found what could well be described as a Final Solution transport carriage, except it had windows. People were crammed in standing, as packed as a tube in King's Cross at rush hour, spilling out. There was no way I'd be able to get myself and my bags on. My only other option was the toilet-jam, or finding somewhere else illegal to be on the train, with the likelihood of being shifted again or booted off. Just then a chap I recognised from the throng by the toilet doors approached me and told me he was taking a bus, that he hadn't got a ticket at all and was thus being booted ashore. His destination was the same as mine.

'How long will it take?'

'3 hours.'

Irritating misinformation. It would take 6 hours. I didn't know this. I decided to trust him and off we went on an autorickshaw across town to a bus stand. I still do not even know the name of the place. Thus began an unexpected 6 hour ordeal through the night. It was 11pm. I'd left at 12 noon. I wouldn't arrive at Calicut until 4am, but there my worries would not end. As soon as I boarded this bus I dug out the pen drive to get my friend's phone number, and it was then that I realised the biggest mistake had been kept from me until the end... she wasn't even in Calicut. She lived in a town called Kannur, another hour's bus journey from Calicut. The scale of my idiocy was immense. I finally knocked on her door at 5:30 am, exhausted and desperate for good sleep.

My first two journeys in India were both, in their own ways, pretty rubbish. I made enough mistakes along the way to be held responsible but I was also continually led astray by this strange culture of giving advice when the giver has none to give, or of giving wrong information for reasons I can't quite fathom.

Kannur is a good reward and a great place to recover for such a strange journey. The people here are laid back and the massages are free and plentiful. I get unctions shoved up my nostrils that burn down to my neck and make me cough up 'kapha'. I swim beneath a full moon in the Arabian Sea. There's still rubbish strewn everywhere, along the beach, piled up beneath cliffs, as if living in paradise is just too much for people to bear and they feel compelled to spoil it by soiling it. Oh, and the beach is longer than an Indian train.

Saturday 2 March 2013

For the Lovely People of Pakshikha...

This one's for all my friends in Pakshikha MSS. A new year begins, and I'm not there, so here's a meander down memory lane. What a great time I had with such fantastic people. Hopefully I'll be back to say hello, shoot some dice and have a good dance-off, but my fate in that regard is in the hands of others.

This is nearly 10mins long! I make no excuses because the year was, well, much longer, and lots of stuff happened.


Sunday 17 February 2013

The Surgical Removal of My Physics... a Magic Bean

Surgical Removal of Physics!

What's he on about? 

You may well ask this question and you'd be right to do so. 

I've had a lump on my head for a long time - probably 5 or 6 years at least. A sabacious cyst. Something to do with hair follicles, but I think it's genesis had something to do with me getting my head kicked in during the final of the Gloucestershire League Cup Final. Some thug drove his bladed boot into my noggin and the cut went right through to the bone on my forehead, severing the nerves to one side of my head. I was numb of there for months, and when I rubbed the Poetter-esque scar later, I woulld feel the same rub mysteriously rendered by a phantasmal finger on the top of my head.... in the same placce where the lump developed. Coincidence? Who knows. It was freaky though. 

I never really minded my lump. I enjoyed having an obvious deformity. 

People would say: "You have a lump on your head". 
I'd say: "I know". 

Sometimes I'd detect a disapproving tone in their voice, which made me like my lump even more. For this reason, I kept it: 

'Yes, I may have a funny lump on my head that makes you feel a bit icky for some reason, but you must love me anyway.

Or tolerate me. Or do whatever you'd normally do to someone like me without a lump. Perhaps I took my lump too seriously. With tender love and care, my lump grew and grew atop my already funny-shaped head. When students or teachers would ask me what it was, I would give them a conspiratorial look and whisper: 

"It's where I keep my physics". 

My second brain, an add-on, a physics plug-in. 

I was in the gym a while back (crazy but true) rowing myself stupid as if I was Andy Kirkpatrick preparing his neglected body for a month for a month of vertical wall scramblinngs. When I desweated myself with a towel I spied blood. Holy moly! All that hard rowing had obviously angered my little lump. Benign lumps are fine; angry ones are not. So I went to hospital and, after having a health-screening that confirmed I was generally as fit as a fiddle (aside from the chronic pain in my back that doesn't register in tests), I paid a splendidly ludicrous sum of hard cash to a polite doctor who numbed my head with a needle, cut a hole and, with much scraping and yanking, pulled out what looked like a baked bean with all the tomato sauce washed off. 

Honestly. A bean. It may have been magic. I'll never know. She threw it away.

It is perculiar to feel somebody cutting away at your head, to feel the scrape of metal on bone, but to have no pain. I could hear it and feel the tugs and vibrations, but without the alarm bells of my nervous system sounding in what I imagine would have been rather unpleasant fashion, I was strangely divorced from the event. It was happening 'up there' behind me, to somebody else. What a glorious thing anaesthesia is. And hospitals in general.  Good ones. Ones that make you feel like you're in Star Trek. The newer ones, obviously.

So. Now I'm lumpless. No longer will my climbing helmet press all of it's weight onto one raised divet on my skull. No longer will people pass comment on the shape of my head (probably not true - one of my best friends told me I had a head the shape of an alien). When I reach up to give my old friend a companionable pat, I feel nothing but stitches, the sad signature of a magic bean that is no more, a magic travelling bean that has move on to new adventures without me.

But will I lose my physics? This is my concern. I shall have to test myself and find out.

Friday 15 February 2013

Burma by Bike - The Road Movie




I can thoroughly recommend them. Zach is a legend.

Wednesday 13 February 2013

Burma by Bike... the Road to Mandalay

It's been a while. Why? Because I've been working hard on finishing Jacks. It's going well. I'm pulling 7 hour days of scribbling in The Atlanta, working through the chapters, sewing the complicated threads that hold the funny shaped book together. It's slightly weirdifying and I'll be glad when its over, but I'm thankful for the momentum and focus this place inspires.

To take a break, I flew over to Burma for a few weeks, hired a motorbike and tried to get lost in the countryside. It might have been a reaction to missing Bhutan and wanting to get back tot he villages. The experience certainly was similar in some ways: smily faces, small communities, Buddhism, pagodas everywhere and hardly anybody trying to scam you (I don't think anybody in Bhutan ever tried to rip me off). 

Of course, the two countries have one very massive difference - their governments. Although there is a reformist leadership in Myanmar now, you still come across rather disturbing aspects of control. They had a list of who lived where and they'd do night time 'raids' to see if anybody was not where they were supposed to be. If you stayed over at your cousins house, for instance, they might end up in prison for their hospitality. Up in the northern territories where I was, it was normal for the locals to have to pay protection money to the rebel Shan armies. Not just money, but men. They would leave you with one son and take the rest. I kept coming across villages with no men in. As usual, it's the normal people who get caught between the rock of the leviathon and the hard place of the freedom fighters. Civil wars are terrible things. Many that I spoke to didn't like either side and just wanted to be left alone to work their farms, dig up gold or just raise their families.

I won't write too much here because I'm considering putting a little e-book together about the adventure, but the bike definitely opened the country up in ways that backpacking wouldn't have. With a tiny 15l rucksac and the freedom of the bumpy roads I found myself in the company of gold-miners, soldiers, teachers, tea factory workers and bridge-builders, slept in chicken farms, restaurants and pagodas, found random festivals, musical and cultural and even managed to get lost in the jungle in the middle of the night (where I found the pagoda to sleep in). 
Anyway, here's a few random pictures:
















Thursday 17 January 2013

The Search for the Disembodied Genii...

Tomorrow I get on a plane and I go to Mandalay, from which I take a motorcycle (a little one) and head out into the countryside, hopefully to find some real villages and meet some real people. Bangkok is whirlwind of modernity, where maserati showrooms and prostitution commingle within easy distance, where you find malls filled with characterless human sandwich boards advertising Gucci and Zara and all the other rubbish brush up against legless beggars in the street, a place of great progress and development if ever there was one. Back to the villages where legless beggars are helped onto benches and brought tea. 

So I go for just one week. I imagine I may extend, but this is supposed to be a short break in my writing. The Atlanta has been wonderful. I came here with an ambition to get the unwieldy monster that is 'Jacks' finished, a book I've been working on for a good number of years - 12 if you count the short story that I had published in Australia many years back, the kernal from which it all sprouted. Unfortunately, the publication of my first book - Music of Maninjau - left such a sour taste in my mouth that the idea of finishing another book just didn't appeal. The publisher was called Bluechrome. Th other authors call it Bluechrime. They disappeared off the face of the Earth sometime around 2009. Abducted by aliens perhaps. Or bankrupt and on the run. The trail goes dead very easily, even when we follow the timeless imperative to 'follow the money'. But enough fleeing from the unpalatable. It's time to finish one.

The Atlanta is a haven for writers and I'm lucky enough to have been able to arrange a sort of patronage for my time here. It has an energy that is conducive to both creativity and concentration, perhaps due to the amount of words that have been scribbled in its lobbies and writing rooms. The walls are filled with signed copies of authors that have worked here or used it as a place to cogitate and find inspiration. One such author is Elizabeth Gilbert, writer of Eat Pray Love, a book I haven't read, but I have watched her fascinating TED lecture about what happened when her book went bonkers. She found herself anxious at her writing desk for the first time in a long time. Why? Because she knew her 'best work' was probably behind her, or at least her most successful one. The follow up would be expected to be a disappointment. The critics would be waiting. She thought this was ludicrous, so she got interested in the process a bit more. Where do ideas come from? What fires creative flow?

Her research took her back to the Greeks and Romans, as research often does. Back in days of yore, the word genius meant something external to the person to which it was applied. We say Newton and Einstein were geniuses. In ancient times, an artist would be said to have a genius, a disembodied 'other' that dripped ideas into the host. The artist as channeller, interpreter, muse, voice-piece. But it was more of a collusion - the artist works with the genius. She liked this idea. As long as she turned up for work every day, people couldn't be too harsh if her next book was a bit rubbish - I did my bit, but the genius... well he wasn't on form. Well, I guess the Atlanta is a good place for these little disembodied spirits of creation because I've been writing at a pace I've never before managed. When things seize up, I go take a swim, drink a coffee, have a massage... whatever. Next tie I sit down, there's fresh produce in my mind to munch on. I hope to finish a full draft of Jacks before I fly tomorrow. I hope to  complete final tweaks when I return. I hope to finish in three weeks.

This is good news, but it means I inevitably have to swim in publishing waters again. I swam with a shark and brushed up close to a jelly fish on Koh Tao. That was fine. This is different. So I either try to get an agent, one who can convince me that Jacks is good enough to cut above the water and make some kind of splash, or I publish it myself through Amazon, both e-book and conventional paperback. In the former case, royalties will be about 10%. Unless it goes bonkers and sells like hot da vinci codes, you never really see a return, but you do have chances at prizes, you get reviews easier, and you don't have take the full burden of being a salesperson. In the mainstream, you really have to be near the top or you're nowhere and your book disappears. In the latter case, I get 70% and I keep hold of my work but I miss out on the possibility of distribution and marketing, the elusive 3 for 2 Waterstones deal that shifts books en masse etc. I'm tending towards going my own way. Anyone who writes fiction for  money is clearly bonkers, and I'm a teacher. I only try to write books that I haven't read or seen before, which makes publishers nervous. This nervousness is a telling symptom. 

Anyway, if anyone out there has any opinion on this, or thinks they might be able to help with finding a really good agent, I'd be interested to hear from you. It's a big decision. In the meantime - for the next week - I plan to wash it all from my mind and let the wind in my hair (beard) whisk me away. TO BURMA! And don't spare the horses.      

Elizabeth Glbert's Fascinating Lecture: CLICK HERE

Wednesday 16 January 2013

A Word Cloud of the Challenges and Rewards of Voluntary Teaching in Bhutan

This is a word cloud of the last post. Do I have nothing better to do? Yes.


Word cloud made with WordItOut

What a Year! Challenge and Reward in Pakshikha

I've been reflecting on what I achieved at Pakshikha MSS, a school not even a year old when I joined, barely fitted out with the necessary equipment to teach, staffed by a young group of teachers, managed by a dynamic, ambitious and young principal, isolated on a hillside with no internet and unreliable fax and phone, home to over 500 children. There were many challenges for the school - water supply, beautifying what began as a dusty establishment and grew into a lush learning environment, developing administrative procedures and establishing roles...in short... working things out, defining the school. What a great environment to be in!  

In Bhutan, I worked harder than I have in any other job. Why? Because I was given the opportunity to do so! And because it meant more - the impact was tangible with the kids and with the school and that drove my motivation to take on more responsibilities and keep saying YES! Gratitude fired me on too, genuine gratitude, like that which I will always have for the people who looked after me there and taught me valuable lessons about being happy. The sense of achievement and reward for my efforts were always immediate and real. In a new school, much needs to be done. In a developing country with resourcing and skillset challenges, your talents (and I mean you now!), whatever they are, can make a real difference instead of being stifled. 

To anyone feeling this way at home, under-appreciated, under-used, stifled or bored, I would say to you - go somewhere that actually needs you. Forget about money for a while and choose to give and get back stuff of actual value instead. A developing country still values education, right across the strata of society, including the kids - you will get gratitude for having chosen the noble profession of  teaching, a gratitude that is thin on the ground elsewhere. 

Incidentally, I checked my UK bank balance twice in Bhutan. I checked my Bhutan balance perhaps half a dozen times. I mean it when I say 'Forget about money for a while.'

Here's a  record of what I did in addition to my teaching responsibilities. I post it because I'm proud of it, more than I realised when I had to put it together. And I'm grateful for it. Every box in this table represents another moment of trust and another opportunity, another challenge that I threw my arms open to and delivered on.  




And all of this happened with a timetable that looked like this for the first 6 months 
(55 minute periods, 33 out of possible 37!):



Of course, the last 6 months was not like this - we shaved it down to 24 periods. Still 3 more than I taught in the UK. Ayeeesh. But it was worth it. It was great, every minute of it (that's not quite true, but it's close to the truth)

If you want to teach in Bhutan, or if you want to help an organisation that places people like me in places like this then start here:

http://www.bhutancanada.org/

Saturday 12 January 2013

New York City is Killing Me - Off to Mandalay

It's a strange song to have whistling around your head as you say goodbye to a life you've pretty much loved and know that you'll miss dearly, but I couldn't get this song out of my head during those last two weeks and the time that followed. So late one night in Baby Rasta, after jamming along to reggae in the bar, I turned on the camera and tootled it out. It's down there at the bottom...

I suppose, deep down, I was thinking about what was on the horizon beyond Bhutan - back to the bustle of city living and the throb of consumer-driven economics, and Bangkok certainly is all that and more! Sometimes I think I'm living in the future here, Bladerunner style with the concrete feet of the Skytrain and all the motorbikes yipping about and the cars that seem to all be brand new and shiny and future-shaped. In the Siam Paragon shopping mall, you walk by a Zara shop and find next door, a Lamborghini shop! In the 'mall'. Everything moves real fast here and it's always a-buzz, and of course, anything goes. To get to the local 7-eleven to buy a toothbrush, I walk by ladyboys and fat middle-aged European men with dainty little thai beauties on their arm, all of them wearing very expensive dresses for their benefactors to sweat on. Not pretty. I look these men right in the eye. I'm not sure why.

I forget how much I've said about it, but I'm now in Bangkok for a month, staying at the Atlanta Hotel as a sort of 'writer-in-residence' with the aim of finishing one of my books. I'll put more photos up sometime. I was planning to do a sort of reflective, day-by-day blog about it, as I'm here to try to learn a bit of discipline and finish things off, which is hard and interesting in its way, shut away and locked in to my little writing room, but that won't happen. I have other things to write. 

Next week I go to Myanmar for a week on a visa run with benefits! I'm heading for Mandalay, from where I pick up a tidy little motorbike and go off into the countryside. There's plenty of chatter about whether it's the right time to go - am I giving tacit support to a regime that has a seriously less than spangly reputation for human rights. But it seems that as long as you travel considerately and, ideally, alone, then it's considered a good thing to do, especially by the people there who want us to know what it's like and want to know what life it's like outside. The key seems to be to avoid channelling your money into the government, hence the travelling solo or in small groups, and hence my decision to get a motorbike and get off the beaten track and into the countryside. Ideally, I'll stay with families, if I can find any who are willing to take me in. I am led to believe the people are lovely, and it's still one of the most devout Buddhist countries there is, which is something I now realise is a good thing, much as I dislike all things religious. Buddhism tends to be a good culture in which societal values can grow, especially if allowed to pertain without too much outside influence - a good description of the Burmese flavour of it, even if the reasons for its isolation are unpalatable. I suppose this decision is a reflection of my feelings about leaving Bhutan. I miss civilised people, dare I say it. Koh Tao was overrun by hedonists. Bangkok is full of people making money. And it's too big. 

I waxed lyrical about the open-fronted Baby Rasta bar in my last blog, noting that nobody in Bristol would leave their bar open to the public through the night. I feel I should clarify - I'm not making a comparison between Thai and English or European. It's all about scale. Small is, as they say, beautiful. The social contract breaks down when there's too many people, like nuclei do when there's too many nucleons shielding the binding force. The crowd is a mitigating factor of sorts, but it's a poor substitute for community. So, back to the village. Back to real people and away from all these glossy poster girls and walking sandwich boards. But for now... back to the desk... 

Oh, and here's a song...   





Monday 7 January 2013

Baby Rasta - A Video Tour

I promised it... here it is. A tour of Baby Rasta (which I believe I called baby Reggae in my last post). The whole place is built around a VW Camper Van frontage and backs into a series of terraces and platforms all at different heights and angles. Most of the building is done with what appears to found or drift wood. I'm sure if I tried to build something like this in such an organic way it would crumble and tumble and generally be a mess. But Bee takes care of the place on a daily basis, and despite the occasional wobble when folk walk nearby, it's solid as anything. I've seen places like this all over Thailand, and I'm sure it's not new to many of you, but this is a cracking example of it - I admire the initiative and creativity, the steady pace at which it grows, like the living trees it's struts and platforms so recently were.





You'll notice that there's no shutters on the front, no doors to lock and no windows to close. I asked Om if they ever had problems with stealing and he shrugged a no as if it was a peculiar question. If someone was inclined they could walk in off the street at 4am and take everything from the bar. But it doesn't happen. I had many conversations about the 'social contract' in Bhutan, though not using that term. It's normal for family to have concerns, especially parents when their son goes to the other side of the world and lives in a strange culture and swims with the unknown. But it's a simple fact - the social contract is stronger here than it is at home. I can't imagine anybody sleeping soundly in Bristol when their bar was open to the street and everything in it accessible to anybody passing by. It's irritating when people go 'travelling' and bang on about how much better life is in the place they happen to be in, but this is not subjective - would you sleep soundly in Bristol with your business open to the world. I'm sure it's an 'Absolutely Not!' from everybody. In which case, either the people here are  more civilised than we are in at least one aspect or... the protection rackets are more sophisticated. I guess we'll never know. 

It's nice to live with hardly a straight line around you. That's one thing I noticed. And its nice to be cultivating mindfulness in ordinary daily movements. Going to the toilet requires descending steps that are made from branches - not even planks - which means you have to take care with each step. This is a good thing. You move slower (might be the reggae in the background), and you take more care. 

Last night I took a few people down to the platform beneath my room, which I usually have all to myself, to play some songs after the bar had closed. There was Pau, from Barcelona, the kind of guy who can play anything, or can work it out in real time with few enough mistakes for it to be ok (a rare breed indeed) and Stella, a striking Malaysian-Swiss woman who had all the men falling over themselves to get closer and sang with a sultry and soulful French quality. Arvid swung in the hammock. A silent Romanian lay on his back nearby, as did Vincent, a hanger-on of Stella with brooding good looks but not a lot to say or do with them (I didn't see him speak once in 2 nights). When Vincent decided to leave, I offered to help with a torch and he politely refused, but getting from the back porch to the VW in the dark is like navigating an woodland obstacle course because nothing is straight and the floor is not always how you expect it to be - flat. So I'm glad I thought to offer. 

We finished up at a slightly alarming 4am, 3-part harmonising on anything from Beatles to Coen to Waits and had a fabulous time. I'll probably never see Pau or Stella again. Such is life. My plan to hole myself up in The Atlanta for a month now seems a bit like, well, throwing myself out of paradise and into prison. Who comes to South East Asia and locks themselves away for a month? Weirdos and crazies. And me.