Semi-Graduation

I am “graduated” currently, meaning I put on my cap and gown and walked with the graduating class this year, however, I am not yet 100% done with my degree. I have 6 months further in school while I am completing my senior project, a 5-person team project working with a teacher somewhere in RIT. Overall, I’m not sure how to take everything in, being almost done, but still having plenty of time to think about life, being done with college, and where to take my life from here. I have pretty wide open options to work anywhere in the US, an in demand major, and I’m open to anything.

In the 1 week break time between Spring and Fall classes, I managed to roadtrip through NH, MA, NYC, NJ, and PA, visiting my uncle and some friends I hadn’t seen in a bit. From May 24th to June 1st, I did 7 states in about 8 days, traveling about 1200 miles, and costing about $125-150 in gas! Here is my route.


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Specifically, 2 days in Merrimack, NH seeing my uncle. Breakfast in Dover, NH with an old friend of mine doing studies at UNH, then I drove down to NYC. 2 days in NYC with some more old friends and eating plenty of the latest and greatest foods of the town. I actually drove into Manhattan for kicks, such a terrible idea. Driving in Manhattan is such a joy and strain at the same time, you never have anytime to think, just to drive and not get hit! Next to NJ for 1 night, visiting my old high school town of Point Pleasant. I saw my old neighbors for the first time in about 4 years and boy was that a shock! Especially with the little kids I used to babysit, they all grow up so fast. I continued on to Phoenixville, PA for a night on the town with a few friends in the area, then stopped in Harrisburg, PA for another night, to watch ‘Up’ and relax for a bit, before heading back to Rochester in the morning.

Growing up is difficult. I’ve taken and asked for advice from many people much older and wiser than myself and even with their thoughts, I still can’t seem to plan for what the future will bring. I’m reaching a point in my life where there is no set plan at all for anything and it is entirely up to me to decide what I want to do. While somewhat scary, I feel that I have prepared myself well through my time in college and am looking forward to these new challenges. Bring it on!

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Thailand Part 2

Continuing my journal of my time spent in Thailand, here is Part 2.

Tuesday, December 16th

Today, Vicki had school to teach, so I headed off on my own for once. I tried grabbing a cab to Putunam Market, but I completely failed the first try. I had a pocket Thai dictionary and was trying to pronounce the name of it in Thai and English and it just wasn’t working. I hopped out of the first cab and then hopped right into a second one, in which the driver spoke a bit more English and understood me.

Putunam Market isn’t really a market, but a series of stalls all along this big street. Nothing really caught my eye, but it’s always fun browsing, the Thai people are very friendly to foreigners. That was one of the annoying things for me because for the first time in my travels,  I haven’t been able to fit in. Generally I can pickup language and customs quickly, but being tall and white in Thailand always makes me stand out. At best when I travel, I wish to be treated equally like a local, but it was a challenge in all of Asia actually.

Anyways, here’s a pretty building:

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Here’s the street that houses Putunam Market on its sides. I’d like to point out the tiny motorbikes flooding the street, those are my favorite method of travel. They are for short distances, you can find bike stations every few blocks and they are so fun to ride 30-40 MPH on the back of a bike with someone else driving. They zip in and out of tight traffic and you just hold on. I loved them!

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There was another massage place that I stopped off at around there for a foot rub, it was nice to kill a few hours getting a massage anytime you wanted. Very relaxing and healthy for the body.

Along the way, I grabbed some rice with egg. One of the things unique to Thailand is the way they eat their meals: mostly communal and outside of their house. They eat many small meals throughout the day also, sampling lots of different meals. I loved that aspect, because it was easy for me as tourist to try alot of food and eat it on the go.

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As I continued down this street, I came to Central World mall and the Siam Paragon mall.

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Central World was only about 7 stories tall, but quite elegant and full of “rich” stores. It’s another interesting contrast when you have so many poor people and people in poverty on the street and yet here’s a huge air-conditioned mall with all the same luxury goods of the US. They were in full Christmas gift spending mode as well!

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Then I came to the Siam Paragon, one of the largest malls in Asia. Jeez. This place was 8x as nice, with limo service outside, an aquarium in the basement, multiple theaters, and again, every luxury brand you can think of. The best thing I found while randomly wandering around was a string trio randomly setup playing Christmas music. The mall was practically empty, save for one other guy listening with me. They were a great trio, it’s just a shame for their performance to be only heard by two people.

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I found my way outside and headed south. I came by a big mural of the King, so I might as well explain. The Thai people love the King ALOT. You don’t ever say anything negative about the King or you get arrested. He’s about 80 I think and solved many problems for Thailand and is very beloved. You see pictures of him every where, he has his own song which is played on the radio and TV at 8AM and 6PM every day, and also has a picture montage displayed before every film. He is everywhere.

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My destination was Lumphini Park. I’ve heard people practice yoga in the mornings, but it was nice to check out some natural flora and relax for a bit.

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Watching the motorbikes take off from a stoplight is always fun. Other random observation, they have stoplights with displayed timers on them; it shows that the light is 60 seconds long and counts down until it changes again.

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At the park gate, there were a bunch of soi dogs lying around. ‘Soi’ is the Thai word for street, so they are street dogs. Many many stray dogs randomly running around Bangkok.

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Near the North end of the park, there was a school, where I grabbed some quick food and hung out with a motorbike driver for awhile. He was very friendly, I guess, due to dealing with all the kids from the school. He spoke like two words of English and I spoke about six words of Thai, so we managed to talk and gesture for about 30 minutes, it was great. I think all of my gesturing with people with who don’t speak English have made me amazing at charades.

As I was heading home, I found one of the most delicious foods ever, roddi or rotti, I’m not sure. Dough is flatten out and then cooked in a large circular bowl. You get toppings added on top of the dough as it cooks and then it’s all sandwiched together, cut up, and covered with sugar and condensed milk. I got banana below, mixed with egg, below and it’s amazing!

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Two hours of massage after dinner and I had a great day. Bangkok is a very laid back city. Here is a shot of the sun setting over the city!

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Wednesday, December 17th

Up early today around 7AM, to head to school with Vicki! We caught a bus around 8AM, it’s a 30 minute ride North to the official college campus. Class started at 9AM and I hung around and watched in the back of the room. Learning English is viewed as something very important for Thai people to rise out of poverty. I guess Thailand is a 2nd world country, with a good mix of poor and rich people. By learning to speak English or I guess a second language, the Thai people can interact with the rest of the world in commerce and improve the quality of their nation. Most of the students in the class were wealthy Thai kids, although there were a few Chinese students who were part of the international program. Even other countries do study abroad!

A comment about the campus, it’s huge. With labor being cheap, you can build huge things for cheap.

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I don’t get the Roman/Greek architecture influences but I guess they view them as being fancy or official. In Thai terms, this is a very private and expensive college, their kinda Ivy League, so you gotta make it fancy.

Another amusing thing was that they use Dawson’s Creek as reading material. I hate to think that a teenage sitcom is how they view American customs.

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I let Vicki teach and wandered around campus to find free Wifi for my iPhone. Most of Thailand is quite connected to the Internet and no firewall either, unlike China! We headed home by 4PM and then got ready for head out shopping. Another day, another sunset!

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We headed out with some of Vicki’s friend to a local mall for dinner and rode on motorbikes there. I love them so much!

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The mall was packed of course with people doing Christmas/Winter shopping. We headed to an all  you can eat for 2 hours conveyor belt sushi buffet. It cost about $5 USD? I love conveyor belt sushi, America needs more places like this. The wait staff loved all of us because of course, Americans love their buffets! Everyone was very friendly and loved having us come in.

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Finally, we headed outside this mall to a nighttime market. This was a real experience, night markets are not really typical tourist fare, so it was nice to be alone, wandering around. Scarves, burned DVDs, shoes, tattoos, miniature pets, knives, swords, haircuts, bags, purses, you can find it all.

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We finished up the night by going to see “The Day The Earth Stood Still” in a theater. It was in English with Thai subtitles, with the King song montage before of course. The best part was bringing beer into the movie and drinking the entire time. America has amazingly stupid drinking laws.

Thursday, December 18th

I got up early again and headed back to the airport. The taxi driver ripped me off by saying he didn’t have change for my 100 dollar Thai bill, but I didn’t mind too much because it was like a $3 taxi fare and I needed to get rid of the Thai money anyways. Always trying to rip off foreigners…

My flight from Suvarnabhum Airport to Kunming, China was about 4 hours long and cost about $300 USD. There were only like 4 other white people on the flight, always a fun game in Asia, count the white people. I got served coffee, red wine, green tea, cognac, and scotch during this flight, I tried to stay hydrated as best I could! I arrived in China and then began my journey alone.

In Summary

Bangkok was a great city, quite affordable for housing and food for an American with the exchange rate. The people were very friendly and good handful spoke English or were interested in learning. The beer, Singha, was cheap and good. The women, or atleast the people I thought were women, were all pretty attractive and petite. I can see why so many expats want to retire there!

I spent about $400 USD total for the 5-6 days, a good portion of it on drinking and buying clothes/gifts. It’s really not expensive to get by, maybe $20-30 USD a day easily or less if you just want basic food and housing.

I’ll continue with my travels in China soon!

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Thailand Part 1

Its taken me about a week to get over my jetlag and re-adjust to life in the US, three weeks of traveling really throws your system off. I wrote up my initial thoughts on the trip the weekend I got back, but now I’m going through my journal and pictures to provide a thorough experience for those interested. Let’s begin with my time in Thailand!

Saturday, December 13th

I left Rochester Friday morning, the 12th actually, but wound up travel for 27-something hours and arrived sometime Saturday evening. 3 flights, Rochester to JFK, JFK to Hong Kong with a 17 hour flight, and then 4 hours Hong Kong to Bangkok. Buying one-way tickets, this cost $950 for JFK -> BKK on Cathay Pacific and $110 for the Jet Blue flight ROC -> JFK. I highly recommend Cathay, unlimited Johnny Walker Black Label on the flights and in-seat LCD screens, I just got drunk and watched movies the entire time. A great flight!

Interesting thing was that the Suvarnabhum airport I flew into had been shutdown for 10 days the week before I arrived due to protesters taking over the airport. I was a bit worried about my flight, but there were no problems and the airport was clean as could be. My friend Vicki from high school, was my main reason for visiting and she was waiting to meet me at the airport. She is 5 months into a year long English teaching contract. We headed back to her apartment, located in the east of the city by Rajamangala Stadium, pictured below. Her apartment is on the 13th floor (yes, they have a 13th floor!).

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And the courtyard below.

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I unpacked, showered, and then we headed out for dinner and drinks. I had my first local dish of pad thai and it was delicious! We then headed to Santika, a popular nightclub, which I found out burned down 2 weeks later on New Years Eve, killing 59 people. While I had fun time there, it’s kind of weird to look back and think that everything burned down. Very tragic, the place only had 1 entrance/exit, which got clogged of course when the fire started…

Sunday, December 14th

Woke up by 9am and it was 85F outside. I planned poorly and was forced to wear jeans as we grabbed brunch at a local place. Vicki and I headed to the Chatuchak weekend market, my main reason for flying in on a weekend. It takes place Saturday/Sunday and is a huge open air market that has about 200K – 300K people visit daily. You can just get lost in tiny corridors and stalls, it’s amazing. I bought a new warm weather wardrobe for maybe $20 USD, everything was incredibly cheap. I bought a huge Deuter (German brand) backpack for $40 USD  after haggling, when I know this backpack should cost $150-200 new. Probably counterfeit but it lasted me the rest of the trip, so it was a good buy! The food was amazing as well, plenty of pork stick stands and green tea ice pops.

We headed back home by 5 or 6 and then I ventured out to a massage place. It was such a great time, seriously. 2 hours of thai massage for about $12 USD. Thai massage is very forceful and strong, it involves lots of rubbing to increase bloodflow, painful at times, but very worth it. I returned to the apartment and immediately passed, I just felt so good!

Monday, December 15th

Up by noon and grabbed breakfast at a different place. I had some coffee which tasted delicious, but I found out it was because Thais like to put 3-4 creamers and a cup full of sugar in. Vicki had the day off from teaching, so we headed downtown in a klong, one of the many methods of travel in Bangkok. They are wide, long boats that fit about 40 people and travel on the narrow canals left in the city. There are docks every 5 minutes or so, but the interesting thing is the boats never stop, they just slow down and coast by. Everyone hops on and off in a few seconds. A 45 minute boat ride all the way downtown costed about 40 cents.

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Here’s one of the infamous tuk tuks as well, terrible to get around with. The drivers just try and take you someplace that sells jewelry and charges you too much.

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We walked to the Wat Suthat and this old Buddhist arch, which people used to swing from and try and reach this bag of gold that was tied to the top, but once too many people died, the King closed it off.

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We were headed to the Wat Phra Kaew, a giant golden temple with a giant emerald Buddha inside. I believe it’s also the King’s palace part of the year. We ran into a monk along the way, there are actually alot of them wandering around! I think the color of his robe signifies which temple he is from.

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From here we headed more “central” downtown I guess, toward the main bridge that cross the large river that cuts through Bangkok. Below are some boats and the river. In the second picture, you can view the garbage build up. It’s one of the weird contrasts I noticed in Thailand and China. With labor being so cheap, people are paid to clean everything, the streets are always very clean, but the water is always completely dirty. I don’t know why they don’t clean the water.

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We continued on to Th Khao San street, the main foreigner area. Tons of hotels and hostels built up in this area, so this where everything English is and where everyone is trying to sell you something.

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I found this to be ingenious, with everything being counterfeit, why not steal music too?

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With the sun falling, we grabbed dinner at the Hemlock cafe and I had some delicious mai tais, trying to sample everything thai related. One of the random things I want to point out is 7/11. It is a clean, respectable establishment outside of the US, they sell everything and anything and are everywhere, it’s very nice.

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I think I will pause here and finish Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday off later, I have alot more pictures and stories to post. Look for Part 2 soon!

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X-raying Guns

One other funny thing I remembered while traveling through the new Beijing airport was when I left my iPhone in my pocket while going through security. It set off the metal detector and I got hand waved by a guard. He found the iPhone and I showed it to him. Then, funny thing to me, he ran it through the x-ray machine. I knew it was just an iPhone, but then this article and video showing off cellphone guns helped explain the reason for being extra cautious. You can never be too sure!

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Quick Impressions

I’m back. I arrived home sometime Friday night at a decent hour, but I immediately ordered a pizza and just started watching TV. Being able to relax was a high priority. After later sitting down at my computer, I didn’t look up until it was around 6am and released I should sleep. The next day, I didn’t wake up until 5pm. I’ve been continuing to relax, but my sleep schedule is definitely off. Today, I hope to get sleep by 4am. What will follow are some quick impressions from my trip, while they are still fresh in my mind. I plan on sorting through my thousand-something pictures and posting them soon, with thoughts from my more detailed journal that I kept. Let’s start from where I left off, leaving 3 weeks ago!

Three flights to get to Bangkok and 27 hours of traveling. Flying on Cathay was the best flying experience of the trip, thanks to their unlimited free Johnnie Walker Black Label and Chevas Regal 8 year! My friend in Bangkok, Vicki, was waiting for me when I got off the plane around 8pm and took me back to her apartment. Dumped my stuff and headed out for dinner and drinks. Had my first Pad Thai and then ride on the back of someone’s motorcycle to a club called Santika. It was a great club, expensive for Thais, but as I tragically found out 2 weeks later, it burned to the ground on New Years Eve killing 59 people. Such a bizarre coincidence for me, although looking back, I’m not surprised. For the following days, I ate and drank alot and explored Bangkok. Went to the Chatuchak weekend market and bought a big new fake backpack for $40. I found out about Thai massages and started getting like 2 hours of massage every day because it was costing me about $6 an hour. Went to school with my friend for a day, she teaches English at a local college. Went to the Siam mall and was very impressed. Overall, loved the food and friendly culture of the Thais. For a few nights out party, eating as much as I want, without paying for housing, and buying alot of random clothes and bags, I spent about $350 over 6 days. Landed on a Saturday night and then took off the immediate Thursday following.

Flying into Kunming, China and wandering around was my biggest shock of the trip. I was babied in Bangkok by having my friends do the hard work of figuring out how the culture and language works, I was lucky enough to experience the best parts of it. China was a whole different ballpark: different language, different culture, different money, and no help. Actually, I had my Lonely Planet guide and a pocket guide to Mandarin that I picked up. The pocket guide with dictionary proved very useful at times when I literally ran into situations where no one at all spoke English, we were unable to communicate, and they were uninterested in helping me out. After landing, I spent a fun time taking an hour to exchange money because you have to wait in line and fill out a form involving your passport! God bless Communism. I felt so safe in China, there were cops on every corner and I knew that everyone was staring at me, no one was going to try anything with me. It took me 2 hours and much embarrassment to book an overnight sleeper train to Dali, where I met a Hungarian traveling the same route as me. Very glad to have someone who spoke English to talk with and decompress a bit. I had complete culture shock my first couple days in China, life is really 180 degrees different from America. I could not relate in anyway to people, everything was so bizarre. You could not assume anything, like toilets you sit on or food that is cooked or heated water or drinkable water or any toilet paper or jeez, I could go on. I went to Lijang by bus and spent a day there. Then the best part of my trip, walking the Tiger Leaping Gorge! Actually hiking. I spent 3 days hiking it from beginning to end, top to bottom, and every other way imaginable. First time I had vertigo in my life, when I was looking over the trail that was only inches wide, a few thousand meters drop, and a heavy wind. Loved all of it. I spent Christmas eve and day in Sean’s Guesthouse, at the end of the trail with a mix of travels, celebrating the holiday together. It wasn’t too bad at all up in the mountains. I took a bus back to Lijang, a bus to Kunming, one day exploring in Kunming, and then a plane to Hong Kong. I have to say, I was very tired of traveling China and it wore me out. I was glad when I left.

Hong Kong was a great vacation though and raised my spirits greatly. My current roommate Haris was there to greet me at the airport and get me to his house. Showered, changed my clothes, and then my “vacation” began. Dinner in Central Hong Kong at a nice restaurant and then drinking at Stanley market. This continued for the next 6 days, a great recovery and time that I needed. I bought a tailored suit, made to my specifications, in 3 days flat, ready for New Years, for about $450. Pub crawl in Wan Chai, the redlight district on one night, drinking in Lan Kwai Fong many nights, including New Years Eve! Haris had great friends and many good connections for fun things to do in the city and good food to eat. I loved Hong Kong immensely! Coming back via Air China was torture and I would almost not recommend flying at all versus flying with them. That brings us back to today, so I will start writing up more details soon. It was a great trip, highly recommend checking out Asia to those who haven’t been!

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