Everyday here, it becomes more obvious to me how privileged I am. In class, we learn about laborers from rural areas immigrating to the city to make a living and in Malaysia, I learned that they even go abroad just to send money home to their families and pay for their children's schooling. I also learned about people who commute to the city for hours to sell their products in the city and then commute back to their rural community at night just to start the day all over again. When I bought my bag of jackfruit, I confirmed it. The lady who sold it to me wakes up early in the morning and takes a 2 hour commute by bus to HCMC to arrive by 9am and then gets home by 11pm and starts the day all over again everyday. If I had that kind of lifestyle, I would go crazy. And then where do you find meaning in your life? Or when it comes to that point, are you just living for your family, hoping that you can provide so that they can have a better future? But doesn't it just become a viscious cycle? Living away, you don't get the same opportunities and the same quality education as they do in the city...and the government hasn't provided these opportunities yet to even out the playing field.
There is SO much emphasis on education here. It's a business like in America. "Nhất sĩ, nhì nông." The Vietnamese society highly values people who earn money using their knowledge rather than their hands. Historically, education has been a way for the poor to rise out of poverty, but there are so many challenges to it. They are short on money and time. Today, we had to discuss whether the education in VN is WORTHY for poor people to strive to it. In Vietnam, students are trained to repeat and recite, not to make their own thoughts or question others. It's a shame because one's ability to critically analyze and use that skill outside of school becomes repressed. I also didn't realize how much of a luxury it was to be able to take out loans to go to school. It gives children from poorer families the opportunity to compete in higher education if they have this skills. I've been reading articles full of parents sacrificing their everything, selling their land, separating from their family in the rural area to take their other child to the city to take the test to get into college (It reminds me of the SATs). They also have centers that charge a lot (like SAT classes) to help students review for the test in a cramped room and some provide housing. We may get to interview the parents who are waiting outside during the test taking since it happens in July and I'll still be here.
Corruption. Worried about points and scores, and teachers try to find the test topics to teach it to their students so that they themselves will have a good track record of their students making it into college. This reminds me of California...the fact that we worry so much about the standardized testing scores and teach based on it so that students can score well and the school will receive more funding.
I'm enjoying the people here so far. I've got to talk to one person in the program on a deeper level than the rest, and I'm glad to have gotten closer to someone here. I was called, "poetic" and "super easy to talk to"....very flattered by the compliment. It's always good to reflect and be introspective. Anyway, he invited me out with his family and they were super duper nice, and we came to this "tourist village" that was beautiful...had awesome scenery. It's a place often used to film movies and videos, but when you contrast the place we were at to the buildings we saw on the way....worn down, dirty apartment buildings floors high...I'm reminded of the drastic disparity within the city. You get the best and worst of Vietnam here.
I see prostitutes all around me, younger Vietnamese women with older foreigners. Vietnamese women--one of the famous commodities sold worldwide...the unfortunate truth. But when you're in poverty and want to change your life and the lives of your family, there are not that many options. What about when all the girls around you are striving to marry foreigners?...the thing to do in some provinces. Taiwanese men come on a tour to Rach Gia to pick out their brides and they line up for them to pick. I always wonder what decision I would make in that situation. I never had to make it.
Privilege--being able to make choices, being allowed to pursue what you want, being able to travel to any country you want, being able to go to school without disruption, being able to work for experience and extra money and not necessity, being able-bodied even, being able to exchange your money for a lot more of the other country's money. Those are the kind of privileges I have.
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Mommy's lullaby
We discussed "ca dao" today, which I would explain in English as poetry of the Vietnamese culture. We talked about how parents sing these poems to their children to sleep and we also got serenaded by our teachers. Then I had vague memories of my mom also singing me to sleep and I could only remember a couple of words she sang and I searched for it online. This is what my Mommy used to sing to me to sleep when I was little:
Àu ơi, ví dầu cầu ván đóng đinh,
Cầu tre lắc lẻo gập ghềnh khó đi. (Bamboo bridge gets shaky and difficult to cross)
Khó đi mẹ dắt con đi (difficult to go, I'll hold your hand(/help you) to cross)
Con đi trường học, mẹ đi trường đời (You go to school, I go to the school of life).
Rough translation...I'll look up some words later.
Àu ơi, ví dầu cầu ván đóng đinh,
Cầu tre lắc lẻo gập ghềnh khó đi. (Bamboo bridge gets shaky and difficult to cross)
Khó đi mẹ dắt con đi (difficult to go, I'll hold your hand(/help you) to cross)
Con đi trường học, mẹ đi trường đời (You go to school, I go to the school of life).
Rough translation...I'll look up some words later.
Friday, June 19, 2009
VASI and EAP Family
I recently got moved from VASI 2 (intermediate) to VASI 3 (advanced). I'm learning a lot more and being more challenged and I'm really happy with the change.
Anyway, yesterday, I stayed longer to get my catch-up homework. I was expecting to just grab a quick bite to eat by myself and then run some errands, but as I exited the building, I saw almost the whole group waiting there still. They were waiting for me. That was so...touching and sweet...They care about me. ^_^
VASI program learning Vietnamese...awesome. Tutoring is great...very helpful. I get to practice speaking and learn about Vietnamese society as well as share about American society. I learned about insurance in Vietnam today. I didn't even know they had insurance, but they do...retirement, life, social (including health and workers comp), and car/motorbike but the system's not that great.
I hope to get closer to people individually and learn a lot from them.
Thuy and Tammy and Tammy's sister, Tina, was in town so we hung out and went to bars. ^_^
Anyway, yesterday, I stayed longer to get my catch-up homework. I was expecting to just grab a quick bite to eat by myself and then run some errands, but as I exited the building, I saw almost the whole group waiting there still. They were waiting for me. That was so...touching and sweet...They care about me. ^_^
VASI program learning Vietnamese...awesome. Tutoring is great...very helpful. I get to practice speaking and learn about Vietnamese society as well as share about American society. I learned about insurance in Vietnam today. I didn't even know they had insurance, but they do...retirement, life, social (including health and workers comp), and car/motorbike but the system's not that great.
I hope to get closer to people individually and learn a lot from them.
Thuy and Tammy and Tammy's sister, Tina, was in town so we hung out and went to bars. ^_^
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Vietnamese & Vietnam
Yesterday, we had a scavenger hunt. It was fun. We got 300.000 VND to find 5 places, buy some fruits and banh with "u" and "ư." We got sầu riêng, bánh chưng, măng cụt, dứa, bưỡi. Ưe also had to interview people and take down information and create a presentation for the next day. Very clever, engaging, interactive, and gives the students ownership (I think a lot about teaching styles). However, I was surprised at how resistant some people were to answer our questions. We found out that they thought we were from competing companies. Also, employees from large companies don't want to take responsibility for saying something wrong.
I'm super impressed with the Vietnamese Language Studies school and how organized and prepared they are. The lessons are really engaging and they also rotate teachers which keeps the class stimulating. We got readers today and multiple agendas. We did an activity where she had cut out the vocab words, and another activity where she taped questions around the room. Very engaging, and I'm very excited to improve my Vietnamese. We took a placement test yesterday and I got placed in the intermediate class, VASI 2. I did pretty well on the written test, so I'm pretty sure it was the oral part that brought me down. That's the thing I want to work on the most...being able to speak in Vietnamese naturally without thinking too much.
People in the program are mostly grad students. I'm the second to youngest out of 12 participants, my roommate being the youngest. I'm excited to talk to them, hear their stories, absorb their lessons, and experience things with them. They all seem like a great bunch. Also, a HUGE MAJORITY seem to be taken...married, engaged, bf/gf, seeing someone. However, we don't go out as much like I did in EAP. Our rooms are on different floors...I finally compiled a list today of who is in what room. I'd like to hang out with them more to get to know them, but at the same time, they all have their own lives writing papers, dissertations, Skyping with boofaces, and I wanna respect that.
I want to explore more of the city on my own to get a map in my head of the surrounding area. Right now, I feel like I'm wasting a lot of precious time in Vietnam in the hotel room when I could be talking to locals and practicing my speaking skills and exploring more of the city, but not sure how to approach it yet. All on my to-do list.
I find that I am still careless with my words. Or rather...I think it and I speak it instead of thinking of a better way to say it. Advice from my businesswoman mom. Still I catch myself every now and then just bluntly saying things that don't seem like the best things to say in that situation...I could have thought it over more.
Sunday, June 14, 2009
1st Dinner with VASI
Today, I had my first dinner with VASI folks. It was a nice big fancy dinner with 11 strangers who are going to be my classmates and 6 teachers, a field director, and an administrator. It totally reminded me of EAP when we used to have our huge, too huge for us, dinners, sitting next to a bunch of strangers who have become family to me. With those memories and that experience in mind, I'm super excited to start this program. It feels like a second EAP all over again.
I miss EAP VN 07. : ( We're continents away.
I miss EAP VN 07. : ( We're continents away.
June 13-14: The "American Experience"- WTF?!
So at Kuala Lumpur, this taxi driver took me and this other person so we could split the car. He was already trying to persuade me to go to Kuala Lumpur and check out the city center. I said no, just drop me off at the airport. That was normal. Taxi drivers get commission for bringing people to hotels. Then after he dropped her off, he started asking me stuff about America being open. "I heard America is really open. Is it true that people can have babies without being married?" I was like "yea, doesn't that happen everywhere?" He said it couldn't happen in Malaysia. A child of unwed parents won't be able to register and receive the benefits of a citizen. Then he asked me about the average age of the first time people start having sex in America. Then he asked me if I wanted to come over to his place, just shower off, and he'll drive me back in the morning. Are you f'n crazy? He said he wanted the "American experience." I'm sure the mother of his 4 kids would appreciate that. Then we were pretty close to the airport terminal and he was asking me if I was scared. Of course, I'm f'n scared. You could have driven me anywhere! I said no, and I just wanna get to the airport. I initially was gonna bargain with him for 15 ringets, but F that...you can have my 20 ringets...I just wanna get the hell outta your car. The perks of traveling alone as a woman. I have come to the conclusion that people around the world assume American women are easy sluts. I still remember when I went to Vietnam and we had a white woman on our program and they treated her like she was gonna sleep with them or something, but we, looking Asian and all, never got that treatment. Anyway...my final reaction is WTF?!
June 13-14: Hoàng Yến Adventure #3 + Leaving Penang
Hiked for what felt like a long time...maybe 2 or 3 hours? Treacherous!...totally nature. It was exhausting. I usually don't wanna turn around, but I was so tired by the middle, and everyone kept saying half an hour more. That was NOT half an hour more. Anyway, we got to the Canopy Walkway, some beach that I can't remember, and Monkey Beach with white sand and monkeys in the trees...a lot of them. Monkey Beach was so far, but worth the trip. James suffered an injury along the way. We boated back. :D I was a happy camper that day...a tired, exhausted, fulfilled happy camper.
Bye bye, Penang!
Yesterday, I left Penang, and I wouldn't say I miss it as much as the people I met and the love I felt when I was there. They even kept me company at the airport until it was close to time for me to leave. Acts like that are so touching.
Thursday, June 11, 2009
June 11: Domestic Abuse
I interviewed more workers today. Counter-productive to the mission of anti-labor trafficking, but some of the workers feel it is easier working in Malaysia than farming in Vietnam, depending on the department they get put in. One woman went in-depth into her life with her husband and how their marriage was good for 10 years. Then he started beating her, locking her up and beating her several times a day. She stayed with him for the kids, and her first thought was her kids. Selfless...so selfless. Finally her oldest child urged her to stop thinking for them and to take care of herself first. 10 days after this lady went to Malaysia, the man remarried. She went into more details but I just keep thinking how can someone be so selfless and how can someone else be so uncaring and insensitive and I just don't get it....how do you have it in your heart to hurt someone you've been with for over 10 years?
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
June 10: More interviews
I continued interviewing workers today (actually, I videotaped), and I've realized that many of the laborers are from rural areas as farmers. I had read that but just to see case after case of workers coming from rural areas makes me realize how prevalent it is. Most have to take loans just to pay the broker to become a guest worker. After all, their financial conditions have to be pretty bad in the first place to want to become a guest worker. Desperate times call for desperate measures, and all of them seem to be desperately trying to find a way out of poverty. By working abroad in a foreign country in which they don't speak the language or know the people, they are hoping to make more money than they invested in for the loans and change the course of their future for them and their families.
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Human Trafficking
Two years ago, I helped out with a panel put on by an anti-sex-trafficking organization called Stop the Traffick at UC Berkeley. Through this event, I was exposed to the atrocities of the sex trafficking industry in the US and the many myths that came with it.
This pushed me to research sex trafficking specifically in Vietnam for a class project, and I learned how at risk of trafficking many Vietnamese women are, especially poor women in rural areas. In a situation with such little resources, women are forced to use their most precious commodity, themselves, to sell for a high price in order to change the course of their futures as well as piously take care of their parents. I think about women in those desperate types of situations, and I shamefully think about the times when I thought my life sucked because I had two finals and a paper due in the same week. My friend once said that if that’s all I have to worry about, then my life is really good. He’s right.
Since I was headed to Vietnam for VASI and had a close friend working in Malaysia at the Penang Office of the Coalition to Abolish Modern Day Slavery (CAMSA), an anti-human-trafficking organization, I wanted to stop by to visit him and volunteer at the organization.
I got to Penang, Malaysia a few days ago. Yesterday, I was introduced to the office and the staff. I learned that the goal of this CAMSA office is human trafficking, yet practically all of their cases have been labor-related cases because it's easier for laborers to contact the office, and because sex trafficking is organized crime and it gets complicated. Labor trafficking was not what I was familiar with, but I was definitely excited to learn about it.
I’ve been working on a powerpoint to train people about human trafficking and CAMSA. I found out that the majority of human trafficking cases are labor trafficking cases, but sex trafficking definitely gets more media attention. Just talking to people, I have heard that the majority of Vietnamese people in Malaysia are laborers. Vietnam, the source country, exports workers to Malaysia, the destination country. Continuing research for the powerpoint, I found out that Vietnam’s policy, Eradicate Hunger and Reduce Poverty Program, strongly encouraged workers to work abroad and send money home. When problems arise with Vietnamese workers abroad, Vietnamese officials will even come over to the destination country and solve the problem in order to guarantee the quality of their product (their workers). This can mean threatening the workers or even physically abusing them into submission so that they will return to work. It saddens me that Vietnamese citizens are treated by their own people as dispensable tools to build up Vietnam’s economy rather than dignified human beings.
Tonight, I joined two staff members to interview Vietnamese laborers. With my Vietnamese-American Vietnamese skills (not the best), I caught only about 65% of what she was saying, especially with her different accent. However, I could see her frustration at her work place. Racial tensions and language barriers prevent her from speaking up. All she wants to do is make money to send her children to school in Vietnam yet she gets jipped left and right as others blame her constantly for problems within the factory. She takes it because that’s all she can do and with her Vietnamese, she cannot communicate to the people who run the show. She accepts it as fate and just tries to work a little harder to earn enough money.
“Lives that flash in sunshine, and lives that are born in tears, receive their hue from circumstances.” -Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Ann Jacobs
This pushed me to research sex trafficking specifically in Vietnam for a class project, and I learned how at risk of trafficking many Vietnamese women are, especially poor women in rural areas. In a situation with such little resources, women are forced to use their most precious commodity, themselves, to sell for a high price in order to change the course of their futures as well as piously take care of their parents. I think about women in those desperate types of situations, and I shamefully think about the times when I thought my life sucked because I had two finals and a paper due in the same week. My friend once said that if that’s all I have to worry about, then my life is really good. He’s right.
Since I was headed to Vietnam for VASI and had a close friend working in Malaysia at the Penang Office of the Coalition to Abolish Modern Day Slavery (CAMSA), an anti-human-trafficking organization, I wanted to stop by to visit him and volunteer at the organization.
I got to Penang, Malaysia a few days ago. Yesterday, I was introduced to the office and the staff. I learned that the goal of this CAMSA office is human trafficking, yet practically all of their cases have been labor-related cases because it's easier for laborers to contact the office, and because sex trafficking is organized crime and it gets complicated. Labor trafficking was not what I was familiar with, but I was definitely excited to learn about it.
I’ve been working on a powerpoint to train people about human trafficking and CAMSA. I found out that the majority of human trafficking cases are labor trafficking cases, but sex trafficking definitely gets more media attention. Just talking to people, I have heard that the majority of Vietnamese people in Malaysia are laborers. Vietnam, the source country, exports workers to Malaysia, the destination country. Continuing research for the powerpoint, I found out that Vietnam’s policy, Eradicate Hunger and Reduce Poverty Program, strongly encouraged workers to work abroad and send money home. When problems arise with Vietnamese workers abroad, Vietnamese officials will even come over to the destination country and solve the problem in order to guarantee the quality of their product (their workers). This can mean threatening the workers or even physically abusing them into submission so that they will return to work. It saddens me that Vietnamese citizens are treated by their own people as dispensable tools to build up Vietnam’s economy rather than dignified human beings.
Tonight, I joined two staff members to interview Vietnamese laborers. With my Vietnamese-American Vietnamese skills (not the best), I caught only about 65% of what she was saying, especially with her different accent. However, I could see her frustration at her work place. Racial tensions and language barriers prevent her from speaking up. All she wants to do is make money to send her children to school in Vietnam yet she gets jipped left and right as others blame her constantly for problems within the factory. She takes it because that’s all she can do and with her Vietnamese, she cannot communicate to the people who run the show. She accepts it as fate and just tries to work a little harder to earn enough money.
“Lives that flash in sunshine, and lives that are born in tears, receive their hue from circumstances.” -Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl by Harriet Ann Jacobs
Monday, June 8, 2009
June 7-8: Penang, Malaysia plus work at CAMSA
I bought a card reader. I can post pictures now.
I've been listening to this: Songs from a Secret Garden http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UPl1ZnKfWA0&feature=related
Life in Malaysia. Humid and hot. It's not as modernized as I thought it would be. I forgot how great traveling was. It's one thing to travel within the US, but when you travel outside the US, it's a CHALLENGE. Free housing is ALWAYS a plus. Everyday is a new learning and growing experience, and everytime you don't understand what is said or what is happening, you ask and you grow and you learn a little more about the people of the world. I've really enjoyed hanging out with his friends and just talking to them. They are Vietnamese students who are going to school here in Penang. Only 3 Vietnamese students in the whole school. They all speak the Northern accent. It's funny because we'll think of hard words for each other in English and Vietnamese and then laugh at the language barriers and how poorly we can pronounce it. haha.
I was talking to HaTuyen yesterday and she said that now she feels like if she doesn't volunteer or help out in some way when she's traveling, it's kinda a waste...that's a thought.
I noticed that they really try to save energy here...that's a lot more than I could say for the States. The longer plugs I've seen have switches for on and off, so you could be using one out of five of them and only one of them will be turned on instead of all 5 (In the US, we only have one switch for the whole thing). Another thing about this house in particular is that one light will light up two places, like one light lights up the shower and the bathroom (cuz they are outdoors). Like Vietnam, there is a heater switch to heat up your water so you don't have to waste energy
His place doesn't have a washer machine, but he says everyone else in this neighborhood does. The company should buy them one. We hand washed our clothes yesterday. Pain in the back. How much we take for granted.
Also, something interesting to me is that...well in Vietnamese and some other Asian languages, we address people by their relation to us. In Malaysia, the main languages are English and Bahasa Melayu (Malaysian language). I hear James talk to people (and others do it too)- "Hi Uncle," "Hi Auntie," "Hi Brother ___." I thought it was kinda funny. It reminds me of when I used to watch the kung fu movies with English subtitles...always didn't seem right haha.
I'm also trying to speak more Vietnamese while I'm here.
So, James told me to go out to the taxi driver to tell him to wait, and I went outside and said "Chu, cho mot ti" (Please wait a little bit in Vietnamese), and James started cracking up and he yelled out, "In English!" I forgot their main languages are English and Bahasa Melayu, not Vietnamese. Silly me. It's so weird because a lot of this place reminds me of Vietnam.
Saturday, June 6, 2009
June 6: First Day in Penang, Malaysia
Walked around Malaysia. Ate. Reminds me of Thai and Laotian food.
Bahasa Malaysian = Malaysian Language
Nasi = rice
Ayam = chicken
Daging = beef
Sotong = squid
that's all I remember for now.
So hot and humid. We were walking along the beach and we were both DRIPPING with sweat. My sweat was raining on my forehead and my arms. I felt like people were looking at us...possibly because we were creating our own rain, but whatevs...haha. My body's not used to the temperature.
Hoàng Yến Adventure #2 (#1 in Phu Quoc, VN)- Batu Feranghi (sp?) (supposedly the best beach in Georgetown, Penang
So James took me to this beach and of course being him, he wanted to go to these large rocks in the water and climb up. Getting there through water, I fell on a rock and got pushed over by a little wave. By the time, we emerged on the other side on those rocks, I had some cuts on my hands, my arm, my thigh, my foot. They stung, but whatever. Like he always says, "You're already here!" so I was game to continue climbing. Fun. Sandals were slippery, but the barnacles (sp?) on the rocks hurt if you didn't
wear slippers but they were near the lower rocks only. Also, I learned stuff about tides (coming in 4 hour sessions and high tide/low tide and how you should watch it before you decide to go out to some rocks in the water). We made it kinda far but didn't make it to the top because then we would have to go down to this rock with a whole bunch of bat droppings on it, and we could also hear the bats under flying under the rocks so we came back and climbed some rocks on the sand side and just hung out and talked. Always an adventure with him.
"You can have potential all your life but if you never realize it, what will that amount to?" -James Hoang Nguyen (Yea EAPers, he does say things that makes sense sometimes!)
Then we bargained for some sunglasses and cases and got both of ours including cases for 65RM, $18.50 for BOTH.

Bahasa Malaysian = Malaysian Language
Nasi = rice
Ayam = chicken
Daging = beef
Sotong = squid
that's all I remember for now.
So hot and humid. We were walking along the beach and we were both DRIPPING with sweat. My sweat was raining on my forehead and my arms. I felt like people were looking at us...possibly because we were creating our own rain, but whatevs...haha. My body's not used to the temperature.
So James took me to this beach and of course being him, he wanted to go to these large rocks in the water and climb up. Getting there through water, I fell on a rock and got pushed over by a little wave. By the time, we emerged on the other side on those rocks, I had some cuts on my hands, my arm, my thigh, my foot. They stung, but whatever. Like he always says, "You're already here!" so I was game to continue climbing. Fun. Sandals were slippery, but the barnacles (sp?) on the rocks hurt if you didn't
"You can have potential all your life but if you never realize it, what will that amount to?" -James Hoang Nguyen (Yea EAPers, he does say things that makes sense sometimes!)
Then we bargained for some sunglasses and cases and got both of ours including cases for 65RM, $18.50 for BOTH.
June 5-6: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
I could feel the humidity immediately as I stepped off the plane. Malaysia.
KL was frustrating for me because:
A. The airport I came into wasn't the terminal I was leaving from to go to Penang. Had to get a taxi to go to the other terminal, which I knew already but finding the right price was kinda hard.
B. It was hard to communicate with people, especially the airport workers because their English was often limited and my Bahasa Malaysian was non-existent. They kept pointing me back and forth.
I also met some Vietnamese people...a lot in fact. I didn't realize how many Vietnamese people there were in Malaysia. A lot come over for work. They pointed me in a certain direction too. They were nice to me though. They didn't understand my Vietnamese at first...well when I woke up at least they didn't understand me...:( Then they understood after while. I totally understood them...blow to the self-esteem.
C. my luggage was overweight (as usual right?). I should have weighed it before and bought the extra. It was no problem through international flights. The only thing is I was about to fly a domestic flight from Kuala Lumpur to Penang, the island my friend lives on, and for a domestic flight, the baggage allowance is CONSIDERABLY LESS. I had a big luggage and a little luggage. To check-in the big luggage had to be 15kg (what I bought on the plane ticket...could have upgraded it but I didn't...poor planning on my part...didn't weigh my luggage). Mine was close to 23kg. The little luggage to bring on the plane was supposed to be only 7kg. Mine was 11kg. I moved as much stuff over to my little luggage and stored it at the airport for 7 days for 70 Malaysian Ringets, which comes to about $21. I also had to pay EXTRA because the luggage I was checking in was STILL overweight at 19kg, so I paid 60MR for that, about $17. Plus, I had some of my friend's stuff that I needed to give to him like four packets of beef jerky, a costco pack of gum, and some other junk. But even without that coming back, I think my luggage will still be oveweight, so I will probably call in and upgrade it for my flight back.
D. I was frustrated with my luggage weight problem ALREADY and then a WOMAN CUTS IN FRONT OF ME IN LINE! That really irked me but then she said something and I didn't understand, and it seemed like she didn't understand me either...although I'm pretty sure she said that her flight was soon (and so was mine!...I saw her, we were on the same flight), so she cut. So irksome but whatever I just let her go. She was fast about it.
E. I got to KL at 10pm and the flight to Penang was at 6:55am, so I tried to sleep and only managed about 2 or 3 hours of sleep. It wasn't no Seoul Airport and I tried many different positions.
By close to 3am, I just stayed up for the rest of the time talking to the Vietnamese people behind me. They thought I was Thai at first.
Finally got to Penang's airport the next morning, and James was on time waiting for me. Well, he was sitting down and watching me for a while seeing what I would do and I sat down and didn't see him. It wasn't until I walked outside that he finally came up to me. What a jerk, but I was definitely glad he was on time, and everything was good after that. :)
KL was frustrating for me because:
A. The airport I came into wasn't the terminal I was leaving from to go to Penang. Had to get a taxi to go to the other terminal, which I knew already but finding the right price was kinda hard.
B. It was hard to communicate with people, especially the airport workers because their English was often limited and my Bahasa Malaysian was non-existent. They kept pointing me back and forth.
I also met some Vietnamese people...a lot in fact. I didn't realize how many Vietnamese people there were in Malaysia. A lot come over for work. They pointed me in a certain direction too. They were nice to me though. They didn't understand my Vietnamese at first...well when I woke up at least they didn't understand me...:( Then they understood after while. I totally understood them...blow to the self-esteem.
C. my luggage was overweight (as usual right?). I should have weighed it before and bought the extra. It was no problem through international flights. The only thing is I was about to fly a domestic flight from Kuala Lumpur to Penang, the island my friend lives on, and for a domestic flight, the baggage allowance is CONSIDERABLY LESS. I had a big luggage and a little luggage. To check-in the big luggage had to be 15kg (what I bought on the plane ticket...could have upgraded it but I didn't...poor planning on my part...didn't weigh my luggage). Mine was close to 23kg. The little luggage to bring on the plane was supposed to be only 7kg. Mine was 11kg. I moved as much stuff over to my little luggage and stored it at the airport for 7 days for 70 Malaysian Ringets, which comes to about $21. I also had to pay EXTRA because the luggage I was checking in was STILL overweight at 19kg, so I paid 60MR for that, about $17. Plus, I had some of my friend's stuff that I needed to give to him like four packets of beef jerky, a costco pack of gum, and some other junk. But even without that coming back, I think my luggage will still be oveweight, so I will probably call in and upgrade it for my flight back.
D. I was frustrated with my luggage weight problem ALREADY and then a WOMAN CUTS IN FRONT OF ME IN LINE! That really irked me but then she said something and I didn't understand, and it seemed like she didn't understand me either...although I'm pretty sure she said that her flight was soon (and so was mine!...I saw her, we were on the same flight), so she cut. So irksome but whatever I just let her go. She was fast about it.
E. I got to KL at 10pm and the flight to Penang was at 6:55am, so I tried to sleep and only managed about 2 or 3 hours of sleep. It wasn't no Seoul Airport and I tried many different positions.
By close to 3am, I just stayed up for the rest of the time talking to the Vietnamese people behind me. They thought I was Thai at first.
Finally got to Penang's airport the next morning, and James was on time waiting for me. Well, he was sitting down and watching me for a while seeing what I would do and I sat down and didn't see him. It wasn't until I walked outside that he finally came up to me. What a jerk, but I was definitely glad he was on time, and everything was good after that. :)
June 5: Seoul, Korea Airport CONTINUED
As fancy as the airport was, I was 8 hours into the layover, and I was SUPER BORED! I ate, I slept, I went online and wrote an update, but still I had TIME! Finally, I MET a friend who I could communicate too! Yay!!!
Her nickname was Polly, and she was from Hong
Kong, going to Cairo, Egypt. How cool is that? Her boyfriend would meet her up in Egypt later but she had left first. Her English was really good. She also spoke Cantonese, and so did a some of the workers in the airport. So I guess at the airport, they are super trying to promote Korean culture, and there were at least 3 or 4 of these Korean Cultural Heritage Sites where you can do activities that are related to Korean culture for free and they highly encourage it. Well, Polly and I were watching this pair play the flute and the ....don't remember what it's called. It has a lot of strings on it, and they are plucked, and the woman who was playing it was playing chords while the flute was mostly playing the melody. The string instrument reminds me of the Vietnamese instrument (maybe it's the same) called the Dan Tranh. They were playing a song called Secret Garden, which was very beautiful I found the song on YouTube: Song from a Secret Garden http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UPl1ZnKfWA0&feature=related). Then when they asked if the audience wanted to try (there were only 4 of us sitting down), Polly and I were the only ones who were willing to try and they handed us a "Korean flute" called something that starts with a T, but unfortunately I don't remember. It was ours to take home too...again, extremely trying to promote Korean culture.
Turns out Polly and I BOTH had 12 hour layovers and BOTH had 4 hours left! It was like we were meant for each other...hahaha. So then we tried on Korean clothing together, made fans together, did this blank ink art together (I wish I was better at remembering foreign names, but I'm not), and just looked around the airport and at the other Korean Cultural Heritage Sites. Good times. We exchanged emails and eventually departed at our gates.
While hanging out together, we also met a Filipino guy from Oakland and another guy from Delhi, India going to Tokyo.
P.S. I will post pictures when I figure out a way how to load them to my computer. I don't have the chord that connects the camera to the laptop. My friend calls it "product lock-in" because Sony purposely makes their things specific to their products so that the standard wire doesn't fit or work to connect it to the laptop. I'm hoping that someone in VASI (the program I'm going to in VN) has a Sony camera. Sorry folks for now.
Her nickname was Polly, and she was from Hong
Turns out Polly and I BOTH had 12 hour layovers and BOTH had 4 hours left! It was like we were meant for each other...hahaha. So then we tried on Korean clothing together, made fans together, did this blank ink art together (I wish I was better at remembering foreign names, but I'm not), and just looked around the airport and at the other Korean Cultural Heritage Sites. Good times. We exchanged emails and eventually departed at our gates.
While hanging out together, we also met a Filipino guy from Oakland and another guy from Delhi, India going to Tokyo.
P.S. I will post pictures when I figure out a way how to load them to my computer. I don't have the chord that connects the camera to the laptop. My friend calls it "product lock-in" because Sony purposely makes their things specific to their products so that the standard wire doesn't fit or work to connect it to the laptop. I'm hoping that someone in VASI (the program I'm going to in VN) has a Sony camera. Sorry folks for now.
June 5: Seoul, Korea Airport
Hi everyone,
Right now I'm at Seoul, Korea for a transfer point to go to Malaysia. I'll be here for about 12 hours :-(...10 now. This is THE BEST transfer airport EVER!...except that they're not open yet because it's 5am here. But they have a rest and relax room, a massage room, wireless internet, other computers with internet, a news/movie room, etc. Also, the escalators don't just run. They sense you pass and then they start up...crazy huh?
I'm a little nervous about traveling alone, so hopefully I see James in Malaysia soon, but so far so good. This airport is nice. I was thinking about leaving the airport and exploring because I have 10 hours to kill but I don't know how far I could walk away from the airport and I'm scared of problems with getting back in, so I think I'll just roam around here and use its fascinating facilities and ammenities. Once I get to Kuala Lumpur, I have to spend the night there because I get there at 10pm-ish and the next flight out to Penang (the island James is on) doesn't leave til 6:55am. SO SO MUCH TIME AT THE AIRPORT.
My laptop doesn't fit the plugs here, so I'll probably switch to the computers soon.
English is definitely a privilege to speak...for some reason, everyone has to learn it as its the international language or something, and when I speak English to people whose native language is obviously something else, they still know a little English, enough to converse with me, so it makes it easier to get around. Flight attendants, other passengers, etc.
Ok that's all. I'm alive and well...and hungry, so I will eat the food my Mommy packed for me. K I'll keep you all posted!
Right now I'm at Seoul, Korea for a transfer point to go to Malaysia. I'll be here for about 12 hours :-(...10 now. This is THE BEST transfer airport EVER!...except that they're not open yet because it's 5am here. But they have a rest and relax room, a massage room, wireless internet, other computers with internet, a news/movie room, etc. Also, the escalators don't just run. They sense you pass and then they start up...crazy huh?
I'm a little nervous about traveling alone, so hopefully I see James in Malaysia soon, but so far so good. This airport is nice. I was thinking about leaving the airport and exploring because I have 10 hours to kill but I don't know how far I could walk away from the airport and I'm scared of problems with getting back in, so I think I'll just roam around here and use its fascinating facilities and ammenities. Once I get to Kuala Lumpur, I have to spend the night there because I get there at 10pm-ish and the next flight out to Penang (the island James is on) doesn't leave til 6:55am. SO SO MUCH TIME AT THE AIRPORT.
My laptop doesn't fit the plugs here, so I'll probably switch to the computers soon.
English is definitely a privilege to speak...for some reason, everyone has to learn it as its the international language or something, and when I speak English to people whose native language is obviously something else, they still know a little English, enough to converse with me, so it makes it easier to get around. Flight attendants, other passengers, etc.
Ok that's all. I'm alive and well...and hungry, so I will eat the food my Mommy packed for me. K I'll keep you all posted!
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