They say you are supposed to be completely adapted to a country when you stop discovering things about it. Well, I guess I am still far from this, as I started telling you last week. Here is just a list of new things discovered by explorer-Sarah in the last days:
Fact no. 1: If a dog here is hit on the road, the owners of the animal fear that the driver of the car will take it and sell it …To bars, where he will become a first-class appetizer for drunk people.
Fact no. 2: The 15th of July marks the beginning of a Buddhist holiday that lasts three months and in which a candle is lit the whole time! My Buddha, that is a big candle! Apparently monks also have the right to go from home to home (and inside the schools, too) asking for food and money. If you don’t give it to them (like in our house of strange/foreign people) they look at you with disappointment… And probably curse you for a thousand years.
Fact no. 3: It is illegal to bet in the lottery in this country, but if you bribe the police, you can have Thai and Vietnamese tickets in your house without risking a fine. Turns out a lot of people use this trick and lottery is quite popular, because you never know, you might have a lucky strike and become rich overnight.
Fact no. 4: When reaping season comes, just around this time, whole families move to the back of the houses of the owners of the field and camp there, working from dawn till dusk. They get paid only for each bag of rice or corn collected, and only 1 or 2 dollars. It is just enough for one day food for one adult, but they don’t work the whole year, have many kids and no kind of health care or insurance. So children have to work with their parents following them from field to field. They don’t get any kind of education either, so their future seems hopelessly sealed to the land.
Fact no. 5: two months is a long time. Living in these conditions of isolation, surrounded by poverty and with a strict routine has taken its toll on all of us and we are starting to anxiously await our return to the “modern and civilized world”. It will be soon, the next 28th of August, when we will visit Battambang and then leave to Thailand for a much merited 10-day rest.
Let me stop here before I fill three pages of good and bad discoveries, hopefully we can laugh about them in person soon enough. Have a happy week in whatever part of the world you may be and, above all, think about me next time your toilet flushes and your shower delights you with warm water.