Tuesday, 3 December 2013

Advent in Asia


Vietnam is definitely getting prepared for Christmas. This was my evening entertainment as I waited for my bành xèo:


I know exactly how this little girl feels:


Can't get more exciting than tinsel, can you?

Here is my bành xèo, which as you can see, looks suspiciously like Vietnamese omelette, so it was very brave of me to sit down and agree to eat it because omelette upsets me:


However, it's not omelette, it's more like a lentil pancake with dubious prawns in it. In this picture is also my trusty coca cola which I order in case of taste emergency where I want to spit out the contents of my mouth onto the floor, but can't, for fear of offending. 

By the time I had made friends with the little girl, the little girl had made friends with a flearidden kitten, and the kitten had made friends with me, Jimmy Le, who I'd also made friends with, had finished his Christmas tree...


And everyone was feeling very festive all around. When combined with the briht blue lights on the palm trees around my swimming pool, this is all contributing to a veritable winter wonderland!



Monday, 2 December 2013

Qantas Lounge



There are many cons to being married to a man whose job requires him to spend more time intimately acquainting himself with the Jetstar, Qantas and Tiger Airways schedules than he does with me, his legal spouse, but occasionally there are some very convenient perks that come with the magic words, 'no, don't worry, we'll put this on the company', and are always accompanied by an expenses receipt. 

Today, by some fluke chance with flight timings, Frenchie and I ended up at Changi airport at the same time. For some, queuing for check in, passport control and immigration stamps with the same date on them are not symbols of romance, but for Frenchie and I, this is practically a second seduction. Imagine my confusion, therefore, when Frenchie rushed me through my end-of-term-approaching duty free purchasing to insist that we 'spend some quality time together'. Surely being in the same place at the same time is quality time enough for us?  No, no, Frenchie had other magical surprises up his sleeve...

The Qantas Lounge for Gold Clients!


Was anyone else aware of the existence of such a paradise?


Believe it or not, everything in this photo is FREE: the delicious plate of assorted salads, the attractive European husband, the enormous glass of sparkling wine, the coasters I stole for my living room. Free! So free, that, like any self-respecting child who grew up with a chip on her shoulder because she wasn't quite as middle class as all the other children at her Home Counties school, I went back for more:


Free!

(The delicious-looking brown and white pudding was disgusting, but that was okay, because it was free!)




Friday, 29 November 2013

New Word

The Vietnamese passport officials, who are always very helpful to me when I come in and out of Tan Son Nhat airport, have learnt a new English word in training after an influx of silly British girls taking flights to Singapore every weekend:

 

Now, when they see my passport, they say, 'Renew!'

I've got no argument, so I just nod acceptingly and point hopefully at the small corner I'd like them to stamp in order to save my precious blank pages. 



Monday, 25 November 2013

Wedding Diet

Some people get fit for their weddings, or do yoga to try and minimise that horrible belly line that apparently happens to the best of us when we step into a wedding dress.  Others just drink smoothies for a year, or, like complete insaniacs, cut out carbs (think of all the wasted potatoes).  When I realised that even I was not immune to the cheeky little bagel ring around naval height, I too thought that bending myself in half and lifting the entire weight of my legs above my head repeatedly using just my core strength was the answer.  Other than the odd inexplicable 10km run at the end of a bad day, however, I have been unable to maintain this, and have found that gin is a better short term solution to a case of the grumps, chocolate to unanticipated feelings of homesickness and Disney films or Cancer Research ads the best thing for inducing catharsis by way of uncontrollable and unreasonable mid-week blubbing on the sofa.

None of these things, however, are doing anything for that naughty little belt bulge that the spanx will apparently hide, and so, as a firm and long term believer in the Power of Poo, I have begun my Wedding Diet.

Really, the WD is just the expat-friendly version of what is actually a desire to Experience More, following a number of comments from friends and loved ones that could indicate that I am not taking full advantage of my time in Vietnam.  In order to rebel against these comments, and, of course, cheat my way to minimum-effort slimness, I have decided that I refuse to cook at home until I have tried all the street food vendors in my local area.  That started tonight whilst I was waiting for Wobbler to be fixed.  Wobbler has been even more wobbly since I fell off him again last week in an utterly and spectacularly embarrassing scene where I worried about my laptop slipping, stopped, was stationery, and then fell sideways into some chalky gravel and bruised my knees.  A lady stopped to help me and I almost waved her away, wanting to say, 'Don't stop; I'm an embarrassment to humanity.  I don't deserve your help.'

Tonight's dinner consisted of rice, sketchy-looking pork belly and lady's fingers.  As I ate, I listed (in my mind) all the new things I am going to experience with this new diet.  I am likely to...

1. See more stray cats.
2. Be laughed at by more Vietnamese men
3. Become friendly with all the local taxi drivers who apparently do not eat at home.
4. Become very ill and lose all the weight I would have done by drinking smoothies for a year or going to yoga.
5. Save lots of money: a plate of food costs the equivalent of 60p.
6. See more babies running around without appropriate clothing on for running-around-in-the-street.
7. Be bitten by a lot of mosquitoes.
8. Drink a lot of paranoid Smecta.

I shall, of course, endeavour to take tourist photos and post them in this blog entry as often as I can, just so you can see how adventurous I'm being and how well I'm taking advantage of all that Vietnamese culture and lifestyle has to offer!  And of course, if the Power of Poo Diet fails me on this occasion, I've always got the spanx, the gusset and the basque to hide my little bagel for the required 24 hours.


I picked out the scary looking prawns and octopus in this and gave them to the Cambodian looking child who I had commanded to sit down and eat a decent meal with me rather than beg for my hard earned cash. Smiles all round: I had dinner guests, he and his mother got sustenance with a side of tentacles. 


I also picked out the offle type stuff in this dish, and of course, the ambiguous prawns. The noodles were weird and deep fried. 

Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Tropical Depression

Now, like you, when I received an email with this as the subject line yesterday from my caring and kind Head, I too thought it concerned the mental strain of being away from one's family for long periods of time, sentenced to a life of sunshine, exotic food, cheap tailors and swimming pools, but apparently, a tropical depression is a type of storm, like a typhoon. Who knew?

We were encouraged to get home before 4pm and stay inside for fear of flying building materials and flash flooding. I didn't need to be told twice, so off I went, for the sake of my safety, scattering and abandoning marking in my wake. 

As I've had some lovely, now very grown up, visitors from Watford over these last few days, I hurried home to warn them that taking a bus to Cambodia that evening might not be advisable, and that RoD and I were stocking up on vitals like gin and also tonic in case we were rained in, and had to evacuate to her flat on the 13th floor rather than the 4th, where I am, and where flood waters would clearly inundate us and carry us away on a river of burst sewage pipes and cholera. 

They regarded me with a look of cool gap yah students as I listed all the exciting things I could do if we got the following day off school (catch up on marking, ironing, clean the flat, check the wedding list, reply to my emails) and stared expectantly at the cloud free skies outside. 

At around 6:45, there was a brief shower, and RoD messaged to say that yoga had been CANCELLED.  Horror of horrors!  Thankfully, yoga had not, in fact, been cancelled, but for a moment it was touch and go, but I did eventually 'go', rather than 'touch' and waited for the first torrents of rain to interrupt the peace and serenity of my downward facing dog. They did not. 

By the time the used-to-be-young-and-now-are-adults guests left, there was still no sign of this storm, which was a colossal anticlimax, especially as one news article said that ALL schools in HCMC would be closed. What it really meant was 'All Vietnamese primary schools, not international schools' would be enjoying an evening of gin followed by a day of marking and tea and ironing. To add insult to injury, during the night, I was not awoken by inconsiderately loud claps of thunder, or cranes smashing through my window, or rising floodwaters, or the howling of rampant winds. Very disappointing. 

In the morning though, it was raining, like it often does in Vietnam during rainy season, and I made the uncharacteristically sensible decision to take a taxi, rather than my bike and arrive at school dry, rather than soaked to the bone with hair sticking to my face. 

Now this is where the story gets interesting (that was all the lengthy, tension-building exposition). On my taxi journey, I realised that even the highway was flooded, which almost never happens, and my taxi driver refused to drive down another flooded road, which is normally the quickest route to school. After we'd found a detour and rescued another teacher, the driver finally abandoned us - like that lift operator who abandons Jack and Rose in Titanic - and we had to wade the rest of the way. Have some pictures to see how bad it was:




Gross slimy stuff floated past and touched my leg. I don't know what it was, but I imagine it was entirely disgusting. 

Luckily, I was rescued by the Ginger Swan who ushered me into a taxi where we both squealed in excitement and took photos of the impact of tropical depression like tourists, not experienced expats. 

Ginger Swan: this is the sort of thing that they show on the telly!  (Snaps some more photos) We're supposed to be British, but we never get rain like this!

Sunday, 3 November 2013

Emma is Helpful

Many a thing has happened since returning from the adrenalin pumping Batu Ferrenghi.  Almost too much to keep up with!  Not only did Frenchie and I flash the proverbial vs to all the red tape that said that as two citizens of the world living outside our passport countries, and loving those of different political nationalities and with a history of cultural antagonism, we could not breeze through a wedding ceremony with the ease that a middle class, daughter of the village brownie pack leader and son of the butcher could have done and get legally married (long sentence), I also managed to prepare a picnic for four, remember all the important documents (including my and others' passports) and I am yet to lose the marriage certificate: a catastrophically impressive achievement in my books!

I then came home and consolidated my eighteenth to twenty second words in Vietnamese (see you later, fish, water, tree), returned to school, and, oh, had a visit from these two goddesses:


Who, frankly, exposed my so-called Li Hi expat lifestyle by floating across busy roads, navigating themselves without maps, remaining hydrated and without the runs, catching horribly early and late flights without complaint and jumping in and out of taxis like they'd been here for years. Slightly put out that my life wasn't as challenging as I'd made out to everyone, I drove a little faster on my moped and stopped for street food that was only a tiny bit likely to make me ill!  That's right! And I practically speak fluent Vietnamese now that I know the words for 'fish' and 'water'. That's pretty much a sentence. 

On my way home from school on Friday, though, I was once again reminded of the differences between Saigon and the Home Counties when I rode past a lady who had come off her bike and was twitching upsettingly in the middle of the road. Having only recently had a less dramatic and spasmy crash myself, I was moved to help rather than drive past and leave it to the experts, especially as everything seemed to be happening furiously slowly, whilst this poor woman still lay fitting in the road. 

So. Like the heroine I am, I discarded my bike by the side of the road and authoritatively smacked the door of a passing taxi so that it stopped. In teacher mode, I took charge and two men, disregardful of potential spinal injury, picked her up and slung her on the back seat. I jumped in front, making soothing noises and holding the lady's hand (thinking, 'what should one do?  Should one be worried about choking on vomit, or putting her in the recovery position, or checking airways?'), and off we sped to the hospital. 

After that, it wasn't very exciting. I left the lady at the hospital, and I hope she is okay now, and got back in the taxi to pick up my bike. The taxi driver, Thong, having established that I wasn't the lady's friend, told me I was a very good person. I humbly agreed and taught him the word for 'saint' so that when he retold the story to his mates over a beer, he could refer to me thus. The police were all over the place when I got back and initially, I think I was the target of police rage before Thong explained that I had in fact been the saviour of the incident (I taught him the word 'saviour', too) and then all the police and the curios bystanders waved me off into the sunset calling, 'thank yoooooouuuu!'  I waved at them, satisfied at the recognition and warm and fuzzy inside at having done a good deed without having my bike impounded. 

Tuesday, 22 October 2013

Batu Ferrenghi

After almost ten hours of relaxing and taking it easy, both RoD and I had gone a little stir crazy and so secretly, lest the other fat, lazy, book-reading, cocktail-sipping holiday-makers (aka The Enemy), or the indulgence-encouraging, polite and attentive staff (Puppet Government of the Relaxation State) heard us, we planned our getaway, disguised by a game of scrabble played on a Malaysian board for extra covertness, wine, sushi and four games of shithead, which I lost.


The escape plan was executed first thing the next morning, after a lie in. Destination: the lighthouse at Muka Head (to signal to other adrenalin seekers, of course, who would parachute out of a low flying plane to rescue us). First, we had to stock up on free lunch from the breakfast buffet, but sadly my heart wasn't in it, so we snuck away with just a mini apple Danish and a blueberry muffin. The Puppet Regime offered to pack us some more snacks in an adorable picnic basket, but this was just a ruse to lure us away from both Risk and also Death, and thus away from the core ideals that make up our sense of Selves. 

We managed to allude the Enemy and catch a bus to the gates of the National Park, where we paid a man to take us on his boat to Monkey Beach, after swearing him to secrecy and refusing to wear our life jackets to show him we meant business. From Monkey Beach, we trekked a mountainous and accursedly slippery path (in flip flops, because we are Li Hi) up approximately 227m to the lighthouse. When we arrived at our destination, we signed the guest book in one final act of rebellion against The Enemy and their Puppet Regime!




Unfortunately, there was no word from our fellow Riskers, and we had to assume, whilst morosely eating our pastries, and reading our books at the top of the lighthouse in the sunshine with a beautiful sea view, that they too had probably fallen victim to the Puppet Government and were nibbling on fruit platters by the pool and sipping on fresh lime juice. We no longer acknowledge them as Brothers in Arms for this treachery. There was clearly nothing else for it but to sit in the sun a little longer, emulating our mothers in a sort of National Trust, pass-the-cucumber-sandwiches kind of way, and then return to be picked up by Akrim our private boatman, I mean, co-conspirator, and stop off at the Tropical Spice Gardens on our way home.


The Spice Gardens were a delight. There was a gift shop. I spent all my money, and then we had coffee and lunch in their treehouse restaurant.  Wonderful!


Satisfied that our protest would be recognised by the Puppet Regime, and they would no longer regard us with the same pity as they do the Enemy, but rather with a sense of awe and respect, such as one gives a great and dangerous member of the opposition, we retired to the poolside to sunbathe.  

However, when a member of the Regime dared to ask if we required drinks by the pool, we realised that these guys didn't know when to back down, and thus made a great display of showing them our Li Hi prowess by going for a run on the beach (or at least I did, RoD more maturely completed hers in the in-house gym where there is water and air conditioning).  My run, though, consisted of many film-like moments, as a tribute to Batu Ferrenghi, invented 1950s Italian film director who founded the town in which we now find ourselves. Parts of my run were like the opening of 'Chariots of Fire', except without the homo-eroticism, and more sweat; one moment was reminiscent of 'Amores Perros' when a puppy, initially frightened by my sudden presence, alerted three of his big friends, who began a stand off that had me backing slowly into the sea like the climactic scenes of 'The Last Unicorn'. Some Malaysian men helped me, initially, by clapping at the dogs, but when they saw that the danger had passed, they just laughed at me. 

After all this, I can confidently, without a slither of a doubt, confirm that we have both been reinstated as both Li and Hi, and thus can once again regard ourselves with respect and dignity. 

All cool and arty photos c/o the RoD Shiny New Birthday Camera Photo House.

Penang

Having slept at Changi airport rather than make the journey back to a comfortable home and bed (I had to say I'd done it at least once), we were gifted with a flying visit from Frenchie who was getting off a plane as we were getting on to one, and then we were off to Penang. There was a brief moment of frozen panic when I left check in a bit too late, but loudly assured Frenchie that he was a fussing grandma and the plane would never leave without me, only to be greeted by a nice lady who told me that the plane was full. Frenchie was standing behind me, a little distance away, refusing to become embroiled in yet another travel scandal of my own making, so I asked her to keep her voice down whilst she sorted it all out so that he wouldn't hear and be all smug about it. He did hear, but wasn't smug, because despite being French, he is a wonderfully patient man. 

George Town, in Penang is a lovely tumble down mixture of Straits Chinese shophouses selling quirky gifts, houses of revolutionary mainland Chinese politicians, street art and Peranakan mansions crammed with gold, jade and mother of pearl. Have some choice photos:




I personally think she should pay me for this one. Other than the interruption of the actual photographer in the background, it is beautiful. 


Cute!

On our first day here, we ascended the tallest hill on the island in a very, very steep funicular for "high" tea (chortle) in a lovely colonial building, whereupon it started raining and didn't stop until the early hours of the next morning. Following this, we discovered that Malaysian taxi drivers' raison d'être is to rip you off, despite the fact that that all their taxis are printed with the words 'this is a metered taxi. Haggling is not permitted,' but eventually we got to a very cool bar/restaurant/cafe called China House where we ate dinner and bitched about taxi drivers. 

Our hostel was very cute, and the owner super friendly and helpful, but we were quite impressed with our splurge hostel, which boasts a balcony bath, sea view and lovely pool. 


Hopefully the rain will clear up so that we can actually make use of the facilities. Until then, I'm refusing to move from this position:


RoD, on the other hand, is threatening to use her book to make a raft on which to sail back to the mainland if we do any more luxurious, tea-drinking, relaxing activities, so we might have to waterski tomorrow, or the appeal of the private beach, cocktails and sushi may be a little too much...


Friday, 18 October 2013

Hen Do

So, many close friends were surprised to learn via the intimate channels of Facebook that I am due to be legally married next Friday. The reason many people don't know this, and I am coming across as a spontaneous, slightly mental, eloper is because as far as Nico and I are concerned, the wedding is in December, as you all know. Conversations about lanterns, the colour purple, French translations, shoes and hymns all revolve around the real wedding. In December.  However, justice systems throughout the world don't see it like we do, thus we need to get married before commonwealth law as well as the eyes of God with our nearest and dearest as witnesses to the event and our undying, somewhat mushy and never ending love for one another. 

To actually tell you the process that lead up to this point would be boring, so let me transform it into an amusing and reduced script:

Priest: I'm sorry to inform you, I cannot legally marry you, because you're not in the country long enough before your wedding. God's still available on that date, though, so the church is still yours. 

St. Albans Registry Office: I'm sorry, we cannot legally marry you, because you're not in the country long enough before your wedding. 

Me: my grandparents are going to have a heart attack when they realise this is a sham wedding. 

Singapore: we can legally marry you because we are awesome and part of the commonwealth, so your marriage will be recognised in the UK without any further paperwork. All you will need is your passports, two witnesses and their passports, 15 non-consecutive days in the country and a lengthy online form process.
Me: phew. RoD?
RoD: yes.  Available. 

Frenchie: my parents are going to have a heart attack when they realise this is a sham, only-legal-in-British-commonwealth-countries-wedding. I am French and I hate the British. 

French consulate: we are incredibly useless and frustrating, but eventually we will meet you and publish your wedding banns so that this sham wedding is recognised in France. 
Frenchie: phew. 
Me: phew. 

RoD: so, since I can come to your legal wedding, but not your real wedding, we must only ever refer to the legal wedding as your real wedding. The one at Christmas is a sham. 
Me: got it. 

So now RoD have found ourselves in the departure lounge of Saigon airport once more:


...following an International Day at school where I dressed as a global bookshelf and spent the day raising the profile of international reading and even walked down a catwalk with and as a book, followed by a come-to-life Gatsby and Daisy:


I just love reading. 

We managed to trump even my 'wait-in-the-bar-until-your-name-is-called-over-the-tannoy' approach by having a very unhappy man waving a Tiger Airlines sign accost us just after we'd paid our bill and tell us to hurry up because we were the last people to board the flight. Then, a colleague who was also in the airport, rang RoD to ask her if she was okay because they'd just heard our names over the tannoy. Obviously, the message was 'board your flight on time', but I was just enthralled by the fact that if you force them to, airlines will up their game and lay on a personal hosting service for you to take you from the bar to the gate. If I'd known this before, I would never have gotten to the gate on time!  I want the first class experience as a standard, please!

Anyway, now we are off for a stopover at Changi airport before a lovely hen do in Penang, full of UNESCO World Heritage sights, beaches, diving, cocktails and afternoon tea. What more could a girl want?

Wednesday, 9 October 2013

Motorcycle Diaries

Since being in Vietnam I've had three trusty, and not so trusty bike companions who have facilitated many adventures, great and small.  The first, Little Moto, was so reliable and awesome that he got his own blog post, and a picture, which pretty much makes him a celebrity in Vietnam; the second was Kicker, who was so annoying (had to be kick started every time because the ignition didn't work) that I gave him back only after a month or so; and now I have Wobbler who, after a flat tyre that lead to what I suspect is a crushed wheel (whatever the metal interior bit is called) now wobbles disconcertingly if I drive too fast. 

In general, I am a very safe driver. When given the option of life or death, I invariably choose life, even if I'm late for something, or quite tired. Evidence to this is that I spent my first 11 months on a bike without mishap, which is quite something in Saigon. I'd say the average time spent before a significant accident is around 3 months, so I was really beating statistics. 

However, a few weeks ago, as I was on my way to a birthday party, a pizza delivery boy failed to acknowledge my existence and, essentially, drove straight into me from the side. My bike slid sideways, I face planted in the middle of a busy road, and I lost my shoe. 

It's funny what your brain does in situations like these. My first thoughts were that I needed to get out of the road, sharpish; my second that I quite liked that shoe, and needed to try and save it without having my hand run over. Thankfully I was able to salvage it and then get out of the road and into the nearest bar, whereupon the most wonderful demonstrations of humanity took the sting out of the whole event. First aid kits and green tea were produced; strangers got my bike to safety on the pavement; another stranger took my helmet off for me; I was ushered into a bathroom and then bettadined whilst squealing like a girl; ice bags were producdd; a taxi was flagged down and my bike looked after. Really, human beings are the most wonderful things. 

I managed not to cry until I got into the taxi, where I made all sorts of strange, suppressed noises, because I didn't want to bother the taxi driver, but really, this was probably a lot weirder and more disturbing for him. He had to rummage through my bag and take money out of my purse when we got to my apartments because my palms were ripped to shreds, and he did the whole thing without pinching any doe, which is very comforting. 

I managed to get to Risk or Death, who regaled me with stories of when she had biked through the deserts of Azerbajan in hot pursuit of international bandits and sustained similar injuries, and Frenchie took one look at me lain out, helpless on the sofa, when he popped over the weekend and said, "Eh, I 'av 'ad worse eenjuries een rugby. You Eenglish, you are 'elpless een ze face ov pain!', to which I agreed and plaintively asked for a cup of tea 

It took a day or so to get back on poor Wobbler once we'd picked him up from the bar and hammered the foot pedal away from the gear pedals (I say 'we' - some helpful Vietnamese men did it) but I got back on eventually, wrist splint, dressing and all, and spent about three days riding to work with one trouser leg rolled up so that the oozing wound on my leg could air. Mmmm. Tasty. 

Shallow wounds to the palms, left elbow, knees and hips were sustained, but all in all, not too bad an induction into the world of motor cycle crashes!

Sunday, 22 September 2013

Anniversaire

This weekend marks a whole twelve months of Frenchie putting up with me and measuring his commitment to me in plane tickets, by allowing me to eat airport Burger Kings, in arguments about the colour purple (not the book) and in numerous nail biting and incredulous passport related stories. Yea verily, it must be true love. 

Thus we decided to celebrate our funny little union by being tourists and going to the South East Asia Aquarium, since we both quite like fish, Frenchie especially, as they talk far less than I do. To get to this Aquarium, we got to go on a cable car. Cool!  Have a picture:



It's me!  Looking only mildly frizzy-haired, but definitely a but gimpy. 

When we arrived at Sentosa, which is an island near Singapore, I had a bit of a culture shock and walked around a little dazed because as a child I didn't really go to theme parks and entire islands made up of plastic and concrete and FUN scare me a little bit. We decided to get on a free bus to go to the aquarium, and when a super friendly, over enthusiastic voice encouraged us to enjoy our time on ASIA'S FAVOURITE ISLAND!!! I stared at Frenchie, petrified, and asked to get off. 

Luckily, there was a Starbucks at our alighting bus stop, since efficient money grabbing from tourists is what Starbucks is all about, and I sat, glancing furtively at everything like a small, furry, caged animal, in a corner, drinking a frappucino until I felt better. 

Motivated by the promise of yet another In The World (I have previously a lot of driest/highest/largest In The Worlds in South America and do like to tick them off my list), we pushed on to the aquarium. 


We had been sensible enough to book our tickets online so laughed at all the other losers who were queuing for 15-30 minutes and pranced through an interesting looking exhibition of the history of maritime trade before being told that there was yet another queue of 45 minutes to endure. Oh. 

Luckily, we were in positive frappucino moods, and this only served to heighten the excitement and anticipation. By the time we finally got through the turnstiles, I lost Frenchie in a crowd, and found him, a few moments later, like this:


Frenchie really likes fish. 

Even more excitement was to come, though, but to go through it verbally would be boring. Instead, have some cool pictures of our favourite things:


10 points if you can spot the cuttlefish. 


These are massive. Like nightmares. 


These are actually transparent, and they had a really cool light show which made them change colour. Awesome. 


Like outer space!


Jellyfish ARE like aliens!


Really big, ugly grouper. 


Awesome manta ray!


Awesome other kind of ray!


These were Frenchie's favourites. Because of the colour. Obviously. 

If that wasn't all exciting enough for an anniversary, we returned home for our furniture present delivery. Now some of you might be thinking 'furniture?!  What are you, sixty?  Are you celebrating your diamond wedding anniversary?' which would be silly of you, because the wedding's not until December, but I appreciate that furniture doesn't scream 'young and madly in love'. When Frenchie picks it, though, it does scream 'awesome and travelly and cool'... but I forgot to take a picture of it, so you'll just have to take my word for it and wait impatiently for a picture of the anniversary furniture. 



Thursday, 5 September 2013

Mr. Monkey's Many Adventures

Today's blog is filled with many exciting things, of Li Hi and Li Hi Wannabe proportions as I haven't blogged for a good long while and there is a lot to catch up on!

Firstly, and most excitingly, our assembly this morning was lead by an Arctic Explorer.  Wow.  What's even more wow is that he is 23 years old, and by this age has already been to the South Pole, set up his own business about the ocean and written a book about his trip to the South Pole.  I sat through the assembly, and even though I was chuckling at his numerous penguin jokes and photos of him in a penguin costume, I did ask myself: I am 26 - what, pray, have I done with my meagre and insignificant life?  Admittedly, this was slightly depressing and un-Li Hi and now I am trying to figure out how to organise a form trip to the moon.  I shall market it as 'Year 7: Space Exploration', and we shall tie it in with many cross-curricular activities including sci fi literature and Science and Geography lessons, and each child shall play an instrument to perform the 'E.T.' soundtrack as we are taking off.

Yes.

Then I shall travel around international schools empowering them to lead similar trips, and I too shall write a book, except mine will include lesson plans and pictures from outer space.

Back in reality, Risk or Death and I have had a rather relaxed few months, stretching our Li Hi desires to far less than their full extent by taking up yoga and by travelling to Singapore on our long weekends. Our visit to Singapore was very exciting and hedonistic and a great chance to meet and get to know RoD's new friend, Mr. Monkey, who, it turns out, has a number of things in common with us:



So we got along splendidly!  Mr. Monkey is a barrel of laughs, and we get away with taking pictures of him in public places and at national landmarks by explaining hat RoD is a primary school teacher and thus needs to create a 'Mr. Monkey Goes to Singapore' Powerpoint to show her five-year-olds.  I'm not sure if this presentation will/would ever have existed, but there is enough truth in it to help us sound convincing - not enough to get a picture with passport control, but enough to get us FREE SCARVES from the wonderful people at the Skybar on the top of the Marina Bay Sands Hotel.  How cool is that?  A lovely waiter man (Tristan) had his photo taken with Mr. Monkey, and then, as Mr. Monkey was posing in front of the skyline, he literally ran up to us, sweating and panting and gave us scarves!

Tristan: (panting)  Where is your colleague?
Me: oh!  Mr. Monkey?  He's over there, having his photo taken against the night skyline.
Tristan: please, take these (offers scarves) and wish the children all the best from us at the Sky Bar and Marina Bay Sands.
Me: thank you!  I shall take them.  For the sake of the children.





Cool.

I have seen this fo' real, yo.
Whilst that was an indulgent and exciting weekend, our new yoga hobby (which is often followed by gin, since we are now embracing the whole expat housewife lifestyle) is a little more Li Hi.  Every week we stroll in, trying not to be noticed, we shuffle our bottoms into our yoga mats (mine is purple, like all the others; RoD's is pink with flowers on it because she brings her own from home) and we chat about y'know, stuff and the weather and whatnot and then stern, slightly camp yoga man demands that we breathe really loudly and stretch and contort ourselves and RoD and I assume out serious faces and inhale exhale.

Our serious faces don't last for long because yoga, just in case you are unfamiliar with it, involves lots of very amusing poses like that 'lie-on-your-back-and-spread-your-legs-apart' pose, which I personally like to call the Position of Women's Oppression, or the 'sit-half-way-down-and-balance' pose, also known as the Really Reluctant Poo Position.  Some of the most upsetting for us are the more simple of poses, like the one that requires you to stand straight and then bend over and hold onto your ankles.  I approach such positions with a bit of a smug 'at least I don't fall over on this one' attitude, and even peek a look at myself in one of the three way mirrors to see how flexible and bendy and awesome I look in my leggings and baggy t-shirt.  Alas, I am only to be greeted by the sight of the lithe and supple Vietnamese ladies in the class who can literally - no exaggeration at all - bend themselves in half and touch their forehead to their knees.  It shouldn't be humanly possible to do this, nor should it be in accordance with the laws of physics that a sixty something year old Vietnamese woman should be able to do the splits in a straight line and then lie flat on her face with her hips, stomach, boobs, chin and forehead touching the floor.
Not photoshopped.  I've seen it with my very own watering eyes.

My comparative whale-like voluminousness sets me giggling in embarrassed shame: I am not flexible; I am not bendy; I am stiff and rubbish at yoga and I'm very sorry.  I try to stifle the laughs.  I look up to the ceiling.  My chest begins to shake as much as the muscles in my poorly toned legs and my abs whilst doing the plank.  I think I can keep it under control, but then I catch RoD's eye in the mirror and hear her make a weird snortsnuffle sound and suddenly, as the camp yoga man comes around and pushes down on my bum to make me stretch, I burst out laughing, really loudly in a guffawing kind of way and I spit in his face a little bit by accident.

He looks at me, disgusted.  I am horrified, but still laughing.  I am so very embarrassed.

"Come on!" he says, "At least try!"

What he doesn't realise is that I've been expending all my mental and physical energies for the past year on this (chorus of cherubim a and angels, please):


WOW.  Look at the GOLD letters!  Look at the RED RIBBON book mark!

...yes. That is nail varnish remover on my desk.

Wednesday, 28 August 2013

The Great Return

Ah!  Vietnam!
Land of mopeds and chickens in cages;
Great paysage of paddy fields and brown rivers. 
Where else can I eat a banh mi for 80p?
Or purchase great swathes of white cotton?
Yea verily, I understand not your bank accounts,
Or why the shop sells not bread,
But ah, Vietnam!  How I love thee!

So. Vietnam, ey?  Country of economic boom and rapid industrialisation?  Well, if you, like me, don't know what these things mean, I shall describe them in Emma language, which involves concrete objects that you can visualise.

All of that FTSE 100 stuff means that in the five weeks I've been away, the following stuff has happened:

- there are lots of new roads and buildings that had been started are now finished. There's even actual work going on at the site where the metro station will apparently go. Wow. Infrastructure. 

- there's now a yoga studio, a cafe, a shop that doesn't sell bread, a card system, a new entry system to the car park and new staff at my apartment buildings and apparently there will be a bakery very soon. Maybe they will sell bread? I now no longer have to go anywhere, but I will still go to my veggie market because it is cheap, local, awesome and has ball trees:


Not to mention flower towers:


Cool. 

- my bike man has moved house and his daughter is bigger than she was before. Apparently babies grow. Who knew?

- they have made a paved bus stop instead of letting people stand in the middle of the highway to flag the bus!  True progress. 

- Slender Laurel has an entirely new bathroom. Shiny. 

Some things do not change though: the Internet took two days to kick back in, and after riding around for 30 minutes trying to find the post office where my packages were being held, I gave up and came home. People in Vietnam think that places are in completely different places from where the previous person has said they were. I asked like, 8 people (in my amazingly proficient Vietnamese) and they all said the post office was somewhere else where it wasn't. No good!

However, all very good to be back, especially as I was greeted almost immediately with a wonderful shipment from home: