Acclimatisation
One of the strangest things about having been here for six months, I think, must be the level of acclimatisation I seem to have achieved.
Walking down the street, things that made me stop and look six months ago now just pass me by as perfectly normal.
* Four Buddhist monks, orange silk robes flapping in the breeze, crowded onto the same 50cc motorbike.
* Five 12 year olds all piled on to the same 50cc motorbike swerving in and out of traffic the wrong way around a roundabout.
* Crossing a road by just walking into the traffic and trusting that people will drive around you
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* Eating things that you would normally just stand on and throw out the window [cockroaches, locusts, water-beetles…]
* Eating rice and bacon for breakfast
* Street children, beggars, amputees, et cetera although these do still usually make me stop and reach for my wallet
Of course it has not all been so strange, I can pop round to the local ‘supermarket’ and buy toothpaste and loo roll, even Gordon’s gin or Red wine. But that has to be for special treats, it is far too expensive to shop there every week.
Being able to check my Email everyday at work is another bonus, as is getting messages and news from family and friends back home [hint, hint]
* Having friends here on holiday being the top one of them. Including a week at the beach relaxing and also a fair number of shopping trips to the Russian Market - P’sar Tool Tum Pong
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* Buying a motorbike (Honda KL400) to get myself around, and out of, the city
* Sampling some great Khmer food [not including the items on the list above!]
* Seeing
* Visiting the
* Sitting up in a riverside cafe, drinking a coffee and watching the general street theatre that is
* Karaoke
* Only joking about that last one, I could not sing to save my life and go into a panic every time anyone suggests that I do!
Also, my visits out to the provincial projects are usually both entertaining and interesting Spending time with local Khmer families, eating in their homes, getting up at
- Oh and we do some work as well !!!
Moving out of VSO accommodation [after 7 weeks] and into my own flat was another milestone, that I think was the point at which I felt ‘yikes, I really am here for 2 years!’ But actually having my own place was a wonderful feeling. I could relax, buy my own food, watch
Socially
1 Ex-pat bars/restaurants full of westerners earning a
2 Khmer restaurants/karaoke bars with blue plastic chairs, tin tables, cheap food and drink, but you are ankle deep in chicken bones by the end of the evening and deaf from the full volume ‘singing’
But, all in all, I have had a good six months, know my way around the city fairly well, am starting to make friends with some of my colleagues, have home, cleaner, transport and a small social circle.
All things that will hopefully build and grow during the next six months.
Happy August everyone
Love to all
Darren