I said don't it always seem to go
That you don't know what you've got
Till it's gone
That you don't know what you've got
Till it's gone
--Joni Mitchell, "Paradise"
If you have an over-achieving imagination like mine, you're gone before you get there. Paradise is a honeymoon with Nan on the lovely island of Ko Samed this past weekend, and for much of the time I could not stop thinking about what lay ahead for me in ten days time when I fly to San Francisco on a forced journey that can have no happy outcome.
My bride would have no mopping about and was alert to my preoccupation with what could not be known. "Thinking too much," she would notice, and she would not leave my hands free for long. I hung on to her like the rock she has become in my life. And she told me that no one had ever touched her back before, hugged her, as I did. Out of all the distance and people in the world, we have somehow ended up on the same shore. There is no rhyme or reason to our relationship, but it illuminates the dark places in our lives and gives us a comfort that I never believed possible. Until my thoughts turn to the "what ifs" and "maybes" of what lies ahead like underwater boulders that threaten our ship.
Ko Samed is a small island with a string of white sand beaches in the north facing east that can be reached by ferry from the tiny port of Ban Phe 40 minutes away. The bus ride from Bangkok takes about three hours. It's much closer than the better known islands of Ko Samui and Ko Phi Phi and, to my mind, superior in many respects. Most of the visitors appear to be Thai with foreigners in the minority (a big plus). The water is warm and without intimidating waves and it rains less than elsewhere (although this weekend the single dirt road was rutted with puddles that only all-terrain pickup taxis could cross). I discovered Samed (often written as Samet) in my first year in Thailand and have been five times; Nan and I have visited the island three times, the last trip in March with her mother and nephew.Our favorite place now is Samed Villa, a relatively upscale resort at the southern end of the beach known as Ao Phai. Rates for the middle value room in this low season are 1800 baht, or about $60, a night. This includes a magnificent morning buffet, with tasty Thai and western comestibles. Although we'd reserved a "garden view" room, the bay could be seen clearly from our balcony just above the open air dining area. For 30 baht, I got a wireless ID card that allowed me to get email on my iPod Touch, but since that dragged me away from our honeymoon I used it sparingly. The objective was to enjoy the beach view from a shady chaise lounge, to bathe in the clear and warm turquoise water, to feast on fresh seafood at several of the restaurants spread up and down the beach, and to celebrate our decision recently to make our marriage official.
On the evening of our arrival, we returned to Ploy Talay Restaurant on Hat Sai Kaew, the island's main beach. It's the biggest and most popular and the fresh-caught sea food is to die for. On Saturday night we tried Seabreeze Restaurant which is quite close to our hotel. I've become very fond of barbecued scallops in the shell since discovering them in Hua Hin, so we had them for both meals. We also had Nan's favorite, squid, called pla mut in Thai which also covers sea creatures as different as octopus and stingray. We ate broiled whole fish and large shrimp cooked in a peanut sauce, and, at least the first evening, toasted our health with cocktails, gin and tonic for me and a Blue Hawaiian for Nan. The first night we ended with ice cream on the terrace of Samed Village as waves softly lapped the shore.
Beside heart-thumping trance music cranked up loud from various beach bars, the most popular entertainment on Samed are fire shows. I suspect Ploy Talay had the first and there are dozens of videos from there on YouTube (including mine from three years ago), but now many of the sand eateries also offer shows. We were too early at Ploy Talay for the show on Friday but at Seabreeze an incredibly talented twirler of fire risked burning with his graceful antics. It was the night of the new moon (cleverly branded as "Black Moon") and the beach was as crowded as it would be during high season in January. Up and down the coast people were launching sky lanterns, called khom loi in Thai, and firing off rockets from long poles. Out in the surf, several men with flashlights and nets were searching for something edible. Vendors with portable booths were selling banana pancakes. Everywhere the semi-wild dogs and an occasional cat roamed.
5 comments:
Dr Will, I've been following your blog for quite some time now, but have not left any comments. I've enjoyed your unofficial reviews of various places you and Nan have visited and wish you well on your journey back to the States.
I hope you sort out your 'issues' quickly and that your return to BKK comes sooner than expected.
Cheers!
Will, this essay made me cry. You will come back--you have a wife to cherish! Take care of business and then get your ass back on a plane!!
Continue to be impressed and delighted with what you share on your blog. Blessings on this coming (possibly unpredictable) trip and come back soon and safe. Let me know if there is anything I can do to help you and Nan.
peace, compassion,
Indeed.
Take care of Business {TCB} and get yourself back on a plane when things are ironed out.
You have lots to look forward to !
Peace and Grace. Prayers for a speedy outcome.
"Out of all the distance and people in the world, we have somehow ended up on the same shore."
You know, you really struck a chord with this one. When I first met my wife Paradee I remember writing that I felt like a small boat tossed on a stormy sea but that now she was in sight beckoning me to shore.
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