Is it weird being back in America?
I wasn't sure how to answer that
question. “Not...really.” Adjusting to Stateside norms was pretty
easy; I did grow up here, after all. I can handle silverware and I never picked up on the whole spitting thing anyway. But as the last month has passed
I've noticed a couple ways in which I am still adjusting after all.
Trishaw drivers know better than anyone how to survive in the traffic in Yangon, Myanmar |
Number One: crossing the street. In 90%
of the world, as far as I can tell, moving around on the street is
based on the principle of not making any sudden moves or changes of
direction. If you can estimate everyone else's trajectory, you can
move around them.
To cross the street overseas: start
walking into traffic, not fast, not slow, no sharp directional
adjustments. If possible, walk straight at the back of a passing car.
It will continue moving, so when you reach it you will slide right
into the space it just vacated. Continue this until you've Froggered
your way across the street.
It's similar to the way you don't try
to avoid the cockroaches, just trust that they'll avoid you.
But in America, if you do this, all the
cars on the street do something extremely unexpected in the global
mind: they stop. Or at least, they slow down and wave you across.
Now, instead of sliding unobtrusively through traffic, you are blocking it. Dangit,
Americans, stop being so polite!
So I have had to go back to obeying
formal traffic rules. It's weird.
One need not make plans in the San Blas Archipelago |
Number Two: I rarely planned anything
more than a day or two in advance for the past few years. I would
reach a town and stay there until I was done, during which time I'd
hear about some other place within a six/seven hour bus ride. Go. I
am not an itinerary sort of guy. But here, this means I don't get out
much, since everyone else has social calendars booked weeks in
advance.
Me: “Hey, you wanna do something?”
Friend: “Sure! Let's get sushi! When
works for you?”
Me: “How about tonight?”
Friend: “I'm booked until January.”
I gotta get the hang of that. Anyone
want to go get sushi...in January?
Does this dude in Kuala Lumpur seem worried about his image? |
And finally, there's Image. I've made a
career out of trying to resist this, probably as a means of coping
with my lack of fashion passion (as my closet of blank-ass clothes will
attest), but my skills were were honed overseas. In Nicaragua they
described my sandals as “Jesus shoes” and I kept wearing them. In
Sri Lanka I sewed up the entire left side of my shorts with the wrong
color thread and thought no more about it. In Myanmar I could not
have cared less when it was a woman's style bicycle I rode.
You can't be too picky about your image if you get your hair cut in a saloon. Can I get a sarsaparilla with this perm? |
I brought that all home with me. The
friend moving out of my new room offered to loan me her woman's style
bike and I accepted, no worries, who cares if people think I look
silly? It's a bike. That ended up not working out, so I have my manly
man ride after all, but whatever, it's shruggalicious.
And I had to smile in the grocery store as
I bought a big bag of toilet paper, thinking about how poop-phobic
Americans are, and remembering confessions of people who were
humiliated to buy the stuff. “I buy it at Cosco in gigantic packs
so that I don't have to do it very often.” Whatever! I'm not
embarrassed by anything!
Can you guess what these Pa-O kids in a mountain village in Myanmar think of our image concerns and poop-phobia? |
But on the walk home, toilet paper
casually under my arm on the busy street, I saw a bag of clothes
hangers on the sidewalk. I inherited four hangers with the closet,
but I now had seven shirts, with premonitions of more to come. I
needed hangers. And here was a bag full of them, free on the
sidewalk. We're also an intensely germaphobic nation, but the odds
these hangers were actually infected and infested, scabies,
hepatitis, bed bugs? Very slight.
But I walked right on past. What would
people think if I was rummaging through the garbage on the street?
Oh.
Damn. That's disappointing.
It's weird being back in America.
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