Archives for: August 2007, 19

08/19/07

Permalink 04:57:28 pm, by admin Email , 506 words   English (US)
Categories: ...and Takes On, Travel

Hanoi Hilton

Well, Vietnam is NOT Korea, that's for sure.

Other than Hong Kong, which is a weird version of China, I've never been to a communist country before. Yesterday at the immigration checkpoint the officer gave me the slowest look I've ever gotten at immigration. I didn't dare smile.

Yesterday my memory card broke and just gave me error after error. Luckily, I found a photo shop and the man formatted my card for me for free. Thank you!

I wandered around, got my bearings a bit, had some delicious fruit shake and some Malaysian bun for 8,000 dong. That's less than 50 cents. I had a huge dish of I don't know what rice and some veggies and durian tea for 20,000 dong (about $1.20). The old couple eating at the restaurant was laughing at me since I obviously had no clue what I wanted, and I just laughed too.

I crashed last night, hard, at about 6 pm, woke up around 10 for two hours and then went back to bed.

I was up eating breakfast at 7 am this morning, which makes me feel (now, at 2:30 pm) as if I've done enough today.



Street in the Old Quarter, 7:30 am

I had breakfast then walked to a local lake and temple (enterance 3,000 dong). I then walked to the Hoa Lo Prison, better known as the Hanoi Hilton. That was an interesting site, though most of it has been torn down and a high rise is in its place. (Admission 5000 dong, about 30 cents.)



Hanoi Hilton



Hanoi Hilton
(That is glass in the concrete edges.)



Vase

I then walked over to the Temple of Literature (admission also 5000 dong), a beautiful, quite area. I ended up talking to a nice 23-year old Vietnamese man for about an hour. He wanted to practice his English for a job interview at the end of the month. I had a heck of a time getting him to understand that I live in Korea and my boyfriend is Korean.

He asked what I knew of Ho Chi Minh and I said not much. He made me promise I would go to the Ho Chi Minh museum to learn what the Vietnamese think of him.

I had lunch for $5 at a restaurant called KOTO (Know One, Teach One). They take street children and train them and educate them to give them better lives. I got a huge falafel and a can of Diet Coke for less than $5 and left the change.

I then took a waaaaaaaay overpriced cyclo ride back to my hostel. Fact is, I knew I was getting ripped off, but I am American and guess what, I do have money. I'm not going to haggle over $2 when a man is pushing my (relatively speaking) rich self around the scary streets of Hanoi using his leg power. It's not worth it.



Cyclo

Tonight may be a sitting on my butt, reading my bootleg books (bought at the prison for $12) or I may check out the water puppet show. Not sure. It's about 35 degrees and that's slowing me down.

An American educator moves moved to Korea, presumably to teach English. Instead she discovers discovered that learning Korean one taekwondo class at a time is was a more captivating activity.

Somewhere along the way, she met a Good Man, fell in love, and ended up back in the States. Still doing taekwondo, still learning Korean...

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