I always have a reason when I go to Sisaket. Although I love
this quiet small city that’s only about fifty miles from the Cambodian border,
it’s a long train or bus ride from Bangkok .
If I simply wanted to restore myself, Korat was much closer and equally
pleasant, Sisaket took a bit of planning, but it always continues to lure me back with
something exceptional to do.
I’m not a sightseer but I’ll travel to see art. I’d fallen
in love with Sisaket thirteen years ago, when I stayed there on a journey to
see Khao Prah Viharn, the magnificent temple on a Cambodian mountain. Last
October I wanted to go to Wat Lan Khuwit, a temple made entirely of beer bottles.
It was in the province
of Sisaket , not too far
from the city of that same name.
So I packed a bag, got on an early morning train and headed
off. The temple was enchanting. Glass buildings sparkled through the leaves of a forest setting,
green and brown bottles the building material for the monks’ cottages, the
crematorium, the bathhouses, the ceremonial halls, and the most beautiful of
all, the prayer hall that housed the Buddha, surrounded by a fish-filled moat.
The next morning I found breakfast and then went to a
temple, wondering why I never allowed myself enough time in this town that
always gives me what I want, plus peace and quiet. The night before I’d gone
out to explore the night market that sprouted up in late afternoon and ended up
at a place called The Cuckoo’s Nest, where expat men of my vintage sat on a
porch and drank beer. They were a small United Nations, each of a different
nationality, each a long-time resident of Sisaket, and each of them men of few
words, but those words were friendly. I looked at them with envy. I wanted to
live in Sisaket too.
Now I was leaving in a couple of hours and I wanted to
wander a bit. The streets were quiet and the temple dominated the neighborhood,
which was fine with me. Thai temples are the country’s social safety net and I
make a donation at one in every place I travel to. In return I find an ignorant,
blundering form of reverence spring up somewhere within me, not for a being,
but for the practice that takes place within temple grounds.
It was early on a
weekend morning and I had almost the entire place to myself. As I walked toward
the gates to leave a man in a wheelchair entered. He rolled up toward me,
smiled, and greeted me. We began a brief chat, me with my city cynicism waiting
for the plea and deciding how much I would give him, while wishing my visit
hadn’t ended with a mendicant. The man rummaged about in a small bag that he
carried and brought out a package holding two little mooncakes.
“For your trip back to Bangkok ,”
he said.
And this, boys and girls, is why I love Sisaket.
2 comments:
What a marvelous punchline! Worth the long trip.
It always is. You should go there.
Post a Comment