The Omen
Looking down
at my broken phone, just hours away from leaving for Cambodia, I couldn’t help
but wonder if my friend’s death was indeed the ill-fated omen I feared it was…
It was just a
few days prior to leaving when I was on Facebook and found a post made by my
friend’s sister explaining that my friend Blake had just died. Upon seeing the
words, fear and anxiety hit me like a tsunami, immediately dropping me to my
knees in the middle of a fish market in Thailand.
Blake and I
had formed a friendship over a shared supernatural experience on a train as we
were returning from our separate trips to Oregon to see the Solar Eclipse in
2017. He happened to be the only witnesses to a conversation I had with a woman
who claimed to be possessed by a demon. He was half asleep at the table next to
me when I found myself face to face with an alleged demon who was speaking
through a woman we spent the last 8 hours talking to. Only now, she and I are
the only people awake and after she had experienced some very strange stomach
pains I found myself 20 minutes later having a heated conversation about when
her possession took place and how I considered the demon’s description of
itself to be the description of a “virus.”
This created
a very volatile tone throughout the whole conversation and left me unnerved
about the whole encounter by the time it was over. I started that conversation
thinking I was speaking to a mentally ill woman and I left the conversation feeling
unsure about whether I just encountered a legitimate spirit or a schizophrenic.
And Blake, he was there in the background fading in and out of consciousness
the whole time, hearing mainly the tapping of her nails on the table as he
explained to me later. When I showed him the video footage I recorded his mouth
damn near hit the floor. Neither of us expected that from her, making it all
the more strange and eerie
In the
following months my life quickly plummeted into chaos and the result was me
leaving my life behind and embarking on the adventure I’m currently still
experiencing. The drastic turn of events in my life only created more belief
that I had real contact with something that pushed the boundaries of my reason.
Luckily, as my previous posts state, I was able to start a new and amazing
life. It would seem my friend was not so lucky. It was thirteen months after
the train incident that Blake met his untimely death at the age of 33. And now here I was, also 33, just three days
away from leaving Thailand for Cambodia, staring down at my phone, scanning the
post over and over hoping that I was just misreading it. Unfortunately, it was
true, and I had no details on the cause of his death leaving me nothing but my
imagination to ponder the circumstances of his demise.
The next few
days were to be very trying on my nerves as I kept thinking about my friend and
what could have happened to him. I was preparing to leave for Cambodia, but I
was really starting to have second thoughts about the trip altogether. I
probably would have abandoned the whole thing if it weren’t for the fact that
my Visa was about to expire, leaving me no choice but to leave Thailand. What
motivated me more than that though, was the fact that I was completely broke by
this time and was honestly ready to fly home. The thing is, I only bought a one-way
ticket to Thailand thinking I was going to just wander around sleeping on
streets and staying in hostels for a few months and then I would just buy a
ticket back when I was ready. This being my first time overseas and having to
figure it all out by myself, I neglected to think about fluctuating prices for
plane tickets that were based on time of year and what airport you fly into.
Because of
the fact I was basically broke, the primary financiers of this trip were to be
some of my family who were being supportive of my travels and wanted me to see
more of South East Asia before I left. This would be the main reason why I would
keep moving forward once in Cambodia, even when I should have called it quits.
Well, that and I wanted to know if I could accomplish something amazing,
something that would shock even myself… But we will get to that, for now, let’s
get back to my broken phone.
Day of Departure
It was 9am.
I woke up early because I still had to stop by a Western Union before I left so
I could pick up some money my mom had sent me for my birthday. This was being
added to the $300 dollars given to me by my family in Thailand on behalf of my
auntie who owns the house I was living in while visiting there. I wake up, make
a coffee, shower and get dressed then hop on a song-tow (a pick-up truck with
two rows of benches to sit on) and head over to the destination where my google maps is
telling me to go. I get off the truck and walk into the parking lot of a huge
grocery center, something equivalent to a Costco in the United States. I head inside
trying to find the Western Union, but I don’t see it anywhere. I stop to ask for
directions.
“Yu Tee Nye,
Western Union?”, I asked the guy mopping in front of me.
He grabbed
my phone and then pointed behind him at a Bank with a Western Union sign in the
window. I laugh at how blind I am and go to take the phone back, but it slipped,
either from my hand or his… I want to say his but let’s be honest, it was
probably me. This wouldn’t be the first time I dropped this cracked, smashed
and warped phone, so why would now be different?
I picked the
phone up and the screen was black, which doesn’t mean much really unless it
won’t turn back on. Which is exactly what happened… or didn’t happen. The phone
didn’t turn back on. I stopped for a moment and thought to myself,
“This is it,
I’m going to die in Cambodia. The spirits got my friend and now they’re coming
for me too.”
And now here
I was, leaving for Cambodia, a walking dead man, and I haven’t even received my
birthday money yet. The information for Western Union was all in my phone in Facebook
messenger. I go outside and begin accessing the extra phone I was given by a
cousin of mine in Thailand. She gave me the phone temporarily, so I could connect
to Wi-Fi while I was in their country. Thank god I had that because at least I
could communicate with people through Facebook, but that was pretty much it.
Since the phone was bought in Thailand everything in the phone was written in
Thai. I was able to figure out how to get the language to change for downloaded
Apps, but I could never get it to change on the internet for accessing my email
and most google searches, which as luck would have it would be yet another
thing that worked against me while staying in Cambodia. While I’m figuring all
of this out a bird happens to shit right on my bag as I’m standing outside
working on my phone situation. This day keeps getting better.
I finish
accessing Facebook and all the vital information I need to get the money and I
head back in the store and then into the bank. I was in and out quickly without any problems and then continued on my
way. I took another song-tow truck to Chonburi to catch a bus to a place my
grandma in Thailand told me to me to go, but I can’t even remember the name of
it now because no one I asked knew about it either. I rode three different
motorcycle taxi’s visiting three different bus stations and none of them heard
of this city.
Finally, I
settle on a place and just tell them to take me to the much talked about, Aranyaprathet/Poi
pet border crossing. From what I gathered based on my researches before my
phone broke, the reason my grandma wanted me to go through another border was
because of how dangerous this place is. I tried my hardest to avoid the place as
I had no desire to be conned and scammed while I’m already confused in a
foreign country by myself. But alas, I had no choice.
I get into a
van, two hours after being dropped off, and finally begin my journey to
Cambodia. I spent most of the four-hour ride accessing everything I needed on
my cousin’s phone for the trip ahead, and I had to do it while I still had phone
reception in Thailand. This consisted mainly of locating the cheapest hostels
in Siem Reap and making sure I had music downloaded on Spotify for offline
listening and access to Facebook and Instagram, so I could continue documenting
my trip overseas. I am after all trying to figure out what exactly Journeys and
Insights really is, and how to evolve it. To do that, “the show must go on.”
The ride to
the border was for the most part uneventful. That is, until I received a
message in my Facebook Messenger from an ex-girlfriend of Blake’s who wanted to
know if I knew how he died. I of course didn’t but wanted to know why she would
ask me. It turns out she and I had met one time when Blake and I were hanging
out in San Francisco and he apparently talked about me enough that she thought
I would have some more information than the family was giving out. I had not,
but she then sent me the last message Blake sent to her. It would seem like the
psychobabble ramblings of a paranoid drug addict if you were anyone but me.
Blake
mentioned that people, or something, was after him and that he couldn’t explain
it but that his life was in danger. My eyes were wide open. I’m in this cramped
van hugging my huge backpack, staring down infinity, heart pounding and mind
racing, remembering that a little over a year ago I was saying the same exact
thing and I ended up dropping my entire life in California to move up to the
mountains of a National Park to live and work, which eventually led to me
traveling. But here I am now reading this message and thinking, there’s no way
I’m not dying a horrible death in Cambodia. I mean really, how many coincidences
equal a synchronicity?
Border of Mordor
The van stopped in some random parking lot in the middle of
nowhere and the driver told everyone to get out. Once I stepped outside I saw
that there were a handful of colorful Tuk-Tuk’s waiting to take us to the
border, so I hopped in one of them. Ten minutes later I made it to the border
and my tuk-tuk driver dropped me off right in front of a Visa office. I was instantly
face to face with a guy telling me to follow him to the counter to apply for my
Visa. I have no clue what’s going on or what I’m supposed to do because this is
my first time crossing a border in Asia by land, so I just follow the guy to
the counter blindly trusting him.
I was told at the counter that I needed a photo for my visa and
I didn’t have one, so I now had to follow this guy through a labyrinth of shady
alleys, then through a crowd until we came upon a rope tied to cones that we
stepped over, which I believe was the border line. I then went into a shop in the back corner of
a crazy looking market place to get my photo taken. This all seemed unofficial to
me but what else was I going to do? I handed over 100 Thai Baht to the photographer
and he takes my picture. Ten minutes later he hands me a tiny zip lock bag with
four of my pictures in it. The guy who took me here then leads me back through
all the madness until I’m finally back at the Visa counter filling out my
paperwork.
Before I even finish my paperwork I am now sitting at a
table with four guys, hawking over me like hungry vultures just waiting for an
opportunity to screw me over. They all start asking me questions, fishing for
information that gives them some idea of who they’re dealing with. It’s probably
as plain as my American face that I’m out of my element. While I’m still
filling out my Visa application they’re trying to explain some convoluted and
very complicated process of what to expect when crossing the border and each
step involved me handing over money. It’s obvious to me that I’m being scammed
but I have no frame of reference on what the proper procedures are, so I’m stuck
having to improvise and figure out what’s a con what’s not as I went along.
As soon as I finish my application the four guys escort me
to a bridge that I must go up in order to check in with someone for entry into the
country. But before I head up one of the guys asks me for a tip, telling me
that if I tip him then the other guy will meet me on the other side and help save
me 30 extra dollars. This situation immediately conjured the image of paying
trolls to cross a bridge which made me not believe them for a second because
the mental image of trolls was too much hilarity for me to bear. But then again,
I also didn’t want to get screwed for not tipping so I handed over some Thai
Baht and went up the bridge and checked in. When I came out the other side there
were still three guys waiting for me and they quickly approached me telling me
that I need to pay another 600 baht for a military stamp so I can get into the
country. I looked at them and told them I am in the country and I’m not paying
for a military stamp. Another guy standing there told me I could just walk up
fifty yards and get a stamp for free at the real entry into Cambodia. I was
utterly confused by this point as the guys asking me for a military stamp began
asking me for a tip since I’m not buying the stamp. I again oblige because I
don’t want to get jumped or stabbed later for not going along with their operation.
I walk over to the official place to have my passport
stamped but now the guy who gave me that advice is now following me over to the
office and telling me what to expect when I leave. I begin to realize that he
doesn’t plan on leaving my side. I’m already exhausted and now I realize I just
handed over a ton of money just to get here and this guy is still wanting more.
I don’t know how much I just lost getting through the border, but I know I’m on
a tight budget and I can’t keep forking over money just because I’m afraid of
it coming back to haunt me. Besides, I’m still unnerved about my whole day and this
is not making things better.
After about thirty minutes I finally get through the line and
get my stamp but when I leave the office the guy is standing right there. He’s
insisting on showing me the right Taxi driver to take to Siem Reap. I tell him
I want to take a bus. He then tells me they are closed and don’t run until
morning. I say that’s fine with me and that I’ll just sleep outside until
morning. He insisted that was a horrible idea as this area is dangerous, so he
tried to show me a hostel, but they wanted to charge me 600 Baht for a room
which is ridiculous and so I told him no and went to find my own Hostel. It was
then that I noticed there were busses still running to take people to Siem Reap
and I called him out about that. He conceded defeat on the matter of the bus
which still cost me 500 Baht but at least I was soon to be rid of this troll. It
would take another full hour before I gave this nefarious shadow man a dollar
to get me water, which he offered to do, but then I never got my water and I
never saw him again.
Entering the Khmer Kingdom
Another hour or so passed by before I heard a woman yelling
at me over the sound of my blaring headphones telling me to get on the bus. The
bus was a horrendous, psychedelic, 1970’s looking hippie van made into a bus and
it was still rolling as I was approaching it. I had to run up to the door to
catch it and the driver looked annoyed at how long it was taking me to catch
up. No consideration about the amount of weight I was hauling in my oversized backpack;
which was forty-four pounds if we’re going to count. I finally get on the bus
and now I’m getting excited thinking about the fact that I’m almost to a bed
where I can get some much-needed rest. I couldn’t sleep on the bus because I
was seated right under a leak in the air conditioning and I was getting drops
of freezing cold liquid dropped on me from some random hanging pipe right above
me.
The ride seemed to last forever because we kept stopping at random spots to pick up large packages that I only at this time noticed took up more than half the room on the bus. I thought I was seated at the back of the bus before I got out at one of the stops to smoke a cigarette and when I looked up at my window I realized the bus was more than double the size I thought it was. Even after the infinite amount of stops we took, which I came to believe was a ploy to bring business to local restaurants and businesses, we finally made it to Siem Reap and I was more than ready to arrive. The bus took me to the end of what was obviously a main road in and out of Siem Reap but decided to take me to the literal edge of town and drop me off. This of course was another ploy to get me to have to pay for a tuk-tuk driver, which I did. The driver picked me up approximately two miles outside of Pub Street which is where all the cheap hostels were at. I ended up paying 400 Baht for the ride because I hadn’t yet figured out the conversion rates from Baht to Riel, or what I would finally found out soon to be the dollar.
The ride seemed to last forever because we kept stopping at random spots to pick up large packages that I only at this time noticed took up more than half the room on the bus. I thought I was seated at the back of the bus before I got out at one of the stops to smoke a cigarette and when I looked up at my window I realized the bus was more than double the size I thought it was. Even after the infinite amount of stops we took, which I came to believe was a ploy to bring business to local restaurants and businesses, we finally made it to Siem Reap and I was more than ready to arrive. The bus took me to the end of what was obviously a main road in and out of Siem Reap but decided to take me to the literal edge of town and drop me off. This of course was another ploy to get me to have to pay for a tuk-tuk driver, which I did. The driver picked me up approximately two miles outside of Pub Street which is where all the cheap hostels were at. I ended up paying 400 Baht for the ride because I hadn’t yet figured out the conversion rates from Baht to Riel, or what I would finally found out soon to be the dollar.
I get dropped off two blocks away from the middle of town in
Pub Street in Siem Reap and I spend the next hour looking for hostels or a
place outside to rest and wait until morning to continue my search. I walk into
a few hostels, but they were all overpriced in my opinion, since I hadn’t yet
figured out what the damage was from crossing the border. So, I keep looking and
finally come upon a Chinese hostel called International Taipei Youth Hostel and
I walk in and lay down every American dollar and Thai baht I have attempting to pay for a six-dollar
room. The guy at the desk tells me they don’t take baht and so I leave and start
looking for a place to sleep in the streets. There was a gorgeous park area
near the middle of the downtown Pub Street area that I thought about sleeping
in, but I thought buying a beer would help me sleep better so I stopped by a
grocery store that was still open. Beers were thirty-five cents a can, so I was
stoked. And in that moment, I realized I could exchange my baht for American dollar
when I buy the beer and so that’s what I did.
I then return to the hostel and try to book a room again but
now the guy is telling me that I don’t have enough. I frantically start
searching for more money to go back to the grocery store, but the gentleman
tells me it’s okay, I can pay tomorrow he says. I thank him, and he takes me to
my room. I finally see the sweet, beautiful sight of a bed and a shower and I
thank the gentleman for the room and the hospitality and head to bed. But before
I do I head out to the roof balcony to smoke a cigarette and enjoy the victory
of making it here. There was a guy sleeping in the bed in the room I was placed
in, he woke up when I went out for a smoke and he joined me. He was an Australian
bloke and we shot the shit and had a beer together for a few minutes and then
he offered me a valium to sleep and I accepted. Everything seemed perfect, I was
given great service, rescued from what seemed to be a less than ideal situation,
and I made a new friend already. I thought the worst was over, but I couldn’t
have been more wrong…
… TO BE CONTINUED



Good read.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much 😁
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