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Carson Christiano |
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Carson Christiano grew up exploring the backwoods of Minnesota, attended
high school and college outside Chicago, and is currently living in Chiang
Mai, Thailand, teaching tenth grade English and exercising her tolerance
for spicy food. Always in search of a new way to get lost (so that she can
write about it later), Carson takes every opportunity she can get to venture
someplace beautiful, wild or enchanting. Her favorite traveling moments
include piranha fishing in the Amazon, floating through underground rivers
in New Zealand, watching the full moon rise over the rim of the Grand Canyon,
and zooming around Sicily on a moped.
Features:
Taking the
Plunge in Thailand - It’s 7 AM on
a Saturday, I’m busy treading water in a sea of pleasant dreams, and already
I have three missed calls from the monks I met in Pai last weekend. Clearly
strangers to the manners associated with this well-established communication
technology, my new friends (Are monks allowed to befriend women, let alone
call them on a cell phone?) seem to be breaking rules left and right.
[Visit this Feature]
In Search of Siam - It’s hot, and
the food is hotter, and my shoulders are in the sun and the sweat is threatening
to burst from my pores, and my book lies unopened on the table—I meant to
be reading casually while consuming this mid-afternoon meal, in an effort
to savor my surroundings, perhaps slow myself down a little?—but I can’t,
can’t stop feeding the fire in my mouth, can’t stop teasing my taste buds,
tickling my pores. My fate is locked in a bittersweet struggle for domination;
it’s me and the sticky rice (my edible weapon) versus the contents of the
bowl. Finally, the last drop of curry wiped clean from its sides, the evidence
hastily destroyed (eaten), I fall back heavy and victorious against my chair,
shoulder blades reconnecting with hot plastic. Letting the pores open now,
I breathe a fiery, pumpkin-and-basil-laced sigh of relief.
[Visit this Feature]
Thailand: Winter in the
Tropics - Winter has descended on Chiang Mai. You wouldn't know it save
for the hats, scarves, jackets, and knitting needles that have made their
way into my classrooms, the complaints from teachers and students that they
are getting sick, and the questioning looks I get when I show up to work
in short sleeves. The weather is an excuse for everything from tardiness
to falling asleep in class to unfinished homework. This morning was admittedly
cool, a brisk 57 degrees with a biting southeast wind, but by midday it
was brilliantly sunny, around 80, with a gentle breeze wafting through the
windows of the English department. If these temperatures are driving the
Thai people into hibernation, I hate to think what the summer months here
are like. [Visit this Feature]
Thailand: Monks, Teachers
and Food - This afternoon, on my way to yoga class across town, a group
of five apprentice monks and their teacher, all clad in bright orange robes,
hopped into the back of my songthow. These trucks are equipped to
hold four people on each side, but because monks are forbidden to sit next
to women, they all had to crowd onto the opposite bench. There I was, riding
along face to face with six monks sitting on top of one another, with a
whole bench to myself. While it was certainly an interesting sight to behold,
I don’t think I have ever felt more powerful in my womanhood than I did
at that moment. I couldn't help smiling the whole way.
[Visit this Feature]
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