Journal 38: Day 13: A dodgy, little love motel on my last day in the Korean Peninsula

So it’s my last night here in Korea.  I decided to leave Jeju and come to Incheon where, I once thought, the city’s Chinatown held new opportunities for some great market photographs or architecture.  I was, I guess, hoping for some Chinese temples where I could snap a few shots of the animals cresting their eves or a dragon greeting me at the entrance.  Maybe I was expecting lots of commotion as bustling streets flowed with people moving goods and foodstuffs around with a sense of navigation that westerners can only stand back and gawk at.  Or perhaps I was hoping for some food that swelled with the heat that comes off it, food that you don’t have to crack open or cook yourself.

Alas, there was nothing.  Or perhaps I should say, there was nothing worth taking photos of.  Drab and somber, the entire area looked more like it was the outskirts of something much more interesting.  Its grimy streets and heavy overcast gave it a feel of old timey poverty just before a dustbowl was set to come in and put to rest any fleeting images of holding on to the last few drumbeats of an economic heartbeat.  It seemed like this was the place that was bashed with North Korean gunfire back in 2010.  But even that place was not far from here.  Only about 30 kilometers or so.

At any rate, I followed what I thought were Lonely Planet’s directions for a motel near the subway that I would take in the morning to get to the airport.  But after walking way too far with all my gear, I finally just used my visual knowledge of reading Korean signage and found a motel across the street from a pizza joint and down the block from a subway entrance and called it a night.  These two landmarks represented what my will had been ground down to; food and the quickest way to exit this country.  I’m certainly not regretting my time here.  It just seems like, now that the end is right around the corner, I may as well get it over with.

Anyway, apparently in my learning of Korean advertisements, I could read enough to know that the sign said “motel.”  But clearly I hadn’t learned what the text for “love” was.  When I checked in, I thought that it was odd that they owners didn’t give me a key to my room.  They also kept asking me in Korean if it was going to be just me in the room.  I kept saying that I, alone, was going to be sleeping and needed a key to protect my valuables.  But they were simply not happy with my response.

Before I go on, I think it would be better if I explained just what a “love motel” and its purpose is.  Now, normally one would simply think, ‘Oh, well it’s obviously a cathouse and there’s nothing more to think about it.’  But, like most other things here in Asia, it has a deeper meaning and purpose.  And, make no mistake, its meaning and purpose follow lines to a source that hold no bearing on whether or not the western world would approve or even understand that logic.

A love motel can be rented by the night or by the hour.  A man can get a room alone, wake up with a woman and never feel shame from the owners as he’s checking out.  The owners of these establishments generally offer a woman to single men checking in and can suggest a man for the single ladies.  A love motel is a place most often occupied by actual couples.  But it can also be used as a discrete meeting place for strangers.

In America, it undoubtedly seems a little strange that a couple would check into a hotel for one night – or even a few hours.  It might also come off as odd that the owners might have some say in the eventuality in the population of each room’s occupancy.  It may also come as a huge shock that these motels have resident “lovers” who, from birth, have lived there to pay off their parent’s debt as sex slaves.  But then again, there are many things that Americans will never understand about what goes on in this strange corner of the world.

As the tradition goes in most parts of Asia, it is expected that the children, once married, move into the house of the husband’s parents.  It’s also expected that the wife becomes, for lack of a more polite description, a slave to the parents – fulfilling chores, errands and other demands.  Keeping in good with a family that demands strict adherence to a very conservative lifestyle, then, becomes an everyday challenge.  Sex, therefore, is a bit of an uncomfortable item which brings a lot of stress to the already difficult nature of a new marriage.

Love motels sprang up out of the resulting need for privacy in these new relationships in the turning of the world’s traditional ways.  These motels were first used as places for dating couples to spend anything from a few days of relaxation to just a quick visit between their busy lives.  From there, of course, the Asian culture of why-can’t-we-have-everything-we-want came into play and they started to gain popularity for other types of visits.  And as for the lifetime resident lovers; well, that was a tradition long preceding the invention of the love motel.

For thousands of years the ideals of Buddhism played into the perpetual cycle of reincarnation and parents thought once their daughters were born when they were expecting a boy, it was their karma giving them the requirement of payment for their ills in previous lives.  So giving up their daughters as payment for this karma was the right thing to do.  Their daughters, in turn, were taught their life of sexual servitude was them paying off their karma as well – otherwise, why would they have been born as the payment of their parent’s karma?

It makes a lot more sense once you have been living in Asia for a while and can understand the mentality of all the intricacies of what goes along with the absolute and unquestioning belief in rebirth.

So there I was, being probed by the owners of this motel and the lady starts moving her hands through her hair.  I had no idea what this meant until some time later.  But once she was satisfied – though not very pleased – knowing that I would be staying one night, alone and not be in need of anything “else” from them, she came up with her price and charged me for the room.

Once checked in, I dug out some cash and went across the street to the pizza place for edible, non-seafood that I didn’t have to break the shells off of or barbecue myself.  On the way, though, I kept wondering what the lady meant when she was combing her hands through her hair.  And it eventually came to me.  She was asking me if I wanted a woman for the night.  Then all the other mannerisms came into understanding as well.

The couple were upset that I didn’t want a woman because they could charge me more for the room.  They were displeased that I would only make them money on the room when, ultimately, this was not the kind of place where they only charge for the room.  This also explained the delay in coming up with a price for the room – essentially an overcharge.  And they didn’t give me a key because they wanted me to ask them for the key every time I wanted to enter the room because they didn’t want me hiring a woman from the street or from the little paper advertisements I would see taped up to the underside of steps throughout the alleyways all over the city.  That was the competition.  And for these elderly, Asian pimps, that’s just not the kind of place they run.

Since having been back in Taiwan, I have done more research into this and have talked to natives who indicate the benefit of short-term motels is much greater than having to put up with the prying eyes and ears of older, more traditional parents who would just as soon have their daughter-in-laws doing back-breaking work than to spend their nights corrupting their respectable son’s sensibilities.  They also confirmed that the majority of the love motel’s use was limited to these situations rather than for the sex-shops they’d more easily become reputed as being.

Nevertheless, my last night in Korea did little more to put me at ease but ultimately summed up all my experiences in that amazing country.  No matter where you go in Korea, you’re sure to find yourself in one inextricably unique situation after another as you navigate the intricate web of peculiarities of everything from traditional Hanok Villages kept in the old ways complete with dances to entice the soil’s richness, to parks dedicated to phallic splendor.

Stay tuned for my last blog on my Korea trip and a toast for things to come.

Southeast Asia Journal 17: April 11, 2010

Journal April 11, 2010

Trash lines the streets everywhere in Cambodia -- all the way up to the Vietnam border

Since the late 1400’s, Cambodia has had quite a bad taste for the Thai people.  That’s about when they were overrun by the Kingdom of Thailand and forced to give over many of their national treasures.  However, there is a pretty bustling trade agreement, and since Thai Airways has been paying a sizeable, yearly bribe to the government-owned transportation department of Cambodia in an effort to keep air travel at an appealing plateau, the economy has a reasonable chance of making a turn for the better here.  But you’d never know it if you did ask.

Cambodia is quite literally the poorest and most desolate country I have ever seen.  I haven’t even seen commercials that try and guilt the 72-cents-per-day out of your pockets that even come close to what happens here.  I saw a man digging through the open sewage to find salable items.  Talk about a shit job!  Puns like “scraping at the bottom of the barrel,” and “don’t have a pot to piss in,” grip with an entirely new hold around here.

But all of this still doesn’t stop the impressive size that the magnitude of Angkor drenches over you once you get to the outskirts of Siem Reap.  Of course the sweat does an impressive job of drenching you also.  There is simply no escaping the deviant sun that seems to linger at such an angle as to always be right in your face no matter which direction your face happens to be (facing, angled, directed?  Which word do I use here that I haven’t already used in the previous sentence?)

After seeing the Tonle Sap people (river dwellers), the temples at Angkor, the craziest of crazy capitols, Phnom Phen I was finally headed over into Vietnam.

The border from Cambodia to Vietnam was my last reminder of the poverty there.  There were several markets that marked the customary symbol of

That's using your head

trade in the tiny nation.  There was all the buzz and commotion I have come to expect in the country.  There were some amazing things to be seen – most just sad and depressing, but amazing nonetheless.  Ladies were carrying baskets of fish and vegetables, snacks and fruits and many other things on their heads.  I liked seeing that throughout my time in Cambodia.  There were also people moving their things from place to place on whatever vehicles they had available to them at that particular time.  Most people chose a motorbike with a trailer.  But there was the occasional loaded-down bicycle or even hand-pulled carts.  Many people

Moving is hard to do

were just bringing things to the market at the border – the spot that marks the last chance to get cheapish Cambodian goods – before heading over into Vietnam.  Or I suppose it could also have been the first place that people could purchase goods once in the country from Vietnam.  In either case, it was good to have left it behind me for the better economy of the country that holds the longest coastline with the South China Sea.

Once in Vietnam (thankfully) I was surprised to see the sheer congestion of this place.  I was told that it was busy.  But I wasn’t told it would be elbow to elbow on motorcycles!  This is just madness.  But, even with all these people sweeping through the traffic in all directions, they seem to miss one another and glide right past as if it were orchestrated in some grand ballet on some  enormous

Packed to the brim

stage with an even bigger set.  Quite a production, indeed.

There are no close calls here, just normal driving conditions.  And through all of this, there are still pedestrians, bicycles, people pushing carts and people carrying bamboo sticks with baskets on each end.  I haven’t even seen so much as a dog get hit while running into the street.  It’s quite an amazing thing to watch.

Crazy traffic in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon)

And the horns: they have created their own form of communication here with the use of their horns.  But more about this in my next journal.  I am curious as to the honking patterns that I have noticed and I will keep an “ear” out for more information on this.

When I got on the bus in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, it was a dry, dusty place with lots of people and little recent infrastructure.  But when I exited the bus in Ho Chi Minh City (the former Saigon) I stepped out into a bustling, flashing,

Big, ugly dance bars line the streets and corners of Saigon

overpowering energy that is dizzying to the unprepared.  There are skyscrapers, huge walls of blocks upon blocks of lights, music and karaoke bars.  There are side shops with everything you could ever need.  From auto mechanics and restaurants to hotels and clothing depots – and they all squeeze their businesses into these shotgun-style buildings over-top of which they most likely live.  The businesses are generally run and managed by the family that lives in the establishment and I can’t figure out if it is because these people are very mistrusting of others or they just like to keep things simple – and save money.  But whatever the case, it is true that competition drives the market here.  If you don’t like what you see or the price of your item in one shop, there is another one just like it half a block down who may be willing to haggle a bit.

Mikoh, the Finish drooler

A note about the bus, though; this Finish guy name Mikoh took about five Xanax before the trip and passed out right in my lap.  There was no waking him up.  At several points during the trip, the bus driver slammed on his breaks sending Mikoh crashing face-first into the seat in front of him.  It quickly became the highlight of entertainment of those of us seated near the front of the bus… until he started drooling on me.  Then I had to grab him by the hair and pull him up.  Luckily, he tells me, he didn’t remember any of it.   He may have boasted of visiting five dozen countries or so, but his bus presence could still use a little work.

Rice workers slaved away in the fields along the roadside

All drool-pools aside, the trip was quite lovely.  We headed through some of nicest rural areas that I have yet seen on this trip.  We would pass rice fields; workers doing their morning planting and harvesting; far stretches of green floral symmetry would pass alongside the bus for miles; then there would be a flooded patch where bison would be feeding.  I could look out at almost any time and see the South China Sea to the east as the sun climbed into the sky overhead.  Along the banks and floodplains of rivers making their exits in mostly brackish, alluvial drain-pools leading into the ocean, there would be boat workers fishing and taking in the morning catches.  There was one man I saw in the distance using a long pipe as a boat from which to throw his nets into the water.  There would also be these strange nets suspended just above the water along the

Using a hollow tube, this fisherman sought the day's catch

ponds to the west side of the roadway.  I couldn’t figure out of they used these nets to store their fish until it was time to harvest them or to grow prawn or spawn other fish or something.  In either case, it was a nice addition to the long pastures and wavy fields of foliage and farmland.

Finally arriving in Hoi An, I didn’t really see much that I liked.  It looked a lot like a miniature version of Saigon.  So I decided to take the next trip on my open bus ticket to Hue (pronounced “Hway”).  There I found a much more agreeable and photogenic setting.

Though it’s been getting cooler and cooler the farther north I travel, I have still heard that the heat is coming to this side of the world to head up the summer season.  And since I have been sweating non-stop for about six months now, I welcomed the cooler climes.  I even figured I would take a dip.  The nearest body of water: the South China Sea.  It was nice.  And I had this theory about the global oceanic currents.  I thought that I read once that the colder one climbs northward along the Pacific Asian coastlines, rising to the benthic plateau from the bitter waters of the abyssal plane (characteristic of this coastline) and drawing with it cooler waters that would eventually meet up with the Arctic waters around Alaska.  I am not sure if I am completely correct on this note, but the water was the coolest, cleanest and most refreshing water I have felt since I left for Asia in December.  It was definitely a welcomed and refreshing treat.

But for that story, you will have to wait for the next journal.  I will be writing about my trip from Hue to Hanoi by Friday.  I should have plenty of new insights and photos to share by then.  Plus, I will finally be able to take care of the next big priority on my photography agenda: The Hill Tribes of Sapa.