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Friday, May 27, 2022

Soviets Chasing Old Chickens, Americans Sleeping Under Cars and A Gorging Six-Year-Old

As published at SubStack, 5/27/22:





[Vung Tau, 11/23/19]

 

Once or twice a week, I get a two-egg sandwich from a sixty-year-old guy who has a crudely lettered stand on Ba Cu Street. It’s across the street from a huge Buddhist temple with a garish gate, and not far from Pizza Hut, where you can get a pie with squid, shrimps, (fake) crab sticks and mozzarella, or one with Chinese sausage, paté and mozzarella.

Selling less than 20 banh mi each morning, he makes just over 5 bucks daily. Still, his life is OK, for he has endured much worse. During the 80’s, he was a bicycle cop near Front Beach, where each night dozens of prostitutes (or “chickens” in Vietnamese slang) waited for domestic and international clients.

“The Soviet workers didn’t make much, so they would chase after old women.” he laughs. “One ran into the bush to get away from them.”

“But she wasn’t a chicken…”

“No, she was a mamasan. These Soviet guys loved to drink. They’d drink Nàng Hương [Miss Fragrant] Vodka. They’d eat dogmeat with the Vietnamese hoodlums.”

“So they sort of fit in.”

He nods. “We were paid very poorly. I’d skip breakfast, or just eat rice with fish sauce. For lunch, I’d have rice with boiled water spinach. We didn’t have meats. We’d beg from the fishermen. They’d give us anchovies, but sometimes bigger fish.”

“They gave it to you because you were a cop!”

“Yes,” he smiles, showing gapped, discolored teeth. “I quit after seven or eight years. I was too dissatisfied. My friends who stayed now get 10 million [$431] a month in retirement!”

“Kids today have no idea. Do you tell your kids and grandkids about how your life was?”

“I do.”

“But they don’t really understand. They have it too good.”

“They have it so good.”

He has a cousin in the US. She left in the 80’s with her ARVN husband. He had spent five years in a reeducation camp.

“The US was OK in the 80’s. I’d say it was still OK until 1995 or so. Now, it’s a mess. You know, brother, you wouldn’t be able to run this stand over there. It’d be outlawed.”

“I hear you can’t even put a chair in front of your own door and sit on it!”

“No, it’s not that bad, but they do have too many laws. In Vietnam, I can have a room with twenty hammocks that I rent out, it’s no problem, but in the US, there’s no way you can have twenty guys in a room. It’s not allowed, but why not?! No one is causing a problem. Still, the neighbors would complain.”

“Here, you do what you want.”

“Which makes sense. If a guy can’t afford his own room, let him sleep with ten or twenty other guys. Why not? Since they have nowhere to go, the poorest Americans sleep on sidewalks. Old people, too. Is that a superpower? Many sleep in their own car, but in many places, that, too, is not allowed. Some try to sleep under their car, but they outlaw that too!”

Shaking his head, he chuckles incredulously.

[Philadelphia, 9/10/16]

Until Covid, Vietnam improved, year by year, over three decades, so optimism also increased. During that same period, the US slipped, then nosedived, so where are we? With food and gas prices stratospheric, and record murder and drug overdose rates, even the dumbest doofuses know things are fucked up. Still, there are those who insist it’s just a minor dip. Happy days will be here again!

Among the weirder predictions is Mike Adams’ vision of Chinese troops invading the West Coast by November. They’ll arrive hidden in shipping containers. Swarming inland, they will be met by American nuclear bombs, so if you’re in New Mexico, Nevada and Colorado, etc., expect your beef chow fun to be suddenly lit up supernaturally, as screaming Mandarin rings in your ears. There are worse ways to go.

Just now, a hyphenated American, G. Joseph, told me he agreed “things are really bad back there,” so “living in Europe in a quaint smallish country, things seem better if you ignore the threat of looming compulsory jabs or the possibility that after enough poking, the Russian bear would get really mad and let his nukes loose.” Since the southern hemisphere seemed safest, why didn’t I stay in Namibia, he asked?

Though the southern hemisphere should be safest during World War III, I returned to Vietnam because I was exhausted from drifting from one country to another. Here, I'm in my element, and there are close friends in Vung Tau I can have long conversations with. One recent session at a restaurant lasted 11 hours! The fried beef was excellent, too.

Conversation is a human necessity, of course. It heals or even redeems terrible ordeals. If no one hears you, minor pains fester into permanent abscesses.

Plus, the food options in Vung Tau are much, much better than in Windhoek. When you can eat well, especially for cheap, you simply feel better. If you had just months left, say, wouldn’t you rather spend them as sanely as possible? Eat, talk, laugh!

With that, let’s close with a food joke. You’ll get a glimpse of the Vietnamese mindset, then and now. Though I embellish on a much-told tale, such is story telling.

Under an enormous moon, inside a thatch hut, with bamboos rustling outside, a Nghệ An couple is having dinner with their two boys, aged 9 and 6. Each rustic has a bowl of rice, and there’s a wooden fish on a cutesy plate in the middle of the threadbare reed mat. (They don’t even have a table.) Shoveling rice down their maws, they glance at this fish.

Suddenly, the father whacks the 6-year-old across the head. To the tearful, cowering and trembling boy, he then screams, “Stop staring at that fish nonstop! You’re eating more than your share!”

Nodding, his wife speaks up, “It’s good you’re teaching him some manners. If his greed goes unchecked, he’ll grow up to be a highway bandit!” Turning to the boy, she snarls, “What are you waiting for?! Apologize to your dad!”

Obeying, the boy folds his arms, bows his head and murmurs, “Sorry, dad.”

That night, the boy dreams of an enormous wooden fish he can stare at forever, in a land of obscene, unlimited satiety where visual lust is never punished by sudden whacks on the head. Waking, he realizes his life goal must be to emigrate to Orange County, California.

[Vung Tau, 5/23/22]





1 comment:

Martin said...

Embellishments; nice touch throwing in the Orange County, California, part.