
...on my server, i thought i will write a few things while they are fresh in my mind.
It is still quite early on our trip (almost a week here) but there have been so many images and experiences that worth much longer. We have now travelled half way through Vietnam and we have just approached the north (heavily ex-communist part).
We have properly stopped by 4 places all together and travelled throught many more. There are very few things reminding me that there was a war here a few decades ago. A few more that this was a communist countly up until recently.
But what is certaintly stands out in Vietnam is its people! I am not sure how i can describe this best. I have travelled in quite a few places before and i have appreciated hospitality and generosity, but what i have found in Vietnamese people is something beyond my expectations to the human race! :-)
I enjoy visiting historical sights, trying local food, and trtavelling through jungles. But what i love the most, is taking a bike with Kim and ride through the small sandy towns, stopping by a small local 'cafe' attached to a house and having a chat with merchants, school kids, carpenter and pensioners. They are not used to interact with tourists (tourists usually hang out in the designated tourist areas) so they are very welcoming to chat over a coffee (if i find some time later, i will dedicate a whole post on Vietnamese coffee and the local coffee cullture). Verbal language is not a barier as we seem to connect in different ways (here i have to say that Kim's Vietnamese have been very helpful many times), and i realise that what i find attractive in these people is a missing part of my childhood. This is very hard to explain in a few lines.
Vietnamese people are geniounly friendly, peaceful, smiley, gentle, stylish, honest, enthousiastic and down to earth. The whole nation...by nature! This is an incredible strength...almost contegious! And i am talking about a nation that has gone through very dark times in it's rescent history.
Up until a week ago i knew very few things about this nation. Now it is all here, unfolding slowly in front of me and i find myself - after a long time - very open to new things... very receiving. I was saying to Kim yesterday that i feel that they have much more to offer to me that i have to offer to them. She smiled and said that it's not like this, that there are many different ways to see one thing. And i find myself discovering new ways of thinking. Ways that were always there but i never knew they existed.
Isn't this that travelling teaches you after all?
PS. Excuse any spelling mistakes. Some keyboards are in Chinese, sometimes i type quickly and others i don't know howm to spell. :-)