Revealing Tokyo

Last month we have been to Japan. Leaving from Vietnam, and returning here, was like a time machine trip. Tokyo is futuristic, you feel like you’ve been thrown forward through time as soon as you land and visit the toilet at the airport, and you don’t understand how to flush or get a piece of toilet paper, while you are pleased by the heated seat. Everything is super functional, neat and untainted, I felt almost uncomfortable when I had to throw away a dripping cup of coffee. They have dedicated trash bins also for liquids leftovers. And there are not so many trash bins around, you can carry your garbage for miles while looking for a place to get rid of it, which doesn’t mean you see any possible human sign along the street.

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…I messed up
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Immaculate taxi (and geisha on board!)

At the airport, they have dedicated officers managing the immigration line: people employed to provide information on which forms to fill out and how, and address visitors to the quickest line politely. In Japan you see commuters waiting in line to board the metro, even rushing is forbidden. They have the most sophisticated railways in the world, trains look literally like bullets, gliding from the space into the platform. When you hail a taxi the door opens by magic, – it is controlled by the driver and it takes time to realize it! – there are crocheted covers over each back seat, and taxi drivers wear white gloves. There are pedestrians crossing guards wearing a uniform and helping people to go from a side of a building to the other. At every intersection, you see thousands people marching all together in a huge organic mass, and there are lanes also for pedestrians walking in opposite directions (not sure there is a universal rule on keeping the right or the left, or maybe I am just not able to follow it, but I found myself walking upstream many times totally lost!). There are convenience stores literally every 30 meters, selling any kind of snacks, bakery products, soft drinks, basic household items, personal care products and underwear.

Everything runs like clockwork, everything is so efficient and alluring. And intimidating somehow.

By contrast, all this discipline and austerity can be outrageously interrupted every now and then by a bizarre owl-themed café, a funky group of cosplay girls, a flashy cartoon-style billboard, or a string of puppets’ vending machines. And every time you get into a convenience shop, you get mesmerized in front of the abundance of all those useless, silly and fanciful gadgets, while a ridiculous jingle plays in the background.

Tokyo seems to be so self-deprecating sometimes, telling you that maybe these Japanese are much more human, off the grid and playful than you could ever imagine.

But to me, still impenetrable. Like all Asians I would say, putting together all my experiences across the continent.

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Robot Restaurant
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Akihabara
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Never seen anybody succeeding by the way

Tokyo is unquestionably amazing, but gave me a sense of imperviousness and “inhumanity” in a way. It’s certainly welcoming, but still emotionally detached. Everything runs through such a sophisticated and sometimes counter-intuitive machine, that you can feel really frustrated and rejected while approaching as a newcomer, despite the proverbial and proven kindness of its people. You can clearly capture a kind of “urban atomisation”, perceiving all the loneliness of its workaholic and well-groomed citizens, and the isolation of young generations, who spend their free time staring at a screen in a video game arcade. While the elders are largely abandoned and neglected. There is a specific Japanese word referring to the phenomenon of people dying alone and remaining undiscovered for a long period of time: “Kodokushi”.

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Coming from this land of no rules, we noticed that we are no longer used to any kind of restriction, and we felt quite uncomfortable trying to follow this Japanese rigid etiquette. Here in Vietnam, we don’t recycle anything, I felt so guilty every time I had to throw away a piece of plastic at the beginning, until I got used to the whatever-bin. No matter the traffic light, you just cross the road – together with your fingers – very slowly, trying to be predictable so that traffic flows around you. People are totally missing the concept of a queue together with any idea of civic responsability, you don’t need to book to have dinner or to go to the hairdresser. Whatever museum or touristic site you want to visit, you just get your paper ticket at the cashier and get straight in. No QR codes, no documents for renting a motorbike and driving either, no public transport or traffic signals…yeah, all in all we lead such a wild life here.

So, then, after 10 days of amazement, we got back to Hanoi and we “lined up” for the visa checking, in the usual messy crowd. There are not many tourists in Vietnam this time of the year, so every experience is very “Vietnamese”. We saw again the carton boxes on the luggage belt – yes, most of the people here don’t use proper suitcases, especially the ones that are involved in this crazy and unregulated trade with Russia (many Vietnamese commute weekly to Russia to collect and import to Vietnam any kind of goods like cosmetics, personal care products, food and clothing…). Then we got out of the airport in the drizzle and grabbed a taxi by chance, as usual. No line, no taxi station, we just raised our hand and wait until we were lucky enough that nobody on the sidewalk took the cab that was approaching towards us.

Getting closer to the city center, we went through the banana plantations right outside the airport, we saw again the conical hats, the motorbikes, the narrow gallery houses, the rubbish dumps…we spotted the chickens and we ran into people in their panda-patterns pajamas, we went through that grey shade of Hanoi and all those splashes of colors…we heard again that pesky and constant beeping, we smelled the lake while approaching Tay Ho…319698C7-E3AB-450E-962A-909C4039F86F.jpeg

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So grayish, so colorful

All of a sudden I realized that that feeling of familiarity and reassurance pervading all my senses had a specific emotional connotation: I was just back home.

I figured out how many connections I have with this city after 15 months spent here. And I remember how this felt unlikely to happen when I first arrived. Settling down in Hanoi, rather than Tokyo, maybe is not easier nor less shocking. You are a foreigner in a very foreign land. But that moment, brought up how that painful process is finally completed here.

There are so many sites in this city which remind me of specific and meaningful episodes, as well as places that are just part of my daily routines. Many insignificant but reiterated moments connected to some certain spots, not remarkable to anybody but me. I have so many memories associated with the place where they happened all over this town, that my collection is finally wide enough to call this place “home”.

 

This is how most of the petrol stations look like in Hanoi, and this is my “petrol guy”, he knows I want a full tank and he always checks carefully on my motorbike and pumps my tires if needed.2FEBDBCB-5665-4D99-885D-C9F166A768C0This is my office – where I re-invented myself, and against all odds, I became a “travel consultant” and a trusted South East Asia’s expert among my demanding clients.D5E3FA10-626C-4FDC-9719-DE31BE369C86.jpegThis is the place where I was googling “pregnancy test in Vietnamese”. I learnt that luckily they use a universal word for that: “Quick test”. It was such a memorable day.740c20eb-ff7c-4ff9-8ec3-fa1113525a77I have a special relationship with this mending place: it was part of my culture shock at the beginning. The lady was always sleeping on a deck chair when I had to drop my stuff, but then she surprised me: she can’t speak any English, but she’s always understood my requests, altering many clothes of ours perfectly, for very little money. I end up paying double price to tip her every time, just because of her smile and kindness.f7d37734-e81b-4e77-911a-89bf52134d88This is the place where I spotted a rat walking on a wire for the first time. Guess my worst nightmare since then.8B411F6E-0FA2-47B4-BF7A-EF128179F38EThis is our balcony, I’ve always dreamt of a terrace with a view. This peaceful view – here at its best, in a rare clear and sunny day – made my stay in Hanoi, being a daily getaway from the hustle of this city.94b746f2-ee6a-4e96-a9eb-e2147c1a940eThis lady has probably spent her all life here, selling these Bo Bia Banh snacks. In the last year, she saw me passing by any given day at the same time, but I thought she was not really “seeing” me, even if our eyes met across many times. Until one day, when I was stuck in traffic next to her, and she smiled at me and said “hello”.8EABF197-F881-4141-B8C4-96A93BB4213FAfter many attempts I found my trusted hair dresser in Hanoi: Mr Quyen calls me “my friend” and is able to treat my frizzy hair, that are pretty uncommon out here. He knows that 2 shampoo is enough for me (a shampoo in Vietnam can take over 45 minutes while you lay down horizontally and you get a head massage and 4 washings…) and he found the perfect copper nuance for my hair. 190509A5-7627-42D5-8F5E-F4861AF37A24.jpegAs per many people, pizza is much more than food to me, it can really turn a bad day around. I am so grateful to this Belgian guy. I have a direct chat with the waitress, she already knows what and where to deliver. And when we decide to have pizza at the restaurant, we are in good company…

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“Pizza Belga” (though very Neapolitan)
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Pizza with a view

On my way to the office, there is this small and busy market, it soon became my enjoyable slight detour. I used to do the same with the Colosseum in Rome, trying to pass by even when it was not exactly on my way, just to enjoy its majesty for a little while. It is not exactly the same, but a few seconds through the buzz and the colorful groceries it’s a great start of the day.b3ccae02-b793-43f4-85ec-cdaec4a46cb2

 

How long does it take for a (very unfamiliar) new place to feel like “home”? For Vietnam to this lost little girl? I would’ve said “it’s never, ever gonna happen”. But then time just runs its course, you can stand the heat and you can turn off Google maps.

I don’t know how long I will be staying in Hanoi, but I know that having memory lane to walk down, is a bond forever. And whenever I will come back, no matter how many skyscrapers, highways and metro lines have been built, I’ll feel right back home.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Outnumbered

This topic is quite sensitive and controversial, and made me think a lot recently. About my unaware sense of superiority maybe, or in other words, that certainty that you will be “recognized” for your popular (?) home country. And on the other side, about my ability to mingle and to adapt to a new situation of which – on the contrary – I have always prided myself on.

This post will probably sound ridiculous and lamer one sentence after another to expat people, but this is the perspective of somebody living overseas for the first time, still trying to fit in this unplanned life. This is my personal path, full of all those clichés that I am glad everybody on my way has already gone through. These are my days of amazement and wonder, good for them if they are already over this, and sometimes don’t even remember how it feels.

Then, luckily, I have a blog to naively admit that I am missing biscuits by a specific brand for breakfast, that going home just once or twice per year to see my relatives and my friends is a terrifying perspective that I don’t think will change, and that I am still not used to this weather. I am going through my very first tropical seasons, I just found out what does “moldy March” mean, how is it when nothing ever dries, your bed and your clothes are always clammy, and you feel like sweaty after a gym session trying to fall asleep. When there is no way to tame the frizz and have your hair in a decent shape. How the heat peak feels like in June, and how ruthless is the monsoon rain in July. This is the first time that I have to point things while shopping, that I wear a pollution mask, and I have to make sure that I wrote down the address properly before taking a taxi. That I don’t have coins but dozens of worthless banknotes in my wallet, that I don’t have a bidet in my bathroom, but I have a huge apartment which – ironically – took more time and futile decorations than ever to make homey. That I am surrounded by people who sometimes don’t even know where Italy is, and have never heard of my home town. I mean, if I say “Napoli”, how come that they don’t reply straight away “pizza, mafia, Pulcinella, Vesuvio, Sorrento, Capri” or whatever? If I say “Colosseum”, how can they really not visualize the place?

It does happen here, and I am just wondering why I took for granted that they should know about that. How many places, dishes, historical events, as crucial and magnificent as what we have in Europe, I completely ignore about Asia?

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“Moldy March” (I would say “moldy quarter” actually…)
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They learn soon how to deal with monsoon rain…
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…and become Monsoon Ninja
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This is 1€ in Vietnam
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Napoli: I don’t know how many times I showed this pic to help people recall, but…

Here in Hanoi, for the first time in my life, I am experiencing the feeling of being outnumbered. The black sheep, the only one “different”. It is not like when you were a teenager and you suffered from not being accepted into the group. Or at work in your home country, when you could deal with people of 10 different nationalities in one day, and you were happy with the international environment of your company. It is not even like when you go on holiday, and luckily sometimes happens that you are the only one from your country. Or when you are the dissenting voice about a song or a trend that everybody loves but you hate.

Since I am spending most of my time in a 100% Vietnamese environment at work, it happens many times that I feel completely left out, misunderstood and somehow “disturbing”. Don’t get me wrong, they are not doing anything to make me feel like that. Quite the opposite, they took me in, trying to find any possible topic or joke to involve me in their discussions, despite the language is an evident barrier to go beyond the small talk. But I am just not like them, as I am just not like master expats who have been living overseas for decades.

You bring a can of tuna to the office for lunch, and maybe if you pulled out of your bag a dead man cut into pieces you would make less waves. They have never seen it. It’s so weird what you are eating, that they could stare at you all through lunch, asking any possible question about the mysterious food: what is it? Where did you take it? How much is it? How often do you have it for lunch in Italy? Do they sell it in the expat district in Hanoi? Isn’t it too light together with a salad as a main for lunch? Why don’t you eat rice and pork instead? And on top of that, you are eating it with a fork that you brought from home, which makes the scene even more peculiar and hilarious. They use to eat fruit with salt, and they don’t expect you to refuse to season it. They go nap on the sofa after lunch, while I usually go out for a stroll, weather permitting. And they are concerned that I am not carrying the umbrella to cover from the sun, as actually I am not that scared of getting tanned eventually. I am exposed to a stream of indistinct sounds all day long, as they speak in Vietnamese in the office of course. And putting myself in their shoes, why should they all bother to switch to another language for just one person?

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Cutlery at the office…
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Fruit with salt, favorite snack at the office
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Fruit at the restaurant

This doesn’t mean that we don’t have our conversations, mainly focused on me and my unusual behaviors of course.

Vietnamese people love gossip and are very curious, sometimes in an awkward way, having in mind Western social norms, needless to say. It would never happen at home that somebody asks how much you weigh. But for them, this is just a personal question to get closer to you and show they care, especially when you look skinny or overweight. Which are exactly the most inconvenient cases to ask such a question for us. They naively ask you about your husband’s salary, or why your boyfriend is not your husband, and you still don’t have kids at 33 yo. And how much you or your husband’s company is paying for your apartment rental.

Even my body shape doesn’t go unnoticed. I have been told all my life that I am thin, but I can wear an XL here, with long sleeves still too short, and I cannot fit in Vietnamese socks for women. If I enter a local women’s clothing shop, usually sales girls are impressed with my size, and every morning I take the elevator with 10 Vietnamese, I feel very uncomfortable with it actually.

All in all, this reversal of perspective is largely the funniest, most inspiring, enlightening and challenging aspect of this experience. Re-consider things that you took for granted your whole life, learn how to feel comfortable with a distinctiveness which is showing up as such for the first time, and sometimes you were unaware of.

I don’t want to sound dramatic, I am not suffering, nor I am pissed off at people or bothered by being misunderstood. Of course it happens sometimes. Both with expats and local people. But I am not feeling isolated and miserable in a desperate need for acceptance. Our background is different, I am fine with that, I gained my self-confidence, I am able to appreciate other people way of living, and to re-consider mine as well. I just need to learn how to continue to benefit from a sense of belonging to something that is still there, but it’s so far away that sometimes I feel like I’ve been put on another planet. I am just afraid that I am shutting myself off here somehow, not being able to make the most of this diversity all the way. Acting just like the Vietnamese expat version of me, since nobody would understand otherwise.

Things I enjoy the most

I promised myself that I wouldn’t start listing things in this blog, as I am trying to get rid of that way of approaching any issue or situation as I used to do with a work task. But actually I found all those lists on the internet about Vietnam and South East Asia so funny and educational, that I will make an exception. Plus I desperately need to focus on positive things today, as I am sweltering more than ever, feeling homesick, lonely and fed up with so many things. They say writing is therapeutic…

So, starting from the little things, let’s be enthusiastic for a while: here is a short list of what I enjoy the most in my Hanoian life – and a lot of time will pass before listing the worst, I swear!

Flower street vendors

Generally speaking, the urban landscape is not a pleasant sight in Hanoi. But sometimes it is brighten up by women wearing iconic conical hats and carrying around their rusty bikes overloaded with colorful fruits and flowers. Cargoes are arranged like little pieces of art, tidy and piled up in a variety of bright color shades. Lotus flowers, daises, peach and apricot blossoms, roses, pomelo flowers, sunflowers: the city is all adorned by this moving flower vases. And every time that I bump into one of them, is like a refreshing breeze, and I feel so blessed for the experience that I am living. I didn’t expect a fast-developing city with 8 million residents and construction sites everywhere, to preserve this unchanged and authentic charm. I thought that those hats were just an icon from the past, or from the rural regions. And that those street vendors were just a typical photogenic attraction for tourists, in the old city center. But this beauty is real, and it’s all around you.

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Check http://loesheerink.com/ for the best street vendors pics

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Sunset over Tay Ho

Since sun started to show up again after 3 long months of white sky, almost every day a glorious sunset happens over West Lake. Every day on my way back from work, I pass by the best spot to enjoy the view, perfectly on time. Along the lake, many old people slowly exercise in small groups, the water is so oily and calm that you can forget for a while the hustle and bustle around. Oh it’s so peaceful, that just 3 minutes of that view can make your day. Even the worst day.

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Peace

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Kind of Tai chi

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Kids are all beautiful, but Vietnamese kids…

Banh my, street food for dreams

Have you ever tried this Vietnamese mini baguette?

With 0.80 euro, here you buy this crispy baguette filled with pork, beef or chicken and vegetables. The baguette comes from the French colonization of course, while the filling is very local, and all the ingredients are marinated with a special combination of spices and seasonings. I am still not able to identify them all and I think that each banh my stall owns its  special recipe. But every time it’s a burst of flavor. Big cities are crawling with small banh my moving stalls or fixed booths, as the equipment needed to assemble the ingredients and warm up the baguette is very basic. I find it simply delicious, and it’s the only thing that made me think of setting up a business in my life! Basically my plan is to start cooking classes 6 months before leaving, fine-tune my recipe and find a place in a kind of hipster district in Rome. Then I will soon turn the business in a franchising of course. Every time I have a banh my, my imagination runs on the project, I find myself brainstorming on the name of the place and the menu, figuring the furniture and the decorations of the shop, developing the brand identity and assessing the financials. And dreaming of making loads of money of it.

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Not the best stall, but scenic location
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Typical plastic stools, not really tall people-friendly 🙂

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Caphe sua da

I thought I would miss the Italian espresso a lot in Vietnam, but actually here there is a an excellent and very popular alternative, even more desirable with the heat. The coffee blend is robust and strong, and the condensed milk gives a creamy and sweet touch: the perfect caffeine drink!

Following, some tips for ordering from a very skilled client:

Once you learn the local name, you will probably try to order proudly saying “cafe sua da”: they won’t get it. Maybe there is something wrong with the pronounciation…after many times, I just gave up on this.

Then you would probably say: “Iced coffe with condensed milk, please”: but a question mark will appear on their face.

Third attempt: “Vietnamese White coffe, please”, they will ask: “I?”. They mean “ice” and there is no chance they will ever say the full word. Say “yes”, and then finger crossed, you never know which coffee will be served.

Winning strategy: if you are ordering at the cashier, look for a menu and just put a finger on it. Then they will ask you: “can I repeat the order?”. A big question mark will probably appear on your face, but you will soon get that they are trained to ask this question to any non-Vietnamese, for any order.

Enjoy!

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“Cong”, favorite cafetteria

Riding a motorbike

I have been riding a motorbike for 15 years, but in my last years in Italy I was forced to switch to a boring car, given the route to my office was too long and rough for a scooter.

I was missing that sense of freedom, of being nimble weaving through traffic jams and alleys in the open air, and finally, I am hitting the road on 2 wheels again! The day I rented the bike here, took me back in time to when I was 14. Today like yesterday, that motorbike means independence:  you just sit on a saddle, give a little gas… and a bright future lies ahead. Renting a bike here is totally hassle-free, super-cheap, nobody asks for any document or guarantee, and nobody will check you, thanks to your white face (and it’s the only privilege for having this paleface here, I can tell you). And it’s more than one hour of fun every day:  this city is so lively and energetic that just looking at what is happening around while riding, makes you feel incredibly alive. And that, is the only moment when I feel integrated in this huge open air living room where we are spending the day all together. The only moment when I am not outnumbered but just like them, wearing the same pollution mask and the same sun coat not to get burnt, going together with the flow, no matter where we are from. Sometimes you just need the illusion of being part of something to overcome that sense of isolation, when you are half the world away from who you were.

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Blending in
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Go with the flow

 

 

 

 

Everywhere is a bed

Just a few lines of background, as it would be very unfair to convey the idea that Vietnamese people are slackers: they are anything but lazy, actually. Generally speaking, I consider them as very hardworking, with a special mention for women. This is particularly evident in the countryside, where 70% of population still live today: it’s impressive how women, even when looking very old, work in the rice paddies, covered head to toe under the burning sun and bent on crop for hours. Or in water up to thighs, depending on the growth stage of rice. Vietnam is the second exporter of rice in the world, and farm labor is still mainly manual: rice farmers can rely only on water buffalos to plow the soil, the luckiest share one machinery with many other families, for acres of fields. Moreover, in this male-dominated society, women are also in charge of housekeeping , taking care of large families, cooking, raising kids and feeding the animals of the farm. I can only imagine which consequences one day of this life may have on my back pain!

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Working hard in Ninh Binh province

Moving to the big cities, in Hanoi, shops are open 7/7 from 7 am to 8 pm and over, you can go to the hairdresser or to the esthetician on Sunday, and in the private sector most of the offices are open on Saturday, and employees are entitled to 12 paid holidays per year. Ok, we could argue on labor productivity and efficiency according to Westerners’ standards, but still, they have a strong work culture.
Anyways, their timings and “routines” at work are quite shoking for an Italian, raised following a set of unwritten rules and social norms that nobody dares to question. So, while I am struggling to change the perspective and accept the way they behave, at the same time, I admire and envy their culture, as an expression of open mind and smartness.
Who said that if you are tired and sleepy, but you are in the office, and you have 5 hours of work to go, you cannot take a short nap to recharge? Why do we take for granted that sales persons must stand waiting for customers all day long? These people have a lot of downtime of course, so what’s wrong with them if they put a cloth on the floor, or – in case they sell clothes – just lay down on fabrics that they have on display, and take some rest?

Ok, now that I looked open minded enough, we can go through my astonishment when on my first day at the office my colleagues kindly invited me to join them on the sofa right after lunch. Or in my early days in Hanoi, when entering a shop and looking around for a sales person, I couldn’t find anyone…at eye level. And I am not only talking about grocery shops, or those “odds and ends” stores, where you typically don’t expect the ultimate shopping experience. Same story when I went to buy an i-Phone, an activity which requires a queue and an appointment in a futuristic space anywhere else. I was in a kind of “Apple Store” (not exactly Steve Job’s concept…) and while I was arguing with the guy about “8” vs ”7”, value for money and performance…out of the blue, somebody from underneath the counter got up and said hello. I leant out of the counter and I saw a bed made of cartons and cloths. Sorry but I couldn’t stop laughing, and luckily the girl didn’t look bothered at all, she just smiled at me. She was actually relaxed after nap time.

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You just need a sign with a logo afterall…

People who are spending most of the time on the street, especially when they have a commercial activity, or work as parking attendants or security guards for example, developed a creative talent in putting together any kind of portable bed or solution to nap. Together with the adaptability needed to sleep in any possible position, litterally on any surface. The background helps, as most of the houses here don’t have a proper bedroom, nor they are used to have one bed per person.
And so the motorbike saddle is very popular to lay down, using the steering as a pillow. And with just 2 poles and a net, here you go with a comfy and ready-to-use city-hammock.

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Most popular hammock solution – Anyone living in Hanoi, could you please share any info about these vehicles?
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I mean…really?
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City-hammock, “against the wall” version
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He hasn’t move in over 1 hour.
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At the market
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Mm…should I wake him up or not?
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Maybe the other one…mm…no way
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Street vendors’ break

It happened many times that I went to pick up the laundry and the lady was sleeping on a deck chair at the entrance, I felt quite uncomfortable waking her up…so in the end I decided that there would be another occasion to pick up the laundry.
This would be totally unacceptable at home, where everybody is always in a hurry, always angry and complaining about traffic, public offices and facilities, people’s incompetence, weather and whatsoever.
I would certainly be outraged and upset if my laundry wasn’t ready by the time the pick-up was planned in my tight schedule.
But this is their country, and you play by their rules. Maybe are better than yours, or at least you can make an effort not to deliberately assume that you are on the right side.
Thank you Vietnam for giving me the chance.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sensory overload

If I could express in just one concept the biggest challenge that I had to face over my first six months in Vietnam, I would say “sensory overload”. Maybe it hit me that hard since Hanoi was my first time in South East Asia, a place where all Westerners certainties about how to behave and how a public space should look like are just wiped out, every moment, at every corner. All my senses got overwhelmed by an avalanche of unfamiliar inputs that I was not able to recognize or to frame in any experienced situation.
My first accommodation was located in the old quarter, where my first sight was a lively and dense maze of narrow streets and alleys packed with motorbikes going in every forbidden direction and carrying every possible item/ animal/ number of passengers, chicken and roosters on the loose, food stalls serving meals from 6 am till night, and people living the street as there is no line between private and public life. It was immediately clear that I had to re-think my personal space in the world.
The Hanoians out here are basically spending the day keeping each other company, eating, doing self-pedicure (yes, I would say it’s a public accepted practice, but “the accepted public practices that you wouldn’t expect” might deserve a dedicated post), taking naps in any available spot, eating again, cooking, watching people, or simply looking into the void or at their phone screens, and maybe sometimes selling a piece of the inventory. This last activity is quite hard to figure out when it comes to several “specialties” (each street of the Old Quarter is specialized in a profession or a category of products), for instance the “tape street”, where you can find 10 shops in a row with plenty of rolls of tape in any size on display, that you can assume are not such in high demand. But it looks like they wouldn’t care to enlarge their portfolio, maybe just because that stock is everything they own since ever, those products were passed down through the generations, and it’s part of their identity. But still, they are spending the day sitting by the side of the street, looking not really worried about selling any piece of it, nor bothered to take any action to increase the possibility.

And they look totally carefree and happy. Welcome to Vietnam.

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Buttons, anyone?
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Grooming

Smell is definitely over stimulated down here. With 5 millions motorbikes hitting the road, the air in Hanoi is so stuffy that after a while hanging around you feel out of breath, like you had a balloon in your lungs, preventing the air to come in properly. Sometimes street barbecues just give a yummy note that would be quite enjoyable, but my sense of self-preservation set my breathe in the anti-pollution mood, and I feel like I am not able to inhale hard, even when the smell is good.
Besides the pollution and the food, this city boasts a wide array of stinks that my nose had never witnessed: sour, pungent, multi-faceted, maybe a combination of rotted and fresh food, and rubbish piled up under the sun for 10 hours, with a touch of standing water plus a hint of some secret ingredients….that put all together create the peculiar Hanoi smell, that words are just not enough to describe.

Coming to sounds, I must say I am from a very loud city, worldwide acknowledged for its noisy inhabitants, and having this benchmark…Hanoi sounds like Spanish quarters after Napoli wins a Champion’s League football match, but all the time, everyday. They have this honking addiction that I found unbearable and very frustrating, especially at the beginning, when I was still looking for a reasonable explanation for everything was happening around. You are on a taxi, you cannot communicate with the driver and the guy is just honking every now and then, even in the unlikely event that there are no cars or motorbikes ahead, or when you take the highway to the airport, just stating that he is passing by, and making you jump out from your seat every time you relax. And you cannot tell him to please stop it, since he wouldn’t even get the point, not to mention the language of course. But in my opinion, being a pedestrian is the most stressful role that you can play on the street: with no sidewalk or clear spot available, if you lose focus for a second you can trip over a basin where people are washing pans and dishes (running water is just for big and fancy restaurants), stumble on a rooster, or on a mound of rubbish. And you walk in the middle of the street, with this continuous honking which should be supposed to advise that a vehicle is approaching…but it’s just the level zero of noise.

On the bright side of this constant over-stimulation, I would definitely mention taste. With a variety of street food, soups, spring rolls, rice and noodles, tropical fruits and vegetables, and ways to prepare meat and fish, Vietnamese cuisine is an explosion of flavor at every bite. Sometimes disappointing, as too strong for an Italian pasta and tomato eater, but as per food, I have to admit that yes, you get used to it. Even if you used to eat max 3 ingredients on average in a dish and you have been taught that you should never mix up meat and fish proteins. Or that you have to cook in different pans to preserve the real flavor of the ingredients, and you were the “plain, please” customer…you end up eating everything together, minced garlic and onions like never before, chilli and spicy, and all those seasoning that you couldn’t even stand the smell. It doesn’t mean that I am not craving for my food, but sometimes (just sometimes) I am able to change the perspective somehow, and guess how tasteless could be an Italian meal for them, and why they need plenty of adds-on when a (almost) authentic Italian dish is served. I never thought I’d enjoy coriander, to me was a kind of parsley tasting more or less like a cleaner, a food ruiner, unfortunately as popular as basel in Italy…but after six months, I love it.

Hope the coriander is just a “starter” in a new stage of adaptation.

It’s all just about getting use to it, they say.

But then, after I proved myself that I can make it, and I took my sensory tolerance to the next level, could we just go back home?

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Things I found disgusting just 6 months ago: coriander, fried shallots and fish sauce with chilli