Saigon at night, with Landmark 81, the newest, tallest building in Vietnam. |
Hello folks!
It's been a crazy 2018 over here!
(To be fair, it's been an even crazier year for the rest of the globe - man, am I glad to be outside of America right now. What a dumpster fire my country is right now! As I tell my students, half-jokingly "We're just going through some things right now... we'll get better... I hope...!")
So I guess I'm typing again, and communicating with the rest of the world from Vietnam. Like I said, it's been a year of big changes on the Vietnamese homefront. Let me get down to business with what's happening in my world!
Lots and lots of text today, so please enjoy some photos from the last year as well!
Click through for all the news!
Domestic Happenings:
Vietnam is continuing to develop at a ridiculous pace. I've said it before, but consider a few statistics: The average (AVERAGE!) annual GDP growth rate from 2000-2018 is 6.51%. AVERAGE. Meanwhile the US is chugging along at 2-3% growth and we're super happy that everything's just literally not on fire at any given moment. Also consider that Vietnam largely weathered the global economic meltdown in 2007-2008, with the rate of growth in 2007 reaching an all-time high of 8.48%, and a low (low!!) of 3.12% in the first quarter of 2009.
Coconut ice cream with sticky rice, corn, peanuts, toasted coconut flakes. |
In short, the market reforms enacted in the 1980's have been a dream for the country.
This has a couple huge consequences for those of us pulled along in the wake. One of the most obvious (and vexing) is the resultant traffic. With all this new money powering society, city traffic is getting steadily more gnarly.
As of August 2018, VNexpress reports that "Nearly 4,200 cars and 9,000 motorbikes are registered every month, while public transport is limited to buses." For context, Saigon has nowhere near enough road capacity to handle that kind of deluge - there are only 4,000 km of road in HCMC, which is a much lower percentage of total city space than is recommended. Traffic is visibly, upsettingly, and totally not-surprisingly becoming worse with each passing day.
Mi Ga Da Gion Kho - Deep fried crispy skinned chicken over dry noodles and steamed bok choy. |
There's my table-setting. And in the middle of this insanity, there's me.
So what am I doing?!?
Housing and Friends:
At least I have a little bathroom garden! |
Brownies with coconut flakes, because Game Night! Hi Rachel P! |
PET US. LOVE US. June (left) and Oreo (right) wait for cuddles after work. Don't judge my bed. |
We've gotten into a rhythm with Game Night at our house (although I've been a hermit for a month now, sorry guys). |
Our new neighborhood is bollocks, though - not a lot within walking distance, and we're on a main thoroughfare that goes to the airport, so traffic is always a hot mess. Still, it's nice to be living with people I like and trust.
At the bride's house in District 8. |
Goodbye, Joao! One last meal together with Claire and Alessio. |
SO HOT RIGHT NOW. |
Work:
I'm still out at the shoe factory in the neighboring province, teaching English to adults willing to learn. Two years into this job, I've feel I've finally gotten some things right. There were about a million failed ideas along the way, but classes and attendance are fairly regular and students are more or less committed. I'm proud of that - it's not easy to convince rural students that they can benefit wildly from learning another language, even if you rarely get opportunities to use it.
No pics of my Presentation class yet, but look for a post soon! |
Trips:
I've taken a number of trips this year!
Bri and I in Da Lat! Yes, it's hat weather (must have been a cool 70 degrees F - basically freezing!!) |
Glenda, I'm so sorry Peter and I snore like a walrus drowning in oatmeal! |
I also had the chance to meet up with my friend Glenda in Cambodia over a national holiday in the spring, which was lovely! She was spending time in Thailand caring for elephants (because of course she was, she is ridiculously cool) and we were lucky to have a few days to hang out in the capital city and eat around.
It was cool on our moto trip, but the scenery was something else! |
And we shall love him and pet him and call him George. |
WORST. DAY. EVER. |
Rolling out of the Tented Camp Hotel, a mere 4 hours behind schedule. The beginning of our day from hell. |
I also took a four day holiday to Da Lat with my boyfriend, which was lovely (would have been more lovely if it didn't rain the entire time, but oh well). Da Lat is my absolute favorite place in Vietnam, and I think someday I want to settle down there and open some businesses. We will see what the future holds.
Dating:
Sieu and I visited Da Lat for 4 rainy but relaxing days. |
Yes, I'm dating! I'm in a relationship that's about 8 months old, and it's going well. My Vietnamese is improving slowly and things are generally going well. It's a lot of work (which I guess I should have expected, but it's humbling nonetheless), but it's worth it.
I am a doofus. It will probably never change. |
Seeing the Future:
So what's next for our hero?
Great question.
General feels, demonstrated by Claire and Rachel. |
Sieu and I in Can Gio (the souther reaches of HCMC) for a weekend getaway. |
As a nation with an exceptionally long coast and an agricultural economy that depends heavily on both the sea and the land remaining in stable condition, these challenges are paramount from the perspectives of both feeding the nation and producing revenue from tourism and exports - all those beautiful beaches are going to be shifting, coffee production will move farther north, and new technologies will be necessary to help the population with shifting agri- and aquacultural businesses as certain growing areas will no longer be able to be used in the traditional manner.
But Bao will live forever. Deep fried soft shell crab in a tamarind sauce on a bao bun. YUM. |
Things are looking up going into the final month of the rainy season and into the last two months of 2018 (God, where did this year go??).
Anyway, that's my basic update. A basic, very long update! I hope you've enjoyed reading this, and I hope to be writing more and more as my time in Vietnam comes to an end. :)
See you soon! As always, comments are welcome in the section or you can contact me via email.
I love reading your stories, good sir.
ReplyDeleteCrazy love!
Would we say bri "learned" to ride a motorbike, or would we say that bri survived trying to ride a motorbike?
ReplyDelete