Statesward Bound
So my laptop was a lost cause and I returned to the island empty handed. My luck has failed to improve since… so much for karma. I’m presently trying to claim the computer and camera on my travel insurance, but I place about as much faith in insurers as I do pixie dust and unicorns. The downside of not having a computer is pretty much everything. My t-shirt designs and writing are on hold, I can’t sort through any pictures I’ll take in the meantime and it was the only form of entertainment at my house. I have no TV nor dvd player, no stereo, nada. The upside to all this, which is always good to look for, is that I’ve started reading more. A lot more. I’ve downed 4 books in 10 days because when I’m not diving I hardly have anything else to do.
First I read Into Thin Air for no particular reason. It is the firsthand account by Jon Krakauer of the disaster that unfolded around him on Mt. Everest in 1996. Quite incredible. Then I read a stinker called Last Light, some thriller about a hired mercenary in Panama. To make up for I then read the very tiring Walden; or, Life in the Woods by Henry David Thoreau. Actually I’m still reading it in the background of all the others because its taking me so long. So far he has some incredible things to say on many subjects, but curiously a few points of striking ignorance as well. “I have lived some 30 years on this planet, and I have yet to hear the first syllable of value or even earnest advice from my seniors. They have told me nothing and probably cannot tell me anything”, he says. Bullshit says I. The verdict is still out on Walden, what I have read is much more good than bad, but I can understand where Bill Bryson is coming from when he calls Thoreau “inestimably priggish and tiresome” in the next book I picked up: A Walk in the Woods. This is Bryson’s comical and throughly entertaining account of his attempt to thru-hike the Appalachian Trail. Its also peppered with lots of trail history, botany and the life; not really my bag, but the rest is grand and I would recommend it. Thus concludes this episode of the Tyler Capps book club.
Another up/downside of my smashed laptop is that I have to actually “write.” You know, with a pencil and this old stuff people are calling “paper.” I bought myself a little notepad to write my entries (or whatever you want to call them) and record thoughts and things that pop up whenever and that’s nice. I can foresee it becoming just as indispensable as my camera, but the problem is this: My typing is nearly fast enough to keep pace with my thinking, but my handwriting is utterly hopeless. My hand has to scribble as fast as it possibly can to keep up with my head and I still have to stop and let it catch up. This leads to my speedy scribbles being hard for even myself to transcribe unless what I have just written is still fresh in my mind. God forbid anyone else ever has to try to read this notebook.
With the loss of my computer and my ever-dwindling money supply the time has come for me to return to the States, if only for a while. With the slow season on the island approaching many people are leaving and I could probably walk into a job pretty much anywhere, but it is so slow that I wouldn’t be able to sustain myself regardless. With the riots in Bangkok making international headlines people, sheepish as they are, are canceling their trips to Thailand. 90%, in fact, of the people traveling to Thailand have canceled and this is going to amplify the quietness here until things fall eerily silent on the island. The sad part is that Bangkok is completely traversable with hardly any other areas of the country being affected. Why must people in the modern world let the media hold such sway over their fears?
I have to say, though, I’m rather looking forward to going back at this point. I miss my family, I miss cold weather and mountains and snow. I’d like to stay over the winter and save as much money as I can, do some hiking and skiing with my brother and perhaps make a trip out West for some real skiing before I depart on my next adventure. What that adventure will be, I’m not too sure yet. Right now my thinking points me towards South America. All of it.
-Tyler
Karma Police
I am about as far from superstitious as one can be. I believe in science, sound theories and provable facts. Sometimes, though, things happen that beg me to reconsider my stance on things like karma.
About a week ago now I was driving back to my bungalow around 9:30pm. There is a particularly steep hill just before my house and I was driving up fairly slowly in first gear just as I normally do. About half way up on the steepest section the bike popped out of gear into neutral and I began to roll backwards. The speed gained up as I tried in vain to shift back into first and gained more before I was able to apply the brakes. I was going too fast and swung sideways flipping the bike. After I was thrown from the scooter there was a split second as I flew through the air that I knew things were coming to an end. I hit the pavement on my right side and the bag containing my laptop landed with a mortifying crunch next to me. The momentum forced me to roll over it once, crushing the screen and my small Olympus camera along with it.
All was quiet. The wind was knocked from me and I sat bleeding in the road for a moment getting my bearings. I looked up the road at my overturned bike lit only by rays of moonlight leaking through the palm trees and I was alone. There was no one there to help me, no one to talk to for comfort. Just me, my pain and two newly christened paperweights. I picked myself up, hauled my bike back onto its tires and roll-started it down the hill. Once the engine was running I turned it around and went back up the hill to my house. Given the accident my injuries were minor. Just a sore neck, a few bruises, cuts and scrapes that I was able to clean and patch myself with first aid supplies from my pack. After tending to myself I reviewed the damage to my electronics. Given the durable nature of the olympus camera I expected it to survive, but the LCD display was crushed. The laptop’s screen was shattered and it wasn’t powering on. Thoughts of all the information that I may have lost rushed through my head in a panic. I sat down for a moment, but I couldn’t stay still. I knew there was nothing I could do that night, but I had to move. I drove back down to the beach and tried to call a couple of people, but no one was answering. I sat down in front of a dive shop alone trying to figure out what I was going to do.
Money was already tight and I needed the laptop if I was going to film anymore. I spent the next day running down answers. I extracted the hard drive and opened the computer up to see the internal damage. Everything looked surprisingly intact. I took it to one of the computer guys on the island, but the only thing he could do was suggest I take it to Pantip Plaza in Bangkok to see if it could be salvaged. Which is what I did. I left the next day taking a ferry to the mainland and an overnight bus into Bangkok. I arrived sleepless around 4:30am and caught a cab to my guest house. My room wasn’t available until 1pm and there wasn’t any place for me to sleep so I killed a couple of hours on the internet and wandered the streets until Pantip plaza opened at 10am. I scoured the massive electronics complex for the right shop to take my computer to and eventually settled on one. The man gave it a once over and said a screen replacement may be all it needed. I watched him as he installed a new screen for 8500baht and shockingly the machine powered on and seemed to be working. Exhausted, but relieved I made the long walk back to my guest house, stopping for lunch along the way. It seemed my streak of bad luck had finally been curbed. As I sat eating, a young Thai woman sat down in front of me and silently slid me a card. It was asking for a donation to the Deaf, Blind and Mute by buying a small handycraft for 60 baht. Wary of Bangkok scams, I politely declined and she left. Immediately afterward I felt very cold hearted and regretted the decision. I did my best to put it out of my mind and continued back to the guest house to get my room. It was 1:30pm, 31 hours without sleep. I sat down on the bed and thought about taking a nap, but before I let myself crash I booted up my laptop to make sure everything was still working. As I was checking through everything with pleasing results I heard a faint “pop” and the machine flicked off. It wouldn’t turn back on.
I rushed it back to the shop in the plaza where the man told me the motherboard had shorted and would need to be replaced. It was at this point, combined with the cost of the screen, that repairing the machine became more expensive than buying a new one. Except I couldn’t really afford one. After wandering around trying again to figure out what to do I asked the man if I could give the screen back and at least save that money. He would only give me 6000baht for it. I tried to get more at other shops, but no one was buying. At this point it had been 37 hours since I had slept and my attempts to bargain and haggle with the man in my state were pitiful at best. I ended up taking the 6000 and as I staggered out of the plaza utterly defeated at 8pm it began to pour rain. In my haste I had forgotten my rain jacket. I couldn’t seem to get a cab to stop and had to settle with a tuk tuk to get back to my room. Needless to say I was drenched by the time I arrived. I finally slept.
I got up the next morning and spent all day searching for a laptop that met my needs and I could afford, but after looking at my bank account and weighing prices I decided that I couldn’t really even afford a cheaper one. That afternoon I booked my ticket back to the island and went back the guest house to relax. I watched TV for an hour or two and left at 7pm to get dinner in a different part of the city. As I sat slowly picking away at my dinner I thought back to the girl who asked for a donation the day before and everything that had happened since. Then the very same girl sat down in front of me and with a look that would suggest she knew more than she possibly could, slid me the card again. This time it said 100baht. I paid her, she thanked me in sign language and disappeared into the crowd outside.
I am about as far from superstitious as one can be. I believe in science, sound theories and provable facts. Sometimes, though, things happen that beg me to reconsider my stance on things like karma.
-Tyler