| Two-Second Travelogue 
      - China, Malaysia, Phillipines, & Home  July 5 - Chengdu - Banner: "Cities should be clean like 
        souls should be pure." 
 When we walked to the bank, I pointed out "This is Cherry Creek." 
        Dad totally agreed. -- Tote
 
 More than anyplace since Italy or maybe Greece, Chengdu reminds me of 
        the U.S. Generally, it's cleaner and the people are more helpful to foreigners 
        than in the U.S., but there's all the significant earmarks of American 
        culture, such as toll roads and department stores. (Suburbanites would 
        feel right at home in Chengdu.) Things are relatively organized - buses 
        run on a schedule. Despite the language gap, sorting out restaurant or 
        hotel bills is easier than it has been since . . . well, since forever, 
        though figuring out menus or whether rooms are available is tougher. There 
        are no discernable indications that China was ever a communist state, 
        though Mao's image is still on the money and portrayed in an occasional 
        statue. The American influence is striking. The major American franchises 
        are here and well-patronized, and there are similar Chinese fast food 
        places. I spied Con-Agra cartons on the back of a bicycle outside a "hole 
        in the wall" restaurant. Government and major businesses sport signs 
        in Chinese and English. The shopping district in Chengdu would be indistinguishable 
        from that in Denver - there's chrome and plenty of overpriced clothes, 
        shoes, and status-type junk. The one major difference is the small number 
        of private cars. Though there are many privately-owned vans, cars, and 
        SUVs, the number is still relatively small. Chengdu is not (yet) as mangled 
        by major roads as most American cities. Though crossing the main roads 
        is dicey, most of Chengdu is still walkable. There are many streets on 
        which the only gas-powered traffic is the occasional taxi. Unfortunately, 
        it looks like this is changing. The division of old neighborhoods by new 
        "modern" buildings (imagine the difference between two blocks 
        filled with 10 to 20 foot wide shops or homes and two blocks occupied 
        by a single multi-storied building) and very wide roads is as prevalent 
        here as in Lhasa or as it was in the U.S. in the 60's. Unlike Lhasa, the 
        buildings are much taller and typically covered with something other than 
        bathroom tile. Drivers behave as if they have the right of way over everyone 
        else, and cars are big status symbols - even stupid, big, two-seat, red 
        muscle cars. -- Mark
 July 6 - Chengdu - The people here have been wonderful to us. 
        (It's such a stunning contrast to the Chinese parts of Tibet!) Maggie 
        and I went to English Corner. It's a spot near the river where those learning 
        English gather twice a week to speak English with each other. (The riverfront 
        has been revamped and is now home to all sorts of activities. This morning, 
        the "English Corner" was home to a ballroom dancing class - 
        it looked like the cha cha to me - and some sort of martial arts thing 
        involving flags on sticks.) The English Corner was packed. Curious people, 
        standing four deep, rapidly surrounded us. We were asked all the standard 
        questions and then discussed the soccer situation in China. -- Mark 
       July 7 - Emei Shan, Near Myriad Years Monastery - On the bus to 
        Emei Shan I saw signs featuring the Statue of Liberty, an eagle bearing 
        an American flag, and even that defaced hill, outside Atlanta, that features 
        carvings of some very large Confederate heroes. I also saw signs advertising 
        apartment complexes in Chengdu featuring a statue of Napoleon and the 
        Venus de Milo. 
       While questioning why only foreigners were required to pay for 
        a ticket to the Monastery, I learned from watching the ticket seller that 
        spitting on the ground and whacking one's ear are ways of expressing . 
        . . well, bad things. -- Mark July 8 - Emei Shan, Elephant Pool Monastery - When we got to the 
        monastery where we are staying, we saw bunches of monkeys. Duncan and 
        Tote yelled down to Mom, "You better put your camera away or else 
        the monkeys will grab it!" Once the boys started throwing rocks at 
        the monkeys but not hitting them. They threw one more rock near the monkeys, 
        and two of the monkeys started fighting. They grabbed onto each other 
        like a human would. They clenched their teeth and pulled their lips back 
        over their gums. The monastery had dim lights. After putting my bag down, 
        I went right out there to help the boys keep the monkeys away. Awhile 
        later, after dinner, we found a camp for the monkeys called "Monkey 
        Hall." The monkeys kept people out of their rooms and up and about 
        by squealing, jumping off walls, and scaring people. It reminded me of 
        the monkey man in India. Dinner was only 20 yuan for all of us to eat 
        as much as we wanted. They had a giant bucket of rice, and you could go 
        back to the kitchen for more broth, vegetables, and sauces. I ate a lot 
        of rice and broth. After we ate we were supposed to clean our own dishes, 
        so we went outside to a sink and washed out bowls and chopsticks. After 
        doing that, we went back to keep the monkeys away and then we went back 
        in and Mom said, "Time for a big experience. It's time to wash our 
        feet." And I told my mom, "No. I'm not going there to wash my 
        feet!" But I went anyway. We filled wooden buckets with boiling hot 
        water and went to the sink to put in some cold water. We stuck our feet 
        in there, sudsed them up, and rinsed them off. And I've had clean feet 
        ever since. -- Maggie
 With the aid of several elderly Chinese pilgrims, we managed to have an 
        "all you can eat" meal at the monastery. (To get our room for 
        close to the right price we all had to get our backpacks on and head for 
        the door - it was at least an hour to the next place.) After rebuffing 
        eager monks bearing an English menu three times before the 6 PM dinner 
        call, we caught on that there might be better deals available. At 6, the 
        pilgrims took over the dining hall and were only too glad to tell us, 
        using sign language, what they were paying for their meals. The woman 
        who came to wait on us smiled when we handed her the correct amount for 
        five dinners. I think she enjoyed the fact that we outfoxed the monks, 
        at least as much as the 50 or so pilgrims did - she appeared to announce 
        our choice and our payment to the dining hall as a whole. That didn't 
        stop the monk from again visiting our table and, dropping the pretense 
        of the English menu, telling us that the pilgrim's meal cost more than 
        twice what it really did. (These Chinese monks are more intent on mining 
        foreigners for all the cash they can than the delightful fellows in Tibet 
        - the Chinese monks are more nattily dressed, too.) With the stares of 
        the pilgrims to buttress our case, he accepted our refusal to pay extra 
        and retreated. Unfortunately, we had to eat our meal under the intent 
        supervision of about 15 fascinated old ladies (and wash our own bowls 
        and chopsticks.) The old ladies made certain that we knew that seconds 
        were freely available. After watching us eat, and commenting on the size 
        of our family, six or seven of our audience bowed and thanked us. I have 
        no idea what they were thanking us for. -- Mark
 
 June and July have rushed by at an extraordinarily fast pace . . . we've 
        toured more, lots of sightseeing, much less reading, writing, math, and 
        time for reflection. We also all feel the imminent end to this wonderful 
        "Big Trip." It makes us feel sad, worried, excited, tired, apprehensive, 
        and grateful. We each take turns wondering where and when we'll travel 
        next. -- Monica
 July 9 - Emei Shan to Chengdu - We just got back from climbing 
        Mt. Emei. It was a pilgrim/tourist route. We got to see the classic Chinese 
        mountains and mist while walking eternal stairways on green vegetable 
        hills, in the rain. The entire path was stone stairs, for three days. 
        The mist prevented any good vistas but made for cool hiking. We slept 
        in a monastery the second night that was infested with monkeys. One pulled 
        a girl's bag off of its handles and ran off. A guy with a hammer got it 
        back. -- Duncan
 I walked with Mommy. We counted stairs. The stairs went straight uphill. 
        Mommy complained about endless stairs. Once we got to the top, we bought 
        dried noodles in a bowl that came with a hot dog. We poured boiling water 
        into the bowl, added the flavoring packets, and jammed the hot dog in. 
        Then I cut the hot dog into small pieces. It tasted very good. -- Maggie
 
 Mark was looking through my photos taken on Emei Shan, commenting on the 
        fat, smiling Buddha statues in some of the temples. They don't seem to 
        inspire him. I think I know what he means. In the monasteries and temples 
        in Tibet, there was a dark, reverential sense of ancient holiness. The 
        golden, bejeweled statues and elaborately painted thankas loomed out either 
        brashly or silently, but always evoking a hushed respect. The thick smells 
        of the burning yak butter lamps, the offered chang, the giant vats of 
        tsampa, the heavy scent of incense all mingled to give these Tibetan holy 
        places a unique aura. When monks gathered, their chanting hum, the bells, 
        gongs and horns added another layer to the meditative mystery.
 
 
 Here in China, although I joined the elderly pilgrims prostrating 
        themselves before the more garishly painted Buddhas and watched as children 
        and young couples lit fat red candles and thick, long sticks of hot pink 
        incense, the sense of reverential respect seems different than in India, 
        Nepal, or Tibet and more Western. In India, the Hinduism seemed ever-present 
        and playful. In Nepal, the combination of Hindu-Buddhism seemed somewhat 
        more serious and a bit more distant from everyday life. In Tibet, the 
        gompas, chortens, and monasteries held a very strong, pervasive sense 
        of being surrounded by otherworldly forms and ancient reminders of our 
        transitory time here. My sense of Buddhism in China, so far, is that it 
        is more like Christianity in the West. It's not all encompassing, and 
        it doesn't delve down to one's core. Most people wear it like a cloak, 
        to be put on and taken off when convenient and necessary. One needs to 
        remember and make time for the observance of religion . . . very different 
        from the perpetually swirling, colorful and rich versions of religion 
        as life in India, Nepal, and Tibet. -- MonicaWe're about halfway around the world from New Jersey. From here on, we are 
      undoubtedly headed toward home. We are all aware we are getting near the 
      end. Sometimes we're sad; sometimes we're excited; and sometimes we're just 
      confused. Maybe that rule about no random movements wasn't such a bad idea. 
 Every now and then I turn around and find someone standing very 
        close to me, grinning in embarrassment. People usually start laughing. 
        I have obviously interrupted someone comparing their height to mine. Several 
        people on the trail measured their feet against mine and laughed at how 
        big mine were. -- MarkJuly 10 - Chengdu to Xian - The plane ride was short and when we 
      arrived in Xian, we easily took a bus to close to our hotel. We were close 
      but far enough, so we tried to get a taxi. When a red one stopped (out of 
      the six that drove past), we found that he didn't want to take us. We tried 
      some more and found out we had to take a green taxi, because the red ones 
      couldn't take five passengers. So we did. -- Tote 
 The children have definitely become confident travelers. This is good and 
      bad. I am always glad to see them become more competent. On the other hand, 
      we are now represented in every negotiation with a cab driver or in a hotel 
      or restaurant or bus station etc. by three and sometimes four people. The 
      kids are usually much tougher (and a great deal louder) than I am. -- Mark
 
 Unable to get train tickets, we flew here from Chengdu. Chengdu was cheerful; 
      colorful; delicious Sechuan spicy food (hot pot parties); modern - emphasis 
      on progressive; and tidy. Xi'an is more rubble-strewn, wet with rain, people 
      seem more reserved, food is definitely less tasty. -- Monica
 
 July 11 - Xian  - Signs we have seen: 
       Please don't take food and drink to the frolic hall, cooperation 
        amerce violator for 50 yuan.I've been sitting here at a table overlooking the loud hub-bub of a typical 
      indoor waterworld. The children are all having a marvelous time. Mark made 
      a foray to purchase train tickets. It was his second or third try. He's 
      just returned giving me a complete account. He had to go through a government 
      hotel travel agent, because at the station he was told the train we wanted 
      wasn't available.Please point out money or tickets to the eye.
 Please keep sanitation
 Civilized Airport
 Pick your steps
 No occupying while stabling.
 Please flush the closet pot.
 No spitting everywhere.
 
 We have found very little English spoken here in Xi'an, and 
        there's almost no written English. By trying to talk with people and watching young parents, it appears true 
        that most couples have only one child . . . and many of those children 
        appear very indulged . . . particularly the little boy, about three years 
        old, at the table next to me. Both his parents have spent the last 45 
        minutes cajoling him to eat a few mouthfuls, trying to convince him to 
        not hang on the railing (trying to keep him from plunging over it) . . 
        . he shouts at his parents and struts cockily . . . clearly he's "in 
        charge." He very cute but obnoxious.
 
 China seems more modern and Westernized than I expected. My guess is that 
        the life of rural China is more traditional. -- Monica
 July 12 - Xian to Beijing - We have been 
        on many trains, but this one is the cleanest, best run one of the entire 
        trip. We are in second-class, but we have white lace curtains and clean 
        sheets and towels and comforters; the food is inexpensive; the dining 
        car comfortable; the windows are large and clean; the ride is smooth; 
        and the bathrooms are clean. -- Mark
 Duncan: One of my books says that when someone says something is a regional 
        specialty, you should avoid it like the plague.
 Mark: Diskworld?
 Duncan: Yeah.
 Monica: I like regional specialties. They're a cultural experience.
 Tote: Mom, you say everything is a cultural experience. You said breakfast 
        was a cultural experience.
 Monica: It was.
 Mark: I agree. It was also lousy.
 July 13 - Xian to Beijing - Duncan: Hey Dad! How big would a 4 ton piece of chocolate be?
 Mark: Duncan, I've tried to answer all your questions, but sometimes I 
        just wonder whether it's worth the effort.
 Tote: Dad, is bamboo strong? Actually is mahogany too heavy for effective 
        armor?
 
 July 14 - Beijing - Today we went to Tiantan Gongyuan, a park famous 
        for a large Temple of Heaven. The first place we visited was a fasting 
        palace, a place where the emperor would live while he fasted before a 
        sacrifice. Down the road was the Imperial Vault of Heaven, a circular 
        wall surrounding a round building flanked by two rectangular buildings. 
        Both had blue tile roofs. The wall surrounding the three buildings was 
        called the Echo Wall. If you stand behind one rectangular building and 
        a companion stands behind the other, if you say something, the other can 
        hear it. Of course this didn't work. Behind this complex was a stack of 
        circular diases. At the top was a circular stone. Surrounding that were 
        9 tiles, surrounding that one were 18 tiles, and so on until 81. The last 
        place we saw was a famous temple with the three-level roof. -- Tote
 
 For lunch we had a sandwich-type thing. It was very good. We even saw 
        her make the sandwich. You make it with crepe batter, egg (scrambled, 
        sesame seeds, wet spices (painted on), and flat crisp bread. -- Maggie
 
 July 15 - Beijing - My favorite food in Beijing is the meat stuff 
        we had with a friend named Jackie. It was chewy, but I liked to suck off 
        all the barbeque sauce and put the meat on top of my rice. -- Maggie 
 July 16 - Beijing - At first the Beijing Opera seemed like they 
        were making fun of someone singing. The singers had voices like that voice 
        you use when you are making fun of a bad singer. Then she started sounding 
        like she was practicing karate. At first, I thought it was insane that 
        we had paid to see this, but after a thief started trying to steal something 
        from the main character and doing flips and somersaults, and the lady 
        tried to stab him about a thousand times with her sword but he kept dodging, 
        I thought it was very good. I can understand why it is famous. -- Tote
 
 There is something cool about sitting in a tiny hole in the wall, eating 
        peppered squid and onions cooked on a griddle outside, drinking cold draft 
        beer, and funding the kids' forays to other food stalls along the street 
        in pursuit of skewers of roasted meat, sausage, and ice cream. -- Mark
 July 17 - Beijing - I was surprised to find that the Forbidden 
        City was so stark. It contained tidy buildings and paving stones, surprisingly 
        no gardens and nature; and you couldn't go in and tour the buildings. 
        I need to get a book out of the library to learn about it. It seemed a 
        very calm place, aside from the 4 million people jammed in there with 
        us. -- Monica
 Monica: We've had too much fun, now we have to do some sightseeing.
 July 18 - Beijing - We went to the Summer Palace. A friend suggested 
        we go in the evening, so we did, but when we got there, the ticket office 
        was closed, and we couldn't get in. On the street, there were people in 
        white vans. They said that they could bring us in for money. Dad talked 
        them down to 40 yuan. When we got close to a side gate, they shut the 
        windows hurriedly and slowed. The co-driver got out and opened the little 
        door. We drove in and then to the right. Then we drove past to pick up 
        the co-driver, parked behind some trees, where they told us to hop out 
        quickly. Then the co-driver walked with us for a while. Dad tried to give 
        him the money, but he wouldn't take it until no one was around. Then he 
        disappeared. -- Tote
 We took a bus to get to the Summer Palace in Beijing. But once we got 
        off the bus, we found they stopped selling tickets already. But then somebody 
        came up to us and did hand motions, but we couldn't understand him. He 
        pointed to his white van with dark, tinted windows. We thought he was 
        going to give us a tour. Tote opened the windows of our van because it 
        was hot. But when we drove in another entrance to the Summer Palace, the 
        driver said to close the windows. Then we walked around the lake. It was 
        very nice and calm in the evening to watch the sunset. But finally the 
        sun was down, and we decided to go. We walked for quite a while but we 
        still didn't see a gate. We saw a bridge to an island. We saw a garden 
        that looked very pleasant, and a temple in the distance. Finally we found 
        a gate with a man sitting there to open if for us. We found the bus stop 
        finally and left for home. I fell asleep on the bus. -- Maggie
 
 Monica: I talked that lady down from 120 to 20 but I wasn't even sure 
        I wanted the thing, so she convinced me that I wanted it. I said, "I 
        don't know if I want a white t-shirt." She said, "Oh yes. You 
        want a white t-shirt; you want this purple one, too." So, I bought 
        it.
 Tote: Jedi mind trick.
 . . .
 Monica: It's a scoop neck t-shirt that I can't even wear with my clothes.
 Mark: Definitely a Jedi mind trick.
 Monica: If I had stayed there longer, I would have had 10 purple t-shirts 
        with scoop necks.
 
 Duncan: Dad, you can order fried Bian Hun - a lamb's sexual organ.
 Mark: Great. Thanks, Duncan.
 Monica: It's probably like Rocky Mountain oysters.
 Mark: How can you be sure?
 Duncan: Maybe Mom should order that.
 
 We went to Yonghe monastery, a Tibetan Buddhist monastery. Tibetan Buddhism 
        even in China has many Chinese things about it. The monastery had cushions 
        on which people bowed to the many statues, and metal incense burners which 
        people pile incense sticks in. The monks in the monastery were almost 
        all Mongolians and wore red shirts and black pants, unlike in Tibet. We 
        had fun identifying the statues. I found a statue of a small brown man 
        riding a goat. I wrote to a friend in Tibet to ask who that is supposed 
        to be. -- Tote
 
 We've scoured the guidebook, ridden the taxi and the subway to other parts 
        of town, and taken several long walks in search of an interesting neighborhood. 
        No luck yet. (The boys keep talking about how much fun they had last time 
        we visited Kansas City, so you know things are a bit less than scintillating.) 
        On the other hand, we have seen many old men flying kites. Tonight we 
        saw two (men and kites) on an overpass. The men use elaborate, sturdy 
        winders - the reels are about a foot in diameter and perhaps an inch thick. 
        They fly small single kites. They do no tricks or maneuvers. They let 
        the line out and reel it in. They seem content. Occasionally there's someone 
        (like me) who stops to just watch. -- Mark
 July 19 - Beijing - Monica: It's just great!
 Duncan: What?
 Monica: It's just great!
 Duncan: What's great? The food, the fish soup, or the Great Wall?
 Moncia: I just ate two enormous fish heads.
 Duncan: Oh.
 
 My favorite kind of Big Trip day. We hiked the Great Wall in all its unrestored 
        and crumbling glory outside Huang Hua. Rain, heat, sun, bus connections 
        in odd, unknown places, and plenty of spots where a slip would prove fatal. 
        In this section the Wall runs primarily along ridge tops but occasionally 
        plunges into a valley before soaring up to the next ridge. The sheer drops 
        and stretches with steep, uncertain footing made me wish I could rappel 
        down the thing or at least rope in. It is truly one of the most frightening 
        hikes I have ever been on. On the way home, a mini-bus driver asked me 
        for more money than we had agreed on. I just smiled and gave it to him. 
        After all, it was a glorious day, and all of us are still alive. -- Mark
 July 20 - Beijing to Hong Kong - These Chinese trains are great! 
        Again, we're in second-class. Our car is immaculate. The staff is wonderful: 
        One of the young women stops to chat in English, fold an origami crocodile, 
        and - nearly beyond belief - instantaneously solves a couple of Tote's 
        math problems. -- Mark 
 Our Big Trip is ending. We're all feeling its imminent completion. In 
        turns, we feel sad, anxious, relieved, happy, excited, grateful, apprehension, 
        loss, confidence, pride, confusion, and reticent. We have shared, as a 
        family, a vast array of rich experiences. Although we all, at times, yearn 
        for the familiarity of our friends, relatives, home, and Denver communities, 
        we have found the traveling life to be fun, challenging, and rewarding. 
        I feel that we are each experiencing some sense of grief and loss now, 
        as we approach the end. -- Monica
 July 21 - Beijing to Hong Kong - We've spent most of the day, 
        since our arrival saying, "Wow! They have [fill in the blank]. But, 
        it's so expensive!" -- Mark
 We took a 28-hour train ride from Beijing to Hong Kong. It was one of 
        the best train rides of the Big Trip. It was clean, not too crowded (perhaps 
        because Chinese people need a special permit to travel to Hong Kong), 
        and efficiently run. We had brought along plenty of food. We mostly read, 
        played, slept, did math, chatted with other passengers and train employees, 
        and stared out the windows at the more traditional, agricultural, rural 
        Chinese landscape. -- Monica
 
 July 22 - Hong Kong - Hong Kong is very modern, but parts are decaying, 
        and small companies still exist, including several stores filled floor 
        to ceiling with models, collectibles, figurines, etc. I call them "Grandma 
        Shops" because Grandma would go crazy trying to collect all the different 
        sets. Dad, Tote, and I went into a big computer mall. Inside was a store 
        filled with bootlegged games and software, we piled up a bunch. We were 
        ready to get them. In the end, Dad said we probably shouldn't. -- Duncan
 
 If we thought mainland Chinese cities were Western and modern, Hong Kong 
        is even more so. And it appears to be very international. Chinese cities 
        were mostly Chinese people....here Maggie asked me last evening as we 
        walked the streets together, "Why are there so many Indians here?" I saw 
        restaurants serving Nepali food, Thai food, Japanese food, pizzerias, 
        Pizza Hut, McDonalds, KFC, and heard many different languages. -- Monica
 
 Hong Kong could be an easy place to hate. Lots of signs, big cars, loads 
        of stores, policemen with semi-automatic weapons, burly drunks with bloodied 
        faces stumbling down the streets, and many servants. We don't hate it 
        yet. One curious fact. Though nearly every other product produced by an 
        American corporation can be found in the parts of Asia we have visited, 
        American cars are still rare. In Hong Kong this is particularly noticeable, 
        since there are many big cars. -- Mark
 July 23 - Hong Kong - Some people think of Hong Kong as the Dim 
        Sum Capital. I know it as the City of Outrageously-priced, Ugly Clothes. 
        It was a nightmare trying to shop for some new clothes. I don't want to 
        buy a fringed, rainbow, cropped t-shirt with the word "DISCO" 
        splashed across the front. But the people here don't seem to mind....they 
        sport a giant Tweety Bird or a tight-fitting glittering, sparkly "University 
        of Dayton" across their chests. Why a thin, polyester, sleeveless 
        shirt here costs upwards of US$8 is beyond me! But Dim Sum, on the other 
        hand, is delicious. The food markets are fun; the Chinese medicine shops 
        are fascinating; the constant flow of people is exciting to be a part 
        of. It took me until today to come to some kind of understanding of Hong 
        Kong. Maybe it was culture shock, or maybe me gearing down to return home, 
        but the excitement and adventure of a new place eluded me. Today it finally 
        kicked on . . . I felt I could be here awhile. -- Monica
 We've fallen into vacation mode. We eat at costly restaurants (they are 
        all costly, here), we just hang out, walking around, during the day. Kowloon 
        (this part of Hong Kong) is more expensive than London was. -- Duncan
 
 July 24 - Hong Kong - We awoke with plans to go to the New Territories 
        area to swim in a bay and play on the beach. However, it rained. We had 
        our picnic inside and walked around the Hong Kong University of Science 
        and Technology, then took the bus and metro back over here to the harbor. 
        It was a more relaxing, aimless day. -- Monica
 
 Big secret: Duncan is now at least two inches taller than Monica. -- Mark
 July 25 - Hong Kong to Kuala Lumpur - Monica: That was the best bathroom in Asia.
 Mark: You've been talking about that bathroom for the last hour.
 Monica: I know, but it was the best. That was the best airline and that 
        plane had the best bathroom.
 Mark: Free wine, too.
 Monica: And the best bathroom.
 
 Monica: Doesn't this seem different than China? The people look so different 
        . . .
 Maggie: If you want me to write about it in my journal, I'm going to say 
        it looks just the same.
 
 Last night, Hong Kong went into typhoon mode. In most building lobbies, 
        signs ticked off the rising typhoon warning. When we went to bed it was 
        a 4; this morning it was an 8. The streets, by Hong Kong standards, were 
        deserted. Many buses were not running, and some of the hotel's day staff 
        spent the night. China Airlines canceled all its flights, and while we 
        were at the airport, all ground transport to the city was suspended. Nonetheless, 
        inexplicably, our Air Malaysia flight took off without a hitch, nearly 
        on time, and the flight is smooth.
 
 
 I suppose we are gradually preparing for re-entry. The prices 
        in Hong Kong were certainly up to U.S. standards. The kids are currently 
        playing Zelda on a seatback game/movie/TV/news console. (The color and 
        resolution are amazing.) I have just finished catching up on the baseball 
        news in USA Today. (I hadn't really noticed just how bad the Rockies really 
        are.) I suppose the only thing missing is talk radio, though there's enough 
        news about the Bush Administration in the paper to reassure me that whackos 
        are still alive and flourishing in the U.S. (It is interesting to visit 
        so many countries focused on the future while the U.S. seems fixated on 
        returning to the 1950's.) -- Mark July 26 - Kuala Lumpur - The most fun here has been sitting outside 
      in the evenings and watching the steady flow of shoppers thronging the market 
      stalls, and the other tourists dining on satay and hot pot along the streets 
      of Chinatown . . . colored lights and constant motion of people and cars; 
      aromas of spicy, tropical Asian food; modern music from the CD vendors; 
      laughter and chatter from other diners; colorful fruits on display; humid 
      heat; shoppers exclaiming over "bargains"; and the children feeling 
      comfortable and independent. They've become such competent and enthusiastic 
      travellers! The people we've met here have been charming, relaxed, easygoing 
      with warm smiles - and fun. -- Monica 
 July 27 - Kuala Lumpur - Monica: I can read all these signs, but I don't understand them.
 Mark: Go ahead.
 Monica: Pejabat pos. Mee goreng.
 Duncan: Thanks Mom. Big help.
 
 We went walking around downtown in the rain, browsed a marvelous bookstore 
        in the very fancy mall that's part of the world's tallest buildings - 
        Petronas "twin towners." We strolled the Chinatown markets (my 
        favorite being the fish market), ate delicious food, people-watched while 
        sipping Tiger Beer, and the children sought out Magic cards - unbelievably, 
        they found them in the market - and had a tournament. -- Monica
 
 Facts of which I was ignorant: 1) One can drive to Singapore from Kuala 
        Lumpur in hours on modern tollroads; 2) Singapore was asked to leave Malaysia 
        - a reverse of the usual "small group fights with larger group for independence; 
        3) A British family ruled one part of Malaysia for a century and drew 
        its police force primarily from an ethnic group known as headhunters. 
        -- Mark
 
 July 28 - Kuala Lumpur to Manila - I think Malaysia Airlines is 
        the best airline yet. (Think Nintendo in economy class, free unlimited 
        drinks, and delicious food.) Maggie got a huge bag filled with treats 
        from the pilot. -- Duncan
 
 Dad and I went out to look for hotels. We looked at about eight. We finally 
        found a suite. Mom is amazed at how amazingly fancy the place is. (Dad 
        won't tell her the price.) -- Tote
 
 It's very difficult winding down the Big Trip . . . the anxiety emanates 
        from each of us in turn. Thank goodness, it's not constant. We all have 
        expectations of what we're going to do when we get back. Will it be as 
        we imagine? Mark will be teaching Constitutional Law at DU and starting 
        a new public interest venture. Duncan will begin high school at East. 
        Tote and Maggie will return to Odyssey at a new (for them) location. I 
        will surely struggle with balancing mothering, wifing, homemaking, working 
        with Odyssey, and trying to pursue the interests I have. -- Monica
 
 We stopped in Borneo. Monica took her 9000th photo. (I'm not kidding.) 
        And, fellows from "High Capacity," "Shooters," "Combat," 
        and "Genghis Khan" security agencies guard our hotel here in 
        Manila. -- Mark
 July 29 - Manila - We're perched above the beauty of Manila Bay. 
        I have been stunned by the beauty, and the adventure, and novelty, and 
        the mystery of so many places and people this year. There is so much left 
        to see, and so much left to do, and so much left to discover. . . Yet, 
        this trip, like all trips, must end. (I suppose it is in part this knowledge 
        that has made the trip so wonderful: We didn't want to waste a day by 
        overlooking what it brought that was new and interesting and beautiful.) 
        It's not romantic - in fact, it's downright sappy -- but I confess that 
        I found the greatest beauties, joys, and mysteries not in the places we 
        visited but in spending time with Monica and the children. -- Mark
 July 30 - Manila - In Manila, like in Egypt, there are armed guards 
        in front of hotels. But here it's different. In Egypt, the guards were 
        government soldiers and police. Here the guards are from private battalions; 
        they're mercenaries. Each battalion has its own name, and it seems like 
        each guy's from his own battalion. (I've never seen two of the same group.) 
        -- Duncan
 
 Mark and I ask each other several times each day (these days) how we can 
        travel, travel and work, or just live abroad in the near future. I think 
        the trip has just whetted our appetites. I don't think I began the trip 
        with this outcome in mind. . . in fact, I believe I imagined the trip 
        would sate my appetite for foreign places. I wonder how it will affect 
        the kids. -- Monica
 July 31 - Manila - It's our last day of our big trip. We have 
        a very nice hotel room. It's two rooms, connected together. We watched 
        videos. We watched "Dr. Doolittle." I thought it was a good 
        movie. The pool has a waterfall. It is a very fancy hotel. Each morning 
        a guy comes in and checks our minibar and brings us a newspaper. -- Maggie 
       Strange. Tomorrow is so simple, and I'm a bit disappointed. All we need 
        to do is find our way through a few airports. No pondering a sketchy city 
        map to figure out where we might be arriving. I don't need to sort what 
        I'll need tomorrow and what will get stashed in my secret pockets. No 
        need to figure out where we might stay, trying to envision what the guidebook 
        authors had in mind when they wrote "large, comfortable rooms" 
        for one place and "cleaner than usual but charming" for another. 
        No need to scope out the best way to get ourselves and our luggage wherever 
        we're going or to steel myself for the usual hotel survey and string of 
        bargaining sessions to get the best deal. No need to figure out where 
        to find a new currency or how to do the conversion to dollars. -- Mark
 Monica: "I guess I don't need to steal the toilet paper this time."
  August 1- Manila to Tokyo to Minneapolis to Chicago to DeKalb 
        - 
 
 August 2 - DeKalb - We're talking some serious jet lag. Monica 
        slept until 2 PM. I woke up at 5 AM and collapsed at 2 PM. -- Mark
 Just hanging out at Grandma and Grandpa's playing D&D, walking with 
        Annie, and checking out the labyrinth in the park. It's fun to just hang 
        out and do whatever. -- Duncan
 
 August 3 - DeKalb -
 Mark: So how do you like it here at grandma's?
 Tote: After only having a few things in our backpacks, it's great! Everything 
        we want is here!
 August 4 - DeKalb - Ah, it's nice to be back! Like loud noise, 
        dirt, ruddy-faced drunks, and spending your evenings sitting in 90+ degree 
        heat and 90% humidity while muscle cars roar past in circles? Try dirt 
        track racing in Freeport, Illinois. Cousin Jay told us to buy the small 
        beers rather than the large because the big ones get warm and sludgy before 
        you can drink them. Even in the time it takes to drink a small one, a 
        layer of dirt collects at the bottom. (I'm afraid I'm still so jet lagged 
        I nodded off during this little bit of Americana despite the roar of the 
        cars and of the folks sitting behind us.) -- Mark
 August 8 - DeKalb - It's only been a week, but there are already 
        times when I find myself wondering whether the big trip really happened. 
        -- Mark
 August 9 - DeKalb - Today Tote learned one of the key facts of 
        life: Kite string is never tied to the spool. With help he managed to 
        get his kite out of the tree. -- Mark 
       August 11 - DeKalb - From the Boone County Fair's description 
        of one of the fair queen candidates: "Melinda is studying cosmetology 
        and will be attending Rock Valley College this fall. Melinda plans to 
        peruse a career as a Lawyer. Melinda also studies and is passionate about 
        dance, for which she has won many awards." 
       August 13 - DeKalb to York, Nebraska - Tote: I didn't gag on any food for a whole year and now I gagged on this 
        sandwich.
 Mark: You gagged on blue cheese.
 Tote: That's not food.
 
 After a year of checking restaurant tabs and rarely finding even a small 
        error, I was surprised when the friendly folks in Amana, Iowa (Amana beats 
        out Herbert Hoover's boyhood home and presidential library as "Iowa's 
        leading tourist attraction.") overcharged us $10. -- Mark
 August 14 - York to Denver - We're home! 
       |