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Thailand -- He Plays With Babies
Will Kern is
the author of the plays Hellcab and Shakespeare Kung Fu. This travel story,
which won a 2002 Lowell Thomas Award, originally appeared in The Straits
Times, Singapore's national newspaper. Will is only the second guy we've
invited to post their travel story at Journeywoman.com. It may not be
written from a woman's point of view but it is an enchanting story that
we're sure every woman will love. Will writes...
My
Chiang Mai guesthouse has a sign on the bulletin board from the local
orphanage. Handwritten, the sign is obviously by a woman. You can tell
because the letters are all round and fat and there are little flowers
drawn here and there. There's a color photo of a wide-eyed kid at the
top, about two years old. The sign is asking for volunteers.
I'm an American, middle-aged, a little
closer to the grave than the cradle, divorced, no kids. It's not that
I don't like kids, because I do, so why don't I have any? It just didn't
work out that way. Truth be told, I'm not very good with children.
But I feel sorry for them. I remember
childhood vividly and it was rough. So the sign says they need somebody
to "play with the babies," and that isn't going to be me obviously, but
maybe I can help out with painting or whatever needs to be done around
the place.
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No one understands
me...
The
Viengping Orphanage is at the back of a large, walled complex which
includes the Boys' Home, an office and a hospice for infants with
HIV. I go into the office and say I want to volunteer. No one understands
me. They don't speak English.
I try explaining
that I am here to paint or whatever they need me to do. I even swipe
phantom brush strokes with an imaginary paintbrush, but I'm not
getting my point across. Finally a woman picks out the words "volunteer"
and "orphanage" and she says: "Mayuree speak English. She teacher."
So Mayuree is who I need to talk to. They point the way.
I step into the
orphanage and see a woman, but when I ask if she's Mayuree I am
told: "She no here. She Bangkok." I say: "When will she be back?
I'm here to volunteer." She says: "Oh. You volunteer. Come."
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The kids are all
snot-nosed...
I'm
led upstairs. The woman opens a door, I follow. Suddenly I'm standing
at the threshold of a nursery. "You play with baby."
I look in at the kids. "Um,
um!" The woman puts her hand on my back and gives me a gentle push,
I trip two steps in. I look back at the door, which is closing,
then out at three Thai women and 13 Thai toddlers.
"But but but..." The kids see
me and stumble over, arms outstretched. And so it's me and the babies
for an hour and a half.
Here's the deal about playing
with babies, at least at the Viengping Orphanage. You don't need
to keep them entertained. They just want to touch you. I'm not here
30 seconds and I have three kids hanging off my neck and one planting
himself in my lap. And he's settling in. He's not going anywhere.
Six girls, seven boys, one-
and two-year-olds, looking well-fed but all really starved for attention.
They are all snot-nosed, huge
gobs of the stuff running down or caked on their faces, and they
wear dirty baby clothes with smiling cartoon characters peeking
out from under unidentifiable splotches.
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She cries and cries
and cries...
The
nursery is painted an off-white, the paint job slopped on, and the
Heroes Of Youth (Mickey, Pluto, et al) are on the walls in jagged
strokes, put there by an artist whose crude handiwork pegs him as
a former prison tattooist. The characters are half-finished and
uncolored, and I can only guess the artist ran out of time or paint
or inclination, or all three.
But these kids are a very colorful
cast of characters themselves, with very different personalities.
Happy is a two-year-old, and
nothing bothers him. He grins from the time I walk in to the time
I leave.
Big Ears, also two, is a smart
boy but a little mean, into the roughhouse even with the little
girls.
Saucer Eyes is a girl of about
one, fragile and a little lost, but she has the biggest eyes you've
ever seen in your life, eyes like an adult.
Monkey Head is somewhere between
an infant and a toddler. She has a big tuft of hair shooting out
of her forehead and I feel really sorry for her because she cries
and cries and she wanders around the room and neither I nor the
three Thai women can fix what is wrong with her.
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What am I doing
wrong?
None
of the Thai women speak English, so they can't tell me what to
do, and whatever it is I'm doing I must be doing it wrong. Why
can't I make Monkey Head stop crying?
I'm lucky because 15 minutes
after I get here, another American comes in. Fifty-seven years
old, this guy is former LAPD and an ex-private detective with
the L.A. County prosecutor's office. Dale Douglas.
Retired now, he's come to
live in Chiang Mai with his 29-year-old Thai girlfriend. He and
I get along famously. This guy has grown children. I'm confident
now.
And of course he takes Monkey
Head and she stops crying.
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Click here to see how Will makes
out and to learn about how you can help, too...
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