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When
Jim Gerweck, Running Times Managing Editor, asked if I
would be interested in representing the magazine at the inaugural Phuket
Marathon, I jumped at the opportunity. And jumped for joy at the thought
of fruit.
Yes, fruit.
Ten years ago, an old friend and I took a big trip. Val was changing
investment banking jobs and had some free time and a bucketload of frequent
flier miles, enough to get us both to the other side of the world. A
first-generation Chinese-American, shed taught English in China
after college and wed always said that someday wed go to
Asia together. That day came. Val planned the trip: We started in Hong
Kong, catching up with friends and doing errands, then took a trip to
Cambodia, one of the saddest countries in the world, where we experienced
the beauty of Angkor Wat and saw the crippling effects of American landmines
that continue to blow off Cambodian limbs. Finally, we had playtime
on a beach in Thailand.
Phuket Island was like any beach resort anywhere in the world. The same
stores selling the same beach stuff; lots of opportunities to rent motorbikes
and diving equipment; loads of places to stay and even more venues at
which to eat and drink. The beaches were beautiful and sandy, the Andaman
Sea salty and cold. After the intensity of being in Cambodia, Thailand
was, for me and Val, all about relaxation. And fruit.
Mangosteen. Mangos. Lycees. Custard apples. Rose apples. Papayas as
big as watermelon. Val is characterologically more cautious than I.
She ate fruit that we could peel. Me, I ate everything.
For ten years Ive been pining for mangosteen. It is considered,
in Thailand, the Queen of Fruit. It has a hard, thick, purplish skin.
Inside you find white sections of tangy, sweet deliciousness. You cant
get it here. You have to go to Asia.
Jim said, Thailand.
I said, Mangosteen.
If You Build It, They Will Come
I was also interested in seeing Phuket again. Id been thinking
about the island since just after Christmas, 2004. The Indian Ocean
tsunami hit Thailand hardleaving 5,300 people dead. The place
of most devastation was about an hour and a half north of the little
island where Id played with a baby elephant and gone for runs
on the beach. While other countries had suffered greater losses, Phuket
had been in the international news because it draws so many international
travelers. Nearly half of those killed by the tsunami in Thailand were
tourists.
The idea to have a marathon in Phuket came out of dinner on a boat in
Bangkok. Peter McLean, a Scotsman who does publicity for AIMS, the Association
of International Marathons and Road Races, was meeting with Raimund
Wellenhofer and Roman Floesser, of Go Adventure Asia, an event management
group that puts on the Thai Temple Run marathon. McLean averred that
Phuket would be a great destination-marathon location. He thought it
could become like the Honolulu Marathona place where runners and
their families could combine interests and vacations. Itıs an easy hour
flight from Bangkok, which is, itself, a hub for the rest of Asia. And
it would be a way to get people back to the island.
Originally, they had thought to make the marathon part of a relief effort,
to raise money for the aftereffects of the tsunami. But when the race
management team met with Phuket officials they were told that the island
had had more than enough relief. Organizations from around the globe
had donated time, money, and the labor of strong arms and backs, and
the island was now in good physical shape. What was still suffering
was the tourist trade. Tourism is the islandıs main industry, and itıs
been hurting since the angry sea rose up. Hotel occupancies were 60
percent of normal a year and a half after the disaster. Many of the
Asian tourists, I was told, were reluctant to come to a place where
such a tragedy had occurred.
So they got it together. They made Akemi Masuda, a sports commentator
and 1984 Olympic marathoner, the official race ambassador. The Japanese
take their marathoning seriously, and Akemi-san is treated like a rock
star. Accordingly, there were gobs of Japanese media at the event. And
then there was us, the group of invited Western journalists who huddled
together for press conferences, meals, and late-night World Cup watching.
We had folks from the UK, Netherlands, Belgium, Australia and New Zealand.
Our posse also included a few people whose business it is to put together
marathon tours.
Run Paradise
The races were hosted by the Laguna Beach Resort, a gated community
of five high-end hotels on 600 acres of pristinely landscaped tropical
lushness, connected by shuttle buses and boats that hummed through the
lagoons. Each hotel property is a little different, but each has been
accorded many stars.
Arriving at the airport in Phuket I noticed the first change since Id
last been there: a shiny Burger King. I was taken to the hotel and greeted
by a young woman in traditional Thai costume, who gave me a cool washcloth
and a glass of flower tea. I looked over my shoulder and saw an elephant
walking toward me. Anna, a beefy 4-year-old, was being led through the
lobby by a man in blue pajamas. I was told that Anna made twice-daily
strolls through the pool complex. Its hard not to love a fancy
hotel with an elephant in the lobby.
Harder, though, to love the Phuket Fantasea. We journalists were treated
to a trip, complements of the Tourism Authority of Thailand, to a Disney-esque
theme park where we sat through a performance that combined Cirque du
Soleil, vaudeville, traditional Thai dance, laser light show, animal
performance (at one point I counted 17 elephants on the stage) and straight-out
bizarro: Chang and Eng, Siamese twins in Amos n Andy blackface,
made frequent appearances alongside unusually voluptuous Thai girls
and a midget. It was politically incorrect beyond any definition. The
Thais, apparently, love it. As it turns out, the Phuket Fantasea is
one of the islands premier attractions.
On the more sober side, we were given a tour of the course mostly
flat at first and then with little rollers. At around 20K we got out
and race director Raimund Wellerhofer explained to us that this was
the point hardest hit by the tsunami. Having spent more than a dozen
years living in North Carolina, I had become used to the ravages of
hurricanes and expected to see trees still lying prone, roots exposed.
But the palms weathered the storm well. The native grasses, killed off
by salt water, had made a recovery. And the little shops and restaurants
on the beach were spanking new freshly poured concrete floors
and new thatched roofs. Were it not for a crop of Tsunami Evacuation
Route signs, I would never have known of the devastation that
took place here.
The island is ready for the tourists, but those who are coming are mostly
Europeans and Australians; the Asians are still staying away. Wellenhofer
explained, Asians dont want to go places where people have
died. He said they were afraid of the spirits. And the Japanese,
Wellenhofer said, whose diet is largely from the sea, dont want
to eat fish that have fed on human bodies.
And so the strategic deployment of Akemi-san. At the press conferences
the petite and gracious woman spoke at length and answered questions,
which were then translated into English by an interpreter. She wasnt
the only celebrity there for the race. Lee Hee Jin was on hand at the
VIP functions (and to run the 10K). The young Korean is part of the
girl band, Baby Vox, a pop sensation. Sheıs kind of like the Asian
Britney Spears, a guy from Singapore explained to me. Rounding
out the celebrities was scientist Alan Coleman, who also ran the 10K.
Hes the guy responsible for Dolly, the first cloned sheep.
More than 2,000 people competed in three races marathon, half
marathon and 10K. The kids 1K race made it possible for everyone
in a family to have an opportunity to earn a T-shirt. Of the entrants,
there were 500 foreigners from 30 countries. Truly, an international
event.
Late Start
The
marathon started late in the day for a Thai race at 5 a.m. At
the line, in the dark, it was already hot enough to raise sweat from
a motionless runner. The half marathon and the 10K started even later.
We milled around the start area to the sounds of traditional Thai drumming.
When the gun rang out, off we went through the gates of the resort and
into Phuket, the real Phuket. It was a gift to be able to watch the
island waking up. To see the fruit stall vendors setting out their wares.
To watch the fish market come to life. The locals were mostly silent
as we trotted past.
I remembered how liminal Asia had always seemed to me; the boundary
lines, separating inside and outside, people and animals, sweet and
spicy, seemed delightfully blurry. Folks lived on the streets, cooking
and washing and hanging out, not behind doors or windows; it felt like
running through peoples daily lives.
It was hot. I had asked a local if it was OK if I wore only a running
bra and my running skirt, if I would offend people. He said, You
are farung. It doesnt matter what you do. As a foreigner,
the native rules of proper conduct dont apply; the polite Thais
expect so little of us.
It was hot. And it was humid. It was like running through a bowl of
Tom Yum soup. By the time I reached the halfway point at Naiyang Beach
and could see the celadon-colored sea, I knew that it was going to be
an accomplishment for me just to finish the race. I forgot about my
time, stopped caring about my place. I shooed away the guy on a bike
whose job it was to accompany the top female runners. Please, I said
to him in English he didn't understand, Go ahead. I spent energy I did
not have motioning with my arm. Please, I thought, Let me suffer in
solitude.
And suffer I did. By the time the sun was fully up, I was nearly down.
I jogged at death-march pace and thought about Thailand. Id had
a number of conversations about the fabled friendliness of the Thais.
Its a jolt, really, to be around people who are just so darned
nice. Its not about tourism; even those who dont want to
sell you anything are warm and welcoming. Why, I wondered?
Thailand has never been invaded. Its a Buddhist country. The King,
His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej, Head of State, Head of the
Armed Forces, Upholder of the Buddhist religion and Upholder of all
religions plays jazz saxophone and his passion is photography;
bank notes include a picture of him with his camera. This year marked
the 60th anniversary of His Royal Highnesss ascension to the throne
and it had turned the whole country yellowhis color. People wore
bright yellow shirts and plastic wristbands along the lines of Lance
Armstrongs LIVESTRONG campaign with LONG LIVE THE KING on them.
The Thai people love their king.
The economy is strong. Theres a commitment to living well, to
enjoying the pleasures of living. In Bangkok, on the way back to the
airport, I saw a tall skinny building with a big sign on it. It said:
Drink Dont Drive. It struck me as a fitting symbol
for the traffic-congested city, though its prescriptiveness stood in
marked contrast to our own either/or approach. Theres a gentleness
readily apparent in the culture, and a tolerance. Diversity of all kinds
is easily accommodated; often it is embraced.
Nature doesnt discriminate when it comes to disaster, though perhaps
these qualitiesacceptance and gracehelped the Thai people
recover from the tsunami. Many of those who worked at the hotel where
I was stayingwho worked so hard to make my stay luxurioushad
no doubt lost something. And yet their spirit never seemed to flag and
their friendliness never ebbed. My suffering, as it were, in this racewhich
I chose to do, which I did because it is what I do for fun was
nothing. I thought about the Buddha and strove for a more enlightened
path as I slogged toward the finish.
Fruit, Fruit, Fruit
After the race I wallowed beside one of the many pools, eschewing a
fruity drink served in a coconut to peel and eat bunches of lychees
and rambutan (which look like hairy eyeballs and taste like perfume).
Then I wandered over to the beach, lured by the siren call of the massage
ladies in their lavender smocks. Under a tent with rows of cots, a dozen
slight women worked hard, using their hands, arms, and feet to knead
the bodies of Amazonian Westerners for $8 an hour. My muscles, like
those of many runners, are tight as violin strings. When massaged, I
yelped in pain. The Thai ladies howled with laughter. Good-natured,
generous-spirited laughter.
The island had survived the tsunami. I had survived the race. The Andaman
Sea rumbled just meters from where I lay, on a cot, on a sunny afternoon.
The next day I would head off again to Bangkok, and from there to Vietnam
a country with 10,000 years of war in its history to spend
time in Hanoi, to take a boat trip in Halong Bay, to go trekking among
the Hmong people. But for now, I was happy to relax in the peace and
tranquility of this happy place and to eat myself sick on exotic fruit.
Phuket may not be the most culturally interesting destination, but its
not a bad place to start a vacation.
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