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Seeking NirvanaPattaya, Thailandby Simon Dean IT'S 8.30am, it's Monday - I am pretty sure it is Monday - and I'm lying in a foetal position underneath some plastic chairs in Bangkok airport. My sense of well being is not helped by my brutal hangover nor by a minor head injury sustained during a three hour minibus ride with my head wedged against a curtain hook. I have been up since 4.15am having had one hour's sleep, and a 13-hour flight looms in front of me. Trying to piece together the previous night, I can recall only disturbing opaque images of flaming, primary-coloured whiskys that tasted like gelatinous petrol; many, many embarrassing games of pool, and a best-of-30 series of the popular children's game Connect 4. Beyond that lie some troubling, deeply ambivalent feelings about the whole affair.This wasn't necessarily what I'd had in mind for a trip to Thailand: a short-stay, last-minute, internet deal for which there had not even been enough time to get the jabs. I more had in mind a whirlwind sightseeing tour of Bangkok's cultural highpoints combined with a few sedate days of winter sun, reading and reflection on the beaches of Pattaya. Ahhh, perfect.
I'm actually looking forward to my first package tourist experience. Looking forward to escaping the one-upmanship that tends to accompany independent travel; where no matter where you've been, there is always an Australian in the next bunk who did it five years earlier when it was cheaper, life-threateningly harder to get to, and way, way more genuine. After all, although Thailand is pretty much the centre of the backpacker universe, "The Beach" that I intend to find is going to feature an Irish pub selling Guinness with umbrellas in it. To paraphrase singer songwriter Helen Reddy, "I am tourist, hear me roar". Grrr. Being an impetuous web-idiot, I did practically no research before booking the thing. It was cheap and the photos looked nice, and that basically was good enough to part me and my credit card number. So, it was only later that I discovered that Pattaya (leading industries: water sports and sex tourism) might not be the type of place that a northern-European gallery visitor such as myself would normally choose to relax in.
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