HOLIDAY SEASON - BE SAFE, BE AWARE, BE STRONG
I am being serious today - so do take extra care.
How
we live is determined and governed by customs, laws and social norms. Then when on holiday to another country, another
city, with no one to judge, the rules just don’t apply. The inevitable happens, excesses of whatever,
held back before, combined with unaccountability, the flood gates are opened
wide, ready to receive trouble. The bad
decisions that are made, result in the direst of consequences.
Take
the case recently of two Canadian sisters vacationing in remote islands of
Thailand. From Pohenegamook, they grew
up in a small town of less than 3000, schooled locally and worked during the
summer in the family grocery business to save for their holiday abroad. Today’s
trend-setting youngsters go backpacking in Thailand. It has become an exciting
adventure of a lifetime for college students, especially if their friends have
been or perhaps urged on from films like The Beach. Stories of fun, drugs, sex and alcohol, all
the things unlikely to come their way in this small town in Quebec, the two
sisters decided to venture their way into a thrilling journey.
Koh Samui - Thailand |
Two
days into their stay, they are found dead in the their cheap backpackers hotel
suspected of toxic poisoning. The
authorities did not want to darken the image of tourism so the blame goes out
to food poisoning. The reality of it is, food poisoning does not warrant
blackened fingernails, bloody gums, or profuse amount of vomit. So whatever
their choice of drugs, local dealers are making more bang for their bucks by
cutting it with anything from talcum powder to borax to handier mosquito repellent. What influenced these two innocent girls to
choose this path, trusting strangers, ingesting something they wouldn’t even
consider back home is the lack of common sense.
Full Moon Pary on Koh Samui |
Why
do these travelling backpackers, middle aged and old men go hell bent on
vacation and return home in body bags much to the sadness and dismay of their
families, is unknown but the psychology behind this can be explained.
Time
and time again, German, Swedish, EU and American tourists pour into welcoming
countries. Lured by the magic of the
dollar, host countries give them whatever they have been fantasizing. Back home,
the toll of drudgery and mediocrity just makes life miserably boring. So
when the ability to live out their fantasy is within reach, no one to judge or
critique or even disapprove, the fantasy becomes ever more exciting.
Even
movie stars, who seem to have all the fantasies availed to them, can behave
badly away from prying eyes. In the
instance of David Carradine, whatever his sexual proclivities were, regardless of
his turbulent childhood, or his stardom, there allegedly was another person in
his hotel bedroom helping him with his autoerotic asphyxiation. Speculation on whether he would have
entertained this thrill, aided by another person, had he been in his own home country
is doubtful.
Observing
any full or half moon parties on the beach defies all logic on why humans take
their pleasure to the limit. The holiday
mind frame carries their common sense to a complete stop. Aided by magic mushroom cocktails, local
brew, viagra, sexercise on the beach and dancing all night to the beat, till
dawn breaks with the sunlight streaming on exhausted bodies lying half dead
would shatter the families disbelief back home.
Morning after party sleeping on the beach is typical after a Full Moon Party : Photo Getty Images |
Maybe
backpackers or sex tourists are not worried that they are going to judged, for
nobody knows them here. Unfortunately
their bad behavior, encouraged by the host country, whose very living is
determined by these tourists paying double the fees, is definitely judged.
Sometimes
the locals and police game together to bring about sheer pleasurable
abandonment so that they can benefit and take advantage. So if a few look half dead, they sink them
even further by dangling even more pleasures.
How they deeply feel about the
morals of these Western tourists are etched in the disparaging way they talk
amongst themselves. A window into the
local mindset would make anyone shudder with embarrassment and shame and
perhaps not partake so heavily and wantonly.
Or in some cases, embarrassment and shame are unfelt, as death already
took place.
It
is with sadness that some truths are covered up, more for the benefit of the
country’s image, so that the tourism business does not suffer, than an excuse
to protect the victim’s family. The real
victims are the families that are left behind, dealing with unanswerable
painful questions.
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