How Badly?:
How badly do I want to eat? It’s 0919. The
rain had started sometime around 0200 and hasn’t stopped since. Romantic if you
had a lover with you, a reason to stay indoors all day, but that’s not the case
here. So how badly? How badly do I want to venture out of this motherfucker?
Gray sky for as far as I can see. Barred windows from the back of my room
expose an untended field of vegetables, green grass, and a satellite dish. I’m
starving. I wish I knew that the wet season was gonna be lingering around. How
badly? The rain is falling straight down, no angle, no wind. Eternal shower,
puddles outside my door, consistent sound of splashing. How badly do I want to
surf? I thought pretty badly, but now I know what those groms were thinking the
other day when I was the only one out in the lineup.
Not that bad I guess, but
I NEED TO FUCKING EAT!!! I’m out of milk, tired of oatmeal; I need solid
nourishment in my tummy. Al left me a handful of mints. How badly? Am I willing
to say fuck it? I can just throw on my board shorts and rash guard, head to the
Rajawali for internet and food. I’ll be drenched by the time I arrive, but I’ll
be in my surf clothes anyway. How badly do I want hot steaming food? It’s
there, I know it is. Even though the food there sucks, that hotel is a
convenience right now. Anything, anything. I don’t know how much weight I’ve
dropped since I’ve been here, but my thirty twos are starting to sag. I just
want to fucking eat. It should be sunny out and hot, but it’s so gloomy that it
could easily be dusk right now. The streets are silent: no motoring mopeds,
kids on bicycles, nor bells from the streetcarts. My stomach is turning in on
itself. I already took a shit. MY TANK IS ON “E!” Prisoner of the rain in my room.
I can only play Angry Birds so much. Looking outside my window, thinking, How
badly?
#
It’s one thing to already be in the water
when it starts raining, but since I’m not, surf is out of the question. I doubt
that anyone has even looked at it right now with this entire downpour.
I put my laptop in my backpack, throw on
some boardshorts and a dirty tee shirt, and leave the protection of my room to
brace myself for the rain. The Rajawali Hotel is only minutes away, but I know
I won’t last.
Cold drops pelt me as I pull the throttle.
The street is empty. Puddles cover potholes as I race past. I use my sunglasses
to protect my eyes from the stinging drops, but my lenses get foggy. More
throttle, sheets of rain like needles, squinting just enough so I can see. I
pull up to the hotel parking soaked. Randy is sitting at a table with an Aussie
and Dreadlock Eddie. I turn off the moped and say, “I’m fucking over it. Fuck
this place.”
I find salvation through breakfast. Coffee
with milk and sugar is only 2000 IR, barely over twenty cents. Just think about
it. Eight cups of coffee here is the same price as a one Starbucks coffee. I
email a couple of people and see what’s going on in the NBA. Looks like the
Spurs took game one against the Heat. I try to watch the highlights, but the
wifi stream here is so slow that I’m forced to give up. I catch Bri when she
gets off of work, and we get to Vox for a little while before I leave.
It’s about 1300, and the rain has stopped.
I do a quick surf check at the harbor. Supri is selling the little two-foot
waves, making all of the sections and still doing wrap-around cutbacks on such
small faces. But the tide is going out, which will make the surf much smaller
too. There has been so much rain that even the water here is turning brown.
Choco Point is worse, but what catches my
attention isn’t the surf, it’s the actual river mouth. I’m standing, watching a
long tree branch cruise by right in front of me, heading straight for the
ocean. The water is flowing so fast. Plastic bottles and trash is moving along
with it faster than I can run. I love this wave when it’s working, but seeing
how much rubbish is going directly into it makes me want to quite this break
all together.
Back at the compound, Randy is out on his
balcony. He looks down at me as I pull up.
“It’s terrible,” I say. “Everything. The
harbor and Chocos.”
“Let’s go to S___,” he says. “I think
that’s the call for today.”
S___ is that A-frame peak next to that right-hand
wedge where I discovered that tree branch that looks like a dick. I’m not sure
if I’m up to it. After today’s rain, I’m kind of over everything. I tell him
that I’m going to stay local instead and just hope that either the Harbor or
Choco Point will be doing its thing later.
I nap until about 1500 and head to Chocos,
but it’s flat. Over the last three days, Chocos has not been doing it at all. A
German who always surfs with Mando is here. He tells me his name is Fabio.
“Where’s Mando?” I ask.
“Oh, he hit his head on his board.
Stitches.” Fabio explains the story further. He says at the harbor that someone
was in his way on a wave, so he had to ditch his board. “He hit his head on the
nose,” he says. Nothing against Germans, but one of the Luftwaffe guys got
stitches in his head too for hitting his board.
From here I go to the Harbor. It’s even
smaller. Fishermen walk along the shore while the tide’s drained out with their
fishing nets. I give an exasperated sigh as I stare out from my bike. This will
only be the second time that I haven’t surfed at all during this whole trip.
In my room, I’m bored. Everyone else went
to S___ except for me. I should’ve gone I guess, but the rain put me in a bad
mood. I’ve been counting down the days. I don’t want to risk it, just want to
get home in one piece, surf easy, and stay local if I can.
Since everyone else is gone, it makes no
sense to hang around and wait for people to get back. I shower and head out for
an early dinner. I go to Padangs. I’m the only one here. This small restaurant
is literally a shack with four plastic tables and chairs. Flies pester you as
you eat, and geckos crawl along the wall. Despite this place’s surroundings,
the food here is outstanding. I’m almost done with my food, and it’s so
delicious that I contemplate on eating seconds, that’s until something
unexpectedly crunches while I’m eating: a fuckin’ small rock in my rice.
Unfortunately in Java, these little mishaps are common. There’s nothing like
enjoying a good meal, chewing your food into mulch, and then, out of nowhere,
you get that mysterious crunch. You feel the rock disintegrate. It makes no
sense to spit everything out, so you stubbornly chew until the rock’s particles
get grinded down to dirt. Fuckin’ nasty. Lucky for me, I catch the rock before
I break it, so I set it on the rim of my plate. Then, my teeth feel something
large and hard. I spit it out, and it clanks as it lands. It’s a big fucking
rock in my rice. I’m over it.
At the Indomaret I buy myself a beer. Yup, it
looks like a solo night of drinking. I buy a big bottle of Anker and head back
to my room. Randy’s washing his bike out front. “How was it?” I ask.
“It was big,” he says. “Probably the
biggest that I surfed that spot, easily head high. Lots of closeouts too on the
outside. Guys were getting caught on the inside. Even I had to hold onto my
board because I was getting sucked down deep. It was me and Grant, and then
Reese, Edo, Doc, and your German friend showed up.”
“Cool,” I say. Cool . . . yeah. Fuck, I
should have gone. I open up my laptop and start watching surf porn. Fuck it.
It’s an easy night just chillin’. Gonna watch a movie, write, go to bed early,
and—.
A knock at the door startles me. I hear
voices. I open it and find Grant and Reece there. I’m speechless, holding my
bottle.
“Ahhh, you’re already drinking,” says
Reece. “Come on, you’re coming to
dinner with us.”
“But I already ate.”
“Come one, Matt. We already bought some
arak,” says Grant.
“Yeah,” says Reece. “If you already ate,
just come out and have a beer. We’re at the restaurant around the corner.”
“Okay, I’ll meet you guys there.”
I’m rejuvenated with life. It’s nice to be
around other people, especially when you’re invited, and I’m not even being
used for sex either. I quickly change and head out the door.
I accept that Richard the asshole will
probably be there, but fuck it. I’d rather be chillin’ out with everyone than
be a hermit in my room. When I show up, I see that we have a full table sitting
on the floor. Gayun is here with some chick, two other Indonesian dudes who are
staying at Compound One, Ana, Grant, Sarah (Bin Tang’s chick) and Reece. I take
a seat next to Reece. “Sorry, mate,” he says. “Rick is sittin’ there.”
I get up and sit at the end of the table.
Fuck. Richard the asshole is here. Well, whatever. I’ll put up with him.
Another Indonesian dude with a shaved head sits down next to Reece. He’s Rick,
not Richard.
Sitting at the table drinking, I learn more
about the people around me. Sarah tells us that she was born in Zimbabwe and
still has family there. She says she does social work in Jogja, and since sex
education isn’t taught in Indonesia, she tells us about the crazy email she
gets from Indonesian women. “I get this one all the time. ‘Can I get pregnant
from fingering?’ Also, a woman told me that she’s been letting a guy touch her
breasts because he told her it would make them bigger.”
Fuckin’ A, this gives me a good laugh, but
at the same time, Reese and I agree that this is fucked up. I don’t understand
why something like sex ed would be illegal.
Rick and I formally introduce ourselves to
each other. He has a shirt that reads: Poke Smot. I tell him that that’s a cool
shirt, and it’s the only thing I’ve seen here that resembles weed in any kind
of way. He tells us that he lives in New Zealand now.
After beer and dinner, we all head to
Indomaret to grab some supplies for the arak (Indo rice wine) that’s back at
Compound One.
Now we’re at the large, emperor’s table at
their compound. One of the other Indo dudes offers me one of his beers. He
tells me his name is Kirby. The other Indo dude introduces himself as Josh. All
three Indo guys randomly ended up booking at the compound just for a couple of
nights. Josh and Kirby live in Jakarta.
“Kirby,” I say, “what do you do in
Jakarta?”
“He’s the coffee king,” says Josh.
Kirby shakes his head and smiles. “I do
trading with Australia,” he says.
“Oh, like logistics?”
He explains the whole process, how he bids,
distributes coffee to vendors, and how he trades with the Australians.
“So how’s Jakarta?” I say. “I mean, like,
what do you guys do for fun?”
“Man,” he says. “During the day time, it’s
crowded. But,” he smiles, “I live in the night.”
“Yeah, yeah, cool, man. I like that. I know
what you’re talking about.”
He says, “In Jakarta, man,” he rolls his
eyes back,” you can have anything you want. You can eat sushi on top of a naked
woman at four in the morning. All you need is the money. You can go to clubs
that stay open for three days straight. All you need is the money.”
I’m leaning in, buzzed and drawn into his
conversation. “You see,” I say. “That’s interesting because, all I know about
Jakarta is that it’s really Muslim, so I thought it would be like . . . super
strict you know. Like drug laws, right? I mean, my flight said it on the way
over here. The penalty is death!”
Kirby shakes his head again and pulls out a
small, Ziploc bag. He pulls out some weed and starts picking out the seeds.
“You see this, man? You can get this anywhere in Jakarta.”
This guy ain’t bullshitting. “How did you
travel with that?” I say.
“You see . . . if it’s small amount. No big
deal. They don’t care. Only if you have a lot, then you have problem.”
“Wow, so it’s just like the states.”
Kirby packs a bowl, but Edo walks over and
brings Gayun to the side. We’re being too loud. Tina walks over and says that
it’s ten o’clock—quiet hours. “You can stay,” she says, “but you guys have to
be quiet.”
“That’s not gonna happen,” says Reece.
“And you can’t go to Compound Two,” she says.
After a minute of deliberating, we all
decide to walk towards Choco Road and drink at the skatepark.
Anywhere in
the World:
I’ve really taken to these three Indo guys:
Josh, Kirby, and Rick. They’re so worldly, originally from Indonesia but still well
traveled and cultured. I feel like a stupid American, believing the images on
TV that the Muslim capital of the world is filled with people wrapped from head
to toe, stern faces that don’t smile and see every Western person as an
infidel.
“You can’t see the stars like this in
Jakarta,” says Rick. We both look up.
“Yeah . . . you’re right,” I say. Back home
in El Segundo, the sky is pink from the airport lights. In Los Angeles, the sky
isn’t dark enough to see this much. In the midst of frogs croaking on a dark
road, the only light is from two moped headlights coming towards us. “Hello!”
says the invisible person behind the light. “Hello!” I say back. This is the
most I’ve walked since I was at Jakarta Airport.
We stop at a different park before the skatepark.
It’s well lit with benches. Kirby whips out his small speakers and starts
playing music off of his phone. I’ve never heard the artists before, but it’s
Indonesian Pop. We drink more.
Kirby passes some stuff around for everyone
to smoke, and then he comes up to me and says, “Even if you don’t know
Indonesian. Even if you go to Jakarta, you don’t need to speak. They speak
money. That’s all that matters.”
Josh and Rick tell shit jokes. Ana says,
“I’m so stoned.”
I look behind us every time I hear an
engine or see a light. My Western senses tell me to watch out for the police,
but there are none. We’re out in public, in the middle of nowhere getting
drunk, some high, and we don’t have to fear about breaking the law. I realize
how unique this experience is. The last time I’ve chilled like this was in my
hometown of Napili back on Maui, when we’d head to the beach to just chill and
do whatever, all under a similar remoteness. I feel like I’m back in high
school at a neighborhood hang out. The ratio is right: three girls, eight guys.
The weather. The weather is so different. It’s so warm out here in the middle
of the night in an empty park, drinking, wearing boardshorts and flip flops.
I walk up to Grant and say, “You know, this
is really cool, man. I mean . . . I’m in fuckin’ Java, dude!” I extend my arms
to our surroundings. “Look at this place.”
“Yeah,” says Grant. “I know what you mean.
Just the other day I was wondering what me mates back home were probably
looking at at that moment, and then I looked up. It was just me, on a rug, in
an empty shack, and I thought . . . cool. I’m glad I’m not home.” He looks
around us. “I mean, we’re in the middle of nowhere.”
Gayun, young college kid and security for
Compound One, comes over and asks if I’ve drunken any arak. I hold up my empty
beer can and say, “I didn’t bring a cup. I can pour it in this I guess.”
“Shit,” says Grant. “Gayun can make your
can into a cup.” He looks at Gayun. “Gayun, you can make that into a cup?” He
pulls out a Leatherman.
Gayun’s eyes widen. He takes the Leatherman
and holds it like a new toy, touching all the folded parts compacted into the
metal tool. I have three of them back home, but I try to look amazed too so I
don’t look like a dick. “Yes,” says Gayun. “I can make.”
Gayun squats down and uses the Leatherman
to cut open the can. He takes to the work with such seriousness, even ignoring
his lady friend, just to turn my can into a cup. He’s intense, as if something
is being wagered over or as if it was a dare.
“Damn, I feel kind of bad,” I tell Grant.
“I didn’t mean to make him go through all of this trouble.” Gayun use the
pliers on the Leatherman to bend down all of the sharp edges, making the
sipping rim dull.
“Don’t worry, mate,” says Grant. “I think
he’s done this before.”
#
It’s two hours later. The batteries have
run out of juice on Kirby’s speakers. “Denny’s,” I say. “I miss Denny’s. That
would be so perfect right now.”
“Shit, I loved Denny’s when I was in the
states,” says Reece.
When the subject turns to food, Kirby amps
everyone up, saying that the market is still open, that we can order so much
food right now that we’d have a buffet. “All you would have to do is like
this,” he says, while he picks from an imaginary buffet line, stuffing an empty
handful in his mouth. We all end up chipping in and giving money to Gayun. He
takes off and comes back a half an hour later with chips, tahu (tofu), and some
fried dessert dish that we dip in granulated sugar. While squatting and eating,
Reece complains about how uncomfortable he is. “I don’t know how you guys do
it,” he says.
This is where my Filipino roots kick in.
For me, this is perfectly comfortable. Then all the other whites try: Ana,
Sarah, and Grant. They can’t do it either.
“Must be genetics,” says Reece. “The darker
you are, the easier it is.”
“That’s racist,” says Rick. We all laugh.
“But look,” says Reece. “Matt can do it,
and I doubt he sits like that when he’s in California, do ya, Matt?”
“Nope,” I say.
#
Gayun pulls me to the side and says, “Where
is your brother?”
“Oh. He’s sleeping.”
“But do you like, eat with him, go and . .
. hang out with him?”
Fuck, I’m thinking. Gayun is a sharp kid.
Why am I sensing a guilt trip? “I mean,” I begin, “we went out to eat when I
first got here . . . we surfed a little. . .”
“I mean,” he says. “If you want to hang
out, I know where to hang out. If you want to go somewhere to eat. I can show
you, so . . . I am your friend. All you have to do is ask.”
#
2:00 AM
Sarah, Ana, Reece, and Kirby have called it
a night. Rick, Grant, Josh and I are watching Gayun interact with his chick.
They are speaking Indonesian, so I have no clue what’s going on. Rick
translates for us. “They met on Facebook,” he says. “She is from Jakarta. She
took a bus for ten hours to see Gayun. She’s only here for two days. She leaves
tomorrow, and Gayun is trying to get her to stay longer.”
Fuck. Facebook is like the motherfuckin’
Match.com of Indonesia I guess.
“There’s gotta be a better opportunity for
Gayun,” says Grant. “We’ve gotta get him out of this place. Boy’s got
potential. He needs to make some real money.”
We watch the girl tickle Gayun, and we hear
them laugh into the early morning, before we head back to our respective
compounds.
“Josh,” I say. “When are you guys leaving?”
“In the morning,” he says.
“Are you going to surf before you leave?” I
ask.
“Yeah, maybe. I think we’ll have a look.”
“Okay. Maybe I’ll see you there.”
I say bye to Josh and Richard. What cool
dudes. I’m grateful to have met and hung out with them. If anything, they
showed me that people on this side of the globe aren’t much different. I walk
back to my room where Reece and Grant had swooped me up many hours ago. I close
my eyes and further ingrain the image in my head of all of us hanging out under
the park lights. Such a random group of people from all over, sharing laughs
and spreading good energy. Reece and Grant will be leaving right after me, Ana
a couple days before. It is special, this trip and the people. Even though the
arak has me a couple of breaths away from sleep, it makes me sad to think that I
might never see them again.






awesome read!!!! great great writing. i'm so happy for you that you found these group of friends in your travels. it's a once in a lifetime trip, and you're enjoying yourself.
ReplyDeletelife is a work in progress... and you are progressing
Very cool. I like the beginning kind of like a poem. I'm happy you had some fun!!
ReplyDeleteThanks, ya'll. Man, it was an interesting night that really put things in perspective. It's a real special trip, and aside from the surfing it's really eye opening to hear other people's stories too! Bri, glad you got the poem feel. I was toying with it a little, but it's still purely prose, but I'm glad it came off that way =)
ReplyDelete