I shot a look at my landlord’s niece, then asked the little
girl, “Play what?” Not that I expected
to understand the answer. Even if I
recognized the title – and I didn’t – I’d already been watching my landlord’s niece scream and run
around while little neighbor kids threw baby powder at her. Was this a real game or just their own
invention? Was there a way to win and stop
being chased? How long would it
continue? Why tonight of all nights,
when I was exhausted and the humidity was near 100%? All I wanted was to go inside, shower off,
and unwind with a book.
Then suddenly, I took off running.
Every evening lately, as I’ve turned onto my street coming
home from school, I’ve asked myself, “Do I feel like talking?” Srey Pos has been living with us for over a
year now, in my landlord’s house that adjoins ours. She’s their 17-year-old niece and the one who
opens the gate each evening for me, eager to talk after sitting with the guard
dog in front of our house all day. Her
job is to keep people from breaking in, and presumably to clean and cook a bit
for the landlord’s family. But since the
landlord and his wife have been staying out till 8:30 or 9 PM for an English
course, Srey Pos has all kinds of time between my return (5:30 or 6) and
theirs. Sometimes I come home with a lot to do, or
just can’t think of anything to say to her. And
some nights, to be perfectly honest, I’m just not willing to spend energy
making conversation. But I try to reserve
a few minutes to linger and chat more often than not.
In a sense, having her around is perfect for me. I love practicing Khmer but don’t get to use it
that much at school, and she’s eager to decipher all my mangled sentences. The trouble is, while she’s good at
understanding me, I often don’t understand her responses. I’ve heard that her province has a pretty
thick accent, but some of the variations in her speech almost sound like speech
impediments to me: ex. changing “r” to “h.”
When her grandma visited, I noticed that the grandmother was easier to
understand. Given my limited Khmer
proficiency and the great number of Khmer vowels that only vary slightly, I
need some context to figure out that “chwa” means “swy” (mango) or “bhua” means
“braw” (boy). Plus, she doesn’t really
rephrase, slow down, or use gestures: if I tell her I’m confused, she just
repeats the same thing at the same speed. My comprehension has improved as I’ve figured
out a couple of sound shift patterns and key words, but it’s still tough going.
Regardless of how much I understand, I’m glad to get to know
her more. It’s great for me to build a
relationship with someone who’s not fluent in English or comfortable in Western
culture, like my other Khmer friends. And I feel for her – it has to be so lonely
living here by herself. She’s not close
with the landlords, and worries about getting in trouble with them for various
reasons. They may be relatives, but it’s
not a warm, fuzzy relationship. For those
reasons, my Filipina roommate Ethel and I have been reaching out to her – Ethel
probably a lot more often than me, even though Ethel is new this year and knows
about 4 words in Khmer. Ethel uses a
hilarious combination of gestures, dramatically intoned English phrases, and
those four Khmer words to communicate better than I’d expect, with questions as
complex as “Are your aunt and uncle sleeping here tonight?”
Srey Pos keeps saying she wants to learn English, which I’ve
never tried to teach her, but Ethel’s taken her up on it. I hear them outside sometimes: “Girl…boy…ABC…” Personally I think she needs to start back at
the basics. She still can’t remember “What’s your name,” which nearly every kid
in Phnom Penh has down pat by age 6. Besides "hello" and "OK," I
think “bowl” is the only word she’s really mastered. (I found out tonight that she now calls Ethel "Bong Bowl" - "Bong" shows respect and means "older sister.")
She's always eager to spend time with us. She once asked if she could come over and help
me finish my Christmas cookies. Though she
didn’t care for the taste of peanut butter and chocolate, she was a huge help
at mixing and forming the cookies. She always comes over to ask for help with her broken phone charger or her cell phone stuck on a weird setting from pushing one too many
buttons. She also asks us often to
borrow our phones so she can call her village, since she’s always running out
of credit. (Like many Cambodians, she probably buys it $1 at a time, which expires after a week.) For a while, Srey Pos was often jumping rope
with her 9-year-old cousin, and had a blast whenever we jumped in for a while.
Ethel and I occasionally go for evening walks, and that’s
Srey Pos’s new favorite. She goes on
Ethel’s bike up and down the street, circling around us while we walk. Once when I went with just her, she actually
walked alongside me, headphones blasting Khmer love songs from her cell
phone. Friday night when I got home from
dinner with a friend, she asked if we could go on another walk. I reluctantly agreed, knowing how tired I was
and how sweat had drenched my shirt at least 3 times that day, once during each
brief bike ride. I figured a walk could be peaceful and I knew she'd appreciate it.
But the minute we got outside, little neighbor kids were swarming us, trying to throw baby powder at her. She told me she’d already changed outfits three times from all the baby powder thrown earlier in the day. They zipped around us on bicycles, with the kid in front driving and the one on the back tossing clouds of fragrant white dust toward her. Srey Pos alternately shrieked, ran away, and grabbed me as her human shield. They were afraid to get it on me, but she got pretty well-covered.
But the minute we got outside, little neighbor kids were swarming us, trying to throw baby powder at her. She told me she’d already changed outfits three times from all the baby powder thrown earlier in the day. They zipped around us on bicycles, with the kid in front driving and the one on the back tossing clouds of fragrant white dust toward her. Srey Pos alternately shrieked, ran away, and grabbed me as her human shield. They were afraid to get it on me, but she got pretty well-covered.
After we progressed about a block during 10 minutes of these
shenanigans, she turned around and took me back to the house, and the little
kids desisted. But when we got back to
the gate, she started talking with the one little girl, who asked if I could
play. Play what? I am so not in the mood for this. I had already felt relieved to be done with
our “walk” – it had been a long week and a long day. I was about to say no and head to the front
door, when a voice inside me said, Oh well,
why not?
The little girl with one of the biker boys. I wish I knew their names, but I can never remember - their building has a lot of kids. |
I turned and sprinted toward the bike with two boys on it, making them giggle and shriek. What was
I supposed to do? Run away, but let them
catch me every now and then? I supposed I could
handle that for a few minutes. So I ran
and shrieked till the baby powder ran out and the kids went home.
Running hard and laughing hard felt really good. It reminded me of other exuberant nights with
friends in youth group, my campers, my younger siblings. Yeah, my shirt got soaked through yet again. No, I didn’t
have time to read once I’d showered – I just collapsed into bed. No, I didn’t mind getting home too late to join in their
antics the next night.
But I almost missed out on a magic moment, and I’m so glad I
didn’t.
1 comment:
Love this post!!! I can completely relate... one of my friends (also named Pov) likes to talk to me at the same speed using the same words, no matter how many times I ask them to repeat... eventually I generally end up just saying 'jaaaa' and leaving it at that!
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