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Dress Appropriately

One of the things you notice when you travel around is the local dress styles. These can range from the amazing coloured dresses of Central Asian women, to the just a little bit too short jeans and white socks preferred by Russian men, to the Charlie Sheen-style outfits preferred by American men everywhere.

In this part of the world, it’s all about the pajamas. Anna is very much in favour of this, as it turns out that it’s completely appropriate to wear pajamas all day long. Today we obtained photographic evidence that slippers can be worn at any time too. In Cambodia the pajamas tend to be cotton, and looser fit. Vietnamese seem to be more synthetic fabrics, and slimmer cuts. Not nearly as comfortable I should think. Men’s outfits here are pretty plain, but to be honest, it’s always the women’s outfits you look at, wherever you go.

But then you start looking at the outfits worn by the Western tourists, and you realise that they’re pretty odd too. A fine example would be the young Israeli girl we saw the other day, wearing a singlet, dancing tights, and brown slip-on workboots (such as these). I suppose she can’t be blamed though, she will have just come out of compulsory military service. Still doesn’t explain the conversation that she was having with another young gentleman, that went along the lines of “Oh, I never take any photographs, because if you need a photo to remember something, then the event wasn’t strong enough, and it wasn’t worth remembering anyway.” I should probably also point out that the young gentleman was wearing a black singlet, pantaloons and kung-fu shoes. Didn’t really quite gel with the iPhone 4S he was holding though.

Yesterday we were sitting in an Indian restaurant, when another good example walked in. A youngish man, he had a mullet haircut, divided at the back. Singlet again, to go with matching camouflage backpack and rolled-up cargo pants. A tripod and disappointingly small camera hung off one shoulder. This was at 20:30, so I’m not sure what he was planning on taking photos of, but I digress. He spends 5 minutes standing up, reading the menu, before deciding to take a seat. He then studies the menu for this Indian restaurant for another 10 minutes, before placing his order. After looking at the currys, dhalis, naans on offer, he asks for fried rice. The waiter does his best to respond politely, but you can see him thinking WTF? Calmly, he informs him that this is an Indian restaurant, but if he wants fried rice, he would be far better off going just up the street to the market, where any number of stalls will be able to do cheaper, better fried rice. Perhaps this young man’s lack of awareness of his surroundings is due to the wide availability of cheap alcohol and drugs. I don’t know.

Today we’re off to Siem Reap. Rather than take the cheap and fast bus, we’re taking the slow and expensive boat. Hopefully there’s still enough water in the lake/river system to make it through safely.