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What I Learned From A Stranger in Thailand


Travels are painted and layered by the individuals you encounter. The people make the place. This much I have learned for certain. In my travels, I have met some truly wonderful people. 

But, naturally, I have also met some people that I did not find so truly wonderful, some people that would be more aptly described as characters or foils. Not mean or malicious people but strange, idiosyncratic individuals who are a bit too candid at times.

And yet, I’m sure others in different countries and cultures thought the same about me, too at one time or another: a wide-eyed American exploring a faraway land that, to them, to the on-site local, may have been the only place they’ve ever been. 

One time, in Phuket, Thailand, I met a man in a hostel. He called himself Stan. We did not so much “meet,” but, rather forcefully, he sat down next to me in the lobby and started talking as if we had been friends for years already. It was not much of a conversation at first, for he was not talking to me, but at me.

Stan said he had been on the road for over a decade. He looked easily over 50 years old, the only one in the hostel over the age of 26. That gave him an air of arrogance that I’m still not sure whether he earned or fabricated. Stan was balding, thin and gangly, with a nose that looked permanently sunburnt and a graying five o’ clock shadow and haggardness that hinted at recent bouts with alcoholism.

I asked him where he was from.

“All over, kid,” he said. “All over.”

(To note, I’m 6’2″ and at the time had my own scruffy facial hair. It had been years since someone called me kid. Whether he did this affectionately or in condescension I do not know). 

This began a series of stories about how many women he’s been with, how many wives he had divorced, how many overseas investments he had fortifying his many bank accounts.

Stan proceeded to tell me, and anyone else who would listen, about his travels. About how jungle safaris are not as great as they sound. About how the best Shanghainese food he ever had was in Sydney, Australia. About how, if he wanted, he could’ve “made it in Hollywood.”

The way he spoke told me that he really thought highly of his own existence. More than once he referred to himself affectionately in the third-person: “When you’ve been on the road as long as this here Stan, you’ll know wisdom, kid.”

He was not exactly friendly, though he acted as if he was the most popular guy around once-upon-a-time. His manner was gruff and forward, and it was clear that he did not give a toss what anyone else thought of him. Perplexingly, I felt comfortable around him because I knew that he didn’t care whether I did or not. 

Other than his age and arrogance, what I remember more than Stan’s stories was the way he smelled. Maybe it was simply the fact that he smelled. His presence made me wince and crinkle my nose. But I never said anything, nor did any other hostel visitors, because that’s just not what you do. You don’t arrive in a new place in a country foreign to you, and try to make friends by telling someone they are in need of several showers. 

For four days, Stan and I shared a room with two other college-aged guys from London. By the end of the three days, we three youths all smelled like Stan because we’d shared a room with him. 

After this distressing realization, I took on a temporary but not unreasonable fear of balding, long-armed and thin 50-year-old men with sunburnt noses. I’m not sorry for writing this, and I’m not changing Stan’s name to protect his identity. Instead, I wish to pose a warning to other travelers not to share a room with Stan, lest you want to find out what it’s like when soap itself does not work.

Travel isn’t about where you are

Though unoriginal of me to say, it really is the people you meet that make the places you go. Sure, Phuket is a beautiful place, a sight to behold and one that I hope to see again soon. But there’s only so much I can write about white-sand beaches and scenic boat rides. 

But Stan? I could write a book about his pungent scent alone, and then a sequel entirely about the holes in his socks. 

The thing about traveling is that the place you go is not always what’s worth traveling for. The destination isn’t usually the best part. Only sometimes it is, on those occasions you get (un)lucky enough to not meet anyone mildly interesting. 

People make the place worthwhile. That’s what I’ve concluded across a great deal of travels.

I don’t know what it is the case, but it is. Maybe I should have asked old Stan this question. I’m sure he would have answered with gusto, and with some vague reference to something or someone he had conquered in his colorful life. 

Reflect and prepare for a changing horizon

When the pandemic befell the world, everything changed. Travelers all over were told to bunker down and cancel their flights. “Tame the wanderlust until this virus goes away,” we were told. 

Nobody appreciates being told they cannot do something. For me, hearing this from someone only motivates me.

The reality is, the world told travelers not to travel for a long time. At the time for me, that meant two years of travel coming to a full stop because the universe intervened.

But a time of rest can be the launchpad for a next step. A period of reflection, musing, and gratitude. 

In the pandemic months, I’ve had the opportunity to reflect on my travels, as well as learn to appreciate home — sunny California — to a degree I never have. For this I am thankful. 

I had the opportunity to write about my time overseas. To remember the places I traveled. To remember the people I met. To remember Stan. 

Now, travels are once again part of life. But before this was true, then, we could only live day by day in anticipation of that freedom, taking the tide as it came.

This waiting, at any stage in life, prepares you. If you let it, it can ready you for the journey to come. 

And a journey most certainly is coming, because one always is. The horizon always moves. The best we can do is reflect on what was and prepare for what could be.

I’ve learned we live life in chapters, each scene part of a winding story. That is the lesson that I arrived at during times without physical movement.

Who knows what the next journey holds.

Oh wait. That’s right — Stan knows.


This story was first published October 10, 2020.

If you want to read more, check out my bestselling travel book, “Everywhere But Home: Life Overseas as Told by a Travel Blogger” on Amazon.

For more photos, check out my Instagram.

21 Comments

  1. Great read Phil, very enlightening ..lucky for me I’m out if the hostel stage but my son whose in his twenties told me some pretty funny stories. One about a man they shared with in Vietnam I think who drank vodka all day and smoked meth in their room! Needless to say he’s dead now.

    • Ha ha ! That’s very unique of a character right there. Those hostels always bring so many stories. Thanks for reading!

  2. Same. Due to not being able to travel due to Covid restrictions, it has led us to explore our home state and it’s been great. I love San Diego too, we have explored it a lot. We did an Oregon road trip (home state) for this summer instead of our planned abroad travels and it was amazing. Glad you are finding great alternatives too:)

    • That’s a great choice too, to explore around home and within the state. Great stuff! Thanks for reading!

      • I look forward to reading more. We love to travel and usually do as much as we can, can’t wait for Covid to be over.

  3. Hmm…I can practically smell Stan right now from your graphic description, lol. I used to have the opportunity to travel a lot when I was younger. For the past 10 years I haven’t left my province here in Canada because of my two children who have autism. But you are touching on something in your post that helped me stay anchored with those who needed me and that is that travelling is really mostly about the people we encounter. I learnt valuable things about people through travelling that enabled me to eventually better understand and appreciate the ones around me. Makes me think of a quote by GK Chesterton “There are two ways of getting home; and one of them is to stay there. The other is to walk round the whole world till we come back to the same place.” I’m one of those who needed to walk round the whole world and I’m thankful I got the opportunity. I look forward to doing some back reading on your blog!

    • Wow that is great great insight, thanks so much Melanie. You share a great story here too. I appreciate this so much!

    • Really really love that quote you included here, thanks so much for sharing your insight! Its true, you can’t really appreciate home until you leave. And then you see it for what it truly is — how special, or how ordinary, home is.

      • So true. And I think you had the added blessing of going far away to relatives (I’ve been checking out your book) which can prevent a traveller from seeing the people they travel among as unlike themselves. You learn so much more when you can humble yourself and admit that the good and bad you see in your travels you could also find at home. There is a quote by Alexander Solzhenitsyn about the line of good and evil running straight through the human heart. Hopefully I’m not misquoting that but the idea is vital for properly understanding a lot of things. 🙂

        • That Solzhenitsyn quote is one of my all time favorites from Gulag Archipelago! Small world — your sentiments mirror mine so well. Really insightful once again, thanks so much for sharing Melanie

          • I think you would agree that it’s not so much about reading as about reading the right stuff. 😉

  4. I completely agree that it’s the people that we meet and interact with that make a place. These are some dear memories that I have from my travels and much less the sites. I’ve read so much about people wishing this year away but it’s still time and a journey in itself.

  5. Really great story. The people you meet when traveling truly do impact your experience. Thanks for sharing!

  6. The title of your post intrigued me, but the details and reflections kept me here. I love when writers can make us feel like we were there with them (oh what it would’ve been like to be a fly on the wall for those few days!), which is exactly what you achieved here. Thank you for all the detail and for the greater message at large!

    • Thanks so much Cate, I really appreciate you taking the time here. That’s certainly what I endeavor to do — bring the feel of a place directly to the reader!

  7. tee tee

    I enjoyed this reading this and wow this Stan really sound like a real character.

  8. You really drew me in and I couldn’t help chuckling. Love this!

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