Crime and Travel
I’m currently following a single woman (on Twitter!) who has
traveled the world all by herself. Having never been a woman, I never realized
until recently how creepy guys in ALL countries can be toward a woman traveling
alone. That being said, I have observed the behavior of folks toward me and my
group when we’re traveling domestically and overseas.
On a flight out of Newark back home to LA, I “lost” an Apple
iTouch. I wanted to blame the TSA, but it could
have “disappeared” in the airport shuttle.
A friend purchased some marijuana at the marina in Cabo San
Lucas. A young guy took the money, went around the corner and came back with a
wad of newspaper and thrust it at her like “here’s your purchase. Now get out
of here.” She checked her “purchase” when we got back to the car, but there was
nothing in the wad of newspaper. “I’ve never had this problem before,” she
pouted.
In Bangkok, we bought tickets to ride the skytrain, the mass
transit alternative to getting around the city. In our hurry to catch the next
train, a friend threw a wad of Thai baht at the cashier and ran for the train.
She left her booth and chased him down to give him his change!
One night in Bangkok, a driver offered to take me to a bar
outside of town in the middle of nowhere that was not observing the queen’s
birthday and thus was open when others weren’t. We pulled up front and he said,
“I’ll be right here waiting for you, boss!” Twenty minutes later when the bar
closed, there were no lingering taxies and he was nowhere to be found. I didn’t
know where I was. I struck out on a lonely road toward the lights of Bangkok in
the distance, not even sure I was headed in the right direction. Behind me, I
heard the whine of an approaching tuk-tuk, a vehicle part motorcycle, part
rickshaw that is the common form of transport for tourists in the city. I
flagged him down. He didn’t speak English, but he understood the name of my
hotel. It turned out I had only an American quarter on me, but I promised him I
would hire him to be my exclusive driver for the rest of my trip. I insisted on
getting his number when he dropped me off at the hotel and promptly lost it!
A single guy traveling in our group decided to avail himself
of a local woman at the same Bangkok hotel. At first he was stopped by hotel
security. “We don’t allow locals in here,” he said. After a bribe of about five
dollars, the security guard took her ID. “You get this back when you leave the
hotel,” he told her. Later on that evening, they parted ways. The security guard
called his room to make sure he still had all his possessions and was okay
before he allowed her to leave. Now that’s service!
People on holiday behave differently than they would at
home. My wife and I were in Amsterdam when an inebriated young man staggered
into the coffee shop and fell on the floor. We helped him up, but he was
incoherent. “Don’t worry,” the proprietor assured us. “This happens all the
time. We’ll get him back to his hotel.”
Once in the Bahamas and another time in Edinbrough we stumbled
on drug deals in progress, and were promptly shooed off. It may seem like we
live a charmed life, but on the whole, I think people are basically decent.
Please don’t burst my bubble.