Thursday, October 1, 2009
Monday, September 28, 2009
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Waterfall Fall
Daniel and I enjoyed a one hour full body massage for only $6 each while Don and Ben went to visit a family. We then joined them and enjoyed a relaxing evening making home-squeezed orange juice (from oranges with green skins), visiting, doing some brain teasers, looking at picture. Sophany massaged my feet, Daniel got get a second massage from a friend of the family, and we were given yet more gifts. Don, Ben, and Daniel were each given more ties so that
On Sunday, we enjoyed church at the Siem Reap branch. There must have been 130 or so members present; Ben says attendance has doubled what it was when he attended there a year ago before leaving the area. Two ladies spoke in sacrament meeting and then both Elder Parker and Elder Baird were invited to speak. Ben used scriptures from Alma 32 about faith and knowledge and how we need to nourish the seed of faith for it to grow. His delivery included humor and good organization. . . very well received, even though we couldn't understand the Khmer. When he came to sit back down beside us after speaking, a guy in the row in front of us turned and said to Ben, "
Chetana taught our Sunday School lesson about the Book of Mormon. Don calls her Miss Cambodia--she is beautiful--and she's so easy to talk to. Her English is probably the best of any other Cambodian we've spoken to. After Relief Society, the sister who gave the closing prayer held onto Sister Baird's left hand and my right hand and told us that even though we're different nationalities that we are still sisters and she loves us. Her sincere words and eyes and hug brought tears to our eyes.
The second lady who spoke in sacrament meeting then had me come sit beside her. She invited us to come sit beside her. She invited us to come each rice with her and her daughter, which I told her we would do on our next visit to Cambodia.
After church, we rode in Loy's van with Bunseak, Sophany, Chetana, Oliza, Inja, Somath, and Seha to the floating villages. We all rode on a boat and saw some humble homes on the water. The average income in those village
Monday, September 14, 2009
Dinner at Loy Residence, Visit to Angkor Wat, and Fish Massage
August 23, 2009. This morning we will attend church here in Siem Reap from 8 to 11. Chetana will be teaching the Sunday School lesson and then she will be translating the Relief Society lesson for Sister Baird and for me.
Chetana is from Ben's "family" in Siem Reap, she speaks excellent English, and I was impressed when I met her last night at how articulate she is. She not only teaches Sunday School, but she is the secretary for Relief Society and also the Institute teacher (although those students are on break until October). Bunseak, Chetana's father, is the branch president in Siem Reap.

Ben's Cambodian "mother" Sophany is a marvel. She gave Ben, Elder Baird, a
nd Daniel cobalt blue ties she had sewn for them and she also gave Elder Baird's dad and Don home-ma
de green and black checkered ties. Chetana gave Sister Baird and me some dehydrated mango she had made (not from an electric dehydrator, but dehydrated in the sun). The dinner at the Loy home was the best of our trip (special request by Ben, I later learned)--rice with a stew of beef, potatoes, and onions; beef with fresh green beans; baked fish; and a rice pudding with ice in it for dessert. We were also served fanta, sprite, and cola on ice (the good ice, David Baird pointed out to me, that is cylindrical with a hole in the center and made from purified water--the crushed ice is from a large block and is cut with a knife and not so reliable on sanitation).

The conversations of the evening were uplifting and full of laughter. Ben, Daniel, an
d Elder Baird sat in a circle on the floor with some of the family's children. When we stood up to take pictures and prepare to leave, Ben s
aid, "My cheeks hurt from laughing so much." Daniel said his cheeks hurt, too, from sitting on the floor so long. :) Sophany did provide the visiting Americans with floor pillows she had sewn, which were very comfy.
Our day yesterday was spent at Angkor Wat. We visited three of a hundred wats (temples) before even getting to the largest 12th-century palatial wat. Each visit had unique features. Ben suggested we "work up a sweat" (what? we were always sweating, just being outdoors). We climbed some steep, narrow steps to the top of a wat that had no carvings on the stones. It was struck by lightening early in its construction, the stone is brittle and broke easily, pus the main architect of the project died . . . so the carving part of construction was abandoned. Still, the structure is magnificent and provided us a mountaintop-like view from the top.

All four of us rode elephants for about 30 minutes around another temple site. Don's and my "driver" en
tertained us with some music he made by blowing/humming through a piece of banana leaf.
The Angkor Wat temple is about a quarter mile walk just to work your way to and across the bridge that crosses and moat along the stone pathway leading to the entrance. Then, we spent about 45 minutes examining just the first wall, with intricate carvings depicting history--people, animals, Gods, wars, angels--five layers high of
detailed stone storybook. Another wall depicted the creation and the struggle between good and evil, a tug-of-war of angels and demons. We could have spent several days at Angkor Wat alone; I was surprised at the magnitude of the grounds and cities in the surrounding woods, beautiful and magnificent even today. Many of the temple walls have been robbed of their diamonds that Ben explained used to catch the sunlight and reflect to light up the rooms. We also saw the location where the movie Tomb Raider with Angelina Jolie was filmed. Of great interest are the trees that grow with long, engulfing roots on the temple walls and spires. They remind me of some of the entrances I imagine from The Hobbit. Many photo op locations.
Each day we experience such wonders here that it's hard to take it all in, much less
describe. After dinner last night, the Bairds and the Parkers stopped by the night market and enjoyed, giggled, and laughed over a fish massage. Seriously! You put your feet into a tank and hundreds of tiny fish (from Turkey) nip at your feet and toes. And tickle?!? Yes indeed. Check out the video (oops--too big for this post).
Chetana is from Ben's "family" in Siem Reap, she speaks excellent English, and I was impressed when I met her last night at how articulate she is. She not only teaches Sunday School, but she is the secretary for Relief Society and also the Institute teacher (although those students are on break until October). Bunseak, Chetana's father, is the branch president in Siem Reap.
Ben's Cambodian "mother" Sophany is a marvel. She gave Ben, Elder Baird, a
The conversations of the evening were uplifting and full of laughter. Ben, Daniel, an
Our day yesterday was spent at Angkor Wat. We visited three of a hundred wats (temples) before even getting to the largest 12th-century palatial wat. Each visit had unique features. Ben suggested we "work up a sweat" (what? we were always sweating, just being outdoors). We climbed some steep, narrow steps to the top of a wat that had no carvings on the stones. It was struck by lightening early in its construction, the stone is brittle and broke easily, pus the main architect of the project died . . . so the carving part of construction was abandoned. Still, the structure is magnificent and provided us a mountaintop-like view from the top.
All four of us rode elephants for about 30 minutes around another temple site. Don's and my "driver" en
The Angkor Wat temple is about a quarter mile walk just to work your way to and across the bridge that crosses and moat along the stone pathway leading to the entrance. Then, we spent about 45 minutes examining just the first wall, with intricate carvings depicting history--people, animals, Gods, wars, angels--five layers high of
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