The Facebook message found me on fringes of Southwest Thailand.

It was from John, first home-town boyfriend and now writer for the local paper.

“Lori Danneffel died.”

This can’t be right. I just saw her this summer.

Lori?

She has a husband. Grandkids. A contagious laugh that still rings in my ears.

A pit forms in my stomach, the kind with the weight of a bowling ball.
I think of John’s job, having to proofread obituaries of people who will forever be a part of us. Parents who drove us to band practice, a favorite teacher.

And now, friends.

I read the message again and peck out a nonsensical six-letter reply:

T-H-A-N-K-S.

But I’m really not thankful for news like this.

And just like that, Thailand disappears. I was in Mae Hong Son, a town nestled up to the Burma border, the end of a squiggly road with an infamous 1864 curves. The temples, the bird chirps, and mango trees are pushed aside as I make a trip to my past, exit 41 on I-94 in Southwestern Michigan. Thirteen time-zones and light years away from wherever I am.

Smoking cigarettes on the top of outhouses. Listening to Aerosmith while fluffing flowers for homecoming floats. Gasping at the latest comments posted on the walls of the stalls at the Standard gas station. Then pulling out a marker to write our retorts, dotting the “i”s with flowers.

And Lori’s plaid bell-bottoms.

Yes, plaid.

A toothy tuk-tuk driver helps me find a room near the city center as the hotel i booked on Agoda was 200 km away from wherever I was and wherever it was supposed to be.

Eight bucks a night. An almost-hot shower, toilet with a seat, mattress on floor.

And right outside, there is a New Year’s celebration.
The sky dazzles with yellow stars and floating lanterns.

But inside, memories flood my mind.

Selling donuts before school. Getting locked in the instrument closet in the band room. The smell of valve oil. Chipped clarinet reeds. Toilet papering teacher’s houses.

I return to Mae Hong Son and my eight-dollar room.

New Year’s morning, I stumble out of my hotel for my juice fix, noticing something was odd. I wasn’t the only one up. Women dressed in their Easter best, carrying Easter baskets were everywhere. Fine Thai silk skirts and tailored jackets. But it wasn’t Easter. It was New Years.

And Thailand is a Buddhist country.

I decided to follow the women, me still with bed head and my thoughts running away with my past. Locker combinations. The smell of Cupani pizza. The seating arrangement in typing class. As I turn the corner, I see hundreds of Thai have lined the street, waiting for the sun to rise and give alms to the monks.

As the drums start, a saffron robes appear beneath the sun. Between every beat, I hear Lori’s laughter. Her cracking jokes in Mr. Bendnarowki’s class. Bragging about her grandkids. But never a complaint about her hip replacements. Ever. Had she had three? Yes, three.

Not grand kids. Hip replacements.

As people approach the monks, they remove their shoes and fill the baskets with gifts. Small bags of rice. Oranges. Milo chocolate drink packets. Flowers. Over-flowing baskets are poured into rice sacks carried by helpers. The elders slip gifts of money into the folds of their robes.


As the procession continued, my mind floats again back to Lori. In Mae Hong Son, the parade was paying homage to the monks. But in my mind, the parade was paying homage to Lori, and the memories that are a part of me.


The past is never dead. It is not even the past. William Faulkner

You can watch more of the Mae Hong Son Monk procession below.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *