My plane lands at 3am and I arrive to an empty airport on the island of Singapore. There is a line of taxis for as
far as I can see, all waiting at idle for passengers. Guessing by the lack of people in the airport, they are
going to be here a while. I inquire at the information desk; I can take a cab for $30-$40 to the city center, or
wait an hour until the shuttle starts at 4am for $9. I'm not going to pay more for a cab than my bus ticket to Kuala Lampur tomorrow
cost me so I join a group sleeping in chairs to wait. I trade in a few US dollars for Singapore dollars; I don't get many because I'm only going to be here a day, and airports are notorious for having bad exchange rates.
An hour later I
head to the bathroom and the guy at the information desk tracks me down while I'm peeing to tell me the shuttle is
ready. The driver drops me off in Little India, I know there are a couple hostels per block around here. I spend
an hour trying to get a SIM for my phone to work before realizing AT&T has locked my phone to the AT&T network. It
sucks to have no phone, no internet, and no email. I rent a bed ($22) in a shared dorm room until checkout a few
short hours later. There is only one guy in there, a local who has been there a week 'waiting for his house to be
ready'. He was up playing on his phone at 5am, so at least I didn't bother anyone. I sleep for a few hours, and
grab a coffee on my way out. There are a dozen travelers in the kitchen, I see no interaction between them and
hear no English. I'm unimpressed by Little India so I take the bus to the more yuppie quay district.
I find a new hostel right off the water, but the good location doubles the price. They hold my passport until I
can get some Singapore dollars to pay them. She asks me for my 'embarkation ticket', I have no idea what she is talking about. I had been using a piece of scrap paper to take notes with; she tells me it is my immigration ticket and I can't leave Singapore without it. I head down to China Town; there is always a money trader in China
Town. But here there isn't; after half an hour I talk to an Indian tailor. These guys custom make suits for
tourists to ship home, they are hungry and enterprising, they are happy to make a side deal for my US currency. He
tells me the rate is 1.3; I know it is closer to 1.33 but I'll pay the 2.8% so I can go sleep.
I find a packed
restaurant with street tables and find a menu with nothing but pork ribs. Seriously, it is just pork ribs prepared
a couple dozen ways. I order Bak kut teh (hot pork tea); it is pork ribs in an endless hot spicy broth, and it is amazing. Maybe
hot soup is not the best when it is hot and humid out (93 with 64% huimidity), but I can imagine this stuff on a snow day. I'm the only
westerner I see that day, and I notice I'm the only person wearing a hat. I feel like I stick out like a sore
thumb, but no one pays the slightest attention to me; I'm guessing they see a lot of tourists, but not now in the
off season. The exception was whenever I walked by a 'spa'. The lady at the counter would try to wave me in like
it was the place I've been looking for, sometimes rushing out of the store.
Bak kut teh
I stumble outside and see the light show at Marina Bay going off in the distance. I can barely stay awake, but I
don't want to keep sleeping and wake up ready to go at 3am when everything is closed. I walk a block to the quay;
there are 20 restaurants in a row with an amazing view of the city and canal at night. I'm impressed by a place
with gigantic lobsters and crabs and fish in cascading fish tanks. I keep walking and find that every third
restaurant has this exact same setup, right down to the font on the signs. There are British pubs with no Brits
and Irish pubs with no Irish. There are quite a few Italian restaurants. I grab a seat on the edge of the canal and
get 'thick crab corn stew' and beef satay with a beer. The crab stew tastes like corn in flour paste. I realize it
is corn in flour paste. I quit after three bites, finish my beef satay and pay my $35SD bill ($25). The amazing
street food does not extend to the yuppie tourist areas.
The quay.
This is what $25 gets you in Singapore
I go walking and am relieved to find a familiar place. I
had seen a few pool tables around, usually with a full bar and lots of hot young women. The way these places work
is you go play pool, and the girls flirt and play pool with you. Eventually they will ask you to buy them a drink;
if you do they will keep playing with you and you'll find a $30 drink on your bill. If you want her to take off
with you she'll tell you she can't because she is working, but if you pay her employer a fine, she can get off
work early and go have some fun. After that, you can make other arrangements with her if that's what you're
looking for. But this was an actual pool hall, I could tell as soon as I saw snooker tables and cue lockers.
I rent a table and she tries to sell me a 6-pack of Heinekein on special for $35SD. At this point I realize I am
down to my last few SD, and I'm not going to find a currency exchange that night or before my 7am bus to Kuala
Lampur. I order a Jack Daniels neat. She kept insisting I get a mixer with it. When I won't she brings me the JD
on ice. I have no idea what she actually brought me that looked like whiskey, but there was only a faint whisper
of alcohol for that $7SD. There was a table of locals playing an amazingly good game of snooker. Imagine a pool
table with twice the area and balls that are half the normal size; it takes skill (and long arms). A gorgeous girl
in tiny shorts with long black hair walks in with a middle-aged businessman to play at the table next to me. She
laughs at everything he says, cheers when he makes a shot, and finds lots of excuses to fall into his arms. He
spends most of the time staring at his phone. She looks my way quite a bit, which means the only two people in the
whole city to take the slightest notice of me were a couple of spa madam's and a pool hall girl. It's obvious what
the reputation of a western tourist is.
I've got just enough SGD left for cab fare to catch my long-distance bus in the morning. I head to the hostel and
grab a gatorade at the 7-11 along the way. I'm sitting in bed when one of my roommates walks in. She seems shocked
to see me; I say hello, she dives into her bed and closes the curtain. The other guy is in bed too, I can see him
behind his curtain. There is a main room with 8 beds, with a community bathroom to one side and our 4-bed room
next to it. I'm not sure what the etiquette is in a unisex bathroom, but there is no room to dress in the shower
stalls, so I undress in the open and hope none of the girls walk in. I open the door into the main dorm room to a
guy wearing a t-shirt and no pants. I guess I didn't need to be careful. I realize I left my key on my bed, I
forgot I would need it to get back in. I know both my roommates are awake and right next to the door on the bottom
bunks, so I knock. And knock again. Two people in the main dorm pull back their curtains to stare at me. The two
in my room ignore the knocking completely. I have to make two trips to reception to get and return a spare key,
and it is around 1am with me walking through groups of sleeping people. I never once saw any person there interact
with another person in any way. I hope it isn't like this everywhere.