Travel

There is so much travel in traveling.  I’ve never had more than two weeks off in a row.  I’m now a month into vacation and weary of the travel part.  I know, whaaa, quit complaining.

Yesterday, I had breakfast at my hotel and the worked on lesson plans until it was time to leave for the airport. I have to turn in my first month of lesson plans before school starts.  The rest of the day was travel to Bangkok and a hotel near the airport.  The taxi stand at the Don Mueang airport was amazing.  I got there and they were serving number 555.  But, where to get a number was not obvious.  It must be at the back of that room full of people.  It was.  I got number 630.  This system doesn’t appear to be working very well.  Then when I finally got a taxi it took 40 minutes to go the 8 miles to my hotel.  Whoa Bangkok traffic.

What a wonderful little trendy, cheap hotel.  The staff was friendly and I get free breakfast and airport shuttle in the morning.  I ate dinner there because I was too exhausted to go further.  I had a grilled cheese sandwich that I’m pretty sure was cooked in liquid sugar instead of butter.  Come on, Thailand, stop putting sugar on everything.  Don’t try this at home.  Sugared grilled cheese is not delicious.

This morning came early – breakfast at 3:30, shuttle at 4:00am.  Was I high when I booked a 6:00am flight?  Maybe it was foggy brain.  The airport was a zoo at 4:15.  I made a friend within 2 minutes and we decided to navigate the zoo together.  Justine was a delightful young lady and we managed to find our way through a mob with no lines, just angry lost people everywhere, ticket agents yelling, and tour groups looking confused.  After landing in Bali, the immigration line was the shortest I’ve ever seen.  But I had to wait a long time for my luggage because I waited at the wrong carousel.  Once I figured it out, my bag magically appeared on the correct one.  Funny how that happens.  Unfortunately, that meant I didn’t get to say goodbye to Justine.  Enjoy your vacation Justine!

I rented a car while here.  It seemed easier for wandering around the island.  If I didn’t have the suitcase or if I had the SE Asia ability to tie any thing to a motorbike, I’d rather do that.  But, that was just a bad story waiting to happen.  The car guy took me to an atm and then to the police station to get a “driver’s license”.  I don’t have an international license because I didn’t know that was a thing until I had already moved to Thailand.  I would have had to get it in the US in person so too late for that information.  This license is supposed to get me out of having to pay a bigger fine if I get pulled over.  We’ll see.

So then I have to take this sorry excuse of a vehicle from the airport to my hotel.  The doors rattle.  The steering is loose feeling.  The breaks need a heavy foot.  The steering wheel is on the wrong side and it’s stick shift.  That was a first for me.  Then let’s drive on the left side of the road just for fun.  As in Thailand and Vietnam, the striping is just for decoration and a beep means “I’m passing you now”. All that said, it went ok and I made it to the hotel.

My hotel is cute and has a pool.  I was in it within 5 minutes. I worked for a few hours, then dinner and now travel exhaustion.  Tomorrow diving – fingers crossed that it’s great!

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

 

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Taxi Stand
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Taxi Bling

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Pool side room

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Bioluminescence

I had read that bioluminescence is possible to see in Halong Bay, Krabi, and Bali.  I was hoping for the glowing trifecta, but didn’t see it in Halong Bay.  This is a plankton that emits light when stressed so water movement causes them to light up.  I’ve seen it once in Palau and it was one of the coolest things I’ve ever seen.

There were tours offering night snorkeling so I signed up for one.  I was sick the day I was supposed to go, but the guesthouse was able to reschedule me for today.  It was a whole afternoon of snorkeling and island hopping and dinner.  I brought crackers and cookies so I could eat bland food instead – so glad I did.  Although everyone said dinner was great, just looking at it almost did me in.

The snorkeling was the most unimpressive snorkeling I’ve ever done, but after diving, I expected that.  I just floated and enjoyed being in the water instead.  We went to two different snorkel locations.  It was two large boats full of people.  Again, I expected this.   Most of the people were as unexciting as the other tour I took and diving.  I did spend some time talking to a couple of other English Teachers from the UK who were fun.

We went to Railey Beach for sunset.  I was able to walk over to the climbing shop and get a partial refund on the climbing I didn’t do so that was nice.  I also found mochi balls.  It’s always a great day if there are mochi balls. Saw some monkeys too.  One threw a corn cob at me.  He had bad aim, but my opinion of monkeys is still that they are mean little creatures best to be looked at from afar.

Overall, it was too long a day.  By the time we got to the swimming with plankton part of the trip, I felt horrible and just wanted to sleep, but this is what I came for.  It was a ton of rude people flailing around in the water kicking and splashing.  We only had 10 minutes and most of it was spent fending off people or that slimy fish that kept trying to adhere itself to my leg.  I thought maybe he was trying to suck the pain out of my pulled muscle since that is what he kept going for, but decided I still didn’t want to befriend him.

There was bioluminescent plankton.  It was very faint and you couldn’t see it from the surface, but if you waved your hand around about a foot below the surface, you could see little sparks.  Overall, I’d call it a success.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

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Low Tide

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All my new best friends

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Mochi Ball!!

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Food Boats

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All the Things

Thursday, I did a half day of rock climbing.  Railey Beach, which is near me, is known for its climbing.  The beach is only accessible by boat.  It has such a weird vibe to it which I didn’t like much.  It’s like a Rastafarian, a hippy and a rock climber met on a beach.  The climbing was good and it felt nice to be on the rock again.  But I pulled a quad muscle part way through.  That might cause a problem for climbing in two days – I booked two days of climbing.  I wondered how they would know to take me back to my hotel after I did the boat ride.  As I was leaving the climbing shop, they gave me a red nametag thing around my neck and put me on the boat.  I felt like a little kid who had been given a nametag and sent off to school.  It worked, a taxi was waiting on the other side and knew me by my red tag.  I did have a neat experience where I had the distinct feeling, “Oh, I live here”.  It was subtle, but it was as if a small part that was resisting, let go.

Yesterday my leg did not feel miraculously better as I had hoped it would.  All my other muscles were sore too.  I guess I got a good work out climbing the day before.  I had signed up for a jungle tour today.  The people in my tour were less than fun.  It was 4 Europeans, 7 Thai Muslims and a family of 3 from India.  I’m becoming more and more convinced that Europeans are just snooty.  The Muslims didn’t even acknowledge me.  The Indians were nice to talk to.  We went to a hot springs waterfall.  I really enjoyed that.  We also went to the Emerald pool which was a mineral springs with tons of Thais swimming in it.  It was also enjoyable.  There was lunch which was Thai or Halal and too spicy for me.   I didn’t really like it, and (foreshadowing) it didn’t like me either.  Then they took us to the Tiger Cave Temple.  It doesn’t have actual tigers, that’s another temple somewhere else in Thailand.  I didn’t see a cave either.  There was a bunch of stairs you could climb to see a big Buddah.  Of course there were, they seem to like to build things on tops of mountains and I seem to climb them even though, it looks like the same Buddah I’ve seen in other temples.  I didn’t listen too closely to the tour guide when she said how many stairs.  I should have.  At about 600, I asked someone, how many stairs?  Oh jeezee, I would not have done this if I had known it was 1260 really steep stairs to see a Buddha statue.  So, enjoy the pictures I took, because I worked very hard in the heat to get them.  The way down was just as hard since they were so steep.  I could barely move my legs by the time I got down.  I felt dehydrated and horrible by then.  Next was elephant riding.  I’m am against this so I didn’t pay to go.  Another couple didn’t pay either.  Shortly after everyone took off on their elephant ride, the put the three of us into another van full of other people and took us back to our hotels.  The ride back went winding down steep streets way too fast and I felt sick to my stomach by the time I got back.  I never get car sick.  I tried to nap, but was rudely awakened by the need to throw up.  This continued roughly every hour through the rest of the day and all night.  Really, Life?  What do you want?  I was just beginning to feel better and was trying to rebuild my strength.

Today I woke in so much pain.  All my muscles hurt from climbing the other day and now my stomach muscles hurt from being sick all night.  I tried to eat some yogurt, but didn’t feel much better.  The owner of the guest house I’m staying in offered to drive me to the doctor.  That was real nice.  The doctor asked a bunch of questions, gave me some meds and sent me on my way.  I didn’t do much today, slept a bit, tried to eat a little and rescheduled the tour I was supposed to do tonight.  I canceled climbing yesterday.  I feel a little bit better, but not great.  How am I ever going to survive Thailand?

Then to add to all of this, I find out my mom’s husband has been put into hospice care.  My brother went out there yesterday to help with finances and paperwork.  One of my cousin’s sons was killed in a car accident.  Big stuff is happening back home and I’m complaining about some bad food. I find my brain trying to put all the information into categories and boxes and make sense of it all, but it’s having a hard time doing it.  I’m not sure it even knows how any more since that’s the old way of doing things.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

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Diving

Yesterday and today I went diving.  Other than Chatfield Lake, I haven’t been diving in 6 years.  I was so excited!  Chatfield Lake is horrible and shouldn’t be considered diving.

I came diving in Thailand in 2005 and it was amazing.  At that time, it was the best diving I had ever done and has only been topped once since.  This was not amazing.  In fact, I am heart fully saddened by what I saw.  Most of the reef is dead.  I dove in a different place in Thailand in 2005, but I doubt it’s the location that is the problem.  I’m going to guess it’s all the divers, the snorkelers by the thousands, party boats, the tons of boats spewing oil into the ocean, the smelly water that runs in all Thai streets and the full moon parties.  In 10 years so much has been destroyed.  Will we have any live coral in another 10?

There were sections on each dive that had some good coral and aquatic life, and there were interesting things to see.  Saw seahorses, nudibracs, lobster, turtles, scorpion fish, eels and some puffer fish.  I only saw one lion fish and I remember seeing hundreds before.  It was still nice to be surrounded by water.  We saw dolphin today and were hoping to swim with them, but 2 of the snorkel boats kept chasing them and they left the bay pretty quickly.  I always love seeing them.

Yesterday I spent some time at the beach after diving.  It was so hot that I could only stay in the sun, out of the water for about 10 minutes before I thought I might have heat stroke.  So, eventually I gave up on a tan and hid in the shade.  But, here in a resort town, there are fruity drinks and ice cream to be found in the shade so it was a win win.  Since massage is cheap, that’s on the schedule each day too.  I do believe Ao Nang Beach has more massage places than any where else in Thailand and that’s a lot.

Today I had a contact fold in half in my eye before the second dive.  After much digging around in my eye, I couldn’t get it out. I gave up and dove with one good eye.  After diving, I tried to get it out, but no luck so I sat in a coffee shop in the afternoon and worked.  Then I got a foot massage.  Foot massage here means foot, leg, shoulders and neck, sometimes arms.  By the time I was done, I was so loopy I could barely walk.  My eye was so irritated that I could barely see.  I must have looked drunk leaving the massage place.  I managed to get some dinner and get a taxi tuk tuk thing back to my hotel.  8:30pm, I finally got the folded contact out of my eye!  Yay!

In most towns in Thailand there are songthaews that are used for cheap public transportation.  They are trucks with covered seats on the back.  Then there are motorbike taxis which are a dude with an orange vest on a motor bike.  There are tuk tuks which are a low vehicle big enough for 2-4 people, kind of like a golf cart but lower and with a faster engine.  Here they have motor bikes with a cart on the side that will seat 1-3 people.  It’s kind of like a songthaew for a motor bike.  I haven’t seen them elsewhere in Thailand.  I rode in one today. The driver did a fabulous squeeling u turn right before letting me out too.  I’ll try to get a picture of one tomorrow.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

Lost

I had an interesting thought today.  If, in my 20s, I had done what I’m doing now, people would say I was traveling and living abroad to find myself.  I thought, what an interesting twisted concept.  So many times I’ve heard people say they are taking time off to find themselves.  It’s self identification that is the source of issues.  And yet, finding oneself is often a lofty goal.  On many occasions, when people ask why I moved abroad, I said to shake things up, to get lost.  I’m trying to lose myself.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

Krabi / Ao Nang

Yesterday was my last day laying low in Jomtien.  I worked a little and had a late breakfast.  I debated having breakfast by the beach and spending the whole day there or near my apartment and going to the beach later.  I opted for later.  Good thing.  It poured rain for an hour or so and I was safely working in a restaurant instead of on the beach.

I was concerned about how I would check out of the apartment and get my deposit back since they were closed yesterday and wouldn’t reopen until after I had left today.  I tried to book a private taxi to Bangkok so I could leave later than the bus, but it would cost quite a bit more.  That didn’t work out so I bought a bus ticket anyway.  I decided to go call the number on the apartment rental office door.  As I walked by, one of the guys was in there and I told him my checkout problem.  He just came in to pick up something he had left and I was lucky to catch him.  I got checked out and got my deposit back.  How’s that for your “life takes care of me story” of the day?

I ran other errands like printing travel plans, getting a bus ticket and getting water.  That took up quite a bit of the day.  I spent a couple hours at the beach reading and then went to dinner with Chris.  I feel much healthier than when I arrived which is good because I already have a lot already planned and booked for the next few days – two days of diving and a day and a half of rock climbing.  I hope I have the strength after being sick and losing so much weight.  I’ve lost close to 15 pounds since I moved to Thailand and I feel like most of it is muscle.  Time to rebuild!

Today I left on the 7:00am back to the airport in Bangkok.  The 8:00 bus may have been early enough, but I just didn’t want to risk traffic.  The bus only went to one airport and of course my flight was out of the other one so I wanted to make sure I had plenty of time to get across Bangkok.  I took a taxi from one airport to the other and it took quite a bit longer than I would have expected.  Still, I got there way too early.  Then a flight to Krabi.  Another longer than I expected taxi ride and got to the guesthouse I’m staying at around 4:00pm.

Just the taxi ride to the guesthouse and this place is beautiful.  Why couldn’t I have been placed here?  I could live here.  It is quite touristy where I’m staying, but I’m a tourist for now.  I checked in at the guest house and then walked to the dive shop to check in.  After that I went to the beach (Ao Nang) just as it was getting dark.  I’ve been on vacation for over 2 weeks now and this is the first time I’ve felt like I’m on vacation.  Yay!  I’m on vacation!

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

 

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Rain outside, Rraine inside
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Jomtien Beach
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Airport Coffee Shop Selfie
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OMG – This is an actual salad in Thailand – Rare Sight

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View from my Krabi guesthouse room
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Ao Nang

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Look who’s on vacation

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Green lights from the squid boats
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Statue in front of a clinic

Sailing

Yesterday after a late breakfast, I went to the beach.  The beach here is much nicer than Hua Hin, but still not the clear beautiful water you expect of Thailand.  They had a bunch of chairs and umbrellas set up along the beach.  I wasn’t sure if I had to pay for the spot, but I ordered a coke at one and sat there for quite a while reading.  There was a wonderful breeze and the water was nice too.  Later I met Chris for dinner.

Today I met Chris for breakfast.  One of his friends said he would take us sailing sometime between 10:00am and 1:00pm.  It turned out to be 2:00pm so I did some printing of my upcoming travel arrangements.  I still find it easier to get to my hotel if I have a printed copy of the hotel info instead of handing my phone over to the taxi driver.  Then we went out for a sail.  It was nice to just be on a boat sailing.  I do feel a bit useless as I know nothing about sailing and couldn’t help with anything.  Brian was our captain, a nice Italian guy who grew up in Zimbabwe and married a Russian lady and now lives in Thailand.  Most of the talk of the day was about world issues and world economy, which I know nothing of.  It was facinating, but also hurt my brain.  Later, I got to meet Brian’s wife and two of his children.  His children are fluent in 3 languages, like it’s no big deal, especially his 3 year old daughter.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

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Better eat fast or ants….
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Check out this kid’s water gun backpack

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Jomtien

I went down to the lobby at 4:45.  One of the night guys was asleep on a bed behind the desk and the other was on a lobby couch.  I felt bad about waking them up, but the one on the couch hopped up and grabbed my bad and took it out to the taxi that was already waiting for me.  I think the Vietnamese people are easy to anger and have short tempers, but when they smile or are helpful, it feels so much more sincere than the Thai people.  My flight back to Bangkok was uneventful and it was the shortest wait I’ve ever had to get through immigration anywhere.  I said goodbye to Annaliese.  I felt a huge relief as I did.  Not that I was relieved to say goodbye.  She is a sweet fun person, but I realized I had taken on some of her energetic stuff (everyone has stuff).  With all that I am learning and the big wall I am coming to with the disintegration of identity, I think I took on some of her fear, making mine feel larger, a trick of the ego to keep me in fear so I won’t move forward in this process.  I know other people that feel the energies going on around them so strongly that it is overwhelming and they sometimes don’t know what is them and what is others.  I never use to think I did this, but now I’m realizing I do sometimes.  It just comes in more subtle and I don’t realize I’m taking on other energies right away.  When I do, I’m able to drop it quickly.  The relief I felt today was when I let her energies go and some of my fear went with it.

With a bit of difficulty, I found the bus to Jomtiem which is a couple hours south east of Bangkok.

Jomtiem is a beach area near Pattaya.  Pattay is a big beach destination for old white men and people wanting to get away from Bangkok.  When I first moved to Thailand one of my co-workers put me in touch with his brother-in-law, Chris.  Chris lives in Jomtien.  He was a huge force in keeping me sane when I first moved to Sam Ngao.  I would often call him after school when it was the middle of the night in the US.  I just told him I needed to speak and hear fluent English and it would set my brain right.  He’s a sailor and told me he’d take me sailing if I ever made it to Jomtien so I decided this would be a good place to relax between Vietnam and Krabi.

The bus dropped me off and I walked a couple blocks to the restaurant Chris was meeting me at.  It was nice to put a face to the voice.  I managed to eat a half a sandwich.  Yay!  He recommended an apartment complex nearby that rents rooms and has a pool so we went there.  There were several high rise buildings with plain looking apartments and a big pool.  On the bottom floor of each building is a row of plain looking businesses, Thai restaurants, small bars, places renting rooms and other things.  We went into one of the places renting rooms and booked a room for me.  It’s not the nicest place, but it’s on the 10th floor.  The rent was cheap enough and I have to pay for water and electricity when I leave.  I think I’d rather have a hotel, but I think this will do for 4 days.

I had told Chris I was sick and asked if there was a doctor he recommended.  He has and ear infection so he said he’d go with me.  We walked into the clinic and I told them what was going on.  I talked to the doctor for a while.  Her English was difficult to understand, but she seemed to understand me better.  She asked a lot of questions, took temperature, looked in my throat and nose.  She told me it wasn’t Dengue fever as if I was nuts to ask.  She said I’d be burning up and red if it was.  Then I got called back in for an injection.  The nurse put 4 or 5 things in the syringe.  I have no idea what was in the shot and I don’t much care.  Then she gave me a bag with 7 different drugs.  She gave me instructions on how to take them, but not what they were.  She said one was an antibiotic that would help with the sinus infection and stomach problems.  Again, I don’t much care what the drugs are if they work.  It all didn’t take long and cost me about $30.  Much cheaper than the US, but way more expensive than Sam Ngao.

After the clinic, Chris dropped me off at the apartments.  I went and got a foot massage at one of the places in the building.  It might have been the best foot massage yet.  Then I went to the pool and just sat in the water.  Finally, I was immersed in water.  The water was way too warm, but it was wonderful anyway.

I need to pay for wifi at the building and found out too late to pay.  The office was closed.  So, I ventured out for dinner and hung out in a sports bar until they closed, just posting blogs, putting more money on my Thai phone, making phone calls and catching up on email.  I ate a whole personal pizza.  I feel tired, but so much better.  Thanks mystery injection.

I found out earlier today that my mom’s husband is in the hospital.  He can’t keep food down and now isn’t very coherent.  I talked to mom tonight and she is ok, all considered.  I didn’t ask when he went to the hospital, but I can bet it was around the time I was in Hanoi processing about her.  I wonder why our medical system thinks radiation is a good alternative to cancer.  Most people I’ve known that had radiation died of radiation complications.  Why don’t we just try to make people more comfortable and let them go of cancer?  How did pumping someone full of poison become the solution to not die of cancer.  I guess it works for some, but I still think something is terribly wrong with our medical system.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

 

Tiny Tables and Chairs

I didn’t do much today either.  Slept in, had breakfast and walked around a little.  Then we stopped for coffee.  The coffee shops here are funny.  They only serve drinks.  They put tiny tables and chairs on the sidewalk and there are people sitting at them any time of the day.  A few had hookah pipes too.  I wonder how there are so many people not working, just sitting at tiny tables.  So we did the tiny table thing one more time.  I’ve spent the rest of the day in my room, repacking, working (engineering stuff) and looking for new flights.  The airline I booked my ticket to Krabi has staffing problems and canceled most of their flights, including mine.  I have to be up at 4:30am tomorrow so my plan is to sit in this comfy bed the rest of the day and go to bed early.  This may be the last soft bed I ever see in SE Asia.  Erin left today and I’m sad to lose her as a travel buddy.  She was delightful to travel with.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

Water Puppets

Not much happened today.  We slept in and had breakfast in our hotel.  The staff was just as happy about feeding us as they were about checking us in yesterday.  I was going to try to find a doctor today, but after talking to the hotel lady, decided going back to bed was a better idea.  She said most doctors don’t speak English and so most foreigners go to the hospital, but the lines at the hospital are so long that if you don’t get there at 5:00am you might not get seen.  Add that all up, I’ll wait until I get back to Thailand.  So we hung out in our hotel until 3:00pm when we set out to get tickets for the 4:10 water puppet show.  I’ve never heard of the art of water puppetry, but apparently, it’s a thing.  And it sounds like it originated here and the Water Puppet Theatre is famous so we decided to see a show.  They were sold out until the 8:00pm show so we wandered around until then.  The show was so interesting.  I’m not sure how to explain it.  Google Hanoi Water Puppet Show.  There was a live band of ancient Vietnamese instruments which was my favorite part.  They reenacted things like farming, chasing frogs and the dance of the dragons.  The puppets were in water and the puppeteers behind a screen manipulating the puppets with rods under water. The puppets were brightly colored and some had sparklers.  It was a fun show and I highly recommend you see a water puppet show if one ever crosses your path.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

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Entrance to a temple on the lake in Hanoi

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At the temple altar
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Temple altar

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Nightmares!

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