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bristling
with
television
antennas,
and
probably
the
most
spectacular
traffic
jams
on earth.
And
it is
a holy
city,
studded
with
splendid
temples,
shrines,
and
monasteries,
haunted
and
blessed
by thousands
of gods,
ghosts,
and
angels.
Because
the
city
has
no real
geographical
core,
no central
point
a visitor
can
navigate
from,
perhaps
a good
way
to explore
it is
by historical
periods.
Bangkok
is relatively
young
as Asian
cities
go-about
two
centuries
old-but
its
cultural
heritage
extends
back
to the
founding
of the
original
Thai
monarchy
in the
13th
century,
and
far
beyond
that,
into
the
ancient
underworld
of ritual
and
myth
that
lies
beneath
the
surface
of everyday
life
in modern
Thailand.
This
is a
Buddhist
nation,
but
it has
delightfully
variegated
the
faith,
combining
Theravada,
the
oldest,
most
traditional
school
of Buddhism,
with
Hinduism
and
native
Thai
animism.
At Bangkok's
wats,
or temples,
you
see
this
vibrant,
convoluted
spiritual
world
in all
its
living
glory.
Surrounded
by
gilded
gods,
golden
spires,
and
ritual
objects
of every
size
and
description,
the
Emerald
Buddha
looms
over
the
central
chamber,
seated
on his
own
elaborately
tiered
gilt
mountain,
with
a delicate
spiked
parasol
of gold
above
his
head.
The
Buddha's
flesh
glimmers
like
moonlight,
twinkles
like
a star
in the
shadows.
There
is real
magic,
real
power
here
that
the
incredible
agglomeration
of art
and
architecture
in the
rest
of the
wat
somehow
misses.
Sometimes,
less
is more.
Everyone
who
has
spent
much
time
in Bangkok
seems
to have
a favorite
Wat
Arun
has
its
cool
riverside
porcelain
monuments;
Wat
Pho,
its
145-foot-long
Reclining
Buddha;
Wat
Traimit,
a
10-foot-high
Seated
Buddha
of solid
gold.
My favorite
is the
Wat
Saket,
situated
on the
Golden
Mount,
a century-old
concrete
mountain
that
towers
254
feet
above
the
city.
That
may
not
sound
like
much,
but
on the
dead-flat
plains
of Bangkok-just
slightly
above
sea
level-it
is something
out
of a
dream,
a miniature
alp
floating
on high
like
a mirage.
There
was
a sense
of timeless
calm
within
those
walls,
but
there
was
vitality,
too.
Most
of young
monks
would
leave
the
temple
after
about
three
months
and
return
to the
secular
world
outside.
Spending
two
months-a
period
describes
as blissful-in
a monastery,
they
would
get
jobs,
marry,
and
raise
families.
But
they
would
never
completely
lose
the
peace,
the
transcendent
wisdom
they
had
found
in that
magical
place.
The
effects
of
the
monastic
experience,
common
to almost
all-young
Thai
men
and
many
young
women,
are
palpable.
Thais
are
tough
folk-if
you
harbor
any
doubts,
just
watch
a local
kick
boxing
match
or check
out
the
paratroops
that
guard
Chitaladda
Palace.
Now
to Bangkok's
earthier,
more
worldly
side.
If two
terms
sum
up the
Thai
attitude
to everyday
life,
they
are
"Sanook-Have
a good
time,"
and
"Mai
pen
rai-Never
mind."
The
city's
carefree
attitude
is manifest
in myriad
shopping
centers,
bazaars,
hotels,
restaurants,
nightclubs,
massage
parlors,
and
discos.
Always
the
unexpected,
the
revelation,
the
happy
surprise,
the
pearl
in the
oyster.
Even
the
city's
name.
Bangkok
means
"Village
of the
Wild
Plum",
from
a small
trading
settlement
on the
banks
of the
Chao
Phraya
River,
long
since
swallowed
up by
the
mushrooming
metropolis.
The
authentic
name,
the
one
Thais
use,
is Krungthep-"City
of Angels."
But
even
that
is only
an abbreviation
of the
real
name,
which
is,
in fact,
in the
Guinness
Book
of World
Records
as the
longest
place-name
on earth:
"Great
City
of the
Angels,
Supreme
Repository
of Divine
Jewels,
Great
Land
Unconquerable,
Grand
and
Prominent
Realm,
Royal
and
Delightful
Capital
City,
Full
of the
Nine
Noble
Gems,
Highest
Royal
Dwelling
Place
and
Grand
Palace,
Divine
Shelter
and
Living
Place
of Reincarnated
Spirits."
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