Tribal, The Prequel Ch 8

A new journey is starting. Move on and don’t look back.

Ballad of Hua Mu Lan
Montagnard women carrying bamboo sections
near Lai Chau. Northwest Vietnam

A man in shorts, sandals, and a Grateful Dead T-shirt approached me and introduced himself. He was short, powerfully built, with hard angles on his face. His eyes showed no emotion like the black pupils of a shark.

“ Hello, Sir.” He said, extending his hand. His grip was like a vise, and his hand rough and calloused. “Are you the American Biologist?”

His English was well practiced with the hint of an accent I had learned during my stay here. He introduced himself, and I’ll call him Pete to avoid typing his real name, which would interrupt the flow of the story as we all stumble with pronunciation.

“Yes, please call me Dan,” I replied.

“Good, I’m your guide and interpreter. I’ll introduce you to the Chief, and we can discuss your business here. How long will you stay?”

Here was my government-supplied assassin. So much for the secret journey. This was a lesson in patience that Montagnard people would teach me repeatedly. It is the long wait for a victory that wins. Pete simply came to the village as soon as he was sent and waited for my arrival. Now I was his to do with as he pleased. My job was to study his habits, so he couldn’t surprise me on that fateful day of my execution.

“I hope to stay several months, if possible. I want to gather a lot of information about plant life here.”

“Who will receive this study?”

“Everyone interested,” I said with all the straight-faced lying I could muster.

“Excellent. I have a colleague who also wants to study biology in this area; She will be here in a couple of days. I’m sure you can learn a lot from Miss Yang.” Pete said with an air of superiority.

“I’m looking forward to meeting Miss Yang. I’m sure with you and her leading the study, we will have great success.” My turning mastery over to Pete was purposeful. The best way to find a common bond is to let them lead the way and adapt to their leadership style even when they test you with impossible tasks. In this culture, only the worthy are allowed to eat the food and breath the air freely. Pete would take care of the messy work disposing of me if I proved problematic.

We walked along toward the longhouse that belonged to the Chief. This would be more ceremony than anything else, and I was ready to go with the flow as they tested me to determine my trustworthiness. The village followed from a safe distance, with the children boldly holding on to Pete’s shirt and mine in hopes of more treats. I touched the shoulders of the kids and made a gesture of showing them kindness. I knew never to touch their heads as this was only for animals, and to rub their hair playfully was the same as equating them to animals. Head rubbing was a high insult that would anger the adults and alienate the children. Not a good start for any long-nosed barbarian.

After passing the kid or animal test, the women called the children away and returned to work. The village square was soon deserted, and the chatter of the villagers faded. The chief sat at the far end of the longhouse in an area that served as a special place of counsel based on the wall coverings of their tribal colors and symbology carved into the thick wooden pylons that supported the roof. The tribal leader’s wife sat on the platform, appearing uninterested in Pete and my arrival. However, the two men standing in the corners with old Chinese assault rifles and extra-long parangs looked very interested in getting a chance to do some target practice.

The last thing I wanted to do was get nervous and sweat. That would be taken as a sign of dishonesty, and Hans and Franz would be arm wrestling Pete for a chance to do a little village hack and slash celebration on me. I put on my calm bro persona with a touch of humble head-down respect and let the inquisition begin. My stomach growled. They heard it. I prayed they didn’t think I farted because the Vietnamese believed farts were evil spirits and nothing was more evil than a longnose barbarian fart. 

To my surprise, the chief’s wife left and brought back food, and we all sat and ate together. This was test number two. The cuisine is like nothing else Westerners are accustomed to, and the tastes and textures can take you to a whole other world of palate hell. Luckily, I had spent some time with Hector and his girlfriend near Loc Son, just south of Hue City. The cuisine blended Vietnamese and other Asian countries with a French twist. Street food was how most people got by in the city. I plastered on my most stoic face and ate. I liked it, and Mrs. Chief kept pouring it on until my week of starvation in the forest was sated. I prayed silently that I would not turn this hearty meal into evil spirits and ruin the friendly ambiance I found myself in.

After we ate and tried out the local homebrew, the Chief and Pete were in a good mood. I mentioned that I brought gifts for the Chief and his wife, which seemed to perk them up quite a bit. I presented the Chief with a small leather pouch full of gold nuggets worth a small fortune provided by the State Department and a spool of red silk thread. Both of these items were considered functional and hard to get. The Chief handed the silk thread to his wife, who flashed me a lovely set of brown teeth except for those missing. She would divide it up among the senior females for sewing ceremonial garments. Chief set the gold pouch aside like a sack of marbles, and we were suddenly getting down to business.

I explained my desire to study plants and how they contributed to the environment. Maybe some of these plants were useful for medicine or other purposes. The Chief’s eyes mocked me as a dumbass city boy, but he determined I wasn’t such a bad kid after all. I was welcomed into the village to stay as long as I liked.

Victory. Now the hard work began.

37 responses to “Tribal, The Prequel Ch 8”

  1. This is such a wonderful example of your mastery in engaging your reader, reliving the details of this experience so skillfully is enticing and hooks your audience with curiosity and even fear for your well being. Dan, I always look forward to your exotic interactions, always left eager to learn more of what lies ahead for you. Your narrative is brilliantly done. 🤗

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    1. Thank you so much Rene. I am keeping this as close to the original experience as possible even in the language and how I felt or acted at the time. You are truly inside my head as my head was back then. Of course, I’ve changed a lot but a part of me can flip into that role as I remember it. Thank you for being there during this replay. 🤗

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      1. It’s my pleasure, thoroughly enjoy!

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        1. 🤗

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  2. I love that you are opening the door and In doing so you are giving us insight in to your past life that went beyond adventure to a deep emotional experience that should be remembered and journaled . Please continue to open this up. Well done!

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    1. This could run for a while and even then there is much more. I have lots of closets full of treasures 😉

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      1. I look forward to lots more.

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        1. Be careful what you wish for my dear friend. It could happen. 😉

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          1. Haha, never ask for more unless I really like it.

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            1. LOL! I’ll make sure the well doesn’t run dry.

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  3. Memories are doorways. It’s important to keep opening them. In the process you are creating a captivating narrative for those who love adventure and the unknown.

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    1. Perfect way to put it, Rene. My mind mansion is a place with many doors. I haven’t peeked behind many of them in a while. I actually enjoy looking in there now because I’m safely tucked into the present where the past can’t reach me and everything looks much better now. 😎☀️

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      1. I can understand that. I hope you’ll continue to share with us, you’re a superb writer. I’d love to see you write a book. ( I think I’ve said that before….) ☀️

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        1. Thank you for your unwavering support, for a long time. You hung in there during all my phases of learning to word wrangle. I do have a lot of material laying around in the file cabinet and I’ve had this idea of an anthology for busy people that like to read. I have a lot of living among the native stories and I could focus on the best examples of being human and uncorrupted. A lot of it is very raw stuff like living simply and being grateful for any gift nature provided. That in itself might not be great reading, but to me the gift of seeing the secrets of life revealed and feeling a part of something far greater than myself was a lesson I would like to pass on.

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          1. It’s a pleasure to follow your journaling my friend!

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            1. Thank you, Rene. As long as people can find value in reading my journey, I’ll tell the tales. It’s what I have always wanted and my dear grandmother begged me to chronicle my life. She never gave up encouraging me to be more than what was expected.

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              1. You’ve exceeded all expectations anyone might aspire to. Keep writing.

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                1. 🫡Roger That!

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  4. I’m impressed with how you respected the culture, I love how you brought red thread and minded your farts 🤗💖!

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    1. Ha ha haaa! Thank you Judy. The bribe was not my idea but the red thread was. The real power in tribal culture are the elder women and if you contribute to their hard work, you have loyal support. Unless you break wind and then it’s over with. I could have left that out but it was a genuine fear of mine not to offend them or prove my false ego, but to genuinely become as close to them as they would allow and respect is the best approach and in my case, the respect was genuine. Most of the Americans that worked with the Montagnards came away with real love in their heart for these unique people.

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      1. Very cool that the elder women are respected in the tribe. I think farting has a universal taboo but to varying degrees :). I think many people can sense respect vs false flattery or manipulation and I like how you knew ahead of how to be polite to the tribe, especially with the children, they also deserve appropriate acknowledgment.

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        1. I always see other cultures as having their many advantages over American Consumerism Culture. They may not meet our highest standards but they live much happier lives if they have control of their lives. Many native cultures are deeply suppressed and their lands taken from them. Those are not tribes that thrive.

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          1. I think there’s common sense wisdom in simplicity of small communities vs modernized cities, I feel like modern-western culture removes the naturalness of being human. We live in such artificial ways vs tribal life where they’re much more self-sufficient I would imagine. Sad how imperialism has stolen and converted traditional cultures’ lands and values.

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            1. I agree. We are a long long way from our natural and happy existence. But it isn’t Lost forever. We can get some of it back if we are mindful and accept responsibility for our contentment with life.

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              1. I hope we do learn to appreciate the natural beauty of our world. I believe that we were supposed to be stewards of earth not destroyers.

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                1. I agree! I even believe we can find reference to being good stewards of the earth and her animals throughout the Bible.

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                  1. I truly think that was the original intention. 💖

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                    1. Absolutely until we sorta messed that up.

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  5. “I’m sure you can learn a lot from Miss Yang.” With no evidence to support this, I have a suspicion Miss Yang is going to teach you a lot more than about native plants. I could be wrong. I’ve been wrong in the past, but rarely admit it. I’m glad to be here sharing your memories of the days of yore, when you were carefully observing actual gub’ment assassins in the field. With your uncanny descriptions,
    “like the eyes of a shark” and knowledge of the culture (knowing not to ‘pet’ the children) I get this total apocalypse-now vibe, but you were there, actually being Col. Walter E. Kurtz, among the natives, holding on to sanity. I look forward to much, more more of your dazzling writings and descriptions. Bring me…into the Jungle!

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    1. Apocalypse Now was a favorite movie because it had a lot of good scenes. It was based on a real Army Col who became too successful at war and didn’t retain his political correctness when addressing superiors. So, they jerked him out of there and let the NVA eat his tribe alive. And of course we lost that war too.

      Miss Yang did teach me more than any single person ever did. She was an enigma to me until I stopped trying to figure her out and started attending her class. You’ll have your Jungle Expert badge when this is done.

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      1. Standing ready for the badge.

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        1. We will begin after a short intermission 🔥

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  6. Are biologists on a mission common in these areas, or at least enough that the story is plausible? I’d probably blow the whole thing right away. I don’t know how people get to be savvy enough to see what’s really going on and keep their wits about them to pull these things off.

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    1. At the risk of a major bloviation, the short answer is yes, there are a lot of researchers now more than ever because Vietnam is actually a resource rich country that is still largely agrarian and unexplored formally. During WWII, Vietnam was treated as a spoils of war. It was largely a Vichy French colony with rubber and coffee exports. America got involved because France decided to abandon the Country and the West was fearful of communist takeover. So we fought the war which was hugely unpopular almost bringing down the US Government. The premise that we were preventing communism was really a false flag. We simply didn’t believe Vietnam had any potential otherwise. We were dead wrong and as soon as the North took over the south, they began to build a better nation with trade potential. So most western and certainly eastern countries went back to find out two things. Is the country politically stable enough to create long term trade agreements and what resources do they have. My job was to determine if the huge plantations popping up everywhere were legitimate or were they criminal/government enterprises. A lot of researchers can’t determine what’s going in by dealing with government officials in Ho Chi Minh City. They want someone on the ground interacting with locals to get the real truth of how things operate. There is much much much more to the process but it would get boring. My perceived danger was real since we do the same in South America and murders of researchers is rampant. One of my friends was killed last month in Brazil. Desperate people will do anything for money.

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      1. Very fascinating stuff here. There are so many layers upon layers of everything.. how can anyone know what is really going on? Certainly not the likes of me. I’m glad you’re here to tell us all about this stuff.

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        1. Thank you Hetty. I do appreciate your interest. I think to keep everyone from going insane, I’ll stick mainly to my layer. To be honest, I was naive and thought everyone was a patriot like me. Bwaaaa haaa haaaa! I was so wrong, but on the bright side, I had some very interesting travel all expenses paid by the taxpayer money laundering service run by a Uncle Sam. I’m grateful for those lessons one can’t learn any other way.

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