When I was working in front of my mobile PC such as copying pictures which I had taken on the previous day from my digital camera or smartphone to my PC, sending e-mails and taking notes on my trip bright and early, it burst out into terrible torrential rain accompanied by thunder and lightning. The TV screen went black and showed messages like the following picture. The internet connection was also severed. I've never gone through what you call a squall, but was that it?
Do you know the historic town of Malacca, which is located about 1.5 hours' distance by car from Kuala Lumpur. I had been eager to visit the town since 40 years ago, when I was in a history class. The best way for us to see the town is to act by ourselves in an unrestrained manner, but I thought we might as well hire a tour guide to look around the town effectively and time-savingly. I had reserved a guided tour from Japan.
We were supposed to meet the guide in our hotel lobby at 8:30, but he was 10 minutes late due to a traffic jam caused by flooding. He made an excuse in Japanese, meaning "I'm sorry, the traffic got stuck by flooding". There are two similar but different words for flooding in Japanese. He mistook one for another. I wondered then if his Japanese skills were ok or not. However, soon later, I knew this guy was in a class of his own when it comes to his job. I'd never meet any guide who surpasses him. I learned a lot from him and I'll write about him later again.
I learned the condition of Malaysia from him. The guide gave us really good lessons about Sultans, the automobile industries, Japan's regular car inspections, their domestic industries, natural disasters, their neighbor countries like Thailand, Singapore, and so on and their politics, their economics, their history, multiple tribes, military affairs,,, all of them included lots of humor. His story, viewing outside and picking up topics from the scene, segued from one theme into another and never stopped for about one and a half hours. He seemed to guide tourists in FOUR languages, Malay, English, Cantonese, and Japanese. I admired him.
There was a big supermarket, AEON, in the entrance of Malacca, which is widely known in Japan. He told us full of wit and humor like this: He frequently visited AEON and bought daily necessities against his better judgement and he could never beat the point system. AEON has a really good head for business.
He naturally knows that AEON is derived from Japan and utilized the fact to relax several Japanese tourists who happened to get in the same van and didn't know each other. He handles four languages. That is to say, he would have four kinds of ways of talking. I'm writing about him again and again in the following entries.
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I can't wait until the next episode. (Peter)
Posted by: Peter | Sep 22, 2016 at 01:11 PM