This is the story of what happens when the author's plans to
ordain as a Buddhist monk in Thailand are derailed after he has
arrived in the country. Next Life in the Afternoon is spiritual,
funny, at times irreverent, and full of personal lessons learned
along the way.
I'm squatting naked on a concrete floor in the predawn coolness
of Udon Thani, pouring water from a washbasin onto my head to rinse
off the bar soap I used as shampoo. My hair is long and stringy. I
had counted on it being shaved off by now, so I had let it grow out
a bit leading up to the trip. It's about fifty-five degrees, and I
am trying to be as quiet as possible so as not to wake the monks
and my traveling companions. The splish-splosh of water is
punctuated by my sharp, pronounced inhaling, a result of being
doused with such breathtakingly cool water. My toes tingle against
the cold floor, and I am momentarily brought back to Boston, where
my trip began. It seems to be a different planet, almost, although
the air and water hold a familiar chill.
A week into the trip, I still haven't acclimated to everything,
and I am stuck somewhere between amazement and culture shock. My
mind tries to escape like the cool sudsy water that pools at my
feet. The sun is nearly on the horizon, and the temple is coming
alive with slow-moving footsteps along the rainy paths outside. I
should get going. The morning alms rounds have begun, and I hear
familiar voices muffled outside the door. I can't make out many
words, but hear one that is familiar: Farang. A half-derogatory
Thai word for "foreigner" and the name I have in this country that
keeps me at arm's length.
-From Next Life in the Afternoon: A Journey Through Thailand
What's with the name?
"Next life in the afternoon" is a translation of the Thai idiom
"Chat na bai bai." It's a lightly humorous expression of
frustration in plans not working out as intended. This seemed to be
an apt title, since the author was not able to become a monk. It
also ties in the concepts of reincarnation and impermanence, which
are key in Buddhist belief and thus Thai culture.