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My budget for the entire trip was $3,000, and I didn’t go into the red. (Photos: Getty, additional design by The Spinoff)
My budget for the entire trip was $3,000, and I didn’t go into the red. (Photos: Getty, additional design by The Spinoff)

SocietyNovember 5, 2024

My Greatest Trip: Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos

My budget for the entire trip was $3,000, and I didn’t go into the red. (Photos: Getty, additional design by The Spinoff)
My budget for the entire trip was $3,000, and I didn’t go into the red. (Photos: Getty, additional design by The Spinoff)

A white woman’s account of backpacking through southeast Asia? Groundbreaking.

In a post-social media world, I find it impossible to regale you with my trip through Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos without first doing some throat-clearing. “Doing” southeast Asia “on a shoestring” has become such a traveller’s cliche – so tainted by association with the most obnoxious type of tourists; the eat-pray-love woman and the fakedeep Kerouacian man – that to be even tangentially associated feels like social suicide. The egoic urge to distance myself from these guys is strong. 

But it is Travel Week on The Spinoff, and we’re talking about our greatest trips. And cliche or not, backpacking through southeast Asia was a really, really great trip of mine. 

Hanoi, Vietnam. (Photo: Getty)

It was 2010, I was 23, and I spent the bulk of my Sir Robert Jones Scholarship in Philosophy winnings on flights to Bangkok over the uni summer break. (The scholarship is now defunct, maybe because undergrad philosophers kept doing this kind of thing with the prize money.) I would fly solo into the Thai capital mid November, loop counterclockwise through the four countries and finish up where I started, flying home in mid February. Return flights cost $1,399, which I booked through STA Travel (RIP). My budget for the entire trip was $3,000, and I didn’t go into the red. 

I know this sounds insane and implausible. I have checked and re-checked that I’m not misremembering this figure. But I really did survive – thrive, honestly – on an average of $33 a day, seizing every $10-per-night hostel, 16-hour chicken bus and $1 roadside Pad Thai I came across. 

Smartphones existed in 2010 but I didn’t own one, so I navigated using only a dog-eared Lonely Planet. Unimaginable now, but guidebooks still ruled the day. Thai and Cambodian locals had a good hustle whereby they’d open an identically named restaurant or attraction to whatever Lonely Planet had raved about, so that when I tried to find, for example, the Thai massage parlour charitably employing blind masseuses, I found there were about six of them on the same street – some containing fake-blind workers, according to other travellers in my hostel. 

Backpacking in southeast Asia was (and probably still is) mortifying for this reason: you’re constantly being warned by worldweary, middle-class Brits and Israelis about all the ways locals might cheat you out of an extra $2. And a lot of the locals are trying to cheat you, all the time, but given their relative station in life, it’s pathetic to fight it or even care, but so many backpackers do, because they’re on $33-a-day budgets.

Halong Bay, Vietnam. (Photo: Getty)

I feel the urge to throat-clear rising again. I wasn’t like this! I’m not like other backpackers! But in the interests of avoiding this kind of posturing, which is boring and probably not even true, I’ll get straight to the point, which is relaying what a bloody good time I had.

I had such a bloody good time. The roadside Pad Thai was $1! Sometimes less! In Kep, a dreamy Cambodian seaside town, I ate Kampot pepper crab by the water’s edge; a meal so transcendentally good I’m transported back to it whenever I’m posed the “death-row last meal” hypothetical. I have similar memories of a massaman curry in the thicket of trees behind Railay Beach in Thailand, the single most picturesque beach I’ve clapped eyes on, and of roadside breakfast bánh mì in Huế, Vietnam, loaded with freshly scrambled eggs and coriander on a perfectly crisp baguette (again, $1). Maybe eight out of 10 of the best meals of my life took place during that three-month window, and altogether they cost me little more than a tenner.

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I made fast friends with a French woman whose homoerotic advances I encouraged then danced around. She was so free-spirited it made me nervous. “You have the same approach to nudity as the English,” she told me derisively. One night we lay in bed in stomach-clenching hysterics comparing animal noises in English and French. “What does a duck say?” she’d ask, shrieking with laughter as I quacked. “What does a French duck say?” I’d respond, doubled over, actually rolling, while she coin coin-ed away. 

In the communal area of a Thai hostel we drank mushroom shakes; she boldly (experienced) and me tentatively (not). You could get the death penalty for drug crimes in Thailand, yet every second hostel offered mushroom shakes and pre-rolled joints. I found this dynamic dampened my appetite for experimentation, but I was quite alone on that front. Still, I braved a shake, and a group of us sat laughing and drinking by a campfire (yes) until the wee hours. When I finally returned to my hostel I lay for a while lamenting that the shake had had no effect. As I pondered this, I noticed that my ordinary, garden-variety, stationary single bed was swinging like a hammock. 

Vang Vieng, Laos. (Photo: Getty)

I saw the sun rise over Angkor Wat. I zoomed through so many bustling city streets on the back of so many mopeds. I drank 10c beer on plastic stools in Hanoi; surveyed the rice terraces of Sapa; fed monkeys on islands in Halong Bay. I slept overnight in a sleeping bag on the beach where they filmed The Beach; the water irradiated by bioluminescent plankton. I was travelling solo, but I was never alone. I cannot describe how fun it was. 

I saw horrors in southeast Asia that still haunt me in flashes. Malnourished mothers begging for powdered milk for their drowsy babies on Pub Street, Siem Reap. The Killing Fields and the portraits of victims in the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum; the way I made myself look into the eyes of every single one, taking hours longer to move through the complex than all the other visitors. A shiny, piglike, American man bellowing across a restaurant patio that it was actually good that he paid young Thai girls $30 to fuck him, because they’d take that money straight home to their families. A Cambodian beggar so impossibly deformed that for a second I couldn’t make out what was in front of me, and whose shuffling approach caused me, to my everlasting shame, to turn and head in the opposite direction. 

There’s a reason what goes on tour stays on tour, I guess. I’m not even going to get into Vang Vieng, which I experienced full-throttle in its heyday (or nadir). Western tourists in southeast Asia deserve their reputation, and I can’t honestly hold myself out as a counterexample. That said, if I could do it all again – relive not just the individual experiences, exhilarating and terrifying and life-affirming as they were, but cultivate again that spirit of hedonic experimentation at all costs; that glorious, pre-social-media feeling of not being surveilled, either by my scolding peers or scolding conscience – trust me, I would.

Keep going!
A collage featuring a vape, a travel card, and a wine bottle against a red graph background. The text "The Cost of Being" is on the left in green and red.
Image: The Spinoff

SocietyNovember 5, 2024

The cost of being: A uni tutor who spends on vapes, samosas and the odd night out

A collage featuring a vape, a travel card, and a wine bottle against a red graph background. The text "The Cost of Being" is on the left in green and red.
Image: The Spinoff

As part of our series exploring how New Zealanders live and our relationship with money, a 21-year-old flatting in Wellington explains how she gets by.

Want to be part of The Cost of Being? Fill out the questionnaire here.

Gender: Wahine.

Age: 21.

Ethnicity: Māori.

Role: Tutor at Victoria University.

Salary/income/assets: About $100 a week during teaching weeks, plus $316 Studylink loan living costs.

My living location is: Urban.

Rent/mortgage per week: $960 split four ways, $240 each.

Student loan or other debt payments per week: I don’t earn enough to have student loan deducted. If I’ve been shopping recently, maybe $20 on Afterpay.

Typical weekly food costs

Groceries: We don’t share any groceries, so a usual shop for me is about $100. That includes coffee beans (I can’t give them up) and I buy different toiletries/personal care items at the supermarket so it doesn’t sting my wallet when I run out of multiple things at once. I’m a vegetarian as well, so I always get one “luxury” vegetarian item so I’m not just eating chickpeas and beans – like vegetarian sausages or falafel.

Eating out: $20-$30 once a fortnight if I’ve stayed in budget.

Takeaways: As above. Usually pizza or kebab on Uber Eats.

Workday lunches: If I don’t have leftovers for lunch I’ll spend max $10 at the supermarket on snacks/bakery kai for lunch at uni.

Cafe coffees/snacks: $6.50 a week. Every Friday I go to my favourite cafe – it keeps me sane during the week knowing I have that waiting for me at the end of the week.

Other food costs: Nada.

Savings: Can’t afford to save – I pull money out of my savings from summer job every week. Something always comes up.

I worry about money: Always.

Three words to describe my financial situation: Insecure, fluctuating, depressing.

My biggest edible indulgence would be: Samosas from the New World deli. They’re only like $6 and such a rip-off but I get two every time I go to the supermarket and they bring me so much joy.

In a typical week my alcohol expenditure would be: $10 if I don’t go out (Jacob’s Creek I love you).

In a typical week my transport expenditure would be: I top up my Snapper card $15 each week.

I estimate in the past year the ballpark amount I spent on my personal clothing (including sleepwear and underwear) was: At least $3,000. I had a bit of a shopping addiction last year, when I was making more money. Lost a lot of weight too and had a “professional” job over the second trimester and summer, so a wardrobe refresh was necessary.

My most expensive clothing in the past year was: A Kathmandu puffer Jacket for about $250. I’ve worn it twice, but I know the second I sell it I’ll want it back.

My last pair of shoes cost: My Docs for $300. Favourite shoes ever.

My grooming/beauty expenditure in a year is about: Probably $750-$1,000 over the last year for skincare, makeup and hair removal. Sensitive skin and cystic acne is a bitch.

My exercise expenditure in a year is about: Nada. Even if I could afford it, I probably wouldn’t go to the gym. I bought a yoga mat last year for $30, and that’s my exercise.

My last Friday night cost: $150. Courtenay Place deludes me into thinking I can afford it. Definitely a once-in-a-blue-moon situation.

Most regrettable purchase in the last 12 months was: A Nutribullet that my flatmate broke. I didn’t use it often, but still.

Most indulgent purchase (that I don’t regret) in the last 12 months was: Do vapes count? Indulgent, yes. Do I regret them? No. But will I in 20 years? Absolutely.

One area where I’m a bit of a tightwad is: Basic food. Why buy name brands when Pams and Countdown brand is half the price and the same thing.

Five words to describe my financial personality would be: Irresponsible but a great budgeter.

I grew up in a house where money was: Not talked about when we had little, and complained about when we had lots. Money was always flying out the door in the form of koha, even when we didn’t have much money – some might say that’s irresponsible, but I think it’s proof that you can still give back and support others who need it more than you do.

The last time my Eftpos card was declined was: Never. I obsessively check my account balance.

In five years, in financial terms, I see myself: Paying off my student loan on a public service salary (if there are any jobs left to get at that point).

I would love to have more money for: Travel. By travel I don’t mean seeing the world or going on trips around the country. I mean being able to afford to have my car in Wellington (WOF, gas, parking, insurance, small repairs). It’s currently sitting at my brother’s house 10 hours away, and I just want a way to easily get out of the city, and to go to Pak ‘n Save. Also flights. I want to go home, I want to go to iwi kaupapa, I want to see my nieces and nephews, but mostly I want to go see my grandparents. I know they won’t be around for much longer, and I’m scared I’m wasting so much time living far away from them that I could be spending with them.

Describe your financial low: Second year uni, first year flatting. I have persistent depression disorder, but for the first time I experienced a major depressive episode. I couldn’t work, couldn’t go to uni, but of course I still had to pay the bills and buy enough food to sustain myself. I blew through what little savings I had in the month that I barely left the house, and the following months I experienced the “fuck it at least I’m still alive” mentality and indulged a lot. When I came down from that, shit was tight.

I give money away to: People on the street. If I have spare cash, it’s going in the cap or the cup. People always tell me I shouldn’t give money to people on the street because they’ll spend it on alcohol or drugs – well, I was going to as well, and I sure as shit would too if I was on the street. I feel like it’s something that should make me feel good about myself, but it really doesn’t. I just feel bad that I can’t give money to everyone.

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