“If only there was an overhead foot bridge”, I said to my friend as we were talking about how busy the traffic is on street 2011 in the north west of Phnom Penh, capital of Cambodia. She and her young children live on one side, and the market is on the other. The market is so close but hard to get to, street 2011 cuts her off. Ten years ago it was a quiet dirt road. Five years ago it was sealed and had a lot more traffic. Now it’s really busy.
“Near the Grilled Chicken Market” isn’t one of the usual
survival phrases you would learn when first stepping off the plane into a new
country, but for me it was. I spent my first week in Cambodia staying in
a mission centre, and that was the phrase I used to find my way back home each
day. Hearing the phrase and using it again this month spookily transported me
right back to January 2006.
It seemed incongruous that I was using the phrase to
visit a friend who I had met only months before, she’s part of my new life in
Siem Reap, but now living right “near the Grilled Chicken Market”.
Similarly the picture of the coffee plunger (French Press) on
the Jars of Clay menu reminded me of the first time I went to Jars of Clay café
after a hot sweaty day at the Russian Market. I got totally lost and couldn’t
find anywhere cool to sit, so when I finally found Jars it was very
memorable. In those days the café was over 10km from our place in Phnom
Penh Thmey (1 hour bike ride for me), so I found it so bizarre last
month that I was sitting in a second branch of Jars up north right near my
old house.
The whole trip was full of these incongruous long forgotten twelve
year old memories mixed with strange new futuristic things such as PassApp
(like Uber for tuktuks). I had been expecting a boring need-to-renew-a-passport
trip but it turned out to be such a weird and wonderful experience.
Photo: Hanoi Road, somewhere between the Bible school turn off and street 1986, back in 2008
It seems to me that the biggest changes took place 2011-12,
the central years of my time in Cambodia so far. At the end of 2010, Logos
International School moved to the area and other expats I knew started moving
there for the first time. Straight after that in January 2011 we went to
Australia for two years and by the time we got back Phnom Penh Thmey was almost
unrecognizable.
It felt like housing estates, mostly built by the New World Group,
had devoured every small wooden house, rice paddy and even a good size pond in
the north west of the city. It went from mostly open skies and dusty
tracks, to hundreds and hundreds of big fancy brick houses and cement roads.
The small lake had turned into a market. Back in Christmas 2010 one
person from my expat Bible study group had moved to the area, but now there
were so many members living in Phnom Penh Thmey the group had actually started
meeting there.
Photo: Also Hanoi Road, also somewhere between Bible school turn off and street 1986, but this one is from 2018.
While these changes were taking place in Cambodia we were living
inAustralia and the world of undiagnosed debilitating sickness. It took us by
surprise; life was transformed when The
Dizzy Monster began his attack.
Being out of the country while Phnom Penh Thmey morphed from
outskirts of town to the new ‘place to be’, combined with the our own huge
changes we experienced while in Australia meant that we were entering a
New World when we returned in 2013. It was like everything from our old
life had unexpectedly and abruptly gone.
So no wonder all the changes in
Phnom Penh have such a big impact on me. The year 2011 cuts my 12 years in
half. Just like street 2011 is hard to cross, getting over the year 2011
for me feels almost like leaving one world that ended in 2010, and entering a
New World.
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Up until 2010 I used to ride my bike out just past the Bible school to enjoy the sunset and palm trees. This vacant plot had a fence around it, I guess it used to be a school or something. Just before we went to Aus in 2011 they started sealing the road as you can see in this photo. By the time we arrived back in 2013 it had become a housing estate, and we lived there for two years! When I took this I was heading along the Bible school road (Street 72P) almost to 2011. |
And here it is, the remote vacant lot that I used to ride past in 2010 became one of the many New World Housing Estates that was built around 2011 in the north west of Phnom Penh, near street 2011. |