On impulses
How to Jump Off
a Moving Train
There’s a reason I was so dangerously out of it that morning. I had just come back from a grueling weekend trip — what was supposed to be a leisurely four days in Vietnam curtailed to a hasty 28 hours, with nightmarish visa troubles on either side. Granted, it was no one’s fault but mine that I failed to procure a Vietnamese visa. Though in my defense, this was my first time going between Asian countries. The only intercontinental travel I’d done up to this point in my life had been European, for which I did not need a visa, so the question of whether or not I should get one didn’t even occur to me. When I arrived at the Bangkok airport and jogged up jolly-faced to the VietJet check-in counter, I didn’t even understand what the lady meant when she kept repeating “visa.” I just opened my passport to different pages and showed her all the places I’d been. “This one’s Belize!” I may as well have said.
I did eventually make it to Vietnam, but not before scrambling for a night’s lodging in Bangkok, procuring an emergency visa through a questionably above-board WhatsApp hotline, and negotiating for a minimally up-charged rebooking the following evening. And a day-and-change later, I did make it back, safely and with a smile on my face, happy that I hadn’t “cut my losses” and nixed the weekend altogether. Of course, upon re-entering Thailand, I found myself in the interrogation office across a table from two mild-mannered Thai officials, curious about my exploits as an allegedly Thai-based American “vacationing” for a single day in Vietnam. It took a while to explain that I was up not transporting any illicit goods — which was apparently their main concern — but that it truly was a vacation which I had coincidentally reduced, by clerical error, to an admittedly suspicious time frame. After two hours of inefficient, yet exceptionally cordial, bureaucratic proceedings, I was free to go. In truth, I was disappointed. There was no good-cop bad-cop routine, no hostile appraisal of my economic beliefs, no foreheads smashed into the cold, metal table. (There wasn’t even a cold, metal table; it was plastic and retained the air’s warmth well.)
Suffice it to say, by the time I’d left the interrogation office and completed the 25-minute cross-airport trek to Don Mueang Railway Station, I was running on fumes. The overpacked duffel slung over my shoulder had produced a deep, asymmetrical twinge in my upper back, and I was sweating profusely, my body capitalizing on the opportunity to expel the leftover alcohol in my system. I hummed a short, unmelodic ode of relief as I boarded the train, heaved my duffel onto the overhead rack, and slunk down onto the seat. I wedged my backpack between my knees, positioned my palm as my pillow, and queued up a couple songs. The old woman across from me, already half-asleep, tucked her bare feet behind her and wriggled herself comfortable.
I have always enjoyed the train. It provides the comfort and community of a plane without the inconvenience of an airport. Crucially, you feel removed from the world when you’re on it. You are forced to acclimate to the inaction of traveling — the limiting of movement, the concentration on an unchanging landscape. You can feel your heart slow down.
I swayed inertly with the undulations of the train, resting my weary eyes in the passing browns and greens. My torso was bent and uncomfortably damp, but unburdened for the first time in a hectic 30-hour stretch. Warm bursts of wind thumped around the train car like shoes in a laundry machine, whipping the sweat off my face and drying my cotton clothes. You couldn’t hear anything over the wind or the rattling of the old machinery below. Other passengers moved, even spoke, like a TV show on mute. Albeit full, the train was private and quiet. I exhaled and watched out the window, my face snug in my upturned palm. My eyes drifted from the blue sky down to the tawny brush and then relaxed into a bleary appreciation of just the motion itself.
I refocused, outside the train, on a version of myself running alongside it. My legs moved with an equine rhythm beneath me, expending no effort. Looking down at them felt like defying reality, like I was suddenly Dash from The Incredibles. I knew this feeling; I’d had it once before, on a psychedelic trip, when I had run for 10 minutes at full sprint along a beach shore and only stopped because a friend distracted me. My legs became the spinning turbines of a plane taking flight, while up in my brain, I sat in the cockpit, enjoying the ride. The cattails around me faded until it was just the train and me, chugging along side by side. After a while, it was just me, seeing nothing at this point but still cruising on autopilot.
A long time passed like this, until the crunch of a staticky voice swelled around me and jolted me forward into a lurch. The voice clarified into recognizable human speech, and then into recognizable Thai. The visual world materialized before me, as sunlight burned through my uncooperative eyelids. The woman across from me, still sleeping, reappeared. I perked my ears up and caught a jumble of conductor-speak concluding with “Ayutthaya,” the name of my destination. I realized from the absolute stillness of the train, and from the few passengers who had reached the platform about thirty feet away, that we’d been stopped for at least a minute now. The platform looked familiar, and it finally occurred to me that this was my stop.
Just as I put the pieces together, whistles announced the locomotive’s departure and the outside world began to move again. Hotwired with adrenaline, I clenched my jaw, pried my eyes open, combed my hair back, and catapulted myself into go-mode. I sprung up from my seat and lowered my duffel onto my chest, knocking an earbud loose in the process. Recalling my karate days, I dropped immediately into a push-up, scanned the floor, and recovered the earbud from beneath a seat across the aisle. When I jumped back up to my feet, I looked out the window and noticed we had picked up considerable pace. I had maybe a couple seconds until it would become dangerous to leap out. But I knew how much longer it would take to get home if I missed this stop and wound up in Saraburi thirty minutes north. (In fact, just two weeks before, I had done exactly that — I had slept through this very stop and had to hitchhike three hours in the middle of the night to get back.) I had no intention of doing that again, and so every second I spent deliberating only made matters worse.
Duffel over my shoulder and earbuds in one hand, I snatched my backpack up with my free hand and ran down the aisle. When I reached the three-stair exit, I looked out in horror at the ground speeding through view, blurry with motion. I leaned out and peered back at the station, which was only getting farther and farther away. My mind raced as I patted my pockets. Phone. Wallet. Backpack. Duffel. Anything else? I don’t know. Go. But then, Wait. Which way do I lean? Am I going to smack forward or back? Should I throw the duffel down first? Am I going to break my legs? And finally, Go.
I intuited that in order to minimize impact, I should try to land on one leg and plant the other after, to kickstart a running motion. This was a poor intuition, it turned out, as the train was moving too quickly for me to “catch up” in the split-second I had to transition to my own two feet. I ragdolled onto the pavement, opening up the skin on my elbows, forearms, shins, and one unlucky side of my head. Luckily, the duffel helped break my fall and slowed the somersault that inevitably followed. A few curious eyes from the caboose stared down at me, and from behind, a man in uniform hurriedly approached. He was shouting something which I couldn’t quite make out with the train still roaring in the distance. It sounded like he was saying “Ayutthaya.”
“Ayutthaya,” I affirmed. We both said it a few times, which provided me great relief, but seemed to only cause him more concern.
He crossed his arms in an X and pointed in the direction of the train. “Ayutthaya,” he reiterated, nearly grabbing my head to redirect my gaze toward the train I’d just adamantly disembarked.
The reality was crushing. The age-old insult to injury. I could not face it.
“I am here for water and a little snack,” I improvised.
Perplexed, he ushered me back toward the station and, I suppose, in the direction of water and snacks. The town was a few grades smaller and less developed than Ayutthaya, with few cars in sight and only dirt roads. Feeling the station worker’s eyes on me, I walked confidently to a small convenience shack across the road and bought a single bottle of water, which I did in fact need. I took stock of my surroundings — an ecosystem of handmade signs, strictly in Thai, directing traffic and advertising food, amid strips of hut-like homes and looming jujubes. With truly nowhere else to go, I returned to a bench outside the station and looked myself up on the map. It was now around noon and I had wound up in a district called Bang Pa-In, a quiet, windy town with few people walking around. I was 16 kilometers outside of Ayutthaya, which I calculated would take me a little over 3 hours to walk, if not longer given the heat and luggage. However, it would only be a 20-minute drive, and it was the middle of the day. Naturally, I checked to see how much a rideshare would cost. It was cheap enough, about $6 US, and so I ordered one.
It was then that the station worker came out and asked me if I would be needing a ticket on the next train. “No, thank you,” I told him, and he stepped back inside. I stared at my phone, refreshing the app, eager for a ride to show up. I estimated that it might take up to fifteen or twenty minutes for someone to show up, given how remote I was. In actual fact, my estimation proved overly optimistic. Twenty minutes passed and not a single car or motorbike appeared on the map. By this time, I began to realize that no one in the whole world was going to want to go to Bang Pa-In, pick me up, and then drive me all the way to Ayutthaya — at least not for the money they’d be making. So I breathed a deep sigh, swallowed a big gulp of pride, and approached the station worker’s office, where he sat smoking cigarettes with two other men in uniform.
I hung my head and asked, humbly, when the next train might be, at which his co-workers laughed and to which he replied, “Fifteen fifty.” Minus twelve, I thought, that’s 3:50. It was now half past noon, which meant that I had over three hours until the next northbound stopped here. Asking the station worker for just a moment, I consulted my rideshare app again. I held it up to the sky like in early 2000’s movies, but the problem wasn’t my service. There was simply no one around to drive me.
I did some mental math. Even if I had the kind of full-body, full-mind fight in me that could power a 16-kilometer, load-bearing, 95°F journey on foot, it wouldn’t save me much time. I’d get home around 4:30 either way. And so in utter resignation, I indicated a shameful “one” to the station worker and he handed me my ticket. The 16-cent, 20-minute ride would commence in just three short hours. I could hardly contain my excitement.
In those three hours, I perched myself back onto my bench and alternated between sitting upright, lying on my back, and lying on my side with my head hanging crooked off the seat. Occasionally a northbound train would pass, an express that did not stop in Bang Pa-In, but was instead holding out for Ayutthaya or perhaps somewhere even higher up. In my delirious state, I imagined myself again running alongside the tracks, getting up to speed and then jumping onto the same three-stair entrance I knew all too well from my last descent. As I ran through this fantasy over and over, the train’s black expulsions of polluted air filled my ears and eyes until they were all I could sense around me. The world fell dark and I found myself as still as I was when I first sat down on the train.
Invisibly in front of me, a man’s voice, clear as day, spoke out to me with alarm. My eyes remained ardently shut while my legs instinctively swung to the floor. My head, unprecedentedly heavy from excess blood flow, craned itself up from its dangle to reveal an acute tweak it had worked into my neck. I supported my head with a gingerly hand and peeled my eyes open to see the station worker frantically gesturing to the train he could not believe I was about to miss. At this point, I knew the drill. All of my belongings either strapped to my person or hanging from an outstretched hand, I sprinted to the track, where the train benevolently lingered in place. I boarded, tossed my duffel overhead, slumped down into an empty seat, and waved thank-you to the station worker, who shook his head incredulously as he waved back. A familiar warm wind blasted through the cabin, drying my greasy hair and providing just enough ambient noise to breathe in. I propped my feet up on the empty seat across from me and set my alarm just in case, but resolved to stay awake for the twenty minutes it would take to get home.
The only way to rationalize such inexcusable errors is to remember that you’re not born with any of that knowledge you supposedly lack. Sure, of course, intuition makes up for some of it, but ultimately you don’t get to choose your own strengths and weaknesses. I have a strong intuition for math, for instance, but a horrible intuition for trains and visas. A friend of mine whose rich, essayistic writing never fails to impress me recently pronounced archipelago “archipe-lah-go.” Another friend, whose competence and diligence have already gained her considerable esteem in her field, once flew to the wrong country because it had a city with the same name as her intended destination. Ineptitude comes in many amusing forms. The more painfully obvious the mistake, the more indelible the lesson.
It’s a simple and straightforward one this time: if you’re on the verge of ejecting from a high-speed vehicle, at least make sure you’re in the right rural province first. You shouldn’t need someone to tell you that, but at the same time, it’s not like you’re born knowing it. All you can do is try your best not to learn it twice.