Saturday, July 4, 2015

Ten Things I Learned From Riding a Bicycle in Phnom Penh, Cambodia (4 July 2015)

To anyone tempted to cycle through Phnom Penh with the expectation that traffic rules will be followed, or even acknowledged, I salute your optimism. Just know you’re entering a vortex of improvisation, intuition, and mild chaos. I speak from experience. Here’s what I’ve learned - collected not as “tips,” but survival instincts refined through trial, error, and a healthy dose of sarcasm.

1. Accept That Order Is Fiction

If you’re waiting for Phnom Penh to conform to your sense of logic or traffic law, you’ll be sorely disappointed (and likely stuck at an intersection for eternity). Acceptance is the only helmet that fits here. I stopped expecting things to “make sense” and started flowing with what was actually happening. Strangely, the traffic still moved, just… to its own beat. Once I let go of control, I found peace. And yes, surprisingly, joy.

2. Critique Less, Breathe More

I used to mutter indignantly at every driver who cut me off - until I realized no one gave a hoot at all. The white Prius didn’t apologize. The black Lexus didn’t blink. The police escorting some Very Important Unknown barely noticed I existed. Meanwhile, I was losing inner peace by the pothole.

Now I conserve my breath and energy for the actual ride. Honks roll off my back. Injustice glides past me. I let civility win - not because they deserve it, but because I do.

3. Presence Is Not Optional

If I zone out, I get a pothole, a “honey badger”-type driver going in the wrong direction, a jaywalker, or a rogue construction barrier as a wake-up call. So I ride like a monk: mind emptied, senses dialed to eleven. The streets are unpredictable, and danger doesn’t announce itself. It merges, it swerves, it jaywalks. I don’t just stay present - I stay hyper-alive.

4. Find Your Rhythm (and Ignore the Honkers)

There is no gold medal for arriving first. I ride in my own tempo, budget time generously, and refuse to be bullied by trucks that clearly overcompensate for something. My lane is mine. I meander through traffic with elegance - or at least determination - and I don’t move over just because someone behind me thinks their horn is a form of persuasion.

5. Master the Art of Crossing Like a Local

Crossing a street in Phnom Penh is an act of faith. With or without traffic lights, I nudge forward with quiet defiance and the steely gaze of someone who’s seen things. Sometimes traffic yields. Sometimes I sidestep for dear life. Most times, I shadow a braver soul and let them create a human buffer. There’s strength in numbers... and sacrifice.

6. Know the Real Threats

Tuk-tuks hauling mystery cargo are the worst. Not the drivers, mind you, but their triangulation setup. That back-end spread? A spatial hazard with no sense of personal boundaries. I give them space like they're radioactive.

7. Protect the Temple (You) and the Chariot (Your Bike)

Between the sun, the fumes, and the spontaneous monsoons, this isn’t a casual joyride. I wear shades and slather sunscreen like armor. I also check my tires like my life depends on it - because here, it kind of does. Air top-ups cost about 500 riels (US$0.13), and I consider it the best investment in self-preservation.

8. When It Rains, It Pours - Then It Boils

The weather here operates on mood swings. One moment it’s sunstroke o’clock, the next, it’s Noah’s Ark. I never ride without my rain poncho. A pair of waterproof pants lives in my basket. Phnom Penh rewards the prepared.

9. Watch for the Unsung Heroes

Parking attendants. Street food vendors. They’re part of the landscape, and yes, sometimes in your way. But they’re also just making a living - like the rest of us. I dodge politely and resist the urge to grumble. We’re all just trying to get somewhere, preferably in one piece.

10. Savor the Silver Linings

For all the madness, something happens when I ride: my body warms up, my mind slows down, and my spirit expands. The exercise clears my head. The vitamin D does wonders for my skin. And every unexpected act of courtesy: a signal, a yield, a gap opened for me - feels like a small miracle.

And maybe that’s the magic. Amid the honks, humidity, and chaos, I’ve found joy. And freedom. And resilience. All from a seat on two wheels.

So if you're ready to ride through Phnom Penh - helmet on, sarcasm loaded, sunscreen in tow - may your brakes be responsive and your spirit unbothered.

Above left: One of the many who rides in the wrong direction; Above right: This little girl importuned me to buy her flowers while I waited at the light.

Above left: A typical scene in Phnom Penh: 1) an overloaded van, 2) a motorbiker with a heavy load (heading in the wrong direction), and 3) a random pedestrian in the middle of the road; Above right: Another motorbiker riding in the wrong direction

Above right: A tuk-tuk driver (stay away from me!)

Above left: Another motorbiker with a heavy load (a common scene); Above right: Hiding in the shade with other bikers while waiting at the light