By Sarah
My mission in Bagan was simple: find a good sunset spot. In an
area with nearly 3,000 temples, surely I could find one that was high enough to
see over the tree line, neighbored by interesting and varied temples, and
remote enough that we wouldn’t have to fight to find a perch from which to
watch the sun sink and the rusty orange of the surrounding structures glow.
Through force of habit, I did a quick google search. The same
three temples were recommended over and over. Even some new friends we met by
the pool of our hotel told us they found a great sunset spot, then proceeded to
recommend the one listed prominently in Lonely Planet.
But I wanted a 360 view from a quiet temple. I imagine
sitting on top, just Flounder and I, meditating in peace as the light faded and
the air lost its sticky heat.
So we set out from our hotel at a reasonable time in the
morning, for we are not sunrise people. “The only time I want to see the
sunrise is if I’ve been up all night,” Flounder says.
Within a minute, we began to see temples of burnt orange on
both sides of the road. Some were rounded at the base and pointy at the top
like stupas (or, for Fairfielders, like the kalashes atop the domes), others
were rectangular, or pentagonal. Some were carved and embellished, others were
plain. Some were overgrown, with tree trunks and vines, and some were pristine.
I began pestering Flounder. “Pull over! I want to see if I can
climb up that temple!”
He went with me the first few times. We were full of
enthusiasm and awe. “Look at those ones over there!” we’d point, stop, and
explore.
When I found a temple that might fit my criteria, I’d mark
it on the map. ‘Possible sunset view?’ Then move on.
But soon even I tired as we passed hundreds of perfect,
unique temples. Thus is sightseeing, the tragedy of being surrounded by the
most fascinating places and noticing how quickly that fascination fades.
“Another example of fine craftmanship? A bridge to ancient
cultures? The finest specimen of its kind? No, let’s not get off the bike, I can
take a quick picture from here.”
And as the heat mounted, the energy to leave our little
electronic bike, to poke my head into dark spaces and search for narrow
staircases up to a sunset view, that energy faded. So we got lost a little. We navigated
sandy paths, we startled scrawny, lithe squirrels and upset dozing birds trying
to hide in the bushes from the midday heat.
Soon we came across horses pulling tourists in wooden carts
and knew we must be near the “highlight” temples. We ducked into the large,
cool structures and I noticed about as many pilgrims as tourists. The area of
Bagan, a stop on every tourist itinerary in Myanmar, is also a profoundly
important site for the many devout Buddhists in the country. So I covered my
legs and shoulders, removed my shoes, and tried not to get in the way of the
worshippers praying, circling the inner shrine, or paying to apply another
square or two of gold leaf to the statues of Buddha.
In the afternoon, in the full heat of the hottest part of
the day, I found The One. It had a 360 view, was relatively isolated, and had
stairs big enough that Flounder wouldn’t need to crawl to get up them. It was
perfect and I knew immediately.
So we went back to the hotel pool (side note: get a hotel
with a pool. During the 36 degree afternoons, there was nothing better than to
dip in and out of our pool, reading a book, and chatting with other travelers.)
then rode back out in the cool of the late afternoon to The One.
We had the temple almost to ourselves; it was just us and a
man selling paintings. But after we sat down to meditate, he started to pack up
and soon it was just us and a panorama view of the temples big and small
surrounding us, glowing softly in the setting sun. Their golden warmth was
offset by the green of trees and fields and the white of stubborn cows being
pushed by small laughing boys, heading to a home between temples built nearly a
thousand years ago.
That’s the thing about sightseeing. It’s easy to become blasé
about the most amazing things, to not even muster the energy to get off the
bike. But then, sometimes, you find yourself with a person you love watching
the sun setting over breathing history, and the beauty of it catches in your
throat.