Chapter 42: Eczema Pools and Sandpaper Washcloths: Spa-Hopping Around the Planet

We recently renovated our Midcentury Modern home, spending way too long thinking about our primary bathroom when we could ponder slightly more important issues such as world peace and why Home Depot plays such godawful 70s rock music when I’m shopping for begonias. Traditionally, bathrooms in 1950s homes were all about function–efficient, unpretentious, and sadly, Lilliputian in size–around 5 feet by seven feet.  Like, I-can’t-stretch-out-my-legs-in-the-tub small (true story). I mean, a queen-size mattress is 5 x 7 for goodness sakes. Our existing loo was not the room of our dreams.

Typical 1950s bathroom that fits on a queen-sized mattress
Image by by Jaggery, via Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0
Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Prefab_Gabalfa_-_Bad.jpg
License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/

Our bathroom definitely did not vibe with our vision of a “spa-like” space. Yes, that is a cliché phrase that every designer on HGTV utters on every episode of every home show. But despite the cliché, we really are spa-like people. We are all about the soaking and relaxing and scrubbing and luxuriating in a private calming space that doesn’t smell like toilet cleaner.

And I’m not going to lie, I know a thing or two about spas as I’ve fortunately had many spa experiences around the globe, both good and not-so-good, starting from my days as a teenage exchange student living in Peru. It was there in South America I learned that showering isn’t always a pleasurable indulgence. Every morning I entered the sole bathroom in my host family’s home, a tiny space (as in airplane bathroom small) that the seven of us shared, for my daily shower.

But no matter how long I waited after turning on the water, it stayed bone-chilling cold. So, I learned to first use my hands to splash it on my shivering body as that seemed to numb my senses. Then, holding my breath, I’d walk into that ice cold stream of water. As I gradually lost sensitivity in my body parts, I imagined that this was how the Titanic passengers felt when they slowly sank into the frigid Atlantic and lost the power to swim. Or think.

To top it off, there was no shower curtain either. That meant that the terrazzo floor in the bathroom was soon covered in cold water that I was sure would turn into an ice rink later. Then, after I left the bathroom, the maid would leer at me as she covered the wet floor with newspaper. Apparently shower curtains and mops and hot water and spa-like bathrooms weren’t a thing in this country.

Following the lead of cold blooded reptiles, I sit on a warm Peruvian boulder to
restore sensation after a freezing shower.

But then I met up with some of the other American exchange students in the Peruvian town where I lived, and casually mentioned how weird it was that Peruvians didn’t have shower curtains or hot water in the bathroom, and how they oddly used newspaper to soak up water. They all stared at me like I was under the influence of ayahuasca.

“Um, my host family has a shower curtain,” said one of them. “Yeah, mine too,” the rest of them added.

“And I take a very long, very hot shower every day,” said another. “Ditto,” the rest answered.

“Let me guess, your host families all have mops, too?” I asked as they nodded. Apparently, I couldn’t fault the entire Peruvian culture for lack of a spa-like bathroom experience–it was just the quirks of my particular host family. There was a cultural lesson in there somewhere, and I was sure it would come to me as soon as my brain thawed from my icy shower.

Fortunately, I had much better experiences in spas after that—well, for the most part. We couldn’t wait to soak in the steaming, natural lakes of the Blue Lagoon in Iceland, an outdoor spa experience that didn’t disappoint. The water really does appear a mystical blue, the exact same color of the blue milk Luke Skywalker drank in Star Wars: A New Hope

Spa-like experience (in an Arctic sort of way) at Iceland’s Blue Lagoon

But alas, it’s not magic after all, as much as I wanted it to be, but just boring science (the high silica content reflects the sun and creates the color, blah, blah, blah). The water is a steamy 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and you can rub the smooshy, white mud at the bottom all over your body and you will miraculously look like a teenager again. Not really, but one can dream. And I did slather it on quite thick just in case.

But the scariest part happened beforehand, when you are required to shower in the bathhouse before going outside and into to the lagoon. Being wet and wearing a swimsuit in 14 degree Fahrenheit air is probably a tactic they use at those CIA black sites, because it is more torture-like than spa-like.

We soon learned that spas were everywhere, even in Almaty, Kazakhstan where there is no freedom of the press, but definitely freedom to have a spa day. The Arasan Spa we visited had it all—saunas, steam rooms, hot pools, cool pools, massages, and even a bar where you could sit with nothing but a towel wrapped around your waist. Pornstar Martini, anyone?

We weren’t allowed to enter the sauna without first buying a little sauna hat–a strange, four-sided felt structure that you definitely can’t look cool wearing. Supposedly, the hat helps you avoid overheating the blood vessels in the head. This was already starting to sound scary because overheated head blood vessels just sounds like an awful way to die.

Don’t let those boring old leaves fool you–they can do some damage. Image: Photo by kallerna, via Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Vihtoja.jpg

As we began to enter the “Russian” sauna (one of several country-inspired rooms), an employee asked if we had brought our own “whisks.” Except with his thick accent it sounded like he said “whiskey,” and of course we said no because that stuff burns my throat, And then we thought he said they would have “whiskey” for us in the sauna. Whatever. When in Rome…

Once inside, we climbed several tiers to the top of the sauna where there was space for us to sit. Then, we soon discovered why people didn’t sit up here, because it had the same temperature as an air fryer turned on high. “I can’t blink. My eyelids have dried to my sclera,” I told Jamey.

Just then, two burly, mostly nude men entered the sauna and headed toward us, holding not whiskey bottles, but what seemed to be the leftovers from a tree trimming job. They were speaking Kazakh (we guessed) and motioning us to move down one tier as they scooted behind us. They were clutching small branches of crunchy-dry leaves. Hmmmm.

The next sensation I felt on my back was someone peeling off my outer layer of skin while heating it with a blow torch you would use to crisp the top of crème brûlée. “OH MY GOD!” I exclaimed. The burly man chuckled. “Am I getting a skin graft?”

“He’s hitting you with those branches,” Jamey replied, just as his burly man started to beat him too. “HOLY HELL,” Jamey whisper-choked.

It was about as far from “spa-like” as I could imagine. I must’ve blacked out because I don’t remember much of this experience, which apparently is a traditional Russian activity that “stimulates circulation, exfoliates the skin, and provides aromatherapy with the natural oils released from the leaves.” From my perspective, it’s how the KGB got information from spies they caught. Those darn Russians.

A visit to a traditional public hammam—also known as a Turkish bathhouse—in Tunis, Tunisia offered another tortured spa experience. Hammams were introduced to Tunisia by the ancient Romans, so we figured something that’s been going on for 2,100 years must be top notch.

Sandpapering skin for nearly 800 years!
Sami Mlouhi, via Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
Source:https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Plaque_indiquant_hammam_El_Rmimi_%D8%AD%D9%85%D8%A7%D9%85_%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%B1%D9%85%D9%8A%D9%85%D9%89.jpgn License:https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/

That is, until we had the traditional body scrub. On paper, this sounded great: “An exfoliating treatment that removes dead skin cells, improves circulation, and hydrates the body leaving skin soft, smooth, and rejuvenated. Whose skin couldn’t use a little rejuvenation?

Then a burly guy (surely related to the branch-beating guys in Kazakhstan) with a sandpaper washcloth scrubbed our backs like he was taking the paint off an old hutch. I’m pretty sure he removed the epidermis layer of our skin. I was afraid to put my shirt back on because I thought it would become bloodstained.

Another time we were with three friends in Thailand, staying in an unforgettable floating, bamboo hotel in the middle of the River Kwai (as in the one with the bridge over it in the 1957 movie). At one point, we were all lying on cushions on a floating spa raft, getting simultaneous massages from five Thai masseuses who were synchronized in all of their movements (you were supposed to close your eyes, but I love a show). Sounds like a dream, right?

Jamey and I (last two), pre-massages and pre-coughing spell.

Except Jamey’s masseuse had a phlegmy, nagging cough that came out every time we started to relax and yanked us out of our peaceful zone. I figured that if I got up and said, “Holy cow, take a spoonful of Dayquil!” none of us would be in our peaceful zones for a long while, so I just listened to that rattling cough and hoped I wasn’t going to catch Legionnaires’ Disease.

On another adventure we were wandering the streets in the beach resort area of Legian on Bali’s southwest coast when we spied an enticing sign that read: Fish Therapy with fish from the Garden of Eden. Much like Eve, we were easily enticed and paid something like 50,000 Indonesian Rupiah, which of course made us feel like bazillionaires (that translated to $3.00 US) to enter this storefront fish spa. While I struggled conceptually with the words “fish” and “spa” being used in tandem, I was awfully curious to test this one out.

We sat on a polished wood bench and slowly lowered our bare feet into a shallow, lukewarm pool of unnaturally blue water, and immediately dozens and dozens of tiny black fish began to nibble at our toes and soles. Now, being a fan of the 1978 horror film Piranah, where genetically altered fish strip the flesh from living people, I immediately lifted my feet out of the water as I did not want to see my feet bones. But the fish spa wrangler assured me these creatures had no teeth, so I allowed them to continue gumming the dead skin from my feet.

Adam, Eve, and dead-skin-eating fish!

As bizarre as it feels to have tiny creatures nipping at your skin, it was sort of soothing and stimulating, and I liked the fact that these creatures weren’t openly judgmental the callouses on my heels as some humans do. Of course later I discovered that fish spas are banned in many countries because they carry severe health risks, such as bacterial infections, blood-borne pathogens, and loss of your toenails. Apparently the water easily becomes a breeding ground for harmful germs. And thus ended any further fish spa visits.

Watching your soles become as soft as a baby’s, or watching live as blood-borne pathogens attack.
it’s a crap shoot at a fish spa.

Now don’t get me wrong—we’ve also had amazing spa experiences that don’t involve torture or bacteria. On a tiny island in the Maldives, at a lovely resort with those other-worldly overwater bungalows that you see on screen savers, we had the spa adventure of a lifetime.

The spa provided us with a private, shaded walled garden with a fountains and terraces and tropical plants and maybe even a rainbow-colored unicorn singing to us. We had massages and facial treatments as the palm trees swayed above us and we listened to the waves of the Indian Ocean hitting the shore about 20 feet away. It was very White Lotus, just without any deaths and such.

Jamey within our personal spa zone (I was off riding the unicorn).

That was the first time we saw a cold plunge pool and as much as we wanted to dive in, my lizard brain took over and said, “You will NOT enter Arctic waters voluntarily…you’ve already done that in the shower in Peru.”

Széchenyi Thermal Bath in Budapest, Hungary was another superb spa adventure. This is the largest medicinal bath in all of Europe, famous for its very grand butter-colored Neo-Baroque buildings, 18 (!) pools (15 inside, 3 outside), and even outdoor chess tables in the pool where I couldn’t understand how chess players concentrate with all that pool noise, splashing, and a thick aroma of cocoa butter suntan lotion.

Gorgeous–and hopefully psoriasis-free–swimming pools at the mega spa,
aka the Széchenyi Thermal Bath in Budapest, Hungary

Each pool inside has different kinds of mineral rich spring water from deep underground, targeted to help with certain ailments like joint pain, arthritis, and certain skin conditions. It was interesting picking which ones to take a dip in, although I wasn’t too keen to share pool water with bathers potentially suffering from eczema and psoriasis. But to be honest, the stunning interior architecture was enough to make me forget about skin disorders. I mean, we’re talking marble, Corinthian columns around the pools, baby!

In Shanghai where we lived and taught for four years, we were lucky to have the flagship branch of Dragonfly Spa at the end of our street. Housed in a lovely, historic, five story Shanghai lane house, there should be a picture of this place next to the definition of “spa-like” in the dictionary. The top floor room is known as the “love nest,” and I chuckled every time we were assigned this room for our couples massages. “Meet you in the love nest, snookums…(wink, wink).”

The best part is that our international school provided a nice stipend for health and wellness, enabling us to purchase annual VIP passes to Dragonfly. So, we Dragon-fied every week—massages, facials, manis, pedis—all those things that strengthened our health and wellness in a much more relaxing manner than say, a gym membership. It was all extremely relaxing. Well, except for the time the barely English speaking woman giving me my facial kept saying under her breath, “Ooh, maaany wrinkle. So maaaany wrinkle.”

Jamey getting some sort of Saran Wrap treatment at Dragonfly Spa in Shanghai

By the end of the school year, we would have to use up all remaining funds on our VIP card, so in one loooong visit we would have about every treatment they offered. I remember once we sat in these bougie chairs while we simultaneously had a mani, pedi, and facial while wearing inflatable tubes on our arms and legs that vibrated. Nearly every employee was working on the two of us at the same time. If that’s not spa-like, I don’t know what is. I’m thinking this is what Lauren Sánchez Bezos gets every morning when she wakes up.

We even recently experienced a spa at sea on our first cruise, relaxing with a really soothing couples massage from two very sweet Philippine masseuses. They were so excited that we had visited their home country, enjoying their tasty food and swimming with whale sharks (another true story, but definitely not spa-related).

But like every employee on the cruise, they were quite focused on the upsell. Beforehand, they suggested many spa add-ons, such as a Pro-Collagen Quartz Facial (Quartz? Ouch!), an Aroma Spa Seaweed Massage (seaweed smells like dead fish, okay?) and even teeth whitening.

Then afterwards, just as we were relaxed and calm, they pushed a bunch of overpriced spa products, such as a $112 jar of invigorating bath salts that “make you feel like you just had a massage.” Unless there were little live hands in that jar, I was not convinced. Or the $145 Pro-Collagen Marine Cream, an ultra-hydrating formula packed with marine algae (Say WHAT!? That stuff that gets caught in your toes at the beach?) to reduce the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles. Wait, were they being judgy about my face, like that mean lady at Dragonfly Spa? Oh well, at least massages were more interesting than the human oatmeal who sat at the ship’s bars and scrolled on their phone.

Couples massage? Watch the sunset from the top deck? Nah, let’s have a Busch Light and read The Facebook.

Now that we are living back in the States, we hit the spa in any town we go to, from Dubuque, Iowa’s gorgeous Potosa Spa in an historic hotel (with treatments shaped by Native American culture) to St. Louis, Missouri’s Secret Garden Spa in a stately 100-year-old former home, where we sat in a hot tub outside when the temp was 17 degrees (it was heaven, I promise).

And of course, after all of this background spa experience, we ended up with a primary bathroom in our home that we feel is actually spa-like. It’s centerpiece is a solid stone tub (one of the workers messed up his back carrying it in with 5 others), a giant, 3-sided glass shower, an 11 foot wall covered in wavy water-like white tile, and a calming turquoise paint color that makes me think of the Maldives. Our drawers are filled with bath salts and bubble bath (the normal-priced products from Dr. Teals) and face masks and lava rock foot scrubbers.

Our spa-like primary bathroom, free of judgy spa employees.

Best of all, nobody is in there telling me I have maaaany wrinkles–though our fancy fog-free mirror is pretty revealing.

Chapter 38: Traveling While Gay: Vigilante Squads, Unnatural Carnal Knowledge, and Plenty of Piña Coladas

At the airport in Malaysia, waiting to board our flight/escape unharmed

We were walking zombies when we arrived near midnight at the Sama Sama Express Hotel inside the Kuala Lampur, Malaysia airport. We were on our way to Vietnam, and we’d been traveling for more than 24 hours on three different planes that literally took us halfway around the world (in economy, no less). Now we had an 11-hour layover here until our next flight, and the only thing on our agenda was a steaming hot shower and sleeping while lying flat.

Thankfully we didn’t have to be coherent to check in at the hotel since we had booked and paid online a month before. And since it was located inside the airport, all we had to do was mosey over about two minutes from our arriving flight to the hotel’s front desk and flash our passports. Easy-peasy.

There were two young women at the front desk. One of them read from her computer, reviewing our reservation aloud: one night, standard room, checkout at noon, breakfast included. Then she abruptly stopped talking, looked at us, back at the computer screen with squinted eyes, then back at us.

“It says king bed,” she announced.

“Yes,” I answered. “Also, we’ll check out before ten since we have to make a flight.”

She looked at the other clerk with alarm. I wondered, were they upset we were leaving earlier than the established checkout time? Whatever—we just wanted to sleep.

Once in our hotel room, Jamey wondered if it was the king bed that had distressed them. After all, we were two males, and Malaysia was a Muslim country. While I usually looked into the LGBT situation in countries before we visited, Malaysia was just a layover and I had skipped the research. So I did a quick online search where we discovered that the front desk clerks’ discomfort was the least of our worries:

Malaysia:

  • 20 years imprisonment, fines, and caning for same sex sexual activity.
  • Vigilante groups round up men accused of being gay and had them arrested.
  • Government officials deport any visiting foreign cabinet ministers or diplomats who are gay.
  • The People’s Anti-Homosexual Voluntary Movement lobbies for stricter criminal laws against homosexuality.

Then there was this fun tidbit:

  • The Malaysian Film Censorship Board announced it would only allow depiction of homosexual characters in movies as long as the characters “repent” or die.

Apparently in 2017 Malaysia tried to censor Disney’s Beauty and the Beast over some “gay moments.” I totally have to get a copy of that version.

Now, I’ve had some sleepless nights in hotels in the past for a variety of reasons–an air conditioner in Belize that chilled the room to meat locker temperatures, a room in Cairo without AC or a window or a fan or apparently oxygen—but this was a whole new ballgame. Would these clerks turn us in to the People’s Anti-Homosexual Voluntary Movement? Would we be caned in the airport food court, right in front of Starbucks? Would we be featured in the next season of Locked Up Abroad? We even pulled out the convertible couch and made it look slept in—just in case the vigilante squad showed up.

The next morning we checked out earlier than we had originally planned, did not make eye contact with the clerks, and loudly talked about football stats as we sped through the lobby. We finally stopped sweating when those airplane wheels left that Malaysian runway. See ya’ later, haters!

Jamey and me at the 1993 March on Washington for LGBT rights

The whole anti-gay thing has never made sense to us, and the fact that most of this bias is based in religion (you know, that institution that’s supposed to make humans better people?) makes it all the more bizarre. I’ve fought hard over the years to combat this discrimination—marching on Washington, volunteering for human rights organizations, speaking before city councils, writing a monthly article in a local alternative newspaper, picketing and boycotting anti-gay organizations, and writing an email nearly every week to a person or company who debases people because of their sexual orientation. But, c’mon! When I go on vacation, I don’t want to think about an anti-gay vigilante squad ready to bust down our hotel room door. Unless they are going to take us to see that steamy version of Beauty and the Beast…I’d be totally down for that.

In our travels around the world, we’ve mostly avoided these awkward get-put-in-the-slammer-because-of-how-we-were-born situations because, as a rule of thumb, we avoid countries that might maim or kill us. For example, there are ten charming countries that impose the death penalty for being gay (Afghanistan, Brunei, Iran, Mauritania, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Somalia, and Yemen) that will probably not be the spot for our next spring break hullabaloo.

Uganda was almost on that list. Home of the infamous 2013 “Kill the Gays” bill, they originally called for the death penalty for “aggravated homosexuality.” Now I have met some very aggravating homosexuals in my lifetime, but to be clear, I never wanted to kill them. The punishment was later downgraded to life in prison (Whew! Thank goodness for small favors!) after most of the world threatened to withdraw all of their financial support from the country. Nope, I have little desire to explore a country where violent and brutal attacks against LGBT people are common and cheered on by political and religious leaders (and often performed by state officials). Nothing ruins a holiday more than a beating overseen by a Ugandan pastor.

Unfortunately, over the years we have slipped up and took trips to places that we really

The streets of Accra, Ghana. Wonder where he went to med school?

shouldn’t have. A few years back we tagged along with some friends on a driving trip around Ghana (For the sordid details, see my blog’s Chapter 15: Cause Every Little Thing is Ghana Be Alright). We didn’t research the country since our friends had made all of the plans. However, we had an inkling something was up when we saw that the windows of many Ghanaian cars were adorned with large adhesive letters that said things like, “I am covered in the blood of Jesus.” The drivers must have toweled off because, overall, they looked fine to me.

On the beach in Ghana, smiling even though they want to use those oars to beat the gay out of me.

For the first couple of nights we stayed at a rundown beachside hotel that gave new meaning to “seedy.” It was the kind of place that returned your laundry nicely folded, but still unwashed (yep, really happened). There was no Wi-Fi so we couldn’t research how Ghana felt about LGBT people. At one point I asked the front desk clerk if I could change some money, and as she was giving me my Ghanaian cedi she looked straight at me and said, “So you’re American. I don’t like that Obama. He legalized homosexuality.”

I wasn’t exactly sure how to reply. Maybe she was setting me up? Maybe she was just mean? Or covered in the blood of Jesus? So, I fake-smiled, took my wad of cedi, and racewalked out of there. Once we made it to the first place with Wi-Fi, I discovered these fun facts about Ghana–the country we would be traversing for the next eight days:

 Ghana:

  • three years imprisonment for “unnatural carnal knowledge” (e.g. code speak for being gay)
  • physical and violent homophobic attacks against LGBT people are common, and often encouraged by the media, as well as religious and political leaders
  • reports of young gay people being kicked out of their homes are also common
  • reports of torture programs designed to “cure” homosexuality

Rest assured I did not hum a single show tune or discuss any episodes of The Real Housewives of Atlanta for the next week and henceforth did not get the gay tortured out of me.

Ethiopia. We’re just close friends, I swear!

We inadvertently visited other African countries where the laws don’t favor us, either because we tagged along with others, attended a conference, or just missed the info in our research. I mean, it’s not exactly publicized by their travel and tourism bureaus. “Visit Egypt! See the pyramids! Float down the Nile! And if you’re gay, crush rocks in a hard labor camp for 17 years!” Here are a few of the countries we naively visited:

Egypt: Homosexuality is not specifically outlawed, but “morality laws” are used to punish gay people–up to 17 years in prison with or without hard labor & fines.

Ethiopia: Up to 15 years imprisonment for same-sex sexual activity.

Morocco: Up to 3 years imprisonment for same-sex sexual activity.

Senegal: Up to 5 years imprisonment for same-sex sexual activity.

Tunisia: Up to 3 years imprisonment and fines for male same sex sexual activity.

Sometimes it didn’t even cross my mind that a country would be anti-gay. Take Bhutan, for

Trekking to Paro Taktsang (Tiger’s Nest monastery) in Bhutan, where we could have gone to prison for a year for making whoopie in the hotel room.

example, known worldwide as the first country with a Gross National Happiness index built right into their constitution. Everything the government does is supposedly weighed against this index, which includes a guarantee of psychological well-being. And yet:

Bhutan: Between 1 month and 1 year imprisonment for same-sex sexual acts

Well, listen here King Wangchuck (really his name) of Bhutan. If I’m a gay Bhutanese fellow, I’m not experiencing much of that Gross National Happiness you advertise. This hurts even more because King Wangchuck is young and handsome (seriously, clink on the link–he’s model-like) and is pals with Will and Kate. Surely he watches Will & Grace?

Another big travel blunder we made was when we visited the Maldives, that exotic string of islands in the Indian Ocean. We didn’t even think to check on the LGBT situation before we traveled there, mesmerized as we were by those over-the-sea bungalows we’d seen on screen savers and travel posters.

It was a painfully expensive adventure, but we sucked it up because, hey, those over-the-sea bungalows! And yes, it was dreamlike stepping off our veranda right into the turquoise waters of the Indian Ocean and having a cabin boy decorate our bed each day with little pictures made of flower petals. Good thing he didn’t create a picture of the Maldives Penal Code which would have shown us this:

Maldives: Up to 8 years imprisonment with possibility of whippings, house arrest, or deportation for same sex sexual acts or…gay marriage!

I discovered this fun fact while lounging on the veranda of our Maldivian over-the-sea bungalow, sipping a tropical drink, and doing a search on my iPad. And let me just say, there weren’t enough piña coladas in the world to make us forget that we could be languishing in a Maldivian prison just because one day back in 2012 we drove to Iowa (one of six U.S. states at the time that allowed same-sex marriage) to get legally hitched after being together for 26 years.

Maldives. Can you please wait until after breakfast to whip us?

It’s one thing to feel disappointed when your vacay doesn’t turn out exactly as you planned—maybe it rained, or the hotel room had a mildew smell, or the hotel restaurant had stale bread. But imagine being on vacation and filled with dread just for being, well, yourself (while paying a whole hell of a lot of money for that privilege). Next time we want an over-the-water bungalow experience without the fear of a gay whipping, we’ll pass on the Maldives and head to places like Fiji, Cambodia, and the Philippines that won’t throw us in the clinker for being lawfully wedded.

We really began to understand the hateful side of the world when we decided to become international teachers, and began our search for schools. One of our first offers came from a school in Seoul, Korea where we really hit it off with the principal after several Skype interviews. He said we would be perfect for his school, and the last step was for him to get the final okay from the school owner. But a day later he informed us that he didn’t even make it inside the guy’s office—the secretary out front had stopped him dead in his tracks when he explained that we were a gay couple.

“You can’t tell him that!” she exclaimed. “That’s not allowed at our school!”

The principal asked, “What’s not allowed?”

“You know,” she answered. Then she mouthed the word “gay.”

You pretty much know when a school secretary can’t even voice the word “gay,” we weren’t going to be sashaying down the halls of that institution anytime soon.

It only got worse. As we started to look at schools with available positions, many were either in countries where gay people definitely would not be welcomed (hello Saudi Arabia!) or were religious-based schools where they probably mouthed the word “gay.”

To keep track, I ended up making a color coded chart that included every school (Green = gay friendly! Red = We will imprison/torture/kill you!). We discovered that nearly one third of international schools were off-limits to us.

Thankfully, both of the international schools where we ended up teaching were extremely gay-friendly and actually, just friendly in general. Our school in Shanghai even hung a banner across the front of the building announcing their support for LGBT people—it was signed by all administrators and loads of students. Both schools were also located in countries that did not discriminate based on sexual orientation. Same-sex sexual activity has been legal in China since 1997. In Mali, no laws against same-sex sexual activity have ever existed in the country.

Throughout our job searches and vacation searches, I can’t tell you how many times we heard someone say:

 “C’mon, it’s safe for gay guys in _________! (insert name of obviously anti-gay country) They might have those laws on the books, but they hardly ever enforce them!”

In other words, “You PROBABLY won’t be stoned or imprisoned, so just enjoy your piña colada!”

Sorry, not worth the risk. There are just too many countries in the world that welcome me for who I am, where I don’t have to worry about the repercussions of bizarrely inhumane religious laws, or antiquated British colonial laws that treat same-sex relations as a punishable offense. If I want to spend a gazillion dollars a night for an over-the-water bungalow, I’ll do it in a country that appreciates and maybe celebrates my keen sense of fashion, knowledge of Bravo shows, and witty repartee.

Sadly, our own home country isn’t a bastion of gay friendliness either. Up until 2003, same sex relations were illegal in the United States (let’s just say I was a repeat offender from way back in the day). You know things are bad when communist China legalizes same sex sexual activity six years before the U.S. And to this day, it is still legal in America to fire an employee for being gay in these 28 states:

  • Alabama
  • Alaska
  • Arizona
  • Arkansas
  • Florida
  • Georgia
  • Idaho
  • Indiana
  • Kansas
  • Kentucky
  • Louisiana
  • Michigan
  • Missouri
  • Mississippi
  • Montana
  • Nebraska
  • North Carolina
  • North Dakota
  • Ohio
  • Oklahoma
  • Pennsylvania
  • South Carolina
  • South Dakota
  • Tennessee
  • Texas
  • Virginia
  • West Virginia
  • Wyoming

It’s all pretty alarming to me, especially when I just read some research that shows that unequal treatment of LGBT people causes economic harm, leading to lower economic output for individuals, businesses, and even entire countries. On the other side, inclusive policies can actually boost a country’s GDP. Surely that news would spur countries to change, right?

Nope. Just over the last year or so, countries have become even more anti-gay. Russia, Uganda, Nigeria, and Brunei implemented new laws that increase penalties not just for being gay, but also for simply supporting rights for LGBT people. We’ve still got a lot of work to do in this world.

Which means, it’s definitely time for a piña colada. Or the whole pitcher. Oh, what the hell, just give me the bottle of rum.