05 May 2012

I just ate chalupas on a mini-bus in Panama...


..let me ‘splain.  It all started this afternoon when I decided to get Taco Bell for dinner (due to cravings for the last several months).  I wasn’t too worried about getting there early because 1. I wasn’t very hungry and 2. I figured it would be just a quick cab ride or walk there and back.  So at around 6 pm I look up Taco Bell Panama in Google maps and it turns out that the closest one is in the Albrook Mall which is not within walking distance unless you are walking for exercise.  However, I remembered that there is a free transfer from the Albrook Mall to my hotel at around 8 o’clock.  Great.  I could take a cab, get Taco Bell, and still have plenty of time to catch the shuttle. 

So at around 6:30 (I’m ashamed to admit after getting distracted by Bachelor Pad) I headed down to the lobby to verify that the transfer will be running.  The receptionist told me yes it will, but I will need to call at around 7:30 to make sure.  I said ok and headed out to find a cab.  Quickly a cab stopped, I asked how much it would cost, the cabbie told me 2 dollars, and I hopped in.  The cab ride was longer than I anticipated (things look so close on google maps), but I appreciated being inside because it was raining out. 

I got to the mall and saw a large electronics store in the parking lot.  Remembering that I had to pick up an HDMI cable for Nata, I decided to go there first.  After a little walk, I got inside and started a very interesting shopping experience.  I looked around a little and found something I liked for myself but decided to pick up the cable first.  I asked where they were and a worker walked me over there.  I decided on a Philips cable (ironically enough the same brand as the MRI machine that sealed my fate of coming to Panama.  Well actually it was the stones that machine found in my bile duct that did the fate sealing, but that is beside the point).  However, in this store you can’t just take the item to the cash register yourself.  The purchase request has to be entered into a computer and the item is delivered to the pick-up counter by a worker.  Ok, that’s weird, but this is Latin America.  I continued over to where I found the item for myself, and went to pick it up.  I had second thoughts about whether this was permitted due to the cable incident, but this item wasn’t tied down or anything.  Then I went over to the corner counters that said “caja.”  While queuing I had this feeling that holding an item in that store was wrong, but no one came up to stop me.  Finally, it was my turn to pay.  I went up to the window, place my item on the counter, and was immediately told that I need to get a “factura” for my item from one of the floor workers.  Ok, my instinct was right even though it went against all of my U.S. electronic shopping experiences.  So I returned to the area where I got the item and found a worker to enter it into the computer.  I then went once more to the register area.  I paid for the items and was then directed to another counter that said “entrega” to pick them up.  While trying to leave the store my exit path was blocked by an inflatable green robot that I’m pretty sure had a person inside, but I weaved my way around and got out hoping to never have to shop electronics like that again.

So now it was around 7 o’clock and I headed back through the parking lot to the mall.  I entered the mall and was immediately surprised by its size, amount of bright colors, and safari them.  I now started walking in search of Taco Bell.  After walking at least 10 minutes and seeing almost every other fast-food restaurant I still hadn’t encountered Taco Bell.  I began to feel disappointed.  I had gone all the way there just for Taco Bell, and by golly I was going to eat Taco Bell.  I finally arrived, almost hopeless, at what I thought was the end of the mall.  Then suddenly there was a bend and a whole other stretch of mall appeared before me.  The whole new section was even bigger than the one I had just walked that was larger than my mall back home.  With new hope and a slightly sore abdomen I kept going.  Finally, after another ten minutes and passing by at least two more Subways, I found a legitimate food court with carousel and all.  What was in that food court?  Taco Bell!

I found the nearest stairs and headed down (after one trip around the bottom floor of the first half of the mall I had headed upstairs in hopes it was there).  I excitedly walked up to the Taco Bell counter and ordered a two chalupa supreme meal that included French fries and a Pepsi.  Thinking I had plenty of time ordered it “para aca (for here).”  When the order for Chola (no one can ever understand my name) was ready I grabbed it, some mild sauce, and ketchup and looked for an empty table.  This was a difficult task because in any food court in central America that I have been to it is unheard of to take your own tray to the trash.  Instead they are left on the table where a worker picks it up and throws it away for you.  I finally found one near Dunkin’ Donuts and sat down.  Just before squirting out a pack of ketchup for my fries I decided I should call the hotel to confirm the transfer.  It was about 7:30.  I called and was told that it would be leaving soon (in about 5 minutes) from the Zebra entrance. 

I quickly realized that I needed to go back to the Taco Bell counter and get a to-go (para llevar) bag and rush to the shuttle.  While walking through the mall I had noticed signs with giraffes, rhinos, tigers, and elephants, but I hadn’t noticed any zebra pictures near the exits, so I figured it must be in the end of the mall I hadn’t walked to yet.  While walking I began to feel like I was wrong.  After a few minutes I stopped at a kiosk to ask.  The female worker told me with a hopeless look “I’m sorry honey, but it’s far away.  At least a 20 minute walk. (loosely translated)”  I thanked her and decided that this, of all times, was the time for my Shona-luck needed to kick in.  20 minutes?  I could do better. 

I was off - rushing through the mall at a speed much faster than anyone, who had gallbladder surgery less than a week ago and two days ago walked about as slow as a turtle, should go.  I wasn’t actually speed walking, but I still felt like a few stitches were at risk of ripping.  I just had to make it to that shuttle.  I did not want to pay another 2 dollar taxi ride when there was a free shuttle so close.

 I kept going and less than 10 minutes later rounded a corner and saw a sign with a striped animal that said cebra.  Thank goodness! I might have made it.  I quickly exited and did not see a shuttle.  Of course, not wanting to seem guilty for missing it I called the hotel and said “I’m here and the shuttle hasn’t passed by.”  I was told that it would come very soon.  So of course, in my own little Shona world, even though there were other people waiting outside I thought that they probably asked for a little shuttle just for me because no one else was going. 

I waited for 5-10 more minutes and finally a mini-bus pulled up and was immediately crowded by people.  Of course this was the bus I needed.  I got on and found a seat but heard that my hotel would be the last stop.  I remembered my chalupas and realized that I had to eat them or they would get cold.  So I ate them right there in a jam-packed shuttle where nobody else was eating, and they were delicious! 

After a tour of the city that passed by nearly every hotel in the downtown area, I arrived at my hotel with a 360 degree achy torse and legs and the satisfaction that my Shona-luck driven by being “pinche (cheap)” had prevailed. 

I re-learned tonight how my expectations are usually so utterly incorrect.  Why should one of three malls in Panama City, Panama not be huge and not have moving sidewalks like the airport?  Why would the one restaurant I was looking for have suddenly left the mall?  Why shouldn’t Taco Bell serve French fries as a side instead of a small Taco?  Why should I be the only person wanting a free hotel transfer?  And why can’t a chalupa taste just as good in a mini-bus in Panama as sitting in a restaurant in the states?

One more victorious yet tiring and slightly stressful outing = that much closer to being a successfully confident world traveler.