It all began with a promise. A halfhearted commitment to a best friend. One made, ironically enough, under the assumption that the promise would never have to be fulfilled. But when the glare of the ringside lights gleamed off my freshly oiled body and the local radio man began calling for the “farang” from Chicago to step through the ropes, I knew I had no choice but to make good on my disingenuous pledge.
Let’s back track for a minute to a time before the ocean sprayed fighting ring, menthol laced oil, and paralyzing fear. Back to the birthplace of this moronic idea.
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| Ross LOVES minibus rides! |
… On one of our many near death minibus experiences with Dr. Andy and the Entourage, Scott audaciously proposed that somewhere deep within my soul I possessed an unrecognized, insane, craving to try Muay Thai fighting (I don’t know how Scott can see into my soul, but I don’t like it). The doctor was unnervingly pleased to hear this and felt compelled to share with us that a previous English teacher at KU had tried such an adventure… and had broken his arm in the process. Naturally, this filled me with an insane craving to try Muay Thai (how did Scott know???). I’m considering therapy. Even at this point the potential for me to quench my now insatiable thirst for hand to hand violence seemed farfetched at best. Then, about a week later, my friend Allie sent a facebook message which coincidentally mentioned a hostel on the island of Koh Samet, where we planned to visit that weekend, which had a fully operational Muay Thai fighting ring. You can see where this is going.
I thought to myself, how can I, an out of shape coward, who’s last legitimate fight occurred roughly thirteen years ago when I kicked a boy in the groin during a playground brawl (sorry Dan), reasonably justify jumping in the ring with a trained Muay Thai fighter? Then it came to me. An idea so splendidly stupid that it had to work. I would play off my new found desire to come face to face with my own feeble existence under the guise of a birthday promise to Scott. Everyone would call it idiotic, but they would support it! And they did…
Let me take a moment to reassure you, or perhaps just myself, that I’m usually a reasonably rational thinker and despite the current body of evidence I’m mounting to the contrary, I feel that this was merely a momentary lapse in sanity. My mom totally agrees… Now back to the story.
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| The beaches aren't the only pretty things on Koh Samet |
After a full day of lounging on Koh Samet’s beautiful beaches, making fast friends with a Finish man named Danny (he called me Santa Claus so we’re cool), and dining for Scott’s birthday, it was finally time. As the group began heading in the opposite direction of the hostel with the boxing ring I, ostensibly still intoxicated with self-torment, suggested that we swing by the Thai fighting place just to “check it out.” We’d barely ordered a beer before the girls, who evidently had also become delighted with the thought of watching me writhe in pain, had arranged a match with the young man serving us our Chong’s.
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| Birthday dinner |
While watching two ten year old boys in the opening sparring match of the evening execute their Mauy Thai training with precision and undeveloped ferocity, I was summoned behind the ring. There an older gentleman, doing his best impersonation of an English speaker, informed me that if I was going to fight I needed to have a manager. I immediately thought back to orientation and, failing to recall a CIEE session concerning Muay Thai contract language, decided I’d better investigate on my own. Upon my questioning I was told that no, I didn’t need to sign a waiver. No, they didn’t want to see my passport. And no, there wasn’t an insurance policy I could sign up for. All I needed was a manager. Scott gleefully accepted this position.
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| If I only knew what was coming next |
The older man then eyeballed me from head to toe, rummaged through a pile of blue boxing shorts, and tossed me a pair that I can only assume was procured from Baby Gap’s overstock supply. Then Scott and I were nervously led to the “locker room,” a covered concrete slab within full view of a gawking Thai audience, and told to get dressed. I slinked off my sneakers, socks, t-shirt, and Levis and traded them for something a little more revealing. Mr. Miyagi arrived shortly thereafter bearing two long, slender strips of cotton and hastily intertwined them between my fingers and around my wrists. He then doused my fear stricken frame with menthol oil until I could be confused for a seagull caught in the Exxon Valdez spill (side note: I’m allergic to menthol, breathing was a breeze). Once finished, he gestured towards an unknown destination in the darkness behind my concrete sanctuary and garbled something resembling “get ready.” Scott and I looked uncomfortably at one another and then, seeing no obvious escape route, followed an overgrown trail away from the ring until we reached the famed Golden Gloves training facility. Said training facility consisted of two structurally suspicious plastic chairs assembled around a punching bag swinging ominously from an unfortunate tree branch. Using the former Saw III set as a backdrop, Mr. Miyagi then kindly took three minutes to introduce me to manhood. Under his tutelage I learned how to punch (I figured I’m 23, it’s about time), block (don’t know when I’d need that), and kick (it felt good to reunite with this old friend). I awkwardly demonstrated my newly acquired fighting talents, cringing every time my unproven fists collided with the bag, until Mr. Miyagi felt comfortable that a jury of my peers would determine the hostel was not responsible for the inevitable laundry list of injuries I would incur.
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| Scott acting like he's done this before |
Now off the legal hook, Mr. Miyagi escorted me towards the guillotine. First, past a curiously empathetic looking Thai crowd, then through the unsettling small but especially spirited contingent of Americans. Spurred on by the cheers of my enthusiastic supporters I cautiously climbed the three stairs into the ring where I was greeted by another executioner; I mean Thai man. He graciously laced up my boxing gloves and offered me a used, but nonetheless effective, mouthpiece. Somewhere in suburban Chicago my childhood orthodontist is breathing a sigh of relief and also inquiring why I haven’t worn my retainers since the 8th grade.
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| Notice the foot mark on my stomach |
With my mouthpiece firmly entrenched, the radio man began his auctioneer call and the referee beckoned for both fighters. As Scott exuberantly finished his motivational speech (watch your back Tony Robbins) I turned ring ward and came face to face with my beer vending opponent. A mere hour earlier the boy who’d dispensed our Chong’s was just that, a boy. Now he was the immaculate example of what diligent adherence to p90x can accomplish (my lack of commitment be damned!). Presently donning my “leave nothing to the imagination” boxing drawers, abundantly lubricated, and standing next to the Tae Bo guy, I more closely resembled a Vienna Beef dog squirting out of its overly crimped casing than a masterpiece of human anatomy. So yeah, I was oozing (read: love handles generously spilling over shorts) with confidence.
Functioning as the physical embodiment of deliberate disregard for the food pyramid I was instructed to pace the ring, much like a blue ribbon 4H hog, and wai at each corner as a demonstration of respect. Despite my misgivings toward religion, I snuck in a prayer or two at each stop. I figured appealing to a higher power couldn’t hurt, right? With the prefight rituals complete and my will finalized it was finally time to meet said higher power. If you’re thinking I’ve lost all my marbles I’d like to reassure you that there was a fleeting moment when I questioned why I had volunteered to have my bones ceremoniously pulverized in front of my friends, but that was quickly suppressed by survival mode when I touched gloves with Ivan Drago, initiating the fight.![]() |
| Me with the Tae Bo guy |
The contest itself, now inevitably unable to meet even your most modest expectations, was mostly a blur to me but the following is how I assume any casual observer would recount the fight. Round begins, Ryan bounces around with undeserved confidence, Thai guy notices, becomes slightly annoyed, kicks Ryan in the hamstring with intention of severing it in two, crowd shudders realizing Ryan is in over his head, Ryan feels leg splintering from within, attempts to ignore searing pain, strikes back with slap-like punch, then backs off preserving his meager fuel reserves, Thai guy delivers five more crushing blows to Ryan’s rapidly bruising left leg, audience shields its eyes expecting leg to spontaneously combust at any moment, Ryan ignores imminent annihilation, rallies with a fury of undisciplined punches, lands none, retreats to the “safety” of his corner, Thai guy stalks him like a lion in the Serengeti, Ryan ponders benefits of mortality, considers agony of achieving said mortality then instead offers a thousand baht to Thai guy if he’ll “lay off the leg,” Thai guy doesn’t speak English, Ryan irritably responds with embarrassingly delicate kick, Thai guy laughs, Ryan feel inadequate, endures further torturous strikes to now functionless left leg, flees his attacker, then his torso escorts lifeless leg behind him around ring until referee graciously calls the end of the round.
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| Mmmm dysentery water |
Repeat this scenario several times, inserting scheduled breaks for consumption of non-EPA approved bucket water and weird groin massage sessions, and you’ll have a pretty accurate play by play. This beautifully choreographed dance (we could have won a Tony) lasted all of three rounds instead of the usual five, which I had fortuitously negotiated prefight (thank you Thai street markets for turning me into a ravenously shrewd bargainer).
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| Pre-hug |
When the third round finally ended and I awoke from my nightmare, realizing I wasn’t drowning in a pool of my own blood or strapped to a gurney, I was overcome with relief. Despite losing the fight by a judge’s decision (I’m appealing) I decided to ignore all cultural decorum concerning physical greetings and began casting out hugs like the studio audience at an Oprah giveaway episode. You get a hug! And you get a hug! Everyone was embarrassed but I didn’t care. I was alive!
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| The left leg two days after the fight |
Thirty minutes after the bout was over I finally caught my breath and was shepherded back to the hostel. There, I forcibly swore my friends to an oath of internet silence until I had an opportunity to tell my parents about the experience (I didn’t want another accidental homicide on my record…). However, come Monday morning, having not spoken to my mom or dad yet, I found out that a small collection of fight images had been hacked and accidentally released as part of a wikileak circulation. The pictures had then been posted on facebook and as fate would have it, my mom saw. So you can imagine how I felt when I casually opened my Gmail account and saw the title of the lone message in my inbox…
Have you lost your mind?
Apparently I have.

























