Island Life Reality Check: Morning Swim Routine While Sick in Cambodia

in Travel25 days ago

Island Life Reality Check: Morning Swim Routine While Sick in Cambodia

Twenty days into my Cambodia adventure on Koh Rong Sanloem, and I'm still fighting this damn cough. Five days now. The kind that won't let you sleep lying down, so you prop yourself against the wall and hope for a few hours. Not exactly the tropical paradise Instagram feed you'd expect.

The alarm screamed at 6 AM this morning. I laid there debating whether to hit the beach for my usual exercise and swim routine. Then the rain started hammering the roof, and that settled it—back to sleep for another thirty minutes.

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When the Rain Stops, You Move

Once the storm passed, I rolled out and headed down to the beach. No exercise today though. The lungs aren't having it. But I can still get in the water, and that's something Connecticut winters don't offer.

The morning beach here on Koh Rong Sanloem is a different world. Empty. Quiet. No massive waves crashing, no strong currents trying to drag you out—just the calm water of the bay lapping against the sand. Clouds drift overhead, and these long-needled pine trees line the shore. I'm still not sure what species they are, but they add something unexpected to the tropical scene.

The rocks along the beach tell their own story. You can see circular patterns and textures worn into them, evidence they spent time underwater. It's the kind of detail you notice when you're moving slow, when illness forces you to pay attention differently.

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The Swim That Keeps You Sane

This morning swim routine is becoming essential. It's one of those things you can't do back home, so you take advantage while you're here. Even if I can't push through the exercise because my lungs are still shot, I can float in the calm water and let the ocean do its thing.

There's something about that morning ocean contact that resets everything. The salt water, the temperature, the way sound changes when you're half-submerged—it grounds you when you're dealing with the frustration of being sick in a foreign country.

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The Avocado Coffee Smoothie Debate

On the way back, I stopped for my breakfast ritual: avocado smoothie with a cup of coffee dumped in. Yeah, I know how it sounds. Everyone tells me it's horrendous. But it actually tastes good, and I'm standing by it. Give it a shot before you judge.

The combination works—the smoothness of the avocado, the caffeine kick from the coffee, the sweetness balancing it out. It's become my morning fuel, sick or not.

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The Reality of Island Wildlife

Back at the hostel, before starting the workday, I spotted one of those massive mosquitoes on the wall. The kind with legs so long they look like daddy longlegs spiders from Connecticut. Tiny wings, enormous legs, just hanging there doing whatever giant mosquitoes do.

I left it alone, took a shower, and got to work. Tomorrow I'm hoping to wake up healthy, but we'll see what the island has planned.

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What Island Life Actually Looks Like

This is what extended travel really looks like—not the highlight reel, not the perfect sunrise shots. It's managing work meetings while fighting through a cough. It's adapting your exercise routine because your body won't cooperate. It's finding small wins like a morning swim when you can't do everything you planned.

The beach access is incredible. The water is calm and welcoming. The morning routine keeps you grounded. But you're also dealing with illness, limited medical resources, and the reality that you can't just pop into a pharmacy back home.

That's the trade-off nobody talks about when they post their island paradise content. You get this amazing location, this experience you couldn't replicate anywhere else, but you're also far from the conveniences and support systems you're used to.

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The Seven-Month Perspective

Twenty days down, many more to go in this seven-month commitment at Lovesick Hostel. Some days you're crushing it, hitting the beach for exercise and work alike. Other days you're propped against a wall trying to sleep through a cough, hoping the next morning brings better health.

Both versions are part of the story. The morning swim in calm bay water with pine trees overhead. The avocado coffee smoothie that everyone thinks sounds terrible. The giant mosquitoes that look like creatures from another planet. The frustration of illness limiting what you can do.

This is island life when you're actually living it, not just visiting for a week.

Tomorrow morning that 6 AM alarm will go off again. Maybe I'll have the lung capacity for exercise. Maybe it'll be another swim-only day. Either way, I'll be down at that beach, taking advantage of what Connecticut can't offer, even if I'm not at 100%.

Have you ever dealt with getting sick during extended travel? How did you adapt your routine while recovering?

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A very beautiful place because for me, the beach has always been a favorite place for everyone. I also live close to the beach, but I always go there to enjoy its extraordinary beauty. Just like you do.

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