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Southeast Asia (SE Asia) is divided into peninsular SE Asia and insular SE Asia. I am a little bit informed of the geographical and socio-cultural situation of Peninsular SE Asia, being the inhabitant of a country, i.e. Bangladesh, which touches the border of the westernmost point of peninsular SE Asia. The peninsular SE Asia ends at a point, where the easternmost point of South Asia starts. This point is the Bangladesh-Myanmar border, which marks the intersection of the two subcontinents: SE Asia and South Asia. Last year, I have visited Phnom Penh and Siem Reap of Cambodia that enriched my further understanding of the geographical and socio-cultural situation of the Insular SE Asia. Insular SE Asia is known as Indochina because of its idiosyncratic socio-cultural makeup formed with the amalgamation of the socio-cultural aspects of both India and China. Its socio-cultural makeup has been formed with the Indian religions of Buddhism and Hinduism contrary to the socio-cultural makeup of insular SE Asia. I am personally informed of the peninsular SE Asia, where the isles of Indonesia, Malaysia, and Philippine exit. But, I know little about the Insular SE Asia except for the religious identity of people of these countries. The geographical map of insular SE Asia appears to me like a jigsaw puzzle. Last month, I have visited Malaysia during February 03-09, 2020. This visit provides me an opportunity to make a breakthrough that remained long to me a jigsaw puzzle. During my visit, I have stayed at Bintulu city situated in the Sarawak state of Borneo Island. Borneo Island is far away from mainland Malaysia. It takes 2 hours of flight to reach in Bintulu city. Sarawak state shares the Borneo Island with the Kalimantan state of Indonesia. Usually, the tourists do not put Sarawak in their destination list because of its remoteness. However, I have visited Sarawak since I required attending an academic conference hosted by the Universiti Putra Malaysia. This event of visit provided me an opportunity to explore the geographical location as well as the cultural makeup of Sarawak. I stayed at Bintulu and visited in and around the city. From Bintulu Indonesia and Brunei are not very far. These two countries share international borders with the Sarawak state of Malaysia. Having stayed in Bintulu, I have gathered some experience and understandings. The ongoing development activities have attracted my attention. The city of Bintulu has flourished as a modern city, which was sunk beneath the deep jungle until the last decades. Most of its countryside has now been turned into the palm gardens. Among the experiences and understandings, the valuable one is about the breakthrough of the jigsaw of the insular SE Asia. The understanding of this jigsaw is of my own kind. How I understand the makeup of insular SE Asia as an allegory that Indonesia is a large country, which Malaysia is contained in, and Brunei and Singapore are the two countries smaller than Malaysia that again are contained in Malaysia. Thus, a tour of academic pursuit has turned into the visit for gathering experience of geographical and socio-cultural makeup of insular SE Asia. I owe a lot to the last academic tour to Sarawak, Malaysia.