prcscct wrote:I feel that many of us don't get out enough and start to get cynical about many things here, me included. I had a great experience yesterday, although simple, that put a smile on my face, made me shake my head in amazement, and got me angry all at the same time. I need to do it more often!
I went to get a haircut and then to a small restaurant next door that had a special on San Miguel original pale lager, which I hadn't had for quiet some time. Sat down and enjoyed three bottles, and this is part of what I saw:
1) An old man about 80 across the street in his boxer shorts hoeing the ground for no apparent reason. It's about a 1/2 rai lot, he doesn't own it and nothing is growing there. He just kept moving dirt and rocks using little force and seemed to be enjoying himself. Perhaps a displaced farmer now living with his kids in town in his old age and simply reliving his memories.
2) Women lovingly sprucing up a small Chinese offering temple. The place is spotless compared to its surroundings and you could see and feel the joy they had keeping the place pristine.
3) A greasy thug stopping in the middle of the soi to meet a motorcycle coming the other way and quickly exchanged a plastic bag of pills for an envelope of what I assume was money. For sure a yah bah deal, and right out in public in the middle of the day.
4) A mentally challenged man (again only in boxer shorts...must be the dress of the day

) who kept walking up and down the sidewalk and each time he passed me he said "F%$k you". The fourth time I actually laughed at him, and he went away.
5) The area mobile vegetable vendor arriving at the restaurant and the fat Thai cook coming out dressed out in his stained kitchen whites, and haggling loudly for 20 minutes about prices, and then stocking up on what was needed for the evening menu.
6) An oversize truck carrying a huge earth moving machine that obviously took a wrong turn onto this particular road, and got stuck in the overhead wires. The keystone cops showed up and the saga was still going on when I left, with traffic backed up forever with people trying to make u-turns in the street to get out of there.
7) A new girly bar that had just opened across the street named The Monkey Bar, with the girls wearing monkey masks and jumping up and down to try to attract customers.
8 ) The loving scene of small Thai school children walking home hand in hand with their mothers or friends, smiling and laughing all the way.
This was all in 45 minutes. A slice of life the likes of which you'll see nowhere else, and reminds me of some of the reasons I came here, and am still here.

Pete
