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Is living in a Thai village in the middle of nowhere becoming more appealing now?


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1 hour ago, tonray said:

My preference would be to live inside IKEA if I could. Every day you can have a different living arrangement, girl watching as shoppers walk by and the restaurant is cheap enough.

Nice meatballs and apple pie. Watch tv naked during the day.

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I really start to think that it's up to the girl and her family how you feel out in the sticks. 

 

I used to have a 4 years relationship with a bkk girl whose grandmom was living in Prachinburi. It was always awful everytime she asked me to go there a few days with her. Even one day was too much and very boring. Her family was also very judging and strict. Smoking or having a beer in the garden was a no go.

Now I am dating a girl from Surin - Esan whose mom is my neighbor in Pattaya but the girl is living with her 2 brothers in some small town near Surin as she is doing an internship as a teacher at a local school for her last year of university. 

It's always fun to be there as her brothers are just great. They like to barbeque with friends in the evenings and play music. It's always nice to make jokes with them and we even go on motorbike trips and camping together on weekends. 

It may be because she is living there alone with her 2 brothers without parents. But I never felt bored at all.

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1 hour ago, Sydebolle said:

If you live in the house of your dreams, have hobbies (gardening, cooking), access to internet (outside world) and can rock up for a beer or two in a pub/place within reach - perfect! 

 

Yep, a simple no thrills life, but I do see the appeal. Add in a loving family and the odd trip then what more do you really need?

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Just now, kaneko86 said:

I really start to think that it's up to the girl and her family how you feel out in the sticks. 

 

I used to have a 4 years relationship with a bkk girl whose grandmom was living in Prachinburi. It was always awful everytime she asked me to go there a few days with her. Even one day was too much and very boring. Her family was also very judging and strict. Smoking or having a beer in the garden was a no go.

Now I am dating a girl from Surin - Esan whose mom is my neighbor in Pattaya but the girl is living with her 2 brothers in some small town near Surin as she is doing an internship as a teacher at a local school for her last year of university. 

It's always fun to be there as her brothers are just great. They like to barbeque with friends in the evenings and play music. It's always nice to make jokes with them and we even go on motorbike trips and camping together on weekends. 

It may be because she is living there alone with her 2 brothers without parents. But I never felt bored at all.

Of course individual circumstances play a pivotal part,

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4 minutes ago, thaibeachlovers said:

Indeed. My MIL hated me so it was not the best atmosphere to be living in. Add a ratbag nephew to the mix and it was quite toxic.

In the end the only solution was to leave.

Let me guess..

The MIL usually hates you because you 

"give to little".

The ratbag nephew, continually asks for money which you know will be spent on YaBa, hence your answer .... off.

 

Been there done that myself.

 If you are in Isaan I doubt the circumstances ever change much.

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Is living in a Thai village in the middle of nowhere becoming more appealing now?

 

Mostly all my life have lived somewhere out in the sticks, born on a Farm,  did live for 3 years in Berlin. and here on the outskirts of BKK while the house was being built in 2003..

 

living in a City or town has no appeal at all, being now in my 70's guess that will never change

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37 minutes ago, pookondee said:

Let me guess..

The MIL usually hates you because you 

"give to little".

The ratbag nephew, continually asks for money which you know will be spent on YaBa, hence your answer .... off.

 

Been there done that myself.

 If you are in Isaan I doubt the circumstances ever change much.

Actually I think she just hated farangs, but certainly I didn't give enough money to satisfy her wants, as I didn't give her any.

 

The nephew didn't ask me for money, probably because he knew I wouldn't give him any, but he was just a ratbag anyway. A few years later he did his best to ruin my homelife by inviting himself to stay every weekend and eating our food and taking up the entire lounge all day. Never picked up his rubbish either. I was always having arguments with my wife about him because she refused to tell him he couldn't come. I had to lock my food up, but he just ate hers and she had to pick up after him as I refused to.

I'd say he had quite a lot to do with the breakdown of our marriage.

 

Her village wasn't in Issan, it was near the Lao border in the north east.

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No, not at all.

Living in Bangkok my and my family can isolate - and have access to all we need at a couple of clicks of a button.

 

Living upcountry, where we have a property, it is a case of everyone - mainly her extended family - coming and going as they please, usually looking for something to eat or talking about something to eat. People popping about all day with no work to do.

 

At a time when there is no safer strategy that keeping yourself to yourself, I know where I would rather be.

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5 minutes ago, JRG23 said:

No, not at all.

Living in Bangkok my and my family can isolate - and have access to all we need at a couple of clicks of a button.

 

Living upcountry, where we have a property, it is a case of everyone - mainly her extended family - coming and going as they please, usually looking for something to eat or talking about something to eat. People popping about all day with no work to do.

 

At a time when there is no safer strategy that keeping yourself to yourself, I know where I would rather be.

You stay firmly behind them curtains, fella.

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25 minutes ago, JRG23 said:

No, not at all.

Living in Bangkok my and my family can isolate - and have access to all we need at a couple of clicks of a button.

 

Living upcountry, where we have a property, it is a case of everyone - mainly her extended family - coming and going as they please, usually looking for something to eat or talking about something to eat. People popping about all day with no work to do.

 

At a time when there is no safer strategy that keeping yourself to yourself, I know where I would rather be.

You did not set the rules for your house. It took a little while but all of the extended family know what my rules are. Sometimes it is pleasant for them to come round as it does not happen very often.

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23 hours ago, Tanomazu said:

Sounds like heaven.

 

Throw in some moths and who could resist?

I'm an animal-lover, but not a tree-hugger.  Mozzies, centipedes and cockroaches get the chop.  There are no rats or mice - the feral cats sort that out for me.  Snakes in the garden (including cobras), frogs, moths, butterflies etc etc - I have no problem with them ????

 

I did have problems before in Thailand with certain members of the human species.  So I don't encourage human visitors to my house - I'll meet who I want to socialise with in town ????

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8 minutes ago, simon43 said:

I'm an animal-lover, but not a tree-hugger.  Mozzies, centipedes and cockroaches get the chop.  There are no rats or mice - the feral cats sort that out for me.  Snakes in the garden (including cobras), frogs, moths, butterflies etc etc - I have no problem with them ????

 

I did have problems before in Thailand with certain members of the human species.  So I don't encourage human visitors to my house - I'll meet who I want to socialise with in town ????

And what are the women like there?

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It's got its drawbacks and its plusses.

 

I'm enjoying it because I've got a family, fairly nice wife, and resort style house here in Issan.

 

I don't drink so I don't miss the bars.  But I miss the night life and myriad of eating options that city life affords.

 

We holiday every other month to some beach so that helps my longing for the oceanside.

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Each to their own I suppose - but not for me.

 

I will retire to Thailand next year at age 55, was married to a Thai and have a child.  Prior to COVID I had 4 holidays a year to Thailand, had 48 trips since 2010 and a few before that.

 

I want to live close (walking distance) to the bars, restaurants, malls, hospitals, pharmacies, massage shops, barbers, etc, somewhere like Soi Bukhoew.

 

For me that is an easy life, everything on your doorstep.

 

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I don't have any quarrel with this idea. Each to his own of course but objections raised by some may not mean the same to you or I.

 

In any event, I am open-minded and even if I decided in some kind of life-changing scenario, I would be happy in the knowledge that I would be prepared to make the adjustments necessary and move again in the light of my experiences!

 

For me, I would like to see out my days close to the sea but if I cannot for any reason, I won't be unhappy.

 

Good Luck with whatever decision you make

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On 7/20/2021 at 6:24 AM, Cake Monster said:

I live in a Village, and I love to wake up and see the Sky

There are very few pressures, and living close to a City, things I need are only a Short distance away.

 

living like a hobbit does have its advantages ????

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       I have lived in both the city and in the boonies and have found that the vibe of people in the city are uptight, rude, and less friendly. Same as the kooks that want to defend there rat in a maze lifestyle in the big city. To me the city has it's purpose, to do business and get out.

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We have a nice 3 bedroom home in a village up north,moms there now looking after the place.

it’s nice to leave the hustle a bustle of city life for awhile,go up there get some fresh air and veg out.

The biggest issues you face while living in a rural village are amenities if that’s what your used to. Plus the biggest one I have noticed is health care. Yes they do have some sort of basic hospital. But anything more than a fever and you have to travel to a bigger city with a bigger hospital. 
So that leaves transportation issues,find somewhere for the misses to stay while your in hospital.

Plus a lot of the time you might have to travel 2 to 3 hours just for a 15 minute appointment with a so called specialist. The. Only to be told come back in a week or two to see how things are. 
Also depends on what type of lifestyle you are used to,I personally can only handle it short term.

But horses for courses.

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