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Posted

Good your learning thai. You will hear in no time what they really think about you. I just smile and say thank you when they talk $hit about farangs

Posted

'Feeling' like a Thai can go very fast. Living like a Thai also, special when you 'survive' with 15.000THB/m. But being as a local Thai: you do in 3 steps:

-Not now

-Not tomorrow

-Never ever

  • Agree 1
Posted
22 hours ago, susanlea said:
22 hours ago, Moonlover said:

Try the 'ignore user' option. I placed this idiot on mine within 48 hours or his 1st post. (I have NOT read the O/P)

 

22 hours ago, susanlea said:

Yet here you are.

Ah, but I did say I haven't read the post and I still haven't, nor any other posts by the O/P. What baffles me is why so many members read and respond  to his nonsense.

  • Agree 2
Posted
3 minutes ago, Moonlover said:

 

Ah, but I did say I haven't read the post and I still haven't, nor any other posts by the O/P. What baffles me is why so many members read and respond  to his nonsense.

Like you just responded :coffee1:

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Posted
23 hours ago, Mekmong MICK said:

I've been pleasantly surprised how quickly its taken me tbh. I've been here nearly 3 weeks and already feel at home. I've previously done the usual tourist trips to Pattaya, Patong and Kuta but never been a local in Thailand.

 

Even though I'm well travelled and cultured, it's a different feeling actually feeling like a local in a foreign land. Between wives 2 and 3 I spent a month in the Philippines to try and meet someone but never felt totally comfortable and like it was home. There were too many Western sex tourists.

 

Here, I've already met someone, starting to learn the language, joined this online forum which is a useful resource and even eat mostly local food. The locals are always smiling and welcoming. I have even stopped adding tomato sauce to my pad Thai (in Australia tomato sauce accompanies every meal). Case in point below; my breakfast this morning was a Thai bahm mi and two little boys.

 

20240702_113254.thumb.jpg.4c5f05cd7fb1e581c9624e13a61258ba.jpg

 

How has everyone else's experiences been fitting in? Was there a defining moment where Thailand felt like home and you were a local?

 

 

MICK

Untill you speak Thai language fluently 😄

  • Haha 2
Posted
7 hours ago, Puccini said:

 

1. What is bahm mi?

 

2. Are you saying that you ate too little boy for breakfast?

No need to worry. Trump assured us Hannibal is a very good guy. 

Posted
34 minutes ago, Thingamabob said:

After 60 years of visiting, working and living in Thailand, and being happily married to a Thai lady since 1990, I still love the place. However, as a westerner, I can never become a Thai even if I speak the language, enjoy Thai food and the company of Thai people, the simple reason being I am not born and bred a Thai.

What age did you start?

Posted

Another happy farang - enjoy while it lasts. The wake-up will have a "hangover" character though and the remedy will be a ticket back to the home land. 

Posted

I won’t use the word “ local”, mainly because of the language, interpretation etc

 I but I felt more accepted here than I did living in England ( lived there for most of my life). I believe because I am brown skinned and I am not trying to use the race card, but it’s a fact. I am often spoken to in Thai, people believing that I am a Thai.

 I first came for an International Cricket Tournament 24 years ago and identified with the culture, food, weather, people etc etc

I moved here and worked for a while before retiring. I had to learn about working with Thais, as you would moving to any country.

Posted (edited)

Oh look....the trollio got smacked like a little whiny bch and disappeared. No stupid threads since Tuesday.

 

As he reads this reply he is furiously asking chatGPT about some better attention seeking threads he could post to boost his ego.

Edited by Celsius
  • Agree 2
Posted (edited)

The first time I was able to remove the rubber band intact from takeaway I proudly felt like I arrived… :coffee1:

Edited by BKKKevin
Posted
13 minutes ago, Alidiver said:

An Aussie calls himself cultured. 555

 

C'mon... thats an unfair Aussie bash...   they're not all uncouth and uncultured...   

 

I met one once who didn't even call a beer can a 'tinnie'..   

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Posted
On 7/2/2024 at 7:34 AM, Mekmong MICK said:

I've been pleasantly surprised how quickly its taken me tbh. I've been here nearly 3 weeks and already feel at home. I've previously done the usual tourist trips to Pattaya, Patong and Kuta but never been a local in Thailand.

 

Even though I'm well travelled and cultured, it's a different feeling actually feeling like a local in a foreign land. Between wives 2 and 3 I spent a month in the Philippines to try and meet someone but never felt totally comfortable and like it was home. There were too many Western sex tourists.

 

Here, I've already met someone, starting to learn the language, joined this online forum which is a useful resource and even eat mostly local food. The locals are always smiling and welcoming. I have even stopped adding tomato sauce to my pad Thai (in Australia tomato sauce accompanies every meal). Case in point below; my breakfast this morning was a Thai bahm mi and two little boys.

 

20240702_113254.thumb.jpg.4c5f05cd7fb1e581c9624e13a61258ba.jpg

 

How has everyone else's experiences been fitting in? Was there a defining moment where Thailand felt like home and you were a local?

 

 

MICK

I am sure you are fitting in just fine wearing that "Rolex" watch that you have been bragging about. You must be a hansum man wearing it.

  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
On 7/2/2024 at 2:04 PM, Mekmong MICK said:

I've been pleasantly surprised how quickly its taken me tbh. I've been here nearly 3 weeks and already feel at home. I've previously done the usual tourist trips to Pattaya, Patong and Kuta but never been a local in Thailand.

 

Even though I'm well travelled and cultured, it's a different feeling actually feeling like a local in a foreign land. Between wives 2 and 3 I spent a month in the Philippines to try and meet someone but never felt totally comfortable and like it was home. There were too many Western sex tourists.

 

Here, I've already met someone, starting to learn the language, joined this online forum which is a useful resource and even eat mostly local food. The locals are always smiling and welcoming. I have even stopped adding tomato sauce to my pad Thai (in Australia tomato sauce accompanies every meal). Case in point below; my breakfast this morning was a Thai bahm mi and two little boys.

 

20240702_113254.thumb.jpg.4c5f05cd7fb1e581c9624e13a61258ba.jpg

 

How has everyone else's experiences been fitting in? Was there a defining moment where Thailand felt like home and you were a local?

 

 

MICK

This has to be satire.

 

I've been here nearly 3 weeks and already feel at home.:cheesy:

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Posted
On 7/3/2024 at 11:58 AM, rickudon said:

Within 4 days the hotel owner had tried to set me up with one of her waitresses (a real beauty). I knew then i was looked upon as a local, albeit still a farang.

Was she one the real locals didn't want to marry?

 

One of the great expat myths is that Thai women prefer farang men.

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Posted
3 minutes ago, FruitPudding said:

I don't wanna be a local, thanks.

 

And WTF are you eating?

 

Looks to be a Vietnamese Bbq pork banh mi and some egg rolls.

Posted
4 hours ago, thaibeachlovers said:

This has to be satire.

 

I've been here nearly 3 weeks and already feel at home.:cheesy:

Yep....3 weeks and now he is asking advice  on sin sod and marriage.....Amazing Thailand

  • Like 1
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Posted
On 7/2/2024 at 9:04 AM, Mekmong MICK said:

I've been pleasantly surprised how quickly its taken me tbh. I've been here nearly 3 weeks and already feel at home. I've previously done the usual tourist trips to Pattaya, Patong and Kuta but never been a local in Thailand.

 

Even though I'm well travelled and cultured, it's a different feeling actually feeling like a local in a foreign land. Between wives 2 and 3 I spent a month in the Philippines to try and meet someone but never felt totally comfortable and like it was home. There were too many Western sex tourists.

 

Here, I've already met someone, starting to learn the language, joined this online forum which is a useful resource and even eat mostly local food. The locals are always smiling and welcoming. I have even stopped adding tomato sauce to my pad Thai (in Australia tomato sauce accompanies every meal). Case in point below; my breakfast this morning was a Thai bahm mi and two little boys.

 

20240702_113254.thumb.jpg.4c5f05cd7fb1e581c9624e13a61258ba.jpg

 

How has everyone else's experiences been fitting in? Was there a defining moment where Thailand felt like home and you were a local?

 

 

MICK

😂😂😂😂 You're obviously joking. To fit in you need to speak Thai language.....fluently! You can???😳

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