You can buy rye flour at many of the vendors, and I have, and used, though a bit pricy. Nice change and hard to beat a good rye bread for sandwiches, or just toasted w/butter.
Most other flours & grains are available online, some pricy, and some a bit difficult to work with.
Finishing at the bottom of your class is no big deal
Agree. I finished school with no real qualifications, but still had three successful careers. Why did I do so poorly at school: because not a single teacher was able to motivate me to be interested. I did a lot of things at school, read a lot of books, rowing, played trumpet in the orchestra, acting, etc but not much in the way of passing exams. Never studied, never cared. Of course I was lucky that I started work when qualifications were not necessary. I could have done any job not requiring a degree. Kids these days are not so lucky- too many chasing too few jobs, and many jobs require a degree that did not use to, like nursing. Just heard that half the current year's nursing graduates will be unemployed. That would never have happened in the 80s.
I think any Americans who are retired and living in Thailand should feel blessed. America has no state healthcare system either and most likely never will. Plus, 50,000,000 Americans who now have healthcare under the affordable care act stand to lose it very soon.
It is definitely absolutely better to rent a condo in Thailand than buy.
Condo purchases are no bargain. List prices are very high, and when dealing with a foreigner, they will stick to those inflated prices.
Thais don't normally buy used condos. They will always prefer to buy a new condo, so it is incredibly difficult to sell a used condo.
Building maintenance usually gets worse and worse as a building ages. Your home will be in a steady state of decline.
Things can change very quickly in Thailand--a new construction project can appear next to your once quiet home, new noisy neighbors can move in next door.
Rentals are very reasonably priced and available in just about every building.
Won the game of life? Not yet. Still playing and I hope I have a few years left.
My advice is to move to Thailand when you're in your twenties or thirties. Then it isn't necessary to try to think that you're forty-five.
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