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Occasional Gems Light Up Our Day, Help Preserve Our Sanity: Thai Opinion


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Posted

STREET WISE

Occasional gems light up our day, help preserve our sanity

Achara Deboonme

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With continued flood newsfeed from all channels particularly social media network and scenes of empty shelves at retail outlets, for most Bangkokians it is nearly beyond ones' ability to preserve their sanity.

Day in and day out, a big part of their conversations is devoted to floods. "Is your house flooded?" "Has your house been flooded yet?" "Is your house in a safe zone?" Will it stay safe?" Day in and day out, plus scenes of water creeping into this and that area of Bangkok and claiming more and more victims, these questions can rock the confidence of many and drive them towards insanity.

It is not easy to remain sane in this situation. But it is not entirely impossible.

Some shopping malls are closed but others are opening. That explained why Thailand's first Ikea store was packed on weekend. A shopper said: "Just look around. We can come back to buy our targeted items, after the floods are gone." Good say!

Some tweets are effective in livening up the mood. Singer-cum-volunteer Jetrin Wattanasin’s followers had a big laugh with his reply to a tweet asking for the benefits of EM balls: "The balls forced hi-so people to queue up (for the ball making)." Followers of conductor/composer Trisdee na Patalung were taken away from flood scare with his tweets on cocktail making.

On TV, news updates on flood and conflicts of the government and Bangkok in managing water could drive many crazy. But some programmes are giving us a rare hope, at the times when there seems to be no hope at all.

I was deeply touched by a news piece from Channel 3 last week. Amid news of conflicts between flooded and non-flooded communities over flood gate management, a community in Thon Buri remains in harmony though a sandbag wall keeps half of the community flooded. A resident in the flooded half was not dissent. She said nobody in the flooded half tried to tear the sandbags, as that would not help. Demolishing the wall means more victims, including monks living in the temple on the unaffected half. It's understandable why she was so generous, as residents in the unaffected half demonstrate their gratitude through medical help and food supplies.

I also enjoyed watching the "Whale" animated series, which educates the causes of this disaster and how we should cope with it constructively. Kids are told that 50 million whales are misplaced. Given that there are only three channels to bring those whales back to the sea and their ability to bring only 1 million whales to sea daily, it would take 50 days for the whales to return home. The next series urged evacuees at shelters to help each other. Its message is there will be only flood victims at the shelters if all are selfish. But if they help each other, the shelters will be full of volunteers.

Speaking of volunteers, a TV programme indicates that people of all ages can lend a hand even kids. "We're small and we can't lift a sandbag. Yet, we can serve the grown-ups with water," a kid said.

Thai PBS's "Krobkrua Diawkan" (One family) last Saturday was outstandingly inspiring. In a Lop Buri community with 50 households, a woman named Golf did her best to help her affected neighbours. She opened houses for flood victims and shared food. She used her Facebook account to report the situation to the outside world and ably got two fibre boats to ensure continued food supply.

"I lived a very poor life, with parents being construction workers. When I was young, I did my reading under a lamp and sometimes smelled burning of my hair. Yet, my mom told me to share what I had with others. She didn't say how that would benefit us. She just said we should help others when we can," Golf said.

In the programme, actor Fanden Janyathanakorn said despite conflicts here and there, this shows that Thais are living in the same family. Thais need to join hands, even though how lightly the hands are joined like now.

These keep me sane, just when I had to leave home in Ram Indra at the mercy of the floods. Hopefully, this piece helps lift up the mood and keep all sane. The worst will pass, though not as soon as expected.

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-- The Nation 2011-11-08

Posted

It's just like the Woodstock Festival.

"We Are Family" (Sly Stone)

"All Things Must Pass" (George Harrison)

That explained why Thailand's first Ikea store was packed on weekend. A shopper said: "Just look around. We can come back to buy our targeted items, after the floods are gone." Good say!

With 5,000 baht?..........................................jap.gif

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