Jump to content

Bangkok Post Letters Page.


Griffin

Recommended Posts

There was an interesting letter in the post today with the writer askng why Thais won't take a seat next to him if there is even a rusty spike to sit on.

I have noticed this many times. On a few occasions Thais have slid across to a seat that becomes empty. I am assured my hygiene is above question. So, why do they do it?

I imagine some females might not want anyone to see them and presume they are with the farang stranger.

Or is it that Thais are not very cosmopolitan? Along with the more dubious benefits of multi-cultureism it has at least exposed me to other colours and cultures and don't feel the need to leap out of my seat when the next one is occupied by someone different to myself.

Discuss.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 77
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

No one would be rude enough to tell you that you stink :o

I have not noticed that problem at all ... are you dressed appropriately? Is there something about you that is sketchy?

Really I haven't seen this as a problem at all

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hmmm,

This has happened to me (on the odd occasion). I'm always well showered and never look scruffy & it should be said that it doesn't happen all the time by any stretch of the imagination. However, without being paranoid I can say that it has happened. People have been walking swiftly to claim the seat next to me and then seen its a westerner and made swiftly for another seat!

I think it happens for a number of reasons. For girls the most obvious reason would be trying to avoid being seen as a mia farang. I can understand why they want to avoid awkward looks. I don't want to know why others do it as its a depressing thought.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've noticed this several times on the Skytrain. All seats taken, with people standing, next station a fair few get off, and there is a seat vacant opposite me. The little lovely sitting next to me gently slides over to the other seat.

Doesn't happen all the time, but noticable :o

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've noticed this several times on the Skytrain. All seats taken, with people standing, next station a fair few get off, and there is a seat vacant opposite me. The little lovely sitting next to me gently slides over to the other seat.

Doesn't happen all the time, but noticable :o

Perhaps she keeps moving because you mutter ''Lovely ... loveley ... lovely'' under your breath, while fingering your tie and drooling. :D

Link to comment
Share on other sites

:o

This does not only happen in Thailand. It happens in HK or other Chinese places as well.

Having grown up in HK, I have to say I do the same. I am not very sure why. Maybe it is the uncertainty of not knowing what is going to happen next if one sits next to a farang. How I am going to react if he starts up a conversation. For I don't speak very good english. Funnily enough, I am half a farang and I notice people doing the same to me.

Nowadays, I am more confident of communicating with farangs, so the main reason would be I hate to sit next to a man.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Seen it several times on the bus going down south where the attendant always does his/her best not to fill the seat next to me except when the bus is full.

I do smell though after a night of flying and boozing :o

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I never notice that in Thailand but in Japan when you are a gajin it's a other story.

On my last trip at Narita airport I went to day room & shower to wash and take a nap, it was 8h00 in the morning and the airport is almost ampty. I ask for a day room but "sorry sir no day room available, all rent a this moment. You did not see the sign outside" no I dis not see the sign (the sign was there when I got out) so I rent a shower room, going to the shower room I notice that all day room door are open and there is no one there, I go back to the desk to enquire about that and again the answer is "no room available" so I ask the lady with a piss out attitude why she would not rent me a day room, she look at me in a panic mode not knowing what to do and not to say. I ask her if they had a policy for not renting day room to foreigner and she replied that her boss gave her order not to rent day room to gaijin, she said that using the word gaijin. I insist to have a day room and raising my voice so everybody could hear that I was piss. She comply to stop the confrontation and rent me a day room, coming out to take my next flight she said "my boss will kill me when he see the credit card slip with a gaijin name on it".

When you are a gaijin in Japan you are nobody.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hum, it's interesting that you note that about some Japanese people with gaijin. I know a Japanese girl who is simply lovely. She is Westernised - and she can just get along with absolutely anyone. She invited me and a couple of work colleagues to her birthday party, and her Japanese friends are some of the most awful people I had ever met.

One of them took it upon themselves to half bake a takoyaki for my colleague (that is batter with octopus inside) and shriek with delight when my colleague bit into it and squinched up her face in disgust. Another person gave me a bowl of porridgy noodles and told me that I probably wouldn't like it. I actually did like it, which the people sitting at my table didn't seem to enjoy, so a guy next to me started imitating my voice and gestures, at which everyone roared with laughter. They then shut me out of conversation, so my colleagues and I decided to leave.

I don't really like my cousin's wife - she's Japanese, and I was talking to her about Thailand and my favourite things to do while I am there, and she said something along the lines in the beginning that I probably liked it because it was different to what I am used to. I thought the way she said it was a bit condescending as she already assumed that was why I liked it. I told her that heaps of Japanese people live in Thailand, which put her out a bit :o

But they're not all like that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i like jap people, when i first met my gf she was living with japanese overseas students, they had a party with 9 girls and just me, they all got so hammered they started kissing eachother, like french kiss which was brought on by a big brother uncut commercial on TV.

Some of the girls even telling us about there sex lives.

I thought they were great.

whats a gaijin?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i like jap people, when i first met my gf she was living with japanese overseas students, they had a party with 9 girls and just me, they all got so hammered they started kissing eachother, like french kiss which was brought on by a big brother uncut commercial on TV.

Some of the girls even telling us about there sex lives.

I thought they were great.

whats a gaijin?

A Farang mate, in China/HK you'd be a Gwilow!! and I'm sure every country has a nice naem for us white folks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i like jap people, when i first met my gf she was living with japanese overseas students, they had a party with 9 girls and just me, they all got so hammered they started kissing eachother, like french kiss which was brought on by a big brother uncut commercial on TV.

Some of the girls even telling us about there sex lives.

I thought they were great.

Please PM me the other 8 girls contact numbers or email... thanks :o:D

Explorer :D

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I notice that a lot of farangs like to openly stare at women on the train.

Not just look at, but stare non-stop like they were watching a movie. And if they're with a friend, they'll often wink at them, as if no one else in the train knew what they were thinking.

Not all of course, but mostly scruffy-looking types. I don't see the professional and older farangs doing this however - maybe it has to do with maturity levels.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Important not to generalise, but I think a lot of Thai people don't want to sit next to a farang in case of a conversation starting up, a lot of Thai people - even those that speak quite good English, are very very shy at using it! Never noticed this on the sky train (middle class/ cosmopolitan) but on cheaper forms of transport particularly outside Bangkok it happens.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i like jap people, when i first met my gf she was living with japanese overseas students, they had a party with 9 girls and just me, they all got so hammered they started kissing eachother, like french kiss which was brought on by a big brother uncut commercial on TV.

Some of the girls even telling us about there sex lives.

I thought they were great.

whats a gaijin?

Gaijin is a term broader than "farang": a non-Japanese.

Thais have other words for different foreigners (not American Africans, they are "farang dum") but for Somalis, Pakistanis, Indians.

My experience with Japan, after almost 3 years here is quite pleasant. True, I have never been on trains (live 640m from the office, Shinjuku-Yoyogi, walk to all the places I want to go to). So much so that I am even questioning myself should I ever leave this safe and polite haven.

As for moving to a next or a far away seat to pre-empt showing their incompetence in English I found a cure for it (not on the trains but in restaurants and in the street) : as soon as I speak up in Japanese, they feel comfortable and talk back in English, whatever they know of it.

As for being "nothing" if you are a gaijin in Japan as another poster said, I would argue that. Not my experience.

After Japan, coming to Thailand, Land of Smiles, all that looks like a country of rude bastards, starting from immigration (that have never done anything unpleasant to me, just their surly faces as if someone just finished beating them up).

True, in some way, Thailand felt like LOS when coming from Australia. But not after Japan.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As for moving to a next or a far away seat to pre-empt showing their incompetence in English ...

... and consequent loss of face (seemingly much worse in Bangkok than Tokyo, IME). I'd always assumed that was the reason but I asked several Thai friends today and they all thought about it and reckoned that that is why they move. (Does that make sense? I'm drinking and typing.)

Happy Songkran! Stay dry!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I notice that a lot of farangs like to openly stare at women on the train.

Not just look at, but stare non-stop like they were watching a movie. And if they're with a friend, they'll often wink at them, as if no one else in the train knew what they were thinking.

Not all of course, but mostly scruffy-looking types. I don't see the professional and older farangs doing this however - maybe it has to do with maturity levels.

Yes, they stare like wild animals. This is genetically pre-determined to insure the continuation of the species. :o Used to do it myself until I realized how psychotic it looks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.










×
×
  • Create New...