So, yeah. Here I am in Thailand. Why? Sometimes, when a man gets round trip tickets to the other side of the world for less than $600, a man’s just gotta go, you know?
I’ve been here once before, two years ago. And now I’m back.
This place stinks. It smells like trash and durian and fetid tropical dumpsters. It’s too hot. It’s more humid than a sauna. The traffic is insane. It’s filthy. I fantasize about running rampant through the streets with a pressure washer. There are staggering levels of poverty on display. The pavement is uneven. Buildings are thrown together. Everything is falling apart.
The Thai people are wonderful, gracious human beings, but the tourists are the biggest bunch of assholes you’ll ever want to meet. Snobby douchebag backpackers in paisley parachute pants and dreadlocks, do you even yoga, bro? Annoying flocks of Chinese grandmothers. Subtly condescending European retirees on holiday. Bald, troll-like German expat whoremongers in tank-tops with hairy shoulders. Loud, stupid drunk Australian teenagers.
So why do I love this place? I don’t know.
There’s something about this crazy, ancient city that keeps me coming back.
As usual, when I travel, I am surprised at what a solitary endeavor it is for me. I’m too old and square for the backpackers. I’m too young for the retirees. I have too much dignity for the whoremongers. I’m too introverted for the party crowd. So why am I even here?
This place is hard to explain. It is so many extremes, so many contradictions. So organic. It’s like what a city might be if nobody were in charge, and yet, somehow, it all just worked. It’s chaos, all the self-organizing splendor of a flock of birds or an ant’s nest. I’ve never met a friendlier people. It boggles my mind, how these locals, after being inundated with hordes of brash, ignorant tourists (not excluding myself) for generations, can continue to be so damned nice.
And so, even if I’m usually keeping my own company, even if I’m just reading a book and drinking a cappuccino in one of the hundreds of little coffee shops and restaurants in the old city and watching the world move by, like a post in a stream, somehow I just enjoy being a part of it.
Cheap food, cheap beer, cheap coffee. Wonderful, gracious, welcoming locals. A beautiful, vibrant culture.Thai massage for ten dollars an hour. No, not that kind of massage. An ancient, living city that manages to somehow be completely frantic and completely laid-back at the same time.
I haven’t explained it half as well as I’d like to, but I’m hungry and I need to go get some pad see ew for the equivalent of three dollars American.
Matt Kincade
Chiang Mai, Thailand.
I need to go to thailand. I hope it is not all hype
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Well, like I said, it’s a complicated place. It probably isn’t for everyone. But at the very least it’s safe and cheap, and it certainly is an experience.
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That is awesome! Check out my blog when you get the chance
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Apart from ahole tourists sounds nice. Enjoy.
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Don’t get me wrong, it’s a good time. But the hostel crowd can be frustratingly clique-ey, compounded by the fact that people tend to make assumptions about guys traveling solo to Thailand.
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neat, succinct, combining the “apparent”* extremes — how does this place run w/no discernible order? makes me almost wanna go there too ~
*i think your consideration and embracing the yin/yang crazy/sane chaos/yet “ordered niceness” wraps your post up nicely
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