Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Clear Eyes, Full Hearts, Can’t Lose


I love Lost, I enjoyed 24, but this was the first series that I could watch again and again. You know how I love putting my favorite songs on repeat? I could put this series on repeat.

I came home last night after watching Iron Man at Siam Paragon. By the time I took a shower it was 11.30 PM. I just got the Friday Night Lights DVD Toey burned for me, decided to pop it into the laptop and watch a few minutes of it. From the moment it started, I couldn’t stop.

The series is basically about the events surrounding the Dillon Panthers, a high school football team in small-town Texas, Dillon. It revolves around the players in the football team, as well as Coach Taylor and his family.

Toey had been telling me for a year and a half now about how great the series was. How it should’ve gotten higher ratings despite the critics saying how great it was at exploring the personal development of the central characters and at portraying the realness of Middle America.

I was pretty tired then, but I really wanted to see what this series was all about because Toey loves it. LOVES IT.

And it’s not just a show about high school football.

The characters and their relationships are very realistic. These are people dealing with pressure and expectations from the town, family, and themselves. For anybody who’s been on a school team, or have a passion for something, you will understand. You don’t have to be a jock to enjoy this show; you don’t have to know anything about football. It's just a great show that we all can learn from.

You may remember the movie Friday Night Lights, which I thought was OK. It’s a lot better that the movie. The acting is really good. The dialogues are great. And the music really brings it all together. The background music is performed by a band call Explosions in the Sky. They play instrumental rock. It’s beautiful. They’re really good at building up your emotions, which I think is a huge part in making this series successful as well.

By the way, the actor playing Coach Taylor is Kyle Chandler, the guy from Early Edition. Remember that series? I really liked Early Edition too.

So watch it. I’m so excited about this show and I’ve only watched the first episode.

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A Whopping 70%

Just read this from The Nation:

"A recent global sex survey found that 70 per cent of Thai women cannot achieve orgasm. Others reach orgasm through masturbation or having sex with another woman, while 79 per cent of Thai men climax during sex, according to research by condom manufacturer Durex. The survey was conducted in 26 countries and questioned 26,000 respondents about their sexual behaviour and attitudes."

High number 'eh? I remember reading somewhere about the type of lover guys are from different countries. For example, German guys may be gentle lovers. American guys may be aggressive lovers. And so on.

Maybe Thai women are just harder to please? So guys, start giving more!

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Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Equal Rights and Punching a Girl

About a week or two ago I went to Curve, it’s a bar on Ekamai Rd, packed with young adults. I hate that place.

Or I’m just getting too old to fight for my space. It’s incredible and ridiculous how crowded it can get inside bars here. There’s got to be some kind of law in Thailand about how many people can fit inside a building because it’s certainly not safe and a fire hazard. When Toey spilled a drink and broke his glass, I couldn’t even move to get out of the way. The floor was too packed, we were standing, and I had whiskey+coke dripping all over my toes.

Anyway, what I wanted to talk about was not the crappy music or the sweatshop I found myself in.

First, let me describe the setting. Our friends stood around a square table about half a meter in size. There were about 7 of us surrounding this table, could be more. Our other friends were at another table. I may be exaggerating, but it was so crowded that everybody was forced to just stand with their arms to their sides. We tried to enjoy the music by bobbing our bodies up and down. I really wanted to leave, a lot of us wanted to leave, but we just ordered another bottle. I tried to grow roots from my feet so that nobody can take my space. I was holding down my fort.

There was this girl at the next table, standing behind Toey. Now, let me describe Toey. He’s about 180 cm, normal-size built. The girl was probably 150 cm.

She said, “Excuse me.”

Toey scooted his butt inwards because he thought she wanted to walk pass.

No, she planted herself in that spot.

Toey thought to himself, “WTF?”

The girl started dancing.

Yes, with the arms waving, flying up and down. She really was being spastic.

So, Toey shoved his body backwards.

She kind of flew back.

I gave Toey a look to cool it.

She started to complain to the girl next to her. Her little guy friend tried to inch his way to stand behind her, I guess to “protect” her. I didn’t let him pass. He would’ve crowded my space.

We danced and tried to have fun. Then out of no where her friend started yelling at Toey. So Toey yelled back at her.

“What kind of guy are you?” [in Thai]

“What kind of ugly bitch are you?” [in English]

Knowing Toey, he would’ve punched her. Yes, he’s always been an advocate of equal rights, and this was no exception. And I support him. And it really annoys me when Thai girls start talking smack. They sound like those bitchy, high-pitched toy dogs barking. They even start looking like one if you have great imagination.

But at that moment, I wasn’t in the mood for fists flying. And being a pacifist and non-confrontational I said, “Jai yen yen,” which means “Chill” in Thai. I really didn’t want him to hurt her and things to turn ugly.

But if it did, I probably would’ve ran to the car and gotten out the baseball bat.

So really, guys, would you punch a girl?

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Monday, April 28, 2008

The Sound of Fake Generosity

For some reason I’ve always heard that Thai people are known for their smiles and generosity in helping other people.

And for many reasons I’ve always felt that it was tourist propaganda just to get people to visit Thailand more.

I don’t believe that Thai people smile more than other countries. If anything, they just smile because they don’t know what else to do. Ever heard of this? The best way to deal with any difficult or uncomfortable situation is to smile. I actually think that this is a skill worth having, especially if you want to be deceiving and fake. As for generosity? Well, they’re just waiting to take advantage of you.

The reason I’m talking about this is because I came across a really popular blog by Matt. I’m sure some of you may have heard of him. He’s the guy that goes to different countries and takes videos of himself dancing. The blog is call, “Where The Hell Is Matt?” I like his blog because he’s just really straightforward and opinionated. It’s a great way to learn about a country from his first-hand experiences albeit we keep in mind that it is just his opinion.

He’s been in Thailand before a few times and he hates it here.

He said:

“Right now you may be aching to inform me that Bangkok is a great city, you just have to know where to look. I reject that notion. Every city is a great city if you know where to look. Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia has some great nightclubs. I can point you toward a fantastic Indian restaurant in Kigali, Rwanda. A great city is one that astounds your senses without any guidance or direction. New York is a great city. Bangkok is unchecked urban squalor.” February 12, 2008

In his other posts, he goes on to describe his difficulties with getting people to help him. If anything, they just ignore his existence altogether.

“Last time I was in this country, I complained that people ignore you when you have a problem. I've read up on that a bit, and apparently it's a cultural thing here. They have incredible powers of denial. When someone asks an awkward question or behaves in a way that attracts attention, that person simply no longer exists.” June 7, 2003

Sad to say, I actually agree with him more, rather than feel offended.

I read some of the comments he got, and he definitely received a lot of bashing for writing this from expats who live here or the nationalistic people bursting with Thai Pride who only suddenly gave a crap about Thailand because a farang's trashing it.

My point is this. I think there are way too many people in Thailand who, for many reasons, always turn a blind eye to the issues that are wrecking the country. People here are inconsiderate, materialistic, dirty, narrow-minded, unorganized and lazy. They will do anything in their interest to find the easiest way out. They accept things too easily. There is something wrong with Thailand and people just don't want to see it. As long as it doesn't affect them, it's OK.

The gap between the lower, middle and upper classes are huge. More money should be invested in rural and educational projects. People don't care about who runs the country as long as their own personal interests are met.

There is, however, this thing call Chaos Theory, or more popular known as The Butterfly Effect by Edward Lorenz, which states that "small effects lead to big changes." Sure, we may not see the consequences of our individual and unrelated actions right now, but any ignition will cause a chain reaction in the future. I love Chaos Theory, but will talk about it more in another blog entry.

People have told Matt to give Thailand a chance, even to get out of Bangkok to see the beauty of the country, it's hidden charms. But I’m sure he’s seen more of Thailand than just Bangkok.

For me, Thailand has very minimal charm but lives on the hyped up illusion of a tropical country. I believe that people choose to live here only because it’s cheap, have an Asian fetish, is hiding from something/someone, or moved here because of their job. On the scale of things, Bangkok itself is a horrible city infested with cockroaches. Although there may be places in Thailand that's like paradise on the surface, Bangkok is rotten to the core.

I had a great talk with one of my friends from Penn State the other day who commented that the problem with Thailand is that most Thai people are great followers, and nothing more.

Here's the link to Matt's posts about Thailand.

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The Annoyances of Living in Thailand

If there are two things I find incredibly annoying in Thailand are doing my income tax and trying to get a reimbursement or claim from the insurance company or my company. I went to the dentist yesterday for a check-up and the cost was 820 baht. When I filled up the Expense Claim form this morning at work and submitted it to HR, I found out that you need a minimum of 1000 baht in order to get the money back, or get this, you have to wait 3 months for it.

Why? What's the point? Why wasn't it written somewhere? Why 3 months? It really frustrates me that I didn't know about this beforehand. I think companies in Thailand are so incompetent at notifying employees about their policies. I feel that they're all just trying their best to rip us off. And the problems are always usually the process and the lack of information.

I even made sure to read the Medical Insurance Guidelines before going.

Moving on to another issue, income tax. I didn't submit my income tax statement for last year because it was too confusing. And it's not that I just sat in front of the computer and just complained about it without doing anything. I went to HR and asked, they told me to read about it online. So I went online and read it. The Thai version was incomprehensible. I tried the English version, it was even worse. They cut out a lot of details and it didn't help at all. I went to HR again. I really don't understand. I'm pretty certain that I'm not the only person in this company who doesn't know how to do it.

It also doesn't help that all my colleagues are foreigners. Apparently, the company does the income tax for foreigners only.

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Sunday, April 27, 2008

When You Close Your Eyes

I felt so sad when I looked at my grandma's black and white picture at the funeral. There was a huge knot in my throat. I've never had somebody close to me die. I looked from the picture to the coffin. I imagined my grandma lying in there. A body that didn't move any more. It really got me thinking and believing that "life" is such a miracle. The ability to move, feel, communicate, and think.

It was difficult for me to be at the funeral. I just kept staring at her picture. I kept replaying how my grandma was when she was alive over and over inside my head. It was like watching an old videotape.

I kneeled in front of the coffin, closed my eyes and started talking to her inside my head. I said I missed her. I said that I hope she was OK. I thanked her for being my grandma and that I was happy to be her niece.

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Saturday, April 26, 2008

Conversations That Inspire

A good friend of mine from Penn State recently came back to visit Thailand for a few weeks. He's on the Thai national fencing team and is here for the Asian Qualifiers tournament, which determines whether he gets to go to the Beijing Olympics in August. And he won! So I'm really excited for him. He's so determined to get that Gold medal for Thailand.

The funny thing was that we never really hung out in college, but for some reason whenever we did talk, I would feel a great connection with him. There really are some people that inspires and motivates you, those that remind yourself of what kind of person you want to be, and I guess he's one of those people.

Ever since being back here, which has been for about a year now, I've felt a bit confused sometimes about myself and how I should act around others. I feel that people here are always putting up a front, and it's so fake. It's hard to figure out who's sincere. For me, he is so real, never pretentious. And it reminds me that I should just be myself more around people, because I don't need to please everyone.

We have really great conversations, ones that I can never imagine talking to other people here about, except for the really close friends from high school.

I'm really happy that we managed to catch up after all these years. He's really well-rounded, well-read, and knowledgeable about a lot of things ranging from literature to politics. He's very opinionated and I think that's the best part about him. He's never afraid to speak his mind.

I think we forget sometimes of the type of person we truly like. Sometimes we forget and just accept anybody that comes across our paths. And I'm glad that he reminded me again of what kind of person I like, and more importantly, what kind of person I don't like.

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Friday, April 25, 2008

The Picture of Death

Have you ever pictured somebody you love dying? Do you remember how it felt? It’s such a horrible, sinking feeling in your heart. For some reason, when I’m lying in bed at night, I would sometimes imagine or have these haunting dreams of my mom or Toey dying. And it breaks my heart in such a different way.

It only takes a matter of seconds before the tears wells up in my eyes and all you can hear in the middle of the night are my sobs penetrating the still darkness. I wonder why I do these things to myself.

I do know though, that I’m affected so much by their deaths only because they are the two people I love the most. My mom being the connection I have of what a family is, and Toey for bearing my endless pain and loving me.

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The Earth and the Ocean

If he was a rock, the patient Earth that supports life, I am the ocean that surrounds him, sometimes a tempest, sometimes calm.

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A Bond That Cannot Be Broken

There’s only a few that you could feel that way with. It’s these people that have really come to accept you wholeheartedly when others have ignored you. It’s these people you want to protect because they give you a reason to continue living.

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Burying Myself with This Letter

I spent the whole day at work writing a letter about how I felt. I typed out what I wanted to say, and then I wrote it out on a piece of notebook paper. Here is the first part of what I wrote:

“I feel that writing this would maybe make you understand why I’m doing this better than saying it to you. It’s so difficult for me to explain myself.

We’ve had this discussion countless times before, and in the end I would always be too scared to follow through with it. I would feel better and secure because I still have you to support and listen to me. But I would feel as though I didn’t solve anything about myself.

I don’t want to ignore my fear of abandonment. When these feelings become too much, I want to hurt myself. I would feel as though I don’t deserve to be loved because there is something wrong with me.”


Sometimes I wonder if there is truly something wrong with me, if I actually think that there is something wrong. I’ve always heard that if you say that you’re crazy, then in actual truth, it doesn’t make you crazy because your brain is still logically trying to make sense of your being.

There’s more to the content of the letter than I’m actually writing here. But I can’t post it here, just because it’s so personal, and even though this is my blog.

I gave the letter to Toey.

And I felt as though I made a huge mistake.

I cried so much.

I really wanted to be better. And I was so scared. I felt that if I didn’t become better, I would lose him someday.

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RAIN

There’s an unbelievably soothing sound I hear whenever I listen to rain hitting against the roof of my house or knocking against my window pane.

It’s been raining really heavy these past few days and I love it. It’s as though the sky is falling and crushing me. It’s as though the world disappears as rain blankets any trace of existence.

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The Likeness of Love and Ink Blots

When somebody says they love you? Do you believe it? For me, I’ve always listened to it with a pinch of salt. I don’t believe that falling in love is immediate, and that there’s no such thing as love at first sight. Sure, maybe attraction at first sight, but definitely not love. Love is a feeling that grows.

There’s this quote I found by John Money, a psychologist, when I was researching about love that I can really apply to myself:

“There is a rather sophisticated riddle about what a boyfriend (or girlfriend) and a Rorschach inkblot, have in common. The answer is that you project an image of your own onto each. In many instance, a person does not fall in love with a partner, per se, but with a partner as a Rorschach love-blot. That is to say, the person projects onto the partner an idealized and highly idiosyncratic image that diverges from the image of that partner as perceived by other people. Hence the popular idiom that love is blind, for a lover projects onto a partner, or love-blot, his/her unique love image, as unique as his/her own face or finger print.”


I’ve always thought that it was only me who thought like this, and I’m happy to find that there’s actually somebody else who think alike.

I’ve always felt that when guys start liking me, they don’t actually like ME. They project what they want to see of me, and judge me from how I act or what I talk about initially. They have expectations. Then it’s only when they get to know me more that often times I don’t live up to those expectations. Of course, this doesn’t need to happen over just a matter of month or two, it can occur over longer periods of time like up to a year even. And I hate disappointing people. Especially, when I’ve fallen in love with that person too. It hurts, you know, when the person you love expects so much from you, and wants you to be that idealized person they thought you were when they started dating you. It hurts when they can’t grow to love you as the person you truly are.

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Thursday, April 24, 2008

In That Sleep of Death What Dreams May Come

I had a dream about my dead grandma on April 14th. She passed away at the end of March around 4 am. These days, I can't help but be affected by her death. This was my dream:

I don't remember the first part. About what happened in the beginning. What I do remember was standing in a vast empty, flat space that stretched out for miles. There was nothing in the distant. The place was covered with a smoky mist. A light fog. The floor seemed gray, or maybe the color tone of everything was grayish, except for the fog that gave it a touch of white. The atmosphere was surreal, as though you were walking through a cloud. I don't remember if there was a sky. But there was definitely the grayish floor, in which I was standing on. It felt like cold, hard dirt. Maybe the sky was actually just another shade of gray also.

Despite the fogginess, what was odd was that I was not alone. I felt the presence of others around me. I didn't recognize any of these people though. Some were looking at me; some were walking in other directions. Crossing my path, walking behind me, going forward. There was no noise. Except for a swishing sound, like there was wind blowing although I didn't feel a breeze. They didn't seem rushed. It looked like they were just floating around. Maybe their feet did move, but it was as though they glided whenever they walked. They looked light. For those that did look at me, it was a cold, blank stare. No emotions. It was an ashen, pallid face. No smiles, no twinkles in the eyes. I think they were mostly wearing black.

Time didn’t seem to be an issue here in this space. Everything just seemed to stretch out for eternity, suspended in time. I had a sinking feeling, knowing inside that these people were not alive. But I tried not to know it.

I felt a tiny bit of anxiety standing there. I didn't know where I was. I was beginning to feel scared. Everything was a bit too eerie and sad. It was like a scene from an old, silent black and white film.

Then I saw a small cloudy gray mist, about the size of a small dog. It wasn't that far away from me. It didn't have a shape, and it seemed to distort every now and then. For a second I actually thought that it was a dog.

I was standing still, but it felt as though the gray mist came nearer to me, although it did not seem to move. Movement there seemed to slow down and pause, then start again. It was a constant flow of motion, yet it seemed still.

For some reason, I had a feeling that it was my grandma, who recently died. I don't know how I knew. Maybe it was the hope inside me that wanted it to be her. But I did strongly feel inside that it was her.

I was a bit scared, yet I felt warm inside. The warmth felt like the love I had for her, and the love she had for me. I felt protected, but I was scared because I knew she was dead. I couldn't see her clearly because it was still just a gray mist.

I didn't know that in dreams one can still imagine. But I started to imagine her face, her grayish-white curly hair. The face I saw whenever I went to her house as a child, sometimes wearing glasses, sometimes not. Then I pictured her face on the hospital bed, as she laid there hooked up to a machine that helped her breathe. Her soft, wrinkled skin. The breaths of air she painfully gasped. It was painful and hurtful. The thought of losing somebody and not being able to talk to that person ever again. It’s so difficult to be alive.

My heart ached. Not at how she looked. But at how I felt seeing her again.

The tears came. It flowed silently and gently down my cheeks.

Then I noticed that there was another person standing next to her. I couldn’t see him clearly also. But he wasn’t a gray mist, and I could make out the outline of a human body. For some reason, I thought it was my uncle. The one that was still alive. I felt confused, not sure why they were together. They just stood there, looking at me.

I couldn't tell or see how they felt. Maybe that was the hardest part of all. Because at least I hoped to see her smiling, happy and well. Instead, I didn't know, I couldn't tell. And that was it, the gray mist just stood still.

I woke up with tears in my eyes. I didn't understand what had happened. It was a dream but I woke up feeling so sad about her death. I thought to myself, why was that place so sad? A place where people seem to just wait or search for something.

The phone was ringing. It was the phone that woke me up. It was my mom calling to ask when I was going home.

Later that night my mom was talking about my grandma. She misses her. She said that it was difficult thinking that in this life, she would not see her again. She wonders if there will ever be another chance of being together, being her daughter again. It was sad, thinking that people have only one life to be with someone. It seemed so short.

I wasn't sure whether to tell her of my dream. It was kind of difficult. I wasn’t sure why. Instead, I asked if she dreamt about her. She said no. Sadly no. But she said my uncle did. The night she died, he dreamt that she was sitting at an old coffee shop back in her younger days, the one she always went to with my grandpa.

I thought, it's these old places in your memory that tears you up. Ones that are no longer there, or at least are changed. A past that cannot merge with the present.

In the dream, my uncle ran up to her and asked why she was sitting here. She said that she was waiting for my grandpa.

My grandpa died when my mom was 25. My grandma lived for more than 40 years without him. I thought to myself that she must be a very strong person to have lived without my grandpa for so long.

I still haven’t told her about my dream.

I wrote this because I didn’t want to forget this dream, especially this dream.

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All at Once

Hi. This is my attempt at creating a blog. Gotta figure this thing out. Seems pretty simple.

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