Sunset Over the Mekong River

Showing posts with label Bangkok. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bangkok. Show all posts

Saturday, January 22, 2022

A Year Ago Today

This week marks one year since we returned to Thailand after our COVID exile. And today is one year since we were let out of our quarantine room for 45 minutes to go out on the rooftop garden. So here are some of our quarantine photos from a year ago.

Breakfast that day was the American Breakfast. This thing they call an American Breakfast is something I've only ever had in Thailand. Before that, I never thought to eat hot dogs in the morning.

Lohas Residences - breakfast - American Breakfast
American Breakfast


After breakfast, we were escorted to the roof for 45 minutes in the fresh air.

Lohas Residences Rooftop Views 2021-1-23 13
Doing Laps in the Rooftop Garden


Lohas Residences Rooftop Views 2021-1-23 14
Rooftop Garden


Lohas Residences Rooftop Views 2021-1-23 15
Bangkok Views


For lunch that day we had Pad Thai. Something we have not had much since then since we have not found a place in our town that sells it. Along with that was a tapioca dessert shaped like flowers.

Lohas Reidences - lunch - Pad Thai
Pad Thai with Shrimp


Lohas Residences - dessert - tapioca gelatins
Tapioca Gelatin Desserts


Then in the evening we had massaman curry.

Lohas Residences - dinner - Massaman Curry
Massaman Curry


After being cooped up for a couple of weeks, I am much more appreciative of how nice it is to be able to get out and around. And we are glad to be living in a rural area where it is pleasant to bicycle through the fields and forests. Often when I'm out pedaling among the paddies I praise God that I get to live in such a beautiful locale. So, by contrast, here are some scenes from this past week.

Nymphaea pubescens Willd. Nymphaeaceae-Water Lily, บัวแดง 11e
Pink Water Lilies


Canoes in the Pao River 5e
Canoe in the Pao River in Kamalasai


Rice Paddies of Kamalasai 40
Newly Planted Rice Paddies


Kalasin Unpaved 5
Pedaling the Field Roads


Bombay restaurant Kalasin 4 - palak paneer
Palak Paneer at an Indian Restaurant in Kalasin


While the environment we find ourselves in now is much different than it was a year ago, the two are similar in that God is present in both situations. Whether we're stuck in a building in the big city or surrounded by the hope represented in the greening rice paddies, God is close by and ready to visit with us.

But as for me, how good it is to be near God! I have made the Sovereign LORD my shelter, and I will tell everyone about the wonderful things you do.
Psalm 73:28 (NLT)

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Convenience

As the time draws near for our departure from Bangkok, we realize that there are some things we will miss after we move away from Bangkok.  One thing that is very convenient for us here is the plethora of street vendors within a quarter mile of our place selling all kinds of food—both raw and prepared.

Pretty much every day we walk past a three-way intersection where the side street we live on meets the main road and where there is a pedestrian overcrossing to get over the main road.  At that corner are two of our favorite vendors.

Lek
Lek

Lek wheels his fruit cart to that intersection about 10 am each day and stays until about 1:30 pm, when he moves his cart elsewhere.  He parks his cart in front of a 7-11 that is adjacent to a massage parlor.  Lek has the most consistently sweet fruit.  We usually get pineapple, papaya and watermelon from him.  He also sells guava, green mangos and a fruit which is given the English name gooseberry, but is not even closely related to those species of Ribes that we know in North America.

It didn’t take long for Lek to realize that he did not need to put packets of sugar mixed with chili powder in the bags with our fruit.

There are other fruit vendors in our neighborhood as well, some have a slightly different selection of fruit.  Some vendors actually soak their fruit in salty sugar-water before putting it on their cart—can’t say I’m too excited about salty pineapple.  Perhaps they do this because they don’t know how to pick out the naturally sweet fruit like Lek does.  Some vendors prepackage their fruit on Styrofoam trays, which to me is just a waste of resources.  Most vendors cut their fruit up on the spot and then place it in plastic bags.

Aum and Waev 2
Waev and Aun
The other vendor we like to buy from is the coffee stand run by Aum and Waev.  This couple is very talkative and they help me practice Thai  by asking all kinds of questions.  Their coffee sells for 35 baht for a blended drink (just over a dollar) which is average for street vendors and about  1/3 the price one pays at Starbucks.  I never was much of a iced coffee drinker until I came to Bangkok where it is hot and humid pretty much all the time, so that I seldom drink hot coffee except early in the morning.  So perhaps once a week I will pick up a blended mocha from Aum and Waev on my way back from class.

Another thing that has been convenient for us in Bangkok is the public transportation.  One does not need a car to get around this town.  There are taxis, motorcycle taxis, three wheeled taxis, buses, the Sky Train, Subway, Canal and River Ferries, public vans and the regular train.  The one we have used the most has been the sky train. It is about the fastest way to get to places, so if the place we are going is near a stop we will take the sky train.  For the past year I have been carrying around a 30 day refillable sky train pass.  Since they are switching to a different system, this will soon be obsolete.
Sky Train Pass

The place we are moving to in Chonburi does not have many street vendors around like here in Bangkok.  It will take is a while to figure out things like where the best place is to buy fruit and cooked food. Chonburi also does not have as many public transportation options. So, while there are many things that we won’t miss when we leave the big city, there are some things that we will.

There are two very nice conveniences about the place we are moving to, though.  It is less than a quarter mile to our office and it is about 1/4 mile to a very large shopping mall (=air-conditioned refuge).  The mall has two large grocery stores in it!

As with any other move we have made, there are always adjustments to make.  But soon we will be into the swing of things in our new location.

And the good thing is that wherever we go God is already there.

This is my command—be strong and courageous! Do not be afraid or discouraged. For the LORD your God is with you wherever you go.” Joshua 1:9 NLT

Friday, March 23, 2012

Insanity

Bangkok Skies-8
The dirty skies of Bangkok (normally it is not THIS bad)
Yesterday I had to go see a  doctor to see if I am healthy enough to renew my work permit here in Thailand.  Among the conditions that are not acceptable for a work permit:
  • TB in the infectious state
  • Alcohol additction
  • Drug addiction
  • Stage 3 Syphilis
  • Severe manifestations of elephantiasis
  • Insanity
I’m glad he didn’t question me too hard on the last item.  I could see it now, “So you quit a nice job in order to take on a new one with much less pay and harder work.  You then moved out of a nice house in the suburbs and into a city where the air is toxic to breathe and it is so warm and humid all the time that you work up a sweat going upstairs in an elevator.  You must be insane.”

In my darker moments I sometimes wonder the same thing.  I remember when we started this adventure that I laid it all on the line—willing to even give up my life so that others may hear the good news of the gospel.  But somehow, subjecting my body to extreme physical conditions doesn’t seem to have the same glory attached to it as being a martyr for the gospel. 

I’ve been reading a book by a Thai author who paints a very dark picture of Bangkok and what people endure in this city because, as bad as it is, it offers more than they had in NE Thailand.  As I read it I find myself wondering if I want to agree with him or not, because if it is really that bad, then why did I purposely come here?

But it is all a matter of perspective.  We quit our jobs and moved out of our nice house in order to follow our Lord to a place where we can bring hope to a people who live in a culture devoid of such hope, which makes their spiritual environment far worse than  their physical one.  The joy we see we the eyes of people who come out of darkness and into light far outweighs any environmental conditions we may have to endure.  And if we do endure these conditions to better reach those who also must endure them, then it becomes not only an acceptable cost of doing business but a pathway to joy.

Stop deceiving yourselves. If you think you are wise by this world’s standards, you need to become a fool to be truly wise. For the wisdom of this world is foolishness to God. 1 Corinthians 3:18-19a (NLT)