Sunday, December 16th, 2007
Smiles from Bangkok, Thailand
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Sawatdee khrab! My heart will miss the hearts of Thailand. People are so nice here. I am sitting in Queen of Thai Silk, a custom tailoring shop for traditional Thai apparel. The women next to me are sowing as I sit here. I don’t think they have any idea what I am writing about.

I am rushing to etch some memories of this heavenly refuge on paper to preserve its beauty in my heart. The girls are working with smiles. I love who they are and I just met them 20 minutes ago. Something about them makes them feel like family. I can see right through them; they are not very complex creatures. This culture is very welcoming, hard working, and…humble. Not flamboyantly proud, but satisifed and quietly content.

Outside, motorcycles catch my attention as I look up and gaze out through the window. Through the palm tree leaves, I see the Thai beach, crystals dancing in the fatherly son. The father looks down on Pattaya pleased with approval and continuance, diligently yet effortlessly serving its bounty. The leaves of the trees wave their fingers, tickling the air – hunched over the water – tending to their visitors, procuring shade.

The Thai ladies have silky coconut-soft skin, walking on the sidewalks of shops while they tend to their children or exchange innocent flirtatious smiles with passers-by. Free smiles are plentiful and go without earning here where the spirit roams free. The spirit has love, respect, an appreciation for life, food, animals, and family. I wonder what else they live for. It is absolutely amazing to see such a vibrant culture who is so full of the right character traits that is not on top of the world.

I am glad I was able to visit this land and understand their joys. I now understand the music. I sympathize with the poor, sick, and elderly as if they were my own family’s. I smile in admiration when I see strangers, wishing they could understand my cuckoo. They are not strangers! That word creates wide distances between the hearts. Just because someone across the world is different does not mean they are strange in the connotation of meaning weird.

One must seek to understand. One must wear their clothes, visit their land, eat their food, live their days and history to truly understand a people. I think people in America are too shielded from the true rip the skin off side of the world; really seeing what’s inside the world and its people and its history. When I lived in America, I thought the world ended between California and Maine. Imagine the effects visits like this could have on the world – it could really bridge the gap and make the world a more loving place. We have so much ignorance in the world, but I am not going to get into that and ruin the spirit. I love Thailand and I am definitely coming back soon!

Itinerary: Day One

  • Grand Palace – Emerald Buddha Temple
  • Canal Tour – Chopraya River
  • James Taylor Tailor – Sukao Thai Road
  • Royal Lapidary – Gemstone Manufacturer
  • Rot Sabeng Restaurant
  • Muay Thai Boxing – Ratchadamnon Road
  • Centre Point Hotel – 15 Petbury Road

Itinerary: Day Two

  • Pantip – Electronics Shopping
  • MBK – Apparel Shopping
  • CentralWorld – Shopping Mall
  • Shogu Bushi – Sushi
  • Tok Tok ride
  • Hollywood Disco – Live Performances

Itinerary: Day Three

  • Pattaya Beach…

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My name is Basim Mousilli (age 27)
I am an IT business consultant specializing
in advanced digital oilfield technology;
I am a computer nerd by profession
and adventurer by state of mind.



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