Well, what a couple of months. I was hunkering down for a third year in the Hat when an offer came out of the blue. A chance to return North. I swallowed the inevitable pay cut and started making plans.




Was sad to sell the little Suzuki 125cc automatic Rice Rocket - loved crawling round the sticks on it. My landlord (retired copper) snapped it up. 9k? Bargain. There he is signing the green book.

It was time to return ....... for a week.
Waiting at Bangkok's Heathrow was an old student. Taught him maths in Trang in 2009. He's high up in the airport security game and I was grateful for his company that night. Staved off feelings of loneliness that always seem to manifest themselves in airports.



Northumberland really is "the sticks". It's England's most rural county.
Suffered reverse-culture-shock back there. The best thing was being able to drink tap water. It tasted great and was ice cold. Awesome. The worst thing was using toilet paper. Felt filthy the whole time. Disgusting.


Another shot of him having a tab. Canny backdrop.


Edinburgh's drank deeply from the "Diversity-is-Strength" well. Was walking around Waverly Station when a young black woman asked (in broken English) if I'd like to go on a £17 bus tour. Now that's authenticity right there! Could almost smell the deep-fried-mars-bar. The sight of this sub-Saharan selling traditional Scottish-ness invoked images of Rabbie Burns postulating "The best-laid schemes o' mice an' men Gang aft agley." I politely declined in my best Jock brogue.

1. Lots of people drinking at 9am on a weekday.
2. Jeans and a polo shirt made me the best dressed there.
Bought 10 x 200g bars of dark chocolate from ASDA for £10 to bring back to Thailand. Still got two left. Aroi.
Spent much time browsing old photos. Got emotional. If there's one thing I learnt from going home, it's that I absolutely made the correct decision to leave.
It was good to see what's left of my family and I enjoyed the contrast but the whole time I was pining for Thailand.


Managed to get a shot of the Burj Khalif in Dubai. We also flew over Baghdad - looked pretty all lit up. Thought about how the RAF would've flown over Iraq at night too.
F*cking Blair.


Where else should we meet but Nui's shop - complete with updated bar. Good catching up.
Only took a day or two to find a new room nestled in rice fields 20km south of CM. Couldn't be happier.



So, having arrived in CM in Oct 2013 with the intention of retiring here (aged 39), it's now 2019 and I'm back after a 2.5 year hiatus in Xi'an and Hat Yai. Who knows? Retirement might be back on the table.
If not, I'm happy to stay busy teaching IGCSE and A Level Maths at my new school. Looking like a pretty decent gig so far. Fingers crossed. Je suis Anglais mais j'adore la Thaïlande.
The life of Riley!
ReplyDeleteAlways great to read ya blogs marra, shame I missed ya when you were home, the night you and craig were going to go to the club i had to fulfil my committee duties and call the numbers for the Thursday night Hoosey. Maybe next time in a decade or so eh? keep doing what ya doing mate and maybe I'll get a chance to come and visit you sometime. Millsy
ReplyDeleteDiversity is the strength well, 555!
ReplyDeleteCanada leads the way in this matter, trully.
I was given the gig teaching in Hua hin, but opted out in favour of more China years. Hehe. Off to Nanning next month. I sure hope that stupid TM30 will quickly dissolve into the nothingness. And stay away from smoggy season, bud. Its getting worse up North, almost as bad as in Chinese interior. Bla... Yours trully, Alex Lapp.