Who woulda thought that "winter" in Thailand would actually mean feeling cold part of the day for a few weeks? After the first few months here I certainly never thought I would ever be cold in this country. I have been proven wrong.
Each night I clothe myself in a pair of long, comfy pants, socks, a t-shirt, and sweater not before heading outside, but before heading to bed. I curl up in my bed under my two light blankets and prepare myself for the night. My room is not insulated, has 14 ft ceilings, tile floors, and no heater. At night time the temp. may reach 49 or 50 degrees, sometimes lower. It may be a degree or two warmer inside, but not too much more.
Now you may be saying to yourself, "That's not that cold. Why is she complaining?" It's true. In most areas of Northeastern America these temps. aren't that cold. A huge thing to remember though is that at that temp. everyone would have some sort of heater running and everyone lives in houses that have insulation and sealed windows and doors.
I've made a list of the pros and cons of living here during the winter:
The good parts:
• I don’t have to use my air-conditioning (less money to pay at the end of the month)
• I’m not sweating all of the time (This makes me look a lot better not just because I’m not gross looking all of the time, but because Thai people don’t sweat. When I do, I look abnormal)
• It’s comfortable to be outside during the middle of the day
The bad parts:
• All building are designed to facilitate air flow and keep the rooms as cool as possible (When its 50 degrees outside, while its not freezing, it’s chilly enough that you don’t always want the room you’re in to be the same temperature as outside. For example, my office windows do not close. When it is windy outside, it’s windy in my office)
• Not a single building that I have been in has heat. (Imagine that your bathroom door opens to the outside and does not have a heating unit AND you have to take showers in a room that’s around 50 degrees. It can be pretty chilly)
• Most people here have a motorbike for their form of motorized transportation. I do too. (When it’s 45-50 degrees at night time and you have to drive somewhere that is 20-25 minutes away, you’re pretty damn cold by the time you get there. You have nothing protecting you for the rush of air as you drive and once you arrive you have no where to warm up)
• Most activities are done in open air rooms or outside at all times of day and night. (Eating dinner at an open air restaurant at night requires on to be bundled up an cold through most of dinner)
Now even as I'm finishing this post up, wintering is beginning to end already. It had a short run of a few weeks. I knew it was over today when I started sweating when I simply stood out in the sun. Here comes the hot weather :/
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1 comment:
MB! Great to hear from you, read your email and so happy to see you have a blog where I can click in to check on what's going on with you over in SE Asia.
Keep it up! Words do not do justice to how friggin amazing what you are doing is. I know it can be hard at times, I personally whimped out this time around during my short stay in Asia. You seem to have a good handle and positive attitude on it all. Keep it that way and you'll come away from this having grown a great deal.
Keep in touch and keep the blog going. You are a great writer. Crisp, to the point, articulate and good at keeping the reader engaged. No doubt!
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