Wednesday, 15 July 2009

Time to start dieting

I am now on a diet.

I visited my neighbour farang C the other night, where the most important item of business was weighing myself. I don’t have a set of scales at my place, as I worry that once I have them I won’t be able to leave them alone.

According to farang C’s scales, I weigh 95kg. I am 182cm, or about six foot for those of you who grew up pre-metric.

Yet I recall weighing in at 98kg the last time I went to the doctor – and I don’t believe I have grown any thinner since.

I suspect farang C’s scales are unreliable. They are trying to lull me into a false sense of security, which won’t do it all if I want to maintain my ‘fit and firm’ (to borrow the Thai, which in turn borrows from the English) appearance.

If I ever hit the 100kg mark, let me declare in advance that I shall feel so much in need of self-inflicted punishment that I will happily give the keys of this blog to Anon the Shrink (my psycho critic, who is sharing the love - he’s now dropping poison at BB’s blog).

Hopefully that unhappy day will not come to pass. Chef Maiyuu is doing his best to help.

See those strawberry cream desserts in the nip glass (pic no longer available - it disappeared)? They are tiny portions, which normally would suit not a big guy like me. But they have to do, as I am trying to lose weight.

He served the first strawberry dessert plain, then a second one with red whirls, or streaks. But that was my lot for the day: he didn’t offer me any other sweet goodies from his busy kitchen.

I examined myself in the mirror last night. Why is my stomach sinking? Is it merely the effect of gravity, or am I indeed getting bigger?

‘You have put on weight in the last week,’ Maiyuu announced last night, when I pressed him for an answer.

Drastic measures are needed – out goes the beer from my regular food intake. I have been taking a bottle every couple of days. I have also been pigging out on icecream – grabbing the carton from the fridge whenever I feel like it, sitting down in front of the TV, and having a sweet feed.

Okay, ice-cream is out too. Plus any sugar-heavy desserts from Maiyuu’s kitchen, such as fudge.

Monday, 13 July 2009

Friendship in the Land of Smiles


An anonymous poster asks whether I have any good friends who are Thais.

‘I have talked to other expats, [and ] besides their BF, they don't end up with any Thai friends because of the wide differences [between Thais and foreigners],’ he wrote in the shriek box.

I don’t have close Thai male friends in the Western sense. I don't invite anyone around to my place. I have no friends with whom I go out for meals. No one asks me to share his tales of woe or joy about girlfriend/work/family.

A woman from Esan runs a outdoors food place close to my condo. I have started asking her about her family (she has a teenage son, and a husband), and she has asked a few questions about me (‘How much is your rent?’).

I don’t know what lies in her sinews, so I wouldn't yet regard her a friend.

But where Westerners tend to be reserved until we get to know each other, Thais are more relaxed.

We can talk to a Thai, even a virtual stranger, about anything. It creates an illusion of family-style warmth and familiarity, which is similar.

In my first years here, I hoped fondly that the Thais I met socially would call me regularly, or invite me out with their friends or meet their family.

Experience put paid to that hope. The only people who tended to call were people who wanted something.

The others knew that if I wanted to see them, I could find them at our usual drinking place, or wherever else it was that we met.

These were young men from the provinces for whom Bangkok was not their main home, but the place they came to study or find work.

We might share a meal together at an eatery down the way, or go back to their place – usually a rented hole in a rundown apartment – to drink at 3 in the morning.

But I didn't want too much of that, as I am twice their age. I could have made more of their offer of friendship if I wanted, but I wasn’t interested.

Their closest friends tended to be Thais they grew up with in the same village, or with whom they went to the same school.

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My condo is popular with Thai families. Here, I can watch parents interacting with their children.

Yesterday, I saw a Mum talking to her son, who had just finished a tae kwon do class held at my condo. They were talking about his school exams.

I would have more in common with Thais of family-raising age than my old drinking friends, who were in their early 20s.

I don't know any Thai families at my condo yet.

I would be the 'ajarn' (teacher) rather than a family friend, as these are middle-class people, unlike the casual, working-class Esan folks I knew in the past.

We could get close, but not so much that I intrude in their space, as families are strange entities, and for the most part best left to themselves.

It’s too simplistic to say that we fail to bond because of our cultural differences, though those play a part.

Age differences are also important, as are differences in education and family background; all the usual things, in fact, which bind (or separate) people in the West.

Thursday, 9 July 2009

No thank you needed, young man

A Thai student stopped me on my way home from work. I was walking head down, scanning the pavement.

It was after 11pm, and the young man was wearing regulation university dress: white shirt, black slacks.

I wondered why he had not gone home for a shower and a meal. Why was he still out at this hour, away from family? 

'Do you have B10?' he asked in English.

'I do - is that all you want?'I replied, opening my wallet. I gave him B20, just in case he needed more.

Being Thai, he finds it difficult to say 'thanks', not because he's ungrateful, just because it's not something Thais do easily when someone older gives them something. They might wai the person; or, as this young man attempted to do, start a conversation, almost as a distraction.

'Do you work around here?' he asked.

I can't be bothered with small talk, which made him feel uncomfortable, so he asked a second time.

'Do you work around here?'

'Mmm,' I agreed.

He looked disappointed that I didn't respond in the face-saving way that was expected. He is starting a conversation, expressing interest in me to show he feels grateful.

But he needn't, as I am happy to help. I didn't want him stuck in this unpleasant spot (I work in an industrial area) either.

'Now I need to find a bus...' he muttered.

I left him to it. Much as I like Thai ways, I can't be bothered engaging in small talk simply because a simple 'thank you' culturally is too elusive. I resumed my journey home.

Wednesday, 8 July 2009

Iceblock addiction, gay identity issues, candle man memories

'I want suckies!' said boyfriend Maiyuu.

That's a cry for help if ever I heard one.

I put my gay identity problems (see below) to one side, to consider the needs of my boyfriend.

God knows what could happen if he doesn't get his suckies, I thought. I must put myself in his place to consider what his plight could be like - without, of course, 'projecting'.

Actually, I knew immediately what he meant. We are deeply in tune with each other's needs as a couple. You could say we have come out to each other.

'I will go to Carrefour to buy some. Would you like to come?' he asked.

This was Maiyuu's first invitation to me to accompany him outdoors all weekend. I had asked him half a dozen times if he wanted to go for a walk.

'No,' he replied - you can't buy suckies on the street, so no wonder.

Suckies are the coloured iceblocks you see above.

Neither of us is sure what else to call them. I am sure they come in packaging, but I have never looked at the name. We do know what to do with them, however.

Cut off one end with scissors. Place in mouth. As the flavoured iceblock melts, suck out the cordial, or whatever it is in its liquid state.

'I am too busy to go out, but I will wait for you,' I replied.

'I'll be just a tick,' said Maiyuu, as he left home.

We had no other reason to visit the Carrefour superstore other than to buy suckies, but it is the only place around here which sells them.

Half an hour alter, he was back with his beloved iceblocks. As I write, he has sucked his way through at least half a dozen of the tubular-shaped things.

They are addictive, especially in a climate as hot as ours.

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Just when life was getting dull around here, I thought, Mr Anon has come to the rescue.

You will recall that I left an invitation a couple of days ago to Mr Anon to have another go at the coming-out debate, which started in the comments section of Saturday's post.

He left one of the first comments which set off the discussion. Here it is again:

'It is our parents' responsibility to know us and accept us. If you can't be honest with your own family about who you are, it probably means you have a number of identity issues.'

Oh God, identity issues!

There goes my psychological right leg.

'You are suppressed!' And with that he cuts my left leg from under me as well.

I have lost count of the number of wounding epithets or labels which Mr Anon has applied over the years. I must truly be one sad gay bastard.

His remarks are designed to hurt, of course, but the language is couched in psycho-babble - what exactly are identity issues, pray tell, and why should we worry if we have them?

Are they curable, like Maiyuu's addiction to iceblocks?
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The Victoria Coffee House, Christchurch, 1985
When I was 17, an 'adult' friend liked taking me to a coffee house, stuck on the end of a busy one-way street like a barnacle on a ship's bum.

The coffee house, on the corner of Montreal and Oxford Terrace in Christchurch, New Zealand, had been there since 1968, and was a fixture to hippies, arty types, and other oddballs who liked to wile away the empty hours until dawn. It was unlit but for candles flickering away on each table.

Farang M introduced me to his friends, who, like him, were aged in his early 30s.

I thought they were impossibly sophisticated - especially when they pulled out the inevitable joint for a smoke around our moody table.

At the entrance was an enormous white candle, stuck on a platform like the Virgin Mary on a plinth.

Every night farang M took me there, a bearded man with long hair was sitting over the candle, with a fiercely dedicated look.

He held up simple domestic candles (the kind we used in blackouts as a kid) over the flame of the mother candle, to drip more wax onto its body, to make it bigger still.

This was his job. Rarely a night went by when I did not see him sitting next to the mother candle, tending to its needs. The candle had been growing there, on its noble perch inside the front door, for years.

He did not start conversations with anyone, just melt candles. The bearded one was well known in that part of town as the Candle Guy, and had been there as long as anyone could remember.

Occasionally a newcomer would ask what he was doing, and he'd give them a talk about his life's work.

Others knew better than to keep him back from such important business. Why interfere? He is busy dripping, so leave the guy alone.

At the coffee shop, for the regulars at least, life carried on - the owner served tables, customers smoked joints and ordered one coffee after another.

Other favourites from the smudged, hand-scrawled menu were toasted cheese sandwiches, and simple ice-cream deserts, served in cheap silver-metal bowls.

They also sold liqueur, but only in the late hours, as the place was unlicensed.

Eventually the coffee shop was forced to close as it made way for city expansion. Did the candle man have identity issues? He was odd, it has to be said, and I have no idea how he ended up.

Perhaps he had created another statuesque candle at home, and spent his idle hours building that one up, before his main public performance at the coffee shop at night.

At least there he had an audience. For who can be bothered with such a painstaking task if he has to work alone?

We are all a little strange. Mr Anon, does that mean we deserve to be condemned?

Anyway, before I forget it entirely, here is Anon's latest bitchy comment. I have removed one paragraph, which is no longer relevant to this blog. As for the rest, you are welcome to enjoy it as it was sent.

By the way: To all readers celebrating Buddhist Lent, Have a happy waxy one!

'It seems to me that in this pattern with your parents you follow suit in the same way as with your other relationships. You are happy to keep things on an unreal basis that is unthreatening to you, in one apparent way, because they are controllable.
'Clearly your public and very emotional- rather than rational - reaction to the issue of being out displays some insecurity about your identity and the place you really need to occupy in terms of your relationships in all 3 areas: home, work, and extended family.
'I suspect if you can avoid coming out, it relates to you psychologically in the sense of hiding- from yourself, from any real boyfriend, from your family. Thus my belief you have identity issues in general.'

Monday, 6 July 2009

The strident coming-out brigade


I'm not anti-gay; just pro-family...let’s put it like that, shall we?

But where everyone else is concerned, oh, yes - come out! Regular readers of this blog (well, most of those who have contributed, anyway) are in no doubt that telling our families is the best answer.

We owe it to our parents and ourselves to tell them what we are really like, they say. Otherwise, we lead worthless lives of deception.

The debate on whether gays should tell their parents about their 'true' selves started inadvertently, in response to Saturday's post.

I wrote mainly about symphony orchestras, but also mentioned the plight of a young Malaysian blogger who has told his parents he is gay, and whose Dad won't accept his declaration.

In this pro coming-out message left in response, here is reader Anon:

'Without this very important knowledge of who you are, the entire family is dealing with you on false pretenses (and you with them). There may be surface calm and serenity, but it is dishonest and not real; ie, it is not the real you who is a member of the family but a facade.'

Strong words! So if I have yet to come out, and regard myself as at least part-gay, I am duping my parents? I am wasting our precious time together as I put across a fake image of myself, merely to gain their acceptance?

Life would be nice if it were so simple. Maybe for the proselytising come-out brigade, it is.

Never mind that a gay man may no longer be a teen craving anyone's acceptance. Or that his relationship with his family may have covered many obstacles and joyous moments even in the absence of such a declaration. They might be happy with things the way they are.

The pro-openness movement says they can't possibly enjoy a meaningful relationship - no matter what else has happened, no matter what the age gap between offspring and parent, or each other's expectations of how parents and their children should behave.

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We just have to get the message out there at whatever cost, rub it in their faces, if necessary, to proudly proclaim the real us.

Sometimes the pro-openness message sounds dominant and assertive. 'Stop the lying, liberate yourself and your parents!'

At other times, it sounds oddly subjugated and timid, as if gays do not have the right to expect they will be accepted.

'NEVER despair. ALWAYS hope. GIVE love.'

Forgive me, but I don't see why we should allow ourselves to be brow-beaten by the 'come out' mafia, whether in assertive or submissive mode. No one solution will work for everyone.

Yet if I buck the trend and decline to tell my parents, will I pay a price?

'By delay[ing], you remove the opportunity to build a real relationship, which takes time and good will on both sides. The longer the 'imaginary' relationship persists, the harder it will be to overcome it,' says another reader.

Really? Parents are not as feeble as this argument suggests. They manage to cope with any manner of crises which their children present for their attention: unwanted pregnancies, drugs, serious illness.

Is the 'I am gay' declaration so earth-shatteringly important?

This reader, meanwhile, sounds like a politician stumping for election:

'Here is my stance - As a gay man / lesbian ... it is YOUR responsibility to come out and live out. Not only for your own well-being but the well-being of future generations of GLBT people.

'The reason so many parents (and cultures and societies) still (amazingly) have problems with GLBT people is BECAUSE we are ALL NOT OUT.'

Permit me to offer an opinion on behalf of the hapless minority who have yet to liberate their true selves, and discover the glory of asserting their gayness:

We are all not you. Nor do we have to care how beautiful your life has become since you confronted your parents with the news that you are not the man they might have thought you were.

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Many gays seem determined to foist the news on their parents no matter what.

They want to meet their own needs. What their parents think, or their siblings, friends, employees and so on, counts for much less.

These things should be negotiated and managed over time, if they are raised at all.

Questions for the strident pro-outers:

Other members of the family should be considered. If enough of them disagree, would you drop your insistence on being gay - or is it a non-negotiable stance?

Is being gay a non-negotiable part of you, for that matter? How much of you has to be gay before you reach the point where you simply must tell - 50%? 70?

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All of us have family responsibilities, roles which we are expected to play which have a value of their own, both to us and other members of the family with whom we interact.

As an uncle, for example, I would want to consult my brothers and sisters about what approach they would like me to take, as they have children who one day will be old enough to understand what being gay means.

Another challenge for the tub-thumping pro-gay brigade:

'It is not just about you - it something which affects everyone. So, the question is not just whether you are up to it - more importantly, are they?'

PS: I am ware that not everyone will agree, especially gay readers who have come out and liken the experience to the second coming of the Lord. You are entitled to your view, as am I.