The following paragraph is pretty rough, more or less a stream of consciousness that I scribbled in my journal a while back. At the time I think I was frustrated with my living arrangement in my room at the dorm. I thought of it again now because I just moved to a new little apartment, and it reminded me of what's important in a place. Forgive the blatant disregard of the formalities of the English language, if you will.
I'm beginning to come to the conclusion that my enjoyment/contentment/happiness in a place is dependent of course on a number of factors, a major one of which is a history of relationship, love, shared life/memories there. That it is a place where I can remember times of shared life, love, laughter, relationship, of giving of life to each other. The places I can look back and say 'that's a place I loved to be, was comfortable at, at peace in, longed to be/go to,' are all places of shared life, love, etc. It's not the only factor of a place, of course, but with it, the absence of others, such as physical comfort, beauty, amenities, etc can not only be overlooked, but not even missed. And in its absence, a place lacking beauty, warmth (not just physically), ambiance, comfort, etc, pretty much just sucks, a lot of the time.
It's just one more confirmation of my sneaking suspicion that life, at it's core, is all about relationships, and the rest is just window dressing.
So I guess, for those of my friends who live here in Chiang Mai, this amounts to an invitation to come share life with me, and for those wonderful people who aren't in this place, to get your incredible, amazing, silly little selves over here to visit, or just to share life in what ways we can, from afar.
As usual, words (at least mine), aren't enough. So suffice to say:
I love you.
Love and Grace from Thailand.
-t
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Tuesday, August 5, 2008
Reflections on relationship (one topic among millions)
Why do our closest friends and family get taken for granted, when we put on our best for everyone else?
It's a question I've wrestled with on and off since childhood, and never been able to fully find an answer to, and so it's been asked in this little brain of mine, and then re-shelved, countless times.
Where does the balance lie between familiarity, comfortableness, and closeness in a friendship, and caring enough about a person to give them our best at all times, even when they don't ask for it? Between being used to them being around enough to start taking them, their presence, and their caring and love for granted, and caring and loving enough to offer ourselves, our time, our presence, even when they don't ask for it? Because maybe they don't ask for it because they know us well enough to know we value our private time, or they don't want to be a burden, or impose another item into our schedules, because they know we're busy enough as it is.
So who is it that gets our best behavior? Is it the people we happen to cross paths with every now and again, at the store, on the street? Or is it our nearest, dearest, and those closest to us?
And which of those groups then gets taken for granted, not hated but ignored (maybe not ignored even, just unnoticed, or even just unappreciated)? Why does familiarity breed contempt sometimes, if you'll forgive the triteness?
Is it because we know they love us, care for us, and give us their attention and approval regardless, and so we're comfortable just being ourselves, not putting on a face, a front, trying to seem polite, friendly, make a good impression? That's valid. It's important to have relationships close enough to be real in, to be candid in, to be grumpy in sometimes. Perhaps even they're our close friends because the relationship is that comfortable, that unconditionally loving.
But where is the line between being close/comfortable, and not sharing our best with them as well? And why do we feel we must put our best forward with strangers all the time, and with our loved ones only some of the time?
That's not to say we shouldn't be nice, friendly, loving people towards those we don't know/know well. And it's not to say that we shouldn't ever "let our hair down" with our closest. It's just to question where the priorities are, where perhaps they should be, and what that may look like.
Because we would, of course, go out of our way, do anything, for our loved ones, probably without even feeling imposed upon, if they'd ask. Strangers ask all the time for things that impose upon us, and we're fine giving of our time, our selves, our lives.
But the fact that they are our closest, our loved, our friends, means they know what that costs us, what it takes to add something else to our schedules, our brains, our lives, and they know how burdened those things are already, precisely because they're close to us, and so precisely because they're close to us, they don't ask.
So maybe what it looks like to give our best for our friends is to know what it costs them when we don't add them to our schedules, our brains, our lives, despite how burdened those things are already, and to add them anyway, without being asked. And to know them well enough to know when asking is going to feed back into our friends, even when they are truly busy, burdened, and full already, but wont stop on their own, and so to put aside feelings of imposing, and ask of them anyway, not of our own need, but of theirs, or both.
These thoughts are very much jumbled, very much raw/unedited/unorganized, very much a conglomeration of various thoughts over the years, very much a treacherous maze of pronouns, and very much a part of a bigger journey I've recently realized I'm on, to discover/define/understand what it means to be a person who lives, loves and relates deeply, to constantly and consciously be laying down my life for my friends, because greater love has no man than that, and I think that goes far far beyond being willing to give up one's life for his friends. I think it also means being willing to give of one's life, to share it, and give it to his friends.
No fingers are pointed, save at myself, and quite frequently at that. And no conclusions have been drawn, precisely for the purpose of inviting discussion, added thoughts, comments, questions, or snide remarks.
It's a question I've wrestled with on and off since childhood, and never been able to fully find an answer to, and so it's been asked in this little brain of mine, and then re-shelved, countless times.
Where does the balance lie between familiarity, comfortableness, and closeness in a friendship, and caring enough about a person to give them our best at all times, even when they don't ask for it? Between being used to them being around enough to start taking them, their presence, and their caring and love for granted, and caring and loving enough to offer ourselves, our time, our presence, even when they don't ask for it? Because maybe they don't ask for it because they know us well enough to know we value our private time, or they don't want to be a burden, or impose another item into our schedules, because they know we're busy enough as it is.
So who is it that gets our best behavior? Is it the people we happen to cross paths with every now and again, at the store, on the street? Or is it our nearest, dearest, and those closest to us?
And which of those groups then gets taken for granted, not hated but ignored (maybe not ignored even, just unnoticed, or even just unappreciated)? Why does familiarity breed contempt sometimes, if you'll forgive the triteness?
Is it because we know they love us, care for us, and give us their attention and approval regardless, and so we're comfortable just being ourselves, not putting on a face, a front, trying to seem polite, friendly, make a good impression? That's valid. It's important to have relationships close enough to be real in, to be candid in, to be grumpy in sometimes. Perhaps even they're our close friends because the relationship is that comfortable, that unconditionally loving.
But where is the line between being close/comfortable, and not sharing our best with them as well? And why do we feel we must put our best forward with strangers all the time, and with our loved ones only some of the time?
That's not to say we shouldn't be nice, friendly, loving people towards those we don't know/know well. And it's not to say that we shouldn't ever "let our hair down" with our closest. It's just to question where the priorities are, where perhaps they should be, and what that may look like.
Because we would, of course, go out of our way, do anything, for our loved ones, probably without even feeling imposed upon, if they'd ask. Strangers ask all the time for things that impose upon us, and we're fine giving of our time, our selves, our lives.
But the fact that they are our closest, our loved, our friends, means they know what that costs us, what it takes to add something else to our schedules, our brains, our lives, and they know how burdened those things are already, precisely because they're close to us, and so precisely because they're close to us, they don't ask.
So maybe what it looks like to give our best for our friends is to know what it costs them when we don't add them to our schedules, our brains, our lives, despite how burdened those things are already, and to add them anyway, without being asked. And to know them well enough to know when asking is going to feed back into our friends, even when they are truly busy, burdened, and full already, but wont stop on their own, and so to put aside feelings of imposing, and ask of them anyway, not of our own need, but of theirs, or both.
These thoughts are very much jumbled, very much raw/unedited/unorganized, very much a conglomeration of various thoughts over the years, very much a treacherous maze of pronouns, and very much a part of a bigger journey I've recently realized I'm on, to discover/define/understand what it means to be a person who lives, loves and relates deeply, to constantly and consciously be laying down my life for my friends, because greater love has no man than that, and I think that goes far far beyond being willing to give up one's life for his friends. I think it also means being willing to give of one's life, to share it, and give it to his friends.
No fingers are pointed, save at myself, and quite frequently at that. And no conclusions have been drawn, precisely for the purpose of inviting discussion, added thoughts, comments, questions, or snide remarks.
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Cold, Wet and Buggy
Ok, so the cold part is a blatant lie, or at least it's a relative term.
The rainy season is officially upon Chiang Mai. Well, I guess I don't actually know what "officially" constitutes the rainy season, so that could easily be a lie as well, or at least incorrect. Suffice it to say that it has started raining with some regularity. And when it rains, it pours, if you'll pardon the triteness. Of if you wont. That's fine too.
An interesting side effect of the rain is that most nights it's accompanied by wicked hatches of bugs, of many varieties, but mostly these little termitey things.
Yes, that's a word. They fly all around anything that puts out light, they're pretty annoying, and sometime in the night, they all fall to the ground and lose their wings, or perhaps lose their wings and then fall to the ground. Whatever the case, in the morning there are millions of termite wings all over the place. Good times!


(is it just me, or is there a gecko in here?)
The rainy season is officially upon Chiang Mai. Well, I guess I don't actually know what "officially" constitutes the rainy season, so that could easily be a lie as well, or at least incorrect. Suffice it to say that it has started raining with some regularity. And when it rains, it pours, if you'll pardon the triteness. Of if you wont. That's fine too.
An interesting side effect of the rain is that most nights it's accompanied by wicked hatches of bugs, of many varieties, but mostly these little termitey things.

Yes, that's a word. They fly all around anything that puts out light, they're pretty annoying, and sometime in the night, they all fall to the ground and lose their wings, or perhaps lose their wings and then fall to the ground. Whatever the case, in the morning there are millions of termite wings all over the place. Good times!


(is it just me, or is there a gecko in here?)
a small repentance
So I've been avoiding blogging for quite a while now.
Ok, avoiding is a bit stronger word than I intend. More like procrastinating, putting off, or some such related concept.
Allow me to elaborate:
Somewhere down the line, I got it into my head that the things I post on my blog had to be deep, thoughtful, intelligent, articulate, and incredibly meaningful. Those are great and all that, but I've realized, or rather, slowly come to the realization, as I frequently and regularly berate myself for not blogging, that the need to only post things of a certain, shall we say, caliber, is really just my own vanity and pride speaking.
Not that it's bad to communicate deep things, or to communicate things in an articulate manner, but I've decided that if I only allow my colleagues and friends to share in my thoughts when I think those thoughts are worthy of sharing, I'm really painting a picture of myself that isn't true. While those things may or may not be a part of who I am, the desire to have only those things displayed on my blog is a thinly veiled attempt by my ego to make myself look good.
So having said all that, with far more words than is necessary, I'll say this:
from this point forward, my blog will contain frivolity, random silliness, and some general level of lightheartedness, in addition to any other serious and deepish things that may come up from time to time.
I'm not writing some epic piece of literature here (I have some friends capable of this, but I'm not), I'm sharing my life, and that includes things like my odd fascination with bugs (coming soon). Now that doesn't necessarily mean I'll be flooding the so-called blogosphere with masses of posts all the time, but I wont be holding back on fun little tidbits because I don't think they're cool enough.
So, if you don't want to read my verbose meandering thoughts above, here's the summary: Tony's blog is now Tony: uncensored and unedited. ish.
Peace.
P.S. Yes Leah, the posting of this article was directly prompted by your little gibe, but in my defense, I actually wrote this post over two weeks ago. I've just been putting off posting it. How's that for irony?
Ok, avoiding is a bit stronger word than I intend. More like procrastinating, putting off, or some such related concept.
Allow me to elaborate:
Somewhere down the line, I got it into my head that the things I post on my blog had to be deep, thoughtful, intelligent, articulate, and incredibly meaningful. Those are great and all that, but I've realized, or rather, slowly come to the realization, as I frequently and regularly berate myself for not blogging, that the need to only post things of a certain, shall we say, caliber, is really just my own vanity and pride speaking.
Not that it's bad to communicate deep things, or to communicate things in an articulate manner, but I've decided that if I only allow my colleagues and friends to share in my thoughts when I think those thoughts are worthy of sharing, I'm really painting a picture of myself that isn't true. While those things may or may not be a part of who I am, the desire to have only those things displayed on my blog is a thinly veiled attempt by my ego to make myself look good.
So having said all that, with far more words than is necessary, I'll say this:
from this point forward, my blog will contain frivolity, random silliness, and some general level of lightheartedness, in addition to any other serious and deepish things that may come up from time to time.
I'm not writing some epic piece of literature here (I have some friends capable of this, but I'm not), I'm sharing my life, and that includes things like my odd fascination with bugs (coming soon). Now that doesn't necessarily mean I'll be flooding the so-called blogosphere with masses of posts all the time, but I wont be holding back on fun little tidbits because I don't think they're cool enough.
So, if you don't want to read my verbose meandering thoughts above, here's the summary: Tony's blog is now Tony: uncensored and unedited. ish.
Peace.
P.S. Yes Leah, the posting of this article was directly prompted by your little gibe, but in my defense, I actually wrote this post over two weeks ago. I've just been putting off posting it. How's that for irony?
Wednesday, February 6, 2008
International Randomness
Ok, so living overseas sorta breeds encounters with random randomness, but I was hit with a moment of sheer randomness of near-ridiculous magnitude this evening.
So I'm sitting in a pretty nice restaurant in Chiang Mai, Thailand, with 4 Americans who I barely know, but am really excited to see. They were my first official visitors, and it was a great time. As if it wasn't random enough, I had just come from a Chinese New Year party hosted by the plethora of Chinese students at Payap, and to celebrate Chinese New Year, they made chicken dumplings and set off loud firecrackers. So then I'm at this restaurant, on Chinese New Year, with some Americans I don't know that well, and what should happen? Suddenly I hear a familiar guitar riff strike up behind me, from a stage I hadn't noticed in the restaurant. A breeze of relaxed music, which proceeded to become a full fledged Beatles cover concert by a bald Thai man and an acoustic guitar. And he was good. I couldn't help but smile, as I thought, "just another day in Chiang Mai."
So I'm sitting in a pretty nice restaurant in Chiang Mai, Thailand, with 4 Americans who I barely know, but am really excited to see. They were my first official visitors, and it was a great time. As if it wasn't random enough, I had just come from a Chinese New Year party hosted by the plethora of Chinese students at Payap, and to celebrate Chinese New Year, they made chicken dumplings and set off loud firecrackers. So then I'm at this restaurant, on Chinese New Year, with some Americans I don't know that well, and what should happen? Suddenly I hear a familiar guitar riff strike up behind me, from a stage I hadn't noticed in the restaurant. A breeze of relaxed music, which proceeded to become a full fledged Beatles cover concert by a bald Thai man and an acoustic guitar. And he was good. I couldn't help but smile, as I thought, "just another day in Chiang Mai."
Friday, January 18, 2008
Where I live
So having moved across the globe, my surroundings have changed a bit. Quite a bit. So here's a few frames of my new place.

So here's my building. It's called the Paradornparp International House. It's big.
(Click on it and it will get bigger. Same goes for the rest of these.)

When I walk in the door of my room, this is what I see.

My fun, unkempt blue bed

The workspace. Desks and shelves abound on this wall.


And the obligatory shots of the sun rising over the Wat (temple) that I can see from my window.
They've got nothing on the sunset over Doi Suthep (a mountain to the west).
So there's a snapshot, if you will, of where I live!

So here's my building. It's called the Paradornparp International House. It's big.
(Click on it and it will get bigger. Same goes for the rest of these.)

When I walk in the door of my room, this is what I see.

My fun, unkempt blue bed

The workspace. Desks and shelves abound on this wall.


And the obligatory shots of the sun rising over the Wat (temple) that I can see from my window.
They've got nothing on the sunset over Doi Suthep (a mountain to the west).
So there's a snapshot, if you will, of where I live!
Sunday, January 13, 2008
Graduate school felt like kindergarten today...
First day of class today.
The only class I have right now is my Thai class. It's divided into two sections: reading and writing, and then speaking and listening.
There are five of us in the class, from all over the world. There's a Brazilian who grew up in Spain, France and Germany, a German, a Korean, a Scottish photojournalist who lives in Brighton, England, and then me. Quite a bunch.
Today in reading and writing, we went back to kindergarten.


It was fun, but I apparently don't use my hand writing skills enough, as by the end of the class, my right hand was a bit sore.
The only class I have right now is my Thai class. It's divided into two sections: reading and writing, and then speaking and listening.
There are five of us in the class, from all over the world. There's a Brazilian who grew up in Spain, France and Germany, a German, a Korean, a Scottish photojournalist who lives in Brighton, England, and then me. Quite a bunch.
Today in reading and writing, we went back to kindergarten.


It was fun, but I apparently don't use my hand writing skills enough, as by the end of the class, my right hand was a bit sore.
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