Tag Archives: Thailand

Re-living Thailand! A food, friends and fashion photo gallery

Here are some highlights from my 2018 trip to Thailand to help pass the time during the pandemic lockdown of 2020! For those who’ve asked where I get the cool shirts I wear, see one of the actual stores below!

On the flight to Bangkok. Yes, I was wearing masks on airline flights back in 2018 before it was a thing…

Bus ride from the airport to the part of Bangkok where my hostel was located.

A friendly stranger notices the lost look in my eyes and offers to help me navigate the city

Taxi drivers have no idea where the hostel is, so I stop inside a Tesco to ask them to make a call on my behalf

During the trip, I visit Yanhee International Hospital for a colonic! Yep, my idea of a fun vacation!

Mango Vegetarian Restaurant, one of my new favorite spots in Thailand!

Go ahead, carnivores, admit it! You’re tempted! Say it! I won’t tell anyone!

 

 

Every day was a different culinary experience at Mango

 

 

The view from inside my usual spot

 

Friendly wait staff!

 

Getting a tour of the night markets from another hostel manager….

…he and his wife even invited me into his home…

 

On my way to Bobae Market for my once a year shopping expedition

 

 

 

As we say in Jamaica, “Reggae gone international!” Bob Marley clothing is everywhere!

 

The shirt I’m wearing in this photo was actually a gift from a friend in Macau, but similar styles are available here in Thailand, so I bought about a dozen!

 

Next time you’re in Thailand, find Bobae Tower and pick me up a few more shirts, please.

 

Bus rides every day from one end of the line to the other, just to see how regular folks live and commute

 

 

Chatuchak Weekend Market, another world famous tourist and shopping spot

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Visited a high-end tailor shop….don’t ask me why. They don’t carry my style of shirt

 

 

Okay, send the kids out of the room, things are about to get hot!

My home for two weeks in Thailand, Amarin Inn – Khao San Road Guest house, Bangkok. Tell them the Jamaican sent you!

 

 

 

Fatima at the Amarin Inn front desk!

 

 

 

One last view of Bangkok!

Say goodbye to Bangkok, Thailand!

If you enjoy looking at photos of strangers you’ll never meet, food you’ll never eat and videos on the street, well THIS is the blog post for you!  Here is a wrap-up of my Jamaican in Thailand adventure! There’s a short video clip at the end…

Fatima at the front desk of Amarin Inn where I stayed for two weeks! Thanks for all your help discovering Bangkok!
The famous MBK Shopping center!
Inside MBK
Helping hostel owner, Daman, publicize Amarin Inn’s web presence
Bobae Tower. This is where you’ll want to go to get clothes at wholesale prices

 

Some of the sights at Chatuchak Weekend Market. Billed as the largest market in Asia! Also known as JJ Market, it has more than 15,000 stalls, divided into 27 sections.
Around Chatuchak

 

Tailor shops abound!
James Tailor (also one of my favorite singers!)

 

Planning my next Thailand adventure at a government-endorsed travel agency
Tuk Tuk driver Shomchai
Great food at Ethos Vegetarian Restaurant
Ethos revisited
Surej! New friend (staff) at Ethos
UK citizens who run a retreat in Thailand!
Bali nomad at Amarin Inn!

 

Meal at May Kaidee Vegetarian Restaurant and Cooking School
Bobae Market shop where I found my favorite style shirts!
Last day in Thailand

 

Yes, Bangkok was a great adventure! I’ll definitely be back, and will check out Chang Mai and other areas! Stay tuned! Now, however, I have to start making my way back to Saipan! Next stop: Macau!

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21 Chambers of Yanhee (featuring Uma Thurman!)

More from the Yanhee series! Here’s the full video of my panic attack in hyperbaric chamber #21 at Yanhee International Hospital in Bangkok, Thailand! (Featuring Uma Thurman making a “guest appearance!”) Click the link for more!

 

 

 

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Mango Vegetarian! Food, glorious food!

Sam, whom you met in a previous episode, and whom I met in a “chance” encounter in a 7-11 store (but, as you know, there ARE no chance encounters) introduced me to Mango Vegetarian & Vegan restaurant and I haven’t eaten anywhere else since!

I didn’t order anything from the menu that first time I went (since it was after 5pm and I only eat one meal a day between 12-3pm), but I vowed to return the next day…and I did! It was, perhaps, a little awkward for Sam (eating alone, and all), but, as I tell anyone who invites me out in the evening, I go for the friendship and conversation, so please don’t be surprised if I don’t eat!

Best recommendation so far! Thanks, Sam!

As I discovered in Vietnam and here in Thailand, too, even vegetarian and vegan restaurants often use sugar and MSG in the seasonings of their dishes, so it’s difficult to get a meal without those ingredients. Mango, however, does not! Yay!!

Location: Thanon Tanao, Wat Bowon Niwet, Phra Nakhon, Bangkok, Thailand, just a short walk from Amarin Inn where I’m staying!

The menu was overwhelming! The have breakfasts, gluten-free, desserts, fresh-squeezed juice, raw meals and a HUGE selection of unique dishes! The next day, I ordered #41, the Quinoa Buddha Bowl Salad (“A high protein meal with healthy salad. Mixed greens, quinoa, sweet potatoes, barley, Job’s tears, carrot, flax seeds, chick peas, pumpkin seeds, black beans, mango, tomato, beetroot, avocado, and other seasonal fresh fruit”) 

Wow. #41

The serving size was so large that I had to request half of it “to go….” um, so I could order a second dish!

#57 Chick pea fried rice

This was menu item #57  “Chick Pea with Mixed Vegetables Fried Rice” (“Fried rice with chick peas, barley, Job’s tears, vegetable and ginger in Massara spices sauce”) Heaven!

The next morning at about 11:15 (they open 10:30am), I returned to experience one of the breakfast dishes! It was earlier than I typically eat, but this turned out to be my single meal of the day!

This was menu item #18 “Gluten free pancake with choice of side.” (Pancake ingredients: Organic rice berry flour, Lord black grains flour, young coconut milk, coconut sugar, coconut milk and brown rice milk.) I chose mango and dragon fruit as my topping.

#18 Gluten-free pancakes, with coconut syrup and pineapple ginger kombucha

My new friend, Mango staff member and culinary advisor, Wan, is taking me on a journey through the 99 menu items! Things will only get better!

Hi, Wan! Nice meeting you! I’ll see you later!

Culinary Interlude: I’ve eaten there three days in a row. However, yesterday, I spent the entire day and night until 11:30pm hanging out with hostel owners Kulyanon and Ahmad, helping them film and upload an interim Youtube video for the hostel, and then accompanying them as they visited family in various parts of Bangkok before their flight today, so I didn’t eat anything during the day (even though Kulyanon tried desperately to get me to eat something!)….

Hanging with new friends Kulyanon and Sam of Amarin Inn (at Kulyanon’s brother’s home)

….and so, guess where I’ll be TODAY?? Wrong! I’ll be at MANGO, silly!

The view of the street from my favorite seat inside Mango

And you should be there too whenever you’re in Bangkok! See photos and over 125 reviews on their Happycow.net listing.

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My coffee colonic in Bangkok, Thailand at Yanhee Int’l Hospital!

Come on! Don’t act like you’re not curious! Don’t pretend your interest isn’t the least bit piqued to see what it looks and feels like when 25 liters of warm, coffee-tinged water is introduced into the colon (no, not through the mouth…use your imagination!) in order to clean and remove toxins, debris, undigested food, impacted fecal matter, bacteria, parasites and mucoid plaque from the colon in order to improve digestion, nutrient absorption and essentially reboot the digestive system!

So, being the narcissistic exhibitionist I am and, perhaps, being the armchair voyeur you are, I’ve answered both our desires! Check it out! (It’s completely anonymous! No one–not even me–will ever know you watched!)

Note to the squeamish: Don’t worry, I don’t actually show the “stuff” coming out!

Background: Ever since I discovered Jason Rupp’s Youtube video and his glowing recommendation of Yanhee International Hospital in Bangkok, Thailand, for a colon hydrotherapy session, and the amazingly low cost (by US standards), I decided to check it out for myself! I’ve done colonics in the states, in Hong Kong, and now in Thailand (Hmmm. Is this a new type of fanatical-cleansing-thrill-seeking subset of medical tourism I’m pioneering?)

p.s. A friend saw a photo of me at this hospital and asked if I was okay

My reply: Yep, I am faaaantabulous! FYI: I do the colonics and oxygen therapies, and coffee enemas, and extended waters fasts as part of my normal, regular health maintenance (See my books, A Clean Cell Never Dies and Fast & Grow Young) to keep myself young and vital. Plus, I’ve been in in some high-pollution zones recently, so I definitely wanted to do a detox, AND you can’t beat the prices here in Thailand!

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The Trivial Traveler

“Everyday People…”

There is a specific reason I film and share what some might consider mundane travel experiences such as: who says hello to me, how we meet, who invites me to dinner, who gives me directions, who fixes my laptop, how to get a colonic in Bangkok (oh, trust me, that’s coming up!), where to buy cheap produce, how to purchase airline tickets cheaply, and other seemingly trivial traveler tidbits (and it’s not just narcissism!).

For instance, in addition to the tour guides, restaurant owners, and hostel managers you’ve already met, there was–among many others–the techie in Da Nang, Vietnam who upgraded my RAM and fixed a non-responsive USB port as a courtesy….

Upgrading RAM with a smile

….there was Lala, the Da Nang, Vietnam hostel manager of Conical Hats Homestay, who came out to greet me as I walked through the streets…

“Nice to meet you! Come back any time!”
Conical Hats Homestay

There was the Da Nang, Vietnam appliance store rep who went out of his way to help me locate another competing store at which I might find a Lavalier microphone to record better audio for my videos….

“You can try this famous store on the same street as your hostel. Once you come off the Dragon Bridge just keep going straight…”

In Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon), there was Khoa, the hotel tour clerk at a hotel around the corner from my hostel who printed out my inbound and outbound airline reservations on the hotel printer (at no charge) so that I could apply for my Thailand entry visa…

Thanks for the help, Khoa

In Saigon, there was Bun, the cute shoe factory worker who interrupted me filming a video intro….

…gave me a thumbs up for my all white suit… (that’s the extent of my fashion consciousness: I can match a white top with a white bottom! I got this!)

…and invited me to accompany her on a walk through the park. (This was mostly done through “sign language” since my command of the Vietnamese language and her command of English were both minimal, so we used Google translate thereafter.)

“Would you like to walk with me?”

….There was the Saigon Grab bike operator who, once I told him I was Jamaican, said he knew of Usain Bolt and taught me how to say Usain’s name in Vietnamese (I think). Then, after telling him I lived most of my life in the US, he–unprompted–went out of his way to point to his skin and mine and said that here in Vietnam: “we same,” and that “Vietnam people love everybody!”

Conversation while negotiating the organized chaos of Ho Chi Minh City

In Bangkok, Thailand, there were the two customer service reps at Tesco Lotus who made calls to my hard-to-find hostel to help me locate it…

“Sorry, sir. The line is busy right now. We will try again.”

…and the laundry service operators in Bangkok a few blocks from my hostel who were up early, and who ironed my shirt for me the morning after I arrived since I never learned how to pack a suitcase like an adult. (Yes, I was half naked in their open front shop as passersby may have wondered if there was a new Jamaican striptease show in town!)

Note to self: I’ve got to start that calisthenics workout program so I can add a few pounds to my non-existent chest

….or Nok, my translator at the Yanhee International Hospital where I got my long-anticipated coffee colonic…(film at eleven!)

Nok, translator at Yanhee, Thai local married to a Filipino

…or Beta (spelling?), the Nepalese tailor at PresidentSuits who has lived in Thailand for eleven years, who suggested I change my style from casual-baggy-Thai-neru-mandarin-monk-in-sandals to something western-traditional…

Here! You can hear it in his own words:

…or the Nepalese electronics vendors at MBK mall who tried to find me a lavalier microphone clone…

Thanks, gentlemen!

…or Sam, a customer in the 7-11 convenience store, who welcomed me to Thailand when he heard me tell another customer wearing a Bob Marley shirt that I was from Jamaica…then offered to help me find an authorized SIM card dealer (foreigners can’t buy SIM cards from just anywhere! Ask me why.). Sam has lived in the US for many years, so it was quite insightful learning a Thai national’s perceptions of Thai people from both the inside and outside!

Fellow nomad, Sam offers assistance
…while onlookers look on!

Yes, there’s a reason my travelogue includes these types of stories, and does NOT include much of the standard tourist sites while focusing more on the people and interactions in everyday places.

To understand that reason, however, it may first be necessary to understand the mission of my Jamaican in China blog, facebook page and Youtube channel: To create an alternative travel narrative to encourage anyone who identifies with me to follow his/her passions, become a nomadpreneur if they wish, break free and see the world fearlessly (and inexpensively)!

As part of my PassionProfit philosophy and formula and nomadpreneur escape strategy, I’ve met and coached people who wish to travel, but who are afraid of how they will be received overseas. They don’t see themselves in many mainstream travelogues and guidebooks and so, they believe such travel is for others they can’t relate to. They worry about prejudice, about negative attitudes, about global perceptions and, faced with such paralyzing fears and unaddressed concerns, and no one to model, they never take action (plus, they are afraid it will cost too much)

My self-appointed mission, therefore, is to move such individuals to action. How will my mundane travel experiences accomplish that, you ask? Well, several years ago, I learned a little secret when I was part of a sales team with ACN (American Communications Network), a network marketing company. We learned that if you want to move someone to action (in ACN’s case it was to purchase a service or to sign up as a sales rep), you must take that individual through a process that has him or her thinking the following three thoughts:
1. “Me too!” (In other words, they need to relate to you and/or your background, personality, nationality, ethnicity, gender, etc., and see themselves in you)

2. “This makes sense.” (They must see the logic and/or common sense, or practicality or necessity of the action you wish them to take)

3. “I can do this.” (They need to be shown the details of how to do the thing you wish them to do so they can imagine themselves doing it and feel capable of doing so.)

Using a similar strategy, my mission, through this blog is to show the little human interactions of overseas travel, the smiles on the streets, the camaraderie, the welcoming gestures–the little things that can make or break a travel experience– and to show the images and videos of these that you won’t see in the mainstream guidebooks and travelogues so that readers who are fearful of travel for any reason, and who can identify with me in some way, can think to themselves:
“Look! He’s just like me (Jamaican, Caribbean, skinny, vegan, former employee, civil engineer, of African descent, etc.), and he’s having a great time! He hasn’t been kidnapped! People are friendly! (And it doesn’t cost as much as I thought) Wow, if HE can do it, then maybe I can, too!” And if they do decide to follow in these footsteps, they may wish to check out thailand tours for exciting travel experiences in new and vibrant surroundings.

It’s also the reason I interview and/or profile folks like Ronnie from Trinidad living in Vietnam, and Ken from New York now living in Kyrgyzstan, and(coming soon:) Bayo the personal trainer who moved from DC and is now giving unique tours in Brasil! So, trust me when I tell you that my experience is not unique, it is simply underrepresented!

It exists for the express purpose of showing a reality others can point to and model in order to help them evolve into the sort of traveler they wish to be! If not for you, then please share this blog, and Facebook page, and Youtube channel with someone you know!

Finally, I’ll share two thoughts that are essentially saying the same thing and that I’ve found to be true in my life:

  1. “That which you seek is also seeking you.”

2. “Whatever you focus on will grow in your reality.”

Excelsior!!

Stay tuned!

Walt F.J. Goodridge
The Jamaican in China…and Beyond!
“I share what I know, so that others may grow!”

COMING SOON: “What’s in my suitcase?” (Confessions of an alternative-minded, health-obsessed, vegan nomad!”) Excerpt: “No, officer, the white powder in that plastic bag is Diatomaceous Earth. The other one over there is Non-iodized Sea Salt. That one over there is Bentonite Clay!”

“Sure, no worries, but, um, could you take the handcuffs off me now please?”

 

 

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Jamaican in Bangkok! And the award goes to….!

Wow! I’ve only been in Thailand for 3 hours, and already it’s the top contender for the “Most Helpful People” award! As I walk around following the directions to the hostel I booked, at least SIX people (women, but one guy, too) have walked up and simply asked “Where are you going?” or “Where are you trying to get to?” and then offered bus routes and other directions to help me get there!

On a bus from the airport in Thailand

The first person to do this, however, and thus the first person I’ve met in Thailand, was Nafeezah who asked, “Can I help you?”then took the time and energy to  guide me around the confusing bridges and stairways of Victory Monument to find the number 28 bus!

Good Samaritan Nafeezah helps the wandering Jamaican!

 

Graciously waiting for the bus

Here’s the scene on one of the buses  I took to get to the hostel

 

We’re off to an auspicious start! More to come!

 

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