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| The Iron Bridge: in technicolor! |
As Lian watches me unpack my usual assortment of ratty t-shirts and wrinkled short pants, she asks what I'll be wearing to her niece's wedding in three weeks. Only then do I realize: I forgot to bring the single pair of big-boy slacks that I own. D'oh! Even I cannot rationalize showing up at the sacred nuptials in faded plaid shorts from Old Navy -- the nicest apparel I brought -- so a few days later we're off to the bargain bins at Panthip Plaza.
Rummaging through the piles of hideous Arrow slacks for what I know is my correct size, I feel two arms encircling me from behind. I smile and reach down to acknowledge the embrace ... and touch man-hands! I am being sized up by a skinny young male clerk with a tape measure. He then produces a pair of ridiculous clown pants that cannot possibly fit me.
"No, no, this size number is much too big," I assure him, "I wear a smaller size." And to prove it, I agree to try them on.
The ugly-ass slacks are a spot-on fit, and for the rest of the day I am despondent.
Damn these primitives anyway, don't they understand the finer points of ly-- I mean, marketing? You don't label clothes for the customer's actual size, you label them for what the customer wants to believe. And I really, really want to believe that my hated new tent-pants are incorrectly labeled.
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It's a Buddhist holiday in Thailand ... which is like saying it's Monday. Honestly, you could throw a dart at a calendar and stand a better-than-even chance of nailing a holy celebration.
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| Immortalized in terra cotta. (Click to enlarge) |
"Write your name and name your mother," Lian instructs, which I do, respectfully. So, Mom, together we are now a permanent fixture in a Buddhist holy place on the other side of the world. See?
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One argument against overly affordable healthcare is that some hypochondriacs might go rushing off to the emergency room every time they have a tummy ache. A silly concern, right?
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| Hospital food, Thai style |
In the time it takes for me to enjoy a plate of grapow gai (chicken and holy basil) and an iced cappuccino, Lian is seen by a physician and fills her prescription -- all covered by medical insurance that costs her the equivalent of just over $11 per month.
I look at how Thai healthcare works (and "works" is the operative word) and am embarrassed for America's broken, corrupt joke of a system. What do these people know that we don't?



