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Thai-Farang Marriages

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  • Thai-Farang Marriages

    http://video.nytimes.com/video....st.html

    Married guys in Udon.

  • #2
    It's nice to see the success's

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    • #3
      Here is the print version.

      September 24, 2010
      A Thai Region Where Husbands Are Imported
      By SETH MYDANS
      UDON, THAILAND €” The most dazzling creatures Nui Davis saw when she was a child were the village girls who had found foreign husbands, visiting in their Western finery and handing out candies to the children.

      €œFor me, they were like a princess,€ she said. €œAnd I kept those pictures in my mind, and I made a wish that one day I would like to be one of those ladies.€

      Today, at the age of 30, she lives with her husband, Joseph Davis of Fresno, California, in an air-conditioned, three-bedroom house with a driveway and basketball hoop, surrounded by flower beds and a well-kept lawn.

      €œMy family keeps saying, €˜You got it. You got your dream now,€€™ she said.

      But unlike many other foreign husbands, Mr. Davis, 54, did not take his wife home with him, choosing instead to settle down in northeastern Thailand, a region known as Isaan.

      He is part of an expanding population of nearly 11,000 foreign husbands in the region, drawn by the low cost of living, slow pace of life and the exotic reputation of Thai women €” something like a brand name for Western men seeking Asian partners. €œThai women are a lot like women in America were 50 years ago,€ said Mr. Davis, before they discovered their rights and became €œstrong-headed and opinionated.€

      €œThe women now know they are equal,€ said Mr. Davis, a retired Naval officer who has been divorced twice, €œso the situation is not as relaxed and peaceful as it is between an American and a Thai lady.€

      It is easy to spot the foreigners€™ homes, with their sturdy walls and red-tiled roofs, an archipelago of affluence among the smaller, poorer houses of their new neighbors and in-laws.

      Mixed couples are common on the streets and in the markets of Udon Thani. One street where Western men gather to eat and drink is popularly known as €œForeign Son-in-Law Street.€

      €œThere are villages in Isaan that are almost entirely comprising foreign houses, where the whole village is almost entirely houses purchased by foreigners for their Thai ladies,€ said Phil Nicks, author of €œLove Entrepreneurs: Cross-Culture Relationship Deals in Thailand.€

      Isaan is one of the poorest parts of the country, the source of most low-wage workers in Bangkok and the home of many of the women who work in the entertainment industry in the capital.

      Some of the earliest Thai-American marriages were in Udon Thani, the site of a U.S. air base in the 1960s during the Vietnam War. In the following years, most Americans left, sometimes taking a Thai wife with them. Now the presence of American and European men is growing again. €œIn the northeast where this phenomenon is strongest, a huge majority of the women there are looking for a foreign boyfriend or husband, and I think some of them can be quite assertive, and aggressive in their pursuing of a foreign man,€ said Mr. Nicks.

      A clash of expectations strains many marriages, and more than half end in divorce, said Prayoon Thavon, manager of international services at Panyavejinter Hospital in Udon Thani.

      While the men €” many of them retired and living on pensions, many disappointed in their lives and marriages at home €” may be seeking an emotional connection, the women are generally motivated by economics, said Mr. Prayoon, who provides counseling for mixed couples.

      €œFor some ladies it is just money, money, money,€ he said. €œGetting married has become a business more than love. People want to improve their social status. Sometimes these ladies spend the husband€™s money, use it all, then he€™s cut out. There are many cases like that.€

      Even though many men are retired and living on a fixed income, they are expected to help support their wives€™ extended families, beginning with a dowry of several thousand dollars.

      €œWhen you get married in Thailand you are marrying the whole family, the whole village,€ Mr. Prayoon said. €œOften the lady expects that, but the man doesn€™t understand.€

      There seems to be less concern about differences in age, with many bridegrooms in their 50s or 60s or even 70s.

      €œAge is not a factor here,€ said Mr. Davis. €œIn America if I marry a girl who is 24 years younger than me, all you€™re going to get is eyes and bad talk, bad gossip. Here it€™s not an issue. It happens every day.€

      At the age of 63, Dennis Sorensen, a retired mathematics teacher, is 32 years older than his wife, Pennapa, whom he met eight years ago on a beach. He spends much of his time watching U.S. television through a satellite hookup and cooks his own hamburgers, but he said he has done his best to keep his wife and her family happy. He helps raise her teenage daughter from an earlier relationship as well as their 2-year-old son.

      €œThere€™s some adjustment there,€ said Mr. Sorensen, for whom this is the first marriage, €œand we€™ve had issues where I run out of money and I cannot take care of everybody, and that has caused some crises, but we€™ve overcome everything the best that we can.€

      One barrier is language, as few foreigners learn Thai. €œI can€™t speak English so well, but I can live with him many years,€ Ms. Sorensen said, speaking in Thai. €œSometimes when he is very upset I don€™t understand what he is talking about but I understand the tone and I just walk away.€

      But she added in English: €œI think Dennis is good €” good for take care of my family, take care of my daughter, take care of everything for me. Before, I don€™t have anything. But right now I have a home, I have car, I not work and I only stay home and take care of my baby.€

      Foreign marriage has become so common that it has lost much of its stigma here in Udon Thani, and many girls share Ms. Davis€™s dream of becoming a princess. €œIt looks pretty good and they look pretty happy,€ said Rojjana Udomsri, 30, who is married to a Thai man and has a 2-year-old son. €œThey have money to spend and they can go anywhere they want.€

      But she said she had her doubts.

      €œI don€™t know if they are really happy,€ she said. €œThere were times I wanted to have a good life like them, but I can€™t live with a person I don€™t love. With someone I love I can go through all the hardships of life together.€

      This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

      A picture caption in an earlier version of this article referred imprecisely to a three-wheeled vehicle. While the term tuk-tuk is often used loosely to refer to such vehicles, the one pictured is a samlor.

      Comment


      • #4
        (PigDogg @ Sep. 26 2010,18:15) €œThai women are a lot like women in America were 50 years ago,€ said Mr. Davis, before they discovered their rights and became €œstrong-headed and opinionated.€

        €œThe women now know they are equal,€ said Mr. Davis, a retired Naval officer who has been divorced twice,
        Thats the best thing I've read here in a long time

        Mr Davis probably has the Thai wife saluting him and scrubbing the deck out front of the house .
        Free your mind and your ass will follow .

        Comment


        • #5
          Good thing they corrected that caption, I was about to fire off a stern letter to the editor.

          Great article, seems evenhanded and well-balanced.
          Making newbie mistakes since 2009 so you don't have to




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          • #6
            can this happen for a man and ladyboy as well can their be a happy ending . i hope one day i will know.



            "No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country.
            He won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country."
            General George Patton Jr

            Comment


            • #7
              AB - no official recognition of marriage between a man and lb in Thailand yet - but there are a few who have been able to make it work.

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              • #8
                (jimslim @ Sep. 26 2010,22:20)
                (PigDogg @ Sep. 26 2010,18:15) €œThai women are a lot like women in America were 50 years ago,€ said Mr. Davis, before they discovered their rights and became €œstrong-headed and opinionated.€

                €œThe women now know they are equal,€ said Mr. Davis, a retired Naval officer who has been divorced twice,
                Thats the best thing I've read here in a long time  

                Mr Davis probably has the Thai wife saluting him and scrubbing the deck out front of the house .
                Married twice already- anyone else see the writing on the wall!!!
                Bollocks to marrying the family, not just the wife. That's why I won't let anyone jump on the gravy train
                I couldn't give a shit how long it is until you're next holiday- I live here

                Comment


                • #9
                  I've pretty much decided, that for me, marriage is a bad deal--I'm not interested.
                  I'll rent when I can and the rest of the time I'll spank it on line. Not great, but good enough.
                  "Bankin' off of the northeast wind
                  Salin' on a summer breeze
                  And skippin' over the ocean, like a stone."
                  -Harry Nilsson

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
                    (jimslim @ Sep. 26 2010,16:20) Thats the best thing I've read here in a long time  

                    Mr Davis probably has the Thai wife saluting him and holy-stoning the deck out front of the house .



                    RR.
                    Pedants rule, OK. Or more precisely, exhibit certain of the conventional trappings of leadership.

                    "I love the smell of ladyboy in the morning."
                    Kahuna

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