
The Lightness of Being Unbearable
by Andrew Hicks
It’s sometimes said that Thai women are
feminine through and through, that they are Venus personified with never
a hint of Mars, and that their only aim in life is to please their man.
Sad foreigners with a limited grasp of reality soon fall amorous when
they first come to Thailand. They go through a temporary phase of
self-delusion akin to a mental illness, the main symptom of which is
that they think they’ve gone to a heaven filled with honey coloured
angels.
Unfortunately for them, once hooked and with an irreversible addiction
to their lady, her purring pussy cat phase does not last very long and
they face some serious reverses. It’s always a shock discovering that
your pussy cat is in fact a man-eating tiger, and they can sometimes be
seen at the end of the pier and of their tether, thinking of ending it
all. Rarely do they do it though as invariably they’ll come back,
begging for more of the same.
Let me first stress that despite my feline imagery, none of what I’m
going to say in this report on the psychological strategies of Thai
wives that follows, in any way relates to my own wife, Cat. To talk of
her even in a veiled way would be an unfair breach of her privacy and
might consign me to a nasty incident with a meat cleaver. No, in fact
she’s always been perfectly reasonable and even-tempered. She’s never
known for slagging me off for always losing things, for buying a stupid
thirty year old jeep or putting her name on a contract for crap
satellite internet that hardly ever works. In the face of considerable
provocation, her good mood is always exemplary.
Just as this study is not based on Cat, nor on any other personal
experience of my own, I also deny having myself done any of the
empirical research into the erratic behaviour of Thai ladies. Throughout
my academic career, I have always made exclusive use of research
assistants and in this case, of the expats on bar stool and beach who
invariably expatiate ad nauseam about what makes their ‘Thai girls’
tick. Their findings are many and various but a general regret is that
while a time bomb usually ticks, Thai women give no warning and only
ever smile. It’s impossible to know what they’re thinking. As they’ll
never give you a straight answer, there’s no hint of the pyrotechnics to
come.
By way an aside, it’s noteworthy in this context that the Thai language
has no single word for ‘yes’ or ‘no’, only for ‘perhaps’ and ‘maybe’.
In Bangkok I stay at a unique hotel at the door of which there’s a big
sign saying, ‘Sex Tourists Not Welcome’. In this study I have excluded
contact with any such informants, though it’s not always easy to avoid
them. Once while having breakfast at a small Chinese hotel in Penang, I
and the two Swedish men I had reputably met at The Atlanta hotel in
Bangkok, were having breakfast when a middle-aged German came and sat
down with us uninvited. He insisted on telling us that his favorite
place was Patong in Phuket and that there he had had assignations with
over two thousand girl friends. While I would acknowledge his generous
contribution to rural development, I would not rely on his judgment
about Thai women, as the depth of these relationships must be relatively
limited.
On a more personal note, as a young man I always used to try to remember
my girlfriends’ names, if not always their birthdays, though perhaps for
the German this had become a little too difficult.
To briefly summarise our research findings therefore, we reliably
conclude that out of a cloudless sky, lightening can suddenly strike.
The Thai women that were the survey sample, all partners of farang men,
can at times be moody, capricious, fickle, mercurial and volatile. On a
whim and without rhyme or reason they change their minds on an agreed
course of action and wax furious when their man protests. While at one
moment, butter wouldn’t melt in their mouth, suddenly they can behave in
a manner that is utterly unbearable.
This is not of course my experience, and as I say, mindful of the meat
cleaver, I’m simply reporting the empirical findings of my research
team. Nor do I in any way imply that these men are all a load of
plonkers. Even so, when any of them express a grievance about their
experiences, I put it to them that if you choose to ride a
roller-coaster, you have to take the consequences... there’ll be as many
downs as there are ups! It’s some reassurance though when it’s all going
downhill, that soon you’re sure to be on the up again. In Thailand the
clouds quickly roll away and the sun always breaks out as sweetly as
before.
That’s of course why these besotted foreign men always come back for
more. It’s also because even when their tirak is being utterly
unbearable, she does it with such style and flair, with such charm. Who
other than a Thai woman can be so awful, but with such a flashing of
eyes, with such detachment, such poise... such lightness. She never
loses her cool, she always stays on top. It’s all calculated, an
insidious manipulation that leaves her farang in a state of gibbering
anxiety and dismay as he staggers backwards in shock, grabbing
instinctively for his wallet.
After the sweet success of my novel, “Thai Girl”, I’ve been urged to
write another one. I think it’s going to be about a farang who has a
stormy relationship with his Thai lady. She sees him reading a book in a
café where she’s a waitress. She likes the look of him and she follows
him to his room. She moves in with him and while he’s nursing her
through a bout of dengue fever, she becomes fearful he’s being
unfaithful with other women. This is morally unacceptable to her as
he’ll be spending on her rival money that he should be spending on her.
So she tells him that if she catches him at it, she’s going to cut off
his nearest and dearest and throw it to the ducks.
The plot then follows the male protagonist as he freely philanders,
leaving the reader in tense apprehension as to the continued safety of
his threatened equipment. The emotional point of the story though is
that despite all his dalliances, he always comes back to this woman
because he loves her for being so awfully, so exquisitely unbearable.
I’m trying to think of a title for the novel and I’ve come up with one
that has a certain ring to it. How about, “The Lightness of Being
Unbearable”?
Andrew Hicks
Stickman's thoughts:
I liked the pussy cat
and man eating tiger analogy.
As best I can remember I have yet to read anything really insightful on the
explosive nature of Thai women. Anyone think they can nail it?

The author of this
article can be contacted at: arhicks56@hotmail.com.
The author of this website, NOT this article, can be contacted at: stickmanbangkok@gmail.com.