If you go to Bangkok this summer.

2024. 7. 19. 15:38U.S. Economic Stock Market Outlook

If you go to Bangkok this summer.

1. I sleep in. If breakfast at the hotel is not included, order brunch at Chan & Yupa Cuisine near the Korean town. The flower garden is pretty and delicious. Slowly delay and take a taxi to the palace (taxi is very cheap in Thailand).

Then it will be very hot in the daytime. I meet the emerald Buddha at the Emerald Temple Wat Phra Kaew. Look closely at the praying Thais. If the United States is more the land of Jesus than you think, Thailand is more the land of the Buddha than you think. Ask the charred Buddha where he came from and what am I doing in Bangkok. But ask him why it is so hot.

If you're done talking to Buddha, you're out in no time. It's hot. You can see what's in the Wat Pho neighborhood on foot, and if you've been there, get a massage inside the temple. Sleep tight, too. That way, it's almost right until dinner time. When you get out of the Wat Pho and walk for about five minutes to the Tartian, a chubby boat across the Zhaopraya River comes every half hour (about \200) and goes up the morning temple Wat arun. It's hot. One of your companions will ask you to go down quickly.

After crossing the river again, we have dinner at Deck by arun or Above Riva restaurant on foot. It costs about Medfogalic. Reservations required. Make a reservation for around 7 p.m. and look across the river at Wat Arun to remember "Why did I go there when it was so hot?" That's how the sun sets across the Chao Phraya River to Wat arun. I'll never forget that scene.

2. The next day, I just sleep in the hotel swimming pool. I wake up and wander around the neighborhood to get a massage. I get a massage and then sleep again. For lunch, I eat cut watermelon or chicken leg grilled with briquettes at the food stand on my way back from the massage. Lunch is enough. In Bangkok, especially for ordinary people, they don't have cooking facilities at home, so they eat all of their breakfast, lunch, and dinner at the food stand. So the food stand is a buffet. And when we arrive at the hotel, we sleep in the shade again. You may also read books such as "Lies on the Price of a House" by Kim Won-jang.

At 4 p.m., we leave for Ayutthaya in a rented car. It's the same altitude as Gyeongju. It's a left-hand drive as in Japan, but it's not difficult because the roads are nice. It takes about 1 hour and 20 minutes if you go slowly. You have to arrive before 6 p.m. to get to the Wat Phra Mahathat temple. The Myanmar military cut off all the Buddha's hair, and it's only one place left. (If you are from the same Buddhist countries and you don't understand, imagine how many European expeditions killed and killed each other on the Crusades before they even met the Islamic army.)

When it's time to close, it remains in the temple until the tourists disappear. With cool winds, the temple holding on to the falling bricks will be seen in the dim silhouette. Think about the Thai people praying in this temple hundreds of years ago. Imagine what the enemy would have done if they cut the head of a stone Buddha in a war. The history of the Indochina Peninsula is roughly cut.

And about a five-minute drive away, we eat at the restaurant of the SALA Ayutthaya Boutique Hotel, looking over the river. Reservations by the river are required. It's one of the most beautiful restaurants I've ever been to in my life. Even though it's beautiful, the river mosquitoes are not getting away from you. They ask for mosquito repellent.

You can stay overnight at SALA (about $300) or at The Park Ayutthaya Resort and Spa (about $50) near the park. In front of this small hotel, there's a 20-odd camping-chair street cafe (still available...). They light up the lamps, and they sell things like cheap coffee and butter toast. Think about it over a glass of beer. Why is it so hot at night in Thailand...

3. When I wake up in the morning, I go running. Strangely, Ayutthaya has a lot of people running. There are many parks. Perhaps it is the lowest-income park in the world where people run peacefully. In other words, even if the income is low, you can make such a peaceful and healthy city.

Carefully drive left and back to Bangkok. If you're in town, you'll stop by the CentralwOrld department store. The structure of the department store is the same as ours. They're all copied from Japanese department stores. Order a grilled fish dish from Laem Charoen seafood. I'm sure they're all eating it. We have other Thai food in Korea, too, so we'll just try it. It's pretty good, and when we get back to Korea, we'll see how delicious our fish dish is.  

After leaving Central World, there is a small Erawan temple diagonally across the intersection. Be sure to visit. It is just a temple dedicated to Buddha's Buddha statue with several arms in the middle of the city, and Thai people passing by pray and give their wealth for a moment. It is the best place to feel Thailand. To feel Thailand is to understand how Thai people feel. He offered a jasmine flower necklace called "Puang Marai" to the foundation and asked the Buddha. "Will it be hot tomorrow, too?"

A lot of people go to the Zet Fair night market at night. It's become so popular that there are so many people. Young Koreans eat a lot of Langseps like Gamjatang. It's hot, so I buy a coconut ice cream, take a peek, and get off at the Phrom Phong BTS Station. There are Emporium Department Store and Emquartia Department Store next to each other. In the basement, there is a space where only super cars can be parked separately. You can meet another Bangkok area. There is also a ski suit store. These friends are really...

The high-end Thai food that even Thais have never seen is in LUK KAITHONG. After dinner here, on the fifth floor of Emporium, there is a public rooftop BAR called ESCAPE. We end the day with a beer. If you look around, you'll see how many different ethnic groups there are in the world.

4.
Tooth

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