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Olddaddy

Dont move to Pattaya

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Posted

I was talking to a expat last night in a bar in Jomtien 

Been here 2 years 

I told him of my excitement in meeting a guy in my room in several hours that was well known on Facebook 

He told me he no longer feels excited about meeting guys

Lucky to meet once a month with a guy he says maybe twice 

The excited look on him had vanished now he lives there 

"They all begin looking the same " he said ,it doesn't become exciting to meet up with moneyboys "

Day to day living gets in the way , he strangely said 

The poor guy just lost interest in meeting moneyboys for sex 

"Oh maybe sometimes I go to the sauna get it for free , but paying lost its novelty in just not as interested " he said 

Then it dawned on me what many say .....about living here in Pattaya ,too much of a good thing makes back a dull boy 

Could I move here to Pattaya ?

Probably not ready yet !

I still need excitement to look forward to every trip 

 

 

Posted

I have a certain sympathy for the view expressed in @Olddaddy's post. In my younger years when i was visiting Bangkok at least six times a year, I was like the lad who had discovered the cookie jar. Extending the metaphors I was in seventh heaven. So many bars! So many boys! So inexpensive!

Even when I moved here nearly quarter of a century ago, although still working for many more years I loved what Bangkok had to offer - even though the gay nightlife scene was starting to change, a result of Thaksin Senior elevating his ultra-religious pal as Minister for the Interior tinkering with laws and making life more difficult for venue owners. I still loved my nights out, many with friends, usually visiting bars after dinner and many times resulting for me in an off.

But then it all changed. Yes, I know the improvement in the Thai economy resulted in boys from many neighbouring countries replacing Thais in the bars. But age changed me. That and eventually finding a long-term partner, one who had nothing to do with the sex business. Indeed he had never even ventured as far as Soi 4 when we first met! When you have a loving partner, offing boys from bars drops virtually to the bottom of one's list of priorities. 

While many who live there love Pattaya - and I have visited a few times, I have never really liked the place and could never consider retirement there. But horses for courses. It has its charms. It has some excellent restaurants and lots of boys. But despite the attractions, if I always had to resort to paying for money boys for my sexual pleasure, like @Olddaddy's expat friend, I am sure I would end up pretty bored.

Posted
2 hours ago, PeterRS said:

But despite the attractions, if I always had to resort to paying for money boys for my sexual pleasure, like @Olddaddy's expat friend, I am sure I would end up pretty bored.

Yes and that's the difference in retirement in Pattaya or Bangkok 

You can probably meet more  free guys in Bangkok travelling through than Pattaya 

Posted

Coincidentally, i was watching some Pattaya videos on YouTube on Sunday,  and my goodness, some of the newest ones were depressing. Expats complaining about over-pricing and the unwarranted strength of the  baht, suggesting that the locals aren't so friendly now, that their favoured bars were closing after  being targeted by the police....and much else. In general,  "things ain't what they used to be", as the song has it. 

I asked P for his views; he's far away from Pattaya but still has friends there. What's the view of the locals? Nothing has changed, he said. Yes, there are police raids on particular bars that have often caused concern, yes tourism has been disappointing all year and this "Very-Low-Indeed- Season" is crippling some businesses, but his contacts don't share the concerns expressed on YouTube.

Jimmie50  makes some perceptive points. I've now postponed  and probably cancelled my relocation after due consideration. I never been the sort of person who makes friends easily and it would isolate me  from those I have here in the UK.  Nor am I sure that my relationship with P would benefit  since I am insistent that he should not give up his farm in the north. 

What those YouTube videos illustrated, whether or not they be representative or accurate, is that life for expats of my generation in Thailand  has changed. And , as we have discussed before, Pattaya itself is changing from a sex-tourist paradise into an international resort that wishes to attract  Asians, particularly the well-off ones.  I am reminded of this when we eat in T21 and look out for north Pattaya from its top floor. The huge new developments and luxury hotels have sprung-up on the locations of the go-go bars along the beach that I remember so well from my unforgettable first view of Pattaya in 1995.

Posted
7 hours ago, Londoner said:

 

I asked P for his views; he's far away from Pattaya but still has friends there. What's the view of the locals? Nothing has changed, he said. Yes, there are police raids on particular bars that have often caused concern, yes tourism has been disappointing all year and this "Very-Low-Indeed- Season" is crippling some businesses, but his contacts don't share the concerns expressed on YouTube.

 

and I would trust his feed more than those of serial complainers. 

No doubt Pattaya has changed  but so did Buenos Aires, Nairobi, Moscow and Suva as well.  ( If one doesn't  know Suva , ask Oldddaddy)

Posted
4 hours ago, vinapu said:

and I would trust his feed more than those of serial complainers. 

No doubt Pattaya has changed  but so did Buenos Aires, Nairobi, Moscow and Suva as well.  ( If one doesn't  know Suva , ask Oldddaddy)

Olddaddy can always look Suva up.

Posted

Having had some more time to reflect on the topic ‘Don’t retire in Pattaya’, when it comes time for us to retire we give very little thought beyond the financial considerations.  Working full time, we are accustomed to interacting with dozens of people each work day.  Loneliness and boredom are never an issue.  Then, all of a sudden, retirement hits and we are confronted with so many hours of gaping silence.  There are countless studies that have been done that show how loneliness can slowly but effectively eat away at your physical and emotional health.  Finding some way of creating meaningful relationships and a continuing purpose in our lives is not easy.  It isn’t as simple as going to one party, attending one concert or festival…we establish connections through routine exposure.  I think this is the reason why some people make the decision to move to a retirement community…daily exposure to like-minded people in the same stage of life as you.  These communities also provide countless opportunities for connecting so you don’t become bored and isolated.  On the flip side, that is also a good reason why so many older people decide not to move once they retire.  After spending so much time in one place, they are surrounded by long time friends and family.

Posted

What fantastic photos, and what an amazing life you have experienced!  Thanks for sharing!   

Posted
2 hours ago, jimmie50 said:

What fantastic photos, and what an amazing life you have experienced!  Thanks for sharing!   

Thank you. I have been wonderfully lucky, first to move to Asia at a time when for most travellers it was just a stopover en route to Australia. Then to work for companies which required not only some travel but a lot of it! I could post another 5,000+ photos only from parts of Asia (e.g.many more in the countries covered above plus those omitted like Nepal), and these are only the ones after I got a digital camera in 2001. Sadly my photos of ten visits to Bali, the Taj Mahal and many others taken earlier have all faded. Probably a result of bad storage. 

I posted only to show @iendo what variety there is within the continent and most available relatively inexpensively with some advance planning. So make some plans and then go and have a blast!

Posted
44 minutes ago, PeterRS said:

I posted only to show @iendo what variety there is within the continent and most available relatively inexpensively with some advance planning. So make some plans and then go and have a blast!

Yes, it is very impressive. Those picture remind that I have been everywhere but that I have seen very little. 

Posted
52 minutes ago, iendo said:

 I have been everywhere but that I have seen very little. 

Take a heart, I heard the same sentence from a lot of very seasoned travellers as more you travel , more you realize you are  just licking surface , no matter how hard you try.

Posted
8 hours ago, iendo said:

Those picture remind that I have been everywhere but that I have seen very little. 

I fully understand that sentiment. When I started out on my serious travelling, it was for the most part to see and experience all the places I'd be fortuate to visit. Many now remain in the memory without having to look at all the photos.

Posted
On 9/23/2025 at 3:54 PM, Londoner said:

Pattaya itself is changing from a sex-tourist paradise into an international resort that wishes to attract  Asians, particularly the well-off ones.  I am reminded of this when we eat in T21 and look out for north Pattaya from its top floor. The huge new developments and luxury hotels have sprung-up on the locations of the go-go bars along the beach that I remember so well from my unforgettable first view of Pattaya in 1995.

"Sex tourist paradise." Is that what is called an oxymoron? 😅

Is it true that Pattaya wishes to attract well-off Asians? Or would she like to see quality tourists in general, both local and foreign? As a corollary, has she been successful?

1995 to 2025 is 30 years, a very long, cruisy time for anyone who wishes to adapt to the changes. What popular tourist city hasn't changed in that period of time? Is the UK the same as it was thirty years ago, besides the dysfunctional royal family? Even the university I went to is no longer among the top two, if recent rankings are to be believed. 😪

Whenever I see posts lamenting the loss of an era or the good ol' days, which crop up often enough, my curiosity is not so much focussed on the disappearance of a period of time or space (which admittedly makes for interesting reading at times) but veers towards the writer's own self-development amidst the changes.

 

 

Posted
7 hours ago, mauRICE said:

What popular tourist city hasn't changed in that period of time? Is the UK the same as it was thirty years ago

Very good point.  SF Bay Area in California is nothing like it was when I first moved there 35 years ago.  Some would argue it has changed for the better; others will complain about how horrible it has become.  All depends on your frame of reference I guess.  

Posted
8 hours ago, mauRICE said:

Whenever I see posts lamenting the loss of an era or the good ol' days, which crop up often enough, my curiosity is not so much focussed on the disappearance of a period of time or space (which admittedly makes for interesting reading at times) but veers towards the writer's own self-development amidst the changes.

I agree with most of your post, although I certainly don't believe the disappearance of the "good ol' days" is a subject necessarily for lamentation. For those like me who enjoyed so many years in Bangkok - indeed revelled in them - (never really liked Pattaya as regular readers will be aware) they are a source of much continued enjoyment of wonderful and often amazing memories. 

As @mauRICE rightly says, though, time never stands still and what we once loved is almost bound to change over time. I used to love living and working in London as soon as I left university. Absolutely adored the city and took advantage of what it offered in terms of entertainment, opera, concerts and wonderful theatre as much as my meagre salary could afford, always in the cheapest seats. Coming from a small city, it all opened my eyes. Returning almost every year over more than four decades, most recently in March, not only have I witnessed the city changing greatly (some for the worse!) my own life experience has changed massively and I generally would not wish to return to any of the past, including those heady days in London or even Bangkok. I sometimes wish those today could have experienced the Bangkok days of old but . . . Although I have not been a visitocr to most of the sex scene in Bangkok for some years, I fully recognize and acept that is definitely a result of my personal development. It is always unrealistic not to allow for change.   

Posted
On 9/25/2025 at 12:27 AM, PeterRS said:

Sadly my photos of ten visits to Bali, the Taj Mahal and many others taken earlier have all faded. Probably a result of bad storage. 

There are AI apps which, apparently, can bring your old photos back to life.

You take a photo of them on your phone and the app does the rest. 

I don't think they are free but the results I've seen online are incredible, if true.

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