Thai Ways
Thai Culture and Code of Conduct
The common Thai greeting is the Wai, a prayer-like
gesture using both hands. When Thai people wai you, you should wai back. When
Thais and foreigners do business, it is common to shake hands.
Thai's are flexible in nature and most times understand,
that foreigners can not know their code of behavior. Mostly, they are too polite
to complain about anything you do out of ignorance. There are however, a few basic
rules that you should observe.

- Thai people are very fond of
and loyal their king and queen and the whole royal family. Never criticize
any member of the Royal Family or the institution itself. It's probably better
not to bring them up in conversation at all.
He is indeed a well respected and remarkable
man who has earned the adulation over the past 60 years of his reign. In this,
the 60th year since his coronation or at any time for that matter, showing any
disrespect towards the royal family is likely to evoke a rare outburst or disapproval
from the locals. You could even get arrested for it!
- The religion should be respected as well. Temples, Buddha
statues or monks are to be revered. Buddhist and Chinese shrines are open to foreigners
but you should dress appropriately when visiting.
- Shorts and sleeveless shirts
are discouraged. A non-muslim can enter a mosque, except during prayer time.
- Hilltop houses have special spirit rooms,
which are closed to outsiders: entering them will violate their sanctity.
- Monks and Buddhist ceremonies can be photographed.
- Thais regard the feet of lower stature so do not point
them at others or step over those seated or lying.
Feet are used for walking on and occupy the lowest
part of the body (anatomically and metaphorically speaking). They get dirty in
rice fields and on floors and should be tucked away out of sight, never pointed
at anyone or used to point.
Of course, along come us bumbling size 45
farangs, insisting on wearing footwear everywhere.
Thailand is very much a shoeless place
and the culture of footwear here is quite different. For one, shoes are never
worn indoors, its nice and tropically warm and far more comfortable to go
shoeless within the spotless indoor environment. This of course means youll
be removing your footwear a lot; every time you enter a temple, tourist attraction
or home, so leave those 20 holed Doc Martens at home and pack your flip flops
instead.
Just watch the locals, theyve got it sorted,
they ride motorbikes, go hiking, show up at work and even enter construction sites
in their flimsy sandals. It works!
- Remove your
shoes before entering a Thai temple or house.
- Avoid touching people on the head,
It is considered very rude.
- Bigger is Better-
Thai society has a complex and overwhelming hierarchy of status, and every Thais
elevation up the ladder of respect is central to their motivation and very being.
Age, money, fame or respect through the monkhood or teaching profession count
for much in the status ranks.
- Expect the unexpected-
Foreigners living here often find it unfathomable why certain
habits thrive (such as ignoring safety rules on the road), or why their hosts
carry out activities in the most bewildering way.
Your own judgement about whether its good or
bad is irrelevant and by standing out from the rest and going against the flow,
even to make a point about doing the correct thing, isnt
terribly popular or admired.
Its polite to mind your own business
Thai Beliefs
Even though the country has modernised and become a lot more
prosperous over the past three decades, Thais at heart are still very traditional
and bound by modest behavioural habits. They also have a profoundly superstitious
approach to life, based on Buddhist and spiritual fortune.
There is karmic cycle to everything Thailand, according
to the popular traditional school of thought, and appeasing the spirits through
merit making is paramount if you are to avoid misfortune. This has a overwhelming
effect on the daily routine of all Thais as they go about their business.
Dont be alarmed if your taxi driver takes both
hands off the wheel in heavy traffic while doing 100kph to offer a quick wai to
a passing Buddha statue. Expect to be held up while merit making takes place or
to be shown the long way round to avoid consecrated ground.
Be prepared for all sorts of odd shaped construction
to accommodate the feng shui practices, and get used to all sorts of changes to
schedules to meet the most auspicious timing on the calendar.
Keeping in the Upper Class
The Thai are also quite conservative and the more middle or
upper class they are the more they try to uphold their manners and status.
We might get the wrong impression, with all the go
go bars everywhere, but your average Thai is actually quite shy and old fashioned
when it comes to fraternalising. For some young middle or upper class girls, even
being seen with a Western man spells disaster among the gossip fiends.
This might explain why you get a cold reaction when
trying hug or kiss a Thai goodbye in public.
Who you hang out with, where you are seen, how you
conduct yourself in public and what you wear are all important to the bourgeois
here.
As a visitor in Thailand you will mostly interact
with working class people, tour guides, receptionists and sales clerks whose parents
were all humble farmers. But there is a whole middle class you seldom get to meet
who uphold Thai manners assiduously.
Society here isnt quite as open as we are used
to, and people dont have the privilege to ignore all around them and behave
as they please, unconcerned about what others might think of them.
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