I
moved to Chiang Mai after six months in Samut Prakarn (probably a worse
place than BKK). I arrived here with a non-teaching mornings-only job
lined up, editing financial news for a UK newswire on a laughable
wage. Armed with a bit of experience and a recently completed ECC TEFL
course I approached 5 of the decent 8 language schools in town. I dressed
to meet Thai expectations (tie and smart shirt/pants), tried to speak Thai
and had all my papers ready. By the end of the day I had two offers of
part-time work. One was with CEC, a very busy Thai-run outfit that was
more of a baby-sitting agency than a school, the other was with the
Australia Centre, one of the more professional and prestigious schools
here. So, juggling the three, I had plenty of hours work, with a combined
salary of 25k.
After awhile it became obvious to me that
although my initial impression was that Chiang Mai had too many wanna-be
teachers and not enough jobs, the quality of 'potential' teachers here was
woeful. I saw guys with dreadlocks, teachers in T-shirts, girls wearing
skimpy 'backpacker-type' clothing, dirt old men, etc. I realised that a
little understanding of Thai expectations and a professional approach went
a long way. One hirer gave me some insightful information. He had been
school manager for several years and had seen lots come and go. His office
was centrally located on the canal withing spitting distance of
guesthouses. At least 20 people came to see him a week. Some didn't even
have a CV, and some were dismissed by the receptionist for poor dress. He
reckoned he binned 10 of the CVs, and only 5 others were worth keeping on
file. If he hired one a month he was lucky. 'You have all the right
qualifications and are well presented young man, unfortunately I have
nothing for you right now, keep coming to see me each week' he had said.
And so I settled into CM, working mornings
only with several other farangs and a team of Thais for a pultry salary of
10000 baht a month (80 hours work), and several hours in the evening
between the two language schools, I found an apartment out in the suburbs
and cycled everywhere. None-the-less, it was easy to settle in, the
environment was much better, I soon made plenty of friends among the
ex-pat community, the Thais I met were less material and more
down-to-earth, wilderness was at my doorstep and things were cheaper. A
lower salary didn't really matter to me.
Six months later things have moved on. As a
freelancing journalist (which I am by profession) I had made a
breakthrough with a UK company writing content for websites (My specialist
area), I soon gave up the awful mornings-only job, and dumped the Thai-run
school (for all the usual reasons, cancelled classes, disorganisation,
lack of curriculum etc.), and now I have a burgeoning copywriting business
which employs 15 people part-time. I run everything from home, turnover is
quick, and I'm making 3 times more than my previous teaching salary. I
seldom mingle with the tourists in town, still live cheaply and
occassionally teach at the Australia centre for good measure. I get
frustrated at the poor standard of service here and the low level of
professionalism among the people (Thai and Farang alike), but the math is
good when doing business with overseas clients. A lot of people here have
set up product export companies.
I've been lucky, but the harder you work the
luckier you get. The truth is, Chiang Mai is full of 'life stylers',
people who don't want to work, people who will happily live off 10,000
baht a month, eat at noodle shops and loiter in tourist bars playing pool,
riding their bicycles everywhere and seldom leaving CM other than for the
monthly visa run to Mae sai. It's a small place, the schools know who's
who and won't touch them. Many hang around for months looking for work,
but eventually give up, broke and broken, and leave. They don't bother to
learn any Thai, in CM you don't need to. I know several who have arrived
with their act together and landed plum jobs on no prior experience. There
are few jobs in Thai high schools, but a handful of international schools
hire properly qualified people. Occassionally they hire ex-pats who have
been here awhile with their 'ear to the ground'. Sometimes it's a waiting
game of getting in with the crowd and waiting. There are lots of people
here who subsist on bit work from the various language schools, and
eventually leave. Few language schools offer full-time contracts, and few
even underwrite a Non-Imm B application.
It's easy to get by in Chiang Mai,
consequently it attracts the scum. I've had people apply for a job with my
fledgling company who admit to being down to their last 300 baht. Others
have asked for advances less than 2 weeks after starting (I let them go).
Some can't even afford to do their visa run (700 baht).
Then there are the retirees. Those who have
made their money elsewhere and simply loaf. Some are as young as 35 or 40,
but they distort the picture, leading others to believe that it is OK to
party and not work. There is also the NGO crowd, mostly working quietly
for Burmese aid outfits that aren't entirely allowed by the government.
They are serious, compassionate people on varying salaries who have been
recruited externally.
Chiang Mai is way better to live in than BKK,
but that's my opinion. Nowadays I prefer an early morning mountain bike
ride to a night out at the MOS. I'm settled in my little bungalow, with a
normal life, regular places to go to, where you almost always run into
people you know, the traffic is dodgy, but not too congested, the air is
cleaner, but not always clean, It's cooler, sometimes rainier, but a
little humid at times, the pace is slower, sometimes its really boring,
but there is a steady stream of cultural events put on at the uni. There
are a few nightclubs worth going to, plenty of bar girls, less odious rich
Thais breezing around, and most things are cheaper. It's possible to have
your own house and no one need use public transport. The mountains are
really accessible, everywhere in Thailand is noisy, locals in Chiang Mai
can also be frustrating.
If you come here, come with the right attitude
and you'll succeed. Many come here with long-term plans. I know many who
ahve been here 10 years or more. Others come, plan to stay, but never
quite make it.
Anon.
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