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Pattaya John
07-14-08, 02:58 AM
Expatriates.:kib:
A traveled and well known author (Mr. James Michner) wrote a book called "The Wanderers" back in the sixties. In this volume he described the personality types that he met in his travels. He used a few chapters describing what he called "Tech Reps" or Technical Representatives. Back then many expats were such...

Anyway, Mr. Michner describes these men as those who invariably know the local culture better than any anthropologist, have at least one girlfriend in the local dives, better common sense than most & etc. My favorite part is the condensed version of his description of a Tech Rep (read that "Expat"):

"If you happen to be strolling through the deserts of Pakistan one day, and come across a mud hut with thatched roof. Looking inside you find an American sitting on the only piece of furniture, a toolbox..., right next to the most expensive stereo system you've ever seen in your life!! That man is an expat!"
You see them in back-street bars of Bangkok, Manila, Guadalajara, along third-world waterfronts, in up-country Thailand, anywhere living is cheap and rules scarce. Some are old guys in their sixties and seventies with fading tattoos from other lives, lives that also fade into fewer and fewer living memories. Some are in their thirties and run little businesses, often legitimate. They are a bit rough-looking or maybe just eccentric, congenitally what they are, and not concerned about what you think of them. You find them heisting a brew ski in out-of-the-way spots, chaffing with the barmaids who maybe or may not have a sideline. They are the dropouts of the earth-the interesting expats, not the middle-management retirees who really belong in some dismal retirement colony in Florida.
They are a breed overlooked by the world, which suits them fine. Some have pasts. You see jailhouse tattoos. A few are drunks waiting to die spitting blood--poor miserable sods who just couldn't get it together after the contract ran out on the oil rig and the wife ran with the kids, probably for good reason. Most are solid enough. They drop by the bars because that's where the social life is. Some own bars. Many have local wives and families. Some did once back in the States and figure they'll pass this time around.
They are men with stories, many of which wouldn't be believed in the upholstered countries of the earth. On the other hand, expats generally don't talk to upholstered people. You meet a lot of retired pilots, maybe for United and maybe for spook outfits like Air America, or maybe the personal pilot of some oil-sheikh out of Arabia. Some did things they don't talk about! During the American lunge into Asia in the Sixties; after the war, the golf course just didn't appeal to them. Golfers don't always understand about Lucy's Tiger Den, the Grey House, and the Blue Fox in TJ.
Their defining trait is that they don't fit in and don't want to. The bond broker for example who wondered, "What am I doing this for?" and stopped. He opened a dive shop in Mexico and never looked back... There are drug dealers who got smart in time; men who don't seem to have last names, or not the same one twice; guys who scout trinkets for the US import market. You bump into freelance writers living by their wits, credentialed by obscure publications which sometimes exist. Military men who retired on twenty and didn't want to work in the NAPA outlet; the former bouncer at a strip joint in Florida who somehow drifted abroad and saw no reason to go back.
The waters of anarchy run wide and fast through expatriate realm,
though they don't gather up everybody. Some of the Americans are deeply
attached to the memory of the US they left. For a few, patriotism has replaced religion as the psychic buoy for the otherwise unmoored. Others are profoundly, by conviction or inattention, citizens of nowhere, loyal to no country. Maybe they've lived in so many places that whatever bonds they may have had have worn through; borders are to them just places where you get your bags inspected. Maybe they wearied of the socialism of Canada, the regimentation of the United States, and bailed.
Some are angry that their countries haven't lived up to their desires. Others are bored with the question. The world does not approve of deliberate statelessness. These men wouldn't care. There's not too much they do care about. A few expats are bad-voodoo muck-sulkers. The Federals in Guad recently snatched a candy man on the lam out of Spokane: something like forty counts of homosexual child molestation. (He seemed like a nice guy.) But it's rare. More commonly men marry and play Leave It to Beaver, have kids or adopt the wife's, live happily and make sure she gets the Social Security when they die.

Almost universal among them is a profound desire not to be part of somebody else's parade. They want to be left alone. In the semi-developed countries favored by expats, governments usually don't care about you unless you break the law. Sometimes they don't care even if you do break the law, depending on the law. The big North American governments never stop supervising, admonishing, collecting data, requiring forms. Those who dislike it enough end up somewhere else. The uncharitable in America bruit the notion that men expatriate because they want to enjoy sex with lovely young lovelies. That's part of it. For a man of fifty, a sloe-eyed sweetie of twenty-five beats hell out of an angry menopausing gringo with a law degree. Maybe it shouldn't be that way, but it is that way.

But much more than sex is involved. Women in the backwaters are often just plain agreeable. After the divorce back home, men learn. Some do. There are interpretations and interpretations of the prostitution and semi-prostitution that one finds abroad. Hooking, an expat might tell you, if he cared, which unlikely, gets is a bad rap. Bar girls usually aren't bad people. The cynical among the expatriates, which is about all of them, say that hooking differs from other approaches to sex chiefly in that the latter cost more.
Deep down, a lot of men just don't want the admin overhead of the usual relationship: the breakup, the shrieking, the agony, and let's-get-counseling, and everyone feels like dirt. Relations between the sexes, they say, are always fundamentally commercial. Women trade sex for whatever they want, and men trade whatever they have for sex. In the US, when the whole mess becomes horribly boring, the husband insists that he's still in love to avoid admitting that he'd give anything to be in Bangkok.

The woman eats bon-bons. Remember that the expat lives there, unlike the crypto-sadistic Japanese sex tourist. He knows the girls in the bar, laughs with them, and takes one home here and again. For her, it beats being sweated in a running-shoe factory. Most countries don't have the Puritan background America does.

I know lots of men who have married either bar girls or non-hooking local women. (Some don't know they have married bar girls.) Often it works well. The woman gets what she wants: a decent life, and a husband who doesn't knock her around. He gets what he wants: a pretty and pleasant young wife, food on the table, and a good mother if they have kids. He probably actually loves her because, praise God, she's not congenitally angry or in a law firm. They're happy. It's their business.
:cheers:

mexfishguide
07-14-08, 11:46 AM
Mitcher, sure knows his crap.

Take Care
Mexfishguide:cheers

drifter
07-16-08, 03:24 AM
I think I just saw this recently on this website.:wtf

Pops
07-16-08, 05:09 PM
!:cheers

Pattaya John
07-16-08, 09:07 PM
:AR15

I LERK every other day and I did not see this post on the Rat Pack Web

:wtf

peanut
07-18-08, 05:45 AM
Looks like something that wild rover posted.

drifter
07-20-08, 05:12 PM
Hey Peanut!

How's it going? Jet-lag kickin' your ass? I hope not! I am home, in my back yard- Kickin' it by the pool with the BBQ smokin' and the mojitos flowin'! Hope you make it out of there soon, bro! Look me up; Duff and I are hooking up soon and we are going to drink one to YOU, my friend!:cheers

Drewskie
07-20-08, 08:02 PM
hey drifter when does duff get home?? oh hey i started walking finally, slowly but surely!!

drifter
07-21-08, 02:12 AM
Duff got home in May. Glad to hear you are starting to get back to normal, Drewskie.

LAID BACK SPARKY
07-21-08, 11:40 AM
Hey Partener,
See you finally made it back to the states, Hope you made a ton of greenbacks. Myself just close to finishing my old home place, Asked to be laid of back in June got too hot for this retired sparky, will catch out some time in cooler weather , then drag up when the frost hits the ground, Had fun with you guys while in the Valley, If you are ever back this way hollar at me.
Laid back sparky
"RETIRED"

Drewskie
07-21-08, 04:02 PM
hell yea man so uh once i come visit we are taking out your new ride k!

drifter
07-21-08, 04:50 PM
Hey Laid Back!

Yes, I am back in the good Ol' U S of A for a minute! Got until the 11th of August 'till I head back out. I would like to hook up w/ you sometime and trade stories and such.....

Drewskie,

The ride is SWEEEEEETTT! This mother hauls ass! and turns heads. Rollin' on 20" chrome Ds, bitch!!!!! Let's go when you get here! Unless you're scared! LOL!:rockwoot:

peanut
07-21-08, 11:35 PM
Your wife will never let you take that car out.:doh:doh

drifter
07-22-08, 05:53 AM
Your wife will never let you take that car out.:doh:doh


You're 100% correct! But it's fun to talk about it!:blahslap