Versuchen GOLD - Frei
The essence of Thailand in one phrase
Bangkok Post
|June 05, 2025
The glossy brochures tell you it’s “The Land of Smiles” or maybe it’s just “amazing”. Slightly more sophisticated takes suggest the essence of Thailand can be found in its unique expressions of showing consideration to others in the context of a hierarchy.
How do you say krengjai in English? Why are there so many pronouns? Good luck with that.
There is another word that captures something essential about Thailand, at least in its current incarnation. It’s one of those hard-to-translate terms, and it’s not even Thai. But it applies to Thailand as well as anywhere else in the world, and maybe more so. What's the word?
Catch-22.
What? What kind of word is that? What does it even mean? Even Chat-GPT struggles with it: “A self-defeating loop of logic, a paradox, a circular predicament with no way out, an impossible bind created by conflicting requirements, a bureaucratic deadlock with mutually exclusive conditions.”
For those familiar with the term, catch-22 is not unlike krengjai in the sense that you can understand it without being able to translate it. What's left is to explain by example, and in both cases, Thailand provides an especially rich lode of anecdotes.
The term catch-22 was coined by American author Joseph Heller, who, in writing about the horrors, frustration and hopelessness on the front of a violent war, invented a term to describe the powerlessness of the individual in the face of a powerful bureaucracy.
His darkly comic novel, Catch-22, is the story of an air pilot grappling with mind-numbing bureaucratic injunctions that make it impossible to achieve any autonomy.
A fighter pilot in an unjust war, protagonist Yossarian reckons the only way to get out is to plead insanity, but by pleading insanity in an insane war, he is showing his sanity and thus is not eligible to get out.
In Heller's novel, catch-22 is about not being able to get out, but it also applies to not being able to get in.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June 05, 2025-Ausgabe von Bangkok Post.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
War in Iran spurs fear of fuel shortage
Long queues formed at fuel stations across Sri Lanka as the conflict in Iran fed fears of oil shortages in the island nation, which is still recovering from a deep financial crisis.
1 mins
March 04, 2026
Bangkok Post
Gulf states on high alert as war spreads
Trump ramps up threat to Iran regime
3 mins
March 04, 2026
Bangkok Post
Trump, Netanyahu doing the free world a favour
US President Donald Trump is being criticised from many quarters for his decision to join Israel in a war to topple the Iranian regime, which Saturday yielded the killing of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
4 mins
March 04, 2026
Bangkok Post
Travellers stuck in Dubai face long wait
The Emirates' reputation as a safe destination in a volatile area was put to a brutal test in recent days as Iran targeted the region with missiles and drones, writes Ceylan Yeğinsu, Omnia Al Desoukie and Christine Chung from Geneva, Dubai and New York
5 mins
March 04, 2026
Bangkok Post
Proteas on the prowl, target a spot in final
Black Caps lurk in the Kolkata shadows
2 mins
March 04, 2026
Bangkok Post
Thai futsal team bag historic Asean title
Thailand celebrated a historic breakthrough on Monday night as they clinched their first-ever Asean Women’s Futsal Championship title, edging Australia 5-4 in a thrilling final at Terminal21 Hall in Nakhon Ratchasima.
1 min
March 04, 2026
Bangkok Post
EC shrugs off poll petitions
Narong Klunwarin, chairman of the Election Commission (EC), remains unfazed by legal petitions over the agency's handling of the general election, insisting commissioners acted lawfully and are ready to defend their decisions in court.
1 min
March 04, 2026
Bangkok Post
Why food waste composting may fail
Imagine an enormous pile of leftover rice, vegetable scraps, or fruit peels dumped to landfill, slowly rotting and filling nearby communities with an unpleasant smell.
4 mins
March 04, 2026
Bangkok Post
Afghan-Pakistan fighting kills 42
Worst clashes in years enter 6th day
2 mins
March 04, 2026
Bangkok Post
Financial planning challenges in Asia
Middle-class consumers finding it harder to plan for retirement, survey by insurer FWD Group finds
2 mins
March 04, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
