IF YOU DECIDE TO GET MARRIED
If you decide to get married there are a few things you need to consider not the least of which is that you are often not only marrying the girl, you are marrying the whole family who will expect you to be generous. Often there will be a payment to the parents called sin sot (dowry) the amount is negotiated and dependent on what you are prepared to pay. Often if the girl has been married before or the parents are deceased there is no dowry.
Many Thai women have children from a previous scoundrel that they married thinking mistakenly, that he was in it for the long term. Not only is he no longer in the picture, he also in all likelihood does not help to support his children. I myself married a lady with 3 children who before I met her was struggling to keep them fed, clothed and sheltered.
If you spend enough time around Thais you will soon learn about Thai family values. Having said that, I know a few westerners who have lived here for many years and still don’t fully understand the scope of a Thai’s connection with their family. It is vitally important to understand these family values if you’re married to a Thai.
Most Thais live with their families while they are attending university and most of these
…show more content…
If you must ride a motorcycle, drive very slowly and be aware and alert to everything around you at all times. To be relatively safe on the roads, always look in every direction twice, always give right of way to the other guy, never drink and drive, but assume that everyone else is. Don’t automatically drive off because the traffic light is green; look in both directions first because someone else may be running the red light. I think Thais consider and amber light as a signal to accelerate and a red light as a suggestion to stop. Speed limits are also seen as
If a driver opens a door for some reasons, the motorcycle rider could hit it and be knocked of the motorcycle. Another danger is left-hand turns. Making left-hand turns could cause the vehicle to clip the front of the motorcycle, knocking it over. Even in slow-moving traffic, serious injuries can result from lane splitting.
customs and some immigrant customs just a brief summary usually a male finds a female that he knows well and when the male is ready and the female is ready the male proposes to the female and later on they get married. In other customs there are many other ways to get started and ready for marriage some customs usually your parents would find you a bride or a husband which is not custom to the U.S. customs. Kolker States “there’s something outright improper to us about the notion scouting brides for her grown son” (Kolker 62). Assistant marriage is common in India, Pakistan, and Asia. This indicates that there is a lot of diversity of different types of people in the world.
obey all signs and follow the don’ts and do’s! make sure you don’t hit a deer! when you get a license go around for a
They don’t have time to speak with people like friends and families there’s a lot of work that they need to do. Alfred gives an example of how school work can come in between students and their family “the scholarship boy must learn to distance himself from the family circle in order to succeed academically, Rodriguez tells me by doing this, he slowly loses his family”. This quote shows us that student may want separate themselves a little bit from thee family in order to focus more in school but in doing that they start to lose that connection they had to their family. There is also the matter of students meeting new people that come from different walks of life so they tend to devote more time to the new people then the people at home that are
As common as young marriages and motherhood are for Hmong women, they do disrupt the adolescence stages and life events in the young mother’s life. In a study by Vang (2009), her findings suggested that, “teenage marriage has a significant impact on the socioeconomic status of Hmong women later in life…the overall trend reflected a negative impact of teenage marriage on the lives of Hmong women in general,” (p. 1). Hence, young marriage for Hmong women can impose negative effects and consequences on their lives. Women who married before the age of 19 earned less than
Certain behaviors are considered ideal when choosing a husband or wife. The parents of the bride or groom choose their son’s or daughter’s spouse; a groom’s parents desire a girl who will grow up to be good-looking and beautiful, because it is said that a man takes great pride in a beautiful wife. Light-skin, good teeth, and good height (not too tall) is desired. One of the most important qualities a groom’s parents desire is a girl with a sweet temper, one who does not become too angry too quickly. Faithfulness and hardworking are also qualities that are desired.
While women mostly “retain the name from which they were born, they are still considered a member of their husband’s clan.” (Purnell, 2014, pg. 240) There is not single leader of the Hmong, instead there are leaders for each clan whom are older males. While the father or husband is the decision maker of the family, the oldest son takes over decision making if he dies. Marriage within the Hmong culture is characterized as the daughter living with their husband and in-laws, and the boys marrying before they are considered adults.
The tradition in India is that women at young ages are traded off as wives. What happens is that men and their families arrange marriages for these
In Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, Lord Capulet, Juliet’s father, decides that no matter what Juliet says she has to marry Paris even though she’s already married to the love of her life, Romeo. Getting married for a young person is the biggest life-changing event of their life and an important decision. The type of marriage a person has is mainly based on culture. Arranged marriages have evolved over time and are still in use today for certain people. Arranged marriage from the parents of a child is a bad idea because it may turn into a money pit for both spouses, it may restart old family feuds from the past, and it is unfair for a child not to be able to pick their own spouse to marry.
For example in the laws 138, 139 and 140, the procedures to divorce a woman are clearly laid out. 138. If a free man wishes to divorce his wife who has had no children, he must pay her a settlement equal to the value of the gifts he gave her father when they were married plus the dowry she brought from her father 's house; by paying this settlement he divorces her. 139. If the free man had given her father no gifts, this part of his settlement shall
These deep-rooted values have been passed on from the generation which is continued by the strong value of family that we have that can be seen in the way we live our lives to become successful to gain money and support each other. With a Filipino family, it makes me to be a persistent and determined from the importance of being successful. The future is important for my race so I can give back to my family with the education and money I earn. It was taught give back to family with all the support they have given. My family’s life would be easier if I help them when I get successful.
It is important to remember that arranged marriages in places such as India and countries in Africa often involve a dowry. In other words, the groom and their family will pay the bride’s parents for the hand of their daughter. This leads to fathers marrying off their underage daughters to
In Canada, many people understand marriage to be a legal union between a couple that formally recognizes their true love for each other. In other parts of the world, different cultures practice arranged marriages planned by the family or guardians of the bride and groom. Without a doubt, there are successful long-lasting love stories derived from arranged marriages. However, the whole process of an arranged marriage can have negative social implications. In my opinion, I believe that arranged marriages are wrong and should no longer be acceptable across the globe.
Introduction Malay families and households in Singapore experience various socio-economic changes due to industralization. As familes and households are not fixed nor isolated from the wider society, these socio-economic changes are seen to tamper with the “ideal Malay family”. Djamour (1959) states that the “ideal Malay family” is predominantly made up of a nuclear family comprising of a married couple and children. The head of the household is the chief wage earner and is mostly the man, while women see to housework and caring of small children. This natural patriarchal notion result in a very clear divisions of male-female domains of daily responsibilities in a household (Nirmala, 1993).
When talk about Korea, no one who does not know Korea. People known that Korea is a modern country that had a fast growing economy, and had a top education ranking. I have known Korea through the spread of Korean culture. Nowadays, in Thailand, Korean culture has a role in the everyday lives of people. The question that arises now is “Why Korea?”