This is the first interview I did with Steve called "My Terrible Thai/American Marriage" ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-FH_ekX_hgJw.html
I have known Steve since I moved to Phuket in '93. I have seen him in action at work here. He is a very talented man and I am sure that he will survive here quite well. I am very much looking forward to seeing more of him.
Steve's transparency is refreshing. I understand he lost money in his divorce, but it's sad that such an intelligent and articulate man works a shitty menial job and is nearly broke at 64. Good luck to him. I sincerely hope his heart keeps pumping for many years and he finds happiness in Thailand.
I think the only job he could find in Thailand is teaching English, and i wonder if he has thought about getting credentials so he could teach. Also with his health condition he will not find a company that will insure him for medical.
He's a bit like Charles Bukowski in that respect......he's a very engaging and original writer inexplicably working a shitty job. I think Steve will make friends much more easily than Charles did though
@@rondodson5736 Well, last time I lived in Thailand I was the public relations manager for a swanky hotel on Phuket. And I was a columnist for The Nation and a dozen magazines. I taught English in a girls' high school, a community college, and five hotels. Finding work is not the problem. Getting work that provides a good visa is the problem.
I like how Steve clearly understands that every man dies but not every man lives. And that his mistakes don’t define the now. No judgement here, thanks for the stories and Good luck in Thailand Steve, i believe things will workout somehow. And fair play to you Pete, I really enjoy your videos 🙏
Thanks for this. I've been depressed lately, and Steve helped me see things in a new light. I'm 40 and retired in Thailand already. Steve would do just about anything to be in my position.
Well, not knowing the rest of your life, I wouldn't go so far as to say I'd do anything to be in your position. But yes, I do want to retire to Thailand. Congratulations, Matt.
@steve rosse I only meant my financial position. Also, my military benefits include free health and dental. Thanks for sharing your story. I have a thai girlfriend. I've never been able to get over, too. I wish you the best, man.
The first interview hit me hard and the second one did too. My situation is not as extreme as Steve’s, let alone the age difference as I’m 33 and the gigantic experience difference, but I found a lot of similarities and I understand what he is talking about. I resigned from my job in Italy at the start of 2022, officially had my last day of work just 2 days ago and I will move to Bangkok in June planning to continue my career over there. I had this plan since I fell in love with Thailand in 2019 and never looked back, despite the pandemic forced me to postpone. I understand when he says you are constantly hammered from one side with messages like “make your dream come true” and from the other side with “are you sure of what you are doing? You know real life is not holiday? You will never find a job there! Brace yourself for failure!”. You know what? I do believe I have the potential to have a successful life and so I think about Steve. He has enough skills to put on the table and all the chances to find his luck. Glad to hear he will make his move sooner than anticipated 💪🏻
@@lucianatrambaglio4881 grazie! Alla fine le cose non mi andavano male in Italia, però mi ero stancato della stessa mentalità e stesso stile di vita. La cosa che mi ha più colpito é l’energia che si respira in Thailandia, mix di modernità e tradizione
I'm American retired living in Thailand. All I can say is, if you have no plan A or plan B, flying by the seat of your pant's and not even have 25 or $30,000 to park in the bank for retirement Visa...It will not go well.
Retirement Visa, Education Visa, and Family Member (Child) Visa seem like the best long term visas. The later 2 being the cheapest. Education visa can cost $1200 USD per year. and Child visa less so with the min you have or are in a good relationship.
I enjoy Steve's honesty. I can tell he is fed up with American dream. Just as I was and is the reason I moved to Thailand 5 years ago. “It's called 'the American Dream' 'cause you have to be asleep to believe it.” George Carlin.
Never a truer comment. 2-3 jobs just to survive in my home Hawaii. Not really living, just surviving and always unbelievable stress and anxiety. We also have an epidemic of homeless everywhere on the island.
Steve, Pete is 100% right when he says people will be interested in your journey. That's not just the anecdotes and stories that I know you're great at. Rather it's a very regular (maybe daily) update on how you are progressing along the journey .. what obstacles are in your way, how you faced them, how they've made you feel and how your plans develop and change. I'm guessing these sort of video blogs probably wouldn't need much in the way of editing (so I would expect they could be quickly done and uploaded on a regular basis) .. it can just be a daily diary about your journey. I so enjoyed the last interview with Pete that I bought your book (Leaving Thailand) on Kindle, and enjoyed reading that so much that I had to go and also buy Jack Reynolds book (A Woman of Bangkok) which was also a fantastic read. I certainly do want to hear how your journey goes, even starting from getting things sorted in New Mexico and building up to the departure. And I do wish you all the best. Good luck!
Thank you, Steve. I will certainly try to make a channel that's worth watching. Stay tuned. And I'm glad you liked the books. Jack Reynolds was a fascinating character. Andrew Hicks has written a terrific biography of the man. "A Woman of Bangkok" has been sending men to Thailand as long as I've been alive.
Steve my story is typical 1988 I was a backpacker did Europe and tried to go to south Africa and Kenya from tkts (from a bucket shop in London) it was too expensive so Bangkok then Cairns and Sydney Fiji Tahiti and L.A and New York Buffalo & bus back to Toronto. Well I was supposed to stay 10 days in Thailand and then on to Australia and so on... well that never happens of course! I met another backpacker from Manly Au. We became fast friends and I over stayed my Visa which was 15 days by over 3 months . It wasn't a big deal in those days . I was supposed to travel sew my wild oats and marry my New York jewish princess. But I met Amporn and well a house in Chiang Mai (I paid $3000 and Amporn paid 17000. And we lived for the first 4 months a quiet life but I was 26 and well you might guess how the rest of the year went. It gets a little seamy. Everyone of my expats friends also have exciting tales. Live your dreams Steve . Did you never get up Chiang Mai ? My experience was a hell of a ride. I never officially worked for 18 years from what I recall. I finally settled into a domestic life in Canada with my Filipina wife. We would travel to Philippines and She really took a shine to Thailand and Chiang Mai in particular. Great great memories
It's great that you had 7 years in Thailand in the '90's. It's great you are checking Thailand out today. To be honest I, and others in the comments, don't think your odds of success in Thailand are great unless dying after 1 year can be counted on as a success. You've made your mind up and no one is going to dissuade you. I've lived in Bangkok for 5 years and am married to a Thai. I've also followed some vloggers in the Philippines because they talk about the expat experience really well (check out Paul old dog new tricks, and every man has a story). I recommend that your Plan B be the Philippines. You were used to visa runs in Thailand in the '90's. The Philippines tourist visa situation is much better (3 years before a border run). It sounds like you are on the edge financially and the Philippines might be a better landing place in the end. But . . . follow your dream for now.
Just about done watching this interview. Steve is a genuine, honest, and engaging man. He is fully transparent and a bit self involved, but hope he wins in Thailand! Go for it! Get busy living while your dying. Hope Steve starts a channel. I would sub and love to watch his adventures 🇨🇦🇨🇦❤️❤️
My perspective, particularly for anyone under 50 y.o., is this is a cautionary tale.... live your life now - don't save for rainy days...or, work now, save and live later. The latter is a conservative approach. I wish Steve well, and I hope the guys under 50 will take a measure approach. Be well all, Sam
Exactly why I left my unstable job in HawAii, retired early and joined my family in Thailand. My cobra payment was $600 a month, everything in HawAii is totally unaffordable. I had a Thai lady say to me so if you don’t have money in America you die. In the 3.5 years I have lived here I spent around $300 for excellent, efficient healthcare in Chiangmai.With Medicare in the US , you will still pay $200 a month for part B for medications and hospital. I hope Steve is able to make it here, so honest and upfront. I’m from HawAii and when I was visiting my family in Bangkok, I didn’t want to come back home to HawAii. Epidemic of homeless, unaffordable cost of living, crumbling infrastructure. Working 2-3 jobs. The best decision I have ever made was to move to Thailand. It was more work to get my cat from HawAii to Thailand, then myself and son. We have a Thai embassy in Honolulu, so it was easy
I know about many retirees in Thailand who don't have the necessary $25,000 in the bank for their visa. It always surprises me that people my age who were making $100,000 a year at sometime in their life, or even much less, haven't saved maybe $100 a month for the last 25 years and put it away.
You do not need money in the bank for the retiree visa (50 yoa or over). You do need to be able to show an income that gets to monthly or annual income that meets the requirement. Proof of Income. The Thais at Immi would rather not do it, but it can be done for a retiree visa if you have a pension and Social Security and other income streams. 800K baht a year income. If married to a Thai national it is only 400K baht annually. It can be done for a marriage visa as well. OA
@@michaelseaberg7964 Hi, Mike! You need 2,000 US monthly for the retirement visa, and my Social Security will not be that much. But thanks for your interest!
@@steverosse My suggestion, if you have the trust needed to do this within your family, is to take 30K USD from the house sale and place it in an account in your name (seeding it basically). With that you can show the money honey to immigration and get a one year retirement visa. After you have the visa you can withdraw the money (or write a check for it if it is in a checking account) and give it back to your mother/family. You will then have a year's valid retiree visa to figure out what you can do to stay over the 12 months. Which, in my mind, would be a job that will get you a visa for the work you'd be doing. Just an idea that would at least give you a year to get things done on the visa end. More breathing room for you.
I considered retiring in Thailand. I have made a dozen holiday trips there since 98. I likely will not retire there as I have other contributing factors, but I will travel there again. Steve's plan is not the best one, BUT it is HIS plan. Nothing is more sacred then having the freedom to make your own decisions. He is a survivor and will survive this too. Kudo's for following his dream and LIVING.
There are two things I see that could keep Steve from realizing his dream. Visas and health insurance. Other than that I can see Steve easily finding work at a Uni in Thailand and other job opportunities that he is qualified for. Though age can be an issue if you are above 60 (I have known expats here that worked as a teacher until age 70) it can be done. He's white, American, university educated, speaks understandable English, and is intelligent and personable. All things needed (or desired by the Thais) to get a teaching job. At a private school or government school he would also be able to get some medical insurance... possibly. Steve has mucho skills. He'll do alright if he can crack the visa requirements.
Good advice. He’s also an author and should find online work too. I believe he should start a YT channel. That would be a great marketing tool for a writer
Few problems with your surmise: You can't get ON the teaching ladder (get a work permit and visa) after you reach 60 and yes, people teach until a much later age than that but, they started teaching before 60yo! Thai Social Security is same YOU CANT JOIN IT AFTER 60yo. If you are in it before 60 from that age your monthly payments are reduced and you will receive a full refund on all previous payments (Thai's and Westerners)
@@BrianCRPG Good to know. Does that include the private teaching universities and schools (religious schools for example) or is that just for the Thai 'public' schools?
On one hand, it’s just nuts at his age to relive his glorious past, but then again, he’s doing what so many of us wish to do but yet too scared to commit to. Steve, I hope you find that God you made that promise to. Even to calm that inner turmoil & find peace within. Whilst in Thailand Part 2, start a RU-vid channel on “Finding Steve..” I would certainly be interested in watching that.
Hi Pete , great follow up to the last interview with steve. While I wish him all the luck in the world with his dream move back to Thailand and big respect to him for taking this step , I can’t help but feel he may struggle. Without the proper funds to keep him going is a worry , he can’t stay on peoples good nature for the rest of his life , with no health insurance in Thailand that could be tough and if he can’t find what he wants in Thailand he may go to another country and if he does that it wont be Thailand . I think he remembers Thailand one way and hope he can have that again alas I fear that may not happen. I hope he can sort his relationship out with his daughter maybe his son can help them both patch things up . All the best Steve , Pete nice one my Mann
I hope we get a check up on this guy a year later and the year after that. I think he might be making the right choice. He's already had 2 heart attacks so it's not certain how much time he has left so life quality becomes important and I think spending that remaining time on a beach in the tropics is the better choice.
I was thinking while listening to this interview that Steve should start his own RU-vid channel too. Please start it tomorrow maybe as a weekly vid at first, don't wait till arrivingin Thailand. Steve's weekly email could be sent to his subscribers too. There are tons of opportunities here to support his livelihood in Thailand.
I could invite him to AfterSkool for a drink. He would probably enjoy it until the moment when he would realize that that is what he wants but he can't afford it.
@@edgar9651 As I say in the interview, I don't drink alcohol. And I haven't paid the farang price for sex since 1988. AfterSkool? Jesus, did you just step off the plane ten minutes ago? I wouldn't go in that place to ask for a tooth pick.
@@steverosse They have lots of "school girls" in there. That should remind you of those 5 happiest months in your life and the women who you still dream about. Maybe you can can ask the girls to give you a special price because you are such a great guy - at least you could try.
I came here in August 2020 I am 64 and got a retirement visa, I planned for it and put money in my Thai bank to get me ready for my retirement every month. I opened a bank account while there with a tourist visa. He can possibly open a Bangkok Bank account as they have a branch in New York and start that process now. He can put some money in the bank, I’m sure he will have some retirement or social security and use those two income sources to get his retirement visa. I will him all the luck, I am here now and I am happy that I made that move.
Thank you, Keone. My social security and pension will not be enough to satisfy the requirements for a retirement visa. But I'll find a way. I'm not ready to stop working just yet.
He should definitely start a RU-vid channel. He's a very interesting an open character. A man who's lived, suffered and wants to finish his life living his dream. What's not interesting about that!
Great video. Watching Steve talk about Steve is like crack for me. I wish him the best in the fraught, adventurous days ahead. Most incongruous thing is the green-screen of the perfect beach background behind Steve as he talks about finallly jettisoning his dull, gray existence in Las Cruces. With that fake background, it appears as though he's already succeeded. Phil, great job on these videos. I met you at Steve's book party when he was here in December. But, to echo Steve's compliments, you do a really good job on these and show a strong journalistic sense in your interviews.
I take my hat off to Steve. He stuck to his promise to provide for his kids and honour the courts decision to take (from memory) 60% of his income. Yes, he's had some self inflicted dramas (which I admit to myself too) but he kept his dream in sight and is now living the dream. I just sincerely hope he gets more like 20 years there on Turtle Beach instead of the 12 months he's dreamt of for so long.
I just watched this for a second time, and now I'm wondering, what's the big risk? Risking a miserable life in the crumbling U S A,, for a life in Southeast Asia, living on a beach and surviving on rice, fish, coconut milk, and pecking away on your laptop, especially at the age of 65, seems like nothing more than a sensible trade-off to me. But, if you pose it as a great risk taken to follow a dream, it sounds so much more romantic, doesn't it?
Yeah, Pete chose to use that word and it surprised me. But it's his channel. And I suppose it draws more views than "one more farang retiring to Thailand."
Subscribed mate. I get Steve's dream. Back in 2009 I packed up my belongings and as a single dad with 2 kids moved north to Queensland, Australia from Sth Australia. Most thought I was mad. No job, no prospects, but I'm still here on now almost a 6 figure income. And like Steve, my end game is Thailand in the next 5 to 10 years. The criticism will come again like it did the first time, but this k know: where there's a will there's a way. Great interview. But I wouldn't play poker with you. You give nothing away, mate. ;)
Steve, I won: I have a 94 Camry! Excellent interview. As far as story teller, Steve could be the American version of Simon (the Brit). I think Steve should start his RU-vid stories before landing on Thai soil. People love to follow the transition.
I’m moving to Thailand in a year or so , I got your book and really enjoyed, I’ve been going there since 88 I was 18 and had the best times of my life there , I’m definitely spending my last days there
Hope it all works out for you Steve, I love living in Thailand and can understand your reasons for wanting to be here.Good Luck with the journey, Good Interview Pete.
Hi Pete, that was a tough story, that's a man who knows what he wants and just goes for it without considering the possible consequences. Real respect for Steve, I hope you can fully realize your dream. 👍😀🙏
Respect? The guy dreams about how his life could have been 30 years ago. It won't be like that again, especially without money. If he would engage his brain for a minute then he should realize that. Just going somewhere far away and hoping all will be fine is just delusional.
@@craiggallup5706 I told him that already. I think most people miss what this is all about. Everything about Steve Rosse and he states that, is about attention seeking Steve Rosse. This is his way to avoid paying for therapy.
@@craiggallup5706 I avoid lawyers at all costs. If I'm going to wink-wink at somebody I'll do it to the man in uniform, instead of paying some "agent" to wink at him for me.
No, this is about Tom Lloyd being in a hissy fit. What the hell set you off, Tom? Did you ask me for my honest opinion of a piece of writing and so now you hate me? I can't remember saying anything to you that would make you do a 180 like this.
Thanks for this. I'm currently living in Thailand. I was in Phuket in 1995 probably when Steve was there, although it was only a short holiday. I'm fascinated by Steve and I watched both of your interviews with him back-to-back today. My opinion, Steve will get his wish. He has a huge talent, the ability to converse, this will open doors for him and will allow him to build a community wherever he ends up in Thailand. I wish he had expanded on his experience with hallucinogens; he said he'd never take them again. I wonder why. I would very much like to hear more.
Thanks... uh... Thanks Goats in trees! I don't like hallucinogens because their effect goes on for hours and hours and I get exhausted. Also don't like the high alcohol delivers. Don't like any kind of speed-y stimulant. But I'll smoke weed all day long, given the chance.
@@ThairishTimes Well, this is bizarre, he did respond to me, nicely, and then after I offered to help him with his visa to Thailand he ignored me and deleted his comment. I can now see how he ended up broke. He hasn't got enough sense to accept free help from someone who wants the help him achieve his dream.
I’ve met so many Thai people who endure so much on a daily basis and yet they are great people.My friend has worked 30 years in a garment factory. She lost her savings and retirement benefits fighting Ovarian Cancer.She is a stranger to luxury and comfort.Yet she is one the most positive people you’ll ever meet.As are most Thai People. Listening to self centered and self pitying blow hards is disgusting.
your friend is putting up a front, it is called 'toxic positivity'. she probably does not like you well enough to be honest with you. plenty of thais bitch and moan behind closed doors, plenty of people offing themselves now covid crippled the economy. how is that for positivity?
Yeah, I love SR, THE most HONEST guy I have ever seen, and keeps you interested. Go to his channel and watch all his vids, I did. Great story telling and made me decide to return to Thailand when I retire in a few years. I will definately look him up and have coffee ands hoot the shit. Pete is great too.
Pete! I love your interviews and these 2 with Steve Ross are excellent (do a channel Steve!) Favourites alongside the NYC firefighter Charlie. I’m going through all your interviews & watching them all. Keep it up! I’ve been travelling to Thailand 🇹🇭 twice a year since 2007. I feel like it’s a second home for me.
Drama is on my resume. Bachelors degree in Speech and Dramatic Arts. Worked in the Theatre and Film industries. Wrote five books. Lots of drama. And enough sense to know that in a RU-vid video you talk about drama. You don't talk about the mundane.
Pete is right about people being interested to see how things work out for you in Thailand Steve, the good and the bad. A youtube video diary might be a good idea, I know I would watch it.
I saved about 450 k euro (50% invested in descent big companies) and will move there soon. I have had enough of the western lifestyle. Will study thai and teach for most of my expenses there (3-4 days a week). Will just rent a nice place, not considering buying untill landowning of 1 rai will become accesible for farang. I know thailand good enough to not get involved with scaming bargirls (lived there in my 20s for three years). I have given myself a royal budget of 100k baht a month living in Chiang Mai. With the teaching income of around 30-40K I calculated I can make it out easily 10 years in Thailand without problems and will still have 225 k left in the end. And probably in 10 years this investment has doubled. Trust me: I will have a very very good life in Thailand with a 3-4 day work week. I will still have the option of going "home"...people who go there should always keep this option open. Dont expect making a fortune in Thailand, most people fail really bad.
Have a look at the every man has a story Channel from the Philippines he is an older man that went to the Philippines under similiar circumstances to your guest, he fell on his feet and everything worked out for him So don't loose the dream
Great interview with Steve Ross what an open honest guy. I hope he makes it back there. Great interview and can I say you are the Michael Parkinson of interviewing not sure if you know him. I used to watch him when I lived in the UK over 40 years ago. I like how you listen . Keep up the good work
Great interview Pete. I kinda know how Steve feels. One think I have learned is do not bring your foreign girlfriend or wife to America. It changes them. Good luck to Steve.
Hiya Pete. I will go back and watch. I have not seen the first one. He is brave. I hope it works out. You're a great interviewer. Thank you for sharing.
The picture he painted of himself leaving and never seeing his family again for a kamikaze emigration to Thailand is really sad. Sounded almost like he's just given up in a way. I hope it goes well for him but with no plan B, a fairly fanciful plan A, and the 'die trying' attitude I'd genuinely worry for the guy. It is a good recipe for a RU-vid channel though you're right!
Steve comes off as a highly intelligent person with a literary sensibility. Consider the enormous gap between his vocabulary versus all the other interview subjects - he's a wordsmith by comparison in his own league. And what I have observed from an interest in other biographies of authors: Hunter, Bukowski, Camus, even Vonnegut, being so intimate with words can be a real burden on the mind - a bittersweet gift a best. Being particularly good at relationships, at making 'rational' life choices, etc. may not be a strength nor a priority. But can they tell and often live a hell of a story? I do hope Steve finds peace even if it is spite of his wishes.
Great interview. I can relate... Because my name's is the same ha ha. But I do get where he's coming from about working in America. I'm a computer engineer and have been working long enough to have a great pension. My Thai wife is here with me as is her daughter. I hope to retire next year but plan to retire only part-time in Thailand. Buy or build a house and go back and forth. Wife can have it when I'm gone. Steve will be fine, sounds like he knows what he wants. Good luck...
LOL...the comments were far more fascinating then the vid and reveal a lot about the man...I would guess he knows a lot of people due to his outgoing and in your face personality but does not have any true friends that he could call upon for assistance in a time of need. His delivery is on point and keeps you entertained but would you allow him sleep on your sofa for a few days...Not me... he has already planted the seed about staying on your sofa. Everything about the man is calculated, staying on your sofa was premeditated but put forward as in jest, a real chancer as they would say in Ireland. Thailand 20/30 years was a different place, staying over at your mates home on the sofa for weeks on end was quite common, with the lady of the house cooking and cleaning for both men while they sipped Leo on the veranda with no questions asked or complaints given. Anyway , the calculated networking with Steve has commenced, it will be interesting to see how many people in a Westernised Thailand will have room on their sofa for a man with limited finances.
Very acute observation. Whatever its positive aspects, global capitalism has been steadily breaking down norms and values of traditional societies such as in my native land of South Korea. Thailand seems no different and will continue to "Westernize." And Vietnam is just around the corner.
Good interview! I have known Steve in 1990 in Phuket as we were among the founders of GRP, the Gibbon Rehabilitation Project to study and reintroduce captive gibbons to the jungle. I didn't know why he had left and where he was until I stumbled on your last interview. Interesting story and i remember that he was a good writer but not an easy character. But as many writers he has to overdramatize situations, I think. It should not be difficult for him to make enough money in Thailand with his skills: utube, blogs, writing, advertising and teaching, even privately. Rents and food are cheap here and the visa problem can be overcome. I wrote to him offering some help, but it seemed to me that he is not happy if his dramatic situation loses suspense! Good luck Steve , and get in touch when you get back here... Thailand has changed but it's still a good and easy place to live!
@@ThairishTimes yes, we have been in touch since I saw your first interview w him. My compliments for all the interviews that I am viewing! Come by if you're coming South, I may have a few old-timer stories for you ..and a nice place. Bring wife n kids
I really like this guy. He reminds me of me. The only difference is I never got married and had kids. I lived in Thailand back in the late 90s also. I lived there for 9 years. I had the time of my life. I am about 15 years younger. I really want to go back to Thailand also. I have a business idea that we could collaborate on. I would love to exploit his writing and film skills for mutual benefit. I don't know if I could I trust myself with him. We would have a lot of fun, but I think we would die broke, probably on an illegal visa run or from a heart attack doing dodgy things. Or it could go the other way. Who knows? Pete is right. He is definitely talented and charismatic.
There are two ideas that I have that we could collaborate on where are skills compliment each other. I will definitely look you up. I can't go now but maybe in 6 months. That will give me time also to flesh out a plan to propose to you. If it works out, we might recapture the magic if not better. Just stay healthy. No more heart attacks.
@@steverosse I understand your desire to go back to the place that makes you happy even though there is risk. Little risk equals little reward right? Hope it works out for you and maybe I’ll see you there next year.
There's a big difference between somebody in the States who's never lived in Asia to say that's it a big risk and somebody who lives there saying that it's a big risk. I wish this guy luck but I'm sure we'll see him living on Jomtien beach in two years.
Please post a follow up. I know people like to critique other’s lives especially mistakes. However, we all make mistakes. Steve is very intelligent and I have faith that he will live his dream. Steve, if you’re reading this I believe in you. I do have questions on his plans for residency and how he plans to achieve a proper visa.
@@steverosse Wow, eight months, that's impressive. 555 I just clicked on your channel and saw the Bar girl holds farang captive in the Nana Hotel! video. You are obviously already a top expert. Next time I see you in Nana, I will ask you for advice. Or maybe I should ask the girls to tell me some stories about that old farang. I am sure we will have a laugh.
This guy is interesting- don't know why- but he is. More of this guy please. He's no loss to the USA but will definitely we an enhancement to sleepy Thailand. Cheers
I like this dude. His open hearted truthfulness is just lovely and so rare and what is more simple and alive than the Truth ? I’m in recovery and have over the years attended many 12 step meetings and this is one of the few places you’ll meet people this real. All spiritual awakenings happen within and around absolute truth and sincerity. Very few people admit even to themselves just how afraid they really are and how little they actually know that is meaningful. The song says you have to go to hell before you can get to heaven. This man has already been to hell and back over and again. Me too. His next stop is heaven, right here on earth and in the Buddha field when his time comes to venture forth across the great wide open. I send blessings for his journey may it be filled with light and love and much peace ✌️ 😊💛🌸🌺🌼👏
@@steverosse Hey brother you are so very very welcome and again I’m sending you much love and blessings. May you find that deep joy and peace that we were all born to find. I know you will 🤗
And again a Very Good interview with an Very Interesting person as Steve. But he has to be Realistic about not TO much money to live in Thailand, for rent a house etc… and he need a Good Insurance, very expensive in Thai , and last but not least , he Need a Visa and for that you need a minimum amount off money! I think he is TO optimistic, what I admire! With less money and a small Pension it is difficult, also now in Thailand, you can not live from the Wind and the Sun only. Good Job Pete. 🙏
@@steverosse i wish you all the Good Luck you can get. You are an very interesting person with an interesting live. I admire that (same age as you) You are an optimistic man, and that’s the reason that I think…. You can go make it. 👍