Nonthaburi Doesn’t Explain Itself.

There is a giant metal pyramid bolted to the front of a shophouse on one of the main roads in Nonthaburi. It rises three stories, corrugated panels in layers of teal and rust, like someone welded a temple spire to a strip mall. The sun was sitting right behind the power pole when I walked past, and for a second the whole thing looked like it was on purpose. Like someone planned this composition. Nobody planned this. Someone just built a pyramid on a shophouse and never took it down.
I don’t know what it is. I don’t know what it was. A sign for a business that closed. A design choice that made sense to one person at one point in time. A leftover from something. I’ve walked past it and I can’t figure it out, and I’ve stopped trying. That is the thing about Nonthaburi. It does not explain itself and it does not care if you understand.

Two blocks away, a bird built a nest on top of a phone top-up machine. She was sitting on it like she owned the place, tucked between the antenna and a can of Birdy coffee somebody left there. Birdy. The coffee brand. Next to an actual bird. You cannot make this stuff up. 🤣
The machine is still plugged in. The screen is still lit. People are still walking up to use it. And this bird just decided that the top of a vending kiosk in a concrete alcove was the right place to raise a family. She’s not wrong. It’s covered, it’s warm, it’s elevated, and nobody is going to bother her because this is Thailand and you do not disturb a nesting bird. You just work around her. You top up your phone and you let her be.
I think about this a lot when people ask me what it is like to live in Southeast Asia. They want to hear about temples and street food and islands. And those things are real and they are fine. But the actual texture of daily life here is a metal pyramid nobody can explain and a bird on a vending machine next to a coffee can with her own name on it. It’s not exotic. It’s not curated. It’s just ordinary life being stranger and more layered than anything you could stage.
Nonthaburi is not trying to impress anyone. That is what I like about it. It just keeps going, building pyramids on shophouses and letting birds nest on machines, and if you are paying attention, it gives you more material in a ten-minute walk than most cities give you in a week.
You just have to look sideways.
March2026



















































































