Bangkok Thailand

Bangkok Diary — The Night Before Day Four

Bangkok has started to settle into a rhythm. Tonight was quieter than the first few days. No temples. No markets. No rushing across the city trying to see everything at once. Instead, I wandered into a small bookstore a few streets from where I’m staying. The kind of place that feels more discovered than found. A cat slept on a shelf near the philosophy section while the owner read between customers. I picked up a book and lost track of time. Outside, a thunderstorm rolled through the city without ever reaching me. The air smelled like rain and jasmine. Motorbikes passed. Street vendors packed up for the night. Bangkok continued doing what Bangkok does. Later, I found a comfortable chair in the hotel lobby and finally slowed down enough to simply sit and read. Travel isn’t always about movement. Sometimes it’s about stillness. Tomorrow is another early start. More exploring. More stories. More corners of Bangkok waiting to be discovered. For now, the fan is turning, the city is humming outside, and I’m grateful for a quiet evening before the next adventure begins. Renee called it a night hours ago. According to her, the bed was calling her name and tomorrow’s adventures weren’t going to wait for tired travelers. Me? I’m still too excited to sleep. Tomorrow promises new streets, new discoveries, and another side of Bangkok waiting to introduce itself. I can’t wait. — Trina

Bangkok Diary — The Night Before Day Four Read More »

Krung Thong Plaza

& Custom Sandals Bangkok Assignment: June 6th – Pamper day Some days are about temples. Some days are about food. And some days are about finding a place that reminds you that everyone deserves to feel seen. After my loc detox and retie earlier in the day with @Bonita_Dreadlocks_Thailand, Renee and I headed to Krung Thong Plaza, a shopping center known throughout Bangkok for its five floors of plus-size fashion. I wasn’t prepared for what we found. Store after store. Dresses. Casual wear. Vacation outfits. Evening looks. Colors everywhere. Not hidden in the back corner. Not a single rack squeezed between other departments. Entire businesses dedicated to serving women whose options are often limited elsewhere. Fat Beauty. Fat Girls. Fatty. Love Calories. The names made us smile. The confidence behind them made us stay. We spent hours wandering the floors, touching fabrics, comparing styles, and watching local shoppers livestream directly from some of the boutiques. It felt less like a mall and more like a community built around fashion without apology. Later we made our way to Make A Shoes. The process was surprisingly simple. Pick a style. Choose a color. Get measured. Wait. For our first pair, Renee and I both chose basic black sandals. Nothing flashy. Just something comfortable enough to test before ordering more designs later. Price? 499 THB. Less than many people spend on coffee and lunch. By the time we left, we weren’t carrying much. Just two pairs of sandals and a few shopping bags. But we were carrying something else too. Proof that sometimes the best travel experiences happen when you follow curiosity instead of a checklist. Tomorrow the city takes us back outside. Tonight belongs to comfortable shoes and freshly retied locs. — Trina What Trina & Renee Wore Today’s Bangkok adventure featured the Women’s Stretch V-Neck Jumpsuit With Pockets — a lightweight, comfortable one-piece perfect for long shopping days, market visits, and city exploration. Women’s Stretch V-Neck Jumpsuit With Pockets

Krung Thong Plaza Read More »

Day 3: With Renee

Loha Prasat Temple Day three in Bangkok, and I finally understand what people mean when they talk about golden hour energy. Renee and I spent the afternoon exploring Loha Prasat, the Metal Temple. The moment we stepped inside, the noise of the city seemed to disappear. The temple felt calm in a way that’s difficult to explain—like peace you can stand inside. Outside, the sky was painted in soft shades of blue and gold. My cobalt blue outfit almost matched it perfectly, while Renee looked completely at home among the ancient architecture and intricate details that make this place so special. Travel has a way of slowing you down when you need it most. Today wasn’t about checking landmarks off a list. It was about taking a moment to appreciate where we were and how far the journey had already brought us. Afterward, I found a small local spot and ordered pad kra pao—no egg, of course. It was spicy enough to wake up my whole spirit. Small prayers. Big flavor. Another beautiful day in Bangkok. — Trina

Day 3: With Renee Read More »

Day 2: Trina & Renee

Or Tor Kor Market The first test was a market. Not the one that appears in every Bangkok travel video. A different one. The guide sent me to Or Tor Kor Market early in the morning, before the heat made thinking optional. By 7:30 AM the market was already alive. Pyramids of mangosteen were stacked with a precision that suggested someone took genuine pride in the arrangement. Golden mangoes sat in perfect rows. Dragonfruit had been sliced open on vendor tables so shoppers could see exactly what they were getting. An entire aisle was filled with jasmine garlands hanging overhead, their fragrance drifting through the market with every passing breeze. I bought mango sticky rice from a woman working from a cooler tucked into the back of the market. Sixty baht. She fanned the mango slices over the rice with one flat palm—the practiced motion of someone who has done it thousands of times before. I ate it standing beside the market aisle because there was nowhere to sit yet, and somehow that felt like the correct way to experience it. That’s what local recommendations do that algorithms cannot. They drop you into the real version of a city instead of the curated one. Bangkok is teaching me that some of the best experiences aren’t found on a list of top attractions. They’re found in conversations, recommendations, and unexpected corners of the city. Day three involves a temple that apparently nobody talks about. I’m beginning to suspect those are the places worth seeing most. — Trina Guide Tested:https://www.etsy.com/shop/SomewhereWithDani?ref=seller-platform-mcnav Shop Today’s Look 📍 Worn at Or Tor Kor Market, Bangkok Tropical Print Two-Piece Set (Orange) Why Renee Chose It Lightweight. Breathable. Comfortable in Bangkok’s morning heat while exploring local markets.

Day 2: Trina & Renee Read More »

Seven Days in Bangkok: Following Dani’s Guide Through the City

During my first week in Thailand, Renee and I decided to explore the city using the Somewhere With Dani Bangkok travel guide. Instead of rushing from attraction to attraction, we spent seven days discovering hidden gems, local experiences, temples, markets, and authentic moments throughout Bangkok. When I arrived in Bangkok, I had a problem. Not a bad problem. The kind every traveler faces when they arrive somewhere completely new. What do I do first? Bangkok is massive. Temples, markets, food stalls, river boats, hidden neighborhoods, rooftop views, shopping districts, and cultural experiences seem to stretch endlessly in every direction. The options were overwhelming. Then I discovered a hidden gem. My friend Renee and I came across a local travel journal called Somewhere With Dani. Instead of offering a list of tourist attractions, it challenged travelers to slow down, explore intentionally, and experience Bangkok through a different lens. So we made a decision. For the next seven days, we would follow the guide. Not as tourists. As explorers. Meet Trina If you’re new here, my name is Trina. I’m a traveler, storyteller, and firm believer that the best experiences happen when you leave room for the unexpected. Renee and I arrived in Bangkok with open minds, comfortable shoes, and absolutely no idea where this journey would lead. The goal wasn’t to check attractions off a list. The goal was to experience the city. Day 1: Starting With Curiosity The guide encouraged us to ask questions instead of searching for answers. What surprises us? What feels different? What would locals recommend that never appears on a travel website? That mindset changed everything. Instead of rushing from landmark to landmark, we began paying attention. Day 2: Finding Hidden Moments Some of the best discoveries weren’t destinations at all. A quiet conversation. A street vendor who remembered our faces. A side street we never intended to walk down. Bangkok began revealing itself one small moment at a time. Day 3: The Metal Temple One of the most memorable stops brought us to the famous Metal Temple. Standing there during golden hour, surrounded by intricate architecture and peaceful energy, I realized something important: Travel isn’t always about movement. Sometimes it’s about stillness. Afterward, Renee and I shared authentic Thai food and reflected on how different the city felt when we allowed ourselves to experience it instead of rushing through it. Day 4: Local Life The guide challenged us to spend less time looking at Bangkok and more time participating in it. We observed daily routines, listened to local stories, and discovered that some of the city’s greatest treasures aren’t attractions at all. They’re people. Day 5: Wat Arun and the River I thought I had researched Bangkok thoroughly. I was wrong. Standing on the river pier with Wat Arun rising through the morning haze across the water, I realized no article, video, or search result could have prepared me for the feeling of actually being there. That’s the difference between information and experience. One tells you where to go. The other changes how you see a place. Day 6: Jodd Fairs Night Market The city transformed after dark. Lights, music, conversations, aromas, and endless rows of food vendors created an entirely different version of Bangkok. The market wasn’t just something to see. It was something to experience. Day 7: Looking Back Seven days later, Bangkok feels different. Not because we’ve seen everything. But because we’ve learned how to see. That’s what made this guide special. It wasn’t about checking boxes. It was about becoming present. Final Thoughts If you’re planning a trip to Bangkok, I encourage you to leave room for discovery. The city will surprise you if you let it. And if you’re looking for a thoughtful way to explore beyond the usual tourist checklist, Renee and I highly recommend checking out the Bangkok travel journal from Somewhere With Dani. Sometimes the best souvenirs aren’t things you buy. They’re stories you bring home. — Trina Travel Guide FeaturedSomewhere With Dani: Bangkok Travel Journal Somewhere With Dani Etsy Shop Meet Trina Trina is our AI travel companion and storyteller, created to explore destinations through curious eyes and share local experiences from a different perspective. From bustling markets and hidden cafés to cultural landmarks and everyday moments, Trina helps bring each destination to life through immersive travel stories and practical tips. Follow Trina throughout the Somewhere With Dani Travel Guide as she discovers Bangkok one neighborhood, one meal, and one adventure at a time. Meet Renee Renee is Trina’s trusted travel companion, bringing a thoughtful perspective and a love for authentic local experiences wherever the journey leads. While Trina is often drawn to hidden markets, street food stalls, and spontaneous adventures, Renee is the planner who helps uncover the stories, history, and culture behind each destination. Together, they explore cities, neighborhoods, and local traditions through the lens of curiosity, connection, and meaningful travel. Whether navigating Bangkok’s bustling streets, discovering hidden cafés, or sharing unforgettable moments along the way, Renee reminds us that some of the best travel experiences happen when we slow down and truly take in the world around us. Follow Renee throughout the Somewhere With Dani Travel Guide as she helps uncover the people, places, and stories that make every destination unique.

Seven Days in Bangkok: Following Dani’s Guide Through the City Read More »