What part of India are you in, without air-conditioning and normal toilets and running water? And where you have to sleep on the roof at night?
I actually fear for your health a little. Be careful about the water you drink. Either drink Nestle bottled water or drink tap water boiled.
Regarding the stray dogs, I laughed at that. I found that odd as well.
The other thing I found odd was how thin people are here. It is a sharp contrast from the fat Western world.
I do agree that toilet paper sucks. In Muslim countries you have a mini hand shower kinda thing that fires water at high pressure for when you are done on the toilet. Much better.
Here is sorta what part of my washroom looks like:
I was in a small town just outside of Chandigarh (the capital of Punjab and Haryana) living with my mom's side of the family. They have an air conditioner in one room which is used on especially hot days but I didn't like going it it because I find the temperature difference between hot and cold far more annoying than just being in the heat.
They have normal toilets and squat toilets. I prefer the squat ones though so using that was by choice.
There is running water, just not enough pressure during the day to run a shower. And of course I drink bottled water or filtered water and not the tap stuff. I made one mistake by having a drink with ice and got sick from the ice cubes but other than that slip-up I haven't had any issues with illness
I guess it sounds a bit grim in my original post but it actually wasn't bad.
We had a bidet in our apartment when I was a kid. No one used it.
It works, but isn't hygienic. The problem is that it is directly under the... umm... exit hole. So what ever lands... lands on the bidet spray.
If you're referring to the same kind they have in India, that's not a typical European bidet. The ones that these guys are referring to are probably a separate device that's not attached to the toilet.
On another note, the red light district in Bangkok is one of the craziest things I have ever seen. It goes so much further and is so much more open than any other similar area I've seen.