She and her family have helped donate about 3,000 liters (almost 800 gallons) of drinking water to those in worse-off areas.
"Those who got affected, they lose their houses, they lose their jobs, their cars -- many things," she said.
But even those in the capital faced possible shortages of water.
The Metropolitan Waterworks Authority said it had reduced the amount of tap water processed for residents from 900,000 to 400,000 cubic meters per day, because of high algae counts at one of its plants.
Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra said authorities would speed up the process of draining water into Bangkok's canals and into the sea, raising hopes that water levels in the city could start to sink. However, the government has warned it may take more than a month for the floods to recede.
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