True.
However you are always welcome to visit our rainy paradise!
In Bangladesh there is Monsoon eco-tourism now.
In Bangladesh' case it is also a matter of westerly flows of the Monsoonal winds which brings the moisture to our area around this time of year and is stopped by the foothills of the Himalayas. Cherapunji in Assam - north of Bangladesh has the highest rainfall in the world.
The clouds get stopped in the hills around that place...
Rainy season in Bangladesh as in all of the Northeastern India is a fabulous time to us Bangladeshis.
During monsoon there are huge stacks of black clouds going up to 30,000 ft., copious lightning (thunderclap), smell of ozone in the air then you have sheets of rain coming down. Lots of weather-based drama which has affected the emotional make up of local inhabitants.
This is all integral to the culture and lifestyle of our area and is interwoven in our poetry and seasonal celebrations - even in the age of the Facebook and Internet.
This is an image of the Monsoon clouds over Bangladesh captured from the space station around 2002. The Ganges delta and Hatia Island are slightly visible.
The thing about the Bangladeshi psyche is that they don't see the rain as an anomaly of weather rather a celebration of life (renewal+cleansing) and a welcome seasonal change.
Rainy season is the time when the tennis-ball shaped Kadam (Anthocephallus cadamba) flower blooms.
Rainy season food - Khitchery with eggplant fry
Also Hilsa Fry