Archive for February, 2010

Whoa…I love it when

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

LEADER writers go on the war path. From today’s Sunday Times (that’s SG Sunday Times, yocks):

No Sense Of Shame

Late last year, readers were subjected to the sad spectacle of a stream of women crawling out of the woodwork to tell the world that they had had sexual relations with golfing ace Tiger Woods. More recently, they were inflicted by the stories of at least five women who claimed they had slept with Chelsea football star Ashley Cole. This is not to absolve the two married men of their philandering, but a pertinent point ot ask here is: Do these women have any sense of shame?

It wasn’t as if these women were prostitutes. Yes, there were a couple of porn stars in Tiger’s trail. But until recently, even prostitutes did not kiss and tell.

Certainly, sportsmen are generally not paragons of virtue. They are young, at the peak of their virility, and can be predatory, seeking out women who will satisfy both their sex drives and their egos. Those who make obscene sums of money like Woods and Cole can be downright callous and cavalier in their treatment of women.

The women involved with Woods and Cole were treated shabbily, yet for a fee paid by the bottom-feeding newspapers and 15 minutes of fame (or notoriety?), they were willing to tell all about their liaisons with a famous man.

One of Woods’ women even wanted to convene a press conference. It was scrapped when Woods paid her to shut up. She was no newsmaker, but the event, if held, would hve packed in the hacks.

Western celebrity culture, coupled with a therapeutic ethos that sees all errant behaviours as treatable illnesses and philandering as sex addiction, for example, has eroded all sense of shame. Too much money has corrupted the world these superstars inhabit and their sense of entitlement knows no bounds. Alas, we won’t see the last of these headline-grabbing romps, not by a long shot.

*

And a WTF moment by the Daughter of The Dua Pai:

My mother used to say wryly of such people: “If they cannot see the Panda, the Panda’s daughter may be an acceptable substitute.”

Panda?? Rapacious ravaging Godzilla more like it. But maybe Panda as they’re having trouble breeding. I’d suggested to Long-Suffering Friend that he consider cloning.

Me to Long-Suffering Friend:

Since you bleat on and on about offspring, I suggest cloning. It’ll help solve the population problem.

Imagine phalanxes of fine upstanding Long-Suffering Friends with gleaming grins (look ma! no braces!) stalking around demolishing illusions like Exocet missiles & delivering shattering insights with all the charm of Thatcher’s illegitimate children. Like legions that marched right out of some L. Ron Hubbard wet dream.

*

& WTF spa parties for kids? “Kiddie makeover parties, manicures, pedicures, facials and massages are catching on here.” When I have children they’ll be subjected to Nanyang Girls’ High School discipline. No long hair. No long nails. Communist-green school bags that say 为人民服务. No branded sports shoes, only Bata.

*

For Aristotle, courage was above all the virtue of the warrior who dares risk injury when he fights. For Thomas Aquinas courage was more typically endurance. It was hanging in there, faithfully and patiently, when it is hard. G. K. Chesterton reminds us that we all owe our existence to the courage of our mothers, who endured nine months of pregnancy and the travail of giving birth. There is the courage of parents, enduring sleepless nights while they raise their children. There is the courage of teachers in inner-city schools, who hang in there, continuing to teach despite intimidation and boredom. There is the courage of nurses and doctors in sub-Saharan Africa who go on caring for people with Aids even when they have hardly any medicine and the epidemic threatens to overwhelm the country. There is the patience of those who are faithful when a relationship is fragile, or cope with illness day after day. Courage makes us steadfast.

(What Is The Point Of Being A Christian, p. 75)

The drama of the gifted child

Saturday, February 27th, 2010

Random photos of my parents’ kitchen’s ceiling. We use bamboo poles like these in SG to hang up our laundry.

 

I love the colours! Cheered me up when I looked up while walking to the bathroom.

 

I must take my pleasures where I can. Since I’m fabulously unemployed I’ve taken to staring at ceilings and pondering turning tricks, drug dealing, organ farming and investment banking.

 

*

Experience has taught us that we have only one enduring weapon in our struggle against mental illness: the emotional discovery of the truth about the unique history of our childhood. Is it possible, then, to free ourselves altogether from illusions? History demonstrates that they sneak in everywhere, that every life is full of them — perhaps because the truth often seems unbearable to us. And yet the truth is so essential that its loss exacts a heavy toll, in the form of grave illness. In order to become whole we must try, in a long process, to discover our own personal truth, a truth that may cause pain before giving us a new sphere of freedom. If we choose instead to content ourselves with intellectual “wisdom”, we will remain in the sphere of illusion and self-deception.1

 

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1 Miller, Alice. The Drama Of The Gifted Child. Trans. Ruth Ward. New York: Basic Books, 1981 (2007). ISBN: 978-0-465-01690-7. p. 1

Huat ah! / equal affection

Friday, February 26th, 2010

A FRIEND’S mother treated us to dinner…but I didn’t know it was a grassroots event. I walked past the ballroom thinking it was a wedding dinner, then reread the SMS and thought…wait…table 20, I’d better go in. Jolly good fun, though, had chocolate coins handed out to me by a 财神爷 and lotsa entertainment in different languages. Good to catch up with the gang over a 10-course meal, though we had to shout over the sound emitting from the speakers.

…I believe I got pickpocketed. Checked my clutch and the notes I put in there are gone!!

*

If equal affection cannot be…I remember a conversation I had with a chum.

A (casually): So how many hearts have you broken?
B (angrily): It’s how many hearts have *you* broken!

Got a phonecall from E. recently, and a package from Anais and a letter from an ex. I feel so bone-crushingly lucky to have friends like that all across the world, and I love them so much. But there’re also those who love you more than you deserve, and whom you don’t always love back in the way that they wish you would. D. seldom writes a letter to me that he doesn’t end with “I love you”. E. was frank and touchingly vulnerable when he told me what he thought when he got off the plane. It makes me want to write letters to them expressing affection that I don’t feel, because I know it would make them happy. But it would make me feel worse. And I wouldn’t be honest. Would they really be happy if I told them I loved them and I didn’t meant “love” the way they want it to mean?

Team games/”crazy”

Friday, February 26th, 2010

A (wandering around): I don’t know whether I’m team three or four.
B: I know what you are. You’re team stupid.

C (in winning team): We didn’t explain but still got top marks!
B (points at chocolate prizes): I hope you get *fat* eating those.

D: Nobody wants to eat the chocolates?
E: Not after they’ve been cursed.

*

Overheard in the Newsroom #3292: “Tomorrow, I’m calling in crazy.”

Gordon R. Peterson
Don’t think you get a day off for crazy — or we’d all be off every day.
Gail Harding Savoy
I think I go to work crazy all the time.
Teddi Simmons-Cole
In education, we call that a “mental health day”.
Jackie Buys
i thought that is just who we are.. crazy to do what we do.
Herman Chau
I wish more people would - and never return.
Steve Cegielski
You’d have to be crazier than the rest of the newsroom. And I think that would be pretty tough in most newsrooms.
Leigh McCormick
Crazy was in my job description, so I guess I’d have to call in sane to get a day off.
Yvonne Koh
I think I developed late-onset Tourette’s when I was in the newsroom :)
Carla Field
I have used up all my sick time. I am calling in dead.
Margaret Kaigler
Call in dead and they’ll call you to write the obit…

Love letter

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

I’ve been looking so long at my pictures of
you that I almost believe that they’re real
I’ve been living so long with my pictures of you that
I almost believe that the pictures are all I can
feel

Remembering you standing quiet in the rain as
I ran to your heart to be near
And we kissed as the sky fell in holding you close how I always held close in your fear
Remembering you running soft through the night
You were bigger and brighter and whiter than snow
Screamed at the make-believe screamed at the sky
And you finally found all your courage to let it all go

Remembering you fallen into my arms
Crying for the death of your heart
You were stone white so delicate
So lost in the cold
You were always so lost in the dark remembering you
How you used to be so drowned you were
Angels so much more than everything
oh hold for the last time then slip away quietly
Open my eyes but i never see anything

If only I had thought of the right words I could
have held on to your heart
If only I’d thought of the right words I wouldn’t be breaking apart all my pictures of you

Looking so long at these pictures of you but I
never hold on to your heart
Looking so long for the words to be true but always just breaking apart my pictures of you

There was nothing in the world that I ever
wanted more
Than to feel you deep in my heart
There was nothing in the world that I ever
wanted more
Than to never feel the breaking apart
My pictures of you

*

ONE of my favourite colleagues/friends is involved in a book project & she’s going through the pictures of her Beloved Subject…can’t wait to see the fruits of the team’s labour later this year. Some of our input in the form of questions will be answered by her subject, too!

*

Fiddling around with my spreadsheets (recovered from computer crash, Hallelujah, thank God for external disk drives) and working out my budget…Have splurged on dresses, books and outings, so have to scrooge a bit. Also reading Warren Buffett for inspiration: will have to save more (compounding, darlings, compounding); may set up appointment with lovely broker to discuss.

What I’ve learnt from counselling is to pare down — cut down to essentials instead of going around in a manic frenzy. Am pretty stable now after piling on too many commitments, from volunteer work to calligraphy, chess, Bahasa learning, yearning for a PhD, wanting to master the free style, meeting all manners of people I tend to pick up along the way and so on and so forth. Couldn’t cope, and part of that translated into rage, which led to me yearning for someoone to hire me a) a secretary and b) a hitman.

Now that I’ve taken a look at my situation from a more detached distance I realise how fortunate I’ve been: A first-class education, opportunities for study, a warm and supportive family…

听雨

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

世味年来薄似纱,谁令骑马客京华?
小楼一夜听春雨,深巷明朝卖杏花。
矮纸斜行闲作草,晴窗细乳戏分茶。
素衣莫起风尘叹,犹及清明可到家。

今天上了书法课,毛笔坏了,老师介绍买”听雨” — 一种羊狼豪的名字 — 觉得多么诗情画意!

早春夜半,窗外细雨沙沙,不禁让人想起了陆游的诗句“小楼一夜听春雨,深巷明朝卖杏花”,不想多去感慨诗人全诗的意境,不想感觉诗人当时的无奈和惆怅,只想缱绻在这两句的诗意中,让思绪随着亮晶晶的雨丝飘摇,飘向遥远的时空。

听了一夜的春雨,次日清晨又听到深巷叫卖杏花,淡雅的春意油然而生,令人想起江南湿漉漉、绿幽幽、亮晶晶、香喷喷的春色,浓而淡,淡而又深,深而且远。但细品一下,诗人听了一夜的春雨,并未入眠。在这春夜里他为何事辗转反侧呢?那远远传来的如断如续的卖花声,又能给他一些什么样的愉悦和抚慰呢?不能。只有诗人一个人在清幽得空寂的春晨中独自惆怅。接下去的头联不更道出了他的这种心情吗?“闲作草”、“戏分茶”,一生出入于战场生死,贯游于天南海北,时刻思虑着报国和爱民的陆游,竟也“ 闲”而又“戏”了!在诗人眼中,临安春色,何其清淡寡味,人情何其冷漠,世味何其索薄,壮志更是无从去提起一字,只有在“闲”“戏”中打发时光。 (See this link for more analysis…I lifted the above paragraph straight off baidu.)

*

In which I blather on about a calligraphy brush named “tingyu“, or “listen to the rain”, and quote poetry about listening to the rain. I’m just glad to have figured out how to get the language bar working again after my computer had an apopleptic fit and died on me. :)

Timothy Radcliffe on sexual ethics

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010
…There is an abyss between what the Church teaches and the way many members of the Church live. When it comes to sex, most Catholics do not behave in a way that is strikingly different from other members of society.

How is the Church to respond to this? One approach is strongly to insist on the received teaching. If we do this then we are in danger of becoming increasingly out of touch with the lives of so many members of our Church. The Church might become a narrow sect whose sexual ethic isolates it and inhibits it from sharing the gospel with others. Already many Catholics cling to membership of the Church by ignoring the Church’s teaching on sexuality, which undermines the Church’s authority in other areas. If one can disregard what the Church says about sex, then why not about everything else? Others remain Catholic, but feel either burdened with guilt or feel second-class citizens, excluded from Communion because they are in “irregular situations”.

If the Church simply accepts modern sexual mores, then the dangers are just as serious. We would appear to be assimilating ourselves weakly to the modern world, lacking the guts to stand for what we believe. If the Church’s teaching is true, then surely we must proclaim it. Often what happens in practice is that the official teaching is asserted, perhaps sotto voce, and subtle hints are given that everyone is really welcome. This is called the “pastoral solution”. Maybe it is the most humane way, but it may look like dishonesty and cowardice.

I do not know the solution but the best starting point for understanding our sexuality is the Last Supper. When Jesus hands over his body to the disciples he is vulnerable. He is in their hands for them to do as they wish. One has already sold him, another will deny him, and most of the rest will run away. The gift of his body discloses that sexuality is inseparable from vulnerability. It embodies a tenderness which means that one may well get hurt. It is a self-gift that may be met with rebuff and mockery, and in which one may feel oneself to be used. The Last Supper shows us with extreme realism the perils of giving ourselves to anyone. It is not a romantic tryst in a candlelit trattoria. A Christian sexual ethics invites us to embrace that vulnerability, to take risks involved in self-exposure and intimate contact.

(What Is The Point Of Being A Christian, pp. 95-96)

Dreams

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

A: I’ve 28,000 photos to go through. At least I’ve not started dreaming of Mr Dua Pai yet.
B: Or dreamt you *were* him. I’ve dreamt I was the Dalai Lama at a peace concert.
A: That may not be such a bad thing. I’ll dream of eating yummy Peranakan food. Hmmm…which person shall I throw into jail today?

*

Reading on the Budget (Tharman I’m your fan!) and the Philippine elections of guns, girls and goons. No wonder Dengcoy, Raul and Manny and the rest of the Pinoys in the office often exuded outrage when they’re not being cynical.

Eyecandy

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Cranes…That’s not me in the pictures. Imagine someone pudgier with a bigger butt, and badly-cut shoulder length hair. That’ll be me.

Flapper

Japanese weave. Photos: Antipodean

PRETTY dresses make me happy…I don’t shop all that often; when I do, I go for pieces that suit my style. Am very happy with the haul today! :)

*

I’m very glad for the lessons I’ve taken in these six years since graduation. For one, money is not important to me. I’ve seen how it breeds dens of vipers. When you’re out with certain people you can see how they judge social value. What firm do you work for? What do you do? What does your father do? Which bank is he in? Which school did he go to? What does her husband do?

I say bullshit to all of that. Character is judged by what a person does…over CNY we talked of how someone’s father had died and she’s helping to take care of the mother and how the burden of care often falls upon certain children or grandchildren in the family when others “default”. One of my best friends has a sick grandmother and father to take care of at home, and she shows up again and again, day after day, with patience and fortitude. These are the people I admire, the people who matter to me, not so much the materialistic braying yock-yocks.

At some point I pity them too, for I’ve friends caught up in the cycle — but I’ve learnt to distance myself from the users. You’re able, you’re ambitious, you’ve the brains, yes. But you’re also fucking self-serving, and desperately insecure.

To a certain extent it’s encouraged by the Government throwing wads of money at us. I say: Bullshit to that. Bullshit to carrots and sticks. Bullshit to binary distinctions between fear and love. Bullshit to the black-and-white thinking that critics must be exocet-missiled and obliterated. And really, fuck the fear of the ISD — I’m pretty sure I do worse things to myself with my finely-honed sleep-deprivation techniques that I’ve developed since I was an angsty teen.

Some things are non-negotiable, and you can never buy a sense of public service, or my sense of integrity, of who I am as a person. So here is *my* manifesto: I won’t ever be a running dog of those in power, who seek to intimidate with power, who use all means to hold on to power. I spit upon the wads of cash you think will solve all problems. Tennis courts, Mercedes Benzes, plastic surgery for your wives, cocktail parties for your husbands, oh yes I can play the game, but please have the common sense and decency to see it all for what it’s worth: It’s just a game. Don’t take your bourg lifestyle so fucking seriously. As the Chinese say, na de qi, fang de xia. (Sorry folks, haven’t sorted out my Chinese input software yet.) And David Marshall once said in an interview that justice “is a meld of law and humanity. Decency in concepts”. What I see is worship of the Golden Calf. What I see is seeking of vengeance. What I see is insecurity at work — hence the need to seek to try to control others.

Am reading LKY: The Man And His Ideas again…there’s lots to admire. But what I take umbrage against is the idea of treating human beings like dogs, like things to be trained, like you can jerk a leash and jolt them and get Pavlovian instinctual behaviour. It goes against everything I stand for. From Timothy Radcliffe’s What Is The Point Of Being A Christian:

However, if denunciation and accusation become the main way in which human beings view each other, then we shall indeed be sucked into untruthfulness. Sometimes we must accuse, but we cannot do that until we have first seen the goodness of the other person. Good people do bad things. In this mistrustful and suspicious society we need a different sort of press, freed from its Enlightenment limitations. We need a different sort of political debate, where the goal is not to trash one’s opponents but to arrive at a shared understanding of the common good.

I don’t think I can change all what I see as wrong in this society, but I can be sure that I won’t let these things change *me*. As JJG says:

Belle, on ira
Et l’ombre ne nous rattrapera peut-être pas
On ne changera pas le monde
Mais il nous changera pas

*

Modern Declaration
by Edna St. Vincent Millay

I, having loved ever since I was a child a few things, never having wavered
In these affections; never through shyness in the houses of the
rich or in the presence of clergymen having denied these loves;
Never when worked upon by cynics like chiropractors having
grunted or clicked a vertebra to the discredit of those loves;
Never when anxious to land a job having diminished them by a
conniving smile; or when befuddled by drink
Jeered at them through heartache or lazily fondled the fingers of
their alert enemies; declare

That I shall love you always.
No matter what party is in power;
No matter what temporarily expedient combination of allied
interests wins the war;
Shall love you always.

*

The Queen And The Soldier
Lyrics by Suzanne Vega

The soldier came knocking upon the queen’s door
He said, “I am not fighting for you any more”
The queen knew she’d seen his face someplace before
And slowly she let him inside.

He said, “I’ve watched your palace up here on the hill
And I’ve wondered who’s the woman for whom we all kill
But I am leaving tomorrow and you can do what you will
Only first I am asking you why.”

Down in the long narrow hall he was led
Into her rooms with her tapestries red
And she never once took the crown from her head
She asked him there to sit down.

He said, “I see you now, and you are so very young
But I’ve seen more battles lost than I have battles won
And I’ve got this intuition, says it’s all for your fun
And now will you tell me why?”

The young queen, she fixed him with an arrogant eye
She said, “You won’t understand, and you may as well not try”
But her face was a child’s, and he thought she would cry
But she closed herself up like a fan.

And she said, “I’ve swallowed a secret burning thread
It cuts me inside, and often I’ve bled”
He laid his hand then on top of her head
And he bowed her down to the ground.

“Tell me how hungry are you? How weak you must feel
As you are living here alone, and you are never revealed
But I won’t march again on your battlefield”
And he took her to the window to see.

And the sun, it was gold, though the sky, it was gray
And she wanted more than she ever could say
But she knew how it frightened her, and she turned away
And would not look at his face again.

And he said, “I want to live as an honest man
To get all I deserve and to give all I can
And to love a young woman who I don’t understand
Your highness, your ways are very strange.”

But the crown, it had fallen, and she thought she would break
And she stood there, ashamed of the way her heart ached
She took him to the doorstep and she asked him to wait
She would only be a moment inside.

Out in the distance her order was heard
And the soldier was killed, still waiting for her word
And while the queen went on strangeling in the solitude she preferred
The battle continued on

*

Two Tramps In Mud Time
by Robert Frost

Out of the mud two strangers came
And caught me splitting wood in the yard,
And one of them put me off my aim
By hailing cheerily “Hit them hard!”
I knew pretty well why he had dropped behind
And let the other go on a way.
I knew pretty well what he had in mind:
He wanted to take my job for pay.

Good blocks of oak it was I split,
As large around as the chopping block;
And every piece I squarely hit
Fell splinterless as a cloven rock.
The blows that a life of self-control
Spares to strike for the common good,
That day, giving a loose my soul,
I spent on the unimportant wood.

The sun was warm but the wind was chill.
You know how it is with an April day
When the sun is out and the wind is still,
You’re one month on in the middle of May.
But if you so much as dare to speak,
A cloud comes over the sunlit arch,
A wind comes off a frozen peak,
And you’re two months back in the middle of March.

A bluebird comes tenderly up to alight
And turns to the wind to unruffle a plume,
His song so pitched as not to excite
A single flower as yet to bloom.
It is snowing a flake; and he half knew
Winter was only playing possum.
Except in color he isn’t blue,
But he wouldn’t advise a thing to blossom.

The water for which we may have to look
In summertime with a witching wand,
In every wheelrut’s now a brook,
In every print of a hoof a pond.
Be glad of water, but don’t forget
The lurking frost in the earth beneath
That will steal forth after the sun is set
And show on the water its crystal teeth.

The time when most I loved my task
The two must make me love it more
By coming with what they came to ask.
You’d think I never had felt before
The weight of an ax-head poised aloft,
The grip of earth on outspread feet,
The life of muscles rocking soft
And smooth and moist in vernal heat.

Out of the wood two hulking tramps
(From sleeping God knows where last night,
But not long since in the lumber camps).
They thought all chopping was theirs of right.
Men of the woods and lumberjacks,
The judged me by their appropriate tool.
Except as a fellow handled an ax
They had no way of knowing a fool.

Nothing on either side was said.
They knew they had but to stay their stay
And all their logic would fill my head:
As that I had no right to play
With what was another man’s work for gain.
My right might be love but theirs was need.
And where the two exist in twain
Theirs was the better right–agreed.

But yield who will to their separation,
My object in living is to unite
My avocation and my vocation
As my two eyes make one in sight.
Only where love and need are one,
And the work is play for mortal stakes,
Is the deed ever really done
For Heaven and the future’s sakes.

Old friends

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

MET Jib, an old friend from Brown. She teaches at Chulalongkorn after returning from her PhD programme on one of the best scholarships I’ve heard, where the Thai govt sponsors students to teach in the liberal arts upon their return. There’s nothing like this here in Singapore, and Shing and I know as we’ve looked around. Unless it’s the PSC, of course, but then they try to turn you into high school teachers.

She teaches comparative literature, and does a course on crime novels and films, using movies such as Memento, Fritz Lang’s M, Psycho…I’d have loved to do something like that. And we talked of how competitive schools are, Shing telling the story of how her cousin, who’s an accountant, takes leave to volunteer as a traffic warden to try to get her kid into a school.

A: I come from a neighbourhood school and I turned out fine.
B: But you’re what, the only one who went to Top Yock-yock Girls’ School? Compare that with the IJs and Nanyang.

I’ve just been immensely lucky to have coaching from my mother, and to be in a family that puts a premium on education. I sent off the orchid/dandelion article to Mrs Chua from NorthLight…if I’d been in a lousier environment I’d probably have ended up in a teen gang and gotten thrown into jail. God knows I’m rebellious and hot-tempered enough — in my land of psychoville I’ve often felt like reaching over the table, stabbing certain choice people with a fork while screaming obscenities. I’m bidding a slow, reluctant goodbye to psychoville, sadly, as I’m rescued, sorted out, and replaced on the rails of conformity.

*

I’ve taken to cycling out in the mornings with the papers and a couple of books in my basket, and reading by the sea, then coming back home to a long drink of water and slathering myself with bath products and shampoos and various lotions. It’s so nice to be clean and to smell good. Mmm.

Host an NYC child

Friday, February 19th, 2010

WAS contacted by the very dedicated, very persistent staff of Fresh Air Fund in the US about their call for volunteers. The organisation needs hosts for this summer, so if you’re in the area covered, do check out the details.

Fresh Air children are boys and girls, six to 18 years old, who live in New York City. Children on first-time visits are six to 12 years old and stay for either one or two weeks. Youngsters who are re-invited by the same family may continue with The Fund through age 18, and many enjoy longer summertime visits, year after year. A visit to the home of a warm and loving volunteer host family can make all the difference in the world to an inner-city child. All it takes to create lifelong memories is laughing in the sunshine and making new friends.

The majority of Fresh Air children are from low-income communities. These are often families without the resources to send their children on summer vacations. Most inner-city youngsters grow up in towering apartment buildings without large, open outdoor play spaces. Concrete playgrounds cannot replace the freedom of running barefoot through the grass or riding bikes down country lanes.

*

Reading on Dr Lim Hock Siew in today’s papers. Interesting article.

“Befriend a thousand books, and have the spine to stand by your beliefs.”

Also, folks, check out the Rajaratnam exhibition in the National Library. It’s on the 10th floor, and very well curated. He’s one of my heroes.

We, the citizens of Singapore,
pledge ourselves as one united people,
regardless of race, language or religion,
to build a democratic society
based on justice and equality
so as to achieve happiness, prosperity and
progress for our nation.

I’ve to learn how to temper that strong streak of idealism with realism…we’re really quite lucky here in Singapore.

To tell the truth I’m pretty glad I’m not going back to do a PhD in literature — all those theories made me very irritated, sour and sulky. Negri and Hardt: Oodles and oodles of claptrap, I thought when I read Empire in Oxford. French theorists! Spivak! Ugh! & Brown made me roll my eyes sometimes with the high-minded principles about being anti-sweatshop blah blah blah…Some theories may be attractive intellectually, but when you’re faced with real people needing jobs, food, homes, you just get on the ground like the Mercy Relief workers and start using whatever channels and resources you have to bring benefits to the people.

Was asking Anais about law school and she replied: “it’s theoretical enough to be extremely intellectually stimulating, but also tangible enough to give you something meaty to grapple with, with real impact and consequences”.

*

To read S-E Asian studies or not? To continue with the Iseas application or not? Or to apply to law school next year?

Snippets

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

(On FB)

A is rethinking her Hot Boyfriend plans.
B: sorry, i’m spoken for. i can direct you to my understudy, Lukewarm Boyfriend.

C is abstaining from meat this Lent.
D is abstaining from gormless dolts this Lent.

*

A: So there are the dandelion children and the orchids.
B: Dandelions? Weeds, more like.
A: Hey, they are the species.

A (on child comparisons): So X said that her friend’s young child could say “mosquito repellant”.
C: I told A she should have said “Wow, there must be many mosquitos where she is.”

Champagne socialists

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Phoebe: What are you doing?
Mike: Setting rat traps.
Phoebe: To kill Bob??
Mike: No, no, to test his neck strength.
Phoebe: No, Mike, I don’t want to kill him! I thought we were just gonna capture him and, and you know, set him free in the country side where he can maybe meet a friendly possom and a wisecracking owl.
Mike: Ok, ok, I’ll throw away the traps.

FIRST stop was the old RGS gang, then met new friends…guys, I roll my eyes, who talk on and on about DOS games and compared levels of geekery. Always got talk of Godfather and JCVD and Conan the barbarian.

A: Yes my guy friends said they found Sigourney Weaver in Alien attractive. I was like wtf??
B: You obviously don’t know men well enough. We like them shaven with gunk all over them.
(moment of silence)
B: I mean the head.
F: We’ll tell that to your next girlfriend.

Mongol General: Hao! Dai ye! We won again! This is good, but what is best in life?
Mongol: The open steppe, fleet horse, falcons at your wrist, and the wind in your hair.
Mongol General: Wrong! Conan! What is best in life?
Conan: To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentation of their women.
Mongol General: That is good! That is good.

B (musing): On bad days I find myself going back to that over and over again…”To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentation of their women.”

A (to male who claims he moonlights as a gigolo): So how does your partner afford your daily rate?
D: For certain trusted clients I offer a discount.
C: How does this compare to XXX, A?
A: Why are you asking, C? Are you trying to see how to price yourself?

C: You initiate a lot.
A: A lot of what? Sex?
C: No, I don’t think you do. Topics of conversation that lead us down weird and twisted alleyways.

B: Everybody I know jizzes.
D (B’s partner, female): Not me.
B: Everybody I know of my own sex jizzes.

D: There’s a painter who paints with his dick.
C: How does he do that?
(conversation gets too crass for public consumption)
A: Google “cockpainting”. Finally, something to do at work.
D: But C’s a teacher. They’ll probably fire him. It’d be worse if he’s a primary school teacher.

C: So XX was in the gym and he saw famous pastor in the sauna letting it all hang out.
D: Why did he take off his towel? What was he doing like that?
A: Glorifying God’s gift to man.
C: Inviting worship.

E: So he wore this silver tie to court and my friend was ripping into him for attire. “Do you think this is sombre enough?” He said: “I wore it to my father-in-law’s funeral so yes, I think it’s sombre enough.”

A (over KFC): I’ve not had Popeyes before blah blah blah
A: I think you can phone in. The office ordered some for someone’s birthday.
E: So you *had* had Popeyes before.
A: No. It was another department. I smelled the fried chicken and followed my nose and looked on while they ate.

E to D (on abstract modern art): You can cover the rabbit with paint then hold it down as it struggles. Title it Rabbit I and sell it. Can have Rabbit II, Rabbit In Pain, etc.

C: There was an artist who made a boat out of a shed, rowed it down the Thames, then reshaped the boat into a shed in a gallery.
E: I think an engineer would do a better job. An engineer could make a motor out of the wooden shed so no need to row.

X: I don’t believe in premarital sex. I’m always afraid someone will put nude photos of me online. Like Edison Chen or Tammy.
A: Don’t worry, just take nude photos of him first so you’ve a bargaining chip. “Excuse me, before we start, I’ve to take some photos of you.”

Calligraphy again

Monday, February 15th, 2010

FINALLY picked up the brush and painted some truly awful looking characters. Still find it infinitely soothing, though I feel so…yes…Ding! Ding! Ding! You got it!…guilty for not practising when I was away in Bali and caught up in drama. Shall slink into class next week and spend some time doodling happily with black ink.

*

Watching [ 向左走向右走 ] Turn Left, Turn Right, a sappy Chinese love movie based on Jimmy Liao’s picture book story of lovers (one poet, one musician) who keep missing each other as they lead parallel lives. I’m outraged by the incompetence. Hello, you know she translates poetry — can’t you ask around the publishing houses instead of trying to dial random numbers off a drenched sheet of paper that’s been ironed out, & then wandering the streets shouting 784533? Come on, don’t give artists a bad name!

& what’s up with the earthquake scene destroying the walls at the end of the movie? I roll my eyes, I tell you, I roll my eyes.

I am full

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

MORE specifically, I am full of:

- ngoh hiang
- curry chicken
- roast duck
- pork with ginger and leek
- abalone
- broccoli and prawns and squid
- spring rolls
- stirfried kangkong
- “Buddha jumps over the wall” soup
- scallops in spicy sauce
- fried noodles
- white rice (3 servings)
- pineapple tarts
- coconut crumbly things
- peanut crumbly things
- ice cream
- chocolate (multiple helpings)

Ah, CNY.

*

On a friend’s party invite with Marx in a party hat, Mao toasting etc…

A: How appropriate…all Red for CNY.
B: Hey, it’s the Communist Party.

*

‘The acid test is performance, not promises. The millions of dispossessed in Asia care not and know not of theory. They want a better life. They want a more equal, a more just society. He who gives them this is their saviour.’

- Lee Kuan Yew, 1964

*

Had the most heartbreaking search lead to my blog lately:

+ “i m a teacher and one of my first -grade students is painfully shy.she will not look adults in the eye and she seems terrified of the males teachers in the building.i have never seen any bruises on her but i wonder wether her fears of adults particularly males could be an indication that she has been frghtened or perhaps harmed by someone”

How do we even begin to trace and heal abuse? I tend to exude bumptious outraged virtue over this issue and wrote about it over Christmas…

And I shall quote again from Rowan Williams:

One of the worst effects of this culture of impatience and pride is what it does to those who are most obviously dependent - the elderly, those with physical or psychological challenges and disabilities, and, of course, children. We send out the message that if you’re not standing on your own two feet and if you need regular support, you’re an anomaly. We’ll look after you (with a bit of a sigh), but frankly it’s not ideal. And in the case of children, we shall do our level best to turn you into active little consumers and performers as soon as we can. We shall test you relentlessly in schools, we shall bombard you with advertising, often highly sexualised advertising, we shall worry you about your prospects and skills from the word go; we shall do all we can to make childhood a brief and rather regrettable stage on the way to the real thing - which is ‘independence’, turning you into a useful cog in the social machine that won’t need too much maintenance.

In the last year, the issues around how we regard childhood in our society have been opened up for discussion with new intensity by a number of important pieces of research like the Children’s Society’s Good Childhood report or the Cambridge Review of primary education. There has at last been a wake-up call about the ways in which we are crushing and narrowing children’s experience; and there is a long and significant agenda there for debate in the months ahead.

But behind the details, there is one central issue. Can we as a society accept and even celebrate the fact that there is a place for proper and mature dependence - that human beings need to receive and learn: not so that they can get to the point where they stop receiving and learning, but so that they can acquire the habits of receiving and learning in ever-new settings? Can we help children enjoy their dependency so that they don’t just leave it behind but get to manage it with freedom and imagination as they grow older?

I do love his sermons…from his Easter 2009 sermon:

No argument can persuade anyone about this, only the lived reality. It’s worth remembering that Paul of Tarsus joined the Christian community not as a well-meaning religious enquirer but as someone who had been the equivalent of a terrorist gunman, someone who had supervised the activities of a private militia devoted to abducting and imprisoning members of the Christian sect. He is a perfectly intelligible figure in the back streets of modern Beirut or Baghdad. And he has to find his ‘heaven’ by going, undefended and unvouched for, to the people he has been trying to silence and kill. Can anyone live like this? If the Colossians or Corinthians or Philippians had asked this, at least Paul would have been able to say yes: I have lived it, or, It has lived itself out in me and in those who were my victims. No wonder that he goes back over this so many times in his writings, and, in his second letter to Corinth, angrily protests that, whatever else may be true, he is not doing this for the sake of his comfort or power. Why should the Corinthians trust him (especially when there are more attractive teachers around)? Well, at least he has lived through the most appallingly painful realities of the reconciliation that Jesus made possible; he has lost an entire career, an entire identity, he has put his life at daily risk. The one thing the Corinthians can be sure of is that this is not an opinion or an argument.

And the moral of all this? It’s boringly familiar. If we want to commend our faith, we have to show the difference. The new world has to be visible. In the days of the early church, writers trying to defend the faith naturally used all sorts of complex intellectual arguments; but they also said, ‘Look at us. We try to live forgivingly with each other. We don’t try to get revenge when we’re killed by the state authorities or the lynch mobs. We treat every life as precious, including the lives you don’t care about. We try to be peaceful and faithful, in private and in public, and to live lives of sexual faithfulness and self-control [as much of a challenge, we might add, in the late Roman Empire as it is today]. Does all this suggest to you that there might be another way of living that offers healing to the casualties of so-called ordinary human behaviour?’

*

At the Haiti fundraiser I talked to Andrew and Mary-Ann from Mercy Relief about their work, how they got involved, Mary-Ann’s time in Timor when she saw aid workers living it up on packages while the students she taught slept through lunch because they had no money to get anything to eat. Andrew worked with Mercy Relief during the Boxing Day tsunami and liked how they were bolt cutters.

And over CNY today I talked to my cousin, who advised me against being the nail that sticks out…”You’ll just get hammered down”. To those of us who brim over with righteousness he says: “Treat it as just a job, choose your battles wisely. Don’t waste your energy hitting your head against a wall.” And on dealing with mediocrity he says: “Yeah well, did you expect all companies to be like Google? Sometimes you just gotta teh gong…if they’ve been doing well being stupid for the past few decades and you come along and say they’re stupid of course you’re just looking for a whacking.”

*

Prayer of St Francis

Lord, make me an instrument of your peace,
Where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
where there is sadness, joy;

O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek to be consoled as to console;
to be understood as to understand;
to be loved as to love.

For it is in giving that we receive;
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned;
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.

*

Instrument Of Peace

Where there is hatred, let me bring love.
Where there is doubt, let me bring faith.
Where there is falsehood, let me bring truth
Where there is pain, I’ll comfort you.
Where there is silence, let me sing praise
Where there’s despair, let me bring hope.
Where there is blindness, let me bring sight
Where there is darkness, let me bring light.

And with these words I speak
Grant that I may not so seek
To be heard but to hear
To be consoled but to console,
Not to be seen, but to see
To be loved but to love.
For when we give love we will receive.

When we forgive love, we’ll find reprieve
It is in dying we’ll be released
Make me an instrument of peace

River Hongbao

Saturday, February 13th, 2010

A: For height of tacky crap-o-rama, visit River Hongbao.
A: Tigers with elongated necks, fairies with stunted arms, pandas that look possessed and a dragon made out of sugar baking under the hot sun. It can’t get better than this.

*

CHARACTER is ultimately revealed by what a person does, not what he says. A few of the most highly evolved among us may achieve perfect consistency between what we say about ourselves and how we behave, but there’s often a gulf. There are diamonds in the rough whose beauty is hidden beneath their modest, self-effacing ways. Very often the people least likely to blow their own horns are the most loyal friends, the hardest workers, and the most dedicated parents. And it’s their actions that prove it.

*

Now that she’s back in the atmosphere
With drops of Jupiter in her hair, hey, hey, hey, hey
She acts like summer and walks like rain
Reminds me that there’s time to change, hey, hey, hey, hey
Since the return from her stay on the moon
She listens like spring and she talks like June

- From one of my favourite songs that has bizarre references to fried chicken…

When we give our energy to others, we have to get it back, or we eventually feel depleted.

Energy suckers are everywhere. Is there someone in your life who is constantly depressed, angry about the world, jealous, always in a bad mood, pessimistic, doubtful, power-hungry, mistrustful, or manipulating? I refer to these individuals as “psychic vampires” because they unconsciously drain your life force with their unrelentingly negative attitudes. Most of them are not even aware that their energy extends beyond them and hurts others along their path. They can leave you exhausted, depressed, and debilitated.

Psychic vampires are usually self-involved individuals who feel self-important. Their bad attitudes attract negative energies — when we have been weakened and depleted by negative thoughts, feelings, and behaviour.

Must learn to put my shields up when facing those whose reality is based on selfishness and manipulation. Be more concerned about who I befriend and where I hang out, where I work, the type of work I do, even where I live. There are lots of energies to be aware of — it’s up to ourselves to protect ourselves from unwanted energies.

It’s a lesson I’ve to learn. We all have limits, and that is healthy. There are some things we shouldn’t do for others, either because they need to do it for themselves or because it will rob us of our ability to care for ourselves and for those who really need help. Besides having healthy limits, I need to speak up so others know what they are. What happened was that resentment built up slowly in me, beginning to surface with sarcasm and erupting on occasion with uncontrollable anger.

I have to know that if I stretch myself too far, I’ll lose perspective and inner balance, so I’ll have to let people know I’ve reached the limit of giving. If I can’t fulfil a request, or just doesn’t want to, I’ll have to say “I’m sorry I can’t right now” or “I have to decline”.

Incantation

Friday, February 12th, 2010

- Czeslaw Milosz

Human reason is beautiful and invincible.
No bars, no barbed wire, no pulping of books,
No sentence of banishment can prevail against it.
It establishes the universal ideas in language,
And guides our hand so we write Truth and Justice
With capital letters, lie and oppression with small.
It puts what should be above things as they are,
Is an enemy of despair and a friend of hope.
It does not know Jew from Greek or slave from master,
Giving us the estate of the world to manage.
It saves austere and transparent phrases
From the filthy discord of tortured words.
It says that everything is new under the sun,
Opens the congealed fist of the past.
Beautiful and very young are Philo-Sophia
And poetry, her ally in the service of the good.
As late as yesterday Nature celebrated their birth,
The news was brought to the mountains by a unicorn and an echo.
Their friendship will be glorious, their time has no limit.
Their enemies have delivered themselves to destruction.

*

A: For us, Maslow’s hierachy of needs is more like an inverted pyramid.

*

Reading Sen’s The Idea Of Justice now. I’ll spare you the long, philosophising, possibly pontificating post…The biggest killjoy is a martyr. In any case I need to get some sleep & take care of this body that houses my gibbering mind.

Gong Xi Fa Cai, everyone…

*

Oh alright. I think I’ve fallen through the looking glass…I didn’t expect to fall in love, and it may be the wrong time, he may be seeing someone else now; but I’d spent a long time trying to run from it. Now I see that I’m in love again, and it’s terrifying. Maybe our paths in life should be separate from each other’s and never cross outside of that casual encounter. I don’t know — God’s will be done.

And I’ve some work to do on my own neuroses and issues to prevent myself from projection. He’s already taken the brunt of some of them — I’ve compared him to Thatcher’s illegitimate children, warned that he could collapse into a singularity from knowing too many people, asked him about his hourly rate — and in general acted with all the charm of a flesh-eating virus.

From M. Scott Peck’s The Road Less Travelled (pp. 169-171):

“Among the feelings that must be so disciplined is the feeling of love…It is to be very much respected and nurtured for the creative energy it brings, but if it is allowed to run rampant, the result will not be genuine love but confusion and unproductivity. Because genuine love involves an extension of oneself, vast amounts of energy are required, and, like it or not, the store of our energy is as limited as the hours of our day. We simply cannot love everyone. True, we may have a feeling of love for mankind, and this feeling may also be useful in providing us with enough energy to manifest genuine love for a few specific individuals. But genuine love for a relatively few individuals is all that is within our power. To attempt to exceed the limits of our energy is to offer more than we can deliver, and there is apoint of no return beyond which an attempt to love all comers becomes fraudulent and harmful to the very ones we desire to assist. Consequently if we are fortunate enough to be in a position in which many people ask for our attention, we must choose those among them whom we are actually to love. This choice is not easy; it is often excruciatingly painful, as the assumptio nof godlike power so often is. But it must be made…To attempt to love someone who cannot benefit from your love with spiritual growth is to waste your energy, to cast your seed upon arid ground. Genuine love is precious, and those who are capable of genuine love know that their loving must be focused as productively as possible through self-discipline.

…There is frequently something pathetic about the individual who has failed to build his or her family into a loving unit, yet restlessly searches for loving relationships outside the family. The first obligation of a genuinely loving person will always be to his or her marital and parental relationships. Nonetheless, there are some whose capacity to love is great enough for them to build loving relationships successfully within the family and still have energy left for additional relationships. For these the myth of exclusivity is not only patently false but also represents an unnecessary limitation upon their capacity to give of themselves to others outside their family. It is possible for this limitation to be overcome, but great self-discipline is required in the extension of oneself in order to avoid “spreading oneself too thin”. It was to this extraordinarily complex issue (here touched on only in passing) that Joseph Fletcher, the Episcopalian theologian and author of The New Morality, was addressing himself when he reportedly said to a friend of mine, “Free love is an ideal. Unfortunately, it is an ideal of which very few of us are capable.” What he meant was that very few of us have a capacity for self-discipline great enough to maintain constructive relationships that are genuinely loving both inside and outside the family. Freedom and discipline are indeed handmaidens; without the discipline of genuine love, freedom is invariably nonloving and destructive.”

Haiti/high tea

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

A to parents: I’m going for a Haiti fundraiser later. How do you say Haiti in Mandarin?
F: 下午茶
A: ????
M: Oh Haiti…海地 lah.

*

JUST because I didn’t like it doesn’t mean that the Straits Times isn’t doing good work…one of my favourite journalists, other than Chi Yin, is Chin Hon, our correspondent in the US. Youngsters who want to be journalists would do good to take a leaf out of both their books. Brave, compassionate, multi-talented: They take wonderful photos as well as write thoughtfully and sensitively. He sent us some photos (link’s not to his photos) of Haiti that absolutely broke my heart. & I spoke to the loveliest people from Mercy Relief about the work they do on the ground…ex civil-servants who were in Timor, in Myanmar, in Indonesia, on the ground, doing the clean-up work. I love these people…

*

The Daughters of Prospero, by Carrie Etter

When gales make a house a boat to toss on water,
And Gonzalo scrutinizes me, says I’m ripe

For hanging, and loquaciously heads below deck,
I know this isn’t the oceanic feeling

Freud wrote of, this lingering image of a child
Placing paper boat after paper boat onto a brook,

Though each one drowns in a short drop ten feet downstream.
Placing white boat after white boat onto a brook,

Because she has learned beginner’s origami,
Because her fingers have amassed a score of cuts,

Because some of the boats never looked seaworthy,
Because a surprising number can glide like swans,

The girl sets her boats on a fatal course, and though
Her head is bent, I can see her eyes’ fierce gleam.

ISD pastor case

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Catholic Archbishop Nicholas Chia:

“…We should always see to it that if we want to promote our own faith, we can speak about our own faith, but never speak against anyone else’s. We hope that people will learn from this incident.”

*
I suddenly feel like watching Traffic all over again. Gimme some drugs and shootings. But as Di reminds me on her post on Last Train From Hiroshima:

But as he went on to describe - in heart stopping detail - the vaporizing effect of the bomb, the obliteration of the city, the way in which survivors were known only by the ghostly shadow imprints they left on walls, my mind recoiled.

As regards the literature of war, the need to explore the themes of courage, redemption, horror and cruelty in war is understandable, even commendable. There is moral and pedagogical dimension to this: That we can and must learn from the bloody battles of the past and remember them, so that the future may be free from the same.

But war aside, there are depths to human depravity and the human capacity for horror that the mind shies away from and the desire the plumb these depths - even vicariously - is no more than pure voyeuristic depravity.

But one wonders at people who intentionally soak themselves in the literature and film of debauchery, cruelty, violence and depravity: Are they really so naive as to think that they will not be affected - morally or psychologically - by the depictions of such corruption? This is particularly so in film - once said to be a form of virtual reality - how many stories have we heard of people having nightmares after watching horror films or young children attempting to perform impossible stunts from movies and breaking bones, incurring permanent injuries in the process?

We attempt to protect children’s minds with the ratings system, determining when and at what age they should be capable of digesting horror, sex, violence and corruption. The rationale behind this is that as we age, we gain an understanding that what is seen on film is “not real” and maturity (or cynicism) will enable us to deal with the other moral issues enfolded in films rated to have highly sexual content or to be violent.

This logic must be recognized as being unrealistic (pardon the pun) and fallacious. To be blunt, it just doesn’t make sense. Unfortunately, as with the best fallacies, it has enough truth embedded in it to deceive.But there must be a recognition that at best, this logic is a rough estimation of the human ability to develope discernment (by age 21!) and at the worst, a completely unrealistic view of the workings of the human psyche.

It is accepted that we are affected by the friends we make, the social milieu in which we circulate. It is accepted that our moods, the amount we eat, the length of time we stay in a restaurant can be swayed by even the colours and lights around us. Psychological studies, the endless data collected by marketing experts tells us that fast food restaurants are decorated and lit in such a way as to encourage people to feel safe but eat quickly. Studies tell us that one’s probability of becoming a smoker, a college graduate, developing obesity rise or fall depending on the crowd around us.

It doesn’t make sense for us to turn and say that after age 21, we will somehow become impervious to being steeped for 120 minutes at a time, in images that are morally and ethically degrading. If we are so sensitive to other influences, how much more so to thousands of images, coloured by depravity flashing in front of our eyes? Even for the literature of war, lines must be drawn; surely there comes a point when overly graphic descriptions and film productions of blood and violence are unnecessary?

We are learning, to be more careful about the things we eat, whether they are grown organically, whether they contain caffeine, trans fat, gluten, chemicals etc. But the practice of discernment must be extended to our intellectual fodder as well. It is a truism, that one can tell a man by the friends he keeps. But it is also true, that one can tell a man from the things he loves, where he chooses to spend his time, the books and movies that he chooses to consume.

The Last Train to Hiroshima is beautifully written, a clearly told tale of the horrors that followed the decision to drop the atom bombs on two Japanese cities, a paean to the lost of both Nagasaki and Hiroshima. But I am unsure if I will be buying or reading it in full, especially when the 5 page NYT excerpt left me drained, gasping for air. This post is more a reminder note to myself than anything else - I have a fondness for war movies/stories - to continue to practice discernment, wisdom in my choice of reading material.

So it’s back to Bach’s cello suites for sustenance…I’m in love with old Rostropovich.

*

I’m getting help with that ridiculous burden of guilt I feel for being a survivor of our education/scholarship system…which makes me want to go back into the trenches time and time again and suffer. It got to the ridiculous point that I felt guilty when I was sleeping. Yes, yes, climb walls, nutty as fruitcake, und so weiter.

Rereading Affluenza and thinking of all the ways in which we crucify one another. I don’t think I’m Jesus Christ — God, I’m not climbing the walls to that extent yet — but I recognise that this guilt is unnatural and unhealthy and is not working for me.

Coupled with that guilt is a strong streak of perfectionism…am working on all of these issues, hopefully I get out saner.

Caio for Naio, or however you say it in Italian.

Night Prayer of St Augustine

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Watch, O Lord, with those who wake or weep tonight,
and give your angels and saints charge over those who slumber.
Tend your sick ones, O Lord Christ,
Rest your weary ones,
Bless your dying ones,
Soothe your suffering ones,
Pity your afflicted ones,
Shield your joyous ones,
And all for your love’s sake. Amen.

*

Up late tonight, surprise surprise. Curled up in bed reading Neil Gaiman’s Stardust for comfort in a particularly bad week. Like The Graveyard Book, which I devoured in Borders, Stardust is full of insight and beauty mixed with morbidity.

& I adore Yvaine’s pert responses (spoilers ahead) —

“I did it for love,” he continued. “And you really are my only hope. Her name, that is, the name of my love, is Victoria. Victoria Forester. And she is the prettiest, wisest, sweetest girl in the whole wide world.”

The girl broke her silence with a snort of derision. “And this wise, sweet creature sent you here to torture me?” she said.

“Well, not exactly. You see, she promised me anything I desired — be it her hand in marriage or her lips to kiss — were I to bring her the star that we saw fall the night before last. I had thought,” he confessed, “that a fallen star would probably look like a diamond or a rock. I certainly wasn’t expecting a lady.”

“So, having found a lady, could you not have come to her aid, or left her alone? Why drag her into your foolishness?”

“Love,” he explained.

She looked at him with eyes the blue of the sky. “I hope you choke on it,” she said, flatly.

*

Glad to see the ISD cracking down on insensitive pastors.

In any case, here’s a list of things to do when unemployed, cribbed from How To Worry Friends And Inconvenience People:

- Ask for sandwich fillings while pointing at other ones.
- Say nothing when you answer your phone. They rang you. They can speak first.
- Help the disabled. Train a speaking dog for the dumb.
- Be a volunteer ticket inspector. Walk up and down the aisle, in uniform, asking to see everyone’s tickets and scribbling on them.
- Use the comments section of someone else’s blog to begin your own parasitic meta-blog.
- Treat all children in pushchairs as if they’re disabled, and with genuine concern ask their parents what’s wrong with them.
- When cars stop for you at a zebra crossing, run up and pat their bonnets to show your appreciation.
- Give somebody a diary for Christmas…that’s already been filled in.
- Just as they finish working on your teeth, it’s polite to kiss your dentist gently on the hand.
- Insist on pronouncing Scottish names like rappers. MC Dougal, etc.

*

看你穿越云端飞的很高 站在山上的我大声叫喔…
也许你呀不会听到 把梦想找到要过得更好

我不要爱情的低潮 我会微笑眼泪不准掉
我很好后来的你好不好 你会知道我没有走掉 回忆飞进风里了

Reviews

Monday, February 8th, 2010

A: WHAT? You’re in love with WHOM?
B: I know. Forget about suspending disbelief. I’d have to suspend consciousness.

B tells gruesome story of meltdown etc, and asks C: Any cheerier news of the love scene over in Japan?
C: Well I got a Valentine’s chocloate.
C: Problem is, I got it when I was buying a novel. Some sort of promotion thing. The wrapper had a picture of a cute guy on it. If this is the universe’s idea of a joke, I am not amused.
C: For a good time, call xx-xxxx-xxxxxx

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I ENJOY
reading funny movie reviews to destress…

The Great Raid: “A steadily mounting series of pesky nonevents paced with all the frenetic, action-packed verve of a wounded lawn sprinkler.” — Marc Savlov, AUSTIN CHRONICLE

Venom: “All hopes for suspense and plot twists are snuffed out about as quickly as the film’s black characters. ” — Kyle Smith, NEW YORK POST

American Wedding: “You’ll see better film on ponds.” — Elvis Mitchell, NEW YORK TIMES

etc. Some good ones to be found here.