Ps. 94:18 When I said, “My foot is slipping,” your love, O LORD, supported me.
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Monday, August 31, 2009

Before my phone gets clogged up with random pictures

The pizza and apple tea cake RP got, to celebrate my parting with the company

Steak and lobster mornay (note to self: anything with 'mornay' indicates ingredients of suspicious origins) at Jupiters Casino

More useless information

After feeding him at the our dinner party the night before (steak, shish kebabs, salad and ice cream), Leon was morally obliged to loan us his boat.

What you need before going paddling. Even moreso if you happen to be Caucasian. This has saved X from Lobster Neck Syndrome innumberable times.

We paddled (ie. X paddled and I was on croco-watch) along the Currumbin Creek.

A strange sight in the morning, awaking in someone else's bed. We had to crash with Leon as the drunk idiot next door started getting boozy again.

Three enormous bags full of rejected clothing, bags, shoes and books going to Lifeline.

Reese's Peanut Butter Cups! Now that H's Chocolate Fridge is 6,000 kilometres away, I am forced to pay AUD13.75 for 340g of the stuff.



And Happy Merdeka, Malaysia! Though your politics are the laughing stock of the Westernized world and your policies always eyebrow-raising, at least you house some of the best food and most wonderful human beings in the world.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Extra class

Growing up, my family was your stereotypical Machiavellian Asian one. I peaked pretty early, setting an unrealistic bar for my parents’ expectations of my academics. Part of this training included tuition. And caning if I got below 80% (though thankfully this was dropped after they realised it wasn’t too realistic in high school).

Anyway back to tuition. I’ve had a succession of tuition teachers. Mostly good, some bad. The worst was Mrs Yip, who taught (or rather tried teaching) me piano. She was very slim and tall. As a diminutive five year old, I was intimidated by her aloofness and incredibly long toes. After about one or two rather unsuccessful lessons, she delivered the clincher that would squash my self esteem and kill any musical inclination forevermore – “Your fingers are so sticky” – I suffer from palmer hyperhydrosis – “can you ask your mum to get you some gloves?”

Apart from her, I did have many good experiences. I was a nerd who looked forward to tuition and homework. My neighbour Aunty Raji (God bless her for giving me MYR100 right before I left for Australia) allocated a special seat for me during her various classes. From the age of four, I’d sit in, smug every time I managed to answer a question my 12 year old peers couldn’t.

(Yes, I was one of those awful kids who never seem to study, talk throughout lessons, yet topped the class. You know you hate me. If it’s any consolation, this strategy did begin to fail in high school.)

During primary school, I had Mandarin lessons. The language did not and still does not come naturally to me. I regularly got smacked on the head for being such a failed Asian. Lao Shi stayed a 10 minute walk away. We had our lessons at her ancient dining table, on her ancient scratchy faux-velvet chairs. She was the gravest person ever and had been known to snipe at us for failing to remember our Mandarin nouns and verbs. The strongest memory I have of the whole experience is probably of how my eczema would flare up during lessons, thanks to the scratchy seats.

Lao Shi also sold us a black spitz puppy. Cherry was such a sweet thing, but then she got ticks which diminished her cuteness by a factor of 734,921. Maternal Logic wouldn’t let me name her Darling (“What if she ran down the road and you had to keep screaming, Darling! Darling! and some man thought you were calling after him?”).

We also had Mr Siva, who was so popular for Math and Science, he crammed about 15 students in his tiny little living room. I usually sat beside Aiman, who was always entertaining. Although more than once, he’d scrape his (Aiman’s, not Mr Siva’s) hairy leg against mine (non hairy) to elicit a scream or two. I did stab him in the hand with a pencil for that. I think the lead is still buried in his flesh.

One time, one of the class jokers decided to pay his tuition fee of MYR80, with most of it in notes, but the remaining MYR3 in one cent coins. Mr Siva, always temperamental (not to mention overweight), flew into a rage and with the sweep of an arm, scattered the hundreds of copper coins across the floor.

Incidentally, Siva is the Hindu god of destruction.

Then we had Mr Tan. Mr Tan was the most unmiddle-aged middle aged man I had ever met (since then, I’ve realised being 46 years old does not mean you must be balding and wear polyester pants with pleated fronts). His classes were held on top of the Baskins Robbins in Bangsar every Saturday. I had him for Chemistry and Physics. I had no problem with Chemistry, apart from our permanently PMS-sy teacher at school, but struggled with the disciplined concepts of Physics (once even making our male teacher cry, but that’s another story).

Mr Tan had (and as far as I know, has) a fringe and shoulder length hair, a hairstyle he has happily kept since high school. Now that all makes him sound hippy and greasy but the man had taste. Always perfectly groomed, but in the most masculine way. I nurtured a crush on him for a whole year, but it only really blossomed after I broke up with my first love at 16. Still devastated, I conveniently transferred all my affections to him. Probably inured to all this nerdy acne-fied teen worship, he played along anyway. We spent many breaks chatting over Perrier and After Eights (I told you the man had taste).

I was really heartbroken when high school ended. I didn’t do A Levels like my friends did and hence had no excuse to continue classes with him.

Then there was He Lao Shi, whose most useful teaching involved How To Overcome Hiccups (swallow water bent over) and thought I had head lice because I always seemed to be scratching my scalp (I was trying to pinch out the scalp pimples), The Teacher With Really Huge Lips who taught us Add Math, and a few other rather unmemorable ones.

Does anyone have Mr Tan's email address?

Monday, August 24, 2009

Angry





What that doesn't tell you is how it feels to sit there, watching someone you love get abused with crude expletives, the angers that arises to see him remain rational and polite to a raving lunatic. What it feels like to finally lose it, to say just exactly what you think, without anymore social niceties or decorum or treading on eggshells. What it feels like to call the neighbourhood police line and not be able to get through while being called a fucking Chinese bitch and being told I will fucking kill you and having our door slammed and banged on repeatedly, violently. What it feels like to have to dial 000 and be told this isn't a matter serious enough. Or how I shook uncontrollably through the whole ordeal. From anger, from helplessness, from hating myself for being so pragmatic because what I really wanted to go out there and do a Clint Eastwood a la Grand Torino and hold a shotgun between his eyes. Or how the tears wouldn't stop. Or how it feels to have your first real fight in your mild-mannered domesticity as you scream and cry and swear because your partner who is half the guy's size still wants to play hero and won't give you the keys. What it feels like to have the police saunter in 50 minutes later, nonchalant and blase.

Hopefully later today I'll know what it feels like to evict someone.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Clarification

Utilizing my free minutes talking to Mo...

Jan: When are you leaving work?

Mo: Soon, when my friend is done.

Jan: Your friend?

Mo: Yes. My friend.

Jan: Like friend friend?

Mo: Friend... minus the inverted commas.

Jan: And the italics?

Mo: And the italics.

Jan: And the bold? And the underline?

Mo: Yes, Jan and the bold and the underline too.

Jan: Damn.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Mounting Mount Warning

Warning: Picture overload! But by golly, I scaled a World Heritage listed mountain in flip flops, in 6 hours and survived to tell the tale so I'm going to milk it for all its worth. Worship me, you mere mortals!

X had been going on and on about Mt Warning for yonks. His bestie bailed on him, leaving me no choice but to say yes to the outing last Sunday, in spite of a lack of suitable footwear.



X is wearing the Forbidden Pants. We met while he was wearing these and he had not worn them since. As you can see, for a very good reason. Someday they will mysteriously disappear.




Chinese laundry. It starts off about 17C at the bottom of the hill where it's all shady, then the mercury soars 10C at the peak. Understandably, people strip off...


... some find their sunglasses too much of a burden too.


The peekaboo tree


In spite of the warning, we passed several trekkers on our way down. On a related note, there was a chopper hovering over the mountain and loads of studly (not to mention friendly) rescuers in jumpsuits. Apparently some dude fell down somewhere and needed to be winched out.


This is how steep it is. You can understand why after a while I was chanting, "I am a mountain goat, I am a mountain goat..."


Gorgeous views halfway











After about 2 hours of hopping from rock to rock, you get to this vertical bit where you do some faux-abseiling. It's not completely vertical, but definitely steeper than a 45 degree angle. There are chains you yank yourself up with.

Blessedly, my low body weight compensated for my miniscule arm strength and I had little difficulty with this bit. X and I would occasionally shimmy over to the other side, clutching to rocks and branches, patiently awaiting the people coming down and vice versa. It was all very courteous and civilised, though more than once, we were flashed some unsightly thighs and other ghastly sights in between.

The sight of my be-thonged feet aroused more than a few chuckles. I played along, with lines like, "If I lose my flippies, I'm going to die!" "Did you want my autograph?" "Is there a wine club up there?" (said to group in BWS sponsored shirts)

Jan: I'm sure I'm not the first person to climb Mt Warning in thongs!

Random passer by: Well, there aren't too many of them!




Views at the top








Exhibit A: Tired toes






We started the trek at about 9.30am and ended our descent at about 3.30pm, with lots of mini breaks in between. Miraculously, I managed to keep my flip flops on for almost the entire duration, except for twice. However I was pretty fatigued by the end and carelessly slipped off a step, spraining my left ankle. It's nothing like the other ankle injury though. I was already able to hobble around in heels (the folk at the Jupiters casino always discriminate against my default choice of footwear, ie. thongs, and apparently will not fail to check for proof of age for the next couple of years) a day after.

My muscles are still unbelievably sore. X, who never fails to rattle off obscure multisyllabic biological malfunctions at every opportunity to emphasise his nerdiness, claims I'm suffering from DOMS (delayed onset muscle soreness).

Statistics:
Distance trekked: 4.4km
Elevation: 1,157m
Time: 6 hours
Water drank: 2L
Times "Are we there yet?" asked: 9,854
Days taken to recover: 3 and counting
Injuries sustained: 2 blue black bruises on both knees (from doing the vertical climb), 1 twisted ankle and 1 chipped nail.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

My Windows Media Player is retarded



I'm not sure what happened, but it might have contributed to the CD I burnt showing up as a blank disc on another computer.

Long live VLC!

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Dietgirl has so much more to offer

I'm in tears after reading this one. You don't find many blogs that manage to be funny and genuinely witty at the same time (without much graphic help too!). This is one of them.

Friday, August 14, 2009

I should be so lucky to have nice abs in spite of the fact I'm currently munching on Jatz while in bed and plan to do it for the rest of my time off

I pierced my navel at the age of 15, something considered outrageous for an Asian of my generation. Or at least amongst my sheltered group of friends anyway. Why did I do it? An honest answer would fall between out of boredom/ wanting to impress peers/ shit that looks cool/ I have nice abs.

The infections that ensued had me doubled over, literally (much appreciation to Mo and her mummy's antibacterial creams). I consider it a lucky thing I didn't have sufficient funds to get a tattoo. I'd wanted one of yellow (Yellow! What was I thinking? As if it would even show up against my colouring) flower trellises over my entire back. Not that I'm dissing any body art lovers, but I'm happy to have unmarked skin now, having been long past the Imustpissmyparentsoffbymodifyingmybodyasmuchaspossibleandwearingtheskankiestclothes phase.

On with the belly button - it's still there. I've had a surgical steel rose ornament dangling there for yonks. 9 years in total. Never removed it, largely out of complacency (the shock value has since diminished) and also the fact it was screwed on so tight, I couldn't. Thankfully, the latter problem was resolved by the resident jam jar opener.



I twisted his armX got me a really cool navel ring from Etsy.



I spent my last day at work flashing everyone.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

L'amour

From one of my current favourite blogs, Le Love:


Friday, August 7, 2009

The staples that bind us

The past week was extremely stressful, work wise. We had an auditor coming over (education administration in Australia is fraught with tedious legislations, especially concerning overseas students) and everyone at the office was panicking over bits and pieces left undone. We had inherited quite a few knots from the past and had our fingers bleeding raw from untangling them. Okay, I'm not very good at analogies, but you get the idea.

The person held to be responsible for this knot-untangling business was me. And it was pretty unfortunate but the auditor still concluded we had a bit of work to do. I was furious because along the way, I had been misinformed of the scope of my responsibilities and had a lot of information vital to decision making withheld from me. Couple that with a sniffly nose, sore throat and mild fever. And PMS.

I was definitely not having a good day.

Bitter, I expressed to my direct superior that he might want to start writing a reference for me.

Yet amazingly enough, no one blamed me. It was obviously not my fault yet corporate life is full of finger pointing, a round robin of scapegoats, so this was somewhat a miracle. It was pretty awesome to have a stream of colleagues calling and coming in to my room to express that I was doing fine and that whatever work I had contributed, while may not have been sufficient for the auditor, was still much appreciated.

As we all hail from different parts of the world, the office is a minefield for cultural and personality clashes. While I myself am generally non confrontational, I have on occasion, lost my temper and instead relied on other colleagues to pass on messages. Our feisty Colombian accountant was one of such people, as she had been, on a number of times, rude and scornful.

Anazingly enough, this week we began to talk and she now comes in the confer with me on things beyond my field. There was no apology for her past behavious but she did express that Latinas were extroverted and tended to get hot headed quickly. I suppose that was as close to a sorry I would get from her.

I'll really miss these people.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Happy Birthday, Matt-Matt

Picture stolen from SO


The handsome young man pictured above is my nephew, who turns 1 today. I generally find most babies rather hideous, but this fellow is clearly an exception.

To register your interest in having him as a future son-in-law, please leave a comment with your dowry offer and take a number.

Monday, August 3, 2009

For a dose of almost unbearable cuteness...

I heart LOLCats.