Thursday, 20 July 2006
One Neighbour To Drive You Mad
I sit next to Cheryl. In these soon-to-be 10 months of being 'neighbours' at work, we have talked, shouted, laughed, complained, been silly and driven our colleagues nuts. We are the Mr & Mrs (technically speaking 'office hubby and wife, see exhibit B, phone screen pix below) with an adulterous side dish of Gerald, who pops in randomly throughout the day to partake in or provide the hilarity. Oh dear, I hear you moan.
Now that Cheryl has declared her liking for my linguistic prowess, I am in firm stead with her other articulate admirings - Lee Hsien Loong (who now goes by the nickname of Hottie Lee) and George Yeo. Is this a sign that I will end up in politics? Will I dangle upgrading carrots to the unwieldy, sore-kneed public in dire need of lifts? Or will there be an opportunity to pull a fast one over a CCTV? I don't know.
Anyway, I digress. Cheryl would scold me for detracting from the subject at hand - her. She's an attention seeker and she knows it. Before her fortnight affair on the 'Love Boat', she bought and wore elegant dresses which she gladly paraded before me throughout the working day, accosting my personal space as she modeled her lady-like outfits, constantly asking 'Do I look nice?', 'Do I look pretty?'.
I sat next to her at our SPM's wedding and ended up taking enough pixes of Lah Moh (at her behest, I assure you) to suggest that she was the bride.
You sigh this time.
But she's a great project manager. Her love for LV, 'dog rice' and bad Mandarin gets in the way.
Check out Cheryl's blog - Exhibit C of the madness - http://weilim.blogspot.com
Tuesday, 18 July 2006
Le Piggy Strikes!
Ham it up - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=shQpx4-Ntl4
Sunday, 16 July 2006
Flowers In The Lamps
We chatted, waited and chatted. Dinner started at about 9. We confirmed that Meixian and Huang Hui wouldn’t be there. It would be a lot of food for half a table.
The funny faces are a reaction to my camera and incessant photo-taking. And yes, there were fake, red, rose petals placed into the lamp holders – a smart, pretty touch that added a smidgen of colour to the otherwise plainly decorated restaurant.
We talked about work and stuff. A long discussion over the value and inclusion of shark’s fin in Chinese wedding dinners ensued too. I know it’s dead, but the fish wouldn’t be if we didn’t care so much about tradition and tasteless cartilage. Humans, as the highest form of life on this planet, have an obligation to take care of the other species, especially one that is so biologically-advanced and intentionally hunted for fins (and where in most cases, the bleeding shark is thrown back into the sea to die). This isn’t the circle of life, it’s the ka-ching of the cash register. I refused my bowl.
Dinner continued with consumption of beer firmly adhered to. As there were too few of us to finish the prawns, chicken, fish and ALL of the Ee-fu noodles, our hostess seemed quite taken aback the rejection of fine food. No offence but we were simply too full. But I had my bowl of orh-ni. Haha, resistance was futile.
Well, Cher Wee and Hwee Yen are off to Chiangmai as this post is being put up and edited and re-edited. Here’s wishing them all the best.
Friday, 14 July 2006
The View 5 Days A Week
Getting Old
There's probably some truth in that. The older we get the less tolerant of persons not listening to us, or simply not paying us enough attention. So we repeat ourselves to make our point. Our wisdom demands to be heard, damn it!
Or maybe we relish peace. To have it we tell the yapping mouths to shut up. Just shut up. Please just stop talking. Shut up! (See, I had to repeat 'shut up' 3 times - old age kicking in)
I have a habit of repeating myself to people, the same story to the same persons. It's embarrassing:
'You know she's having a kid.'
'Yeah, you told me already'
'I did? When?'
'Monday'
'Oh, must be losing it then.'
'Yeah, getting old.'
I'm 31 and I think the synapses between the neurons in the head need a tune up. Omega 3 and 6 oil change please, and doctor, don't hold back on the salmon with gingko paste. Did I tell you I have a habit of repeating myself?
Monday, 10 July 2006
Oh Zizou, qu'avez-vous fait ?
It's always confusing watching a match on TV when there is commotion on the pitch. If it happens against the run of play, it's worse. Usually one not privy to the hoo-ha until the TV cameramen start hustling. One is blur till the opportunely-captured video footage is rewound and played for all across the world to see.
Zizou head butted Matty. It looked forceful and vicious. The ref had a word with his linesman (this is like 2 minutes into the protest) and the next thing we know, he's waving the red card at Zidane. And The Monk knows he deserved it, trudging off towards the showers. He looked sad. Upset and ashamed in the realisation of his actions, like a thief who's been caught with the goods.The shot of him disappearing down the towel had him juxtaposed alongside the Jules Rimmet trophy. Sweet irony, if
I lost some respect for Zidane that day. Just like I did for Luis Figo, for the same head bang on a Dutch player earlier in the competition. Middle age drove them to lunacy? Maybe. Maybe they were just pissed.
Today, 11 July, it emerged that Materazzi may have said something foul to Zizou before the apparent retaliation. Perhaps this rude Italian deserved the shove. The drama of the world cup continues.
Sunday, 9 July 2006
Text On Taxis
In la-la land, prices are set to go up. Iran, Iraq, Nigeria and Osama's band of merry albeit angsty men have in one way or another had an impact on world oil prices, and in turn played havoc on stock markets, electricity prices and taxi fares. How macro to micro, sort of like the butterfly in chaos theory except in reverse. The major taxi companies have announced hikes to flag-down fares, distance rates and booking fees. Taxi drivers yelled 'It's about time' and toasted the news over mugs of Guinness Stout at coffeeshops while the public gasped with looks of shock and horror. In the back of our minds, we knew that taxi fares were going up – we just needed to make that obligatory whimper of objection.
Here’s my take on making everyone happy:
- raise the flag down, from $2.40 to $5.
- forget about booking charges and surcharges. They don’t serve a purpose. They in fact make taxi drivers lazy and contribute to the whole “it’s 10pm, I’m in town, and all the taxis are ON CALL” phenomenon. Ok, maybe a dollar for getting a taxi into a off-main-road location.
- keep the same distance rates
Taxis, like women, one cable provider and air pollution, we’ll all learn to live and get by. For the time being.
Saturday, 8 July 2006
Yes, Red Man Sir, I Won't Cross The Road
"Singaporeans being Singaporean being obedient", was Gerald's response at my suggestion that one could still cross Bras Basah Road at the Bras Basah - Beach Road junction after the 'man turned red'. It seemed that it wasn't enough being Singaporean the first time around but he had to impress his reasoning by doubling the SG factor to precede the bit about Singaporeans generally being obedient and compliant with rules, traffic or otherwise. Are we really? Oh dear.
Singaporean as I am, I will still put that Red Man to shame as I strut in front of all those waiting cars willing to run me over as I traverse Bras Basah Road. Only because I know, it's still ok to cross for the next 15 seconds. Knowledge over fear.
Friday, 7 July 2006
Worhld Kup
Like the sands of time, these are the world cup days of our lives. It is almost the end, and here's the victims list - the poor Aussies got the cruelest booty-licking five seconds from the end, the Americans ended up with a bloody McBride, Brazil bungled, Ghana is na-na (oh my $10), we're all crying for Argentina (to Patagonia with the bad sub keeper!), Ukried, the 2002 starry-eyed Asians floundered, the Oranjes were juiced, and in all this action (or non-action as the case may be), how many times did you see Michael Owen?
Goodness.
It is 2 days to the finals where
In August, we applaud the return of the EPL. Go
Thursday, 6 July 2006
A Blogger? Me? No.
This spattering of words come late. I am 31 going on 32 soon, working in the Internet services line for 4 years and am now walking the baby steps into bloghood, where so many other have already tread. It is also late in the night, 11pm plus. What is worse, I am at work. And what will keep me back further is continuing with paragraph 2.
I am sorry paragraph 2, sudden death unintended. Here is paragraph 3 to bring up the rear. Three is such a nice number to end off with. Three-layer fudge cake. Mmmm. Three beers. Mmmm. Three is a crowd, and you're ess likely to run out of conversation. 3M made post-its. Sticky...mmmm.