Monday, December 25, 2006

spits and swallows.

My mother always taught me how to be sure that a guy really loves you. To put it briefly, the symptoms are the guy would do anything for you.

Back in her days, she would have numerous guys calling on her. They would write her poems, or bring her fruit baskets that are large enough to go around all 11 members of her family. She never lifted a finger, she said, never called them back, never asked them out, never gave them promises, but they kept coming nonetheless. And the most resilient, most persistent man became my dad. Because if you go soft on them, she warned in an energetic oratory, if you serve them and lull them with the convenience of your generosity and submissiveness, you will never know how far they would go for you. You would be trapped with a man that would not treat you the way a girl deserves to be treated. It is Woman’s Destiny, she says. We must be passive.

I always thought that I thought the advice was lame. You know those stories where teenage girls are determined not to end up like their mothers and suddenly sometime in their adult life find themselves acting exactly like mom? Well… there you go. I think as the questions become more complicated, you have only two choices: do as you were told its best to do, or invent your own untested formula. And that’s where all this storm inside is coming from.

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Going Solo.

Oh today. Attended a ceremony the president was attending in Solo, the National Solidarity Day Event. It was at an open roofed football stadium at 11.00 noon, and the place was swamped with plump ladies from the Social Department all dressed up to the nines. I could not help but notice the one sitting next to me had extremely protruding front teeth, which her red-painted lips could never quite conceal. The air smelt of sweat as the onlookers watched the opening: an army of parachutes landing on the field, almost all of them missing the big yellow mark.

My boss still nowhere to be seen or heard, I hung out with the reporters instead. Their looks are to be doubted, these unkempt, lanky haired journalists, but the minute they ask you a question you know they can be deadly. But today I need not fear, for they were as bored as I was. The event bore no news, and some of them were only in it for the free trip home to Java.

Every trip has a reason for being, something you can bring home in your mind, and this time it was the reporters I made friends with. They’re probably the most knowledgeable people in the world on the merit of knowing what happens the minute it happens. And yet unlike the most knowledgeable people in the world, they’re extremely approachable. Ask them what they think of an issue and they can immediately give you a modest analysis based on their simple but intense observation. And they’re always honest about what they think. You can learn a lot from people like that.

So based on the above, I’m happy to report that my first solo trip to Solo proved fruitful!

Monday, December 11, 2006

I will be an excellent mother.

Female colleague is making ridiculous high-pitched gurgling noises at the boss's baby.
I fail to see the point.

Sunday, December 03, 2006

Week Three.










So I go on my first business trip, and the destination is St. Petersburg. It’s winter, and our breath comes out misty white as we walk through the quaint lighted streets. Russian girls in black leather stiletto boots and fur coats walk briskly past. After work was completed, for a blissful hour I walked as the city closed down for the day. The next day was trapped with colleagues, sight-seeing beautiful
St. Petersburg, on a tour bus.
I almost died of boredom.

Friday, November 24, 2006

And I would almost give up. Almost.
In a haze of confusion.

Neurotic

A ridiculously sickening paranoia of stepping on thin ice and losing everything.

Friday, November 17, 2006

Day Three.

“How’s the coffee? Need sugar?”
“No thanks. I don’t like my coffee sweet.”
“That’s right, you’re already sweet enough.”

Said a very old and lanky office boy. Ouch….

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Day Two.

The palace is nice in the afternoons, for a stroll through the grounds as people bustle by after a leisurely lunch. The gardens are dappled and sunny, softening the classic colonial style buildings. Not lavish, but elegant buildings nonetheless. At night it would cast shadows and fall silent, softly spooky, and people say they feel things if not see things. But during the day I only feel the soft rustle of wind. I intercepted the flower carts coming out of the palace, loaded with the flowers of yesterday’s banquet, and picked some still pretty ones for my desk. I believe it would be, however, on very rare occasions that I would take this stroll, for my primary destination, the palace cafeteria, serves tasteless food. So there go my delusions of palace gourmet.

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Hot Young Coconut Pudding.

Which was on the breakfast menu at the hotel where my colleagues stay, and later told me that they decided it was an "appropriate description for Teez, in a nutshell".

Now, I can't say that sounds too bad.

Monday, November 06, 2006

weathered.

Quietly the dust settles in the aftermath of a sandstorm.
Roughly piled and dry like dead twigs on a winter's day.
And you say you think I'm gone next stormy dusty winter.
And I say I think you're wrong.

Monday, October 30, 2006

notch down.

In the best of words: differentiate what you want and what you need.
Profound and surprisingly overlooked. It simplifies a life that wants so many things.
And cheerfully agrees with the fact that you "can't have it all".
I would think that the person who achieves this level would be a very peaceful person. Presuming he obtains what he needs. Think about it. It would be so easy to arrange life's priorities:
1. what you need and want
2. what you need
3. what you want
Of course, nothing is that simple. But once the frustation exhausts itself, once the turmoil dwindles, the options continue to escalate and the sadness still lingers, you need to arrange things in simple little boxes and make a straight beeline for one which makes you happiest.
Because in the long run, you only hit what you aim at.

Thursday, October 12, 2006

to be young

It's as if my person is assumed. Life keeps moving, life keeps escalating. And soon I will reach the skies alone.

But see, that's an over-simplification. Mere plastic labels to explain complexities. Ambitious. Selfish. Competitive. Karma. There is no depth in such analysis. It does not take into account how souls mature like wine, and how faith and religion invisibly draws a straight unwavering line to follow. To come back to after you side-track. If you side-track. There are always echoes which balance the echoes in my head. And most importantly, it doesn't take into account that nobody can fight alone. And that I realise that.

Sunday, October 08, 2006

constant vigilance

These are the days when I dream of where I will be precisely next year. Right now there are about a million feasible posibilities. Possibility number one being the most lucrative at the moment, which really consists of a combination of a certain this, this, this, and that.
But I keep having to remind myself, let's do this in small increments. Let's focus on goaling the balls one by one. Let's take a deep breath and realise that things do not happen without a struggle.
Let's focus on fighting for that dream-job first of all. And then focus on fighting for that dream-team. And then focus on fighting for the ultimate dream. And then, who knows?
There's plenty of battle yet to come. And sweet victories to be won.

Saturday, September 16, 2006

Flattery of the day:

"Did you get a boob job?"

=)

Monday, September 11, 2006

Fortune Teller

The fortune teller said that I have many temptations. This is no surprise as life is full of temptations. Perhaps she reads not what is applicable to her clients, but reads what is foremost in her client's mind. For indeed it had been hovering about, nameless, until she nailed it and identified the squirming bastard.
I realise now that not only are mishaps a blessing in disguise as commonly quoted by elderly people, but blessings may also potentially become a mishap in disguise. If you exploit it, if you indulge in it, if you feel too confident about it. I do not.
But I feel immature. Because I am certain of how to handle my temptations, yet feel deprived. Because I am certain of where I want to go, but wonder where the other path leads. I feel I am not grateful for what i have, but that it is extremely humane to never feel satisfied. It is thirst, paired with an uncanny knack of getting water easily.
The fortune teller did not give me predictions of what my life is going to be, but she told me that the path I am trying to focus on is the right one. That's all I needed to know.

Saturday, September 02, 2006

Just gimme my diploma.

Graduation ceremony was jading (is that a word?). As a custom, girls must wear the traditional garments and hairdo, which requires at least two hours of preparation. After all the fuss, we endure at least an hour of traffic as hundreds of cars queue up, filled with excited graduates and proud parents and relatives doing last minute make-up checks with pocket mirrors. We cover the beautiful meticulous garments with tacky overpriced graduation robes and step out into the blaring sun. We gingerly push the pentagonal graduation hat on to our painfully perfect hairdo. We jostle and jumble in our high heels with the crowd as we enter the building to endure a ceremony in which our names are not even mentioned because we failed to become cum laudes. And when the ceremony is finally over we jostle and jumble to get out, back to the blaring sun outside, sweat staining our beautiful hidden dresses, make-up running and fake-eyelash-glue melting.
And then we take pictures.

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Sunday Spa.

Wafts of fragrant herbal scent

Swirls of petals immersed in wet

Froths of warm and bubbled sweat

Moments so sweet I shan't forget.

.

Sunday, August 06, 2006

The story of the silent couple on the other table: what really happens.

As we were sitting in that coffeeshop a few months ago, having the most delightful animated conversation, I couldn't help but notice the couple on the other table.

I said, "Honey, d'you think they're a couple? They haven't spoken a word to each other. I wonder how fun that can be."
He promptly replied, "You're so prejudicial. They might be passing notes!"

So I thought about it, and he might have a point.

------------------------

He had been waiting. She helped herself to the empty chair beside him, set down her mug, leaned over and gave him a light kiss. His cheek was cold, indifferent. It was never warm unless they slept together, cheek to cheek. He lit a cigarette and she sat silently while the smoke shrouded them.
"Do you mind if I smoke?" he asked, unimportantly.
She ignored him.
Instead, she grabbed a paper tissue and started scribbling on it. She passed it to him.

"A kiss so sweet would prove to be
bittered by your smoking non-necessity.
"

He smiled, frowned, scribbled, and passed it back.

"Non-necessities are bittersweet indeed
but being here with you is all I need.
"

She smiled. He had a glint in his eyes. The cafe was slowly filling up, and the loud chatter of customers started to blend with the aroma of coffee and smoke. But he and she were oblivious to this. She looked up at him seriously now, the smile vanishing into a saddened expression.

"You haven't called me very much", she said.
It was a statement. Matter of fact. Non-accusatory, but unmistakably disappointed.

He slowly took a long drag and blew it out before taking another tissue paper.

"Should I be satisfied to hear your voice?
your lack of presence pains me without choice."

She took a moment to read it and a long moment staring at it. Her expression was unfathomable, but he didn't mind. He waited.

"What excuses, darling! But maybe it matters not
at rare times like this, lapses might well be forgot."


She slipped him the tissue but he took her hand instead and held it. It felt warm, unusually warm. For the remainder of the night, he and she remained oblivious to the crowd.

The rest of the world simply did not matter.

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Here was a scene at a cosy coffee place at Clarke Quay. As usual, it involves merrily chastising my brother's Singaporeanised antiques. This usually involves: being fussy about wearing safety-helmets before cycling to the next block, washing your hands as soon as you get home, and being extremely worried about bird-flu. But we always listen to his life in Singapore with enthusiasm.

[bro:] "I haven't bothered reading Newsweek ever since I got here. Besides, I've been busy reading much more interesting stuff on the Singapore daily newspaper. Only last week there was a man prosecuted for cat abuse. They finally proved him guilty for abusing three cats. He's a friggin' serial-cat-abuser. It was all over the news."

[me:] "Atrocious."

[bro:] "I know."

Friday, August 04, 2006

The temporary pedestrian

"Brick, cobblestone and wood plank pavements were once common in urban areas throughout the world, but due to their high manual labor requirements they are in some countries typically only maintained for historical reasons, while in other countries they are still common in local streets."

In any event, I had a morning jog by the river with its cobblestone pavements. The morning was beautiful, the river was calm and deep green. By simple logic, obviously this is not Jakarta. Whether brick or cobblestone or asphalt, whether for aesthetic or historical reasons, whether for economic or cultural purposes (like, Javanese people don't like walking), Jakarta does not have significant pavements, let alone clean deep-green rivers. I'm very jealous. :( It's simply wrong for a midget country, a tiny red dot on the map to be this nice. For the sake of bittersweet chauvinism I shall say that despite everything Jakarta is ... exhilarating, unpredictable, and mysteriously lovable. In a way it's true; I actually can't wait to go home and embrace the familiar chaos.

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Fret.

I don’t know how it began, but, I find myself not knowing someone as much as I’d like to know that someone. I had overestimated myself. Some people simply do not depend on other people to share their burdens of life. And suddenly I don’t know his burdens in life, let alone be there to help solve it.
And therefore I am useless.

Sunday, July 30, 2006

essentials

I've graduated.



Now, on to the more important things. Bunaken was fabulous! Located just off the coast of Manado, what's important about it is not Bunaken island itself but a cluster of coral reefs nearby which we had to get to from Manado by a splendid white little boat which allowed me to sit at the hull with the wind in my face and the dark blue sea with glittering sparkles of sunlight like playful diamonds and the vivid blue sky with little cottons of cloud and mountain slopes decorating the horizon and later on the coral reefs viewed from the glass-paned boat with the whole city of rainbow coloured fish and lobsters and bright blue starfish which then compelled me to jump off the boat and dip myself into the clear blue sea to swim among the corals and fish. =) Perfect!

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Dad just called me an “unemployed intellectual”. Yikes. That’s pressure in a lyrical way. However, approaching the end of my campus days, and hearing lots of stories about working life makes me appreciate the value of unemployment. Most definitely not material values. But Time. Controlling it. Subjecting yourself to leisures or pressures, to a glass of wine or a deadline, because you want to or feel the need to. Not because you have no other option. But that doesn’t make sense doesn’t it, because, theoretically, there’s always an option, innit.
*sigh*. Is there such a thing as “intellectually unemployed”?

Sunday, July 09, 2006

And inevitably, football.

At 2 am an unlikely group of people gathered at the La Piazza to join the hundreds who were all watching the World Cup together on the big screen in the middle of the plaza. The surrounding café’s were all working round the clock to cater to this magnitude of an event. The unlikely group, btw, happened to be myself, with my parents. It never occurred to me that they would suddenly feel like watching footie with the masses. At 2-bloody-a.m. Admittedly our cable-TV, with its ESPN and Star Sports and whatnot, amazingly does not transmit the World Cup. Mum had a great time, possessing a moderate enjoyment for football. I, felt weird hanging out with my parents at 2am. Dad was only in it for Mum, and successfully persuaded us to split 15 minutes before the game ended.
Later on in the day Dad went typically contemplative.
He said: “It’s ironic that thousands can be so fanatic about another nation’s football team, that they would all gather in the middle of the night to watch. Everybody, everybody gathering in the big malls built over the empty grassy lands previously used by kids to play football.”
I did not have a response for that. Predictably, we are watching the finals at home tonight. We hijacked our maid’s antenna-TV.

Saturday, June 24, 2006

rejection.

He approached my car with Jesus tucked under his armpit, skinnier than usual and covered in lacquer. With his other hand he waved about the other Jesus, equally skinny and shiny, outside my window. I waved my hand submissively and he proceeded to the next car in the traffic line. Amongst the billow and hum of steady fumes, in the few minutes before red turns to green, other sellers swarmed around to promote their ware. They specialize. One type of ware for every seller. Mini helicopters which could actually elevate for a few minutes before dropping dangerously close to my windshield. Crispy snacks which are allegedly fried in hot sand and allegedly non-cholesterol. Giant, footlong pencils which you could flexibly twist. Skeleton keyrings and hairy gorilla masks sold 5 months in advance of Halloween. A dazzling array of World Cup fever memorabilia. Playboy magazines, and Jesus.
And then of course, there are the others. The ware-less, beggars. Tiny barefooted children, their tiny baby siblings slung on their backs. Old women leading their blind old husbands through the maze of cars. Skinny muscular men strumming their broken guitars, or just clapping. I cannot feel sympathy for these men. The people in the cars usually have preferences. They, too, specialize. Some prefer the kids because they should be in school. Some give to the muscled men because they are annoyingly persistent. I prefer those who obviously cannot be productive. But it’s so easy to be apathetic, simply because one gets used to it. Even sympathy is a different thing from philanthrophy, the former not necessarily leading to the latter.
And so it was today that a blind man approached my car, befitting into my ideas of obvious unproductive-ness. But not this man. This man was selling bottled water, chilled despite the blaring heat. He’d press his hand on the window to feel whether it opened for him or not.
As it was, mine did. Howmuch?, I asked him and he told me the price would be 2000. I gave him 3000. Before he handed me the bottle he took the notes and felt them slowly around the edges, one, two, and three. He gave one back to me and said, “this is too much”. No its okay, I said, take them all. He shook his head and handed me the bottle with the 1000 note.

And he walked away to the next car, hands outstretched.

Sunday, June 18, 2006

"Rome"

There are many roads to Rome, it’s true
And possibly I feel subdued
I’m humbled by the twists and turns
The overwhelming choices earned

But there are many ways to Rome, he’d say
Before you change your mind and sway
through Rio, Brazil, and Madrid, Spain
To see the world and back again

It almost seems like Rome is near
Though many paths, the goal is clear
Still, fears come greet me all the while

For life most perfect is, most fragile…

[for the complete, unabridged version please ask me very very sweetly ;p]

Thursday, June 15, 2006

Thesis is like Soap.

You never really end up the way you had predicted from the start. Although this theory is dependant on how consistent, and how competent a scholar, the writer is, I would like to think that most writers don’t end stories up as planned. In the beginning there will be a sneak preview, the introduction of characters that seemingly lean towards a certain predictable tale. In the middle complexities and subtle nuances appear, frantically trying to steer the writer in other directions. If I were not a thesis writer at the moment, I would gladly yield. It would be the most natural thing to do, like when life throws hurdles at you and you simply flex, bend, and take an alternative route. In extreme moments, I feel currently my thesis is like a soap show, not merely tempted to steer off track, but to steer in and out, add and subtract characters, undergo extreme surprises, have affairs left and right, and voila… end happily.
But no… it must be boring and rigid. With the thesis, you must end as you had planned, because the professors hold you accountable for your plans. I so lack the privilege of a melodrama.

Friday, June 02, 2006

How sadly deprived.
In anticipation of a certain event tonight, I had spent a few hours of two days deciding on what to wear. Helped by mom, always so excited and intervening, I tried on thisandthat, even became a little adventurous. As if a holiday spirit had come over me, all I seemed to covet were girly windblowy skirts and beaded necklaces. So unlike me. And precisely why I completely failed, having discovered that I do not have enough resources to develop a holiday fashion within two days. How can people manage to match every bag with every shoe? It’s beyond me. My talents reacheth not this realm. I am humbled. In resignation I settled upon my usual simple look, elegant at best and quite boring. Assured myself, as Oscar Wilde has so eloquently stated, that ‘fashion is a form of art so ugly that it must be thrown out every three months’. Also quoting from Mies van der Rohe, that ‘Less is More’. Of course, I stoically ignore that neither scholars work in the fashion field. After much ado and psychological reframing of mind, I was finally content and set upon having a good time, fashion-oblivious. Only to be told that the event had been cancelled!

I am now wishing I had more quotes. :(

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

brink.

Today was my last exam at campus. No more exams.

Somehow it’s not as milestoney as I thought it might be. I need to graduate now, innit. And find jobs and important things to propell me through life. But right now Im thinking I need to paint my hair, grab a picnic basket (and iPod ;p), travel to Rio and take samba lessons. Will there be time somewhere in the adult life to do reckless things? What if I grow up? What if I never get to wear converse sneakers again? Worries which, undoubtedly, I will not be worrying about when I can afford to buy Manolo Blahnik… but the concept is terrifying. You wait your whole life to be mature and independent, and at the brink you falter.

How embarassing. But then again, I’ve got an ego the size of London, bf always says.
Too huge for me to flinch.

Thursday, April 27, 2006

Life as Usual

They say.
Back to the piling assignments, to the traffic, to the rusty routine. For a moment you expect, without really thinking, that something may have changed. And yet nothing has. Not percievably.

Today.
Came early and at this time of year, at this age, you meet less friends at the campus café. They’re either gone and graduated, are doing internships, or slaving away in the library doing their Thesis. (Oops! I just said the “T” word. *shudder*)

But food is a necessity people cannot avoid, and so are friends…and so if you persevere long enough in the humid café, you would manage to meet a few fellow necessity-seekers. Today was a good day. I met a someone who just came back from a Euro-trip, someone who just came out of an internship at a VFF (Very Famous lawFirm ;p), someone who just got married, and someone planning to get married. As the stories unravel, the mind goes into overdrive. I could almost hear the “creak-creak” sounds of a CPU processing in there somewhere. Jigsaw pieces being put together. Plans. Shapes.
So I found that life is not so usual after all. It seems my todays are filled with thoughts about my Tomorrows.

Thursday, April 13, 2006

Allow me to describe my breakfast, acquired after an hour of solitary walking and searching. I was intent on enjoying my last day here with the perfect meal. It finally came in the form of a bowl of udon, called *something something* and ends with “pukkake”, that is, if I can trust my hiragana capabilities.

Ordering is always fun. Armed with my Lonely Planet phrasebook, the conversation went like this:

Me: korewa kudasai… *pointing at the picture with the bowl of udon that I wanted*
Him: $*&#$%(@#$*
Me: wakarimasen… *with an apologetic bow*
Him: *using gestures this time* E… choisu… serecsion… co’…or… hotu ? (which, miraculously.. I understood to be a question of whether I wanted it cold or hot, there being a choice, or selection of either)
Me: Ahh… cold, err.. kudasai.
Me again: Soshite… wakame kudasai. (and to this he added a handful of gorgeous seaweed in to my bowl).

See. When it comes to food, no linguistic problems are a problem.

Anyways.
So the udon was served cold on a shallow pool of mild soy sauce. In its simplicity, the texture of the udon is enhanced, which, unlike most udons I have encountered in my life, is soft and chewy with a tinge of resistance, almost elastic. As he was preparing, he slipped a half-poached egg on top of the udon, half poached to perfection. A perfectly round egg held together with a translucent layer of white. But as you take your chopstick and pierce it, the yellow yolk comes out and melts into the noodles, coating it and adding another layer of texture to the udon. Scattered on to this mixture is wakame, spring onions, and wasabi, each ingredient adding a new zest. Not too much, retaining simplicity. Zen.
I then pour myself a cup of hot ocha, and settle down to a perfect moment in Tokyo.

Thursday, April 06, 2006

New York was snowing :)

...and I tilted my head back, arms spread, mouth wide, and caught a drifting snowflake on my tongue.

Thursday, March 30, 2006

Life is not just about...

It's like a page from chicken soup for the soul. Jessup is not just about winning. It's the process, the experience, the people you meet. The toil, the teamwork, the challenges you take.
And so the judges said, and told us to remember to have fun, because Jessup is so much more and so forth. And then they announced that we had lost. To Singapore. And the fact flew out of him and stuck on me like a thorn, just hangin' around, parasytical. And as humans we go through the usual humanic phases. A brave face, a hearty congrats; glued on in the spirit of sportsmanship, and pure ego. A suppressed tear, not so suppressed when alone. And then exhaustion, and a primitive survival instinct groping around for the positive things to stop the pain: The incredible fun. The victory against UK. Against Germany. Against Uruguay. The moment they announced we made the top 24 teams.
The rush. The process, the experience, the people you meet. The toil, the teamwork, the challenges you take. (and there goes the warm chicken soup, tasting slightly bitter)

Friday, March 24, 2006

JKT-SG-HKG-SF-DC

Perhaps sometime after we have arrived I will be focusing on feeling the rush. The uncanny calmness, the sudden tensity, the surging panic, the certainty that I will fail miserably combined with extraordinary confidence.
But for now I am just exhausted. Exhausted, cramped, dry, bloated, unclean, and unpretty. We have been travelling for... well, I'm not sure. Perhaps two days. We've crossed 4 airports, countless baggage checks, and a myriad of immigration officers. Friendly immigration officers, flirty immigration officers, hostile immigration officers, apologetic immigration officers, gay immigration officers (this is not prejudice! the guy was wearing make up >:o)...
And the Americans, they're funny. Strangers smile at each other in a queue. Say, "hello, how are you?". In a brief minute before boarding, before entering the plane toilet or before nodding off to sleep beside you in the cramped plane seats, they manage to tell you about their family, their favourite book, their plans for spring break, topped with an overbright "how are you?".
Amusing. And slightly intriguing.
Our final destination is getting near, and I can't wait to take a warm shower, and sleep on a warm mattress, while the winter is slowly dying outside.

Monday, March 13, 2006

of thoughts revealed

conjuring up the magic
delighting in the play
smiles and silly poems
borne and carried away

and words flip, fling, flit
like images in a book
passing quickly, pausing
catching her eye with a glint

oh, but everything now catches the eye!
a saturday of images
caught between the fire
and she, inside, smiles

the dreamees and the dreamers
whose life takes form and shape
images in the play
and she, crosses her fingers.

Monday, March 06, 2006

Tribute to JavaJazz Festival

It was like a playground, and it was a long time since I’ve felt so alive! Saw, by order: Andi Wiriantono, my feisty, hard-bop-ing mentor; Ello, because he gave me a three-day freepass; Bali Lounge, in which I was surprised to be amazed by the vocals of Tompi… can’t really blame the guy for his name; Chiarra Chivello, who made our heartbeats samba; Jeff Lorber, funky and upbeat; Daniella Schachter, whose chords are slightly reminiscent of Bill Evans; Bob James, collaborating beautifully with a Chinese orchestra; Raphael Gualazzio, who played with so much fun he made me laugh; and Hiromi, breathtaking and out of this world.
And what it all comes down to is Jazz. Pure and Unsimple :)

Sunday, March 05, 2006

rage against the machine.

I'm completely jaded.
Say what you will.

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

100 Mbps.

The rain is peacefully droning outside, as the leaves humbly bow down to its transparent weight. These large glass walls are barely discernible, seemingly blending in with the weather. Amidst the rain Yo Yo Ma’s cello sends a quiver in the air, accompanying my thoughts as the kilobytes filter through my laptop.

The free, unlimited, kilobytes.

This hotspot-like haven is like a breath of fresh air to my sluggish, slow-provider infested life. And where, you may ask, is this utopic place? This saving grace in a city as user-hostile and corrupted as Jakarta?

It’s my new campus library! :)
God I love the new Dean.

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

It’s like this. When I’m calm I wonder why. When I’m nervous I wish I weren’t. At other times, I feel I haven’t done enough. But I don’t know what more I can do. I’d feel guilty about the little pockets of time I occasionally enjoy by doing nothing. But I also feel I deserve it and would go insane without it. When will this madness ever stop? But I have a sneaking suspicion I would miss it if it stopped.

... I should be more religious. *sigh*

Wednesday, February 01, 2006

It’s the perfect time of year
Everything set into gear
I’m so happy I ryhme
Prose just seems like a crime

And hence this light airy crap
Can be explained in a short simple wrap
To Washington again, how sublime!
To travel, and moot, and to shine! :)

Saturday, January 14, 2006

On any other day we’d be a river
White on the edges, and a shimmer
With gurgles and frolics
We’d run out of topics
And flow anyways, undeterred

On any other day we’d be together
Dancing and slightly less sober
Discuss the semantics
Ridicule their antics
Though now I suppose we can’t bother

On any other day it’d be just swell-er
Time would extend like a rubber
For now, it just ticks
Like mad, should be fixed ..
..But im sure it'll stand in the weather :)

Monday, January 02, 2006

06.

A 1am breeze whips up, softly refreshing, as the wine softly droops my eyelids. An hour away from last year. An inch away from comfort. Perhaps no coherent words were spoken. Perhaps too many things needed to be said. Perhaps nothing at all needed to manifest in words.

Words, you see, are instant. They lift and drop (like a question on your plate) like the glass that you drink from, quench from. Soon enough you’ll need more. And more. I understood that words collapse around you like an unsuccessful dress, unpinned. Temporary at best. Exposing you, an object of observation. An object of objection.

So I closed my eyes and savoured the breeze instead, an inch away. Quick comfort is not my goal this year. I understood that things are not always solvable in an instant (much to my surprise). Some things, like wine, need a bit of patience. So here’s a toast to 2006... and the test of time.