Things I learnt this past month

So we’re back from our honeymoon, and the lessons just keep coming and they keep getting better.

  1. Mexicana – Always Late.
  2. Air pollution is relative – Mexico City is the embodiment of Natural Beauty compared to Havana.
  3. You’ve heard of Eco-Tourism? Well, in Cuba they practice Socialist Tourism. It’s something along the lines of, … how shall I describe it, “Scam the Tourists”.
  4. Don’t tell US Immigration you’ve been to Cuba.
  5. On the whole, a stay at a luxury, boutique hotel (Bulgari, Four Seasons) in Bali is better value than its equivalent in Mexico.
  6. Fidel exiled Che to his death. Probably.

Posted in cronica | Tagged , | 2 Comments

one word

One Word is one of those sites that’s effective precisely because it is glaringly simple.

simple. you’ll see one word at the top of the following page. you have sixty seconds to write about it.

as soon as you click ‘go‘ the page will load with the cursor in place.

don’t think. just write.

One Word! You’ll be amazed what you can write in a minute.

Posted in writing | Leave a comment

Bushism

I have long since given up on Bush and his refashioning of American foreign policy founded upon a glaringly obvious Electra complex*, so much so that his rants – his Bushisms - elicit only disinterest. But his latest Bushism, a juxtaposition of ignorance and blinkeredness, beggars belief.

Members of Congress need to stop making political statements, and start providing vital funds for our troops. White House Press release

Should Congress cease from “making political statements”, and forgo its role as legislative arm of government, what in the world are they there for? For the United States to be governed by the rule of Whim?

Perhaps Bush should read the Constitution, specifically Article I, Section 8. I wonder if His Whimsyness is aware of Ben’s Guide to US Government for kids? Click here for their topic of Congress, meant for kids 9 til 12.

* Note: ’cause Bush is a girl.

Posted in critique | Tagged | Comments closed

How elusive is time?

How elusive is time? I last clicked on the “Write Post” button of this blog more than six months ago, in early September.

Much has taken place since then, not least my impending marriage to Jenny (see here for her one and only post on this blog). Yes, I’m guilty (and it’s true): love has drawn me away from maintaining this site and writing this blog. The whole experience has taken my quite by surprise – one never plans for such things. The nicest change has quietly crept into my being, almost unobtrusively. There is a new found calmness, … a serenity and felicity to the colour and tempo of life.

We’re due to tie the knot on May 26th. And May 27th, too. This Big Day is too big to contain within a simple 24 hour window. The two days will be full of fun, friends, family; with dinners, gatherings and a tea ceremony thrown in for good cultural measure.

After that, we’ll jet away for a fortnight to Mexico and Cuba (hence the travel guide purchases). After that, there is the small matter of making a home of our apartment at The Berth. And after that, a completed life.

Posted in me | 2 Comments

a circle of friends

My circle of friends is a narrow one, comprising of less than a dozen individuals. Each was exhaustively selected, processed and acquired during a lifetime of wandering and growth. Nothing esoteric unites them, except some form of association with me; none, as far as I know, are particularly well-known, endowed with special talent, especially unique or unreasonably kind. None, up to now, have changed, or significantly contributed to, the course of world history.

They are, nonetheless, all intrinsically good people, with a goodness that washes away sullen souls, always. Happily, this process of friendly acquisition is a mutual exercise, and I feel quietly privileged for it; not the privilege of granted status, but that wrought from daily toil and the struggle of personalities.

This diaspora of friends – this Thomaspora – encircles our world, from Bavaria, to sunny California, London and the English Midlands, Rome, once again war-torn Lebanon and here in Singapore; it extends beyond our terrestial form, extending to envelop the Heavens.

It sometimes feels as if I am an expatriate, distanced and disentangled from these fellow creatures, my fellow creatures, and I am longing for a moment when time can be halted and space compressed, when this circle can surround me again.

Posted in cronica, hegira | Leave a comment

on not reading

The misery continues. After my last post on despair – on the withdrawal from reading life, or the duplicity that is Amazon’s recommendations – I embarked on Robert Fisk’s monumental The war on Civilisation, its 1283 pages traversing the life of Bill Fisk and the modern Middle East that was bequeathed to us by his father’s generation. Pulled into journalistic light are accounts of Western government connivance with the regime of pre-liberated Iraq and the systematic extermination of the Armenian Christians in Turkey in the midst of the First World War.

Fisk has a touch of the Solzhenitsyn in him, as when Oliver Myers points out that

sharp-focus reporting is submerged as horror is piled on horror

True enough, the wave of “atrocity witnessing” is unrelenting. One wonders how this journalist maintains his sense of self, if at all.

So the misery continues. Not in the failure of reading that forced me on this journey with Fisk, but in the lack of redemptive coming together of the whole, a trace of which is evident in his previous Pity the Nation. Perhaps it is Fisk’s integrity that prevents him from making that leap; perhaps it is the vacuous nature of this (and a hundred-fold books’) reception. It is a different kind of despair now.

Posted in bookology | Leave a comment

despair

For two successive days this weekend, I wandered around Kinokuniya determined and a little anxious to make a purchase; not just any purchase, of course, but a “something” that will restore some semblance of balance between the forces of light and darkness, wisdom and ignorance. A tall order, and no doubt a reflection of recent decisions, of choices passed over or badly taken. I left the store with only Marley & Me, a gift for my brother and his Labrador, and the realisation that good books have a time of their own, and come before us only when they wish to be found.

Posted in bookology, Singapore | Tagged , | Comments closed

Love is …

You know the old series of cartoons with the boy and girl that led with “Love is …” (They have a site here)? Well, I have an original to contribute.

Love is … remembering that Tom once mentioned The Posies 8 months ago in a meaningless conversation and reminding him that they will be playing this Sunday in Singapore.

That’s right, folks, my partner in crime (who sneaks around this site when she’s bored at work) found out about The Posies’ gig this Sunday at Bay Beats 2006. How cool is that? All the way from Seattle. Not only that, but Ken Stringfellow will also play 2 solo sets.

This makes up for the diabolical Coldplay concert this past Monday.

Posted in music | Tagged | Comments closed

bookology

Philosophical Myths of the Fall, by Stephen Mulhall, is my 15th purchase of 2006. It is a fine book, and follows his earlier effort On Film. Stephen taught at Essex’s Philosophy department during my time in the mid-1990s; he lectured in an always clear and exhilirating manner, free from the ego-dramatics that consumed Mark Sacks (for example). Now a Fellow at New College, Oxford, Stephen also appeared on the BBC’s In Our Time series as one of the guests on the Redemption episode.

In the meantime, the Essex Philosophy implosion continues apace. Simon Critchley – sometime lecturer, sometime philosopher – has re-invented himself as a pop star. (link courtesy of infinite thought).

Posted in bookology, books | Comments closed

sixth piece

We were asked to each bring an object to class the following day. I brought a three-pin plug. This was placed with other objects on a table, from which we selected an item. I chose this.

The lesson I learnt was that we could write about anything – if we tried!

the piece:

what are these things called?

There at the bottom of her purse, among loose change, receipts that tracked her every movement and acted as ready-made alibis, and masking tools, was the comfort her eyes longed for. Those disposable tear drops on demand; the ease of each capsule’s opening mirroring her proximity to real tears.

This was her first line of defence against the carcegenic air, eye-drops perfectly packaged in tear shaped plastic mouldings which cost more than the priceless liquid it encased.

Posted in writing | Tagged | Leave a comment
  • Recent comments

  • My Library