Monday, December 31, 2012

2012


 
   I still remember. I was at a book fair, looking through discounted books, when I flipped to a page, I read a line, it cut through my heart. This was 2012 for me.

   From V.S. Naipaul's "The Masque of Africa" citing Rian Malan's "The Traitor's Heart":

   "If you're really going to live..., you have to be able to look at it and say, 'This is the way of love, down this road: look at it hard. This is where it is going to lead you.'... 'I think you will know what I mean if I tell you love is worth nothing until it has been tested by its own defeat.'"

  And the answer for me, is to love more. Always love more. Even when it hurts. Especially when it hurts. I will love us into the space beyond space, into oblivion. I will love until the stars can no longer be indifferent, and we will be remembered on a night like this.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

Do not fear, my friends.


   
    The year is ending and there is so much to say, with so little words. I shall fall back on what I once wrote when I turned twenty-one, 

A whole life awaits. Do not fear, my friends. For fear of the things we cannot control is like trying to control a tooth ache. All of you are so brave and beautiful.
   (And four years later, I do fear. I do want to control pain. I do sometimes want to hide in hidden pockets of time, where the world won't change, but I get a day of uninterrupted peace and sleep. I do wonder what will happen, and when it does, if I would be brave enough. But, most of all, my friends, who are still here, to listen to me say this once more. All of you are so brave and beautiful). 


Wednesday, December 26, 2012

La Maison Fatien





La Maison Fatien 
76 Duxton Road 
For reservations: 62203822
$60-90 per pax (without wine) 
French 
Semi-formal, quiet charm 
Warm service but inattentive 

     Two weeks ago, M, H and J picked La Maison Fatien to celebrate my birthday for me. I still remember it had started to rain and all of us were arriving from different directions. I started to get lost as I walked from Pinnacle and the rain pitter-pattered all over me. When I reached 76 Duxton Road, La Maison Fatien appeared like a lovely grey safehouse from the rain outside. 

   I was first and grateful to be seated and served warm water. (Lots of it, please!) The manager (I'm guessing) was lovely and started going through the wine menu. It is of note that La Maison Fatien has its own winery but it's only sold by the bottle. So, we didn't try any since only M and I can drink, and we are very bad with wine. 

   What I like most about this place is that it seems outside of time - whether it is because of the lovely company I was in where we would laugh for hours, or the way it was decorated, there is a quiet stillness about this place that I really like. 





Both pictures from the La Maison Fatien homepage. Top shows the 1st floor and the Bottom shows the 2nd floor. 


    I think this place also serves excellent starters - we either had foie gras (I am ever constant in my fixation with foie gras) or onion soup. Oh, the onion soup was divine, wonderfully enhanced by the wintry coolness of the rain outside. The texture of the onion soup was interesting - with delicious bits of bread and I cannot remember. Frankly, I love a place with many wonderful starters because it encourages all to order a large variety as possible to share. After all, a meal is about sharing isn't it? 
  
   
         


Lovely scallops as main course 

   The sweetest thing is that since we all stepped into La Maison Fatien, J kept asking if they had a chocolate cake. She said their chocolate molten lava cake was highly recommended online and really wanted to have it. I thought it was one of her pregnant cravings. It wasn't on the menu and we had to ask if they could provide. The restaurant said they had one left.

   When it came, I was surprised (even though I knew this was my birthday celebration). It is difficult to surprise each other when it has now been ingrained as tradition that the four of us take turns to celebrate each other's birthday at a new restaurant. J stated she knew I loved chocolate molten lava cake. And, I did love it.




   Thank you girls for making growing older so sweet.




Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Merry Christmas!



    Christmas for my family is a variable occasion. When I was very young, I remember my mum setting up a huge Christmas tree in the living room. We would all decorate it. Pearl and I were short, so we mainly decorated the base with our favourite disney characters. We would cry, "where are the presents?  presents?" and watch as the presents sprout magically on Christmas morning. On the morning of Christmas, we would run down and gleefully look for the presents that belonged to us. Ah, the glories of youth, when decorum does not apply,

  As we grew older, we no longer set up the Christmas tree. Sometimes, we would have a big party at our house, or another relative's house, or we would go out to some glamourous place - sometimes, we just watched a movie, and it didn't really feel like Christmas at all. But, we were always together.

   This year, I suggested getting a real Christmas tree and suggested having a small Christmas party with Grandma, Auntie and Uncle. My little suggestion grew into a full blown wonder as my Mum took over. She is so extraordinary and I can only hope to be as good a hostess as her one day.


  She prepared two different table settings (one for a party on Christmas Eve and the family one on Christmas day) and prepared a veritable feast! The food was really wonderful and you felt as you could eat forever.



   I am always touched when I receive gifts. But, I was most overwhelmed when I gave my presents to Grandma. She looked taken aback and said, "But I didn't get you any presents". She looked at me and my sister who was sitting next to me. And, I smiled and told her I just wanted her to enjoy my presents. She looked almost sad when she said she only got presents for the maids, cheap simple gifts, because she knew my sister and me won't like those items and she couldn't afford expensive gifts. I told Grandma then with all my heart that we didn't need presents, we just wanted to eat her cooking. She smiled then and asked what we would like to eat. I told her anything, but especially her Agar Agar, and proceeded to eat them from the table.

   Dear reader, thank you for reading and I wish you a heartfelt Merry Christmas! I used all my birthday wishes this year for good health for those I love and care for, and that I am certain, includes you.

To my husband


I would like to be the air
that inhabits you for a moment
only. I would like to be that unnoticed
& that necessary. 
- Variations on the word sleep, Margaret Atwood
  

  Thank you for being the boy who found me at the crossroads when I was lost. You were lost too, but you said you felt as if you were found when you found me.

  Thank you for being you even when I tried to change you. For understanding that even while I loved you the way you were and are, I thought these changes would make you happier.

  Thank you for loving me. For loving me even though I was, am, a difficult person. For loving me because I am difficult.

   During my birthday week, I scarcely had time to think about my birthday. But, you slept on my couch every night, next to me, as I worked late into the night, sorting out the legal problems. At the end of each night/dawn, I would nudge you softly and say, "I'm done." And you would smile at me, and say, "Let's go to sleep."

   If love is an idea, you are my execution.




Thursday, December 13, 2012

Bistro du Vin



   Bistro du Vin
   1 Scotts Road
   #02-12 Shaw Centre
   For reservations: 67337763
   $60-90 per pax (without wine)
   French
   Unpretentious, semi-formal with large servings
   Good service


     I've decided to make the effort and try my best to capture food moments, considering it has always been a dream of mine to be a food critic. However, as my general threshold for good food is set so low, I will likely be considered as non-discerning.

   M was saying we had not had a dinner just the two of us in ages, which was true - so she made reservations at Bistro du Vin and we had a lovely thursday dinner together. As the restaurant was largely decked in red with white snowflakes, it had a lovely christmas feel about it. I usually go with my regular foie gras and duck confit combination at French restaurants, but Bistro du Vin had a beautiful blackboard in the middle of the restaurant with all the daily specials.

   My heart skipped when I saw it had bouillabaisse with lobster! It's a provencal fish stew originating from Marseille. The first and last time I ate the dish was in Marseille! I loved it, ZM hated it - which really captures the essence of bouillabaisse - which is incredibly fishy and solely, completely, overwhelmingly, for hard core seafood lovers. This is the real fishy deal - just a soft spot for crustaceans would not cut it.

   M ordered beef cheeks with mashed potatoes. It was such a huge hearty serving that half an hour into it, she remarked, "it still looks untouched".

  All the food was generally good with such generous servings that we wondered if the restaurant might want to consider cutting a little back, so that diners can actually long for that little bit more, instead of feeling too heavy.

  But, the best dish was definitely the pan-seared foie gras with eggplant.



  It's incredibly tasty and incredibly value for money considering the price and the size. M and I agreed that we would share the foie gras next time as a starter, because we were left with no room for dessert.

  At the end of it all, with a heavy belly, we reminisced about our backpacking through Europe three years ago. When we did not have much money and were always hungry after each meal. But, although we were always hungry, I like to think our hearts were full. We laughed and laughed. Friends, indeed, are the greatest seasoning in life.





Tuesday, December 11, 2012

almost twenty seven




     As Mum pondered out loud whether she should buy two fried treats or just one, Dad chimed in, "Buy one. You won't be able to finish."

    Mum immediately turned to my sister, "I want two."

   I laughed and turned to my Dad, "Almost 27 years of marriage and you still don't realise you shouldn't tell your wife what to do?"

   They had little squabbles of what was good and bad for Mum's body, with Mum happily swinging the fried treat bags as we left the food centre.




    They walked off, hand in hand.

   "You should eat heathily," Dad said, "Because I want to be with you for a long time."

Monday, December 10, 2012

To have you is more than I could ever hold.




   I've been wanting to write this entry since November 30. It's probably never too wise to start writing an entry at midnight, especially after you have had quite a few glasses of white and red wine. But perhaps, wisdom never made for memorable entries, and it is when the heart takes over that the mind speaks.

   On November 30, the word of the day was "cathexis". It is a noun, defined as "the investment of mental or emotional energy in a person, object or idea". The Merriam-Webster gives an example from an essay by Margaret Brose in The Body in Early Modern Italy: "The veil that hides Laura and her eyes, her hair, her smile (and its counterpart, the glove that veils her hand) becomes the object of Petrarch's cathexis..." The example is particularly apt considering Petrarch's love poems are considered one of the finest examples of a sonnet - and what could be a better expression of the essence of a sonnet but the "investment of mental or emotional energy in a person, object or idea"?

   But what I really love is that "cathexis" comes from the Greek word, "kathexis", meaning "holding"; ultimately traced back to the Greek verb "echein", meaning "to have" or "to hold". To have and to hold. My breath disappeared. I felt a very real twinkling down my spine - from the brain, to my heart, through my lungs, rolling all the way to the bottom of my toes. I finally understood.

  In my wedding vow, I told him, he would be someone to have and to hold until the very end of my life. I titled the blog, to have and to hold. But, it wasn't until then, that very moment when I read the root of "cathexis" that I felt I knew what I had meant all along even before I understood.

  Even now, what is felt in my heart, I cannot fully express. It is not just to hold someone's hand till the end of your lives, never letting go, to hold all that is dear and true in your marriage in the bosom of your heart. It is to realise what you have, the unbelievable overwhelming magnitude of it all, to look at your hands and gaze in amazement of what you have. To shiver, literally, at what has been given. And to hold, oh to hold, palm to palm, like holy palmer's kiss. 

   I especially like that this word has such a beautiful Greek origin. I still remember him as the boy who couldn't leave me alone, as I determinedly set out to head to Greece to fulfill all my long-held desires - to see Epidaurus (the physical embodiment of the theatre of my dreams) and to gaze at all my childhood wonders. To head to Greece, we had to spend a lot of money, but more than that catch many connecting flights. We had to walk out into the darkness (no lit lamp-posts to guide us) at 3 am and trudge to the train station with all our luggages; always slightly worried some drugged-out person will attack us in the dark. But we did. We walked in the darkness, sat for hours in the cold, changed tons of connecting flights, buses, monorails, until we reached the middle of Athens. I was so happy, I thought I would burst into flames. You were so tired you could barely keep your eyes open. We have so many other moments, so many before, so many after, but I remember this so vividly. That in this world, I have you, and you would follow me anywhere, no matter how long the journey.

   That when we climbed up the stairs all the way up the theatre, I wondered how good the acoustics were. So, you ran down all the way till the bottom again, and you said can you hear me?



   
      Loud and clear.


Friday, December 7, 2012

"I wish I was a photograph / you carried like a future in your back pocket"



    I was finding something on facebook, when I decided to look through old photographs. There's something strangely nostalgic about looking at moments captured out of your past. I'm really happy with the person I am now, but also long for that person I was. That specific moment in time, with all those specific people, with all those specific feelings. Sometimes, you want to tell someone, I wish we were as close again. That I miss being that close to someone, being that close to you. I wish to be that person in your life you could share all those small things, irritating and lovely, that make up a day. That I would know why you are feeling this way, right now, so specifically, because I know your yesterday, the day before yesterday, and all the days before.

   At the start, when people drift, they lose the small things first. But, they take heart that they will always have the big things. Not knowing that the big things were always anchored by the small things. Sometimes, I see something and am instantly reminded of you. I smile to myself, and file it away. But, perhaps, that was my little bird, my little window, to tell you, hey, today, I thought of you. 

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

The way the wind blows


       Although I think the bracelets at Kate Spade are ridiculously over-priced, considering they are even more ludicrously marked up in the Singaporean stores, I think I am in love. Sadly, I can't bring myself to buy it. No, I should not pay for a line that much. I will write it in my heart, and wear it in the insides of my wrist. 



  
    

        I went to wash my hair at my favourite salon today, and one of the manicurist asked if I wanted to do my nails. I declined because my nails were brittle and crumbling like an ancient forgotten castle. But, she looked at me with such earnest-ness, proclaiming she would rescue them. My nails, ever the damsels in distress, could not resist. But, what I wanted to write about was the very strange fact that I went out of my way to choose a colour I have not worn before or would normally wear. It was the shade of a rose that had drunk too much coffee. However, when it dried, I looked at my nails, and it was exactly the shade I usually paint at another nail salon. I was stunned, for a moment. Do we consciously set out for something new, just to end up with the same? Perhaps we are always attracted to that one thing. Perhaps, it is just the way the wind blows.

"I knew what slant of light/ would make you turn over"




San Antonio

by Naomi Shihab Nye

Tonight I lingered over your name,
the delicate assembly of vowels
a voice inside my head.
You were sleeping when I arrived.
I stood by your bed
and watched the sheets rise gently.
I knew what slant of light
would make you turn over.
It was then I felt 
the highways slide out of my hands.
I remembered the old men
in the west side cafe,
dealing dominoes like magical charms.
It was then I knew,
like a woman looking backward,
I could not leave you,
or find anyone I loved more.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Circles




Even this late it happens:
the coming of love, the coming of light.
You wake and the candles are lit as if by themselves,
stars gather, dreams pour into your pillows,
sending up warm bouquets of air.
Even this late the bones of the body shine
and tomorrow's dust flares into breath.
- The Coming of Light, Mark Strand



  
      I like to walk home when it rains. When I step out of the lift that takes me up from the insulated underground onto the ground floor, I feel the electricity in the air greeting me. Everything pitter patters lightly around me, and I try not to step onto the snails. All the dark brown leaves on the floor look like snails from afar, and I always pause to make sure they don't move before I carry on.

    There is a hidden symmetry in the way we live. When I walk towards the train to work in the morning, I climb up a gentle slope. The sun beats down and each step uphill seems inclined against any desire to go anywhere. When it's time to walk home from the train, I amble downhill. Even gravity wants you home. Sometimes, when I get home early enough, I watch the sun set. Not fully, because of the buildings, but a warm glow shines from ajar, like the jagged shards of a glass phoenix. 
       I like to think that all the beautiful points in our lives have circles to mark them. Circles - the perfect shape of beginning and end. You cannot see them when you are living inside of them, living out that difficult curve or reaching out hard to move on just that bit further. But, when the circle closes onto itself, you feel that tingle from the top to your bottom of your body, because your soul knows that you have reached full circle. That wonderful shining beginning with a heartfelt poignant end. That disappointing start renewed with a fresh bright energy. Just like being brought to a restaurant again by someone new to forget the bitter disappointment of that someone old. How the only time I was happy in the worrying month of June was when I visited a children's bookstore, and that was the very children's bookstore ZM surprised me in July when he proposed. We create our own bookends - we may not be able to control how something starts, but I like to think we can determine how graceful we make our ends. 
                  In these circles, we grow, we learn, we reconcile. And, perhaps when we live long enough, when we can look back on the long shadow that is our lives, we can connect all these beautiful dots together, and smile. That was, is me. 

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Window Dressing






     We checked into Marina Mandarin on Saturday to support Dad for his marathon on Sunday. It started wonderfully - we were given a free upgrade and late checkout. As we settled into the room, Mum, Dad and I changed into our pajamas and snuggled into the bed for an afternoon nap. Actually, only I slept I suspect and Mum and Dad watched HBO and gave each other "huggie hugs".



   I liked how after dinner, Dad wandered into an art shop while Mum hovered around the shopping centre concierge wondering about the points she could clock from the dinner receipt and what items she could redeem. I especially liked an adorable statue in the window front by artist, Wu Qiong. Hand in hand, they looked ready to leap into the future together.

    As we walked back to the hotel, Zm joined us. He had taken the train from Yishun after a family dinner and joined us. He looked half sheepish as he came bag in hand. He whispered to me, "Am I under-dressed?" He felt so under-dressed, I had to coax him to go down to the Piano Bar downstairs at the hotel atrium. Me in my blue pencil dress and golden heels, he in his polo shirt, three-quarters and red slippers. Haven't we always been this way? The waitress in resplendent long golden cheongsums with high mid-thigh slits waltzed around. One came with a dessert tray full of alcohol and invited us to order a cherry jubilee. We did. As the waitress started swirling the cherries, the alcohol and vanilla ice-cream together, I turned to him. This man-child, who had insisted on coming from wherever he was, with a sleeping bag (because we didn't know if my sister was going to sleep over too or not), just because it's family and if it's family, he would come. Even if it meant sleeping on the floor. I turned to him, and smiled. We raised our glasses. Cheers.





Thursday, November 29, 2012

Bare



     It's been a month since we've gotten married. From the sheepishness at the start, to the way we still laugh when we have to call each other "husband" or "wife" like a faint echo of a foreign country, we have reached a stage of grounded sweetness.

    I actually miss him. When so much of my fear before, was that I may lose my sense of self, unable to separate what is mine and what is his, as we both become part of each other. So, this sense of loss, is surprising - is almost painful. That's what marriage does to you. I turn around, and you are not there.


   Even as I look forward to the events ahead, how fast time flows makes me nervous. I fear again that I'm not ready. But perhaps, one is never ready - one just hopes life will be kind, will remember the times you promised to love it even when it got hard, will remember the times you promised to be grateful when it was generous, will remember that even when it felt like there was no strength left to go on, we did. We believed in you.

Sunday, November 25, 2012

A kid in a Xmas shop


   This year, my family decided to have a live christmas tree for Xmas. My mother started pouring through the newspaper looking for advertisements for fresh christmas trees and it was decided that we would try out Ikea. The christmas trees from Scandinavia only arrived 2 days ago! On hindsight, some thought should have been put into how long christmas trees last after they have been cut, but we were all so excited and exuberant we brought the christmas tree home before we started thinking, "Does the christmas tree need water?"

  Honestly, it was wonderful doing christmas shopping at Ikea. As I grew older, I increased my skepticism generally on the quality of Ikea goods, but still it cannot be denied that it has a wide range of lovely things for its price range. One cannot expect the sky when one is only paying for a cloud.

 I haven't had the kid in a candy shop feeling for a long time. Perhaps, after earning money and being relatively more self sufficient, there is not a whole range of things that one cannot afford if one puts one mind to it. But the beauty of being a kid in a candy shop is being overcome by a sense of wonder - that there are rows and rows of beautiful things, and even if you can afford it, you can only pick your favourite few because that is all you need. But, oh the choices!

  I had so much fun. I giggled to myself incessantly as I changed my mind again and again over which christmas decorations to get. Mum and I also giggled over the beautiful but unnecessary (in Dad's mind) things we were going to get for the christmas party.

  Perhaps, this is a small piece of bite-sized happiness. Just small enough to savour in the mouth, to enjoy that too sweet wonder, to be satisfied that as large and complicated life can be, happiness can still be an apple to bite on.




Friday, November 23, 2012

Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.



    I was walking home on tuesday and thought the sky was beautiful. Falling asleep in its own quiet way. Reminding me that the world does not owe us a thing, but simply does its job each day - spinning in its own orbit, giving us the beauty which we must learn to see.








Wild Geese
You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
     love what it loves.
Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.
Meanwhile the world goes on.
Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain
are moving across the landscapes,
over the prairies and the deep trees,
the mountains and the rivers.
Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,
are heading home again.
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
the world offers itself to your imagination,
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting—
over and over announcing your place
in the family of things.

—Mary Oliver


Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Fair Weather Friends



   I saw this sign when I walked home today. It was placed on the fence of a school near my house. At first, I thought it was so wonderfully tongue-in-cheek. And then, I realised that oh no, this tongue was firmly in command. And, I laughed. And laughed. And laughed.

  

Friday, November 16, 2012

The worthwhile things are difficult

    My parents kept some of the wedding flowers. They re-arranged the flowers and gave them more water. And, they grew more beautiful each day. I watched as each flower kept its whole while the petals slowly curled up and faded. The days grew by, and I couldn't see time, but I could see these flowers. 





“There's no such thing as effortless beauty - you should know that. 
There's no effort which is not beautiful - lifting a heavy stone or loving you.

Loving you is like lifting a heavy stone. It would be easier not to do it and I'm not quite sure why I am doing it. It takes all my strength and all my determination, and I said I wouldn't love someone again like this. Is there any sense in loving someone you can only wake up to by chance?” 
― Jeanette WintersonThe PowerBook


   Cr shared with me about her wonders of is it worth it? - how sometimes people cannot see the good you want to give them, of the pains of being misconstrued. I told her, the worthwhile things are difficult. The things that mean the most to us, saves us and destroys us, makes us the happiest and saddest persons on earth. At the very least, they should be able to do that much. And then, we laughed about how as you grow older you realise it's not about planning how to deal with life. If you plan life, you take away much of its beauty. The key is to be prepared. And when it comes, to let go.  

Thursday, November 15, 2012

My lizardy friend




“If I can't stay where I am, and I can't, then I will put all that I can into the going.” 

― Jeanette Winterson

 And so, she left. With a tight hug for each of us, a pair of red eyes, and a heart so big - she needs more than one continent to hold.

As hard as it always is to say a goodbye (for now), I like to think that when one forages out in the world, one becomes a deeper shade of themselves. So much more to love and share when one returns.

Together, my friends, we will do great things. Very great things.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

A softer side

    One thing I am always conscious of when I return to work is that every one of us have our own internal life. It's quite easy to become unaware of it when all of us are being cog and wheels of the daily grind, but I try to hold on to that knowledge for as long as I can before even I, become numbed, by the drill.

   All of us have our softer sides, we are someone's children, loved one, maybe sibling, or even parent. All of us are special to someone in this world. We are human first, and whatever else we do, second.

   Everyone I meet I am truly sincere, regardless of designation, for all of us are human and equally deserving of respect.

   I think sometimes people chase qualities, aspects, and forget what's truly fundamental. That just as what we are determines what we do, what we do reflects what we are.

   Another thing I am more conscious of is Time, now that it feels like I have so little of it. ZM sees time as a pie - and whenever I have another demand, there goes his ever decreasing piece. But, I see time more as a river - and that it flows, and it sometimes flows faster, and sometimes flows slower - but at every moment, I'm swimming towards what I want with all the energy I can muster. But, I suppose ZM is right, that I am only human, I cannot always swim at the same speed at the same rate and continue without rest. I can only hope that with time, I can bake bigger pies. But, till then, my loved ones may go hungry. So now, I always turn to him, and say, then let's cut this pie together. Sometimes I'll feed you more, and you will get fat, and then I'll go off and feed others while you exercise.

   Last Saturday, I ate a slice of this pie myself. Just a small sliver at Kinokuniya. I had a specific mission, a specific children book. But I got lost as usual in all the wonders. I am ashamed to admit that several soft toys in christmas garbs caught my eye and in a moment of true weakness, I messaged ZM if he would buy me one (because at this age, such things should come as gifts, no?).



And, he did.

Monday, November 12, 2012

In the spirit of joy

                                                From the tea ceremony at my house

When faced with two equal desires, I often in the end choose the path of duty. But, what happens when duties multiply? I think the biggest difference after being married is suddenly realising you are part of two households. You don't only create a life with someone else, you inherit a whole other world - full of history, blessings, possibilities and responsibilities.

It's not easy, especially when you have so many ideas of what it should be. But, ZM and I talked about it, and he said he will remember one thing I said which was, "We shouldn't think about how others are like. This is our relationship, and we can only make it the best we can be. Be the best that we are." And, I think that gives us space and courage to figure out what we would like our marriage to be, because it is something that is alive, and always changing.

I like this line about marriage I came across, "It is doing things for each other, not in the attitude of duty or sacrifice, but in the spirit of joy." It's why I always loved the chinese word, 囍 - not only does it represent double happiness, the structure of it is firm and solid, like two people holding hands.

Always holding hands, because if this is how we started, this is how we always should be.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Like a dog in outer space



I received a postcard unexpectedly today. Traditional mail is perhaps one of the few real romantic things left in the world. My parents once told me that they would use steam to heat the stamps off their letters so they could re-use them again and again. How precious!

I find the idea of a Museum of Innocence intriguing, as if it contains something that is already lost. I had a debate about purity today - is purity remaining untainted by letting everything wash over one's self without thought or by actively, literally, purifying yourself, to remain/become clean? A kind of distillation so to speak? But, perhaps, pure is indeed to be without filter. To be pure undiluted goodness.

I am amazed at the seeker of purity
who when it's time to be polished
complains of rough handling.

- Rumi

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Watch.



I have been thinking about writing again. There's always the fear of starting again, because you wonder how long will this blog last. But is it such a failure to only be capturing snippets of each phase in life, and then starting again when the old space no longer feels entirely appropriate? Or, is it only because this nomadic blogging is so convenient - imagine if we could start afresh with a new skin every time we wanted. Tabula Rasa.

But I like to think it's always better to start, even if you stop. For if you do not start at all, you already know the answer of how long this will last.

In Maldives, I told ZM I was going to start a blog to write about our marriage and asked him to name it. He paused then said, "Of wind and fishes". I laughed, "Of wind and fishes?" He nodded, "It suits Maldives". I decided I like the name - it really is very generic and ordinary and one is hard pressed to find poetic meaning in it, but maybe that's why I like it. It's simple and without pretensions (or at least I hope it does not sound pretentiously windy nor fishy).

Today, I read an article that the median age for females getting married in Singapore in 2011 is 27.8. So, to be entirely accurate, I got married when I was 24.8. I don't feel particularly young though since I have peers who married younger. Dad kept asking me how does it feel to be married, and he says married with such deep undertones, it feels like one must have been a successful Alice escaping from Wonderland.

Perhaps, the "married" feeling has not kicked in yet or it is something one grows into. Part of it must be the unconventional living arrangements ZM and I have before our house arrives, but I think a larger part of it is that marriage is such a heavy social construct laden with tons of cultural and social expectations. Marriage changes how people see us, but I like to think that how we see each other has not changed. Marriage only gives legal force to my statement that "what is yours is mine" and have ZM bemoaning that he has married someone legally trained. And I take glee in informing him that I have a legal right to maintenance if he fails to provide for me. And while all these teasing is fun (for awhile), I think a relationship should exist outside of all the legal ramifications of marriage. That, we give because we want to and not because we have to. And so, better than being married, is to be committed (says naive me at the 1 week mark of marriage).

I shall end with one of my favourite moments in Maldives. We were lying on sunbeds at the beach and I had fallen asleep. When I woke up, ZM started placing white shells on the bed and said, "Watch".



If you look carefully, nothing is ever what it seems. So, watch.