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  • Dyeap.

    1.

    i’m using a paper clip on my fringe because hair clips cannot be found. it actually works. i am therefore paper.

    wow that did not even make sense.. i’m sleepy.

    2.

    people ask me: ‘so have you decided what you want to do?’

    actually i have. it involves a pink caravan. it also involves lots of exciting ice-cream/omelette i’m gonna sell all over Singapore. on said caravan. i’ll sleep whenever i feel like it, and finish all the unsold food at night.

    and when people laugh and go, ‘..but seriously, what will you be doing?’ i’ll laugh along and pretend i didn’t actually mean the above. lol..

    3.

    the dream where i saw unicorns was too vivid to be only part of my consciousness. i’m convinced the Universe is trying to tell me something important. also i was truly excited about them existing, i can’t believe it was just a dream I CANNOT ACCEPT THAT.

    4.

    mamihalapitahsdhajd

    5.

    will it kill people to be more polite? before working, i’ve always taken courtesy for granted – that everyone says thank you and excuse me and you’re welcome and sorry where it’s due. but no.

    i’m not trying to be racist – i’m not, but it’s too undeniable an observation: the ones i’ve met with the most terrible manners are the stock Indian father types. on one hand, there was that incredible Indian man who came up to say Good Morning, i thought he needed help but no.. he genuinely just wanted to wish me a good morning (people! hope!) and then there are the Indian fathers.

    i’ve had a few come up to me raging unnecessarily and basically being very antagonistic and unappreciative about everything, but i’m fine with that. i can handle persons with anger issues okay, i’ve had much practice. i’m talking the RUDE ones. after noticing the racial pattern last week i decided to tabulate the number of people who didn’t bother to thank me for my help today.

    out of the six who didn’t, six were Indians. maybe i should be more specific (because at the same time many other Indians thanked me). i’m talking A CERTAIN INDIAN FATHER TYPE: the short, stocky kind usually with a mustache and a family of scared looking females in tow, and he’d look like someone had just rubbed chili powder up his asshole – which i imagine to be extremely uncomfortable and rage-worthy and makes you need to rush everywhere (mainly the toilet).

    FIVE of them brisked past me or came up to the counter while spitting out one curt word: “Tickets?” i’m not even kidding, they all said the same thing in the exact tone that after awhile i started suspecting they were just the same person coming back again and again to troll me or something. anyway. i’m too used to being polite on the job so i just gave the directions as per normal.

    this is where i start getting annoying – they’d just WALK and not even look at me as i’m trying to explain it to them. yes they expect me to CHASE after them while giving him his damn answer because it would be too much of a hassle to pause for me, i mean who has time to stop and treat someone who’s helping you like a human being? not an Indian father, no. and when i’m done he’d just walk on without ANY indication of thanks. or even glance back at me. i don’t even..

    i don’t need you to effusively thank me like i bestowed you with immortal life (like the Japanese tourists do) or be insanely cautious and ask permission to enter the public toilet (yes, people do that surprisingly often) – but dammit JUST A NOD? JUST LOOK AT ME? god i’m probably five times smarter and better smelling and looking than him it just kills me to have someone treat me like this. it also kills me that someone IS. EVEN. LIKE THIS.

    also this happened FIVE. FULL. TIMES. just today. they’d come up saying one phrase really hurriedly (and it’s not that they can’t speak English) and just turn and leave once i’m done answering (or mid-way, even). holy crap i can’t wait to be important and powerful so i can whop some rude ass. also they look MAJORLY cheezed off all the time. dude. you’re on a vacation not reliving the Mughal war. you need to wash that chili powder off your asshole and stop being such a huge one yourself.

    Celine reckons it might be their culture.. but then again many Indians/fathers are very friendly and polite. it’s this certain TYPE i’m talking about and i realized yes it’s culture – but not the culture to be rude but rather of patriarchy. maybe some of the more traditional Indian households, where both of the marital unit agree on the entire patriarchalmale/subservientwoman thing, breeds an entire new class of silent Indian wives who’ll trail alongside their warring patriarchs. angry faces in the morning demanding help annoys me.

    i’m quite proud of the fact that i haven’t assaulted any Indian patriarchs or incited a racial riot yet. all i did was been particularly stern with one who hung around for like fifteen minutes asking me round-a-bout ridiculous questions and being very angst about it. so i stared him down and made him realize he can’t push me around like (i bet) he does his (really quiet) wife and daughter (who just kept rolling her eyes behind his back it was hilarious).

    MANNERS, PEOPLE. MANNERS.

    May 19, 2012

  • Stupid Decision-making Weekly, Issue #1

    1.

    Eating ice-cream thrice after developing a cough.

    Soya ice-cream (i can’t go a week without those things anymore) (on the other hand, HEALTHIER CHOICE LOGO).
    Nutella-banana-vanilla split (which is healthy because it consists of Nutella which makes you jump really high like that boy in the advertisement and bananas are fruits).
    And green tea Hokkaido ice-cream today which was brilliantly generous.

    Basically i now have screwed up lungs and it itches all the time and elusive phlegm and everything.

    2.

    Forgetting i now have a chastity belt made of rubber bands installed in my mouth (no seriously), and that it hurts like a bitch when i chew. So i persistently purchase crunchy food and the paaaain, the pain! Which then again gives me incentive to pursue soft food like ice-cream.

    Yeah..

    Yeah when i said chastity belt i wasn’t kidding. It’s restrictive and gross and troublesome and probably the best form of birth control the world has ever seen.

    3.

    I hate how my posts are so food oriented. I have no life.

    4.

    Working only two days last week – while fun/productive, time at home is starting to get pretty stale.

    5.

    I STILL CAN’T DECIDE WHICH COURSE TO TAKE. It’s scarily balanced, my inclinations towards everything. So i’m still sitting on it. Bad, bad decision-making, bad.

    6.

    Work+swimming+weather gave me a horrid tan. And i’m really lax with my sunblock with places i can’t reach so now i’m the shade of Donald Trump. My dentist squinted at me and went ‘Why are you yellow?’ in a concerned and shocked way.

    Also, THE HUMIDITY. The hell you playing at Singapore? You know that whole equator shebang that was cute awhile ago? Well yeah i have news for you it’s no longer an endearing quirk you can put in your travel brochures anymore. It’s toasting foreigners alive and one day we will all spontaneously combust.

    7.

    D&D D&D D&D.

    Currently in the preparation mode, intensely downloading manuals and drawing grids and doing illustrations and sourcing for dice.

    8.

    PPFSCXCDDHKKDRRQDDGHH i am confused.

    9.

    Still not registering the fact that in three months, some of my closest friends won’t be available within twenty minutes.

    May 15, 2012

  • Regrets.

    Awhile ago Stella asked me this:

    “what are your top 10
    a) regrets
    haha okay just that actually”

    It’s interesting because i don’t have many. Not because i make all the right decisions, but because i consciously avoid thinking about what could have been done right. Now is probably the time to think about it, though.

    1.

    This one comes easily. I know i’m quite a callous friend, in that i don’t see the importance of constant contact.. and i have a cruel need to withdraw at times. I hate it about myself too, but most of all i expect my friends to understand – which means i don’t feel as guilty as i should be.

    But there’s one close friend i’ve had through primary and part of secondary school. I don’t know why i did it, but consciously distanced myself from her until we became just acquaintances. She didn’t do anything, i still liked her a lot. And even if you ask me now i don’t know why i did it, it just happened. If i had to point out myself at my most repulsive behavior it was then. It was borne from illogical and pointless cruelty, and i’m not proud that i had that in me. The guilt settled in pretty soon. And it never left, now when i think about her it’s just guilt and shame and guilt and, seriously. I regret it so much and i never got to apologize because no one talks about it.

    While i regret it, i suppose it made me want to prevent anything like that from happening anymore. I still have issues with my bouts of needing space and time alone, but i try not to deliberately dilute any friendship because losing a friend is the dumbest thing to happen.

    2.

    Alright this may partly be for aesthetic purposes, but it’s not shallow k.. I wish I had taken better care of my eyes.

    When i was 8, the teacher sent in my parent because i squinted all the time and seemed to have trouble reading off the blackboard. So we visited the optician and the startled optician was shocked i had waited that long to see him – i was at a frightening -3.60 degrees (for a primary two), which means i was semi-blind all the time but never noticed. Not sure how i lived either. And it seemed like i never learn because after getting my first glasses, the next time i visited i had shot up to -6.50 which means i walked around blind for awhile, again. Now i’m about 7.00/8.00. I also have terrible floaters.

    The thing is, i was reading like a madman before schools even found it necessary to feed us with all the myopic eye-care education. And i read everywhere. In the car, in the bathroom, in the dark, under the sun, on my bed, on the couch, walking around, at the dinner table. Literally everywhere. And all the time. For the entire stretch in primary school i may have read more words than i have looked at the world.

    When i got older and started with contacts (while performing at the Arts Festival) it struck me how obtrusive and troublesome eyeglasses were, especially when you do theater or sports. I wanted the feeling of waking up with perfect eyesight, and not having to grope around for glasses in the dark (although it made me feel like Harry Potter). My glasses are always either too loose (case in point right now), crooked (because i’m violent with them), or frustratingly grimy/scratched. That’s why i’m permanently on contacts. Which is fine until it dries up on me or hurts towards the end of the month.

    Basically, it’s a huge hassle i could have avoided if i’d just read in proper settings. Now i’d have to do lasik. And live with floaters.

    3.

    Been nicer to my sister. If i were the one more adept at picking up social nuances or reading people, my sister is the complete opposite – she can’t pick up social clues for nuts because she is “not manipulative like you” /quote.

    She’s a mawkish, sentimental, gullible, naive, idealistic and, /quoteagain “sensitive” person. This also means she’s incredibly nice to her friends. Too nice. When she was a toddler she was pretty fierce, one who did outrageous things like slutdance to milkshake and scream at people. Now her friends can swing her around and she’d swallow it until it gets too bad. Sometimes i think the years of having to live with me killed that part of her.

    I think my dis-compassion towards her comes from being an only child for too long, almost six years – by that time i’d somewhat grasped who i was as a person. And there was the me who already knew the best ways to pander to my parents and the Grandma, it also doesn’t help that I’m a lot smarter. That meant i almost always got my way.. and that she didn’t. When my sister went through that phase as an annoying preteen – i was in my cruel psyche obsessed phase; i unleashed upon her some mind-screwing experiments and could never consistently be the older sister that she could ‘go to’ (a barf-y concept). As far as i was concerned i was still the only child.

    So she grew up to feel slightly inferior, though i never intended it to be that way. She also became less annoying, and a lot nicer and made less of a racket all the time. My mom pointed out once that although i was obviously more intelligent, my sister’s lack of actually made her a much kinder person. It was quite a sad thing to be told, but i totally agree. I stopped bullying her after awhile, but never had the patience to be one of those let’s-talk-about-your-feelings-and-i-will-be-your-guardian type.

    My sister is considerably kinder to friends and she loves younger children and younger children love her. She’s also a complete geisha – she’s had five years on the violin, went for flower arrangement classes, has her own tea set where she holds tea ceremonies occasionally, she dances to Korean music and she bakes. Also she is stick thin despite eating like a maniac. I don’t know how she turned out culturally superior to me, but she did. So good on her. I’m glad she didn’t turn out to be a complete whacko under my reign.

    But i’m responsible for making her susceptible to external bullying and i don’t think she’s kick up her confidence level any time soon.

    –

    These are the only few significant regrets i can think of, actually. Told you i don’t have much.

    May 13, 2012

  • Afthartos

    At work, there was a fledgling that fell from it’s roost, lying beside another dead one. It was kept in the office for the day, in a makeshift nest of tissue box, shredded paper and napkins. We couldn’t leave it there for the night because the office was deemed too cold, so I decided to take it home.

    Most said it won’t be able to survive, and Rizal said not to get attached to it. Rei-En and I agreed on one thing: that we wouldn’t get attached (it was an ugly deformed naked little thing), but we sure as hell don’t want it to die on us. The fear of it dying was there, but I had an inexplicable hope that it would live if I cared for it properly.

    So it was all planned out. In the staff bus, Shuzhen warmed it with her phone light the entire way. On the way home I broke off some twigs and leaves and rested it on them, and then my Grandma and I cut up some old stuff for it’s blankets.

    Then I tried to feed it some sugar water soaked white bread with a straw. It flailed around a lot and clicked it beak making small, sad sounds, but wouldn’t eat (or couldn’t? or didn’t know how?) I’m really not sure, but maybe I should have tried putting the food directly into the beak…

    To keep it warm I had a table lamp wrapped up in a thin cloth over it, whenever I moved it away from the light it would twitch and thrash around. It was quite terrifying. The rest of the thin cloth I punctured with holes and put over the box in case random insects or ghettos attacked it at night.

    That was everything I could think of doing. It was still moving slightly.. pulsing? As if it’s heartbeat was so hard it just moved along with it. Occasionally it would make that tiny whining noise. I named it Afthartos, ancient Greek for athanatos – immortality.

    It was not that I loved the bird, or felt like it was my pet. I mean even though I’ve had a score of weird pets before (Zachariah the bluebottle, Anthony the ant, my quails and the rock) (and cried when each of them had to be released/died), I didn’t feel that way towards Afthartos. I didn’t like it.. I just didn’t want it to die.

    Negative space: I didn’t care about whether it lived, but I didn’t want it to die.

    In a way it was quite selfish. It was just terrifying to think of waking up, lifting it’s blankets and finding it dead. I don’t know what I was expecting or thinking, but it made sense that if I kept watching it, it couldn’t die. So I just sat around prodding food at its beak content with it’s slight movements and eerie infant sounds.

    But I suck, so at last I fell asleep, with it beside my bed.

    When I woke up a few hours later (I dreamt about psychedelic cats and doors and wailing infants), I felt dread. At that point I thought there was still a good chance it was alive (I THOUGHT I heard the sad tiny sounds), but it was the act of checking that was frankly terrifying. And I’m not very good with confrontation so I laid in bed for half an hour hoping I can fall asleep so I’d have a couple of hours of reprieve.

    Then I realized it may die within that couple of hours (and also I’ve left it alone long enough) so I got up and lifted the covers. It wasn’t moving but it wasn’t dead. I’m not sure how to put it. I’ve only imagined two scenarios:

    1) I woke up and it’s alive! I’m happy. Go down to the fishing store and get some mashed worms, feed it. It gets stronger. In the late afternoon go down to the park and find a safe place for it to live. 2) It’s surrounded by ants and flies, it’s carcass reeking of death and ferment. I’m traumatized.

    But what happened was stranger. It wasn’t moving, but I couldn’t decide if it was dead, or just asleep. I disturbed it slightly to get a reaction, and sometimes I thought I saw movement but then again it was immobile. I didn’t want to assume it was dead, because it might just be breathing too slightly to be noticeable. But if it were dead, then what do I do with it?

    So I sat there. Like a fool. And renamed it Lazarus. Then changed my mind because it was a literary prosaic-ism. Then I thought, dead birds themselves are a a literary cliche. Then I felt bad for making a damn fledgling’s death into some macabre literary analysis of sorts like one of those annoying pathos milking literates. Then I thought, maybe it’s not even dead. Because it was morning and my eyes aren’t adjusted to movements.

    Now it’s still in it’s nest. Under a lamp. Still hasn’t moved. It is probably dead. I heard the fledgling sounds a few times but it’s probably a wild bird outside or my computer. So… yeah.

    Lol I didn’t really expect it to die, so I’m not very prepared for burial. It will probably be in a park with a temporary headstone, in a few hours just in case it decides to move again. I don’t know.

    It was a truly ugly bird. Sometimes I can’t even believe it’s a bird. It looks like an alien. It’s repulsive, with it’s raw pink nakedness and crooked claws and bits of unidentified organs. But if you stare at it hard enough at it’s grotesque beak and wrinkled patchy head and although there are a million of these mynahs everywhere – for just awhile it seems like quite a beautiful little thing.

    May 7, 2012

  • Xenarthra

    Three reasons why I’m not fit for survival.

    a) I’m too drawn to ugly things.

    The majority seeks symmetry. Symmetry connotes the lack of deformity, which indicates health, and the most primitive part of us calls for a healthy mate to birth healthy babies and ensure the survival of your genes. Intuitively we see symmetry as beauty, meaning the plainer you are (and by plain I mean unblemished), the more attractive you are to others.

    So obviously I’ve found pretty things/people pretty, but it’s a kind of appeal I can explain away – it’s nice and pleasing. But those invoke only a beach-y, wavelike pleasure that easily fades when high tides’ over.

    What I cannot get over, and what draws me in like a freaking tsunami that had laid dormant for fifty years waiting for a victim, is hideousness.

    I know it’s strange, but ugly things are just so. damn. attractive.

    And by ugly I don’t mean those Hello Kitty glasses that’s increasing in frequency and which I dislike with the passion of a starving activist. Neither do I mean the unaesthetic, the kind of thing that’s dour and unhygienic and gross. I mean people who just look strange. Like crooked teeth. Like wild hair. Like acne. Like a broken nose. Like uneven ears. Like eyes that are too close to each other or slightly out of focus. Like people who look too uncannily like an animal (I love people who look like animals).

    I can’t stop staring at people like that. Yesterday at work a man came to ask some questions (I can’t remember what), he was Indian (neither can i remember what he looked like in general). I just remember sinking in love with him as he was talking because he had these amazing canine teeth which were grotesque. But amazing. It made him look beautiful I don’t even know how. And a week before there was a primary school kid with her mom. She looked pretty normal otherwise, except for her eyes. They were so extra-terrestrial. The shape was all weird and they were too wide set. And she had acne that were a perfect constellation around her ugly nose. One part of me was going, Omg Weiqing stop being a freak stop staring she’s noticing you staring her mom will think you’re deranged stop it but I could. not. stop.

    Yet on the commercial level we revere deformities. On models, for instance – if you have an abnormally strong brow or gap-teeth or an obvious mole, it can be taken as an extra appeal. So why are we only alright with deformities and asymmetrical beauty at a distance? In real life we are attracted to safe-looking people, otherwise we do things to make us safe-looking people, with hair products and pimple cream and breast enhancement and braces.

    My theory is that true beauty is idiosyncrasy. Is hideousness and grotesque features you’ve never seen before and the general chaos of the face. Producers of Healthy Babies are just conveniently labelled beautiful because we are attracted to them to, well, produce healthy babies.

    Maybe we’re just repelled by hideousness because it’s a kind of beauty so intense that it hurts to look at it too much. But it’s a sick kind of pain that I can’t get enough of. Because I’m disgusting that way.

    This also means my future partner will be an absolute troll to the rest of the world. And if our basal instincts are true, we’ll produce a pool of offspring as susceptible to extinction as I am, dying out faster and saving the world from my genetic freakishness.

    b) Competition petrifies me.

    Survival is basically how well you respond to competition. Surviving is one huge mother race itself. If so, I suck at surviving.

    I’m not sure if it’s inborn, or a nurture thing, but I’ve never performed any better under the thought of competition. In fact all it does is make me want to give up. Just the thought of it.

    I don’t remember my parents ever comparing me with someone else, in fact when I try to point out my strengths in relation to another in anticipation of a compliment (in my more asshole-y days), they’re seldom impressed. Neither have I any competition with my closer friends. Not even the healthy kind. I know some people who, in order to push themselves, set their friend’s achievements as yardsticks or try to match themselves to their friends. Maybe because we have diverse interests, but I seldom feel the need to race against any of them, much less wish I ‘did better’ than. If anything, we (or at least what I glean from our WhatsApp group chats) wish to death the others would do well, because in the (highly) likely scenario that one of us become homeless unemployed-s, we have someone’s mansion to crash (forever).

    Anyway. The healthiest and strongest of the pride are the ones who, with the fuel of competition, generate a shitload of go-getting energy to get somewhere. Mine works in reversal. I’m not just slow to rise in a competition, I practically quail and falter in utter panic until I die. Okay, it’s not all that dramatic, but the very notion of having to compete against anyone by myself makes me feel uneasy and reluctant. I have no idea how people with ‘competitive spirits’ do it. It’s not a spirit. It’s the soul of Satan’s spawn taking over you. And it scares the shit out of me.

    K, let’s say there’s a barren island and there exists only one edible fruit at the top of a tree. If I were alone, I’d climb the shit up there in five seconds and have the damn fruit. If there were five other starving people eyeing the fruit, I’d probably attempt to climb it, but warily and passively and wouldn’t really grab if I had to. If there were ten other hungry idiots besides myself I’ll just walk off and eat some grass instead.

    And that is how I’d die out – malnutrition-ed. As with my genetically passive children.

    c) My shit sense of direction.

    My shit sense of direction in clever titles and anecdotes.

    ALTHOUGH I have been actively trying to improve this as of late. Aided much by necessity (MY JOB) and also Google Maps and patience. I still get lost about 99% of the time, but the time I take to re-orientate and finally find my way is… somewhat shorter. I think. In an apocalypse I’m still the most likely to run off the edge of a cliff or end up in a colony of L4Ds while trying to locate Twinkies though. Especially since Google Maps would then be defunct.

    Come to think of it, my job’s been refining my survival skills. Microscopically, but still. (For one, my Mandarin’s better than it has ever been since circa 2006 [pre-06 I wrote freaking Chinese poems. Tang style.], I can now stand at a spot for half an hour straight without peeing in my pants with hyperactive rage, I can memorize lunch menus verbatim [during a shift where I stared at the guest menu for three hours bored and hungry]). So in the event of an apocalypse, post-working Weiqing can:

    a) navigate her way around marginally well. marginally.

    b) i can communicate and request for help from over one billion more people than before. politely (an occupational hazard).

    c) recite a lunch menu so extraordinarily tempting, the hostile forces will weep and exalt and retreat.

    …Obviously, I am severely under-equipped for survival. I have nothing except for my biting wit and slightly bonkers courage borne mostly out of Tourette’s and lack of common sense.

    That is all.

    April 27, 2012

  • Oneiric.

    Yesterday’s dreams were exceptionally vivid. They took place in two separate sleeps (and yes I’ve been polyphasic of late for some reason).

    Dream #1:

    An acquaintance doused a wall with gasoline and set it on fire. It was for necessary self-preservation purposes and we all agreed on it. When he started it, I knew clearly that it’s fatal for the residents. They’d be trapped and perish unless I warned them about it right then. And I had lots of time because it was a curiously slow fire. But I didn’t.

    I knew they would die. But I just left it as that, kept it to myself. The only reason I remember having was sloth. Pure laziness. It was too much of a hassle to even mention the danger or do anything about it, so I let it be. Went ahead with other things to be done (I can’t recall what they were) and at the end of the dream, I turned back and there was the most intense fire I’ve seen. It was literally white-hot, almost like it was a piece of the sun right on that damned wall. And everyone living there died.

    Right there and then this colossal surge of guilt just ate me up. There wasn’t even much rationalization – just pure guilt for way too long. With that sick feeling that I’ll never be able to forgive myself, and probably no one else can or will.

    Dream #2:

    I was having one of those discussions with Celine about potential. How little of our actual physical and intellectual capabilities we’re employing. We gave a few smart examples, and Celine started narrating this one. This entire sequence was played out in my dreams as she did.

    A cat was abused by a bunch of people. They buried it alive, in a coffin. And relentlessly electrocuted, whipped, drowned, and basically tortured it. I’m not sure how it worked because it was in a coffin – but a dream la. It was pretty scary and Wiccan, had a very gothic Poe feeling to it. And they taunted the cat in their drunken stupor, asking it to spell ‘cheese’ and recite the two times table, whereupon they might stop their abuse. Anyway, the cat eventually died. They dug up the coffin and opened it.

    At the back of the lid (facing the cat) were markings; the word cheese and the entire two times table scratched out. By the cat. The cat, when faced by extremities and possible death, did what was felinely impossible.

    It was freaky.

     

    April 22, 2012

  • CHANCE.

    I am about this close to achieving my life-time goal: to be a Lian.

    What I’ve been doing right:

    • Live in the Heartlands. (A birth privilege, so booyah to the rest of you.)
    • Wear predominantly denim hotshots.
    • Fixation on bubble tea.
    • Talk in inappropriate volumes in public.
    • Have straight hair.
    • …DYED straight hair.
    • Dance at home in my room in my underwear.
    • Troll the heartland streets at midnight.
    • Take a lot of self-shots.

    All I’m missing now is a Beng boyfriend. K here’s now it works in the Heartlands. If you’re of their species, they’ll smell you out within the half km radius. (You’ll smell them out too, usually of cigarettes.) The mating dance then commences – a period of jostling from their Beng entourage, and one will emerge and ask The Line. Yes, The Line, it never varies much and is a ubiquitous code known to all in our area: ‘You wan to be my fren?/Yao bu yao zuo peng you.’

    If you’re available, you need to say yes to be initiated completely into the core of the Beng/Lian community. If you don’t, you’re not ready to. You have failed. But it’s okay, because in the Heartlands, you get this opportunity every few months (as long as you’re of age, don’t look like a complete troll, and give off appropriate Lian emanations.) I’M READY. I’M READY DAMMIT. I want to wear my hotshots and drink bubble tea while screaming vulgarities at my piss-haired boyfriend with his half-price phoenix tattoo. But I missed my chance and now I have to wait for the next cycle when the Beng season is on again.

    It happened just a couple days ago. This time it was on the bus. Couple of Bengs smoking at the bus-stop. AH YES, the bus-stop, cesspit of mating rituals; also known as the Beng Scouting Platform. You board the bus, take a seat. And BAM! (you smell it. The scent of Marlboro. Initiation time.)

    ‘aahh hallo. you know my fren j’now.. wan to be your fren.’

    -blank stare-

    (HOW COULD I. I have prepared so long for this.)

    ‘yooou gottwitter?’

    (I could have redeemed myself here, but no.)

    ‘no.’

    (To be honest it’s because I couldn’t understand what he was saying. Mumbly incoherent Bengs and the works, yknw.)

    ‘orh. den got facebook?’

    (DAMMIT there was where I realized he was asking for Twitter before AND YES I SHOULD HAVE SAID YES YES YES. I even have one of those pre-fixed Lian Facebook screen-names dammit.)

    ‘no.’

    (WHY. WHY. WHY.)

    ‘orh means you donwan be fren wif him la?’

    (At this point I realized OHSHITOHSHIT I am about to lose my tri-monthly chance of being part of the Beng/Lian Society, and WOULD have said yes, except I’d said no the first two times, and OCD dictates a third yes. I don’t know okay. It just seemed incredibly logical and natural and RIGHT to give him a perfect set of three ‘no’s. Damn you OCD.)

    ‘no.’

    ‘orh kay then never mind.’

    (Almost immediately the regret set in. It was so swift, this regret, I actually said sorry.)

    ‘hahaha… sorry.’

    ‘no probrem no probrem.’

    (POLITE BENG IS POLITE.)

    WHY. WHY. WHYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY. NEXT TIME ROUND. I PROMISE. I PROMISE I’LL BE READY IN ALL MY HOTSHORTS GLORY. I WILL BE READY FOR YOU AH BENGS. I WILL BE READY TO JOIN MY PEOPLE.

    April 12, 2012

  • the greatest love story i’ve ever read.

    The 24-Hour Dog
    by Jeanette Winterson (in The World and Other Places) 

    He was soft as rainwater. On that first night I took him across a field mined with pheasants that flew up in our faces when we fused them out. The vertical explosion of a trod pheasant is shock enough when you know it. I knew it and it still skitters me. What could he know at two months old, head like a question mark?
    I made him walk on a lead and he jumped for joy, the way creatures do, and children do and adults don’t do, and spend their lives wondering where the leap went.
    He had the kind of legs that go round in circles. He orbited me. He was a universe of play. Why did I walk so purposefully in a straight line? Where would it take me? He went round and round and we got there all the same.
    I had wanted to swim. I had wanted to wash off the hot tyre marks of the day. I wanted to let my body into the obliging water and kick the stars off the surface. I looped my dog-lead through a trough-hoop and undressed. Oh this was fun, a new pair of socks to chew and an old pair of boots to lie on. His questioning head sank to a full stop and he didn’t notice me disappear under the water. The night smelled of rosemary and hay.
    Oh, this was not fun, his sun drowned and him lost in a dark world without his own name. He started to yap with the wobbly bark he had just discovered and then he discovered he could use his long nose as a Howitzer and fire misery into the fearful place where there had been no fear. I used my arms as jack levers and raised myself out of the pool. I spoke to him, and he caught the word as deftly as if I had thrown it. This was the edge of time, between chaos and shape. This was the little bit of evolution that endlessly repeats itself in the young and new-born thing. In this moment there are no cars or aeroplanes. The Sistine Chapel is unpainted, no book has been written. There is the moon, the water, the night, one creature’s need and another’s response. The moment between chaos and shape and I say his name and he hears me.

    I had to carry him home, legs folded, nose in my jacket, he was twice as big as a grown cat even now, but small as my arms would allow.

    I had collect him that morning from his brothers and sister, his mother, his friends on the farm. He was to be my dog, shot out of a spring litter, a coil of happiness. Bit by bit he would unfold.
    He liked my sports car until it moved. Movement to him was four legs or maybe two. He had not yet invented the wheel. He lay behind my neck in stone-age despair, not rigid, but heavy, as his bladder emptied his enterprise, and the blue leather seats were puddled under puppy rain.
    We were home in less than five minutes and he staggered from the car as though it were the hold of a slave ship and he left aboard for six months or more. His oversize paws were hesitant on the gravel because he half believed the ground would drive off with him.
    I motioned him to the threshold; a little door in a pair of great gates. He looked at me: What should he do? I had to show him that two paws first, two paws after, would jump him across the wooden sill. He fell over but wagged his tail.
    I had spent the early morning pretending to be a dog. I had crawled around my kitchen and scullery on all fours at dog height looking for toxic substances (bleach), noxious hazards (boot polish), forbidden delights (rubber boots), death traps (electric wires), swallowables, crunchables, munchables and saw-the-dog-into-half shears and tools.
    I had spent the day putting up new shelving and re-arranging the cupboards. A friend from London asked me if I was doing Feng Shui. I had to explain that this was not about energy alignments but somewhere to put the dog biscuits.
    I re-routed the washing machine hoses. I had read in my manual that Lurchers like to chew washing machine hoses but only when the machine is on; thus, if they fail to electrocute themselves, they at least succeed in flooding the kitchen.
    The week before I had forced my partner to go into Mothercare to purchase a baby gate. The experience nearly killed her. It was not the pastel colours, piped music and cartoon screen, or the assistants, specially graded into mental ages 2-4 and 4-6, or the special offers, 100 bibs for the price of 50, it was that she was run down by a fork lift truck moving a consignment of potties.
    I fitted the gate. I tried to patch up my relationship. I spent a sleepless night on our new bean bag. I was pretending to be a dog.
    The farmer telephoned me the following day.
    ‘Will you come and get him now?’
    Now. This now. Not later. Not sooner. Here now. Quick now.

    Yes I will come for you. Roll my strength into a ball for you. Throw myself across chance for you. I will be the bridge of the pulley because you are the dream.

    He’s only a dog. Yes but he will find me out.

    Dog and I did the gardening that virgin morning of budding summer. That is, I trimmed the escallonia and he fetched me the entire contents of the garage, apart from the car. It began with a pruning gauntlet he could see I needed. There followed a hanging basket, a Diana Ross cassette, a small fire extinguisher, a handbrush that made him look like Hitler, and one by one a hoarded collection of Victorian tiles. Being a circular kind of dog he ran in one door to seek the booty and sped out of another to bring it to me. He had not learned the art of braking. When he wanted to stop he just fell over.
    I looked at the hoard spread before me. Perhaps this was an exercise in Feng Shui after all. Why did i need a Diana Ross tape? Why was I storing six feet of carpet underlay? I don’t have any carpets.
    The questions we ask of the universe begin and end with questions like these. He was a cosmic dog.

    The lights had the quality of water. I was moving through a conscious element. Time is a player. Time is part of today, not simply a measure of its passing.
    The dimensionality of time is not usually apparent. I felt it today in the light like water. I knew I was moving through something that had substance. Something serious. Here was the dog, me, the sun, the sky, in a pattern, in a dance, and time was dancing with us, in the motes of light. The day was in the form of us and we were in the form of the day. Time would return it, as memory and as futurity; part of the pattern, the dance that I had refused.

    *

    He lay under the table fast asleep while I shelled broad beans. My cats, of which there are four, had taken up sentinel positions on the window ledges. The dog was bottom dog, no doubt, but twice as big as they were. They had not yet understood their psychic advantage. This dog did not know what size he was; he felt tiny to himself. He was still a pocket dog.
    I looked at him, trusting, vulnerable, love without caution. He was a new beginning and every new beginning returns the world. In him, the rain forests were pristine and the sea had not been blunted. He was a map of clear outlines and unnamed hope. He was time before or time after. Time now had not spoilt him. In the space between chaos and shape there was another chance.

    Night came. We made out journey to the pool. We swam back through the ripples of night. The light wind blew his ears inside out. He whimpered and fell asleep. When I finally staggered him home he was upside down.

    I had bought him a bean bag with a purple cover tattooed with bones and chops. Who designs these items and why? What person, living in a town like England, sits down to doodle bones and chops? What kind of a private life does this design suggest? Is it a male or a female?
    All these questions had presented themselves but there had been no alternative. A friend once told me that as soon as she had become a parent, the discriminating good taste of her adult life had been ambushed by the garish crowd of design-bandits. She was finally at the mercy of the retail mob. You want a romper suit? Well they’ve all got bunnies on them. You want a doggy bean bag? Well, we cover them in an orgy of chops.
    Chops away! Over he went in a somersault of yelping pleasure. Was this really for him? He hurled himself at it and cocked an eye at me from under his paw. Would I shout at him? No! He was a new dog. The world was his bean bag.

    I shut the cats in the kitchen with their cat flaps. I shut the dog in the scullery with his ball and his bed. I shut myself away in the room that is sleep.
    I had read in my manual that a dog must be dominated. He must not sleep upstairs. He must sleep alone.
    An hour later I woke up. I understood that my dog had not read the manual. He told this to the night in long wails. I did not know what I should do and so I did nothing. He had been used to sleeping in a heap with his brothers and sister. Now he was alone. He called and kept calling and this time I did not answer. Chaos was complete.

    About nine o’clock I went downstairs into the kitchen. The cats were on their perches, glaring at me with bags under their eyes like a set of Louis Vuitton luggage.
    ‘We’re leaving home’ they said. ‘Just give us our breakfast and we’re off.’
    I fed them and they queued up at the cat flap like a column of ants.
    I glanced in the mirror. The bags under my eyes needed a porter’s trolley.
    Next question. The dog?

    I opened the door into the scullery. The dog was lying on his bean bag, nose in his paw, a sight of infinite dejection. I stood for a moment, then he unsteadily got up and crawled across the floor to me on his belly. As anticipated by the manual, I had become the master.
    I let him out into the sunlight. I have him his gigantic bowl of cereal and milk. I have always loved the way dogs way their food; the splashy, noisy, hog pleasure of head in trough. I am a great supporter of table manners but it is worthwhile to be reminded of what we are.
    And that was the problem; the dog would pour me and every pin hole would be exposed. I know I am a leaky vessel but do I want to know it every day?

    He’s only a dog. Yes but he has found me out.

    *

    I clipped on his lead and walked him round the fields in my dressing gown and boots. If this seems eccentric, remember that my soul had been exposed and whatever I wore was of no use to cover it. Why dress when I could not be clothed?
    He circled along in his warm skin, happy again because he was free and because he belonged. All of one’s life is a struggle towards that; the narrow path between freedom and belonging. I have sometimes sacrificed freedom in order to belong, but more often I have given up all hope of belonging.
    It is no use  trying to assume again the state of innocence and acceptance of the animal or the child. This time it has to be conscious. To circle about in such gladness as his, is the effort of a whole lifetime.

    The day was misty and settled on his coat like a warning. I was looking into the future, thinking about what I would have to be to the dog in return for what he would be to me. It would have been much easier if he had been an easier dog. I mean, less intelligent, less sensitive, less brimful of that jouissance which sould not be harmed.
    It would have been much easier if I had been an easier person. We were so many edges, dog and me, and of the same recklessness. And of the same love. I have learned what love costs. I never count it but I know what it costs.

    *

    I telephoned the farmer. ‘You will have to take him back.’ I said. ‘I can’t do this.’

    It had been the arrangement between us from the start; when there were six puppies in a squealing heap and one by one sensible country people had come to claim them. There is no reason why I should not keep a dog. I had enough land, enough house, enough time, and patience with whatever needs to grow.
    I had thought about everything carefully before I had agreed to him. I had made every preparation, every calculation, except for those two essentials that could not be calculated; his heart and mine.

    My girlfriend carried the bean bag. I walked the dog, gaiety in the bounce of him, his body spinning as the planet spins, this little round of life.
    We were escorted off the premises by my venerable cat, an ancient, one-eyed bugger of a beast, of whom the dog was afraid. At the boundary of our field, the cat sat, as he always does, waiting for us to come back, this time by ourselves.

    As we reached the farm, the dog hesitated and hung his head. I spoke to him softly. I tried to explain. I don’t know what he understood but I knew he understood that he would not be my dog any more. We were crossing the invisible line high as a fence.
    For the last time I picked him up and carried him.

    Then of course there was his mother and his brothers and sister and I gave them biscuits and bones and the bean bag was a badge of pride for him. Look what he had been and got.
    We put him in the run and he began to play again, over and tumble in a simple doggy way, and already the night, the pool, the wind, his sleeping body, the misty morning that had lain on us both, were beginning to fade.
    I don’t know what the farmer thought. I mumbled the suitable excuses, and that it was true that my partner had just heard she would be working away for some weeks, and that it is tough to manage one’s own work, the land, the house, the animals, even without a brand-new dog.
    What I couldn’t say was that the real reason was so much deeper and harder and that we spend our lives deceiving ourselves of those real reasons, perhaps because when they are clear they are too painful.

    I used to hear him barking in the weeks that followed. His bark aimed at my heart. Then another person claimed him and called him Harry, and took him to live on a farm where there were children and ducks and company and things to do and the kind of doggy life he would never have had with me. What would I have done? Taught him to read?
    I know he won’t be the dog he could have been if I had met him edge to edge, his intensity and mine. Maybe it’s better that way. Maybe it’s better for me. I live in the space between chaos and shape. I walk the line that continually threatens to lose its tautness under me, dropping me into the desk pit where there is no meaning. At other times the line is so wired that it lights up the sole of my feet, gradually my whole body, until I am my own beacon, and I see then the beauty of newly created worlds, a form that is not random. A new beginning.
    I saw all this in him and it frightened me.

    I gave him a name. It was Nimrod, the mighty hunter of Genesis, who sought out his quarry and brought it home. He found me out. I knew he would. The strange thing is that although I have given him away, I can’t lose him, and he can’t die. There he is, forever, part of the pattern, the dance, and running beside me, joyful.

    April 12, 2012

  • faults.

    i think i’m old enough to do this. a non-comprehensive list of my flaws, while i’m still in the let’s be brutally honest i want to improve myself gear – which doesn’t come by very often.

    1. i love talking and discussing about myself way too much.

    2. almost never make the effort to ask friends out.

    3. can’t keep my own secrets.

    4. over-confidence leading to undue contentment leading to complete inertia.

    5. i don’t want enough things.

    6. i don’t want things enough to try for them.

    7. even when i should, i don’t confront people/things.

    8. sometimes i’m a self-righteous prick.

    9. it’s hard for me to tell my friends how much i like them.

    10. i judge people by their sense of humor.

    11. i play up whatever someone thinks me to be.

    12. which is starting to confuse me because i’ve caught myself saying contradictory things to different people.

    13. …yet i still agree with both stances. which means i don’t have solid convictions.

    14. i’m nicer to pretty girls.

    15. i like to interfere too much.

    16. cut myself too much slack.

    17. can’t handle commitments.

    18. make almost no effort at humility.

    19. not wise enough to perceive all my faults.

    but i’ll try. feel free to bitch about me to me so i can include them in the next list!

    April 8, 2012

  • more.

    Youth, to me, was a masculine version of The Bell Jar.

    Thematically, semi-autobiographies of aspiring writers on the cusp of adulthood. The immensity of every decision, the sudden departure from the refuge of childhood. Both protagonists are racked with ideals.

    The difference is in the way each author treats their personages’ ideals. We all know how Plath ends up soon after, and in her resignation there is an quiet understanding that her ideals were foolish. Predetermination; once the book begins, our protagonist is already aware of the end – because she is Plath at the end of her journey. The Bell Jar becomes fatalistic, the whole ride through. Coetzee, on the other hand, lives – and I imagine him to be a happy man. In Youth he recognizes that his ideals failed him, and in turn he has failed his ideals – but he never once denounced them. There’s a childlike, sheepish embracing of romance and beauty – an obstinate refusal to see how he teeters on pretension. Both novels end the way I love it – like life. Truncated, uncertain. It doesn’t suggest hope or hint at despair. It just is that.

    I really liked Youth because I could see myself, vaguely, in it. The endless reading, the avoidance of commitment, the refusal to work if it’ll take time from what I like to do despite all sensibilities. He fumbles around adult decisions and obscurely thinks that he’s made the wrong choices – except he’ll never know.

    The stretch where he quit his job, woke up each morning with that guilty freedom, walking and reading ceaselessly, the stagnant pages where his poems/prose should be because he gained unfortunate consciousness of self. And I wanted to say: that’s my life! something I can rarely do for books.

    Besides that – being a confused fresh adult with commitment issues thrown into the world – I have little in common with him. His dull misery, the desire to be submerged in suffering or full misery, I don’t get. Again, the childlike, indulgent ideals he embraced as a Youth. I’m pretty sure Coetzee has grown out of that – or he wouldn’t be able to write so succinctly of his experiences. (In fact he captured the entire ignorance of youthful ideals very well which must have been somewhat humiliating for him to go through again.)

    Why I thought of The Bell Jar when reading Youth is cuz of something more intangible. A short section of it, at the peak of his doubts and before he found some kind of transformation, at his most indulgent of ramblings – came that feeling of absolute desolation. By desolation I mean that abysmal, striking revelation that there’s nothing to everything. Basically that There Is No Point.

    Celine’s experience with the Bell Jar was more intense than mine. While she was at it, she claimed to feel as Plath did, as if she were in a Bell Jar and for awhile I think she was experiencing that – absolute desolation. I finished mine in one sitting – on a journey home and before a nap, which gave me space to compartmentalize it from the rest of my life, so it didn’t hit as bad. But I recognized the sudden, struggling fear while reading, that Plath might be right – that there might really not be a point in anything at all. Which I glimpsed in Coetzee before John found change.

    It’s so easy to sink.

    April 7, 2012

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