Quoth Jeff the Vita-man/zen master:
“There is so much chaos in this environment that it’s hard for anyone to judge your work performance, including you. I’m going to look at the airplane.”
Author: Tom
The Aussies
got me thinking that similar cultures have different nouns and the same verbs.
how lucky we are
to be able to know/entertain the concept of wasting time.
become what you….
Real perspective comes when I’m no longer seeing today in terms of a redundant past.
The healthiest feeling, but I don’t know if I can plan this or compel this moment to come to me.
Maybe it must come up from behind; surprise me when I’m ready:
No, you are not ‘you’.
There’s no epiphany, just a feeling that I’ve spilled over the side of what formerly contained me, when I wasn’t looking.
My home is in my head.
–Bob Marley
Kuala Lumpur and Singapore slideshow
We laughed, we cried, we even left some crap for other people to buy. For a slideshow of our little trip, click here.
virtuosity can be fun
This video has been played 8.2 million times on YouTube. It’s amazing, but the dissemination method smells like tomorrow, maybe even yesterday.
Here’s the NYT writeup, if you have time for background: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/27/arts/television/27heff.html?ex=1314331200&en=b993c2e50a7b705d&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss
My head exploded at 3:40-3:50, then he changed keys.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjA5faZF1A8
shopping lint
Singapore: squalor-free. The first few days is a feeling of relief at the ease of it all, especially if you’ve arrived from the manic inefficiency of Jakarta or India, for instance. You will drink water straight from the tap, because you can. You will not hail a cab by peeing toward traffic as some tourists do, elsewhere. Careful though: without a purpose, staleness might set in. That’s what shopping is for, thought the less evolved (or was it more self-involved?) might feel a niggling guilt at abandoning the ‘road to more’ for the Orchard Road to more trinkets. I was with 3 world-class shoppers who talked me down.
Overheated and steamrolled by the retail mayhem, I also found this lint as I gazed at my navel:
I see no warped/creative side of this prosperity. As we know, this is normally bestowed on a society through a scene created by obnoxious youth who feel disenfranchised and therefore entitled to create their own ‘decadent’ tangents, timely distillates, the best of which becomes art that endures and expands the culture.
The feeling of everyone being on the same page here is palpable; there is no sign that success is measured by anything other than established standards and roles for people. There are no cracks that might show alternate sensibilities; I see no flyers on bulletin boards advertising underground shows for music either electronic or guitar-based; footwear is oppressively, disappointingly clean.
All this has been said before; ‘A’ and I observed years ago that the scene here after dark had no noncommercial edges and felt it showed something profound about this place, especially the youth.
As a society SG seems content to refine/improve existing processes relevant to the material wellbeing of its citizens, and young people seem unaware of anything greater than that purpose. A guy told me that he felt very lucky to be from a civilized bubble in Asia’s chaotic sea, and a small fear every time he left. Maybe this fear is what continues to drive a society with little interest in second thoughts, impractical navelgazing or tangents of originality. Who was I to argue?
dreams, memories, google
My friend sent a link to a video taken by who knows who, showing the Tsunami of 2004 destroying a hotel in which we stayed in 2003 on Koh Phi Phi in Thailand. ‘We woulda been goners!’ he said.
That which was formerly visible to us only from vantage points in dreams… incidents on the scale of myth: ‘One day out of the west a wall of water higher than the palm trees will come to our island, and almost no one will survive.’
Search/find is easier than digging matching purple socks out of a drawer.
Related note, from an old notebook, a different pre-tsunami trip with Dian:
“Miss Lee on Koh Phi Phi sells us boat tickets to Krabi. To Dian she says:
‘Oh you live on Bali- I would love to go there! But I’m afraid.’
Dian: ‘Of what?’
Miss Lee(not wanting to mention the then-recent bombings, as though Dian would be offended):
‘Of everything!’ ”