Thursday, March 30, 2006
Ice
I love masks and have several cheap, simple ones. I guess my interest started when Roger Jenkins introduced maskplay when training my drama group in school. I found them intriguing and full of depth. Something about the strong, silent, purely visual way they spoke appealed to me very deeply, and that got me thinking about the way a body moves, what it says, and what it feels like to watch someone whose body didn't go with their mask (blogged something related to this earlier). And then there's that irritating yet apt scene from the movie The Mask where a stone-faced psychologist says, "We all wear masks, metaphorically speaking."
Perhaps it is the security of hiding behind a mask that comforts me and appeals to me. The feeling of being protected, of minimising exposure and vulnerability. It has also taught me never to take any person purely at face value.
Getting back to Kabuki, David Mack is a truly brilliant artist and storyteller, and the fully painted issues he's published are amazing and read more like works of abstract art than comics. But I think that the black-and-white storylines that he came up with are actually more of a triumph than his painted issues.
This is the first comic I ever bought. I happened to be flipping through a $1 pile at a comic store for the heck of it, and this cover leaped out at me. I took it home, read it, and was stunned. Over the following months, I scrambled through every comic store I knew of to find the rest of this series. Mack tells his stories intelligently and with very effective mood devices.
Kabuki was my jumping off point to other comics and graphic novels. My favourite are:
1. The Dream Hunters by Neil Gaiman (one-off from the Sandman series)
2. Kabuki (of course)
3. Neil Gaiman's Sandman
4. Several titles by Slave Labor Graphics, like Johnny the Homicidal Maniac and GloomCookie (hey, did you know Singaporean artist Foo Swee Chin is published by SLG? How cool is that.)
5. Will Eisner's graphic novels
Tuesday, March 28, 2006
Life was never meant to be caged
Push past, push past
Glass and metal won't hold you in
Look up, look up
A spire of infinity
Hold out your hand
I'll show you the stuff
That dreams are made of
First and last haiku
The frosty wind bites
The trees are covered with snow
Beggars die of cold
Beneath it, I drew, in coloured pencils on lined paper, a bare, snow-laden tree in the middle of a snow storm. A man in rags sits propped up against the tree hugging his knees, but he faces the other direction so you cannot see his face. I never really thought about whether I was drawing a dead man or not.
Frankly, I never saw what all the fuss was about haikus in English. If you ask me, even so-called well-written haikus don't sound right in English because the dynamics of the language just don't allow for the same kind of beauty that this poetic structure may bring out in Japanese.
Monday, March 27, 2006
Empty
Just an hour ago, it was all so different. Energy and excitement flooded the stage from the first step onto the stage to the last note. Damned if we didn't do our best yet this evening. It was life we breathed into the music and the spoken words, teeming with its own electricity and tenacious pulse. Then, when the last line had been said and the last note had been sung, we took our leave of the stage.
And hence I find myself once more mourning my departure from a performance space - a space of magic and undeniable allure.
And I find myself empty inside again. When will I be with my beloved stage again? Our union was, as always, brief, intense, electric, but never enough.
Friday, March 24, 2006
Thursday, March 23, 2006
Rain
I love rain. Its smell, its comforting rustle, the way the raindrops feel on my outstretched palm. There's little I like better than sitting on the porch of my previous home in Seletar with a book open on my lap while a veil of rain falls all around me and the wind carries its heady scent past me. Walking through a shower, hearing the short pitter patter on my umbrella, feeling tiny splashes on my ankles above my socks, watching the hem of my pants get wet, the feeling of being by myself even while walking through a busy street in the rain.
Even indoors, the rain feels magic. Lying in bed at night, its whispering soothes me and comforts me. I remember the rainy nights sitting on my window ledge in the university hostel, watching the world transform into a Monet painting, or just lying in bed feeling cool and safe.
Just another element of magic and beauty amidst the ugliness of the city.
Defining moments in life
1. 3 years old: Being given a small hibiscus by a boy named Adrian in playschool - first time being embarassed by a boy.
2. 4 or 5 years old: Being caned by my mother for climbing into the neighbour's yard to play (in spite of the fact I was invited by the neighbour's mom) - first time I realised parents can be irrational.
3. 6 years old: Had a water fight with my sister in the kitchen - learned fights can be fun.
4. 7 years old: Had a seriously f***ed up operation for appendicitis - realised doctors can kill you as much as they can save you.
5. 8 years old: Made fun of an unpopular classmate - first time I felt truly mean and regretful.
6. 10 years old: First took notice of the beautiful, long fingers of the church pianist and the even more beautiful music he played - fell in crush for the first time.
7. 11 years old: Joined the drama club - birth of my life-long passion.
8. 12 years old: My sister left Singapore to study - felt true loss and loneliness for the first time.
9. 13 years old: Discovered a friend had a crush on me - first awareness of being desired.
10. 14 years old: First held hands with a boy I liked very much - experience of my first romantic touch. (But no, nothing happened.)
11. 17 years old: A brave friend died - first true source of inspiration.
12. 17 years old: Fell in love completely.
13. 19 years old: Had my heart ripped to shreds - first wound from which no full recovery is possible.
14. 20 years old: First truly unpleasant discovery about myself.
15. 21 years old: Started my first real job - learned that financial independence = bonds of parents' high expectations loosened.
16. 23 years old: Dated an older man - lesson that some preconceived notions come with a reason.
17. 23 years old: Finally fully emerged from a long depression - discovered life really can be happy.
18. 24 years old: Got together with Kelvin - unprecedented advent of someone with such perfect chemistry and wavelength.
19. 24 years old: Nephew Sean was born - (see post below).
20. 25 years old: Second truly unpleasant discovery about myself.
And I'm sitting here waiting for the next big moment.
Tuesday, March 21, 2006
Single-digit teenagers
Is it just me, or is there something wrong with this? Absolutely no one I know would call me conservative (hah!) but I'm frankly a little disgusted with this sexualising of kids these days. It's one thing to occasionally let a little girl wear a peasant top that exposes her cute little belly button. It's quite another when she wants to dress provocatively before her age even reaches two digits. The eight-year-old in question calls herself an eight-year-old teenager. 'Nuff said.
I was somewhat horrified to see these covers for a magazine called Koolkidz. Am I overly conservative to think that children should just be children and not be glamourised like that? What's disturbing is that this magazine is aimed at parents. It's telling parents, "This is how your little darlings should look."
Some parts of it look like the inside of a women's fashion/shopping magazine:
True, most kids will want to look older at some point. Hell, I'd even taken photos in make-up and tube tops with socks to fill out the chest area when I was nine. But a disclaimer here: I was my sister's experimental mannequin for when she was just learning how to put on make-up (and armed with a brand new camera), so I wasn't the one to ask to be made up like a kiddy karaoke contestant.
Tell me you don't think this makes the little model look like a juvenile streetwalker.
Included in the contents of the September 2005 issue of this mag are a DVD review of XXX The Next Level (how's that for encouraging violent entertainment), music review of The Essential Michael Jackson and a restaurant review of L'Aigle d'Or (I quote "The grand dame of classic French dining").
My point is, are the media and retail industry giving out unwholesome signals to parents and kids alike? Ok, dumb question. I guess I'm just disgusted at how increasingly ridiculous it's all getting.
Saturday, March 18, 2006
T'was foretold...
With that programme, we'd answer various questions related to things like your personality, preferences, etc. Wanna know what my recommended career was?
Writer.
I found that amusing and poohpoohed it. It just didn't seem like a viable career to me at the time, as all I knew of as "writers" were those who wrote books, and my cynical young mind thought, how many people can survive just writing books, and earn enough from that? I didn't think I'd be good enough to write books and compete with other writers either.
Little did I know.(Ok, these are not my own fingers. They're Kelvin's hairy fingers.)
Finding my way
A
Thursday, March 16, 2006
Alone vs alone
lus I’m having PMS, and progesterone alone would be a very good reason for me to feel the need for Prozac and Lithium right now.
I’m lonely, and it’s too quiet.
1) "You're wasting electricity." This is coming from the woman who cannot get by without airconditioning and sleeps with it at full blast while wearing a thick sweater and scarf. Go figure.
Monday, March 13, 2006
Great Revelations Come in Small Packages
Great Revelations Come in Small Packages
January 2002: My sister is 29 years old when she discovers that she has metabolic syndrome. My heart sinks as I hear her voice over the phone, telling me that her life is changed forever, at that young age. A month later, she miscarries her first child.
My mother has a rather annoying habit of making me guess what my birthday present is a week in advance but refusing to tell me if I’m right. Nature reminds me of exactly that – if it’s something good, you jolly well hone your patience, because you are in for a long wait. Say, nine months.
Meanwhile, nature entertains you while you wait. Having been a mother figure to me most of my life, it is very strange indeed to witness my sister’s usually level-headed disposition unravel as her pregnancy unfurls. Elation. Depression. Urination. Constipation. Indigestion. Indignation. Irritation. And those are just the beginning.
May 2003: Right about the time she starts to tell me about her increasing back aches, I start to wonder why on earth anyone would want to go through this. In my early twenties, I have just gotten my life on a steady track, with independence in my hand enabling me to finally start living life for myself. The sight of my sister’s growing belly and her physical and emotional fluctuations instil more than just fascination. It also instils fear. Fear of losing freedom, fear of pain, fear of unsettling changes in life, and, most of all, fear of losing the rest of my life to the life-long occupation of motherhood from which there will be no rest.
I ask my sister if she is afraid. Yes, she said, she is afraid of the possibility of the various health problems a baby might have. No – I mean, is she afraid of motherhood? She ponders this for a moment before saying, “No. You were an awfully difficult kid. I’ve had enough practice.” Although miffed at the backhanded reply, I am amazed at how prepared she seems to be, and how, in spite of her hormonal joyrides, her expectant happiness carries a sense of purpose and serenity.
The Eagle has Landed
My sister sits on the bed, smiling at us as we enter. Tom, my brother-in-law, stands by her side, beaming as he says hello. A tiny bundle sits on her lap, wrapped in a white hospital cloth and wearing a soft little blue hat. I stand there for a moment, feeling my heart overflow.
Wednesday, March 08, 2006
Revisited
It was evening when she took the path from the road, across the small field where some children ran about squealing in delight. She crossed the car park, dodging some haphazardly parked motorcycles. She stooped for a moment to pet a cat before moving on, towards the block of flats.
Tuesday, March 07, 2006
Saturday, March 04, 2006
Compositions of yore - part 2
This piece is nostalgic for me to re-read, also considering it was written how my teen mind thought back then - rather juvenile language used, I'd say. Hence, I've done a bit of editing here and there in this version to amend the cheesy parts.
First Encounter
A passing girl caught his attention. Marilyn was possibly the prettiest girl in church. Fancy clothes, good make-up. Many boys liked her. Maybe he should get that bookish girl’s number from his friend’s sister. Why was he thinking of that girl again? Maybe Marilyn would talk to him if he said hi. But would the girl with the book want to know him? He stole another glance at her.
He was staring again. She shifted uncomfortably in her seat. She stole another glance at him. She then remembered him as the pianist for the choir that her friend’s brother was in. What was his name? Jon? Yes, it was. Oh, why was she thinking of him? He was not even as good looking as the guy in the black shirts. She turned back to her book. She stared at page forty-one, as she had been for the past fifteen minutes. Maybe she’d ask her friend’s brother about the pianist.
Friday, March 03, 2006
Yes, No, Maybe
"You've been playing tennis together for weeks, and haven't had any hint from him?" I prod.
"No, not really. Nothing concrete, at least."
I've already heard her tales of his little supposedly-out-of-character acts of sweetness that almost-are-not-quite possible signs of affection. (I hyphenate too much.) It all sounded wishy-washy to me. "So do you know for sure whether he likes you?"
"Eve asked him the other day, "Do you actually like S?""
Now this is interesting. "That was direct. What did he say?"
"He said he's not sure."
Chey. "Not sure?" This doesn't sound promising.
"Then Eve asked him, "Will you like S?" And he said yes!" S beams brightly.
I'm incredulous. Is this supposed to be good news? "Will he like you? What kind of question is that?"
Her smile falters slightly. She knows it's only a matter of time before I start to rain on her parade. "It means, we have a chance in the near future. We might be together soon!"
"But doesn't that sound very half-hearted to you? It's like he wants to like you even though he may not be that keen in his heart."
I swear S is holding back a scowl. This isn't the first (nor the second, third or even tenth) time I've tried to burst her bubble by attempting to bring her back to reality, or at least try to make her open her eyes a little wider. Nope, she'll have none of that. "No, I think he just needs time to figure things out. He's the type of guy who needs to be sure before he takes a big step." She gives me her best confident, optimistic look as she polishes off the rest of her salad.
Denial...is not just in Egypt. Wasn't that in a song? Resigned, I say the only thing there is to say - what she wants to hear. "Well...I suppose you know him better. Things might work out great." I flash her a smile I don't feel.
She looks satisfied at this little morsel of agreement I've tossed her way. Daffy's giving up early this time, I'm sure she's thinking.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Some friends say I'm cynical, that I tend to see the negative what-ifs of situations more than the optimistic possibilities. This is especially so for gender and relationship issues. What can I say? I've been to the deep, dark layers of hellish love and have returned sans my idealistic perceptions. I can safely say that, through my own experiences and observation of others' situations, I have attained some depth of insight in this area and can spot certain trends when I see them. I don't ever meddle, though. I simply state opinion.
So excuse me if I rain on your parade, pals. Not my fault if you enter into your emotional messes with both eyes closed. And you know what? I'm often proven right, by your own admissions, time after time. But of course, you know what you want to hear, and what I have to say sometimes doesn't quite fit that. So I try not to say it all. But you're my friends, and I don't want you to go run yourself into the same walls. It's hard to know what a good balance is between giving well-meaning opinions and shutting up and keeping everyone in euphoria...for now.
At the end of the day, you're still going to hit the same walls at full speed. You're still going to hurt yourself again and again and again and again before you finally learn it all on your own, or sometimes never at all. All regardless of what I or other friends say. So the less said the better?
Intuition is a strange thing. I know I have it by the bucket, but what's the use of it when it has little power to positively affect events already in motion? Or even those that haven't begun moving?
Maybe all I should do is shut up and leave my shoulder available. Someone will need it sometime, the way things are going. In the meantime, I'll smile and do my darndest to be supportive and appear to actually believe S when she tells me things are going exactly the way she'd hoped.