Cadence

(A melodic or harmonic configuration that creates a sense of repose or resolution.)

"But I am like a green olive tree in the house of God; I trust in the mercy of God for ever and ever." - Psalms 52:8

Monday, November 30, 2009

word.

from the los angeles times:

A little late in making those Thanksgiving flight plans? Wondering how you could possibly afford your ticket -- that is, without putting a kidney up for sale on Craigslist? Good news! You can get a free flight home on Southwest plus a $300 travel voucher. Just do what I plan to -- get on a Southwest flight in the next few days, and when it's taking off, shout over and over, "Go, plane, go!" and "I want Daddy! I want Daddy!"

Pamela Root got the free flight and the voucher, plus an apology from Southwest, after her 2-year-old kept screaming those things at the top of his little lungs as their San Jose-bound flight was about to take off. In fact, little Adam reportedly screamed so loudly that the safety announcements couldn't be heard and the pilot turned the plane back to the gate in Amarillo, Texas, where the two were booted off.

Root was appalled when a flight attendant told her something to the effect of "We just can't tolerate that [screaming] for two hours," reported the San Jose Mercury News. Root insisted Adam would be "fine once we take off" -- which, in my book, means either "He'll be fine" or "It would be a serious pain in the butt to be stuck in Amarillo another day."

Unbelievably, Root demanded the apology she eventually got from the airline (shame, shame, Southwest) and hit it up for the cost of diapers and the portable crib she says she had to buy for the overnight stay. Even more unbelievably, there's still no word of any apology from Root to the other passengers.

There is a notion, reflected in numerous blog comments about the incident, that other passengers should "just deal" and "give a kid a break." This notion is wrong. Parents like Root and others who selfishly force the rest of us to pay the cost of their choices in life aren't just bothering us; they're stealing from us. Most people don't see it this way, because what they're stealing isn't a thing we can grab on to, like a wallet. They're stealing our attention, our time and our peace of mind.

More and more, we're all victims of these many small muggings every day. Our perp doesn't wear a ski mask or carry a gun; he wears Dockers and shouts into his iPhone in the line behind us at Starbucks, streaming his dull life into our brains, never considering for a moment whether our attention belongs to him. These little acts of social thuggery are inconsequential in and of themselves, but they add up -- wearing away at our patience and good nature and making our daily lives feel like one big wrestling smackdown.

Southwest sent the right message in yanking Root and her screaming boy off the plane. Unfortunately, it lacked the corporate courage to stand its ground, probably fearing a public relations nightmare from the Mommy Mafia. Yet, almost every day, I encounter parents who need to get the same message Root initially did. Trust me -- should I long to hear screaming children, I'll zip right past my favorite coffeehouse and go read my morning paper at Chuck E. Cheese.

I know, I know -- because I am not a parent I cannot possibly understand how hard it is to keep a child from acting out. Actually, that probably has more to do with the way I was raised -- by parents I describe as loving fascists. As a child, I was convinced that I could flap my arms and fly, but the idea that I could ever be loud in a public place that wasn't a playground simply did not exist for me.

I hear claims that some children are prone to tantrums no matter how exquisitely they are parented. If this describes your child, there's a solution, and it isn't plopping him in a crowded metal tube with hundreds of people who can't escape his screams except by throwing themselves to their deaths at 30,000 feet.

Granted, there sometimes are extenuating circumstances, reasons parents and their little hell-raiser simply must take a plane. Well, actually, there are two: dire family emergency (Granny's actually dying, not just dying to see the little tyke) and the need for a lifesaving operation for the wee screamer. In all other cases, if there's any chance a child is still in the feral stage, pop Granny on a flight or gas up the old minivan. It really does come down to this: Your right to bring your screaming child on a plane ends where the rest of our ears begin.

---

my issue with misbehaving children was recently on the MRT bound for Chinatown. for once, everyone at the door actually stood around allowing the passengers to alight... until 2 unruly children pushed their way right into the stomach of an alighting passenger and elbowed their way through to get seats.

i tried to figure out where their parents were but later i found out they were sitting just out of my line of sight, a little further away from the two little terrors they bred and allowed to run free.

the kids ran to two unoccupied seats and screamed with delight, as if they'd found gold. yes, i could still hear them through my earphones. no matter, they descended into chatter that my earphones could obstruct, so i just watched them.

soon enough, i was right, they started to monkey around. i have no idea what the HECK got them so bloody excited in a train travelling underground but they got to their feet. in their shoes. on the train seat.

I WAITED FOR THE PARENTS TO DO SOMETHING BUT NOTHING WAS DONE. ok let me give them some credit... after the two children had stamped their feet all over the seat, their attention was called to by their mom and they froze for a while, with foolish grins plastered on their faces. then they squatted down, shoes still on the seat. oh my flippin' ... $%@&#$

i blame the parents. why did you not stand up, get out of your precious mrt seat walk over and scold them? why, you too embarrassed to admit these monsters are yours? when i tried to leave the train at chinatown they pushed past me again. but i knew if i struck them i'll get hauled off to jail.

please, if you can't control your children THEN DON'T HAVE ANY!!

Friday, November 27, 2009

IMMD

spotted #2.


isn't this beautiful??!?!

Thursday, November 26, 2009

spotted.

on msn with alvin -

Ms. Moo (@) says:
hewoo bebbie angel just tweeted u
she wants to give u awesomes pwesent.
also
should i just throw 2/3 of the culture and replace then?
w/o counting
since we already counted yesterday

diremeow *last minute king* says:
this morning, 8am+ at melville park bus stop,
girl wearing black jeans with sennheiser earphones...
its squarish so I'm guessing ie8? and i think its connected directly to a cowon d2.
LOL
SOMEONE SPOTTED YOU
HAHAHAHAHA

Ms. Moo (@) says:
?!
wts
WHAT
WHAT

(then it hit me - those lines are probably from one of those audio forums alvin frequents.)

HAHAHAHAHA
WTS
WHO?!
i noticed someone was staring
i was like
wts
i thought some *XXX* boy
never see girl before

diremeow *last minute king* says:
HAHAHAHAHA

Ms. Moo (@) says:
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA

diremeow *last minute king* says:
ok

Ms. Moo (@) says:
OMG!!!!!!!

diremeow *last minute king* says:
i don't think i'll post that
HAHAHA

Ms. Moo (@) says:
this is super fun,
WHY
oh.
HAHAHAHA
SO FUN

diremeow *last minute king* says:
hehehe

Ms. Moo (@) says:
I R CELEBRITEE

diremeow *last minute king* says:
"woah.. a girl audiophile."
haha

Ms. Moo (@) says:
HE SAID THAT
HAHAHAHAHAHA
THAT'
S
AWESUMMMMMMMMMMM
XD

diremeow *last minute king* says:
haha
someone else did
haha
quite lol

Ms. Moo (@) says:
i am how super happy now, that someone ACTUALLY SAW MY EARPHONES
MY $350 EARPHONES
yay.

diremeow *last minute king* says:
http://jaben.net/forums/index.php?topic=7348.1125
scroll at the end

Ms. Moo (@) says:
u should just make a stand

diremeow *last minute king* says:
haha
noo lah
$310

Ms. Moo (@) says:
'eh that's mine.'
PLUS SHIPPING.

---

haha! fun times! :D

Friday, November 20, 2009

hard disk spoil.

i've just realized that after all these years, since the hard disk incident, i can no longer type 'hard disk' without a little smirk tugging at my lips.

wedding plans

when i get married, i want this in my hair.


270USD

and a big looping bow on my lower back that's almost fashioned like a kimono's bow.

*sigh* i love daydreaming. =)

Thursday, November 19, 2009

almost ready to brace the cold

(above: mango sweater in navy, grey aldo cap, uniqlo preppy cardigan, zara black beanie, zara taupe gloves, green uniqlo leggings, mango sweater in peach)


my top's completely settled; i've also got a red pea coat and a beige coat (i just realized both are from zara... and cost me less than $40 each) to wrap up in.

so now... i just need to make sure my butt doesn't freeze over and fall off. well, time to go shopping for bottoms!

(of course, i'm really just using this 'buying clothes for a trip' as a cover-up. i'm really just nursing my deep seated desire for autumn/winter clothing. look at those gloves! they're so very precious. *happy sigh*)

Thursday, November 12, 2009

yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah

i got a rude shock on Wednesday morning when alvin smsed me about going for the yeah yeah yeahs' concert.

'what? i thought you weren't interested!'

'huh? well i thought YOU weren't interested!'

great, ticket sales had already started since 9am and by 1045am all the good seats were gone. cat 1 and cat 2 were pink (which meant only single seats left) while cat 3 was the next best option.

i sat next to alvin as we slowly tried to find some other good spot in the concert hall.

a: cat 3? circle 2. how about that? level 3.
v: hmm we watched rockapella from there... should be ok. i guess at that height i can see the drummer...
a: ok...
v: wait wait!! wanna look at the other seatings?
a: sigh. ok we only have 10 minutes before the seat booking expires.

as alvin browsed through the pages., he suddenly exclaimed, 'hey cat 2 turned brown (more than one seat available) for a split second just now!'

we kept refreshing and refreshing until i got tired and let alvin handle the frenzy. somehow, we managed to get 2 seats in cat 2, level 2, circle 1. hurray! but it's still not cat 1...

we confirmed the tickets and bought them. 5 minutes later, i asked alvin where we were sitting again so i could see how far away the stage was from us (yes, i was wallowing). i opened the sistic page... and guess what?

cat 1 was brown in colour. i stuttered out, 'al...vin... cat 1 is brown.'

'hey get la!! why're you not getting that!!!'

haha obviously my panic response is pretty lacking; alvin leapt from his chair and checked the tickets available... the position was slightly off centre and row O, which is right behind the row greg and kevin had gotten. it's pretty darn good., so we bought that too.

aaaaand... now we have 4 tickets. hmm. what to do with those cat 2 tickets? i really hope someone will wanna buy them off us.

and up for auction they went, this morning! amazingly, within 1 hour alvin got calls from so many people who offered beyond our selling price... which means we made some money back!

in the end we sold the ticket at $285 even though the offer shot up to $300 because well, we wanted to make someone's day. so the tickets will be going to that very fortunate first guy who called alvin. :)

it's all turned out so well...

AND THE KILLERS ARE COMING!!!!!!!!!! YARRRRRRRRR!!!! :D!

---

concerts i've been to:

anberlin
switchfoot
coldplay
jason mraz
no doubt
oasis
rockapella

concerts coming:

green day (bought)
yeah yeah yeahs (bought)
the killers
muse

concerts i'm still waiting for:

franz ferdinand
kings of convenience
third eye blind

Thursday, November 05, 2009

Naked as the day we were born

from real life preacher:

I had a vision the other day that came to me in the form of a daydream. I was sitting in the library staring off into space when suddenly I imagined myself in a huge room with a crowd of people. We were all waiting for God to show up. Some people were standing around in groups, talking. Others were sitting down. A few were asleep. Suddenly God appeared and things got very quiet, which was understandable because God was about 30 feet tall. A man near the back was the last one to notice. He was telling a joke to his buddy when he realized he was the only one talking. He looked around, saw God, and said, “Oh, sorry.”

Then God said, “Some of you are rather nicely dressed, I see.” That made the well-dressed people happy. Some of the men opened their blazers to show God the linings. A few women twirled around so God could get a good look at their outfits. A number of people seemed very proud of their shoes and pointed to them with open palms. God laughed and then took a deep breath. For a moment I thought God was going to suck all the air out of the room. There was a long pause, and then God leaned forward and blew. The sound of it was like the rush of a mighty wind. All of our clothes disintegrated and disappeared, like confetti blown off the top of a waxed table.

Just like that we were naked. As naked as the day we were born. It was embarrassing at first, but there wasn’t anything to be done about it. Eventually the idea began to settle in and people calmed down. You could hear people saying, “Oh well, I guess we’re naked now.”

There was a group of religious people who had brought Bibles with them and were now using them to cover themselves. One guy had a small, pocket New Testament which he held over his private parts. The guy next to him had a big black Bible and was saying, “Who’s trash-talking the King James now?” God saw the Bibles and started to laugh with a booming voice that shook the room. “What need have you of Testaments?” God asked. “You’re standing in my presence.” God snapped God’s fingers and all the Bibles turned to smoke and drifted away. This was particularly hard on the clergy, whose expertise in the scriptures suddenly lost whatever relevance it may have had. And try as they might, in the presence of God, even the ministers could not remember a single verse.

“All right then,” said God. “Has anyone else brought something with them?”

There were a few who had things hidden behind their backs. One by one they held them up. A bag of Oreos, an iPod, a baseball glove, family photos, those sorts of things. As soon as they were shown, they turned to smoke, just like the Bibles had.

God looked around at all the people and saw that they were good - finally. Then God said, “Percival Stanley WHIGGINS!!!”

Everyone looked around. Some were mouthing “Percival,” as if they couldn’t believe anyone might actually have that name. Near the middle of the room, a sheepish young man in his 20’s pulled a small wooden flute from behind his back and held it up. God winked and the flute snapped out of existence in a pop of blue static. Percival Stanley Whiggins squeaked and put his fingertips in his mouth. God stared hard at him, which would have been terrible, but there was a slight hint of a smile at the corner of God’s mouth.

“I’ll be keeping an eye on you, mister,” said God.

“Now then,” said God. “Just a few questions. How many of you were lawyers?”

Not one person raised a hand.

“How many were ministers?”

No one moved.

“Business persons? Accountants? Sports legends? School teachers? Artists? Show business, perhaps?”

People looked at each other and shrugged. No one raised a hand.

“Can anyone remember what he or she did for a living?”

No one said anything. We looked at each other in amazement. We were naked, completely at peace, and suddenly we couldn’t remember what we did for a living. Then Percival Stanley Whiggins shyly raised his hand and said, “I think I might have been a shopkeeper.”

God exhaled impatiently and said, “No you were NOT.”

I began to think that Percival Stanley Whiggins was either the bravest or the stupidest person I had ever seen. Fortunately, that was the last we heard from him.

God sat down in a huge chair and said, “Line up now. Line up and come see me, one at a time. Come and tell me what you’ve been doing with the lives I have given you.”

It was a very long line, but no one seemed to mind. Those near the back fell asleep, though they remained standing. They shuffled forward as the line moved without opening their eyes. As they got near the front they came awake. I noticed that some people seemed very afraid to speak to God. One or two tried to run away, but there really wasn’t anywhere to go. Eventually they wandered back over and got in line again. Some people wept. Others shook with fear. Quite a few seemed stunned. Each person had a turn talking to God for a few moments. Then God sent them, one by one, through a purple door that was right next to God’s chair.

Then it was my turn. When I stepped up to the chair, I realized that God had shrunk until God was only about 10 feet tall. It was still intimidating but not as bad as before. God said, “What do you have to say for yourself.”

I was stumped. With no memory of the jobs I had in life, I wasn’t sure what to say.

“Um, I had three daughters. And I loved them quite dearly.”

“Yes, you did,” God replied.

“I was married to a very good woman and I truly loved her. Just adored her. I think I was a better person with her than I would have been without her.”

“Agreed,” said God.

I couldn’t think of anything else to say. There were a few moments of awkward silence. Then God said, “Would you like me to return your memory of what you did for a living, as you people like to say?

“Yes, please.”

In that moment it all came back to me. I expected the fullness of my completed labors to rush back into the void of my memory and fill me with a robust sense of purpose and meaning. But the memory of what I did seemed rather hollow and unimportant. I recounted my various jobs to God without a lot of energy.

“Oh yeah, I was a minister. And a writer. So I…you know…preached and did church stuff. I was at this one church for many years. So I was proud of that, of course. It was…Covenant…something Church, I think. I used to think about things a lot, and I wrote some of that down. You know, so that my thoughts were on paper and all. So…there was that.

God shrugged and said, “Anything else?”

My mind was a blank. So I shook my head.

God nodded, solemnly.

“You were never really true to yourself, though, were you? That’s what makes me sad about your life. The church stuff is fine. And sure, you wrote some things. But you were never completely true to yourself.”

“Well, to a certain extent didn’t we all have to set aside our baser desires so as not to hurt others or do things that would be wrong? So what does "true to yourself" mean in that context? I always felt that…”

“STOP!” God said with a terrible frown that caused a shiver to go down my spine.

“Do not forget to whom you are speaking. I’m not talking about that. You know exactly what I mean, don’t you?”

“Yes.”

“You know all the things you denied, don’t you? Things that were true about you but you wouldn't admit? Things you believed but would not confess?”

“Yes.”

“And you know what you claimed and affirmed to get along and be comfortable, don’t you?”

I hung my head and felt the heavy weight of sorrow.

“Yes.”

God nodded, and the sorrow disappeared. I looked up and saw Jesus standing beside the purple door. God inclined his head in that direction, so I took a step forward.

“Wow, it’s you,” I said. “Does everyone see you here?”

“That’s not for you to know. Answer me this: what do you want more than anything else?”

“The truth. I want to know the truth. About everything.”

Jesus smiled and opened the purple door. Behind it I could see crowds of people walking toward a light on the horizon. And just for a moment I thought I was going to put it all together in my mind. For a brief moment I felt like everything was just about to make sense.

And then I sneezed. I shook my head and realized I had been daydreaming. The purple door was gone, and I was back in the library again. Back in this life, where what I do for a living is what matters and hardly anything makes sense at all.