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Diary

GCA 2009 – “Hacking” Our Way Into Games Convention Asia, Lol

OK, they got my name wrong ... lol ... sort of.

I didn’t wake up on a Thursday morning thinking that I would attend an exhibition.  “GCA” sounded familiar.  As though I have been to such an event before.  I did some checking on my website and guess what?  One year ago, on this day, I was wearing the media pass for this event, invited by Nokia!  It’s been a year already?  And neither did I wake up on a Thursday morning thinking that I would wear a professional visitor pass, acting as my good friend’s assistance for a day.

This morning, a text message arrived at my phone.  My friend wanted to meet up at SunTech for a meal before heading to an exhibition.  Fine by me.  “What are we going to do at an exhibition?” I texted.  “I will tell you later,” she texted back.

As I made my way to the convention center, there she was, looking absolutely stunning , and professional too.  Fashionable long dress and jacket, with a Prada handbag to match.  Her job title is “Head of Regional Sales”.  Not long ago, we were peers, same company, same team.  I really ought to catch up on my career progression.  And I am happy for her.  Sales type of work suits her better than my 9 to 5.

It seemed like her first time here in this kind of exhibition.  Feeling excited and all.  It was definitely my first time in this kind of exhibition, without a media pass.  I too felt excited because … oh well, computer gaming is in my blood.  GCA is primary for the business partners to meet.  Nokia doesn’t seem to participate this year.  I wonder why.

With confidence, my friend headed to the registration counter to get the professional visitor pass.  I doubt if anyone would say no to my very pleasant looking friend, together with her equally pleasant name card.  I played along when it came to my turn and said with a smile, “She is my boss and I am her assistant, today!”  The young chap seemed amused and he didn’t say no to me neither.  Hooray!  I played a good assistance, helped my ‘boss’ to sign in, and …

… Oops.  I bumped onto a few journalist friends from the media.  One of them asked, “What are you doing here?”  And I said, “I am with my boss, on a mission!”  “But you are usually the main guy!  Where is your camera?” he asked.  “Not today!  Ha ha ha, I will see you around,” I waved goodbye.  My media friends seem to remember me by my camera.  How strange!

Upon receiving our passes, my friend suddenly turned professional, looked at me and said, “Since you are my assistant today, tell me what’s our game plan?”  Hmmm.  I put on my consultant hat, pulled out the program guide and said, “If I guess your intend right, we should check out the business exhibitors first and gather some contacts.  After which, we could head over to the consumer side as it is usually more fun.  As for the conferences, we can think of that later.”

Of all the business exhibitors, I enjoyed chatting with the folks from Singapore-MIT GAMBIT Game Lab.  It is a collaboration between MIT and Singapore.  I asked if it is the MIT and the students said yes.  Amazing.  One Western lady is currently studying computing and mathematics in MIT.  We had a friendly chat.  And I had also chatted with some of the Asian students in order for me to understand what it takes to build an Indie computer game prototype.  It is often a 10 weeks or so project with up to 10 team members taking on the roles of producer, game designer, graphic designer, and etc.  The passion these students has was infectious.  I could feel it immediately.  If you have time, check out GAMBIT’s official site.  Before I left the booth, I asked one last question, “Have you considered joining Blizzard?”  For those who are new to the gaming industry, I think Blizzard at present is the place to be at.  “Funny you asked that,” he continued, “as I have considered working with Blizzard before.  But I prefer to work in an Indie environment instead.”  Good answer.  And I wish them all the best in their studies.

Moving on to the consumer side, it did have the bells and whistles, big monitors and girls in sexy outfits to make people go wow.  OK, my friend was as excited as me, for slightly different reason.  Taking the center stage was none other than the Xbox 360 game “Forza Motorsports 3”.  If only those were Formula One cars, that would have been perfect – for me.  There was a costume shop that showcased a life size Thrall (a famous dude from the online game World of Warcraft who gets murdered globally perhaps a hundred times a day) and Ironman.  The Counter Strike costume worn by a group of real life male models was just so hilarious.

After we have covered both the business and consumer sides, the only agenda item left for us – or rather her – to visit is the conference.  Since we are not from the media, we have to pay S$700+ per person.  Uh huh.  OK, somewhere somehow, we have got to …

… my friend pressed on insisting that her company is sort of like a media company.  Hmmm, really?!  I guess we could see it that way.  The young chap got a bit lost, politely asking us to wait while he was going to get his boss.  Uh oh.  I swear I was about to pull my “new media” trick telling them I am running a rather, ahem, popular website in Singapore if we got ourselves into an embarrassing situation.

No need for that because his boss was not around.  We left the convention center, went our separate ways.  One hour later, I received a phone call.

“Guess what?!  They have called and issued us a media pass!  Do you wanna …”

She got the media pass?  Again, who can say no to her?

PS. Below are some of the processed photos I have taken during my adventure.  I didn’t bring my Nikon D700 with me and have used my Nokia N97 instead.

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Diary

It’s 09/09/09 09:09:09, Pee Em Though, But Still …

My Fan (photo taken using N97)

Rarely do I have to blog.  I mean, I often blog.  But I blog as per planned, or as and when I like to blog.  Thanks to my friend Supriya – the same lady who reminded me of that strange moment 12:34:56 7/8/9 while I was choosing my lunch dishes near the National Library one sunny afternoon – I was reminded that today is the 9th of September zero nine.

So what am I going to write?  My new blogger friend Heyzanie (please pop by and say hi) wants to get into the rhythm of writing every day.  Good for her!  I have gone through that period of writing every day and to me, the merit is that I got into this rhythm of wanting to make my life interesting each day.  So that I have something to write.  It is the goal that drives the outcome.

As time goes by, I want to focus my energy to create, or attempt to create posts of higher quality at times, more voluminous at times.  And that takes, time.  Like that holiday trip journals that I have been working on since June.  Two more entries to go and I am done, done!  Or like those articles I write, on that phone I love to use.  The latest article has a word count of close to 5,000!  Gasp!  Fortunately that is a phone that I love to use eh?  In any case, word counts don’t mean much, I know.  But like my buddy TK – inspiring no less – training to run a full marathon.  I reckon distance matters, daily persistence matters – when it all adds up, it matters.

Imagine.  If I am to write 5,000 words a day, in just two weeks, I would have written a novel of a decent size, in today’s standard.  Not bad huh?  Now, all I need to do is to find something passionate to write about.  Same passion as to my beloved phone.

I have thought about starting this entry with a song idea that has been in my head today.  But I reckon the subject may alienate some of my valuable readers, you.  Who cares about lyrics and songwriting?  Just give us the beats!  And hence, I am hiding this few paragraphs, into the middle of this entry.  To my estimation, most people would start to lose focus after the 256th word.  So here is safe.

My 159th song would begin with something like: It’s September.  Far as she remembers.  And she’s been waiting.  For him to appear.  Familiar faces.  Familiar places.  Turning into a stone.  She may appear.  Her heart still beats.  On what little she remembers.  She said it’s not fair.  He smiled and queried why.  It was September.  If only he could be here.  It was snow, in September.  And it snows.  Those glittering tears.

In all seriousness, at times I dream of what to write if I was a writer.  A real writer.  Not just a blogger.  I am not sure if I am a good story writer, able to craft an entertaining plot from thin air.  Certainly not having strong opinions on the governments or the way societies are today.  Hence those classic stories of writing a story with a hidden agenda is out.  That leaves only my personal journal and my observation on the things around me.  I mean, would you pay to read these entries?  In all seriousness?

Yes, there is something I wish to blog about.  And if my prediction is right, people often skip all of the above after the 256th character and head straight to the last paragraph of an entry.  Here!  I am not sure if you remember there are things I wish to do, before 2009 ends.  Let’s just say, I am well on target.  I have passed my Spanish examination and have ripped my entire CD collection into digital format.  I would want to look into my music next.

PS 1. Believe it or not, I have scheduled this post to be out at 9.09 pm.  When the clock struck 09.09.09 09:09:09, my site hanged or crashed.  Just when the post was supposed to be out.  In Cantonese, nine means forever.  And for the last 1 hour, it sure felt like forever.

Oh, thank you Darkspore for magically bringing my site back up (once again).  What am I to do without you?

PS 2. Why the photo of the fan?  If there is one thing that watches over me while I blog, that would be …

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Diary Linguistic

The Art Of Conjugation (Be Back After Our Spanish Exam!)

The art of Spanish conjugation

How time flies.  Just about a year ago we have started learning a new language.  That was before I have started my photography hobby.  And it seems that I have been taking photos for ages.  Getting things into rhythm does have its merits.  Before I knew it, I have clocked in 80 hours of Spanish lessons; before I knew it, I have taken 15,038 photos using my dSLR camera.  Who knows what I would become 12 years from the day I have got these things in rhythm?  (I have this theory that all good hobbies take 12 years to mature into something decent.)

Onto what I termed as “Season 2” of our Spanish class, it gets a lot harder than the previous “season”.  First, is the conjugation of verbs.  The picture above illustrates the two verbs – to want and to come – in three tenses (present, past, and present perfect) for different persons (I, you, he, and etc.).  The variation is mind blowing.  The extensive irregularity across common verbs makes it harder for me to perform pattern memorization.

Besides conjugation of verbs, for this “season”, we have a whole bunch of nouns to memorize (and we have to be able to tell which one is masculine and which one is feminine), a whole bunch of adjectives to memorize (in both masculine and feminine forms), and on top of that, forming sentences and dialogues.  At times, it seems like brutal memorization is the only feasible way to go, for me that is.

Over dinner, I have had some sharing of experience with Cynthia and her mother from Indonesia on how we learned Chinese in Hong Kong, during my time.  There was much brutal memorization on Chinese characters, poems and ancient documents, idioms, and etc.  I remember during examinations, we had to reproduce the entire poems and ancient documents accurately and strictly from our memories.  Looking back, how did we do that?  That was a lot of Chinese writings to memorize, word-by-word.  But we did it just fine back then, most of us.  And as a hobby, believe it or not, I chose to memorize extra pieces of poems that were not in scope.  There is so much wisdom and value compass embedded inside these ancient works.  It is hard to extract them if we don’t internalize them the hard way.

Back to our Spanish examination, it will be this coming Saturday.  Wish us luck!  I have just completed one round of revision and we have tomorrow evening and Saturday morning to do the round 2 and 3.  If all go well, “Season 3” will begin next Tuesday.  I suspect that the difficulty level will ramp up quite a bit.  However, since the entire class is determined to move onto the next level, I guess I just have to see how far I can get.

¡Hasta luego!

Categories
Diary Reflection Whacky Thoughts

32 Weeks Have Passed And I Now Have My To-do List

Recently, I read an entry from one of my friend’s private blog.  It is kind of private because I promise her long time ago that I wouldn’t make a link into her site.  She said, six months have passed and she still doesn’t know what she wants to do.  And she has another six months to figure that out.

That inspires me to think: August is here, what have I done so far?  My friends ask me what happens to my band and I go … erm.  They ask if I still write songs and I go … erm.  What happen to that association?  Do you still paint?  I haven’t seen you for ages, what have you been doing?

Erm.

I update my Facebook status often.  Often on what I plan to do.  I reckon if I write something in public – like in here or in any social networking site – I am committed to something.  And there is a higher chance that something gets done, which is better than always thinking of doing something that never get done.

So from now till December 31, I am committed to do the followings.  All of the followings.  Items one, to seven.

1. Do up my MySpace page and put a song or two inside (est. effort: 40 hrs)

I love my band.  If it was up to me, I would set up a practice or recording session every weekend.  Maybe we shall have a summer break and a Christmas break.  But other than that, we should meet up regularly and jam.  Because I believe that any serious hobby warrants a once a week practice.  Like my Spanish lessons.  The reality is, we meet only once in two months, three months.

And if it was up to me, I would like to do some decent recording and share with the public.  But my [lower] standard is not the same as some of my band mates.  I am a blogger.  I produce contents on a near daily basis.  I am happy to share the demo musical works with my readers regularly.  Keep the engagement going.  To hear some feedback, and to grow.  Especially when that CD quality band recording seems so impossible to attain given our pace.  Time to do some solo works.  More like an incubator of for the band, at my personal turbo pace (everything in life is relative).

2. Finish digitalizing my CD collection (est. effort: 24 hrs)

As of today, I have already digitalized 11,127 music tracks.  Just keep going!  Don’t stop!

3. Clear the photo back log (est. effort: 75 hrs)

I would love to visit the Singapore Zoo and take some pictures but I don’t feel like doing so.  Because I have such a huge back log to clear.  The good news is that I have established some kind of Sunday rhythm to spend some time with the photo processing and categorization work.

4. Properly tag my 1,100+ blog entries (est. effort: 24 hrs)

Tagging is a new concept for me.  I put my entries into fixed categories, year after year.  Recently, I discover that there is something called tagging, alongside with categories.  I may be messy in real life.  But I love structures.  So I will have to go through each entry one by one and tag them nicely.

5. Spanish!  Onto Lower Intermediate and read a Spanish book (est. effort: 24 hrs + ?? hrs)

After 20 lessons of Beginner level, 20 lessons of Elementary level, Cynthia and I are heading to the Lower Intermediate class.  The date is set: August 25th.  But there is a catch.  We have to pass the examination on August 22nd.  That is hard!  Super hard!  I am really not good at the language department.  But I will try.

About that Spanish book … we shall see.

6. Quick recording of all my 158 songs (est. effort: 158 hrs)

Year 1994, I wrote my first song.  I reckon I still remember most if not all my 158 songs.  However, I know one day my memory may fade.  And some of those songs may be lost forever.  Now, that’s sad.  In view of this rather probable rather depressing reality, I have always wanted to record all my work.  It’s not as easy as it sounds.  I tend to spend time rewriting the parts that didn’t work, readjusting the key of the song, and on top of that, being a perfectionist, I wanted to do some decent recording.  That project didn’t last.

So now, I have reset my goal.  I need some quick and dirty recording.  Get it over and done with.  Some sort of documentation.  And then, I can pick ones that I like and do a better job.  Have them posted to MySpace (see point #1) for public sharing.

7. Seek direction on that blogger association I am associated with

I have to find an answer to that question: Where are we heading?  I am looking forward to seeing a new team.  Either way, my 1 year tenure will be up, after this year end.  A toast to all-good-things.

*     *     *     *     *

Wow, a total of 344 hours span over the remaining 20 weeks.  Now you know why I need a more balanced working life.  And unlike some of you, I am not inspired to work that extra hours for the big bucks plus promotion (otherwise, why would you trade more time with the same amount of reward?).  If I can complete all of the above before 2009 ends, I can start 2010 with a much lighter load.

On a separate note, one day I was really excited setting up my N97 as a web server – a future looking solution from Nokia Beta Labs.  What is more interesting is how people react to this ‘concept solution’.  One friend listened with interest and immediately, you can see his mind was working fast and he nodded: this could be useful.  One friend cracked some jokes on the potential applications, kind of similar to my initial dramatic thought that involves a striking long legged spy and her N97 (you can activate the phone’s camera remotely via Internet anywhere in the world amongst other bizarre things you can do).  Another friend, a Nokia non-supporter said: It is kind of pointless eh?

Life is full of pointless little things, I think.  At times I wonder what is the point in spending time with those social networking sites.  Recently, I looked into the periodic table via a free application called “Elements” from the Nokia OVI Store.  Did you know that there is an element called Einsteinium (Es)?  Its existence, from what I read, is pretty pointless.  Named after you-know-who.  To artificially create Einsteinium, first you need to irradiate plutonium-239 inside a nuclear reactor for couple of years.  Then mix the resulting plutonium-242 isotope with aluminum and further irradiate this mixture inside a nuclear reactor for another year or so.  The result is a mixture of Californium and Einsteinium that can be separated.

So, what’s the use of Einsteinium?  It could be pointless to some.  Or as an intermediate step in advancing scientific research to others.  I wonder if it would be safe to drink from a mug made in Einsteinium.

Einsteinium on Nokia app Elements

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Diary

It All Happened So Fast, Fireworks Over My Head (Working Title: Happy Birthday Singapore)

“You shouldn’t push yourself too hard.  You are still recovering,” said TK over MSN.  That particular week, I was resting and working from home most of the time.  That particular Saturday, my friend Mark has invited me to accompany him for a photo shooting session.  By the seaside overlooking the floating platform, where the rehearsal of the National Day Parade took place.  I’ve made a promise that as soon as he gets hold of the right gears, we would go for a night shooting.  Mark chose fireworks; and fireworks it was then.

I seldom shot fireworks and I certainly cannot measure myself up to Mark’s enthusiasm.  That day, he reserved a spot for us along the Nicoll Highway 2 to 3 hours before the fireworks took place.  I, on the other hand, turned up half an hour before the fireworks began.  Nearly missed the shot had the traffic jam was any worse.

According to Scott Kelby, I should bring my zoom lens for some tight shots.  If I was shooting fireworks at the Hong Kong Disneyland Resort, it probably would have worked better.  In Singapore, we are pretty close to the action.  So, a zoom lens seems to be a bit too long.  Mark has done a much better job.  Check out his.  I really suck at shooting fireworks.  Like I said to Mark (and he disagrees), each photographer works within a certain set of genres.  I have a lot more patience shooting animals in the dark.  Or even the moon.  And I have better connection with nature’s creations or monuments that stand or will likely to stand the test of time.  My analogy is that I can comfortably write a piece of music in the Alternative Rock genre.  But I don’t think I can ever write a Jazz or Country song.

Below are some of the shots taken on July 25th (Facebook readers please view original post at my website).  It all happened so fast!  3 or 4 minutes was all it took for the 2 settings.  Each setting I reckon was a 1 minute of fireworks display.  When it was all over, Mark asked if I wanted to do it again for the next rehearsal.

Hmmm.  Maybe not.  And for the fireworks lovers, do drop by Hong Kong during the New Year period (Jan 2nd I think), July 1 National Day, or Chinese New Year.  Hong Kong has the mother of all fireworks I have seen so far.

* * * * *

Ahead of my country mates’ entries, which I am sure you will see hundreds and thousands starting in the next 1 or 2 hours’ time, happy birthday Singapore!  I know my accent often confuses people.  And believe it or not, some friends of mine despite this “open secret” of I being a Singaporean still think that I hold a blue IC.  No.  I am pink.  I am very pink.  As pink as my IC can be.

For this National Day, I am thinking of doing something slightly different.  Having lived in Singapore for 14 years and have become a Citizen since 1998, below are the frequently asked questions when I told people that I hold a pink IC.

What happen to your Hong Kong Citizenship?  Do you need to give it away?

First, Hong Kong is not a country.  For those who are born in Hong Kong after WWII and before 1997, we are born as a British Subject.  What it means is that we had the right to reside in the then-British colony called Hong Kong.  That’s about it.  In short, we – or at least how I see it – are born with no country, and no religion.  Was I happy to toss the British Subject status away?  I was indifferent.

Were you running away from 1997?  The return of Hong Kong to China?

Not really.  I didn’t think that with such a strong economic establishment, China would want to tear it apart.  The Basic Law was enacted way before 1997.  While I wasn’t entirely bought into China’s promise on “50 years of life remains as it is (in Hong Kong)”, I saw this return to motherland part of a bigger plan to unify Macau and maybe eventually Taiwan.  So, was I running away from anything?  No.  In retrospect, I think China has done a pretty good job to Hong Kong and Macau so far.  It helps when China is rising, a trend as predicted a decade or two ago.

Ain’t you glad that you don’t need to do National Service?

It’s hard to say.  If I was born and grew up in Singapore, I would just do it like the rest.  But as a first generation immigrant who has passed the age of enlistment, I am not sure if I would be thrilled to do NS (however if I could bring my camera and blog about what I experience …).

But I guess we all do nation building one way or another.  And I always joke to my friends that those 2 years and more of working with the MINDEF as an external consultant shuttling between the military camps is my very own way of doing NS.  Sir, yes sir!

Why Singapore?

I chose this region because I love its diverse cultures.  I chose Singapore as my home because there is no other place I’d rather be living in for long term.  I haven’t lived in Africa or South America yet.  So my view may change.  But for now, I am still happy with that decision I made 11 years ago.

Would you return to Hong Kong or migrate to another country?

Probably not Hong Kong because Cynthia can’t speak Chinese.  And my sister has married my buddy in Singapore, most of my friends are from Singapore, I am pretty much rooted here.

I guess my question is: How long can I afford to live in Singapore?  The other day, I was asking my Singaporean friend how much I need to survive in Singapore.  She tossed me some six-figure numbers judging at my current lifestyle (because I said I want to retire now … ha ha ha) and it was kind of depressing.  Jokes aside, the government’s message is clear: We shall remain as productive for as long as we can.  I read those news of sixty odd seventy odd years old people still happily working.  For me, I don’t think I want to work for money till that age.  I reckon I will have many ways to keep myself productive.  Will I have enough money to live in Singapore looking at the rising cost of living or will I have a much better quality of life elsewhere with the finite amount of savings I have?  I have no clue.  I need to do some serious calculation first.

*     *     *     *     *

It all happens so fast.  Time to celebrate Singapore National Day again.

PS. Because of this National Day entry, my usual Spanish holiday photo entry will possibly be postponed by 1 day (Aug 10).  Thank you for your understanding.

Categories
Diary

I Found It, I Found It! – One Man’s Persistence To Find That One Song

I think Cynthia would be quite proud of me when she reads this entry.

I don’t know how you remember your overseas trips.  Or moments of your life.  Maybe you write journals, maybe you take pictures.  On top of the words and images and the memory living in those who share the moments with you and will one day remind you that ‘you were there’, I remember trips or moments by the music I repeatedly listened to when I was there.  Vividly I can recall where I was when I heard the song “Nobody Knows” or “U Were Meant For Me”.  I have old school mates till today still tease me of the song “Superwoman”.  That song I was used to blast out loud from my room while I was inside the shower room down the corridor.  Every morning.

In Spain, we rented a car.  And inside the car, we listened to the local radio.  You know what radio stations are like.  Some songs you get to hear every day, even a couple of times a day.  And there was this one song that Cynthia and I both like but could not catch who the artist was.  In Spain, we walked.  And one time, that one song was playing on the ground floor, from an old building made of stone, music coming out from an open window.  I was tempted to knock at the window and ask who sings that song.

For the last few weeks, after we returned to Singapore, every now and then I tried to Google the artist.  It was fruitless for I only know one or two words from the song and it’s a common Spanish word.  I tried to listen to the Internet Radio and catch who the artist is.  But my Spanish is very minimal.

So I painstakingly combed through the Spanish chart online.  Combing through all the popular songs that are now playing on air all the way to the beginning of this year.  I play each song from YouTube and memorize who is who.  After a while, I begin to recognize patterns – the pattern of multiple releases by the same artist and the pattern of how songs are moving up and down the chart across the time horizon.  I know the texture of the voice that sings that one song.  And I know that the song I am looking for is still playing in the air so it should be originating from the chart.  Or maybe the artist has recently died and this riddle would be quite hard for me to solve.

And like all good things in life, once you found that something, it seems so easy.  The song is called “El Aleph” by Nena Daconte.  Click here for music and lyrics from YouTube.  Or here for the official video.  I am pretty sure I will buy their album for memory’s sake.

Nena Daconte

External Link: Official Site of Nena Daconte

Categories
Diary Travel Blog

Our Trip Ended In An Amazing Race Style

Day 14: Mallorca – Barcelona – Frankfurt – Singapore

This entry is dedicated to all those who are working thanklessly facing tired and at times hostile travellers every night and day at the airport when things don’t go as planned.  Now that I have had a taste on what’s behind the scene having missed a connecting flight and lost a luggage, I salute you all.  May you see beauty in life and forget those angry faces or voices before the sun rises every morning.

Cynthia and I having tapas on the last day of our holiday in Spain

Mallorca

My initial intention was to publish a day-to-day account of our journey to Spain completed with a special photo collection every Sunday, starting next Sunday.  Then I stare into day 13.  It’s nothing like the rest.  Maybe it is a good idea to document day 13 first with the little photos we took that day.

Our return trip was supposed to be straightforward.  Turn up at the new Barcelona Airport terminal, T1, before 7pm and take the Lufthansa flight to Singapore via Frankfurt.  The day started like every other day, bright and sunny, blue sky and the gentle breeze from the sea or the mountain or the city.

No.  Come to think of it, our day started with some drunk guy or guys yelling and banging doors at our corridor in the wee hours of a resort island where parties go on every night.  We were at the main island Mallorca.  I can’t imagine what Ibiza, the party island right next to Mallorca, is like.

Throughout the trip, we stayed at four-star hotels.  They are not that expensive.  The price ranges from 70€ to 120€ (1€ = S$2) a night.  But Mallorca is special.  The whole island is like a resort for the Europeans, mostly British judging at the menu items displayed.  They even have my favorite Steak and Kidney Pie.  The whole island doesn’t speak much Spanish.  Mostly English.  When we conversed with the locals in Spanish, they were pleasantly surprised.

So we dropped a star and stayed at a three-star hotel in Mallorca because accommodation seems expensive and hard to come by in an island resort that seems to be so popular amongst the Europeans.  There was no air-conditioning, no hairdryer, and no hand soap.  A basic room in a dorm style, long corridors full of rooms, full of young teenagers in beach wears.  Guys in shorts and nothing on top would pass by the hotel lobby and said “What’s up ladies”.  The girls would just toss a “I don’t care” look.  Youngsters at the balconies would yell at the pedestrians calling names and talking rubbish.  You get the picture.  I felt like I was back in school.

We have decided to sleep in and have a relaxing morning.  To pack up and to enjoy the sun.  Our flight from Mallorca to Barcelona via Spanair (Spanish budget airline I think) was at 2pm.  We took a nice drive from the beach town Malaluf, down the highway (there is only one in Mallorca) and into Palma, where the airport is at.  If you read the entire list of flight departure and arrival like I do, you would notice a long list of all the major capitals in Europe.

Barcelona

Not planned to stay at the brand new Terminal 1 for four hours during our transit, I proposed to get out of the airport and have our third attempt to visit the Picasso Museum.  I am a man of determination.  When we first arrived at the doorsteps of the museum, it was closing in less than an hour’s time.  The second time it was closed.  Most museums close on Mondays, so we’ve learned (after which, we dedicated Sunday to be a mindless museum clawing day).  I was thinking of a third time charm.  Let’s go.  It’s Amazing Race time!

There is no train station in Terminal 1, so we took the transit bus to T2 – the terminal where we first landed in Barcelona.  In a hurry, we nearly boarded the bus that was heading into the parking lot instead.  “This bus is heading to a parking lot.  Do you want to get to a parking lot?” asked a black man wearing an airport tag by the bus stop.  “Not really,” I replied.  “Then wait here for the next bus,” he pointed at another bay.  I wonder if his job is to stand at the bus stop prompting travellers not to get into the wrong bus.  Anyway, we chatted and he has a cousin living in Singapore.  “You should visit Singapore one day.  It’s as sunny and warm as Spain and Singapore is a beautiful country,” I said.  “I will, one day,” he replied.  “Take care,” I said to him as we boarded the transit bus.

OK.  The distance between T1 to T2 is nothing like our Changi airport.  It was more like a 10 minutes bus drive!  Once we were in T1, we felt at home.  We took a long walk through the flyover, reached the station, paid 5.60€ for a pair of tickets, and boarded the train.

I reckon the train only departs every 30 minutes, which is a shame.  My hope of stepping into the Picasso Museum dwindled as the clock ticked.  Out of nowhere, while we were waiting for the train to leave the station, a black man appeared with two pieces of luggage, sat opposite to us, and said hi.  I said hi thinking if I should continue to say something meaningful.  He took out his Blackberry and I stopped there.

Out of nowhere, during our train ride, the black man opposite spoke, “Are you a Malaysian?”  “No, I am a Singaporean,” I replied.  “Ah, but you don’t have the lah behind every sentences like the Singaporeans do!”  I thought the Malaysians do too.  OK.  It’s a small world.  He too stays in Singapore and he works at the banking industry like us!  The conversation turned lively.  Before we reached the city center, he looked into yonder and said, “Your bank is doing well.  Unlike mine.  I pray every night that I will still have a job tomorrow.”  I replied, “Well, it’s a global economy.  Even our people are losing their jobs.”  Really, he asked.  Yes really.  Somehow, inside that train, looking at the bright and sunny day outside, the global economy downturn seems to be so far away, seems so … nonexistent.

We ran out of the platform ready to dive into the Metro (underground transport).  I have even memorized how to get to the Picasso Museum.  Looking at the huge clock hanging at the center of the station, we did a time check.  Duh!  We would run out of time.  So I suggested having tapas snack with agua con gas (sparkling water) at the same restaurant we had our first meal in Spain, the same place where the waiter taught us how to order sparkling water in Spanish, and from then on, everywhere we went, we ordered agua con gas.

Tapas y Agua Con Gas

As seen in the picture on top of this post, Cynthia was happily eating Tapas inside a restaurant.  Tapas come in small portion.  Like the one you see in the picture above is diced fresh tomato and cheese soaked in – I think – olive oil.  What you don’t see is another dish we’ve order – chopped octopus and crunchy vegetables also soaked in what appears as olive oil.  Ordering tapas is easy at the bar (which is the cheapest way to eat by the way as you pay more siting at a table and even more siting at a table outside).  Just point at the sushi bar like container (see picture below).

This is what tapas bar looks like

It was a strange feeling retracing day 1 of our trip on the last day of our holiday.  It was as though the holiday never ends.  It just goes into a loop.  And it was a nice feeling.  Still is.

Barcelona Terminal 1

Going back to the terminal was a whole lot faster than getting out of the terminal.  The train departed the moment we dived inside helped.  The transit bus that is timed with the train ‘s arrival at T2 helped too.  In no time we were back inside the airport, shopping.  According to what we’ve read, this new terminal is the largest infrastructure project in Barcelona for the last 20 years!  And I wonder, would centuries later, the future generation turns this huge infrastructure into a tourist spot?  Like the monuments and Cathedrals.  Further I wonder, would what we build today stand the test of time like those made in stone hundreds and thousands of years ago?

Zara (pronounced as Tha-ra by the way) is popular in Spain.  I was crazy over Zara.  Cynthia was infested by my zest over Zara.  And there is, of course, a Zara inside the airport.

Zara at Barcelona Airport

Pretty eh?

I wanted to get rid of all the Euros (bad idea by the way as you later on will see, we didn’t even have enough money to buy water in Frankfurt) so we blew them all inside a gift shop.  We took a tad too long and the departure gate was opened by the time we finished our shopping.  Learned from previous experience that the gate could be far.  And we re-checked the gate number again as the airports in Spain have the tendency to change the gate without public announcement.  At first we were puzzled when we saw a question mark behind the gate number stated on our boarding pass.  Now we know.

Running like mad couple, we arrived at the gate that displayed the Lufthansa logo and the destination Frankfurt.  I almost knocked onto the tall stern looking German at the gate when he said, “Hola, [something in German I reckon], and Good Morning.  This gate opens in a few minutes.”  He reminded me of a Terminator.  I stepped back, looked behind us, and saw many pairs of eyes staring at us, waiting to board the plane.

Awk-ward …

Frankfurt Airport

We hate the airport.  Nearly missed a flight on day 1 as we didn’t anticipate the airport is so darn huge.  On paper, from the time our plane (from Barcelona) scheduled to land to the time our connecting plane’s gate scheduled to open was 15 minutes.  How on earth do people manage to get out of the plane even if it lands on time, run across the long hallway, go through the queue of passport check, and the pretty tight security check in 15 minutes, I have no clue.  Apparently our plane did not depart Barcelona on time.  It was a terrible flight.  On our left, a white gentleman in his forties accidentally knocked over a beer glass and splashed beer onto Cynthia’s jeans.  On our right, a Spanish lady incessantly recited Lonely Planet in English.  She was reading it loud to her friends, page by page.  And they were heading to Borneo.  Where is Borneo I asked Cynthia.  Somewhere in Indonesia she replied.  Respect.

Before our plane landed in Frankfurt Airport, a stewardess announced that those who were heading to Singapore would be re-booked to Bangkok.  Worst still, this national flight would not have a gate for us to get off the plane and instead, we would be shuttled by a bus.

Everyone ran like crazy the moment the bus arrived at the terminal.  I guess there must of lots travellers taking connecting flights.  Flights are so connected, now I know.  Any delay in one flight triggers a whole new set of trouble for the downstream connections.  Mind boggling to even think of the people involved to deal with this day in day out, all the travellers and luggage affected, and the travel insurance claiming process that follows.

We dashed out of the gate expecting that someone from Lufthansa would guide us on our next step.  None.  So we ran and ran, towards the gate that was departing for Singapore.  Hardly a breath I have, I asked Cynthia what the rationale is to run to a gate that would be closed very soon, that our luggage were still in another plane.  “Don’t think, just run,” she said.  This Amazing Race was for real.  We did want to go home as planned.

So I ran, and walked, ran, and walked for what appeared like an eternity.  I really should have physically trained for this trip.  By the time we arrived at the gate, a short stern looking Lufthansa officer told us that we were re-booked to Bangkok based on the ‘next available flight’ policy.  We didn’t want to go to Bangkok and take a Thai Airway to Singapore!  “There must be another option,” I asked in desperation.  “Yes, Singapore Airline.  But it has departed just 1 minute ago,” he shrugged.  Maybe it was German humor but I so didn’t get it.  Resigned to fate, I was looking at him printing two new boarding passes and torn them into pieces.  He printed another pair of boarding passes and again torn them into pieces.  All of a sudden, he slided our old boarding passes to his colleague who was furiously handling similar cases, worn his suit, together with his supervisor, and left his post.  They simply called it a day there and then.

Looking back, I tend to think that he was buying time for us to board the next direct flight with Qantas instead.  I tend to think that all people are good in nature.  While waiting for our surprisingly lengthy paperwork to be completed, we made friend with a Spanish couple and had a chat with an Indonesia family.  And I chatted with those who were left behind.  You would be surprised that some of them would have missed their flight had I not chatted with them.  “You are heading to Bangkok?!  The gate is over there, not here, and it is closing!  Run!”  Looking back, I was quite relax the whole time and cracked a few jokes here and there.  Like how much I love German sausages that even the stern looking German officer couldn’t resist to smile.

So we were issued a voucher to exchange for our boarding passes at the Qantas counter.  Where was it?  A different terminal he said.  Uh-huh.  I shook his hands thanking his help.  He smiled and waved goodbye while our Amazing Race continued.

The Spanish couple and us stuck together.  Picture this: a terminal like a ghost town.  All the gates were closed.  The security officers were packing their bags ready to go home and they didn’t even care if some unauthorized personnel were pacing around the terminal, or sleeping inside the terminal (that thought did cross my mind).  It was as though the moment their official hour was up, they just shut down and go home.  I love that work culture.

The direction was vague and there was no sign directing you from one terminal to another.  Twice we got lost.  We stopped a cleaner for direction.  We stopped a group of three officers heading home for direction.  “It’s a big airport and don’t get lost!” said one with a smile.  We have even found another officer standing inside a dark hall facing the gigantic window and we asked her for direction.  What was she waiting for?  I have no clue.  As I looked through the glass windows while four of us were running inside a dark corridor, I pointed at the moving monorail train outside and said, “Look, we should have taken that instead.”

We reached the Qantas counter and the charming Spanish couple and us continued our lively conversation exchanged contact information.  For a two hours difference between the Lufthansa flight that we were meant to take and the Qantas flight, we thought we had ample amount of time.  The paperwork surprisingly took a long, long time.  And there was a long, long queue.  It was as though this Qantas flight is collecting all the poor souls who have missed their connecting flights.

We barely made it but we did.  Hooray!  And this entry ought to end here.

But it doesn’t.

Singapore Lost and Found

When we stepped into the Lost and Found department at the Singapore Changi airport, someone was screaming at the officer.  Really screaming, calling names short of vulgarity.  He was an European with a foreign accent.  His partner was there too.  The yelling and screaming and the unreasonable demand just went on and on while I was logging a report as one of my three luggage was missing.  I wanted to tell him that these officers have nothing to do with his lost luggage.  I wanted to tell him that I too was tired after a long flight from the other side of the world.  I wanted to tell him to let the officers do their job they best in doing.  I wanted to tell him that in Singapore, you can trust our efficiency and integrity.  I wanted to tell him to stop yelling at my people in my country or feel free to leave my country right now.

But I didn’t.  As I had no idea why he was so angry.  I could guess but that’s not good enough.  Painfully I kept quiet while smiling at the officer who took care of my case and asked, “Do you get this kind of situation often?”  She smiled and said, “Yes, a couple of times a day.”  Wow, I respect them immensely for putting up with some of these unreasonable people on a daily basis.  How do they find the strength to go to work everyday?

We took a taxi with two luggage re-tagged with the “Rush” label to the Qantas flight.  We missed the luggage that we had lost.  Something of high sentimental value was inside.  Something of high monetary value was inside too.

Crashing My Own Gate

“Do you have my key?” asked Cynthia when we were inside the taxi just 1 km from our home.

Oh no!  Both of our set of keys were inside that one lost luggage!  I know what you are thinking.  Well, if not for my crazy third attempt to visit the Picasso Museum, I wouldn’t have checked in that luggage.  My intend was to travel light.  This is an Amazing Race.  Intuitively, I called my sister and my brother-in-law and got a number of a locksmith at my area.  With no disrespect to the locksmith profession, I have this crazy notion that all these locksmiths belong to a thief guild or something like that (too much computer gaming).  Basically, I was calling for help to pick my own locks, to break into my own home.  And these locksmiths work in an interesting network.  I called one and got a number for another locksmith.  I called the new number and got another one.  Finally one arrived to saw my padlock away and pick my front door lock.  It was an eye opening experience to see fire sparkle spraying everywhere as the electric saw met the pad lock.  And how easy it was to pick my front door lock.  For S$70, I was happy that I didn’t need to check into a love motel with Cynthia in Singapore.  It would have been an interesting experience though.

30 hours since I woke up on a Friday morning in Mallorca, I was dead tired.  As a ‘professional’ blogger, I published an entry I drafted on the plane.  Third draft in fact.  I rewrote that three times.  By then, Cynthia was ‘unconscious’ in the bed while I switched on the TV and watched the playback of the F1.  No, Button didn’t win.  What a disappointment.  What a crazy day.

The Next Day

The Airport called and told me that my lost luggage was found and it was on its way via Singapore Airline.  It would be delivered to my doorstep after it has cleared the custom (I love Singapore).  I bought a new padlock and it says: hardened – anti-sawing, anti-picking.  Do I really want one that is … that hard to break?!  And would we still fly Lufthansa or would we pay 50% extra for Singapore Airline direct flight?  Amazing Race is an unique experience that I don’t mind having once in my life.  Just once I hope.

And of course, I would write a letter to Lufthansa commenting on the unrealistic connecting flight timing and the need to upgrade their planes to the Asian standard – one that comes with in-flight entertainment, eye shade, toothbrush, toothpaste, and more.  By the way, Qantas appears to have improved a lot!  And I shall stop here before I turn this entry into the length of a novelette.

Wait, I still want to visit the Picasso Museum one day.  Maybe after we have toured the rest of Spain.  And the loop continues.

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Diary Travel Blog

So We Are Back From Our Spain Holiday Trip

Me and Cynthia Inside A Museum

Every holiday is an unique journey.  Cliche as it sounds, it’s true.  It’s what one takes home from each journey that makes some journeys more memorable than others.  This trip to Spain is probably one of our more adventurous trips so far.  Not that we are a pair of adventurous travellers to start with.  But one that is enough for us to look back and have a good laugh on some of the silly things we did, shocking experiences we have encountered.  And etc.

I took more than 2,200 photos, afterI have deleted 20% of what I took on the fly.  Sometimes I wonder.  If we stitch up all the photos every human being has taken, the same monument taking in millions of different perspectives, along a time scale in continuum, under different lighting conditions, and etc., would that be a fair representation of  our modern history?  Too much Cubism in my head.  Thanks to the unending lineup of museums Spain has to offer.

We hardly plan our holiday to the minute details, like some do.  Not that we are so lazy that we just figure things out at the last minute, the absolute moment some decisions have to be made – though I must admit that there is some element of truth in it – to us, there are so much uncertainties and things that we don’t know about what we have yet to experience.  So, we research on our options such as where to stay, what to do, and we exercise our options as we journey.

So, what have I taken home from this trip?  I think I have got to know myself a bit better, know Cynthia a bit better.  Having some basic command of Spanish – however little it is – certainly makes our trip a lot more interesting.  We manage to decipher some basic words and signs and we learn along the way.  And I think I have lived in this region – unfortunately – long enough to look at the rest of the world with a certain lens, a certain set of assumptions.  It is good to be displaced out of the box during oversea trips, I think.  Keep observing, keep learning.

For those who are curious on what happened after we’ve landed in Barcelona (for we had no clue when we started our holiday), we did a semi-guided city tour and then rented a car to visit Valéncia, Toledo, and Madrid.  Then we ditched the car and did a self-guided tour within the capital of Spain.  Took a budget flight and visited the island resort of Mallorca.  Rented a car and toured around the island in our own pace.  On the way back, we stole some moments and revisited Barcelona again, briefly.  That pretty much sums up what we did.

Stay tuned for more sharing of photos and day-to-day journey.  I intend to publish an article every Sunday.  Hey, it’s good to be back.

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Destination Barcelona – Be Back In 2 Weeks’ Time

Today is such a warm day and I wonder what the weather in Spain will be like.  Cynthia steamed hot buns this morning and we were sweating by the time we finished our breakfast ready to go to work.  Today is also the day that stands between where my routine work takes a pause and my 2 weeks block leave begins.  My 2 weeks block leave!  Frankly speaking, I don’t feel a thing right now.  Probably will be, once we have passed the immigration checkpoint tomorrow evening.  There is something magical about airports.  Travelers, transit passengers, strangers from all around the world, happy to visit a holiday location, sad to leave home for work, happy to return home for whatever reasons, there is this feeling of “point of no return”, “leaving all that behind” which make airports special.  Your loved ones pass that checkpoint and you have no clue when to meet again; the gate is closing and ready or not you have to board the plane now.  Ready or not!  I am having butterflies on my stomach thinking how unprepared I am for this trip to Spain. Not even my close to non-existence Spanish, which by the way I should have been revising hard, would save me.

I have thought long and hard on what to do with this website of mine during my 2 weeks of absence.  Intuitively, almost like a reflect action, I have – believe it or not – planned out what to publish for the month of June.  Three entries a week I have worked out the titles and what the contents will be.  Running a website is like running a magazine, except I don’t have bosses to report to and editors to tell me how badly I write or how I could and should improve.  Like my real work.  Year 2007, I have scheduled 10 entries in an attempt to keep my readers happy while I was away.  However, most who knew that I was away probably assumed that I would give blogging a rest.  When I returned, I chatted with some of my readers and they were surprised that my website kept churning out contents while I was holidaying somewhere away from home.

And through this process of thinking about it while not thinking about it, looking at the lesson learned in the year 2007, maybe it is a good idea to give blogging a rest and truly have a holiday without thinking about what my readers may comment, which I by the way would love to read and response.  That decision has certainly lifted a big task off my back.  I mean, writing 10 blog entries at one go is no easy feat.

So I have decided to write something the way I have always wanted to write: a mind dump.  Almost similar to an author’s note at the back of the book that most people would skip, that I often try to read and gain a certain idea of what the author is like in real life.  Like Piers Anthony, my favorite fantasy writer when I was young.  His books always end with a chapter on his real life chores, what he plans to do, the books in the making, his daughter (I think), amongst other frustration and rewards he gets.  These texts are certainly less entertaining than his stories but I think it is important to know the artist behind the art.  It enhances the art appreciation process.  That’s why I find reading the biography of Pink Floyd intriguing.  That’s why I have become an even more hardcore fan of Marilyn Mansion after watching him being interviewed by Michael Moore in the documentary “Bowling for Columbine”.  Behind the mask of bizarre make-up and shock lyrics is a man of decent intelligence.  Why blame the entertainer for the school shootout just because the shooter was listening to Marilyn Mansion when in the same day, Bush was dropping bombs in the Middle East killing innocents?  So he said.

By and large, I think I am a disciplined blogger.  I write consistently, in terms of timeline and in terms of tones and contents.  Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy reading some of my friends’ blogs that could begin – and possibly end with – I f**king hate myself or today or my work.  That kind of raw emotion, so genuine, so expressive, and so entertaining in a weird sense.  Such class that I don’t have, that I wish to have.  If I was to write on that free form, self expressive genre, it could possibly be one of the most depressing thing you would read online.  Not all have that class.  Those who have are a joy to read.  Not only from the entertainment point of view, but also to genuinely care of that someone who may have gone through a not so great day, or a not so great episode in life.

Maybe it is also because negativity does not dwell on me or grow on me for long.  I could think of a thousand words entry on “I get burned for caring too much” – a would have been suited title for today – but as soon as my thought solidifies into words, the thought dissipates and there are no more words.  I am a disciplined blogger because by and large I have a certain pattern to follow, however diverse the topics it may seem.  There is a soft word limit of 400.  And there is a harder word limit of 500 except key reviews that can run into 1,500 words.  Why 400?  I reckon typical readers only have a minute or so or less to spend on any one particular site so if I could, I would write my entries with a 200 words or less.  But I can’t.  I am a long winded boring guy.  I am not good at being concise.  That’s why I enjoy writing this entry right now.  Because I have made a point not to impose any word limit for this I-am-going-for-a-holiday-and-see-you-in-2-weeks-time entry.

In real life, I see being disciplined pays off.  Like Formula One, boring as it may seem (as I do know viewers who enjoy seeing car crash more than anything else), one key success factor of Jenson Button is to have the perfect execution lap after lap, race after race.  Each lap you only gain a fraction of a second.  That’s why in F1, there are over 60 laps to decide a winner.  The time difference between the first and the second car could well be in the region of 6 seconds.  The time difference between the second and third car could even be a lot lesser.  You do the mathematics and tell me how much time the race leader gains per lap against his closest competitor.  Whenever I am frustrated with my daily chores, I would think of Jenson Button, think of Jewel.  Jewel Kilcher’s first album “Pieces of You” went unnoticed when it was first released.  She then toured around the country, sleeping inside the tour bus, in order to reach as many listeners as possible.  One year later, more and more people requested her songs at the radio stations all over Amercia.  All of a sudden, her re-release album shot all the way to Billboard #1 and “You Were Meant For Me” seemed to have stayed at the peak for weeks.  Whenever I turned on the car radio back in the training days in US, “You Were Meant For Me” was playing on air.  Hard work and discipline pays off.

In real life, I am neither Jenson Button nor Jewel Kilcher.  In real life, Cynthia and I go through a different daily chore after work.  It is not a chore per se.  Just that at times, there is no instant gratification.  Otherwise, I wouldn’t have classified it that way.  Some young folks may think that massively multi-player online role playing game (MMORPG) is a new concept.  It is not.  In about 2 decades ago, I was into MUD (multi-user dungeon) – a real time virtual world that is text based, that demands your imagination as you navigate around the world.  You press the letter ”˜n’ to go north and then a few line of description of the terrain appears that opens up options for your next course of action.  These days, the concept remains.  But with a more engaging graphical interface.  The experience is a lot more jaw dropping.  Who knows what 2030 will bring?

One friend of mine passed me a potential opportunity to be interviewed by Digital Life (one section of our local newspaper).  I responded the questions but my piece was not featured, which is kind of a relief looking back.  The article doesn’t have the depth that I would have expected.  Do I think that it is a social stigma to be known as a gamer?  I personally don’t see it that way.  But does World of Warcraft make a good business conversation?  I think not.  Paulo Coelho has shared with us an observation in his new book “The Winner Stands Alone”.  He said society will not fix the problem of workaholism.  Because unlike drug addiction, workaholism increases productivity and propels the society forward, at a cost.  Most people, he mentioned, who are putting in a lot of extra hours into their work ignoring other aspects of life, they don’t admit that they are workaholic.  Deep inside, we all know that our partners would like us to have more time with them; deep inside, we all know that we are trading time for money; deep inside, we all know that we have a choice.

So, where do games like World of Warcraft fit in?  It doesn’t increase productivity for sure.  Neither are the hours you sit in front of your television.  Some are able to moderate the time in gaming, some are not.  Is being a gamer a social stigma?  For your information, there are studies that reveal the positive effects of gaming.  For your information, gamers who shoot good guys or bad guys, monsters or zombies in the virtual worlds do not go around gunning down everyone in the neighborhood.  But like Paulo Coelho said, people are more interested in news rather than information.  Positive effects of gaming don’t make good news pieces.  That couple who left their baby at home dead because they were playing World of Warcraft inside an Internet café makes great news item.  Divorced fathers being able to keep in touch with their children inside the virtual world and be part of their childhood doesn’t make good story.  Negative behaviors spawned from within the game does.

According to PC Gamer magazine (March edition 2009), there are currently 11 million World of Warcraft subscribers.  Each subscriber pays USD 15 per month to play.  The total running cost since 2004 is USD 200 million.  That may sound a lot but having a monthly revenue of USD 165 million only based on monthly subscription excluding merchandise and additional services, I reckon this game is a commercial success in a phenomenon scale.  On the day when the latest expansion was out, 1,944 copies (USD 40 each) were sold every minute.

Cynthia and I have been progressing pretty well in the World of Warcraft.  Successful is probably a wrong choice of word.  To be meaningful in the game, it is not only about mastering the game mechanism, which on its own, it is mathematically complex (click here if you are curious and don’t miss the graphs towards the bottom of the page).  It requires you to have a grasp on economy (everyone in the game knows that we need to transform time and effort into virtual currency).  It requires you to build a good network for the collaboration effort within the game.  It requires you to do virtual daily chores and above all, a deep knowledge on the vast game content.  Some are fun, some are just repetitive.  But the carrot is always there at the end of the stick.  As of today, both Cynthia and my characters are riding a dragon or two, getting exalted in a good number of fractions, almost epically geared, tearing heroic dungeons one after another, and we do it day in, day out.

Potential social stigma aside, both Cynthia and I as a result of that game spend much time together, almost every evening (with moderation).  We laughed at each other, screamed at each other, sitting right next to each other on different computers.  Think of it like a nightly basketball game with your partner, or a nightly game of bridge.  We now have our own private jokes and references whenever we talk about something, something even as trivial as our holiday planning.

High level holiday planning I meant.  We know we will be landing in Barcelona.  We know where we will stay for the first three nights.  What’s after?  I will tell you when we are back in two weeks’ time.  Have a good one.

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Diary

A Roach Beheaded

~ Lift ~

You know what it is like when you come face to face with a reality that is so absurd, so out of what you have experienced thus far and you ponder upon the numerous possibilities, for many days and years, in an attempt to seek out the truth.  But the truth is it could be due to something so very obvious, like I finally discovered why I am getting electric shock while playing guitar; or in the absence of an imminent repetitive pattern, it would simply remain as a mystery.  Like that one morning I woke up, I discovered a dead roach beheaded on my kitchen floor.

I don’t sleepwalk; I flee when I see roaches; and I kill them with my can of insecticide spray.  I don’t execute roaches, like that one aunt I knew who would pick up a huge live roach with her bare hand, over the toilet bowl she would tear it into two pieces swiftly and flush the parts down.  That decades old image has lived with me for ages.  And dare I say, for many years to come.

Monday morning started as uneventful as ever till I saw a dead roach on the floor, while I was boiling water for our coffee.  First I felt relieved.  Because it was dead.  Then I noticed something bizarre.  Its head was separated from its body for a good distance, both upside down, covered with ants.  What could possibly behead the roach?  Do roaches get into fight and tear each other’s heads off? Was it attacked by a home lizard?  Or was it disassembled by the ants for easy transportation?  Did It fall down from the ceiling and broke its neck, literally so much so that its head fell off?

A dead beheaded roach that set my imagination ran wild.

When Cynthia stepped into the kitchen, for her cup of coffee, while I was ironing my shirt, I shared with her my bizarre observation.  “It was roach vampire,” she said casually.  “Like a vamp-roach?” I exclaimed.  “Like in the movie Blood, its head got exploded by a vampire hunter,” she replied calmly as she carried her breakfast leaving the kitchen and headed to the living room ready to start the day with today’s paper.  The visual image and the countless possibilities that overcharged my brain didn’t seem to bother her.

“Did you throw it away?” Cynthia asked with her eyes and thought glued to today’s paper.  “Yes, both the head and the body,” I replied as I dipped deeper into my pool of imagination on the endless possibility of a roach beheaded.

Could it be …