Categories
For the Geeks

Online Gaming Is Good For You! (Alternate Title: Troll Dungeons Reloaded)

I cannot think of an activity that works my brain as hard as what computer gaming does to me on a near daily basis.  Don’t get me wrong.  There is nothing wrong with passive activities such as watching TV.  It is good to relax our minds after a long and tiring day of work.  I don’t know what you do for a living.  My job does not require me to make hundreds of decisions a day.  Nor does it require me to exhibit a reasonable level of eye-hand coordination in order to excel . I suppose I could play some team sports.  But if I can’t even get my band to jam regularly, I think team sports are out of the question.

When I play my online game, strings of invisible mathematics formula constantly flash across my head.  I find myself constantly reacting to the thousands of virtual dices rolled behind the scene; dice rolls that define the split second virtual events.  Decisions, decisions, decisions.  I have to pay attention to the timing governed by the game mechanism, be observant of the ever changing environment  I have to pay attention to the spatial movement, as well as the temporal shift.  If that is not demanding enough, I have to keep an eye on how my team members are doing, evaluating our collective performance via statistical reports, and modifying the group strategy based on every piece of information I can possess and process in real time.  During the climactic encounters, my heart would race like a F1 driver’s.  If we fail, our group would analyze the issue, identify the root cause, rectify the strategy, and try again.  If we succeed, we would scream in joy like the footballers who kick the ball into the goal post.  And shortly after, onto the next encounter we push forward.

I don’t have the statistics to support my claim.  But I strongly believe that computer gaming – and more so for online gaming – in moderation can exercise our brains in a positive way.  Making our mind sharper and more alert.  Some of you are keen to know if I have expanded on my previous Cataclysm boss encounter article with the WoW patch 4.1 updates.  Yes, I have!  The two heroic troll dungeons Zul’Aman and Zul’Gurub have been added into the quick reference guide.  Click here to read more.

If you are playing in the Asian evening timeslot and are keen to join us for the heroic runs, my in-game contact information can be found in here.  See you on the fiery side.

Categories
Diary

Sea Devils, And Other Not So Random Stuffs

El rape, in Spanish, can mean a type of fish called monkfish.  I have no idea how ugly it is until I looked it up in Wikipedia.  One classmate from our Spanish class commented that monkfish is a type of anglerfish.  Curiosity or boredom, I am not sure.  But someting drove me into reading up on anglerfish.  At first glance, it is a fish that has a fishing pole attached onto its head to fish other fish.  You could say that it is solely evolution that creates weird species like anglerfish.  I look at the ugly sad face with a pole on top of its head, I am not so sure.  It is one genius design.  But that is not the only reason why I am so fascinated with anglerfish.  According to online materials, when scientists first discovered that all the sea devils – a family of deep sea anglerfish – are female, they were intrigued.  How do the sea devils reproduce?  This is where the story gets juicier.

The male sea devils are 10 time smaller then the female counterparts.  Some are born with a stunted digestive system that prevents them from feeding.  So, the male sea devils need to find the females fast, before they die a natural death.  Who would design such a system?  Nobody knows.  Once they have found the opposite sex, the male sea devil would bite onto the female’s skin with its sharp toothless jaw literally fuse itself onto the female sea devil.  This act of, I would say, love would further fuse their blood vessels.  Soon, the male sea devil becomes a parasite.  Pathologically speaking, there is an English term called atrophy.  For those who are not pathologically sound (neither am I), here is how you can envisage atrophy.  The order is important too.  First, after attaching itself to female sea devil, its brain is gone.  Then its heart, followed by its eyes.  There is a certain sense of melancholy in this sequence of graduate degeneration.  What is left are its balls, solely used as a function of reproduction.  With that, the cycle is complete.  Sea devils as a species have lived for 100 millions years and more.  It is quite an accomplishment given such a bizarre design they are bestowed upon.  Who would want to be born as a baby sea devil boy?  I so would not.

Last Sunday was my birthday.  Traditionally, I take leave on my birthday and have a good eight hours of self-reflection, doing something different.  This year, my birthday is like any other weekend, which is quite refreshing for a change.  I don’t really feel like I have gained a year.  I met my niece (and her parents of course) for lunch at East Coast Park.  She is cute as ever and was a bit moody that day.  So was I.  Cynthia and I did not dine out in the evening because I wanted to catch F1 Silverstone live on TV.

Some say F1 is getting boring this year.  Because we know which driver and which team is likely to win the championship.  In my opinion, that is besides the point.  It is what happens between the first lap and the final lap that makes most of the F1 races interesting to watch.  It is what happens between the first race and the final race that defines the season.  F1 can be full of surprises.  Who would have thought that Alonso would win this year’s F1 Silverstone?  And who would have thought that last year, after fighting all the way up from the second half of the season, Alonso was unable to win the championship?  So close he was.  So very close.

After my tiny achievement in reading a complete Spanish story – albeit how short it is – I have new found courage to read a proper novel in Spanish.  The progress has been painfully slow.  And it is not getting any easier.  At this rate, I may be able to finish reading the story in six months.  This book has a sequel too.  So, provided that I am not getting any saner than I am today, I may be able to finish both before my next birthday.  That would be quite an achievement.

Rumor has it that our band, or what is left of it, will be jamming again this coming National Day.  This give me less than a month to toughen my fingertips for my guitar, tighten my vocal, relearn my songs, and to master a new piece of recording equipment that I have bought since – I reckon – the end of last year.  And I still have this photographic travel journal that will take me at least three months to complete.  It looks as though I have just discovered what needs to be done in 2011, albeit more than half a year late.

Categories
Book Reviews Fiction Linguistic

An Afterthought: El Búho Que No Podía Ulular

Uff.  Finalmente, I have read a story written in Spanish (just yesterday).  Ironically, it is not as Spanish as I would have expected.  It is a story of an owl banished from his own kind and has ended up being lectured by the ghost of Benjamin Franklin together with the rest of the founding fathers of America in ghost forms.  Coincidentally, this entry is published on the US’s Independence Day.  ¡Qué casualidad!

I have always wanted to read stories in Spanish.  Given my level of deficiency (I pondered hard if I shall use ”˜proficiency’), I shall realistically start with Spanish books written for the infants or young teens.  But I have seen too much and my mind has long been corrupted by the earthly vices and spices.  These books are simply not as appetizing.  I cannot even bring myself to read “Hairy Porter”.  Since our classmate is so kind to lend us a Spanish book called “El Búho Que No Podía Ulular”, or in English, “The Owl That Could Not Hoot”, I have decided to give it a go.  I was so determined that I would not publish any entry in my website until I have finished with the book.  This explains why you have not heard from me for quite some time.

Fortunately, this book written by Robert Fischer and Beth Kelly is thin.  And it comes with three stories.  That means, even though I have read one story out of three, I felt as though I have achieved something.  Systematically grinding through the vocabulary and the different verb forms was tedious.  Technology is a double edged sword.  The online resources and offline applications have helped me a great deal in finding what each word or even a sentence means in lightning efficiency.  But I do not find myself making an effort to memorize the meaning and the usage.  I end up looking up the same word again and again.  I suppose if I had a Spanish mama, I could always ask “¿qué significa sonreír?” or “¿qué significa suspirar?”  If I was to invent a new technology to help the Spanish learners, I would create a Japanese lookalike Spanish Nanny Robot.  An attractive one no doubt.  I could ask, “¿Qué significa sonreír?” and she would reply, “It is smile, sweetie”.  Or I could ask, “¿Qué significa suspirar?” and she would reply, “It is sigh, sweetie”.  How cool is that?

Back to the story, it starts with an owl that is unable to hoot.  He can say “why” but he cannot say “who” (the hooting sound of an owl).  Because of that, he is asked to leave the habitat.  Soon, he meets a duck that cannot say “cuac” and instead, he says “cuic”.  The two loners, or rather outliners, have then decided to team up and see what the world has to offer.  Their first mission is to study in a university and become a doctor.  Upon realizing that it would take longer than their lifetime to obtain a medical degree, they have decided to embark a journey of searching for the purpose of life.  This involves interviewing random people on the street and finding out what they do for a living.

The owl that can say “why” naturally does most of the talking.  The duck takes note.  After interviewing hundreds of people, they have come to the conclusion that most people do not like their jobs, yet they do not wish to switch.  They do it for the money and the only time they are happy is when they are not working and on vacation.  The duo further concludes that people are happy when they are spending money.  And they observe that most people do not own what they have.  What then should one do with his or her life in order to be happy?  A typical American story, I suppose.

One day, the owl hears a voice that leads them sneaking into a national museum at night.  Inside a gallery where the portraits of the founding fathers are hung, the owl sees something extraordinary.  All of a sudden, the portraits become empty and the founding fathers have materialized in front of the duo’s eyes (?!).  The ghosts of the founding fathers then lecture the duo on how America was originally founded as a place of equality and freedom and how they are disappointed that the America today is all about making and spending money.  I honestly do not see how this is linked to an owl that cannot hoot and a duck that cannot say “cuac”.  At the end of the story, upon hearing the wisdom of the founding fathers, the owl is enlightened.  And he says, “Libre … es lo que soy”, which means “Free, is what I am”.  Perhaps the moral of the story is that we should not see through the lens of social norms on what we are not capable of doing.  Instead, take the opportunity to break out of the mould and be yourself.  We may stand to gain so much more.

I used to think that I write weird stories.  Those who have read my manuscript for that writing competition would have agreed with me.  But this story is weirder.  If I was to rewrite the story, I would turn this owl that cannot hoot into a hero.  I would bestow some bizarre disasters upon the rest of the owls like the attack of the toxic toads.  And our hero would return to this habitat that rejected him and save the day.  Everyone would worship him and begin to say “why” instead of “who”.  The most beautiful owl in the forest would fall in love with the hero and they would live happily ever after.  Oh, before that.  At the altar, when the priest asks, “Do you take this owl as your lawfully wedded wife?”  Instead of “why?”, our hero would finally able to say “who?”  I think it is darn funny.

Humor aside, there are some good takeaway points from this book that is onto its 40th edition (gasp!).  Below is my favorite.  I too feel that the root of many of our problems today could have been solved by filling our life with love.  That way, we leave no space for fear and hatred.

«Aprendiendo a amarte a ti mismo»’, sonrió Franklin. «Y en la medida en que te ames a ti mismo, podrás amar a tus vecinos, a tus amigos y a todas las demás personas que hay en esta gran nación».

My attempt to translate the above extract is as follows.

“Learning to love yourself,” smiled Franklin. “And as you love yourself, you will love your neighbors, your friends, and the rest of the people in this great nation”.

On a side note, while it is not possible to linguistically memorize what the book teaches, I have noted down all the adverbs that ends with -mente for my future reference: profundamente (profoundly), bruscamente (abruptly), sucesivamente (successively or ”˜y así sucesivamente’, which means ”˜and so on’), detenidamente (carefully), desesperadamente (desperately), fijamente (attentively), rápidamente (quickly), únicamente (solely or only), tristemente (sadly), apresuradamente (hastily), constantemente (constantly), fríamente (coldly), repentinamente (suddenly), tímidamente (timidly), lentamente (slowly), amablemente (amiably), actualmente (nowadays and not actually!), alegremente (happily), completamente (completely).

Categories
Diary My Favorite

I Welcome My MIL With “Teary” Eyes And Other Encounters

Last Saturday I woke up with my right eye red.  I suspect that has something to do with the intense online gaming I had the night before, not entirely sure.  Cynthia and I woke up early on a Saturday morning because her mother was due to arrive in town.  At the airport, while Cynthia was waiting at the meeting point, I looked for a pharmacy to buy some eye drops.  If you were to ask me, eye drops should be sold in bulk.  How often do you wake up in the morning, look for a bottle of eye drops and find that duh, it has expired?  So I grabbed two bottles at the counter and made my way back to the meeting point.  I wish I could lie down and apply eye drops.  Instead, I bent my back backward, tilted my head as far as I could.  Right first, and then left.  It was more misses than hits.  By the time I was done with the exercise, my eyes were soaking wet and my face was in a total mess.  Cynthia was poking fun at me and we had a good laugh role-playing the scenario of long-time-no-see in the airport.  Cued to perfect timing, before I had a chance to clean my face up, my mother-in-law appeared from the gate.  Cynthia greeted her first with a big smile and a hearty hug.  I bettered Cynthia.  I greeted my mother-in-law with a big smile, a hearty hug, and on top of that, with my teary eyes and my tear stained face.  Now, that was embarrassing.

Yesterday’s Spanish homework was to write a joke.  My Spanish is so poor that it itself is a joke.  Nevertheless, it is often the effort that counts.  I used my Saturday story as the material for my Spanish homework.  Before I could reach the punch line, the entire class – our teacher included – laughed out loud.  I wish I was that funny.  Instead of “farmacia” – which means pharmacy – I said “francia”, which means France.  So in my Spanish version, while Cynthia was waiting at the meeting point, I went to France and bought some eye drops.  Consider all things, this farmacia-francia blunder is still not as bad as the guess-which-country exercise we did in class not too long ago.  Each of us was given the spotlight to describe the people of a nation in Spanish and ask the classmates to guess which country the people come from.  I wanted to pick a country whereby her people are not as warm as the Spanish people.  But instead of frío (means cold), I said feo.  “Feo?!” they screamed in disbelief.  “Feo,” I insisted.  To my surprise, no one could make a guess.  As soon as I recalled that “feo” means ugly, I wanted to bury my head deep into the toilet bowl.

One time, Cynthia brought me along for her girls-night-out.  I wanted to decline but since she has been joining my all-guys-events online and offline, it seemed only right that I participate in hers, or some of hers.  To be frank, that evening, I felt strange as the only guy on the table.  My presence had substantially stripped out the depth of what would-have-been a fruitful and detail analysis on men in general.  I wanted to chip in but I would feel bad turning my back on half of the population in this world today.  It is true.  Men, in general, are not that smart.  Our brains may not be in our heads all the time.  But we have a role to play in the propagation of our species.  One girl asked another, “Why did you break up with your boyfriend?”  Filter off all the frustration and confusion, all the emotion and debates, it appears to me that the breakup has something to do with the guy not bonding well with the girl’s family.  That is an inspiring piece of information.  Lucky for me, I love my mother-in-law as much as I love my own.  And I shall remember to bring along eye drops the next time I pick up my mother from the airport so no one could claim that I love my mother-in-law more than my own.

It must be hard to imagine that I am a man of few words, given the fact that I write thousands on a weekly basis.  Last Sunday, Cynthia has handed me a wonderful opportunity of being alone with her mother because of a social appointment of hers.  Well and good, I had this mental picture of having a relaxing Sunday lunch and the restaurant inside the bookstore Borders came to my mind.  I could read a book while my mother-in-law could browse the books as we waited for our food (note: it rhymes!)  The restaurant is still plagued by its signature slow service and if it was not my mother-in-law’s sharp eyes in spotting a 1-for-1 promotion, I would not have known that the restaurant has been rebranded to Robert Timms, an Australian themed restaurant.  Initially, I wanted to order a plate of salad and my mother-in-law, pumpkin lasagna.  Because of this 1-for-1 promotion, I can now pick a main course and my mother-in-law, prawn pasta.  Eat more with less!  I scanned through the menu items.  It read: Stout braised Kangaroo loin, braised crocodile casserole, along with names that I could not even pronounce.  Kangaroo and crocodile meat selling in Singapore? The last time I tried kangaroo meat was when we were in Melbourne.  That was not a pleasant experience.  Kangaroo meat does not taste like chicken (there is a myth that says all unknown meats taste like chicken).  It had no taste.  Cynthia described eating kangaroo meat as “eating shoes”.  I do not disagree.  My mother-in-law was in good spirit and she asked me to try crocodile meat.  If I was still going after her daughter, I would have showed some courage and ordered the braised crocodile casserole in a heartbeat.  Too bad, Cynthia said “I do” close to 12 years ago.  So I ordered half a spring chicken instead.  My mother-in-law was shocked that I could finish up half a chicken on my own.  In Indonesia, half a chicken can feed a family.  The spring chicken dish served at Robert Timms was somewhat cold.  I was not surprised.  Slow service, low food quality, some not too good things never change even when a restaurant changes its name.

My right eye is not that red anymore.  But I still game as hard in the evening.  Some good things never change either.

Categories
Diary Reflection

On A Night Of Insomnia – A Little Diary

Every night, the moment my wife slips out of my embrace is the moment I am briefly woken up, if I am asleep by then.  That happens all the time because living beings do not stay still when sleeping.  Do they?  One time, I observed my dog back in Hong Kong.  I think he dreams.  He would snuggle into a heap of blankets mom and dad have put together, feeling all comfortable on his bed.  Another moment, he would sleepwalk to my dad’s bed, rest his body on the cold hard floor, and closed his eyes falling back to sleep.  Once in a while, he would wake up, walk to the front door, make some scratching sound, growl a bit (someone outside?), and then head back to his corner of the living room, sip some water before returning to his heap of blanket – just like I do.  Not the scratching and growling bit, but the drinking bit, and perhaps the peeing bit.

Cynthia often tells me that I do spring out of the bed at times, make some strange body motions, and speak some random words before heading back to bed.  I often deny such absurd behaviors of mine.  Like she often denies the fact that in extremely rare occasions especially after a long tiring day during our holiday, she is capable of  snoring, however light and gentle, barely inaudibly and certainly adorable her heavy breathing may seem.  Lucky for me, I have once recorded her dreamy symphony.  The next morning, I played the recording back to her.  And we had a good laugh.  She has yet to have caught me doing such weird stuffs on camera.  Hence, for now, such a claim is still a myth.

Fish do not stay still when sleeping.  When I was young, our family was used to have a huge water tank full of gold fish.  I cannot recall if fish sleep with their eyes closed.  I have this fascination with fish inside a fish tank.  Fish mating is one of the most beautiful things to see on earth.  I could stare at fish all day long.  I could trick my fish to kiss my fingers thinking that I was showering them with food.  And when I did shower them with food, some got so excited so much so that they would leap out of the water.  Heck.  My dad’s friend could trick my fish to surface and he would then exhale cigarette smoke onto the eagerly opened mouths of my gold fish.  Then inhaled his cigarette and let go a long slow stream of smoke into the sea of open fish mouths.  Rinse and repeat.  What does nicotine do to fish?  I do not want to know.  Cynthia does not have the same level of fascination.  People say that opposite attracts.  Since I am not a dog lover, I think that makes us even.

Turtles, on the other hand, sleep motionlessly, to my best knowledge.  So motionless that one of them died in my home because none of us remember to feed him with food and water, after his long hibernation.  We were used to keep birds too.  Birds are so active that I am unsure if they ever sleep.  I have seen them dosing off.  That was about it.  I could not tell if a caterpillar sleeps.  It either eats or stops eating.  When I was young, my dad would bring home some caterpillars found at the rooftop of the cinema he worked in.  He would then breed the butterflies using his Japanese doll glass container – a wedding gift of my parents (that Japanese doll to be precise).  It was magical to see a caterpillar turning into a butterfly.  My sister and I would hold the butterflies in our hands and we would release them from our seven-storey tall apartment.

Dogs, fish, turtles, birds, and caterpillars.  Some move during their sleep.  Some I do not know.

Last night, the moment my wife slipped out of my embrace was the moment I was woken up, quite permanently so, at least for that night.  I tried to go back to sleep but I could not.  The noise from the street seemed to have magically amplified, as the time entered deeper into the early morning.  Not a single moment of silence.   I thought of renovating my home with thick soundproof windows; I thought of renovating my home with new cabinets and a fresh layer of paint; I thought of the dust we have to deal with and I have to clean up; I thought of the what, when, how, and soon, it became more tiring trying to sleep.  I thought of moving to a new home that has complete serenity.  But where in Singapore do we have such serenity?  I got out of the bed, retreated to the living room, and now what?  I pictured myself inside a plane, like I was a week ago.  Now what?

I finished reading a book recommended by one of my blogger friends.  The book is about a Jew’s interpretation of the biblical story of Samson.  While as a Catholic, I do not disagree with the author on theological ground, I must say that his interpretation borders on being imaginative at best and far fetched at worst.  Maybe he is right, reading the scripture in his perspective.  Maybe the word ”˜came’ in Hebrew does have a sexual connotation.  Hence when the angel came to Samson’s supposedly barren mother, his mother was in fact impregnated by a stranger.  Maybe the word ”˜grind’ in Hebrew also has a sexual connotation. Hence when the blinded Samson was imprisoned, the locals offered their wives to him hoping that he could perform the miracle of getting them pregnant, treating Samson like a ”˜stud bull’.  Maybe it is also true that when Samson was called to entertain the crowd in the temple, he was asked to perform sex acts.  Who am I to argue with a Jew who reads the bible in Hebrew?

After reading, I tried to sleep again.  But my mind was filled with a film staring Samson in a Eyes Wide Shut style, with my eyes wide opened.  To be honest, I spend more time reading the New Testament than the Old Testament.  To the Christians, Messiah has come.  Old Testament is there to foretell the coming of Christ and Christ is here to fulfill the scripture.  To the Jews, the Messiah has yet to come.  And our New Testament is not at all relevant.  Still, the Jewish author’s interpretation of the story of Samson has kept me awake.  I got out of the sofa, dragged my tired body to the bookshelf in another room, and dug out the Catholic Study Bible.  I read in depth the writing structure of the Old Testament and how the books were organized, the theological value of the Book of Judges (judges are heroes who were significant in the Israel history before the era of the kings), and in particular, the chapters on Samson.  I read the Bible slowly, and in greater detail, including the study notes.  Fortunately the story of Samson is not long . I sought peace in my faith and peace has fallen upon me by four in the morning.

Do you believe in spiritual food?  I felt so refreshed after meditating on the scripture.  One friend of mine once told me that he meditated one hour in the morning every day before going to work.  I used to think that such action would put any sane person to sleep, unless you are a saint.  Come to think of it, maybe spiritual refreshment for the soul works with the body too.  Not during wee hours, for sure. Perhaps during daybreak.

I still could not sleep so I pondered: What would I have done if I was on the plane?  I have got another book to finish.  But the topic is heavy.  It has something to do with psychology and how our brain works.  Cynthia would have switched on the in-flight entertainment.  I took out one of the Blu-ray discs that I have been wanted to watch.  It was a Cantonese movie, a two-hour show.  My reasoning was that I could get bored and tired watching a movie and however little the number of hours left before seven, I could at least catch some.  Besides, I have so many unwatched discs that are no longer funny.  Why do I keep buying when I am unable to consume them in time?

I was wrong.  The movie was engaging, heartwarming and wrenching at the same time.  The movie is called “Break Up Club”.  I bought it during my previous Hong Kong visit because Fiona Sit is staring in it.  It is extremely hard to find good and recent Cantonese movies in Singapore.  I miss my mother tongue immensely.  How the actors behave on screen, all the little quirky movements, the dramatic dialogs, and the facial expressions, they struck my inner core like no other languages do.  I laughed and cried with the actors.  I was more awake every passing minute.  Despite the fact that it is not a perfect film, it perfectly warmed my heart.  And it perfectly failed to put me to sleep.

By six, I retired to the bedroom, where Cynthia was fast asleep.  I might have caught half an hour of nap before the alarm clock rang.  Added to that half an hour of nap before my wife slipping out of my embrace, I had one hour of rest and a bunch of activities in between. Insomnia is a strange experience.  Some time during one to six, I felt as though my consciousness has left my body. Will I be rewarded with a solid eight hours of sleep tonight?  I will have to wait and see.

Categories
Diary

Back From Spain!

¡Hola!  We are back from Spain.  Spain again, you say.  Haven’t we visited Spain like 2 years ago?  True.  But since we have been dipping in and out of the language for three years – the word ‘soaking’ would have been a vast exaggeration – touring Spain thus becomes one of our favorite choices.  Fortunately, there are lots to see in Spain.

“This is Cynthia and I with Gaudí in one of his houses!”

This year, we have visited one of the Canary islands so far off from the inland that could well be part of Africa.  But they are significant enough to be printed onto a 50€ bank note.  We have also visited the southern part of the country where the territories were lost to the Moors – Muslim from North Africa – and were re-conquered by the Spaniards.  Majestic Islamic influenced architecture monuments can still be seen in southern Spain today.  And since we flew directly from Singapore to Barcelona this time, we have spent some time to cover points of interest that we have missed in our last trip.  To my avid readers, after failing to visit the Picasso Museum in Barcelona twice (due to timing) and the Picasso Museum in Paris once (due to renovation), we have better luck this time.  On top of that, we have added 3 more UNESCO World Heritage Sites into our list.

To be totally honest, while I always look forward to a long holiday break, a fragment of me cringed at the physical demand of traveling in Europe.  The planning of itinerary and the logistics of the hotel and car rental booking, the rather long flight time (24 hours to reach Gran Canaria), lugging my rather heavy photography gears, and getting used to left hand manual driving through the narrow roads in the small towns and the mountain areas.  In no less than three counts, we nearly smashed our car onto the stationary cattle and a dashing deer at night.  Having said all of the above, every trip to Europe has always been a rewarding experience – both in the culture and nature departments.  I hope to share the journals and photos soon.  Preferably a faster turnaround time compare to our last trip to France.  Stay tuned.

A blog entry written on a SIA plane a couple of hours prior to landing in Singapore.

Categories
Photography Travel Blog

Corsica Is A Beautiful Island – Our Day 2 Adventure

I have contemplated long and hard if I should pick up the courage, finish up the journal today before heading for a new trip to Spain tomorrow.  It would have been odd to talk about our trip to France when we have already moved onto our next destination.  So I put aside some time today, in the mist of our last minute planning and preparation.  Besides, I have always wanted this post to be featured on top of this website while we are away because unlike some of our previous holidays, I do not plan to release any new materials in our absence.  I hope you enjoy reading this final piece of the journal.

To read more on our adventure to this French island, Corsica, here are the options.

Categories
For the Geeks

So You Need A Cheat Sheet For WoW Cataclysm Heroic Dungeons?

How time flies!  Half a year has passed since the advent of Cataclysm.  In this fantasy universe, something has gone wrong in the core of the world.  Elementals emerge from within causing fire, flooding, earthquake, and lightning in a worldwide scale.  Coincidentally, in our real life, we face similar environmental threats at a global level.  While the earthquake in Japan still fresh in our mind, today, there is a quake in the southeast of Spain.  And we are heading to the south of Spain this weekend.  Maybe we would see Thrall there holding off a maelstrom.  Just like the story in the World of Warcraft.

We hope not.

After half a year of working through the contents in this new expansion, the few of us in the guild feel that we are ready to tackle the heroic dungeons.  Heroic dungeons are hard, that goes without saying.  In the previous expansion, Cynthia and I have tried to enter into a heroic dungeon unprepared, and we were asked to leave, nicely.  After that incident, we have grown to be a more responsible player.  And try not to waste people’s time.  This time round, we have come prepared.  Our guild members have geared up and I have volunteered to create a cheat sheet – or a quick reference guide – on the strategies involved.

To read more, click here.

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Concert

Avril Lavigne Black Star Tour (Singapore) – Yes, We Miss You!

Cued to perfection, as Avril pointed her microphone to the us, ten thousand electrified audience sang in unison, “I miss you!”  And we did it more than once, as she performed “When You’re Gone”.  Yes.  We miss Avril.  The last time she was in Singapore, it was back in 2008.  At the end of the concert, I shared my reflection with Cynthia.  I said, “Every time we go to Avril’s concert, the age of the younger crowd stays the same, but we are getting older!”  It was scary, to be surrounded by so many young people.  The atmosphere was entirely different from the Jolin Tsai concert we have attended merely 2 nights ago.  The crowd for Avril was more international while the crowd for Jolin was more local and many girls dressed up and dolled up to look like Jolin.  On that note, I would say I enjoy looking at the Jolin crowd better.

We were anticipating Avril to be late by one and a half hours, like her previous concert.  Fortunately, she emerged from the stage after half an hour’s wait.  When she did, the crowd was euphoric.  The screaming was so loud that I could not hear what Avril sang or said.  Like her last concert, we booked the seats at the premium area.  Cost us S$165 per ticket but it was money well spent!  The mood was fantastic.  Everyone was on his or her feet and screamed like there was no tomorrow.  The dude beside me attempted to record the entire concert with his e-pony (that’s how the folks in my Spanish study group pronounce that phone made by Apple).  Initially I was apprehensive as in whether or not I should let go my emotion and screamed out loud.  It would be quite bad if he plays back the recording some days later and all he hears is my off-tone screaming.  But then, he was screaming just as loud, singing just as toneless directly into his e-pony.  So I joined him, together with a stadium full of people, we sang each and every song, like an army of true Avril fans.

There were no dancers on stage this time.  And it felt like more of a rock concert.  Avril played the guitar and the piano.  One song, she sat on top of the piano singing “Alice in Wonderland”.  The smoke effect at times was so intense that we could not see anything on stage.  After the song, she coughed a little and joked that she couldn’t see a thing.  That was funny.  And that was also the only time she said something other than “Singapore!”  I wish she would interact the crowd more (like Jolin did).  I wonder if she knows that people in Singapore can actually comprehend English.  Maybe she is not the chatty type.

The concert lasted for about 1 hour and 20 minutes (compares Jolin who performed an extra hour longer).  Especially for those who know nearly every song and every note, time flies.  I hope that Singapore still holds a special place in her heart and she will be back for her next world tour.  For sure, I am grabbing that Black Star Tour video recording when it is out.

Categories
Concert

Jolin Tsai!

It is good to end this two weeks of madness and exhaustion with a bang.  So we were at the Singapore Indoor Stadium, with two of our friends, and we watched Jolin Tsai live.  Quite honestly – and I know a lot of her fans would shake their heads when they read this – I am not very familiar with her music.  People told me that her live performance is good.  And we have two pairs of tickets courtesy of SingTel and Sony Ericsson because we bought two phones from them.  To choose between watching F1 Qualifying and Jolin, I choose Jolin.  To choose between volunteering for the Election Day and Jolin, I also choose Jolin.  Sorry Singapore.  It was a hard decision.

She is good.  She danced and sang, and we were marveled at her energy level.  It was a pop concert and we could not see the band.  Mostly likely, it was a music playback from beginning to end.  Perhaps that was why the crowd seemed lukewarm in the start?  Or maybe in this part of the world, the audiences tend to be more subdued, and less crazy?  She rallied the crowd’s spirit with speeches throughout the show, and she has done a great job.  Cynthia asked what Jolin said.  Jolin was speaking in Mandarin.  And I know Mandarin as good as I know Spanish.  So I made up some stories, with my very limited understanding of Taiwanese Mandarin.  I am a man.  Hearing her spoke has already raised my spirit.  But I guess Cynthia needed the substance within.

On the stage, there was this huge sphere covered with TV panels that at times broadcast various videos, at times broadcast the live performance.  For audiences like us who were seated to the far end of the stadium, that magic sphere beat the two rather tiny TV screens on either side of the stage hands down.  It was functional too.  The middle section could open up like a spaceship, strong beams of light emitting from within (now, that really hurt our eyes), and it shot fireworks to the audiences at the front rows!  Towards the end of the show, Jolin danced underneath the water fountains.  The cameramen must be pretty scared that their equipment would get wet, or a close-up shot of Jolin dancing wet would deem too indecent to the crowd in this part of the world, I do not know.  Only for those at the front rows, the rest of us might have missed at quite a fair bit on climax of the show.

Happy for me, Jolin did some covers for the songs by Madonna, Kylie Minogue, and Lady Gaga.  And she makes strong fashion statements too.  I shall not quote who said this.  One audience close to me gasped when Jolin emerged on the stage with light on her – in this person’s exact word – boobs.  I beg to differ.  Those two rectangular plates of white light were placed slightly above.  At most, I would say, she has laser lit cleavage.  It was totally cool.

On a side note, I think Singapore Indoor Stadium is in need of a major overhaul.  Or perhaps the entire music scene in Singapore is in need of a major boost.  If you have a chance to visit Hong Kong, watch a concert at the Indoor Stadium over there.  The experience is quite a world apart.  And I am comparing the two with what I see in Singapore today and what I remember in Hong Kong two decades ago.