one week
29/06/2007
It’s been a week. I still think about her in my downtime. It still gets to me.
I’m trying to pack, but I hate it. Efficient moving requires a discipline I don’t have. I carry too much baggage in my life. And I remember each time I pack. I know I should throw everything out. I just can’t bring myself to. I need to complete shipping the boxes by tomorrow. I think it’s going to be another 3 for me. It’s mostly documents and clothes at this point.
I wish I didn’t have to do this.
the longest day in the year
21/06/2007
Happy Longest Day of the Year.
Chinese folk celebrate the Winter Solstice – Dong Zhi 冬至 – by eating glutinous riceballs in sweet (or savoury) soup, but hey, there’s the flipside Xia Zhi 夏至 as well that often goes uncelebrated.
Perhaps I should have some of that ice-cream with little riceballs on them to celebrate. They now have an outlet that sells that at Great World City. Interestingly enough, there are now 4 coffee joints there – Spinelli, Mac Cafe, Coffee Bean and now Starbucks. They all serve crap tea.
Longest day or not, it’s another day. We should all be happy.
limitations
19/06/2007
I had a rough couple of days. I’m nowhere near packing. I’ve not bought my air tickets. The ticket prices so far, look exhorbitant. I’ve been watching a Japanese comedy about a policeman who solves old cases, but it ran out of subtitles in Season 2. I think I’m coming down with something
Then big news breaks over the Big Why, and for a while, things are ok again. Mostly for comic relief. A side of me thinks that this is good news, the company is a reflection of the guy right at the top, and since things have been a whole lot more complicated than they should be, a change would be nice. It’s nice that Jerry’s stepping into the role. I hope things change for the better for them.
sweltering!
15/06/2007
It’s sweltering today. I almost forgot what it’s like to sweat so profusely (cos I stopped going to the gym)! But it’s hot hot hot!
I went back to the office to drop some stuff off and pick some stuff up. And while I deliberately refused to say goodbye before – to anyone, to the place, to my friends, in my mind – today felt like it. Nothing says goodbye better than packed boxes and empty desks. They’re moving to new premises next week. Part of me is sad that I won’t be a part of the new office, and I can’t saunter in and out as I please like it was my home.
Perhaps it’s a nicer feeling looking back on something than actually living through it. At least I’ll look back fondly and I’ll remember the fun times, without having to live through the now-times.
i think i overdid it this time
14/06/2007
I’m trying to make soup. My mom makes these mean soups, and they all seem to require something too troublesome or another – radish, dried cuttlefish, lotus root, etc. My favourite, is a simple recipe.
Potatoes. Carrots. Large white onion(s). Tomato. Chunked. Pepper crushed. Meat. Put in crock pot. Fill pot with water. Leave to stew for a couple hours. Add salt. Done.
Usually I use 3 potatoes. 3 carrots. one onion. 500g meat. But I like even numbers better.
So today we have 4 potatoes. 4 carrots. 2 onions. 800g meat. Added the pepper in twice, one below and once on top.
Now the 2 litre crockpot is overflowing. I haven’t even added my two tomatoes yet.
If you intend to try this recipe: the potatoes matter. Russett Burbank Potatoes are powdery and will disintegrate into your soup somewhat. But I love the texture and it smells better. Normal local potatoes will hold, but I don’t like that they’re not powdery. Sometimes they get gooey. I hate that.
strange days
14/06/2007
In the last few days I’ve run enough errands to say that the government stat boards have really been a lot more useful than they used to be.
First – the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA). KF is a PR and needs to get a little stamp (re-entry permit) in his passport to allow him to re-enter Singapore and stay freely.
We went to the ICA Building in Lavender, and it’s not a trip I particularly enjoy. The building is usually crowded some of the walkways are terribly narrow (the corridor outside the photo taking and photo copy booth especially) and you HAVE to pass it to get around to the escalator.
However, the last two trips there have been super fast and super efficient. There might be a long queue just to state your business and get directed to the right counter (if you don’t use the automated queue machine and choose to speak with a human), but it’s not a long wait. And the person behind the counter isn’t some mean-assed old civil servant who is just making it past the day, it’s a nice lady who can give you advice on your options.
Next to her there is a board with the kinds of cases they deal with, and your expected waiting time (in minutes). We spoke to the lady, got a queue number and went inside to wait. I expected to wait about ten minutes (based on what the signboard said) but when we got inside to the waiting area our number was already flashing. Behind the counter, a friendly service officer greeted us. The whole process took ten minutes. No strange questions. No suspicious looks. No tongue-clicks, no eye rolling, they accept cashcard and NETS – not cash, and a smile at the end of things. No “come back again”, no wait for a letter in the mail, no “fill in this and present yourself on another day”.
Completely unlike the experience at the US Embassy.
And I thought the process was quick and efficient for citizen services only! The last time I had to go to the ICA was to get a new Identity Card. They sent me a form in the mail, I responded via the website with my updated particulars and photo, a week later they sent me notification that the card was ready and I could collect it. It took me longer to get to the ICA building than it did to collect my card. Again, I hardly waited 5 minutes and the process was pleasant.
It’s really something. I’ve always expected nothing less than the minimum from the civil service but sometimes they move in such mysterious ways. Good job.
It was much the same experience when I headed to the Central Provident Fund (CPF) Building to reset my Singpass. The Singpass is a PIN/password that can be used on stat board website to access personalised services, like my Income Tax returns or my CPF Funds statement. When we got to the second floor (for walk-in enquiries) we were greeted by a nice lady who directed traffic to the right areas. The nice lady helped some folks access terminals (so they could check their CPF balances) or to a counter (if they had specific issues) or in my case, sent me on to Counter 9 (just walk in, no queue number needed) to reset my Singpass.
I went to Counter 9, got verified to be me, and reset my Singpass on the spot. I signed a form, and left the counter. All in three minutes. No wait, no fuss.
I’m really quite impressed with both the ICA and the CPF. Some private sector firms would do nicely for themselves to take a leaf out of their books. When we went United Overseas Bank (UOB) to apply for tokens for internet banking, we didn’t even know there were two separate queues. I don’t even understand why there would need to be 2 lines. What really got me going was:
1) The other over-the-counter transaction line wasn’t visible.
2) It doesn’t make sense to have a queue ticket system (right at the entrance of the bank!) for investment related services and NOT indicate that; and not require a queue ticket system for over the counter services. And why would you have the waiting area of the first stupid queue obscure the view of the other physical queue (where people are standing in line)?
3) How do you expect the user to differentiate between an arbitrary division in labour set by the bank? How do I make the call which line to follow? Shouldn’t I be able to open an account over the counter instead of taking a queue number? And the best part is, they probably won’t bat an eyelid making me queue/wait all over again if I joined the wrong line.
This is why local businesses in Singapore – internet ones included – aren’t very compelling products. Customers/users here are just soft on crap service. Or maybe the market just isn’t large enough for many large businesses in each sector to survive – leaving the customer/user with little choice. But the result is highly uncompetitive businesses. Sure, they invest their money well, the bottom line is looking good, etc. But where it comes down to serving the consumer – they suck badly. Perhaps providing the service isn’t a primary business – last I checked I really wasn’t listening in my banking class and I could be mistaken that they borrow and lend money to people (me, you, consumers, users) for a living – so they don’t have to count on it or make it count, so to speak.
Good service isn’t about having an apologetic bank officer take the blame when someone yells at him about how the layout of the bank was so stupid he/she wasted half an hour waiting for nothing. Service is making it easy for the customer to get what he needs – information, transaction, whatever. The less I have to interact with someone at the bank, the better.
It’s a shame that the private sector doesn’t understand that as well as the public sector. I’d hope for the bank to fail, but for the fact that I use them, and the other 3 (or 2) are complete crap as well, so I hope someone (maybe more than one) there retires soon so that a newer breed of smarts can take over.
it’s a small world afterall
12/06/2007
When I was nine my parents brought us on a family vacation to Europe. It was a pretty big deal in those days, taking a plane and all, and I was told I was very lucky to be able to have taken a plane at the grand old age of nine. Honestly I don’t think I had any idea or gave two hoots about what was going on. All I had to do was tag along and we didn’t have to go home for a whole month! How neat was that?
No one really mentioned how the flight was going to take the life out of us – it was a 27-hour rickety Pakistan Airlines flight with stops in Colombo, Karachi and I-forget-where-else. When we got to Heathrow, we were tired, completely sick of curry and in desperate need of a shower. But as I got off the plane, it seemed as if we landed in another world. It was cool – well, cold, people (including my cousins) spoke like people did on TV, everything seemed to be covered in some kind of haze, and it smelled like bread.
Now flights don’t take 27 hours with multiple stops anymore. Now the planes are new and don’t smell of curry (just jet fuel). I try to feel like I landed in another world each time I land, but the more I visit someplace the less it feels that way. And it doesn’t smell of bread anywhere.
But I can appreciate a good vacation. I just need to psyche myself up for a long one.
2 in a row
12/06/2007
We caught a couple of movies in the last two days. The joys of living next to the cinema.
First up – Ocean’s Thirteen: better than Twelve, but I liked Eleven better. The whole caper flick thing is a little overdone.
Seconds – Pirates 3 At Worlds’ End: lots of fun. Am a little bummed that Chow Yun Fatt’s role was a little miserable and in my view trivial, but the movie on the whole was exactly what movies should be – entertaining.
I’d suggest watching to the very end of the credits for special extra scenes for both movies, although you’d probably do better not believing any of those special scene tidbits I dish.
done, but not complete
11/06/2007
Finally done uploading the pics that matter from our trip to Japan. Unfortunately none of them have been edited, enhanced or corrected (besides rotating them so you don’t sprain something trying to view them).
Went through a full blown “through” phase, with mixed results. What started in Seoul kinda became a bit of an obsession, fueled by the availability of doorways, windows and tunnels.

Also went a little all out with the maple shots, and am still a little fixated on the itty star shaped leaves. Would’ve been lovely in autumn, but I can make do. Put together my favourite maple shots from all over.

This concludes a great holiday. Busy days lie ahead as we frantically try to get our act together and move, but I’m looking forward to a new camera in a new land – nothing like fresh perspective, right?
the thing about life
09/06/2007
We’re back. We touched down a few hours ago, had something to eat (because I refuse to ever eat another plane meal again, I’m usually starving by the time we land anywhere), got home, cleaned up, changed the bedsheets, moisturised properly for once in 10 days and tried to sleep. Unsuccessfully.
The irony. Couldn’t get enough of it on vacation, but when I get home I can’t sleep when it counts. My good hours are supposed to be at 9am. I can’t even wake up then.
Tokyo was magnificent. We finally got to know her a lot better on the last few days, but had to leave just as we were getting familiar – before the contempt set in, which I appreciate. We’ll always look back on this trip and remember having a fantastic time.
I think it was a good break, now that we’re back to reality we probably have to get a move on things, but that’s life right? No rest for the wicked.












