Holidays~

At 4:42 PM on Sunday, May 17, 2009

And the exams are over, the driving test is next thursday (wish me luck!)and I'm going to London on the 8th of June. 

SWEEEEET~~~~

Meanwhile, I'm enjoying my freedom and have been slacking pretty much. I think staying at home doing nothing for once actually does feel pretty good. But, with all the new applications on Facebook--Hell's Kitchen, Restaurant City, Mousehunt.... I've been pretty much glued to the computer screen panicking over the stupid waiters/cooks, kept on my toes by Gordon Ramsay's remarks and time limit, and neurotically checking every 15 minutes to see if I can click the hunter's horn on Mousehunt. 

Sigh. 

But since I'll be going over to UK, I thought maybe I can do a mini spree for friends or maybe even extend it to the public. Need to add money into the bank account, especially after forking out so much for the trip. -.-" So, Longchamp anyone? :) If you guys are interested, I would come up with prices and a list of the bags. 

And last but not least, a video for you all to enjoy. I thought it was pretty hilarious. :)

Love,
abelyn

Lessons Learnt

At 10:44 PM on Saturday, April 25, 2009

And so while the heat turns us into puddles of water, I've now cooped myself up in my airconditioned room. The heat is really pissing me off, seeing that I'm starting to develop itchy spots on my arms. Urgh. Disgusting really, and damn itchy. No idea what they are, just that they are irritating the hell out of me. And that to have to study and suffer the heat at the same time, is pushing my patience really. My last paper will be on Tuesday, and LondonBoy has returned to London to complete his exams as well. So life will be rather quiet for me I guess. Having him with him for the past 4 weeks was a blessing in itself and I really enjoyed myself. You guys can check out FB photos for yourself I'm sure. Haha. 

But I guess the meeting and the separation taught me several things. 

  1. To enjoy the simple things in life.
  2. Not to take those simple pleasures for granted.
  3. To appreciate those around you, and thank them for their efforts.

As human beings, we often take things for granted, be it those closest to us, or possessions which would mean alot more to others but we just chuck aside. With the limited amount of time spent with LondonBoy, I treasure every moment that we had together, although 90% of the time we spent together was to do one of our most favourite activities ever--mugging. Haha. But I guess the knowledge that the amount of time we had to be with each other was limited, meant that we both knew how precious time was, and how much more the time we spent together was to be treasured. Minor things such as being able to hold hands, to see each other in the flesh, or to reach out and feel the other, meant a whole lot more in this relationship than the others that I've been through. And I guess I've matured in some sense as well. (I hope)

And well, a little 'thank you' wouldn't hurt. Sometimes saying our gratitude means alot more than just assuming that the other person knows. But we rarely realise that, probably because we've always taken those around us for granted. But telling someone a simple 'thank you' means alot more as it is a almost tangible form of appreciation. The feeling of acknowledgement for hard work done makes others feel good, and well, appreciated.  

So, I've updated, and yes I'm still alive, and so is this blog. And back to studying. Sigh.

Love,
abelyn

Ice Cream

At 3:33 PM on Sunday, April 19, 2009

The heat is driving me nuts. Increasing. Increasing. 
Melting. Liquidifying. Puddle of Abelyn.

I want an Ice Cream Maker. I want to MAKE ice cream to eat. 

I want to do things that I shouldn't be doing since my exams start tomorrow. 

I want. I want. 


Sigh.

Love,
abelyn

DEAD

At 4:19 PM on Wednesday, April 15, 2009

I am not only dead, I am braindead. 

I will die. I am dying. I have died.

The Bane of my existence: Lesson Plans.

Excuse this emo post. SIGH.

Love,
abelyn

Crave

At 10:37 AM on Friday, April 10, 2009

And then, I came upon something else that I like. Sigh. Sometimes I think inspiration strikes me at the weirdest times. Like now, when I'm supposed to be completing my work that is due very VERY soon. zzz.

Anyway, the work is called "Crave" by Sarah Kane, an English Playwright. Her play deals with themes of redemptive love, sexual desire, pain, torture--both physical and psychological--and death. They are characterised by a poetic intensity, pared-down language, exploration of theatrical form and, in her earlier work, the use of extreme and violent stage action. Kane herself, as well as scholars of her work, such as Graham Saunders, identitfy some of her inspirations as expressionist theatre and Jacobean tragedy. Critics, have seen her work as part of a movement that broke away from the naturalistic tendencies of much 20th Century English theatre. [All these, taken from Wikipedia]

-------------------------------

"And I want to play hide-and-seek and give you my clothes and tell you I like your shoes and sit on the steps while you take a bath and massage your neck and kiss your feet and hold your hand and go for a meal and not mind when you eat my food and meet you at Rudy's and talk about the day and type your letters and carry your boxes and laugh at your paranoia and give you tapes you don't listen to and watch great films and watch terrible films and complain about the radio and take pictures of you when you're sleeping and get up to fetch you coffee and bagels and Danish and go to Florent and drink coffee at midnight and have you steal my cigarettes and never be able to find a match and tell you about the the programme I saw the night before and take you to the eye hospital and not laugh at your jokes and want you in the morning but let you sleep for a while and kiss your back and stroke your skin and tell you how much I love your hair your eyes your lips your neck your breasts your arse your and sit on the steps smoking till your neighbour comes home and sit on the steps smoking till you come home and worry when you're late and be amazed when you're early and give you sunflowers and go to your party and dance till I'm black and be sorry when I'm wrong and happy when you forgive me and look at your photos and wish I'd known you forever and hear your voice in my ear and feel your skin on my skin and get scared when you're angry and your eye has gone red and the other eye blue and your hair to the left and your face oriental and tell you you're gorgeous and hug you when you're anxious and hold you when you hurt and want you when I smell you and offend you when I touch you and whimper when I'm next to you and whimper when I'm not and dribble on your breast and smother you in the night and get cold when you take the blanket and hot when you don't and melt when you smile and dissolve when you laugh and not understand why you think I'm rejecting you when I'm not rejecting you and wonder how you could think I'd ever reject you and wonder who you are but accept you anyway and tell you about the tree angel enchanted forest boy who flew across the ocean because he loved you and write poems for you and wonder why you don't believe me and have a feeling so deep I can't find words for it and want to buy you a kitten I'd get jealous of because it would get more attention than me and keep you in bed when you have to go and cry like a baby when you finally do and get rid of the roaches and buy you presents you don't want and take them away again and ask you to marry me and you say no again but keep on asking because though you think I don't mean it I do always have from the first time I asked you and wander the city thinking it's empty without you and want want you want and think I'm losing myself but know I'm safe with you and tell you the worst of me and try to give you the best of me because you don't deserve any less and answer your questions when I'd rather not and tell you the truth when I really dont' want to and try to be honest because I know you prefer it and think it's all over but hang on in for just ten more minutes before you throw me out of your life and forget who I am and try to get closer to you because it's a beautiful learning to know you and well worth the effort and speak German to you badly and Hebrew to you worse and make love with you at three in the morning and somehow somehow somehow communicate some of the overwhelming undying overpowering unconditional all-encompassing heart-enriching mind-expanding on-going never-ending love I have for you."

--------------------------

Isn't it beautiful?

Love,
abelyn

Kurt Vonnegut

At 6:42 PM on Thursday, April 09, 2009

Cold Turkey

By KURT VONNEGUT

Many years ago, I was so innocent I still considered it possible that we could become the humane and reasonable America so many members of my generation used to dream of. We dreamed of such an America during the Great Depression, when there were no jobs. And then we fought and often died for that dream during the Second World War, when there was no peace.

But I know now that there is not a chance in hell of America’s becoming humane and reasonable. Because power corrupts us, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Human beings are chimpanzees who get crazy drunk on power. By saying that our leaders are power-drunk chimpanzees, am I in danger of wrecking the morale of our soldiers fighting and dying in the Middle East? Their morale, like so many bodies, is already shot to pieces. They are being treated, as I never was, like toys a rich kid got for Christmas.

————————————-

When you get to my age, if you get to my age, which is 81, and if you have reproduced, you will find yourself asking your own children, who are themselves middle-aged, what life is all about. I have seven kids, four of them adopted.

Many of you reading this are probably the same age as my grandchildren. They, like you, are being royally shafted and lied to by our Baby Boomer corporations and government.

I put my big question about life to my biological son Mark. Mark is a pediatrician, and author of a memoir, The Eden Express. It is about his crackup, straightjacket and padded cell stuff, from which he recovered sufficiently to graduate from Harvard Medical School.

Dr. Vonnegut said this to his doddering old dad: “Father, we are here to help each other get through this thing, whatever it is.” So I pass that on to you. Write it down, and put it in your computer, so you can forget it.

I have to say that’s a pretty good sound bite, almost as good as, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.” A lot of people think Jesus said that, because it is so much the sort of thing Jesus liked to say. But it was actually said by Confucius, a Chinese philosopher, 500 years before there was that greatest and most humane of human beings, named Jesus Christ.

The Chinese also gave us, via Marco Polo, pasta and the formula for gunpowder. The Chinese were so dumb they only used gunpowder for fireworks. And everybody was so dumb back then that nobody in either hemisphere even knew that there was another one.

But back to people, like Confucius and Jesus and my son the doctor, Mark, who’ve said how we could behave more humanely, and maybe make the world a less painful place. One of my favorites is Eugene Debs, from Terre Haute in my native state of Indiana. Get a load of this:

Eugene Debs, who died back in 1926, when I was only 4, ran 5 times as the Socialist Party candidate for president, winning 900,000 votes, 6 percent of the popular vote, in 1912, if you can imagine such a ballot. He had this to say while campaigning:

As long as there is a lower class, I am in it.
As long as there is a criminal element, I’m of it. 
As long as there is a soul in prison, I am not free.

Doesn’t anything socialistic make you want to throw up? Like great public schools or health insurance for all?

How about Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount, the Beatitudes?

Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the Earth.

Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.

Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God. …

And so on.

Not exactly planks in a Republican platform. Not exactly Donald Rumsfeld or Dick Cheney stuff.

For some reason, the most vocal Christians among us never mention the Beatitudes. But, often with tears in their eyes, they demand that the Ten Commandments be posted in public buildings. And of course that’s Moses, not Jesus. I haven’t heard one of them demand that the Sermon on the Mount, the Beatitudes, be posted anywhere.

“Blessed are the merciful” in a courtroom? “Blessed are the peacemakers” in the Pentagon? Give me a break!

————————————-

There is a tragic flaw in our precious Constitution, and I don’t know what can be done to fix it. This is it: Only nut cases want to be president.

But, when you stop to think about it, only a nut case would want to be a human being, if he or she had a choice. Such treacherous, untrustworthy, lying and greedy animals we are!

I was born a human being in 1922 A.D. What does “A.D.” signify? That commemorates an inmate of this lunatic asylum we call Earth who was nailed to a wooden cross by a bunch of other inmates. With him still conscious, they hammered spikes through his wrists and insteps, and into the wood. Then they set the cross upright, so he dangled up there where even the shortest person in the crowd could see him writhing this way and that.

Can you imagine people doing such a thing to a person?

No problem. That’s entertainment. Ask the devout Roman Catholic Mel Gibson, who, as an act of piety, has just made a fortune with a movie about how Jesus was tortured. Never mind what Jesus said.

During the reign of King Henry the Eighth, founder of the Church of England, he had a counterfeiter boiled alive in public. Show biz again.

Mel Gibson’s next movie should be The Counterfeiter. Box office records will again be broken.

One of the few good things about modern times: If you die horribly on television, you will not have died in vain. You will have entertained us.

————————————-

And what did the great British historian Edward Gibbon, 1737-1794 A.D., have to say about the human record so far? He said, “History is indeed little more than the register of the crimes, follies and misfortunes of mankind.”

The same can be said about this morning’s edition of the New York Times.

The French-Algerian writer Albert Camus, who won a Nobel Prize for Literature in 1957, wrote, “There is but one truly serious philosophical problem, and that is suicide.”

So there’s another barrel of laughs from literature. Camus died in an automobile accident. His dates? 1913-1960 A.D.

Listen. All great literature is about what a bummer it is to be a human being: Moby Dick, Huckleberry Finn, The Red Badge of Courage, the Iliad and the Odyssey, Crime and Punishment, the Bible and The Charge of the Light Brigade.

But I have to say this in defense of humankind: No matter in what era in history, including the Garden of Eden, everybody just got there. And, except for the Garden of Eden, there were already all these crazy games going on, which could make you act crazy, even if you weren’t crazy to begin with. Some of the games that were already going on when you got here were love and hate, liberalism and conservatism, automobiles and credit cards, golf and girls’ basketball.

Even crazier than golf, though, is modern American politics, where, thanks to TV and for the convenience of TV, you can only be one of two kinds of human beings, either a liberal or a conservative.

Actually, this same sort of thing happened to the people of England generations ago, and Sir William Gilbert, of the radical team of Gilbert and Sullivan, wrote these words for a song about it back then:

I often think it’s comical
How nature always does contrive
That every boy and every gal
That’s born into the world alive
Is either a little Liberal
Or else a little Conservative.

Which one are you in this country? It’s practically a law of life that you have to be one or the other? If you aren’t one or the other, you might as well be a doughnut.

If some of you still haven’t decided, I’ll make it easy for you.

If you want to take my guns away from me, and you’re all for murdering fetuses, and love it when homosexuals marry each other, and want to give them kitchen appliances at their showers, and you’re for the poor, you’re a liberal.

If you are against those perversions and for the rich, you’re a conservative.

What could be simpler?

————————————-

My government’s got a war on drugs. But get this: The two most widely abused and addictive and destructive of all substances are both perfectly legal.

One, of course, is ethyl alcohol. And President George W. Bush, no less, and by his own admission, was smashed or tiddley-poo or four sheets to the wind a good deal of the time from when he was 16 until he was 41. When he was 41, he says, Jesus appeared to him and made him knock off the sauce, stop gargling nose paint.

Other drunks have seen pink elephants.

And do you know why I think he is so pissed off at Arabs? They invented algebra. Arabs also invented the numbers we use, including a symbol for nothing, which nobody else had ever had before. You think Arabs are dumb? Try doing long division with Roman numerals.

We’re spreading democracy, are we? Same way European explorers brought Christianity to the Indians, what we now call “Native Americans.”

How ungrateful they were! How ungrateful are the people of Baghdad today.

So let’s give another big tax cut to the super-rich. That’ll teach bin Laden a lesson he won’t soon forget. Hail to the Chief.

That chief and his cohorts have as little to do with Democracy as the Europeans had to do with Christianity. We the people have absolutely no say in whatever they choose to do next. In case you haven’t noticed, they’ve already cleaned out the treasury, passing it out to pals in the war and national security rackets, leaving your generation and the next one with a perfectly enormous debt that you’ll be asked to repay.

Nobody let out a peep when they did that to you, because they have disconnected every burglar alarm in the Constitution: The House, the Senate, the Supreme Court, the FBI, the free press (which, having been embedded, has forsaken the First Amendment) and We the People.

About my own history of foreign substance abuse. I’ve been a coward about heroin and cocaine and LSD and so on, afraid they might put me over the edge. I did smoke a joint of marijuana one time with Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead, just to be sociable. It didn’t seem to do anything to me, one way or the other, so I never did it again. And by the grace of God, or whatever, I am not an alcoholic, largely a matter of genes. I take a couple of drinks now and then, and will do it again tonight. But two is my limit. No problem.

I am of course notoriously hooked on cigarettes. I keep hoping the things will kill me. A fire at one end and a fool at the other.

But I’ll tell you one thing: I once had a high that not even crack cocaine could match. That was when I got my first driver’s license! Look out, world, here comes Kurt Vonnegut.

And my car back then, a Studebaker, as I recall, was powered, as are almost all means of transportation and other machinery today, and electric power plants and furnaces, by the most abused and addictive and destructive drugs of all: fossil fuels.

When you got here, even when I got here, the industrialized world was already hopelessly hooked on fossil fuels, and very soon now there won’t be any more of those. Cold turkey.

Can I tell you the truth? I mean this isn’t like TV news, is it?

Here’s what I think the truth is: We are all addicts of fossil fuels in a state of denial, about to face cold turkey.

And like so many addicts about to face cold turkey, our leaders are now committing violent crimes to get what little is left of what we’re hooked on.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I like this guy :)

Love,
abelyn

Appreciation

At 2:22 PM on Sunday, March 22, 2009

I haven't been posting regularly. I guess it's some lack of inspiration on my part. And blogging about everyday events seem so..mundane I guess. Especially considering the fact that I'm swamped in work. With 6 assignments due in 3 weeks.. Yes. SWAMPED. 

So. We're more or less done with the packing of PA, ready to shift to the new building next week. PA@Kallang holds fond memories. But I guess we'll create new memories at the new site itself. I guess I can see it as something good. With the change in management, a new building probably also represents a new start, a new beginning. Or maybe it's just me reading too much into things. And for YinChow, I'm a literature student, so I can write as "literature-y" as I want. HAH. :)

Ok. So the previous post seemed a little emo. But the good news is that, LondonBoy will be back in A WEEK! wahahahha. I'm obviously super duper excited. Working hard to try to clear most assignments though. Even though he's back to study, and I still have school.. Always look at the bright side of life I guess. Living in optimism sometimes makes life a little less dreary, a little less mundane, a little more exciting. 

Here's a more optimistic post, with a very nice picture I took off LeLove.
The words impacted me quite a bit. I guess the other half means alot more than just being a boyfriend or a girlfriend. But also about being your best friend--the companion who could/might possibly spend the rest of your life with. It's about a lifetime of talking, that could/might possibly disappear. About the little things in life that we all take for granted unknowingly, or sometimes, knowingly. It's about appreciating what we have in our lives. :) Maybe I'm just feeling more contented, more satisfied. And, happier. I guess. :)

Love,
abelyn