Friday, June 17, 2005

A Day of Museums...

One good thing about summer masquerading as spring is the wonderful sunny weather one gets to appreciate the colorful riot of spring blossoms. Visited the Cloisters on Tuesday and the bountiful flowering gardens are a wonderful sight, set against the glittering East River and green lawns. The peaceful terrace gardens and monasteric exhibits give a sense of calmness… Cloisters is a branch of the Met, a museum that contains bits and pieces of various medieval monasteries and chapels, including 4 different cloisters, private monastery gardens surrounded by covered walkways. The gardens are meticulously kept, the gardeners actually tries to use only medieval plants! After visiting 4 museums on Friday, I rather enjoyed the gardens, flowers in every shade of the rainbow and the textures and scents…

And yes, I did 4 museums on Friday, in one day… Museum of Sex in the morning which was quite an attack of the senses, the Frick Collection in the afternoon, and the Guggenheim, which I visited more for the architecture, and lastly, the Asia Society which was quite a non-entity.

The best stop of the day was the Frick Collection, the collection of one very wealthy man with very good taste set in a beautiful house. The whole style is similar to the Gardner in Boston but even better. Gardner had a cluttered feel to the place somehow, but Frick's collection is extremely well arranged, every room is artfully done in a way that all the paintings and sculptures and design meshed together for a very cohesive feel. I love all the rooms, from the stately living room to the very male library. Esp love the drawing room with the Fragonard paintings, The Progress of Love (very sensual and very sweet) and the Boucher room ( the cherubs are sooo cute!) and his 4 season paintings. The audio guide adds a special personal touch to the paintings.

Other museums visited include the Noguchi with its intimate and Zen garden filled with stone sculptures in various calming shapes and shadows. Also did the Queens Museum of Art for the breathtaking panorama of New York and the Tiffany collection which was small but did include quite a detailed explanations of the various glass used in the Tiffany productions.

Overall, that’s quite a varied museum list… and says a bit of my weird tastes...

entertainment


Went to 3 immensely entertaining shows recently that are worth a mention…

The first isn’t really a show actually, but its one that I really enjoyed. Went to the Sunday Gospel service at a Harlem church, the inspirational singing was really powerful and the way the congregation stand up and join in, singing their hearts out was very moving. The songs were hymns I think, but done in a way that made it seemed alive. There was even a part of the service that had two guys called the Sons of Light doing raps! An awesome show.

The second was at Comedy Cellar, a bar-like place with comedians taking slots on the stage. Its amazing how entertaining the comedians are, the entire thing was very casually done, the comedians just come up to the stage and talk. But their scathing remarks and dry wit simply have me bending over with laughter, I laughed so hard I was in pain at a point! The yummy desserts of truffles pyramid and tiramisiu was definitely a distracting plus.

The third was Broadway under the Stars. A concert at Bryant Park with the Broadway stars delivering songs from various shows. I think the entire New York turned out for the event, you couldn’t find a speck of lawn in Bryant Park that wasn’t taken up by 7pm and the show only starts at 830! Luckily, we were forewarned and came at the ridiculous hour of 6 and managed to grab two chairs and proceeded to sit tight (well, P did leave to get food). It was a cloudy night, so you couldn’t really say we were watching “Broadway’s brightest stars under the stars”, but it was still a great show and an enjoyable experience

Friday, June 10, 2005

a bite of the Big Apple


Finally got the internet connection up and running… It’s the sixth day in the Big Apple and New York is hot! Met a native today that recognized me as a tourist from the Lonely Planet bible in my hands (which P borrowed for me from the local library as I forgotten mine in the half an hour mess of packing I did right before my flight after rushing out the 5 day translation course outline), and he actually apologized for the weather, it’s August-summer- sweltering and seriously seems worse that Singapore! Thank goodness the nights are still relatively cool in our Brooklyn apartment…

But sauna weather aside, it still didn’t deter me from my determination to shop, I must have gotten bitten by the retail bug… went to Soho, East Village, and the Lower East Side and had quite a good haul. I do enjoy the different form of shopping from the malls, popping into individual boutiques, each unique and personal in design and browsing through their collections… stopping to rest with a glass of iced tea in quaint cafes. Esp love East Village with its good collection of vintage stores and cafes. The abundance of sushi restaurant helped as well :p Also went to the Garment District which seemed pretty much catered to wholesalers but I was sidetracked by the Asian stores of Little Korea on the 32nd anyway. However, I did manage to find the tote bag I was looking for, so am very happy :)

Other activities include walking around Brooklyn Heights. Went to Brooklyn Promenade for the incredible view of the Manhattan skyline and harbor with the islands as well as the harbor front park for a marvelous view of the two bridges. Strolled across Brooklyn Bridge, the weather was pretty good that day, sunny but windy so you don’t feel so sticky, and the close up look at the Gothic architecture of the bridge as well as the view you get hiked up above the traffic was worth the trek.

Also went to Chelsea for gallery-hopping today and saw a couple of collections that I liked (minus the whole lot of abstract paint-flinged-onto-canvas and stuffing a mixture of stuff into stockings and piling them up). Esp. liked the one by a French photographer detailing her 92-day trip to Tokyo, counting down to the day she got her heart broke on the very last day. Another gallery had a video clip comprising of a collection of photographs of daily New York scenes superimposed with garish cartoon like splashes of color depicting war scenes of destruction set to the soundtrack of lullabies and a radio report with helicopter noises in the back. It really strikes the heart, esp the familiar scenes of knee deep snow piled in parks and people walking their dogs….there’s a chant inserted somewhere in the soundtrack...”Its never going to end” which seems so true.. as long as there are human beings, there’ll always be war…

Broadway show count is at 4 currently, with Naked Boys Singing on the top of my list. Perhaps I’m just not a big production kind of girl, always do like the smaller budget shows that seem to be more personal somehow and speaks to me in a way…

Friday, May 13, 2005

生病了


生病了。自从实习结束后,我没好好休息,几乎每天都有节目,身体终于开始抗议了。但,也算值得吧,见了许多好久没见的朋友,也看了几部好戏。现在,也该好好休息了。

5月10日,知道自己被派去那间学校了。是间好学校,名誉好,学生优。若我实习前便去那间学校,我应该会很开心。但,现在,经过实习的洗礼后,一切已今非 昔比。想念我的那些坏学生,习惯上课时把目标调到最低,用最简单的语言。习惯每次派下功课,就要花2个星期追回。习惯骂学生时,他们调皮的回嘴。这些,都 不是新学校会有的。不知道,我是否能重新适应这个新的环境。好的学校,要求会更高,又是另一个新的挑战。

那天,学生打来问我被派去那间学校时,说,老师,好啦,好学校,你不用整天骂学生了,不会教到吐血。可说完,他又加上一句,可是那些好学生不会像我们这样逗你笑,你以后会教到很闷的,还是教我们比较好哦。

哈,一针见血的评语。我的学生,其实好聪明的。

a good life...


Lead quite a fulfilling life recently… watched a couple of good shows, and met up with some good friends for clean and simple fun…

Watched Happy on Saturday with some Beida friends. It was a good musical, although highly strung. Came out with an headache from the concentrated tension throughout the play, but it was worth it. DramaBox’s plays never hold back, you either love it or hate it…I really liked the way they potrayed Oscar Wilde, reciting the lines from his letters and the depiction of Salome and the Happy Prince in between..

Sunday was Mother’s Day, spent the day at home with mom and dyed her hair, a simple gift for Mother’s Day… Dad cooked lunch and Lew and I did dinner although mine turned out a disaster. Reminder: Milk is not a good substitute for light cream.

Watched Sommersturn with X on Monday. Loved it, not so much for the gay theme, but for the delicate way they treated the complex feelings of the unrequited love for one’s best friend. Wished they developed more on the feelings of Achim instead of focusing almost solely on Tobi, the fleeting scenes whetted the appetite but did not really satisfy, but it was a wonderful film overall, one of the better films on homosexuals, not to mention the multitude of eye candy available.

Tuesday was mahjong with J and E, and the much laughter aroused from 3 people that do not really know how to play… Laughter over the mistakes and unforgiving remarks… We enjoyed it so much that we played again on Wednesday! We did much better on Wed though, esp E, for one that threw “the green word” despite much warnings to allow a bankrupt win for the first day and claiming not to know the rules, he certainly won enough to warrant being pelted by tiles…

Watched Bonjour Monsieur Shlomi on Wed morn with L and her friend K. One of the sweetest films I’ve watched in a long time, a show about the love one special boy can have for all the people surrounding him, a boy blessed with the weight of the world on his shoulders. The theme is similar to Amelie, but oh so much better. The storyline is amazingly simple, yet amazingly moving. I felt the tears coming on at the end of the film, yet they came with a smile

Thursday was the visit to Nee Soon camp, a visit that turned out to be surprisingly interesting with a chance at live firing of which I actually managed to hit the target all 3 times, ha, so proud of myself. Afternoon was spent with L and Z at the KTV, celebrating Z’s birthday. We sang from 3 to 7, haven’t done KTV for awhile and forgot how much I enjoyed it. We had HK fare for lunch, and I ordered a chicken porridge that was yummilicous, very similar to the one P and I ate in New York! It was so good that I went back and ordered takeaway for dinner.

Good food, Good films, Good fun and most of all… Good friends…

Wednesday, May 04, 2005

点点离愁



在麦当劳给我中三的学生补习。没想到,他们上周五说要补课,竟然是认真的。而且,全班学生竟然来了三分之一,比正式补课还多。尤其,来了几个从来不认真听 课的学生,让人不知该感动还是惊讶,如浩威和伟良。浩威,因为整天被我留堂,我以为我走了,他解脱了,应该能避就避,没想到竟然还会主动出现在我面前。伟 良,因为他自己都有华文补习了,而且,他知道,他若来,就一定会被我“针对”,因为我说过他的成绩最烂。果然,他一来,就被我赶到一边读听写,没读好就不 能动。他听写第一课时,其他同学都围着看,在他竟然写得出第一个词“瑕疵”时还集体喝彩,哈。

约三个小时的补习,直到我们被麦当劳的员工赶,时间飞逝。我的这一群学生,决不肯安安静静的读书的,总是搞一些小动作让我笑,上厕所时前问我可不 可以,还跟我要pass, 埋怨我为什么改测验改得那么严,伟良还为他9分的作文成绩耿耿于怀。这些贫嘴的坏学生,临走前竟然还起立,在麦当劳中大声喊“谢谢罗老师”。平时上课时都 不见他们这么“有心”!存心让我“出名”哦。但,真的很感动。这是最后一堂课了,和这一群让我放不下的学生。

真的很舍不得,结束后,心情很郁闷。打电话给萱,要她陪我吃晚饭。碰巧,她这天心情也很差,吃了晚饭后,两个人都不想回家,便边走边聊。没想到,走着走着,竟然从West Mall 走回我家!

这一天,感触很多。离别的愁绪让人心情好蓝,但,有一个好朋友陪伴,真的很安慰….

Monday, May 02, 2005

Skylight


Watched Skylight by Escape Theatre yesterday at the ArtsHouse. One of the best plays I’ve watched this year, even better than Wi!d Rice’s Boeing Boeing (which I really liked, it was a almost perfect comedy production, the perfect medicine for the stress-filled days of practicum).

Skylight, a intricate script delving deep into the characters of the two main protagonists, which were supposed to represent two different castes I think, but I simply saw them as two individuals, in love but couldn’t accept each other’s ways of thinking. The long conversations and arguments, peppered with sarcasm and filled with emotions was amazingly good and satisfying. Loved the detailed set and the wonderful acting. The last breakfast scene was somehow just perfect, soft lighting bathing the table, answering to the name of the play, Skylight. A window showcasing human emotions…

Another reason why I liked the play so much was because of Kyra’s character as a schoolteacher teaching in one of the worse schools in London, despite that she can actually get a much easier job anywhere else with her qualifications. “As long as you have one student, one student that you focus on making a difference to, that keeps you going.” That so hit the spot…

There was a story somewhere about a taxi driver saying that David Hare’s plays remind him why we go to theatre, and that is to learn. After watching so many plays… Skylight somehow recaptures the reason behind why I go to theatre as well…

Sunday, May 01, 2005

我们的新谣大家唱


今天,慧打来问我要不要去《我们的新谣大家唱》的演唱会。其实,还有作文未改完,却决定放纵自己。 好久好久没有好好出去玩了。每天的日子,都环绕在备课,上课,追作业,留学生,改作业这个圈子中。现在终于解脱了,决定在下学期正式教学前,好好的疯一下。

今晚的演唱会,真得很棒。其实,我对新谣并不十分熟悉,除了几首著名的《邂逅》,《你的倒影》和梁文福的创作外,当晚的歌,许多都是第一次听到的。更有许多是在听到熟悉的旋律后,才想起有这么一首歌。新谣,真的伴我们成长。

很喜欢新谣,喜欢那种清清淡淡的味道,书卷味的歌词。也喜欢演唱会的气氛,露天广场,凉风习习,歌手打扮轻便,只有一个劳苦功高的吉他手伴乐。整个随意中 带温馨。许多首歌,都引起三千多个观众随声附唱,那种感觉,仿佛就像回到校园时,MAF的sing-a-long。许多歌,都勾起校园的回忆,《我们这一 班》,《细水长流》…

新谣,真的是值得我们骄傲的。一个独特与隽永的,属于我们的东西,属于我们的回忆,

混世魔王

8个星期的实习教学,终于结束了。心中有不舍,有解脱。我的那一群混世魔王。就算到最后一分钟,依旧玩世如故。最后一天我的老师安排的补习课,整个中三班 只剩下约十几个学生。哈,剩下的几个在那里说,老师,就我们几个,怎么上课?不然这样啦,你星期三再安排一堂课,反正星期四考试,你今天教,我们也记不 住。你住哪里?我们配合你,去你家最近的麦当劳,你在那里给我们上课。这一群小魔王,真不知道得寸进尺怎么写哦。

我和朋友们谈起我的学生,他们都说我的学生真的很好笑。其实,虽然他们每次搞这种小动作时都弄得我又气又恨,但回想起来,我也忍不住好笑。真的很 舍不得。我三个班。中一班,很贴心的一群小可爱,在我的最后一堂课还给了我一个惊喜,送礼又送卡。还有两个女生亲自写了好窝心的信给我,说他们舍不得我。 让我真的好想哭,他们还拼命说,老师别哭,老师别哭。我中三班呀,就别想会有这么贴心的举动了。三个班中,我最担心的就是这个不爱读书的一班。他们最让我 放心不下。

这一群小魔头,一个个鬼灵精似的,只爱玩爱闹,却不爱读书。每天上课时都是一团糟。无论交作业也好,上课不睡也好,他们都说是给我面子,仿佛如此 我就不该再催作业或留堂了。尤其那几个最坏的学生,我想我会一直记得,我的第一群学生,第一群让我那么头痛的学生。可以想象,当我正式开始教书的时候,就 没那么多空闲时间一个个追着他们留堂做作业了。我呀,也只有在这一群学生身上,才会花那么多时间,所以,他们也算是我最不幸的学生吧!他们让我头疼,却也 带给我许多欢笑,回忆一大堆,五味杂陈。又气又笑地度过了8个星期…

昨天,其中一个发短讯给我,知道我因为这一班而烦心时,叫我别担心,说他认为我是个好老师。发现,当老师的,其实只要学生的肯定,就足够了。其他什么都不重要…

Tuesday, March 15, 2005

Practicum Days...


P reminded me that its been a long time since I updated…and indeed it is. Practicum started and its taking its toll on me (and about everyone else), despite the fact that in reality, I’m only teaching half the load of a full-time teacher. My Sec. 3 students have me at the brink of a migraine every time I think of them. They are a good lot, and I do see their merits, always willing to lend a helping hand and good-natured at times. They are never really defiant and never ever mean. Yet, yet, how on earth do I get them to listen in class and do their work?! Half of them have already given up on their Chinese and another half are angry at being put in the worst Express class and feel they can’t study in such an environment. And all of them have a very low self-esteem. What can I do? With only 6 weeks left with them… what *can* I do?

Still, it’s the holiday week, despite the heavy nie assignments resting on my shoulders. (I can’t concentrate on any other work until I finish this one awful assignment from hell. BUT I can’t concentrate on working on this assignment either!) Lazed around for the first 2 days. Wanted to start work on the 3rd, but only managed to finish a meager amount of readings before succumbing to playing cards with L (who came over to motivate me! but really enjoyed the card games and the company, thanks gal!) Am currently in nie, hoping the studious environment here will help… but still only managed to finish drafting what I’m going to write, still haven’t started writing a single word…

But, I shall remember that this is the holiday week. After two weeks of real time teaching of 7am-530pm stress-filled days with added markings at night, and 6 weeks of the same looming, I’m going to relax, relax, and relax! This is the sunny tropical island of Singapore after all!

P.S.: I’m trying to cultivate a habit of writing down a blessing everyday in an effort to remain positive. Anything will do, from a stranger’s smile to winning the week’s Toto, as long as it made you happy. In the long run, we shall have a daily record of happy memories! And today’s shall be the 1.5 hour lunch of chicken cutlet and chat with a dear friend who is looking a lot better than the last time I saw him :)

Monday, February 14, 2005

又是情人节


又是情人节了。今年,他以狗狗为主题的情人节礼物整整早到了一个星期,害我情人节正天反而跟他嚷着说怎么没收到东西。这个傻蛋。但,真的挺感动的,因为他 花费的心思和时间。如他所说,在一起这么久了,每年的生日,情人节,纪念日,圣诞等等等,都得想新的点子,年过一年,开始江郎才尽,点子越来越难想,每年 的这些特别日子,都快变差事节了。

在一起三年了,一起度过的情人节,生日,却好像只有一次。而且还是没在一起的时候。两地相隔,他说,没关系,只要两颗真心在一起,就能互相取暖。而我觉得呢?节日还好吧,反正就这么一天。难度的,是那些失意寂寞的时候。。。

他的生日要到了,还是快想想,这回又该送些什么。。。

Sunday, February 13, 2005

CNY & 华裔 05


It’s Chinese New Year again, I luckily have a full week of holidays starting for Eve, to Valentine’s… This year, CNY passed by especially quickly and peacefully…only visited 3 houses on the 1st, went to the temple to appease the god of the year and came home to play mahjong, my new obsession of the year :) I seem to really inherit my Dad’s genes…

Visited the Sentosa Flowers on the 2nd to keep Mom happy, I was very unimpressed though, the exhibition displays mostly the same flowers we see around HDBs everyday, there was quantity, but not much quality. Compared to the spring blossoms in Boston and Beijing, the exhibition 真的不怎么样. There was, however, a wonderful display of orchids to hold up the nation’s pride, with a carpet of delicate lavender and pink flowers.

Went to Sim Lim to buy a new laptop on the 3rd, vomited a whole lot of cash for this machine which I’m typing on right now, way more than I wanted to pay for a new notebook. As L said, when I set a cash limit, I tend to spend twice of it. Haiz… when will I ever learn to control my spending?!?!

Had dinner with G on the 4th, and received two great x’mas pressies/trip souvenirs that I really liked, hope he liked the ones I gave as well. Nearly lost my hp, but saved by G’s long legs. L stayed over for the night and we had a fun sleepover the way only girls do, with facial masques and long chats… Love these sleepovers…

Watched 2 华裔plays, 十三角关系 and 今夜女人说相声. I did catch all the punch lines and jokes for Menage a 13, but I certainly don’t understand the riot of laughter it received! The jokes all seem pretty cliché and dead, and paired with somewhat mediocre acting, they only garnered a nod from me…Total Women, however, was a different class all by itself. Was extremely entertained and impressed, with marvelous acting and amazing talent, it was definitely worth the extremely expensive ticket price (which I didn’t pay as I got away with the student concession). The 泼妇骂街 is definitely a classic.

Sunday was spent lazing… finally managed to do a bout of work, plus the weekly gym session… life starts to return to the daily routine… with Practicum at a notorious school looming…

Still, ignore the bad HORRORscope warnings and look forward to the good year ahead!

Monday, January 24, 2005

sunset view of home



Haven't updated for ages... been back in Singapore for 3 weeks, school started, work piled up and life returns to normal... or as normal as it can get anyway :p

P flew back with me and we went out for the number of times I could squeeze in between my nie schedule considering that we didn't want to go out during the weekends and he quite refused to visit me in nie after the first two times, citing that the bus ride was way too long (And he was wondering why I was complaining about the bus ride when I first entered nie!) We watched 4 movies, 1 play and went to the gym during the weekends. Else we simply stayed at home and watched 天龙八部. Haha... sounds quite decadent, P kept asking me why I wasn't doing any work?

We watched Wi!d Rice's Aladdin, quite a wild interpretation of the old tale, Karen Tan was unbelievable as the bad wizard Alabanana (or sth similar). It's the play's last day and at that note, she did an hilarious pantomime of fainting from exhaustion :p The movies we caught was pretty mediocre, the Korean Love so Divine being the run-of-the-mill love story, National Treasure having the traits of Da Vinci but not as fascinating, Aviator didn't quite meet up to expectations, but was still quite a movie. The one I enjoyed most was Phantom of the Opera, the music was amazing, the way it all meshed together to form the story, but P was quite obviously bored halfway into the movie. The ones he enjoyed most was probably the vcds we watched on the last day, 突然发财 and a Chinese mahjong movie starring Andy Lau, both comedies that made him laugh. Poor P, always getting dragged to watch movies with me :p But our weekly exercise regime (gym or badminton) is a good balance, I'm going to keep it up and get the best out from my new running shoes!

That silly git is currently stuck in Detroit as Logan is closed due to the snowstorm. Ha.. gave me quite a shock when he called at 2am with the news, but being groggy with sleep, I simply took down the instructions to email his prof. with the news in the morning before rolling back to bed. This morning, emailing plus the 10 extra mins I took due to a bad stomachache in the toilet cost me the first 10 mins of my presentation despite all the running between the bus stops and the last minute dash to the tutorial room. I was so embarrassed to keep my entire class waiting, and when I was frantically searching for my presentation notes during the 2 mins intro before I have to present, P called! And naturally, with all the rush, I forgot to off my handphone. Imagine, your own handphone ringing during your presentation! The horror! The embarrassment! And in the end, I naturally couldn't find my notes and simply did my presentation the way it was, thank goodness I did it once before in front of my group and it turned out ok and I didn't miss anything.

Haha... welcome home... back to the same sunset view out the balcony...

Thursday, December 30, 2004

Lazy Christmas...


Spent a lazy last week here...Christmas Eve and Christmas was spent mostly lounging in bed, reading, watching movies or playing computer games...we did absolutely naught and didn't venture out of our room except to cook. We did a creamy mushroom sauce with pasta for Christmas Eve and a yummy marinated chicken with noodles for Christmas...

P completed his Prince of Persia and my 仙剑奇侠传, spent many many hours on these...and we finished up our collection of dvds and borrowed two from the front desk too! Its cozy watching dvds in the dark on the bed...we watched Love, Actually on Christmas night, it wasn't really up to expectations, it had a slightly disorganized feel about it somehow... we did The Birdcage to get a different feel for La Cage, Kill Bill 2 which was the only one P really liked with all the action and blood, in fact, he complained why there isn't more blood when Bill was really killed! I finally watched Eternal Sunshine on the Spotless Mind, which was, honestly, a very strange movie, I didn't start liking it until halfway thru...but I really liked the part when it was Joel and Clem's last time together in his mind and she asked what they were going to do, and he answered "Enjoy it"...and we did Sunrise/Sunset because I wanted to watch them with the dialogue and with P...

Naturally, the skies and deities waited until Christmas was over before they were willing to drop a flake of snow...but the snow on the 26th was lovely, fine soft flakes covering Cambridge with a beautiful white powder...I'm glad that P left the car parked outside so when it appeared that the snow wasn't going to stop anytime soon, we had to go out to park the car in the garage... loved walking in such powdery soft snow... its overnight snow, meaning that I get to sink in snow while walking before going home...and I love that..

We had two sinful dessert suppers in our last week... the first at Finale, a desserterie which served exquisitely small but rich desserts, including one called molten hot chocolate that is really pure melting chocolate... the second was at Top of the Hub with a couple of friends tonight, we ordered almost all the desserts on the menu, all on par with Finale with the added benefit of a magnificent night view of Boston's sparkling lights....

We played badminton on Tuesday for about an hour and it felt really good to get off my butt after so many days of lazing in bed! Althou my arms feel all achy now... Also did a short bout of treadmill which hopefully burnt off all the calories I put in after all the rich food I ate recently. Althou they went straight back in with the kfc after the exercise. It felt so refreshing to go out in the cold air after exercise... so very invigorating to breathe in the frosty air, much better than air-con...

Did a lot of shopping on our last day here, taking advantage of the after-X'mas winter clearance sale...poor P, dragged along behind me trying on shoes and pants and whatnot and spending mounds of money, but had a pretty good haul with 4 sets of pants that I've been looking for, and we had a minor miracle this morning, ...two soundtracks that I ordered off Amazon and gave up on arriving before we flew arrived! I was so happy and amazed! I've been checking and re-checking and the track-parcel page was never updated, and today being the last day... I really gave up all hope, only to have P drop the box in my lap after getting the mail in the morning :)

The rest of the day was spent packing... and P also made some minor adjustments to this site...

And tomorrow... its our long voyage home...

Friday, December 24, 2004

Broadway!


And now, the reviews of the four Broadway shows we caught (you'll think I went to New York for Broadway only)

All four shows were good and unique in their own way, but the first show, I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change was definitely the one both P and I liked best, the fact we were seated 1st row center didn't hurt. A show about the trials and tribulations of dating, marriage and growing old together hit close to home for us, we can identify with almost the entire show! From the scene about a guy carrying Macy's bags and singing about waiting, 'We came here for shoes, like she needs more shoes' (P would change the shoes to bags, accessories and god-knows-what-else) to the couple fighting in the car and the line 'I can live with that'. We know what they are singing about, and it made the mirthful show so much more funny and real to us. There was a particular poignant scene about a husband looking at his wife of 30 years across the breakfast table and singing 'Shouldn't I love you less' which especially touched us and the line, "I love you, you're perfect, now change". We look for the person that's perfect for us. and spend the rest of our life changing them....how true... how sad...

42nd Street was tap dance heaven... a show on Broadway about Broadway, the dance steps are amazing and breathtaking.... The story was simple but it really gave us an insight about the world of Broadway......Come and meet those dancing feet... on Forty-Second Street...... This is the musical that...s simply fun, a show that you can let yourself relax and just be drawn in the beat of dancing feet...

Compared to the previous musicals, Rent was definitely not fun... it is raw and angry and pure energy...a story about life in New York City, and not the glitter but the slums...the homeless and the hungry...a tale about how New York treats their tired and poor and their huddled masses yearning to breathe free... the wretched refuse of their teeming shores... I cried when Angel died, I guess it is true; some stories never have happy endings...

La Cage aux Folles wasn't exactly what I expected, the cabaret part of it was outrageous and entertaining, but the story line I wanted to see wasn't as fulfilling as expected... it didn't touch, and seems contrived somehow. The way Albin reacted when told he wasn't to attend his son's wedding seems mechanical and the scene on the sand between two men who shared a 20 year relationship simply didn't have the heart it should... Slightly disappointed, but still, it was good fun and did its job in amusing us.

Overall, I really liked New York, the big, bad city it is, with its glam and mess and throngs of people everywhere...It's a wonderful place to visit and especially exciting and dazzling in December...and it gave us five grand days =)

New York - Last Impressions


The fifth day was quite straightforward and filled with queues... we started off by queuing for tickets to the La Cage aux Folles matinee show at the Times Square TKTS outlet that sells tickets for the day at 50% off. I really wanted to watch this show after reading about it on the Playbill. It didn't take as long as expected and we got the tickets at 1030am for the 2pm show (we started queuing at 930 and they start selling at 10).

Since we have some time to kill but not enough to go anywhere serious... we decided to go to Serendipity 3, we actually attempted this yesterday but the queue was too crazy...but since Serendipity opens at 11, we figured we could get there early and maybe miss the queue... well, we were half right and half wrong... there was a long queue already... but since most of the people left... we only ended up queuing for approx 20 minutes! Well.. Serendipity, filled with jostling people and Tiffany lampshades, was an experience in iconic dining...The food was okay, the frozen hot chocolate was yummy (althou P said it tasted like milo), the menu was interesting...and worth the queue maybe once in a lifetime. I won't go back if I have to queue again...

After the show, we went for dinner at a French restaurant that proves 3 course dining is something you should only do if you have a lot of time to kill...but the crabmeat crepe was delicious...so it was worth the rush we did for our coach back to Boston...which was the worst metro ride we had in our 5 days here... the metro line we wanted apparently didn't exist! And we got on an express line that missed our stop making us have to go back and forth like mice in a tunnel...but we managed to catch a coach just before it left (and thus didn't have to stand outside in the cold waiting), and we made good time home, reaching at the dot of midnight and caught the last T back to home sweet home...ending our eventful 5 days in New York...

The Met.

Walked through the wintry Central Park on our way to the Met on our fourth day. I really like the frosty feel of the park... light snow covering the green lawns, stark tree branches stabbing into the azure skies...lakes frozen over reminding me of Weimin...I just love winter...

The Met was enormous and packed...luckily, I didn't plan to see everything in the first place... concentrated on the American Wing first before cutting through the Asian Wing to see my favorite Monet and the other Impressionists. I liked the American wing and the way they recreated several rooms to show how the people lived in the eras before us... reminded me of the Mark Twain House and the House of Seven Gables I visited before...I liked several of the American paintings too... but I simply fell in love with the Tiffany stained glass windows...they are so stunning... There were several Tiffany vases and a fountain on display as well which are so lovely...

I didn't expect the Met to have such a good collection of Monet! Even better than the Louvre...There was several good pieces of Manet as well as the famous van Gogh Cypresses and a couple other of his works but the Monets really lighted up my day =) Esp since there were several landscapes that I fell in love with, the colors and strokes he used...

Now to the highlight of the day... we went for the $20 dollar lottery tickets for tonight's performance of Rent. They sell the first two rows by lottery about 2 hours before the show, you put your name in at 530, and they draw at 6pm. I crossed my fingers...and I won! I don't think I ever won any lottery in my life! I was sooo happy and excited =)

Since we had 2 hours before the show began, we went to Toys'R'Us flagship store.. apparently the biggest toy store in the world.. complete with a ferris wheel in the store.. haha.. felt like such a kid.. but P and I always love toy stores...

Liberty & Ellis


Day 3 was a cold cold day....so cold that my finger hurt whenever I take them out from my gloves for a few fleeting moments to take pictures. But it didn't look like such a hell-froze-over day! The skies was an unbelievable shade of blue and the sun shone brightly... shows how looks can be deceptive..

We visited the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island, a very fun excursion if you don't take the weather into account. Liberty looks beautiful up close, her green patina shining in the sun; we managed to get one of the free tickets to the observation pedestal, and took quite a number of perfect pictures, including some of the Manhattan skyline. The museum was informative and I find it interesting how the guides emphasized that the statue was a gift from the people of France to the people of America. Before the guide left, he asked us to spend a moment thinking of the people that did not have the freedom to visit the statue and to think about what Liberty really means...

Had very yummy fried chicken and hot chocolate before boarding the ferry for Ellis Island..

I heard so much about Ellis Island before that it's almost surreal to visit this immigration museum... There was a feeling of deja vu when I stepped onto the linoleum floor...you can literally feel the place with its belly full of stories and secrets...so many broken dreams and tightly held hopes... I watched the film but skipped the guide due to time constraint. Somehow, they all seem so commercialized... too entertaining for such a place that tells its own story through the silence of the walls...

Somehow, both islands matched... the sonnet of Lazarus seems to be written for Ellis as much as for Liberty... "Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free"..

Ground Zero was our last stop that day, a big crater with white lights shining...It looks like an ordinary construction site...We went into the World Financial Center to escape the cold, and there was an unexpected good view over the site...Looking around at the luxurious settings of the WFC, and imagining the difference in the view I was looking at a couple of years ago on the night P tutored me in Java... fate has a quirky sense of humor...

We had dinner by the setting sun on Hudson River, a collage of gold and navy amidst the lit skyline...before heading for the Broadway show...

New York - First Impressions


Our New York trip started off quite smoothly, the coach ride was uneventful and punctual, dropping us off in New York's Chinatown precisely at 12 noon. We walked through the bustling Canal Street, giving in to the alluring scent of honey roasted nuts on the way to the T. Our first impression of New York... there are soooo many people! It might have been winter, but the pure body heat emitting from the masses thronging through the weekend market street warms the entire place up...Check-in was smooth sailing too, although we actually only reserved a room for one, they managed to find a double room for us, proving that crossing fingers really works :P

We had lunch at a lovely restaurant with a ornate fireplace, the food was delicious... I had smoked salmon with caviar cream and P had blueberry pancakes... yumm.. Its so cozy to be tucked in a corner with a fireplace enjoying good warm food when its winter...

We did simple things the first day... walked down Times Square and 5th Avenue...visited St. Patrick's Cathedral, Saks and various other department stores...The highlight of the day was Rockefeller Centre with its Christmas Tree and lighted angels...It was just opposite Saks which gave a pretty show with its blue lit snowflakes too...The place was packed but beautiful...New York sparkles in Christmas... all the lights and trees and decorations wherever you go...We walked down Times Square at night to see all the neon lights and billboards coming alive...the heart of New York...

The second day was spent visiting a couple of galleries while walking through SoHo...We headed to Chinatown for lunch. One of the cheapest meal we had for really good food...we had chicken congee and soy sauce chicken, and the congee was done just the way I liked it...

We walked around Chinatown and Little Italy which was all decked up for Christmas, there was even a procession pushing a baby Jesus down to the road while playing Christmas carols! We walked from Little Italy to Greenwich Village and saw a hilarious street performer Joey doing stunts and terrorizing a Korean volunteer at Washington Square...haha.. did a lot of walking today...Night was our first Broadway performance, or actually, off-Broadway in this case. And it was snowing when we got out of the show... soft flakes falling...with neon lights and billboards and Christmas Trees and golden bulbs lighting our way home...Christmas in New York...

Thursday, December 23, 2004

week of fun


P's finals end on Tuesday, thus we had a fun-filled week before heading off to New York for 5 days, in fact, he was so confident of his papers that we watched Hero on the Friday before his exams... (well, what do you expect from a guy that says "I don't need it" to "good luck" before his paper?!)...he saw the trailer when we caught the Manchurian Candidate and was amazed by the graphics. This is my second time on seeing it and I definitely enjoyed it more... the first time I went in looking for a story and was kinda disappointed by the simplistic plot. This time, I sat back and appreciated the cinematic beauty of the show itself and wow-ed along with P

Tuesday and Wednesday was devoted to Ingmar Bergman, a Swedish director that I'm starting to be converted to...The two films were similar in their theme of love, but couldn't be more different otherwise. A Lesson in Love (En lektion i karlek) was a romantic comedy about how a husband plotted to get his wife back after she decided to divorce him over his infidelity. It was humorous starting from the opening scene where the good doctor broke it off with his mistress, the train scene where he flirted with the woman we didn't know was his wife was the highlight. The film was interposed with scenes of the couple's history, how they met and fell in love, and a particularly tender scene of the couple strolling through the forest together, rays of lights shining down between the canopy of trees, she turning back to look at him... there was several good scenes of their tomboyish daughter as well... turning it all into more than a comedy...into a film that made one reflect, how does one fall in and out of love...

Monika (Sommaren med Monika) documents the trials and tribulations of young love, of a very young couple, sharing one lovely summer together, before the wanting nature of Monika and the troubles of life drove the once-so-very-in-love couple apart and destroying their dreams...I loved Harriet Anderson as Monika, but somehow, Lars Ekborg's Harry touched me more, the way he tried so hard to keep their dreams alive... the way he said "at least we had a good summer" before the couple gave up living by themselves and headed for home...the way he kissed Monika before turning away when he discovered her infidelity, the way insisted on taking care of their daughter by himself when Monika left him, the way he stood in front of the shop window after selling all his possessions and recalled the summer they once had together...

We also caught Shear Madness, a hilarious whodunit play on Friday. It was one of the funniest plays I've watched in awhile...P was amazed by the fact that the play had ran for more than 3k shows. We tried to guess the murderer, and thus felt cheated when it was revealed that the murderer of the night actually was decided by the number of votes taken before the last act. But still, it was a fun night out :)

Other notable fun events includes Legal's on Tuesday and JL fulfilling his promise to cook paper-wrapped chicken on Thursday. It took so much work! From chopping the chicken, making the marinade and wrapping the chicken... it took most of the afternoon but it tasted wonderful :) We also went to Minado's for dinner on Thursday, a scrumptious Japanese buffet with free-flowing raw oysters and sashimi and a wide array of other dishes like crabmeat peach, lobsters, crepe, crab tempera, various sushi... yumm.....the best meals I've had in awhile...

I also went for two concerts showcasing pieces P wrote for his music class, the first one was a composition to a poem that I picked and the second was a minuet. We actually had a lot of fun when P was composing the music to the poem, he asked me for a melody and I hummed one that I liked but he said it was too "happy" and "contemporary"! Outraged, I hummed another tune that was basically all flats and he actually used that ultra-boring tune!!!! Ha...

I also met Shufen for lunch at Union Square, a Korean corner she discovered once when walking in the wrong direction... We had bimbimbap for lunch and discovered quite a large Korean/Japanese supermarket! A very good find, must better than the one at Porter... Another place to look for tasty goodies!

All in all, a wonderful week before we headed for New York...

Vermont


Went for a road trip to Vermont with Shufen for the weekend of 11th and 12th... Vermont is beautiful in winter, calming wintry picturesque scenes wherever you look, freeways lined with silver-tipped frosted trees and rural villages covered in icing-white snow, warm lights shining through the windows... making the stress and excitement this trip generated worthwhile...

As natural with most of the road trips I take, we got lost on the way there, lengthening the car ride which was already too long by itself... Poor Shufen drove from 10am to 3pm! We passed by numerous towns and villages with names like Dublin and Berlin through the routes cutting through New Hampshire... The trees slowly turning silver as we ascended...

Our first stop was Weston, to visit the Vermont Country Store. The village was actually more a row of postcard-perfect houses, with shops like the Village Christmas Store and a Halloween-ny village store. The country store was homey, complete with a Santa Claus asking if you had being nice and selling stuff like quilts and home-made dips. As we skipped lunch on the way here, we helped ourselves with the free-tasting dips and sauces, and because they were so delicious, we couldn't resist buying a couple of jars! The village store sells home-made fudge, which seemed to be made of nothing but sugar!

The sky turned rapidly dark when we left Weston, and the un-lighted roads seems more and more menacing as we winded round curves in the mist... under such stressful driving conditions... we decided against our original plan of Burlington and settled for the motel in White River Junction instead. But the motel was so elusive! We got lost twice before we found it... I hopped out of the car to ask for directions whenever we got lost, and I never felt cold at all each time due to the tension running through my veins! I was never so happy to see anything as the gaudy yellow and black sign that night...we had dinner, called my dad to wish him happy birthday... and went to bed...



The next day started off quite easily, we didn't get lost at all today... but this is when the real excitement started... We decided to simply drive up to Montpelier to visit a cider mill and a maple sugar farm. The route was very straightforward... no driving around in circles like the day before... but we forgot about the icing on the road! The freeways were covered in frozen snow except for a single lane in the parts of the freeways that's used more frequently...And it was at a very straight road that the car skidded... Shufen slammed on the brakes and turned the wheel, but we still went barreling towards the road barrier, banged it and went fre
ewheeling to the other side of the road before the car hit the hilly side and stopped. Ha... it was the most exciting event of my life, I survived a car accident! Both of us were naturally quite pale after the event, but Shufen gamely reversed the car and we went with our trip :P

The cider mill was very pretty, the red of the house setting off the snowy surroundings perfectly, there was even a red train model and swings... We missed the cider-making as it only operates on weekdays, but we saw the video and got a pretty good idea... basically, you crush the apples to make cider. Simple, ne? The minute we got out of the car at the sugar farm, we smelt the thick, sweet scent of burning sugar, although they only harvest the sugar sap in spring, the wide lands of the farm was still a wonderful landscape to take in...

Our last stop was Quechee, with its gorgeous gorge and village... The gorge was impressive but the village was fun with a small train running through the entire village. We had lunch at an authentic diner car, which was an experience. The village's main attraction was its antique mall, which halfway through we thought had too much antiques...But there was a real stone house with a working chimney, supposedly to be a blacksmith's shop but really selling stained glass items.. and there was a toy and train museum with huge train models and glass showings of toys from every era starting from the 1950s onwards...Everything was like a fairy tale... in a snowy fairy tale setting...

We finally left for our drive home at 4pm, a drive which turned out to be as eventful as our other long drives... we were stopped by a police car on I-93! As we didn't realize that the car was following us (why would a police car want to stop two frail and harmless girls?!), we didn't stop when they flashed their blue lights and sirens at us until they kept behind us for 3 miles. (in fact, we still didn't believe they wanted us to stop and took an exit out to confirm that they were really following us). The state trooper was quite mad at us and went on and on about how we should have stopped long ago...they kept us waiting for quite awhile, we had 3 police cars surrounding us at this point (3 cars for 2 girls?!)...I started recalling all the horror stories I heard about the police in the states... it turned out that we forgot to turn on our headlights.... Haiz...

We finally reached senior house at about 730pm (quite a short drive, compared to our starting drive)... Shufen was quite simply blank at this point... driving for ages through the two days, the poor girl... Luckily, there was a study break for the finals, home-cooked food...we had dinner...and slept through the night before returning the car the next morning, where we were informed about the unbelievable car insurance system that requires us to pay anything less than 1k usd for damages to the car! We were sooooo tired at this point of time, that we really didn't need anymore added stress... in the end, we put down 500 usd, which added to the 300 usd deposit we paid earlier, made 800 usd. And the guy called afterwards that since the repairs cost approx 750, that's all he'll charge us, including the 150usd for the car rental... at this point, we simply didn't want to see him again...

Overall, Vermont was a wonderful trip.... with all the frost and snow and lights and country houses...it's a perfect setting for Christmas... and we kept seeing cars on the roads with Christmas trees tied to the roof! We visited a few Christmas stores which were all bustling with people shopping for Christmas and filled with Christmas ornaments... It really feels like Christmas... although I've always celebrated Christmas when I was a kid... this was the first time I really felt it's Christmas for real... a white Christmas with magic in the air...
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Driving, despite all the problems we encountered, is a beautiful way of seeing Vermont, passing by all the charming village scenes that seemed to be straight out of the fairy tales I read as a child...even the ice-covered roads fraught with dangers had a pristine beauty all of its own...
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So, I'll do it all over again... for the experience of a lifetime, for the icy air filled with Christmas joy and the magical charm of Vermont...

Thursday, December 09, 2004

Other activities...


And the other activities...

Took a walk through Commonwealth Ave, the Public Gardens and Downtown Crossing on Dec. 4th in between the fairs...found a monument dedicated to the people of Boston that died in Sept. 11th... enjoyed the quiet time to myself, it was a beautiful day...and the gardens were all yellow and blue. Fall colors...different from the time I walked through the exact same route in spring (you can scroll down to see the photo I put up in spring for the difference) ... Downtown Crossing was all decked up for Christmas with a lit Christmas tree. Filene's Christmas scenes were up and very intricately done...

Food-wise, JL organized a Thanksgiving dinner with the grad people...We started cooking from 11am and didn't stop until 5pm, after which we went over to the grad housing where the dinner was held and continued cooking until 6 plus... and there was so much food! Two turkeys! We did sweet potato casserole (which turned out to be deliciously sweet), baked yam, jiao zi, and two kinds of pasta (the creamy mushroom one was amazingly good too). And that's only half of what was served...there was about 30 plus people (and I actually met a sec. sch friend, talk about 6 degrees). Was extremely tired at the end of it all, being on your feet for the entire day cooking does that to you...

Also went to Ocean Wealth for Ruijie's birthday, and had a very scrumptious lobster dinner (I like it more than legal's!). There was about 10-12 of us, kinda of a mass dinner...

Both occasions reminded me of the times we had such mass dinners/lunches in Beijing, usually you never do know half the people...just people in foreign countries gathering together for celebrations...but they are fond memories...

In other news, I finished the scrapbook on the Europe trip (which brings a very great sense of satisfaction) and I'm not going to talk about my books, that'll take up way too much time! But I did enjoy Rule of Four and Five People you Meet in Heaven, two very different books and good in their own ways...

Plays, vcds, concerts and crafts fairs


Next up, plays, vcds, concerts and crafts fairs...
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Play count: 2
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1.Menopause Musical : A brassy and bawdy play, one that I enjoyed despite the fact that it's obviously targeted at another generation of women that I've thankfully not arrived at yet... 2.Provok'd Wife : another comedy, one talking in rhyme. Amazing set but a dialogue that I feel would be better enjoyed in print. I do wish I can get to know the Boston theatre scene better, so I'll be able to make more informed choices in plays...
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VCD count: 1
1.Beauty or Beast: I know, I know, I brought so many vcds over, and I've only managed to finish this one set. But I really like Beauty or Beast, each episode is so thought-provoking and touching in its own way...the issues dealt with hitting straight at the heart of the world of news broadcasting. Each time I wondered how I'll deal with the situation if I was the chief producer in question, and I never do know the answer... A very well created product, different from the other Jap serials, keeping the fluff but with an additional layer of thought...
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Concert count: 2
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I know I said there are two concerts, the MIT Cross Products and Chorallaries and the Harvard Lowkeys and Opportunes, but both are A Capella concerts and honestly, I can't tell the difference between the two. So I'm doing them at the same time. I did enjoy these two concerts, a capella being my one of my personal favorites. However, the fact is I don't really recognize many of the songs (I don't listen to enough English songs!)... But I did like the MIT Chorallaries Engineers' Drinking Song!
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Crafts Fair count: 3
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Went to 3 crafts fairs on 4th Dec! Must be a record somewhere...
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1.Le Marche de Noel: Situated at the French Library and Cultural Center, I went there more to explore what a Back Bay mansion is like than to look at the expensive wares of various French merchants around town... And wow, these Back Bay mansions are very impressive indeed! Much larger than they look from the outside (they actually have two staircases!), and very luxurious window seats...
2.Christmas Fair: Went to a Christmas fair at the Christ Church Cambridge next, it was a very homey affair, with most of the people knowing each other. There was a bakery section with fresh goodies and hot cider (bought a couple of cookies and brownies for P who was stuck at home with a sprained ankle), and an attic corner with all kinds of knick-knacks probably dug up from the various attics of the church members...
3. Cultural Survival Bazaar : A fair held in a huge hall with oriental rugs strewn all over the floor...filled with "indigenous art and crafts", meaning rugs and shawls and sculptures and earrings with an exotic accent...Somehow, I don't see these stuff from places like Peru, Tibet and Africa being all that indigenous, but who am I to say? Suffice to say, I didn't buy anything...

Films...


Summary update of what I've been up to lately... first up, the films...

Film count: 8
1.Beauty and the Beast : I really love this animation classic, I can't believe I only watched it once! It brought back all the old warm fuzzy feelings of childhood... the innocence and simple sense of fun..
2.Demonlover : An Assayas French film, that's... complex, convoluted, complicated and I do know they all mean the same thing! Still, it's fascinating; an unearthing of human being's baser instincts...
3.Madam Satan : An old Hollywood black-n-white comedy, haha, I do love these old black-n-white Hollywood comedies... esp. Some Like it Hot! This one has a similar style, and Kay Johnson is as pretty as Monroe too!
4.The Stranger (Agantuk) : My first Indian film! Its amazingly interesting, a humorous satire of a long-lost uncle entering a middle-class family's life in Calcutta, an amusing exploration of human feelings, wonderful acting all around...
5.Aelita: Queen of Mars : A silent black-n-white, Harvard Film Archive invited a MIT music prof. to compile a composition of piano scores and play it live, but this doesn't help at all! After the first few interesting minutes... I found myself soooo bored... that I left the minute I saw P in the theatre. Ha... I guess I'm just not cut out for silent films? Or its because I just don't like the futuristic theme of this film..
6.Life of Brian : A parody of Jesus' life by Monty Python. This is my first Monty Python show, and I can't say I enjoyed it as much as hyped. It's funny, okay, but most of the jokes start getting old halfway through the film...
7.Manchurian Candidate : I watched this with P! Our first movie together since... like forever... which is a good thing coz he understood the plot a lot more than I do and explained it all to me when we got out...
8.For Sale (A Vendre) : By far the best film I've watched since Sunrise/Sunset. An extremely intelligent film, exploring the psyche of a French girl that sells herself, and the feelings of the P.I. investigating her... and the relationship they form through time and space... It's not an easy film, but it's one that you go home thinking about..

Wednesday, December 08, 2004

Hartford


Went to Hartford, CT for the thanksgiving weekend with Shufen. (Okay, I admit, this is a very late update). The trip with fraught with uncertainty, we didn't know how we were going to get there or when we were going to get there until the very day before! The itinerary was pretty spontaneous too, meaning we mostly ended up wandering around the city of Hartford for most of the second day.

Due to the last minute decision making, we could only get the afternoon coach, meaning we arrived in Hartford around mid-afternoon. Since its winter, that means the skies were minutes to darkening, and we managed to catch a very pretty sunset over the Connecticut River, soft pinks and blues.

The reason we chose Hartford was due to the Festival of Lights, which we thought would be a Thanksgiving celebration, but turned out to be a Christmas celebration, complete with Christmas carols and a Santa Claus sliding down Constitution Plaza! But the lights are magnificent, its very simple, only the mini gold light bulbs were used, no fancy colors or designs, but the sheer number (think 250,000 if I remember correctly) of the twinkling lights used to drape over the trees and sculptures really transforms the place.. the Christmas carols were lovely too, there was a very unique rendition of "Deck the Halls" by a choir that I really liked..

We originally planned on Gillette Castle the second day, but discovered that there were no buses there! Which is pretty incredulous, seeing that it's a tourist spot, it should be easy to reach, else there won't be any tourists? I guess I'm too used to the tourist-friendly Europe, and forgot that in America, you either get a car or you don't go anywhere.

So in the end, we spent the day strolling around Hartford, visited the Bushnell Gardens and the Mark Twain House which was surprisingly engaging. Mark Twain had a fascinating life, and the sound bites surrounding the museum makes me think that his books should be an interesting read. At the very least, his house was beautifully done, and all decorated for Christmas too! Its really beginning to look like Christmas.

We spent half the day walking to Elizabeth Gardens for the roses and greenhouses, actually it was for the "roses in greenhouses", but it turned out to be a separate entity and naturally, we saw rose-less twines around rows of trellis, which with imagination, should be very pretty indeed. But it was an enjoyable walk, and we passed by the University of Connecticut with a very Hogwarts-like school of law.

Due to the long, long walk, we had lots of time to talk, the bus back to Boston turned out to be late, and I discovered that Shufen have a extremely sweet voice when she sings, not to mention a marvelous memory for lyrics! I guess the best thing of this trip is the company - as it always is with trips. =)

Wednesday, November 17, 2004

Before Sunrise & Before Sunset


Watched Before Sunrise about 10 minutes before I watched Before Sunset because I so wanted to watch this two movies consecutively. Loved the way both were filmed in the similar impossibly straightforward styles. Both basically consisted of the two people who met on a train ride strolling about European cities, talking to each other about their feelings, their views and their lives and doing it again when they meet again 9 years later. The connection between them as they wandered about Vienna in Sunrise seemed so real, the way they can talk about seemingly everything under the sun, the communication that's missing in so many of our lives. The night seemed like a moment suspended in time.

The dialogue was amazing, several lines remaining in my mind long after the movies. "After tomorrow morning we'll probably never see each other," one says. "Well, who says relationships have to last forever?" I liked the way Sunset picked up 9 years later, with the regrets and changes between them. They have changed, and yet have not changed. I love the reflections between the both films, the way Sunset showed the places the couple will go before the film vs. the way Sunrise showed it after the film, the tram ride mirroring the boat ride on the Seine... I loved the glimpses of Vienna and Paris through the films, both cities I visited before (I've actually spent a lot of time in Shakespeare & Co. in Paris!). And both characters seemed so real, the way they argued and joked, the way they talked about the problems they faced, the look on Jesse's face when Celine asked if she had changed being so male and female..

I didn't like the tagline for Sunset. It didn't felt like a second chance with the one that got away. That line seems so... cliche for such a lovely film. I don't know what will have happened if Celine showed up at the platform of December 16th, but the sense of loss and hope renewed definitely would be missing... I complained about the lack of ending when Sunset ended, but when I think about the smile on Jesse's face when he said "I know" to Celine's "You're so going to miss that plane"... perhaps.. that's ending enough...

A image of Celine and Jesse walking down the streets of Paris in the sunlight keeps recurring in my mind after watching the film, both so comfortable with each other... "I like to feel his eyes on me when I look away"...Both films felt like shafts of sunlight.. films of hope and light...

Saturday, November 13, 2004

First Snow


First snow of the year... and its so very early. The trees have yet to lose their fall reds and golds...
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Have been pretty much lazing around for the past week. Caught alot of shows, including Irma Vep on the first day, the Lion King Musical and Bourne Identity and Supremacy.
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Irma Vep was a doucumentary style arthouse film, starring Maggie Cheung as herself. Interesting until the dizzy end... a clean yet messy look...
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Lion King was in one word, impressive. It had a very caberet feel about it, not much of a storyline to speak of as I watched the animation before, but the innovative costumes and set was worth the ticket price, not to mention the intricate opera house itself. A very enjoyable night.
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Really like the two Bourne shows, can't say the same for the draggy original novel. But the movies were great fun, very intelligent script and great actors, including Matt Damon :p
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Been sleeping alot since I came... but still went out to take lots of photos with the first snowfall... Would never stop feeling amazed with the sight of freshly fallen snow.. the pureness of the white, untouched by nothing but the breath of air..

Tuesday, October 19, 2004


细雨霏雨点点,
独倚窗墙边。
欲念不念缠绵,
无力再怀缅。
只愿苍天存怜,
莫让雨落反无缘。

思,图书馆一角观雨玩作

Tuesday, October 12, 2004

《摘星》


应该在做作业,却跑来看动画。无意之间,看到《爱过流星》,音乐与人物听来有些熟悉。想想,原来是许久前看过的《摘星》的续篇。

看过《摘星》,听说是动画的经典。我却不喜欢。不能谅解女主角心云对爱情的毫无坚持。读过许多线上的讨论,解释她的苦衷。但,我却依旧认为,她背后有再好 的理由,也一样。不坚持就是不坚持嘛。女主角不值得爱,男主角爱得再执著,都显得有些有眼无珠。愚蠢的爱情,无法让我感动。听说,《摘星》后来还被拍成电 视剧。我实在没什么兴趣去看。

我反而比较喜欢《爱过流星》。男女主角六年后在咖啡馆短暂的重逢,身上都带点沧桑,曾经刻骨铭心的感情只留淡淡余味,有一种隽永的感觉。昀汉在心云离开时喊了她一声,微笑对她说:“要幸福哦!”看了,有一种落泪的冲动。

《摘星》的歌词如下:
多年以后,某个路口,擦肩而过
你的笑依旧,而我也选择放手。

当你多年后碰到曾经爱过的人,除了祝福,你还能给他什么呢?错过了,可是还是希望她幸福...

接下来几晚,又得赶报告而没得好眠。唉,自作孽,不可活,应验起来也不过如此吧...

Monday, October 04, 2004

家人有约


昨天和佳相约,在一间露天意大利餐馆为她庆生。好久没有这样轻松愉快地感觉了。餐馆的气氛很好,靠海,灯光微暗,还能看到远处的城市夜景。但,更舒服的应 该是吃饭的对象吧。好久没见到我这个“小”表妹了。一席畅谈,时间过得特别快。之后,我们还意犹未尽,跑去Clementi的Pasar Malam逛街。

真得很开心,能在忙碌的生活中抽些时间,将烦恼抛到远远的,和好朋友见见面。尽管我们都知道,有一大堆功课等着,但什么都掩不了现在的开心。人生中,有这些朋友,有这些时光,就值得了。

最近在听一些将唐诗宋词制成流行乐的曲子。很特别,清清淡淡的。特别喜爱其中一首长相思。

汴水流,泗水流,
流到瓜洲古渡头。
吴山点点愁。

思悠悠,恨悠悠,
恨到归时方始休。
月明人倚楼。

思悠悠,恨悠悠,思又如何,恨又如何。将一切寄水而流,只剩淡淡爱愁。对什么,都别那么在乎。也许,这样比较好。反正,无可奈何花落去,似曾相识燕归来。

Wednesday, September 22, 2004

陀螺


好久没来了。不知为什么,进了NIE之后,整个人,仿佛陷进了漩涡,做完了一份作业又是一份作业,转呀转的,有点像个陀螺。忙到最后,已经不知道自己在忙些什么,为什么而忙了。

上个星期被派到学校去观察教学,竟然见到了中学很疼爱我的一个华文老师。在观察一堂课时,老师分下复习作业,叫学生自己复习。闲来无事,就帮帮坐在我身旁的男孩,下课时,他对我说:“老师,谢谢你。“

有惊喜,有错愕。忽然发现,我,已经不是学生了。虽然,在我老师面前,我永远都是个学生。但,人生的另一个阶段,却在我不知不觉中,突然袭了上来。

最近碰到一些不如意的事,真的发现,人,活在世上,真的有许多自己没办法解决的事。自己一生骄纵,现在才明白。 不开心时,并不是想什么就能开心的。不喜欢长大,因为觉得太无力。

Saturday, September 11, 2004

Krimml


decided to visit Krimml instead of our original plan of Graz or Innsbruck...despite that its inaccessible location that means we have to spend a night on a train when we leave in order to reach Chur in time to meet the Glacier Express the day after and it takes numerous train-hopping plus a bus that never appeared to get up to the mountain village. in the end, we had to trudge up the mountain road, knocking on every door (and there were very little doors to knock) asking for directions in hope of an offer for a ride up. we did get a ride...when we were halfway up ;p

In the end, it was all worth it... Krimml is a beautiful village... we went there for the famed Krimml Wasserfalle, and got so much more in return...

The peace and quiet of a secluded mountainville was what we needed after the crowded cities of Vienna and Salzburg. We got a lovely room complete with breakfast and offers of a ride down for 17 euros. There was barely a soul as we wandered around the minuscule village. The air was sweetly fresh with the recent rainfall and pure. The surrounding mountain peaks created a calm and serene atmosphere. For once, there was no place we needed to rush to or see, we just needed to be, and take in this feeling of tranquility... it was a wonderful rest in the midst of our journey...

Monday, August 09, 2004

Vienne

Last day in Vienne and its a rainy day... we went to see the Spanish Reitschule morning exercise in the Winter Palace in the morning. the steps of the horses are made part of a orchestrated ballet, very graceful and measured. I really want to go back and see a full show...

we went to Vienna University next for lunch at its cafeteria, one of the cheapest meal we had ;p the never-stoppiing elevator up to the cafeteria was worth the trip itself! An adventure getting on and off :) the university was interesting as well, the oldest university in the german-speaking world, had a feel for what its like to study here...

did some sights next, the neo-gothic neues rathaus (new town house) and the burgtheater. The theater was almost totally destroyed by a bomb and rebulit. The guide gave quite an extensive introduction to the history of the theater, even as to describing each of the ceiling frescos.

finally had enough of sights as well as P's wet and squishy shoes. We set off for Mariahilfer Strasse, vienna's busiest shopping street, to buy waterproof shoes. Happily succeeded in buying two pairs of Gortex shoes, both waterproof and breathable! Shopping is indeed therapeutic :)

Had weiner schnitzel for dinner, fried breaded pork, crispy and reminded me of chicken cutlet. decided that I waited too long to eat this viennese delicacy.

settled the next day's railway tickets and schedule at Westbahnhof before heading home to pack...

Karlskirche


second day in vienna... went to the augustinerkirche in the morning, the church where sisi and franz joseph was married, as well as the nationalbibliothek (meaning national library :) I want the live in the library!!! Its the perfect scholar's study...

strolled along Graben and Kartner Strasse in the afternoon, fashionable shopping streets of Vienna and had several bite sized sandwiches of various toppings for lunch. saw a economical japanese restaurant.. and couldn't resist...

visited the Stephansdom again for a closer look at its interior and climbed up the south spire for a aerial view of vienna and to walk off the lunch :) I love the churches... such fascinating pieces of history and amazing architecture and all free ;p although the towers' steep spiral steps attempts murder with every step.

went to Hotel Sacher for the "original" sachertorte (I'm such a sucker for original) before visiting the Staatsoper (Vienna State Opera House). P's very happy today because of the variety of foods we tried today ;p

The highlight of today is Karlskirche, a beautiful mint and white dome church with towers and oriental-style columns. Its so special because it is the only church complete with a glass elevator that sends you all the way up to the top of the dome to see the wall murals and the cupola frescos up close! Even P was impressed (and that's hard to achieve!). Its slightly frightening when you'll all the way at the top, right at the tip of the dome. the wooden flooring suddenly seem quite flimsy and Karlskirche is the tallest Baroque Church in Vienna! But its definitely worth it for the beautiful frescos, done mostly in pastels, depicting angels and other biblical stories...

dinner's at Naschmarkt, a lively market selling everything from flowers, produce to restaurants.

We went home via the Karlplatz pavillion subway station, one of the prettiest subway entrance we've seen, with sunflower gilt motifs on patina-green copper roofs, matching Karlskirche perfectly :)

三年


今天是三周年纪念。感觉平平淡淡。三年了。一段感情,起起落落,开心与不开心,都过了三年了。昨天P写信给我时说,这三年,好像梦一般。

打从前天开始,他便一直问我,收到信了没。却一直不肯说是什么信。今天收到信时方知,那傻蛋,用铅笔画了4幅小画,跟着Precious Moments的style,画了我们的记忆。our own precious moments.

“从来不知道,原来你有画画天分耶。”
“我小时候画画很厉害的哦!”

很简单的画,只是素描。也许是我们今天的心情写照。时间使所有的浮沉不定都慢慢沉淀。

只有在最细微的生活中透出的幸福快乐,才是最真实的。

平淡也浪漫。无语也温暖。

Fireworks


had an rare eventful day yesterday :)

as one of the precious days that I can sleep until I "wake naturally", I woke close to 11am. updated on the europe trip which I am lagging far far far behind :( haiz.. at this rate, I don't know when I will finish...

went to red star for a dim sum lunch with mom and dad :) delicously yummy... then its off to the Kwan Im Temple at waterloo. took some photos of fortune teller and one Qi Gong for Shutu. Not sure if they are any good thou... after seeing K's photos.. I discover that my photos are truly only for mine and P's memories'sake. well, as long as we can look at them and go "remember when..." when we are old... ^-^

went to the NTUC fair at Suntec in the afternoon and found my korean aloe vera drink! and going for only S$3.5! compared to the USD$5 in boston, this is too good to be true. esp since I am willing to pay exorbitant rates for this drink :)

went for the fireworks at Marina Bay in the evening. An act of near-insanity with the huge masses of people pressing and squeezing against each other... an ordeal to get there and another ordeal getting out... but still managed to take a few good photos and videos of the pretty lights for P :)

Sunday, August 08, 2004

Vienna


first day in the imperial city of vienna... our first stop is the "very soul of the city", the Stephansdom. A huge bulky Gothic-style cathedral smack in the middle of Wien. We reached there with the mass in service, attempts at sneaking in was thwarted by the obvious asian face :p thus had to settle for viewing the interior of high vaulted cathedral from the back of the church.

walked down to schwedenplatz afterwards via a suggusted route that passed by several minor sights. Took a leisurely walk round the city and had delicous pizza for lunch as well as a kasekrainer at the original Wurstl am Hoher Markt :) yummy...sausage with cheese melting out of every bite...

we somehow ended up walking down kohlmarkt to land in michealerplatz, in front of the Hofburg Complex, castle of the Habsburg Empire.

visited the apartments and the schaztkammer in the alte burg. although the rooms were sumptuously decorated and the treasury one of the most impressive collection I have seen (truly, all the jewels and exquisite antiques) , what I really was interested in is the much-loved empress Sisi who lived in these apartments. A fascinating woman with stars in her hair and sorrow in her heart.

We left via Herrengasse and walked to Freyung, the old sanctury of the scottish church. a pretty glass-roofed courtyard with the Austria Fountain depicting the major rivers, all awashed in sepia lighting...

walked out to am hof and enjoyed dinner at an open-air austrian place before going home...