Friday, August 18, 2006
Fortune, at Fort Canning, INXS
Monday, August 14, 2006
Taking Turns, and Lost Trains
Tuesday, August 08, 2006
Tea Can Be Sinful, Too
Monday, July 31, 2006
Joining A Fad, A Little Later
Saturday, June 10, 2006
Ashtanga Joy, Eagle Soars
Tuesday, May 23, 2006
Stadium Arcadium
The Tay Family
Sunday, May 21, 2006
Axe, Man!
Friday, May 12, 2006
A New Light, Infancy and Future
Eagle Lands, Spirit Soaring To Great Height
A Great Relaxing Moment
Earthly Kinetics
Thursday, May 04, 2006
Wine & Dine
Monday, May 01, 2006
Left Rotator - Cuffed And Caught!
Friday, April 28, 2006
Back On Track, With A Little Help
Tuesday, April 25, 2006
Butterfly Parade
Friday, April 21, 2006
Dean's Conquest - Duathlon '06
Saturday, April 08, 2006
Life At Large, Springtime in the Forest
Tuesday, April 04, 2006
Drills at Lars, and on Thorpe!
First, the forward hand glide, to meet for a split second before pull... definitely works to slow down the stroke.
Then, there is the elbow. Getting higher on pull, with S-stroke works to reduce the shoulder strain. And this is terrific!
Can't manage the breadths on draw both sides still. That will be next?
Next will be the forward head raise on interval, left breadth draw, and maybe pull-buoy. But that might be really ambitious!!!
The best part of Finch's work is that clarity of the advice given. Total Immersion is great practice when you are dedicated to a coach and water time. But I am totally on my own for this and will have to pace myself and see what works and how comfortable I am.
The thing about Thorpe is precisely what the researchers say: slower and fewer strokes can be more efficient. Also, for better streamlining, to wear trunks one size smaller. Whew, there was a crammed house all 2 km, man!
But the best was that I could swim so much SLOWER and glide through the lap without feeling the draw strain and breadthless exertion! I totally worship Lars Conrad for his style and physique, and Ian Thorpe for that incredible efficiency! Can't wait to get back in... but it will have to wait till after the next few days, no thanks to errands and stuff!
Monday, April 03, 2006
Try, At Last, Triathlon!
Friday, March 31, 2006
Deathbed Tour
Tuesday, March 28, 2006
The Rites of The Wronged
Sunday, March 26, 2006
Now Past The Throes Of Death
Monday, March 20, 2006
The First Rains (1995)
The first rains of the monsoon have burst overhead,
Filling the evening air with cosy countenance;
The streets awashed with reflective glows and threads
Of fairylights aroar with colour at the mall entrance.
People hustling with shopping bags into taxi queues,
Forming perfect rows of silent pews.
The chiselled cityscape and hooting cars beckon me
Explore the festive revelry which mocks my solitude
Passing couples in hands and awkwardly see
What I miss out on while Cupid stays mute.
I gather my thoughts to warm my heaving heart
Knowing what comes to naught as hope falls apart
I choke silently, my voice stuck as such
Against the notion that Love’s at large…
No soul should have to bear the brunt of life alone!
No heart should be rent from ever having known
Healing consolation which cherished friends afford;
Nothing as warm as love given not affection bought.
Then startled, suddenly with a thought;
(I walk on) but it’s you, I realise, that I sought.
Yes, to love, affect, embrace and caught
To create some scheme to lure and have wrought
From idea to opportunity my soul thirsts
Of unquenchable desire, released just as heaven burst
Reigns, neighs, unbridled rain, nay no worse.
Who would silence all cars, break bottles by case and casks!
Hear the whisper, now a storm, which urges on
Wreak the senses from solace to solitude’s sullen mask;
To feel the aching pain of one forlorn,
To trim the fear and not hesitate.
Should I call, no, later, or wait?
Lose another moment once lit by hope,
That you might be, too, alone, in bed
Longing the same, while cuffed in the silken envelope
Expecting my call, and tempt fate.
How I now wish to kiss you and erase
Pain of missing you, anoint with caresses your face
That we might be grace to bless that inconsolate bed:
From emptiess to lottery and life, create
Prized beatitudes to realise are worth the wait!
What a joy it would be to awake, turnaround, and feel you tight,
A cluster of the earth’s finest roses in your huddled form,
Perfume in the morning light, smooth stems with thorns shorn –
Your skin like washed sand, after the storm.
What a joy it would be to awake, reality, derived from this vision,
Of sleeping with an Angel, banish bland reason
And find the senses, sweet from the Four Seasons
To be unearthed and tossed tumultuously like incense
Filling out time and space its drowsy shroud
Wherein I see you lift and whirl about
Like the phantom dream, love is, dismissed into the hollow crowd.
Thursday, 9 November 1995
2245 hrs
Shopping and then slipping back into the Four Seasons, to awake and find the other left had left already for the day. I drove a Ford Laser 1.6L then, and for official business entertainment, would have a black Audi A4 to use. Quite a fine life, then. I think there is something about mobility with a car that makes up for the emptiness that follows a good night without breakfast in bed…
History (1990)
History is boisterous in her lessons of Age,
Makes no pretense of favour or rage.
The little, the limited, the lone is lost,
The lessons are that such are the cost.
Yet did an isle an exceptional precedent set -
Battled her fate and abated a bet.
Lone, little and limited became a cause,
To pursue the challenge and chart her course.
The rhythm of the people set upon the beat
Of cultures diverse like flotsam of a fleet.
Amassed, clashed but finding a form,
Deliver themselves from the ideas of norm.
Break free from the thoughts that mar,
Challenge these forces and drive them afar.
Like gongs in unison that beg the gods unleash,
Favour, benevolence – end fasting with feast.
Perhaps Fortune herself did smile on this isle,
The march of folly passed by and while;
Necessity borned of survival inspired diversion,
To a different drumbeat and to Nation.
Should odds be nigh and were nigh again -
When hope is low, do we unite in vain
Battle disdain with sovereignty hard won
Set sure in belief as brothers, we are strong
Then hence, to weather the storm.
4 July 1990
Love's Absence (1990)
LOVE’s absence deprives life’s brazen frame –
leaves an abyssal void which maims:
VISIONS erotic the heart cannot deny,
awakes yeraning, demands a sigh,
should courageously wait and unhappily lie
( a silhouette on a pyre
engulfed by silky sheets of fire)
tries in vain, remain, kiss your eye
the muse awakes, fleet-footed flies
discovers too late, an empty bed
scent marks where you have laid
arouse the senses, might not placate
must bait, or patiently wait
instigate, create or contemplate
(this desired union
an improbable return)
to the gilded state
and thus avert Fate.
London
19 March 1990
This is a recollection of Mark McCallum, who adopted and used his maternal surname, Carter. He inherited some small fortune, and was clubbing in tee-shirt and denim dungaries and jacket, I think somewhere near Max’s off Bayswater. He was with some British Airways pilot, but was always out on guys’ night for a good time, which he knew very well how to get it. He was, by all accounts, an English “party boy”. He brought me to London’s famed boys’ strip club, then run by a famous Singaporean “queen”. Impressive getting around with him.
Another thing Mark did after we caught Les Miserables together, was bring me to the cast’s favourite restaurant after the show, where I got to meet some of the chorus members, saw Angela Lansbury, and I was literally checked up Joan Collins. This splendid restaurant near Covent Garden is wholly unmarked, and distingished by the red brickwork walls.
If I Should (1990)
If I should, my woven history, bare
kindly appreciate, nay, not compare.
The visage full but where threadbare,
do gently fill, if you care, not dare.
If I should be bound by my workèd past,
creativity is checked by the last (not leash);
must untangle the knot that was cast (not released),
smooth the thread taut and fast –
for what is life’s greatest freedom, be
OF CREED, OF SPEECH, OR, FROM FEAR, FROM WANT. **
(If one should be asked, say certainly)
the liberty to start, create apart from what’s done
and to do so freely, in perpetuity.
Letter to Brett C. Callis
Singapore
16 March 1990
** The Four Freedoms declared by US President Roosevelt in World War II, c. 1943. See also the Norman Rockwell painting inspired by the same.
One Doesn't (1989)
One doesn’t have to be good-looking
To feel beautiful;
It is enough to be loved and be
Surrounded by all things wonderful.
Life is more than mere feelings
Whether of pride or insecurity
A realisation and experience
Of all beauty that Nature can give
Is Expressed
And worth more than appearances
Which can deceive.
Beauty, Love, Life still requires
One, even the very least –
To Appreciate.
Therein is all that Matters.
Frankfurt 1989
When I re-read these musings, which to edit and re-write is to lose the crisp juvenile sensibility of that period in my own life, I realise how immature my outlook then was. I blame it now, mostly for the lack of the benefit of growing up with strong paternal affirmation, which would have made any boy confident and whole early in his adulthood, and thus prepared for relationships that would be able to give. Instead, people who are seeking wholeness and expect or belive that relationships with bred that in them are often deceived by this heresy, and then to be very idealistic, painfully sensitive and often languish in melancholy. They are easily devoured by the idea of beauty, too often seduced by the prospect that wholeness in personhood lies in being appreciated. It may be more true to say that young boys become good men when they have been affirmed by their Fathers.
Uit Rusten (1989)
In silence, in stilte,
darkness of my bed I sit
Cold of winter invades my feet;
Beneath, onder de deken I miss the feel
Warmth, of love’s familiar face asleep –
Thoughts so dear feels so real:
Ogen sluiten, glimlach zitten on lips,
Skin on skin, silky sheets sing
Leaves impressions echte as ink.
Love’s infinite longing for a friend
Vanish like dreams too quickly spent,
Left listening to the whispering wind
What does this hurting mean?
‘t advises gentle as falling snow
Begs the heart to let go.
Roma, Italia
27 November 1989
If I Should Die (1989)
THE WORD EMPIRE, KINDGOM AND UNION ILLUSTRATES SUCH AN ENTITY. ONE VISIONARY 1900 YEARS AGO PROCLAIMED IT AS THE KINGDOM OF GOD. ITS NATURE HUMAN, ITS MYSTERY DIVINE. THUS:
If I should die, I die a catholic first:
My life a play, my simplest thoughts a verse.
The dreams, faith, hopes quietly nursed
Might, mistaken seem ageless;
Immortality a call of thirst
Should suddenly, mightily burst.
Redeem a soul from the curse,
Gild an effigy with ashen dust;
Feeble these senses must
Labour the heaviest task:
Document thought, deed, emotion past
Realize the littleness of vast
A shapeless mould cast
Love’s furnace, inflame, passion’s blast
Mettle glazed to last
Reveals my spirited lust
Rambles, punctuates my play thus.
6 oktober 1989
While sitting in early Autumn in front of the Habsburg Palace, Wien
(Vienna, Austria). It was also from the foyer balcony of this very palace where Hitler returned to the land of his birth as dictator-ruler of the Third Reich, and addressed the people as victor and liberator. The film of the event that survives and is sometimes replayed in documentaries, is so stark that you cannot immediately associate it with the sereneness of this place. Perhaps, all storms do erupt somewhat from serenity.
Some aspects of the sonnet represents great personal importance, by way of its confessionary nature, to me. It is beyond denial that the concept was inspired by Rupert C. Brooke’s excellent if idealistic War Sonnets.
I Live With The Possibility (1989)
I live with the possibility
that soon shall I meet one
whose nature would cause mine
be aroused to passion and
excite to matchless permutations
of risky computations;
perhaps tomorrow or the day after
little does the “when” matter
except that I’m ready
best and collected
for such opportunity.
You, whom I had stolen
once a glance, across the pool
whom I chance to stand shyly
in the elevator with
one, as good as dear as You
whose lips formed words of love
as I fell
ideal of beauty, as you
physical and ethereal,
whose open heart and perfect hands
I can only dream is my good fortune
someday to welcome with mine own.
1989
I remember writing this in Dubai, on the way to London, and reflecting on my other recent summer flights to Europe. Again, based on the notes on the original scripts and copy, it was a time which was just a few years since I found myself familiar with the continental lifestyle, being just 24 years old, and very, very impressionable.
One Night (1989)
éèn nacht
Could I help not noticing
Beauty himself standing
by the window
hands in pockets
dreamy eyes wide
Could I help not to think
youth himself enjoying
the happy beat
of music rapping feet
dancing to dawn
Could I help not dreaming
heaven himself staring
a tastefulness
love awaiting chance
an invitation to dance
Could I help not asking
love himself awaiting
heart be still
skip a beat
contemplates defeat
Could I help not smile
laughter himself teasing
frolicking night
revelry till light
a thoroughfare
Could I help not hope
child himself laments
brief is the while
to hold and to smile
kiss a while
Could I help not repeat
opportunity himself passing
lasts one night
might never knock again
I remain
You gently, quietly, abashedly ease from sight
Expansion of an idea of one guy trying to pick up another guy at the dance floor at EXIT, a gay disco in Amsterdam, popular among the young local and foreigners especially in summer. There is some inspiration based on how I met Hans de Wit of Schiedam in mid-June, one weekend in 1989 during my three week vacation there. This guy is the epitome of Dutch youthful handsomeness, with a sauveness and pensiveness that was disarming. We became fast friends, and definitely the envy of many.