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Archive for September, 2008

defining redefinition

30 Sep

This is an ongoing observation for this year. I think it would be safe to say that this one has certainly been playing out the prediction I made at it’s beginning. I know it has for me. As I look around it seems to be a prevalent aspect in so many lives around me as well.

Some have been pro-active while others have chosen to plug away in their seemingly safe “same old” mode. Even world events are playing out the fact that change is happening… sometimes making stark turns and throwing everything into a tizzy.

The major observation I have made is that redefinition is taking place whether one is pro-active about it or not. The point is that if one does not take an active hand in it… it will occur anyway. Though in some periods of time the pace gets stepped up. I believe this is one of those periods. I know it is… and continues to be true for me at least. Some I have had an active hand in while other situations call for a quick and more elastic personal agreement to cope with.

It is a given that any kind of change is not comfortable. Simply because any sense of comfort relies largely on the familiar. And let’s face it… the familiar is changing.

No, this is hardly an effort to have me proclaimed some sort of sage. And I’m not joing the psychic network anytime soon. Simply recording some observations on the topic. So, what redefinitions have you instituted or observed within your immediate environment?

 

swimming eyeballs

29 Sep

Yeah, mine are for sure. Suddenly I have more on my plate than I should. I am far from being a happy camper… I’m a cranky one at best. Details of what and who are irrelevant but suffice to say this really severely puts the brakes on future freebies.

I WATCHED THE “NO” VOTE

I think we can agree that the bailout plan was hardly popular. It took me a while to understand it… sort of… and that’s after some research. Does the average Joe on the street know better? Has anyone bothered putting it in “plain speak”? I think it is clear (ironically from a Paul Newman film) that what we have here is a failure to communicate… especially to the people. On the other hand it seems that politics is more concerned with huffy puffy hubris than actual solutions.

More later… maybe.

EDIT: 6:30 AM

Hit the sack early and up early as a result. Guess I’ll put the coffee on and crank this thing out.

 

and I was thinking…

29 Sep

… about “givens” this morning. You know, the ones that have become a constant as we live out our lives? For instance, one of those that I live with is… I can be home working on the computer all day long with no phone calls the entire time, take a half hour break only to return to 5 missed phone calls. It has become a “given” to my reality.

There are also “givens” of a more universal nature. What get’s me is the accompanying dumbfoundedness, surprise, frustration and indignation that accompanies them when they play out. Since they have become “givens” one would think that these would be expected. Here are a few I have observed.

  • * procrastination of a relatively “easy” task will almost always transform into a monumental challenge whenever you finally decide to “get to it”.
  • * “serial daters” will run into a past conquest just when they are trying to (“close the deal” and) impress the current object of their fancy.
  • * when you are in a rush to get somewhere taking the “fast lane” always ends up being the slowest route between point A and B.

What givens have you observed or experienced?

 

Thanks, Mr. Newman… it’s been a grand ride!

27 Sep

An actor of countless movies, producer, director, race-car driver and humanitarian – you did it all in grand style. A life full and lived unapologetically you carved your name into the annals of movie greatness… but more importantly you used your stature to make a difference to those in need.  You will be missed.

IN OTHER NEWS

I am a winner! I who have never won anything have won 2 tickets to the Tower of Power/Average White Band Show Oct. 8 at the Big Fresno Fair… at least that is the concert I requested. (Yeah, the package includes free entrance into the fair.) And how did I win? By commenting on the Beehive this week! WOOT!

Stay tuned… I’m sure there will be a video posted here soon.

UPDATE: 9:00 AM

Here are a couple of videos to funk up your weekend to.

*

 
 

I enjoyed it so much…

26 Sep

… when I first saw this on the lovely Cynnie’s blog… I thought I’d post it here. Oh. Da Count is the post below.

 

Da Count – lending support

25 Sep

dacountA couple of posts ago I supplied a link to an online petition. Many of you who came here lent your support by signing it. First and foremost… THANK YOU. Even though these troubles are taking place half way across the globe… you gave of yourself. I would like to think and hope that all our efforts pooled together will make a difference. Hopefully the blogger in question will be reunited with his family soon. I read an account by his wife about visiting him and thought I’d supply a link to it here.

So, my count today is YOU who by a simple action stood up to be counted against the abuse of a law just to silence a dissenting voice.

To find out what Da Count is all about click the flashing sign above.

 
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Sarong HNT 08

24 Sep

The end of Summer hardly stops me wearing a sarong. I wear one year round. It’s comfortable… it’s liberating… it’s easy convenient… what’s sarong with that?

There are others who make it sarong too. (Sorry, had to pun badly just one more time.) As they chime in they will be listed and linked here on the SARONG SIREN list. So go over and check them out… and check back here for additions as the day rolls along.

SARONG SIRENS 2008

*Mariposa
*Jobthingy
*Q
*Biscuit
*Lime
*Cosima
*Lucia
*Cynnie

BTW… some of these can only be viewed with Explorer… go figure!

Cheers and Happy HNT!

BTW if you are so inclined read the post below and consider lending your support to a blogger who has been jailed.

 
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freedom of expression – a plea

24 Sep

As many of you know I hardly ever blog about politics. The simple explanation is that any discussion of politics will inevitably descend into a rant… and I will only bitch or rant about something I am fully prepared to take action on. Heck, I hardly ever even discuss the subject unless it is within the context of observing it as some strange sporting event. One could argue that my post yesterday teetered on the edge of being political. Perhaps it did but I think you’ll agree that it swerved more toward social observations.

It would be an understatement to say that the current political situation in Malaysia is tumultuous. No matter what happens it is still going to be quite a ride for it’s citizens. I have not lived there in a long time and have kept up with the news via cyber means. So, my opinion on the political climate is inconsequential.

However I do think that action is definitely called for especially when they start throwing bloggers in jail… using a 50 year old “internal security act” which was originally enacted to deal with a communist insurgency at the time. It is a law that can imprison an individual for 2 years without trial… which is what happened this week. (Hmm… does this sound familiar?) My friend Patrick as well as many other bloggers have written about it.

::personal political opinion alert::

The point is not whether I subscribe to this blogger’s opinions or not. The point here is that opinions and ideas are being suppressed simply because the content expressed in it makes a government desperately clawing on to a slipping hold of power… uneasy. A government that continues to treat it’s citizens as simple ignorant children… which they are not… and threatens them with this law to keep any challenge to their rule at bay. A law freely utilized by a government to make any “inconvenience” go away by conveniently labeling those individuals as “a threat to national security”.  A law that even the Malaysian Bar Council has recently called to be abolished.

::personal political opinion alert over::

There is an ONLINE PETITION you can sign if you so choose to lend your support in helping to free this individual. Read the links I have provided and decide for yourself. The fate and direction of the country ultimately lies with it’s own citizens. But perhaps we can band together to allow them various points of view in order to formulate that decision… and if for nothing else… for basic civil liberties.

 
 

ideal and reality

22 Sep

This weekend I watched the movie “The Kite Runner“… which incidentally I highly recommend. This weekend I also caught up with the news on the political situation in Malaysia. In an odd sort of way the two seemed strangely related … at least in my mind.

Somehow both triggered thoughts about romantic idealism as well as sins of the past… even those more cruel ones committed and/or witnessed in our youth… OK, at least mine.

While watching the film I was transported back to my own childhood. Specifically to a short period when I too like the protagonist in the film flew kites. “Kite fighting” was also part of my youth… as was playing with marbles, top spinning and several other childhood activities from that simpler era that I grew up in.

I will be the first to admit that I was never any good with any of them… my proficiently level stayed at the “functional” scale for the most part. Though that never stopped me from participating and joining in the fun with the other neighborhood kids. After watching the movie I wondered if any of those activities were still a part of the culture today in Malaysia or if the “march of progress” has since replaced them with toys of the video game revolution.

As for the march of progress THIS commentary as well as THIS caught my eye as I read the news from Malaysia. Apparently some political types have been overtly (and once again) using race as a wedge issue of late in the continuing melodrama of the current power struggle. Am I surprised? Hardly.

The ideal at least in my formative years growing up in Malaysia was that we all should live “in peace and harmony”… the reality is that although it can and has happened, there have always been bumps in the road.

The fact is racism and bigotry have always existed in Malaysia. When you have distinct races that hold firmly to their own cultural, traditional and religious values it is bound to create tension. These divides have existed for centuries and is plainly evident throughout the history of the country. No one race or member of any racial group can claim absolute innocence in the practice of some form of bigotry. Even within each culture the traditional hierarchy of caste and classicism are strong elements.  As such bigotry in one form or another has been always present.

That being said, throughout the span of time, there have been ebbs and flows between mere tolerance and respect. Some eras were more respectful than others. The era of my childhood swung more toward respect… at least for a while. The simplistic explanation for is may have been that Malaysia was still a young independent nation then. Perhaps the promise of a collective ideal of nation building together after 400 years of some form of colonial rule had a lot to do with fostering a seemingly more idyllic period.

I had (and still have) friends of every race back home. We all got along respecting each others beliefs and celebrating each others traditions and cultures in the mixed neighborhood I lived in. Though even in that era we were still very aware of the delineation between cultures and race mostly from comments overheard from our parents generation.

“Of course la… he’s Indian.”

“Careful ah… you know how the Chinese can be.”

“Really, she married a Malay?”

“What do you expect… she is a Serani.”

Most of these were followed by disapproving shakes of the head. Mind you those are the kinder examples. These mixed messages created confusion to me as a child. On one hand, life in Malaysia at the time seemed like a rich and wonderful symbiosis of races and cultures, yet hard and distinct lines were drawn in the sand. It was a weird surreal dance where everyone seemed to know their place on the floor and things kept moving along while various groups employed different steps to a common tune.

Then an acute shift occurred during the political race riots when I was 10.  The music stopped replaced by angry voices and this delicate quirky dance came to a standstill. In one fell swoop the fires of racial hatred were stoked leaving no one immune to dire suspicion based simply on differences in race and religion. This was when the lines in the sand got very much wider.

The reality of this hit the hardest on my return to school after the curfews had been lifted. Disparaging racial remarks and slurs were being spouted by several of my classmates of every race. Within a span of two months the mood and tone of everyday life became starkly different. The fact that 10 year olds who got along famously several months before now engaged in hateful (though subtle) racial potshots provided hard evidence that bigotry and racism is a learned behavior… and one learned quickly. No doubt the example of this ugliness was derived from their parents or elders. Though during this same period of racial strife I also heard heroic (and personal) stories of families of one race providing shelter and sanctuary to their neighbors of a different race. True stories during the height of the troubles that gave one hope that basic human decency still did exist despite the madness that ensued.

As I continued growing in my teen years things calmed and the lines in the sand slowly narrowed once again… but they still existed. At the time I naively considered that perhaps the “healing” from the political race riots had still not been complete. I also succumbed to the “peace and one world” ideal that was an extension from the hippie era. What I was not naive about was that it would take a lot more than government propaganda and slogans before a “wholeness” and a binding national identity and pride can be achieved. I still hold the latter opinion.

Some may argue that in large segments of the population in present Malaysia those lines may have narrowed to a sliver. Inter-racial marriages and dating are higher than they have ever been and the claims of being a “pure” anything is at a lower percentage than ever before… or so I gather. So, the current racial finger pointing should be moot, shouldn’t it? Heck, none of the prime ministers since independence have been “pure Malays” by heritage.

So, what is this idiocy all about? Perhaps it is just that… idiocy propagated by fear… and the inciting of fear for political gain. If we haven’t learned by now it should stand as a reminder that most fear springs from ignorance which ultimately leads to chaos. Besides, it does not engender any sense of national pride or forward motion in a country of historical mixed cultural heritage who are inter-dependent to thrive and survive.

As the years have rolled along I have become more convinced that divisions have always been there… and probably always will. Though I do not see this as a negative. Unique differences in culture and tradition do not have to be divisive.

Racial relations in Malaysia have always been complex. I really don’t expect them to simplify anytime soon. Unfortunately, more often than not when politics are thrown into the mix it becomes a righteous mess. Mostly because the distinctions between race, religion, culture and tradition become blurred. It really does not help when race becomes synonymous with religion, etc. My point being… diversity can actually be a strength… but the path to that has to come from unraveling the knots of perception we have tied.

You see each of the racial groups have anything between a 300 to 600 year stake in the country. Each culture has morphed and evolved (often liberally borrowing elements from each other) to create unique sub-cultures from that of their heritage of origin. Indians in Malaysia are different from those in India as much as the Chinese are different from those in China. Even the Malays are different from their various points of origin in the region whether it be Minangkabau, Achenese, etc. The Seranis have also evolved a unique culture fusion from the original Portuguese colonist. All in turn have become distinctly… Malaysian. Perhaps we should be super aware of these differences and appreciate them.

So I can’t help but return to that sunny and windy day out on an open field so many years ago when we all looked in the same direction observing a kite fight in progress. A string was cut. The detached kite flew with the breeze and we all ran after it together. Once the chase was over we made a collective agreement to meet again the next day for more. And as I walked back home I passed the houses of my fellow kite flying friends. As I passed each one I could tell dinner was being prepared. The aroma of a goat curry wafted from one house, stirfry prawns with soy sauce and ginger from another and the heady roast of a petai sambal from the next. Each one different and distinct… and all from the street I lived on. How could anyone not feel rich with that?

 

the sad state of pubs

20 Sep

 
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