Run, rabbit, run.

Less than 48 hours until the SG Standard Chartered Marathon and my legs are still sore from training and my sleep patterns are more fucked up than ever. The run’s at 4:30AM so it might actually help since I’ve been waking around 5AM daily. I’m kind of excited and nervous all at same time; I want to push myself to my limit but I’m afraid I won’t do as well as I want. The forecast calls for rain and that terrifies the shit out of me. Last time I had to deal with that, I had blisters on my feet and a terrible score. Fingers crossed and praying to the gods on my auntie’s alter for a change of weather. Running’s been a little more liberating than usual for me in the past days and been helping me keep things off my mind. The last run I went through East Coast Park, to Marina Bay to the Marina Barrage and it was fucking amazing. The beach, the skyline, the lights… it was all so surreal. I hope the race views will be just as impressive. I just need my body to keep up with me…

I haven’t been doing very much this trip other than running, eating and spending a lot of time indoors. It’s a huge contrast from last year and the year before. Looking for boars and bothering monkeys on Pulau Ubin, exploring temples and museums, cocktail bar hopping, searching for the legadary wild cow on Coney Island… which is apparently dead now. Come to think of it, it might have already been dead when I was searching for it. Whoops. Also, I haven’t been playing Gitadora much. Who am I? I think I’m just drained from work. And with plenty of sleepless nights, I’ve been trying conserve a lot of energy for my runs. I’m not stressing over it any which way. I’m guess I’m just on different footing right now.

Wish me luck for my run.

//

notable eats so far:

Peranakan @ The Peranakan Restaurant

salted fish skins @ Irvin’s (People line up an hour before opening and it sells out. Worth the wait.)

Seafood [cereal prawns, yam scallop rings] @ Jumbo

Had cereal prawn three times now… First time around I peeled the shells off. Noticed my friend didn’t have any left over on his plate so the second time around, I peeled and ate, half and half. On the third try, I just motherfucking ate them all, head and tail intact. Like a true homegrown Singaporean. What what. Can’t say it was a completely enjoyable experience though…

inpsalmnia no.6

sometimes I feel like I could be the opposite of Sleeping Beauty

where the boy who could ease my heart and put me to sleep would be my one true love

and the not being so pretty part.

Goliaths, heads in the sky. 

Arrived to a very rainy Shanghai and left it that way too. I’m a little bummed out because I was really looking forward to run on The Bund, especially because the skyline was so beautiful and the temperature was nice. I was expecting colder based on my trip to Beijing last year but it was more like Toronto late summer/early fall, where it’s warm enough to wear a tee and shorts but chilly enough to keep me cool during the run. The rain was light but it lasted my whole layover so I got myself a cheap, pretty-but-tacky umbrella. I guess it’ll come in handy for my stay in Singapore, which is my next stop. I really need to fucking get myself some waterproof shoes because I was stuck with wet socks and shoes again. Eventually I got fed up and just changed to my flip flops. I think people were really weirded out by that. Again, Chinese people were really bundled up while I was wearing a hoodie and skirt… and flip flops. Maybe they were just judging my clothing coordination… like a socks and sandals sort of thing. I was thinking to myself, “Why doesn’t everyone do this? This is amazing!” I’m talking about wearing sandals in the rain. You don’t have to worry about ruining a nice pair of shoes or the nasty feeling of having feet trapped in soggy socks; It made so much sense to me… until I got my foot stepped on in transit. Ouch.

I took transit during my last trip but I didn’t end up getting on a trains that were super crowded. This time I did. People were crammed, pressed up against each other and no one seemed to mind, especially because a lot of people were fiddling on their phones over someone else shoulder or head or the other way around. I tried to take the pushing a lot less personally this time. I actually pushed people myself. It was kind of exhilarating, actually. It was like a mild therapy for my pent-up frustrations.

Crossing the street still scares the shit out of me. Like being on the train, people just have a different sense of space here. Cars and motorcycles are too close for my comfort and like most Asian countries, they don’t stop for you. While crossing the street, people will weave past me, inches away from hitting me. I remember when I first learned the trick from Mike: Act predictable. Don’t suddenly stop. I still hold my breath every time and I pray that I don’t die.

I don’t think I did anything particularly special this quick trip. I guess my highlights were walking The Bund, having a hot pot of tea while overlooking the city at Aura, and eating some delicious dumplings at Yang’s Dumpling. I ran out of yuan so I’m eating Burger King right now. At least it’s one of those novel local specialties, a mango spicy chicken burger. It had two large slabs of mango on top of a crispy fried chicken. Well, it was supposed to be crispy. Sounded better in my head than the taste in my mouth. Oh well.

I’m just one flight away from seeing all my family and friends in SG. I’m really excited to catch up with everyone. (That and using GMail, Google Maps and Instagram.) My ears perk up every time I hear a Singaporean accent. I’m so in love with Singapore… Why don’t I live there yet…

Deprived, depraved, in more ways than one. 

My insomnia has been particularly awful to me these last few days. It’s been so hard for me to get to sleep and with the chances that I do, I just keep waking through the night, even after having melatonin under my tongue. SOS. My sleeping arrangements have been so different night-to-night so maybe my body’s having a little trouble adjusting. I think I had a good opportunity to take a nap yesterday but I fucked it up by sipping on some pu er (poh leh?) during dim sum. Whoops. Anyways, I’m on a plane on the way to Shanghai. I thought I’d have better luck here being especially sleep-deprived but still no luck. So as usual, I’m here to ramble and complain.

I have to say, Chinese people are fucking weird. I’m allowed to say that, right? Never in my life have I been on a flight that has been more bewildering than the ones going to China. My first experience with a China flight was to Beijing, around the same time last year. Can’t say I’m used to the social mannerisms of those of the mainland. With that flight, garbage was strewn everywhere. On the table tops in the the waiting area and the plane floor. It was awful. People flooded the line to board, far before pre-boarding and couldn’t seem to understand how the boarding zones worked. At least there was a line, I guess. I remember eating A&W breakfast next to someone who shared the same flight with me, peeved at him chewing with his mouth open. Ugh, the worst! People just spoke in loud Mandarin all around, trying to speak over each other. It was a lot for me to handle and it was a small consequence for snagging a cheap flight.

This flight was a similar experience. While boarding, I was pushed by a much larger woman, trying to get ahead of me though I was clearly in front of her. I scolded her. Not even a minute later, I spotted an older man shamelessly pick his nose. I think he saw my disgust on my face and the extra space I gave him when I was walking past him down the aisle. And again, the Mandarin was irritatingly loud. Sometime during the flight, I had a Chinese congregation form in front of me. People were just standing around, talking, laughing, having multiple conversations over each other BUT REALLY LOUD. I started off with a very comfortable arrangement. My friend had upgraded me to the spacey emergency row and my neighbours were pleasant. (Both gentlemen in my row were not from China and I wonder if it would have been a different experience next to people who were. Am I being too prejudicial?) Fahrenheit 451 with Maximum the Hormone coming through my new headphones. Not bad, not bad at all. But suddenly I had these rowdy guys in front of me and I couldn’t stand it. It was so bad that I had to get up and ask a flight attendant to help do something about it. I’ve been starting to learn to speak up for myself.

“I hate to be a bother but there are a bunch of people —“

She cut me off because she knew exactly what I was talking about. While she apologized to me for having to deal with that, I watched a woman grab a large stash of cookies for herself from the kitchen storage area. One of the Chinese-speaking flight attendants went to shoo them off for me. Easy resolution, I guess.

I had a nice seat to observe people. I don’t know what it is but Chinese people really love to do these weird physical motions. I think they do it for health reasons and it’s part of some obscure Chinese self-help physiotherapy. Like any flight when the seatbelt sign turns off, many people get up, stand around, walking about to recirculate the blood in their legs. But many people on this flight were swaying their hips or squatting in the middle of the aisles. Bums an inch off the floor, up, bum back down, up again. People were also standing around, lightly pounding themselves with their fists against their wrists, their backs, their heads, each other. Bizarre.

// Beijing

I faced a few additional Chinese bad habits while I was in the city. People were spitting everywhere, I was being pushed around on transit, things like that. But apart from that, I had a really fun time exploring Beijing on my own. It was a super spontaneous; I barely had any idea where I was going and Google Maps was blocked but I managed to find myself catching sights and stumbling in areas that really took me by surprise. First thing I did after getting off the plane was wash up at my hotel. It was a “five-star hotel” but it was definitely a two-star hotel by North American standards. I remember scrutinizing the blackened, half-used eraser I had in a stationary box on my desk. I got in and out as soon as I can.

It was a couple of hours before sunrise. I didn’t have data so I simply decided to follow random strangers. I would change who to follow every here and there as my mood changed. Pretty soon, I found myself walking with a ton of people walking in the same direction. Followed them for a bit more and discovered the flag-raising ceremony that way. It was pretty cool. Have to say the Chinese anthem sounds pretty grand.

All throughout the city, people were standing around in groups doing tai-chi, dancing, badminton, etc., in the middle of nowhere. All in huge, thick jackets too. Chinese people really can’t deal with the cold. People were bundled up like it was Antartica. I was layered up with a sweater, skirt and scarf and so many people would ask me, “(need to insert this when I can access Google Translate) “ (You’re not cold?!) One guy yelled that to me while moving fast on a bike, as if he didn’t care to hear my answer. I weaved through spit on temple grounds, ate jien bing with extra hot sauce from a street cart, and survived crossing the streets. I remember sitting around a cute cafe, sipping on mulled wine somewhere in Hutong, a surprisingly hip area.

Hopefully this trip will be just as fun. I didn’t want to pack my Goose so I’m pretty much wrapped up the same way I was last year. Need to come up with something snappy when people ask me if I’m cold. Anyways, my energy’s dwindling. Sorry if my writing has lack of flow and is a little oddly segmented this post. Haven’t been able to think straight without enough sleep and the endless gin doesn’t help.

I don’t have access to Facebook, Instagram, etc. by the way. Don’t get offended. Get over yourself.

Messed up bad

I think I’m messed up bad.

I’ve felt really off during my whole time in Vancouver. I was letting everything beat me down. A lot of things were not going according to plan, there were too many stressful situations, intense disagreements, and the rain just really sucked. I haven’t been to Van during this time of year so I was completely unprepared for it. I bought myself a waterproof jacket and a waterproof bag for the trip but those things were useless without an umbrella or waterproof shoes. When it rained, I didn’t figure it would rain the entire day, the whole day, every day of the fucking week. I stayed by Stanley Park for a week to do a daily run around it but there wasn’t ever a clear day so I never got to. Sure, I could have ran in the rain but I’m sure that would have sucked even more. I was already so frustrated with my forever wet socks and shoes.

These last couple of days especially fucked me up. Circumstances just left me feeling unemotionally unstable and craving for something to fill some sort of void. I don’t exactly know what I’m missing but I know I want much more than what I have now. And if there isn’t anything specific that I’m looking for, is it possible I just have the wrong attitude? Am I fine?

“Are you having a quarter life crisis?”

I think I might be. I don’t know what came over me, but I hung out with someone new and I just spilled everything and put everything on the table. My vulnerabilities, my shortfalls, history of my miserable childhood and my broken family. How the hell did I talk so much about myself? Fuck. I think I just really related to him when he told me about his messy life. And I think he had just enough charm and eloquence, asking me about certain things. Fuck. I feel weak, exposed and naked. That’s also probably why I feel so shitty.

I didn’t take the year off for any reason but to work on a few projects while travelling. But I think that soul-searching and that existentialism crap is starting to get to me. I think I’m looking for a more concrete understanding of what’s going on in my life. Fuck, what is wrong with me? I think going from city to city, I’m getting glimpses of the relatively static lives of people and it’s starting to feel like I’m doing something wrong. I know deep down I’m not, but it’s habit for me to second-guess myself in everything that I do. I am happy with how I’m doing things now but and I’ve been asking myself whether it’s time wasted. If I’m happy and enjoying myself, does it really matter? I’m ashamed to say that I’m not sure. I often feel like I’m supposed have a more confidence in what I’m doing, and completely invest myself in it. While I’m investing all my time into business, I’m still limited as there’s a kind of deadline when school starts up again. I also feel like I can’t fully invest my time in school because I can’t let go of my big dreams with biz. I’ve put too much on my plate again, haven’t I?

I’m starting to question where I want to be, and where I want to spend my life. If we set up a storefront on Queen, will I regret not being able to be so transient? Do I really want to spend the rest of my life in Toronto? What about my idea about living in Singapore for a year or two? There are definitely some gaps that I need to fill.

Anyways, I’m on my way home after being away for a month. Maybe being back will help me resynchronize and clear my head for a bit.

//

On another note, I never intended for the last post to start such a big conflict between people. I’m sorry about that. Again, I think we just have to be conscious that people have sensitivities that we should be respect. And maybe an eye-catching blog-post-title can make an exception.

Dear Fat People,

This one’s going to need some insight. So I had a very interesting topic pop up in a conversation the other day which makes me wonder: Is it rude to call someone fat? And does the circumstance change if the person is or isn’t fat? My friend’s opinion on the topic was: “You can call me fat. It’s a fact of life. It’s neither rude nor derogatory”. I could see where he was coming from but I still had a little trouble fully digesting this point of view because my stance on the issue is that it’s rude to call anyone fat, whether the person is or isn’t. My reasoning is that many overweight people, if not most overweight people, are sensitive to their weight. I have seen a lot of friends who are have been struggling with weight loss their entire lives and being called fat doesn’t really seem to do anything except perhaps hurt someone’s feeling or remind them of something in their lives that makes them upset. If someone called me fat back when I was binge eating during exam time, I would be taken aback and also pretty offended. I guess it’s a little different if you’ve reached a certain level of comfort with someone and you guys are open to that sort of communication.

“You fat.”

“Yeah, I know. But so is your mom. ”

I’m not a person to talk to my friends that way but it’s not like I have a problem letting people know that they’ve gained or lost weight. There are a lot of people that I bump into after a few months or years have gone by and if their weight is noticeable different, I will bring it up in conversation.

“You gained a little bit of weight, didn’t you?”

Of course, I only say this when there has been a very drastic difference that’s worth mentioning. Now, to me, there’s a difference between pointing out that someone’s gained weight and calling someone fat. Unlike the former statement, calling someone fat is usually used derogatorily, it would be very likely that it would be taken as so, and it slaps a label on a person. Of course, that’s just what I think, at least.

It was very fitting that Donald J. Trump posted this yesterday:

I had this question in my mind when I wrote my second latest post in which I call someone old and fat. Mind you, I wrote it. It wanted to convey a sense of hostility against them but I would never have the balls to say that to anyone’s face, even for the purpose of joking with a friend. What’s your view on all this? Let me know in the comments.

Sulk and Ramen

You know what really sucks? Eating something you don’t enjoy eating, alone. And that’s what I did tonight. I don’t think I hate ramen but it definitely wouldn’t be something I’d pick for a meal if I had the choice. Ramen, bahn mi (also most other cold cut sandwiches), and traditional Chinese food are all at the very bottom of my list for choice of meal. But I was with a couple and I let them have the pick. I never like to choose the restaurant when I’m among friends. I usually feel a lot of pressure to pick something that people are happy with and think I have an easier time adapting to others than the other way around. So ramen it was.

It started off like a typical night but my friends were clearly stressed with some work-related issues that went on today. We were at Ramen Koika, downtown Vancouver. Though I don’t really enjoy eating ramen, I do my best to pick something that will soften the blow. I ordered the Asari Miso Ramen. The picture looked pretty good. It had a shit-ton of clams and had an option to made spicy so it was an easy choice for me. The couple was with, both ordered black garlic ramen.

Noodles came. One of the reasons I don’t enjoy eating ramen is because I have a lot of trouble handling hot (temperature) foods and I usually have to wait a long time for it to cool down before I can start eating it. So I started to eat all the clams first and it took me a while to realized that they fucked up my ramen. They forgot to make it spicy. They had no issue replacing it but they were going to take some time to make me a new one.

“But I ate all the clams already”

“That’s okay.”

I felt a little small victory that I would be able to eat another full serving of clams. By the time the new bowl came, my friends had pretty much finished theirs. One of them continued talking to me but it appeared that there was a bit of tension between the two of them. A bit more time in, they began to argue. It was very awkward for me. I didn’t do much but look down at my full bowl and poke my noodles around. At some time, I broke one of the awkward moments of silence and encouraged my friends to go home and sleep things off because they were clearly stressed. They were going to drop me home initially but I thought it better that they didn’t have to wait around for me and they could sort things out amongst themselves sooner rather than later. They agreed and went home. 

So there I was. Me, and a bowl of ramen. After my friends had left, every bite I took just got more and more unenjoyable. It’s not like I haven’t had ramen before. I’ve had ramen with friends plenty of times. When they suggest it, I don’t even bat an eye. I guess I’m okay eating something I don’t enjoy as long as the company I’m with is enjoying it. This, however, was the very first time I was alone, stuck with food that I ordered, that I really didn’t enjoy eating. I don’t even know why I continued eating as much as I did. I got to about to the half-way point and then I asked for the rest to be packed up. I don’t even know what I’m going to do with the leftovers tomorrow morning. I think what made eating my ramen even more depressing was that One More Light by Linkin Park was playing. That, and it costed me $18 after tax and tip. Bleh. Get me some French food or something.

Tonight kind of made me open my eyes to how much I’ve kind of been spoiling myself lately when it comes to eating when I’m solo. Generally, I very much enjoy everything I choose to eat and never choose something simply out of maintenance. And I intend to keep it that way. I should never settle for less but I’m such a pushover when I’m with company.

//

People always get really shocked and appalled when I say I don’t like ramen. They just don’t get it. So let me make a case for myself and tell you my reasons:

  1. As mentioned, I have trouble eating hot foods so I tend to avoid meals with things like hot soup.
  2. Ramen is really heavy and I don’t like the bloated feeling after eating it.
  3. It’s high-calorie.
  4. I generally don’t prefer wet or moist foods. That includes things that are steamed. I rather have something with a drier texture like something that’s fried or raw veggies or something.
  5. It’s messy and being a clumsy eater, I always end up staining my shirt.
  6. I rather eat pasta and pasta’s not really high on my list either.
  7. I generally don’t like carbs (that’s another can of worms, ain’t it?)
  8. And I rather eat more meat and veggies than noodles.