Showing posts with label blog world. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog world. Show all posts

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Grandmother Story by Zedeck Siew

My younger brother is a writer of sorts. He is currently working on what probably is his biggest writing project yet. In amongst that writing, he wrote this little piece which I'd like to share with you because I truly do love it. The simplicity in the writing, the Malaysian nuances and the true-to-life translation of Poh Poh's voice (Poh Poh means "grandmother" in chinese). Most of all, I'm sharing it with you because I'm sure there are many of you out there that will experience a wave of nostalgia.

Poh poh with my brother in the background. (Photo courtesy of my cousin, Chrysler Cheong)

Grandmother Story
by Zedeck Siew

“Your Poh Poh has been giving away her jewellery, and visiting Kong Kong’s grave,” my father informed me, last Chinese New Year. “If you want to record her stories, you better do it soon.”

Apart from looking like a typical grandmother (tiny, wrinkled like a shar-pei, constantly in a samfu) my Poh Poh is also known as a chatterbox; it’s difficult to spend time with her and not be spun some outlandish yarn.

These stories are always about family – and, as visits to the cemetery where her contemporaries are buried become more frequent, they reach further and further into the past. Poh Poh told my father and I the following tale after reunion dinner:

~

The Pregnant Woman and The Coconut

“My father was a respected man in our village. He owned a lodging house, and also supplied people with simple medicines, and people came to him with their problems.

“One day, a villager was out collecting coconuts; it so happened that a coconut fell on his pregnant wife’s head, so much so that her head sunk into her shoulders, like tortoise. So the man went to my father and said: ‘My wife, she’s like this,‘ – he hunched his shoulders – ‘How? Can you help?’

“So my father said: ‘Call your brothers to come.’

“He got the woman to lie down, then rubbed herb oil into her neck. When the husband and his relations arrived, he directed them to hold the wife’s legs and arms. My father held on to the head.

“ ‘One, two, three,’ my father counted. Then, with a jerk, he pulled the woman’s head out. And out it popped.

“After applying some kung fu oil, the woman made a very good recovery – some time later, she even delivered a healthy baby.

“ ‘Thank you,’ said the woman’s grateful husband. ‘How you know what to do?’

“ ‘Actually I didn’t know anything,’ my father said. ‘It was just an experiment!’

~

When I listen to Poh Poh I am listening to narratives of subaltern history. Folk Remedies of Pre-Independence Malaya, for example. Recording her stories is part of a family history project – and such a personal endeavour is useless without some sort of wider relevence.

I ask Poh Poh what kung fu oil is made of.

“It’s kung fu oil,” she answers.

This has been a frustrating process, and it’s not even my idea. The project was something that my parents proposed, mainly because they had a writer and journalist in the family. I accepted, mainly to prove to them that I actually cared about family.

It’s not like I don’t like my tribe. It’s a language issue: they speak Hakka; as an Anglophiliac child of a middle-class household, I refused to learn any of the Sinitic languages – an indulgence my parents regret.

Ditto my Poh Poh. Conversation is possible, if we both speak in Malay: but this difficult, between my schoolyard bahasa and her Kelantanese loghat. Talking to her properly requires my father’s presence as a translator.

~

Poh Poh was born two months premature; she was so small her parents didn’t think the baby would survive. Only a year later did they register her birth. Poh Poh’s certificate says she was born in 1927, in a place called Sungai Yu.

(Domestic dynamics of pre-war rural households.)

It was virgin jungle, then. Before becoming a quack doctor, great-grandfather was a foreman for track-laying work; he was directly responsible for about six miles of the northeast railway.

(Industrialisation of North Malaya.)

He fell into the job because of a scandal. Our 23-year-old hero, then living in Kajang, had gotten in trouble for striking up an affair with a married woman.

“My father was tall and handsome, you know,” Poh Poh says, in explanation. “And your great-grandmother was quite short.”

“Anyway, he got this other lady pregnant, so her people wanted to get rid of him. So he had to run to Kuala Lipis. But not far enough, so my aunt got him a job as a railroad mandur, to lay track all the way to Kelantan.”

The interview pauses as my father and his mother have an animated discussion in the mother tongue.

“What’s wrong?” I ask.

“This is the first time I’m hearing about this!” my father says.

~~~

During the war, with the Japanese at their doorstep, Poh Poh was tasked with hiding away the family’s belongings. She gathered up all the household money and valuables, put them in a bag, and started into the jungle.

On her trek she happened upon a cave, and in exploring it found a suitable cavity to stash the fortune. Covering the hole with rocks, Poh Poh marked the spot, the cave, and the way to the cave with various secret signs and marks: sigils only she could recognise.

The occupation happened, much tapioca was eaten, Kong Kong barely survived a mass execution. When the war was over, life got in the way, and Poh Poh never returned to her hidden riches.

“She thinks she still remembers how to find it,” my father translates, laughing. “Buried treasure. Don’t know la.”

But Poh Poh’s treasure maps have worked. By listening to her accounts, my father managed to track down his mother’s long lost sister:

~

The Stationmaster’s Daughter

“Your Poh Poh has been repeating that story about her sister – who was sold to the Kajang Railway stationmaster, because the family couldn’t afford to support so many children – since I was little.

“So we decided to look. This was about 1980. We took your Poh Poh to the Kajang Station to enquire about the old stationmaster. They remembered he was a Christian fellow.

“So we went to see a priest, who consulted the church directory to give us an address. The stationmaster’s family was now living in a kampung near the new Kajang Jail.

“ ’You, I still recognise you!’ the old man told Poh Poh, when we met him.

“He told us that my Aunty Rose was married and now living in Ipoh. She and her husband owned a laundromat, and had a son named Paul.

“So we went to meet Aunty Rose. When we turned up, the workers in a nearby beauty-parlour commented that I looked like my cousin.

“The reunion was very touching. Aunty Rose and Poh Poh look very much alike.”

~

Listening to Poh Poh’s stories, I realise that I have lost the ability to see my family as anything more than opportunities to make points of national substance.

I’ve been trained to think that, in my country, stories are told so they can be taken as parables of tolerance, patriotic vision, or socio-political ambition. Of gender, class, race relations. We are a young nation; if what we are doing isn’t in the business of nation building, it is not important.

But Poh Poh’s stories take place in a different country: where daughters are given away and tearfully reunited; where herbal oils cure a woman’s posture; where there are wild-boar traps and buried jewellery in the jungle. And stories about these things are told merely because they happened.

~

The Man in the Wild Boar Trap

In his free time, Great-grandfather liked to lay traps for wild boar. He’d trek into the jungle, dig a 12-foot-deep hole, and mark this pit with a rotan fence so that other humans would know it as a snare.

But chopping one’s way through the jungle-brush with a machete can be a soporific affair: step, step, cut, cut, step step, cut cut. So perhaps it was inevitable that the 70-year-old hunter Tok Late, stepping and cutting, chopped right through the makeshift fence and fell down this 12-foot deathtrap.

It was only a day later that my great-grandfather returned to check whether he had managed to catch a delicious non-halal dinner. When he heard Tok Late’s panting and groaning issuing from the hole, he couldn’t believe his luck.

“Wah,” he thought. “That’s a big boar!”

Great-grandfather released the safety on his rifle, crept up to the pit’s lip, and took aim. When Tok Late saw the gunbarrel pointed at him, he cried out – and Great-grandfather, startled, nearly shot him.

When he recovered from shock, Great-grandfather pulled Tok Late out of the wild boar trap. He carried the old hunter on his back for the entire mile-long journey back to the village.

On their arrival, Tok Late’s son thanked Great-grandfather for returning his missing, injured father.

“What happened?” the young man asked.

“Your father fell down my wild boar trap,” Great-grandfather answered.

“Oh,” said the son. “Please wait here. I’m going to bring my father up into the house. Then I’m going to come back out and beat you up.”


Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Mabona Origami

INVISIBLE FOES from MABONA ORIGAMI on Vimeo.



WOW is all I can say. You already know that I really love origami and particularly non traditional paper foldings.

You really have to check this out!

Sunday, August 14, 2011

A month in pictures

So it's been a month. I've missed posting but life has been a blur with so much happening I just haven't had a spare moment. To update you, here is my month in pictures.


We went to watch The Gruffalo live on stage. It was the second time we've watched it and it's still great! So much fun and entertainment for both the kids and adults. When Zac asked to go watch it again, I didn't need much persuasion when I heard that it was at the State Theatre Centre in the Heath Ledger Theatre. I really do like the State Theatre Centre. Despite the criticism it has attracted for not being as big as it should, I do like the intimate scale.


On the same day, we had a great time walking around the cultural centre. The kids particularly liked the wetlands. It was also my first time walking in the urban orchard and I'm really impressed that it is so well managed. Go to the link and you'll find out lots of other family activities and harvesting days.

Our house has recently been over-run by Lego. I don't mind. I like Lego. To be completely honest, I think the adults of this household are currently enjoying it more than the kids! By the way, when Zac saw the dog pictured above, he said that he thought it was a sheep that just had been sheared.

Amelia has been experimenting with my camera and the two shot above are hers. I'm pretty impressed. She has also been enjoying baking with her cupcake extraordinaire Top the Cupcake auntie.
And Zac has been enjoying the tradition of licking the batter! Amelia's development has been going in leaps and bounds and the below is her way of trapping her brother in the bathroom. Bathroom door is to the right. Ingenious, don't you think?


Talk about ingenious, about three weeks ago, our guppy above gave birth to babies and we watched the birthing process. We learnt all we could about caring for the fry and we currently have 6 out of the 11 that was born. I haven't been able to get good pics of the babies. At three weeks, they are showing their spots and markings already. Amazing.

And know what is more amazing? The below:

Astounding, really. What a gift and responsibility for us as parents. The psychologist also said that siblings only differ about 5-10 points in their IQ. I guess we have double trouble then! We're still reeling from the news.

On other news around the home, we have been crafting. Below is a Angry Bird thank you card Zac made for a classmate.


Above is the visual plan he drew for a Lego marine park project he worked on with his dad. I'm constantly impressed with his drawing ability as can be seen by the drawing below.


Other crafting by the kids below.


I've been doodling again and below is a start of an idea for some softies. After successfully making the rabbit for Hannah, I am ready for something new.

I'll finish this massive post with the song that is on repeat loop at home. I do like the Glee version. Have a great week ahead! "Hey baby, I think I want to marry you!"


Wednesday, June 1, 2011

My Journey so far...

Almost a month ago now, I embarked on the journey of taking a photo a day with a simple camera (no zoom, no aperture adjustments, a simple point and shoot camera). Joy in the Everyday has been a therapeutic daily ritual. Here's a quick photo mosaic of the most recent photos.

Follow my journey as I try to find beauty in the ordinary things of my everyday. It's been an eye opening learning journey so far. I must admit it is difficult some days but as I have charged myself with this task, I always something beautiful. Try it for yourself. Things will start looking more than ordinary.

Friday, May 6, 2011

joy in the everyday

Let me introduce you to my tumblr 'stream'. Okay, maybe I shouldn't use that term since it is almost exclusive to flickr.


This is the concept behind my tumblr stream:

Using only my phone, I will be capturing and uploading a picture a day. The subject matter is to be a snapshot of the ordinary. I'm going to seek beauty in the mundane
. Follow my journey as I exercise my photo composition (well, phones really don't take anything more than basic photos!) and find the surprise and joy in your everyday.

This hasn't been a new idea. I've been playing with this idea for some time now and it started here.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Make my heart sing with these ice shapes!







These have been on the market for a while now. Often in specialty stores and shops of galleries and museums. I'm talking about funky ice trays and oh, how I love them! Just look at them! There is heaps more to look at at Fred & Friends and I'm totally taken by the whimsical nature of the products. Much of the products either brings a smile to my face or just cracks me up! I'm off to look for something for myself for Mother's Day in their current catalogue! Bye!

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

DIY Planner

Have you ever wanted to make your own planner instead of forking out the money to buy yourself a moleskin, filofax or such? Well, I have. On various occasions. I've made my very own but they were never really inspiring and never really worked any better than what was already offered on the market. I mean, I just duplicated the same old format. I may have changed and personalised the pages but the method of diarising was still the same.

Okay, this may come as such a surprise to you all since I am just a technogeek. I have used a PDA and I have an iPhone but I still really do like the feel of paper and I really wanted one that worked for me not only for inspiration but to keep up with all the various parts of my busy life. I haven't found an App that would work and the PDA, well, that was oh-so-last-decade!

Life at work was getting a little out of hand and I was slowly feeling things slip. Forgetting things and putting my neck out twice in the last month are clear indications that I needed to get in control. At work, I work with the computer diary (which is essential), I also have weekly meetings with a table of sorts to keep up with my team, and I have my trusty A4 notebook which serves as my brain. Yesterday while in a meeting, it occurred to me that I really needed something that worked for me. Something that would allow me to keep up with all the deadlines, keep up with what and where my team was up to as well as enable me to have a good weekly snap shot of things. I figured that someone out there would have been faced with this problem and would have come up with a solution. I did a quick google search and guess what I found?



I was instantly enticed by its catchy line: The best thing in printing since Gutenberg! What a claim. Was it true? So I put it to the test. I searched "weekly planner". Up came a hundred million results. Many interesting. Some quirky. All templates or formats or methods were posted by members who were all aiming to help in your quest to organise your life. I looked through a number of pages and there it was. The one for me. It gave me what I needed from it and more. A weekly planner that I can print out. It not only allows me to keep track of my own deadlines, it also allows me to keep track of my team! Watch out girls, Adelyn is putting on her manager hat!



The depths of this website is amazing. There are planners to help with scene writing and other creative pursuits, medical planners, work life balance planners and lots more! I have only licked the top layer off of this really totally yummy website!

Now, what is really intriguing about this website, other than the hundreds of planner templates offered for free, is the method currently being developed by one of the members called Middle Way Method. It is a totally different creature to the Action Method by Behance I had previously blogged about. The Middle Way Method is not your usual planner. It involves setting goals, visions and personal mission statements. It is a lot more driven. A lot more life management than time management. I'm rather taken by this and will trial this just to see if I have the discipline and drive to do a weekly personal review of where I am, where I want to be and how I will get there. So this is my plan: I'm going to try it for two months. See what I like and don't like about it, make some modifications and see if I can find something that will give me some control back in my life.

I'll keep you informed along the way. I'm off to organise the world!

Monday, April 19, 2010

Extraordinary mondays - kids *sigh*

I found the best reconstruction of a man's button shirt to a girl's dress recently. It was designed by cheytown and posted on Craftster oh so many years ago in 2007. You just have to look at the genius of the design. It is pure lateral thinking at its best! Front of shirt becomes the back of the dress and the back of the shirt becomes the bodice front! Ingenius!

I wasn't looking for anything in particular but when I saw this. I knew exactly what shirt I was going to recon. Khoa had this blue floral button shirt that had these stains on the sleeve that would not budge. It was the perfect candidate for the shirt to dress trial.

So last night, I set about cutting up the shirt and putting it together. I made a few changes to the design of the dress and found the perfect sash and bow to complete the dress. (Oh Tina, I kept forgetting to ask if I could use that bow/belt thing I found lying around!) It took me a total of 1.5 hours! WOW! That's record time and so very easy!

Front of dress

Back of dress

I couldn't wait for the look on Amelia's face the next morning! She absolutely adores "preetti" dresses. My first recon and what a success! I was elated.

This morning, I showed her the dress, brimming with pride and anticipation. Guess what she said?

"Dada's dress"

I tried to put it on her but she down right refused to try it on and would even run away from me whenever I approached her with it.

*sigh*

Tina, I guess you could have your belt back and the dress can go to someone else. Gina, you interested?

Note to self: Recon a shirt that Amelia does not have a conscious memory of.

*sigh*

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Is this copying?

This is too juicy to not post about.

The media is awash with Sam Leach's Wynne winning landscape piece and what looks to be the original piece he "reference" from.

Image taken from ABC news website

What you see on the left is Sam Leach's Proposal for Landscaped Cosmos which recently won the Wynne Prize. On the right is Adam Pynacker's 1660 Boatmen Moored on the Shore of a Lake.

There are quite a few angles on this:

1. Wynne Prize is for a landscape painting of an Australian scenery in oils or watercolours or for the best example of figure sculpture by Australian artists

2. Sam Leach argues that the paintings are different for the following reasons: it is one fifth of the size, important elements from Pynacker's work is not included, there are stars in the sky and reflected in the lake is an LED grid. (Sorry but I couldn't get a better image online of his work)

3. If Sam Leach has been open about his reference, why was it never cited in the media releases?

For more discussion on this, go here.

So now, what do you think? I'd like to know where you stand on this. Should he have won the Wynne Prize?




Saturday, January 2, 2010

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Happy new year everyone! I must apologise for the lack of posts lately. We are having such lovely family time together, I can't pull myself away! Sorry.

We are also in the middle of doing a major spring clean of our house so any spare time is spent cleaning, packing and culling. After the dust settles, I will be back to normal posting. See you then!

Friday, December 25, 2009

Blessed Christmas to all!



If you look closely, you will notice our unique Christmas tree decorations! You could probably guess that the kids helped with the tree this year (which went up just last night!) We had a lovely day today with family and the new backyard pool.

My Christmas prayer is for God to open His floodgates and rain His blessings down on you and your family in this coming new year! Blessed Christmas everyone!

Friday, December 18, 2009

baroque moments shop opening delayed

With much disappointment, I have to announce that the much talked about opening of the baroque moments shop on etsy has to be postponed. Due to some unforeseen circumstances beyond my control, the opening will not be until the mid-2010.

I'm sorry but hey, hang around as there will be more shop talk and possibly sample giveaways in the mean time!

Monday, October 19, 2009

Extraordinary mondays - a peek into journals

I find such inspiration in other people's work and am ecstatic whenever creative people allow us a glimpse into their journals.

Here are some of the pages that I have been immersing myself in. One day...

Check out more from Anna Rusakova's portfolio here on the Behance Network.

A September page from Geninne's diary

Sunday, October 11, 2009

The Human Family Tree | National Geographic Channel

Have you heard of this project? As I am writing this, I am watching it on the National Geographic channel and am AMAZED! We are all linked to ONE man and ONE woman all the way in Africa. The science in it is a little too much for me to explain here but you really have to go read about the project here and the specific genetic overview here.



The Human Family Tree retraces the deepest branches of the human race to reveal interconnected stories hidden in our genes - using diverse neighbors from a single street who represent a microcosm of the world.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

What's hot and what's not

I'm playing along with the What's Hot and What's Not that has been going around a little in the blog world.

What's hot:

The lovely weather we are experiencing here in Perth. The clear skies and the "just-right" temperatures. Hope this lasts. Weather in Perth has been not great lately. It's like winter is dragging its feet.

My parents are coming to stay with us for about 7 weeks!! YAY!

What's not:

Waking up in the middle of the night to feed Amelia. She is 19 months and really doesn't need the night feeds anymore!

The pile of work on my desk at work.

The lack of energy at the end of the day to complete that dinosaur library bag.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Benja Harney - Paperform

Following on my fascination with paper craft and sculptures, I chanced upon Benja Harney's portfolio on the Behance Network. He also has a website called Paperform which showcases his work. My current favourite is his design for the report cover for Shigeru Ban's bidding entry for a project in Sydney. (Unfortunately, he didn't win the bid.)

The cover is made from a single piece of paper which is folded onto itself. I think it is the simplicity and the attention to detail to the packaging of the report that strikes me. Go here for more images of the report and packaging.


Image taken from Benja Harney's porfolio on the Behance Network

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Extraordinary Mondays - Uthando Project



Have you heard of the Uthando Project? This project began in 2004 when Dr Julie Stone, an Australian infant, child and family psychiatrist returned from South Africa determined to find a way to help the children in the Hlabisa district. The initial invitation to dollmakers have grown from strength to strength and is still going.

If you want to be part of it, all you need to do is to make a doll with the following guidelines:
  • Make your doll brown, firm, well filled and cuddly, with colourful clothing (or body, for knitted dolls)
  • Remember that dolls are for children of all ages
  • Dolls with dress-up clothing need at least 3 items of clothing. Shoulder bags, beads, and other decorations are very welcome!
The Uthando Project website also provides you with some basic patterns to make the dolls here and their "contact us" provides you with details regarding who to contact when you have finished your doll or if you want to have further information for a participation in a bigger way.

This is one of the things that is going in my "to-do" list!

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Don't go throwing those SIGG bottles away!!

If you had one of those old SIGG bottles, don't throw them out yet. The clever moms at Cool mom picks and The Soft Landing have partnered with major stainless steel bottle manufacturers to bring you The Big Bottle Swap! You get 30% off if you swap and if you aren't trading in, you get 20%. Better be quick though, the offer ends on 14 September.


Image taken from The Big Bottle Swap website

I've also just found an alternative to Klean Kanteen. A lot closer to home and doesn't cost an arm and leg for shipping and handling all the way from the USA. It's called ECOtanka. It has pretty much the same bottles as Klean Kanteen and the company is based in New Zealand. I've had to put in an order for a replacement cap as Amelia dropped her bottle and broke hers. Hopefully it will fit. I'm sure it will since most of these bottles are manufactured in China and the sizes are standardised anyway.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Sleek the Spider no. 2

This is the second Sleek the Spider in the whole wide world made by Deb from Two Cheeky Monkeys. She won my giveaway and has just posted up the pic of the one she made from the kit she received from me. It's posted here at her twitter.

You should drop by Deb's etsy shop called Two Cheeky Monkeys. I do so love the following items in her shop currently:


LinkWithin

Blog Widget by LinkWithin