Showing posts with label Love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Love. Show all posts

10 July 2013

SLEEPING LIKE A LOG


Once in a while, I get so exhausted from work that I make time to sleep in.

Which means being sleep-dead like a log for 12 hours straight.

Coupled with my phone dying out due to no charging, this is what happened.

 


For some silly reason, the Husband panicked and got the brother to help. (I KO-ed at my in-laws place because we were supposed to have dinner there but I did not inform the Husband my whereabouts.)


 
 
And the day before, I posted this on my Instagram.




Sometimes I think I marry a clown who likes nothing more than making me laugh at his silly antics.




Metta,
欣雨 Xinyu

04 June 2013

LOST IN TRANSLATION I

Where have you been all my life?

Over the Vesak weekend, I spent 6-7 hours daily doing translation works. Apart from doing my daily prayers practice at home, I didn't go for the usual celebratory activities. I wanted to use the time to do something for Buddhism instead. Think that would make Buddha happy too, no?

I would be in the bedroom on my small hot pink plastic table (and I mean, really small, like this S$12 foldable tray table from NTUC), sitting on my lime Ikea stool (I think it's meant for kids), voraciously churning out lines and lines of translated words. 

The Husband would be in the living room, sitting at the long dining table, either editing my works or doing the translation for other articles that I asked him to. If I had any word/sentence structure I'm unable to translate, I would snap a pic of my screen and watsapp him. The Husband's English proficiency is way better than mine (how can his mind work so quick?!), but I win hands down at being more meticulous in translating the original content without losing its intended meaning.

It was an awesome long weekend to be doing something literary, though it's not literature. I can't remember the last time I squeezed my brain muscles this much. TFL work is fun but this brings back so many memories of how I slough during my uni days, rushing projects after projects, assignments after assignments.

I only wish we have a super duper long work table in some big home office room so that the Husband & I can sit side by side to do this translating work so that I can pester him to death and work less.



I like the colour scheme but please give me some curtains or my eyes gonna melttttt!



Who says island tops can only be used in the kitchens?


Top favourite!

Modern vintage style is so pretty!!

Pictures credit: Google images

I would have at least 8-10 tabs opened on my Firefox. There's this Buddhist dictionary, Nciku.com for Chinese-English translations, Google search (ploughing through the entire web for translations if Nciku is not good enough), the original article I'm translating, my inbox, this tab of English Grammar (I'm thinking I should buy that Cambridge grammar book from Popular), sometimes Buddhanet and many other sites that I found just to translate that one tricky phrase. And of course, Open Office (I don't use MS Office. Open Office is free.)

I can really do this day in day out. 

Suddenly, it seemed like the past 20 years of education all make sense after all. 

We are blessed to be bilingual. I might still need a proper dictionary and a grammar guide. Just in case.

But I was pretty brain fried after that long weekend and had to stay off translating long articles for a few days. Jeez, I should have done more Sudouku for some brain yoga to keep it in shape. 

The other day, there was this sentence I had to translate: 大家看看,想想短暫又脆弱的人生...
  
I read it out loud from my phone (Inbox) and asked the Husband, "How do you say 短暫 in English?"

My brain was freezing after doing too many translations at one go.

The Husband replied, "Short-lived!"

"Short-lived? I thought there's a better word for it in Buddhism!"

"Temporary? I think it's either short-lived or temporary!"

"Sure or not? Sounds strange. Cannot anyhow translate. Can you be a bit more serious or not?"

"I'm serious! Who says I'm not serious? I don't look serious meh??"

"How about 脆弱?"

"BRITTLE!" He said it with so much conviction.

"Brittle? Sounds like bones advertisement. Like, brittle bones, please drink Anlene!"

"No, I'm very sure it's BRITTLE!"

"Then what? You mean like 'Everyone think think and see see how life is short-lived and brittle'? Or 'Life is temporary and brittle'? Like very 苦like that."

"Yes, you got it right! Life is 苦 what in the eyes of the Buddha. "

"I don't believe you."

Final translation - Let's take a look and think about how transient and fragile life is...
  
Sometimes Google translate works better than a human brain.

Just sometimes.

Anyone out there can figure out what the English term for 知音 is?


Metta, 
欣雨 Xinyu

17 March 2012

Random




I'm especially in love with what Mr Buffet said about spending. So true. Too many people I know are in credit card debt. It's a neverending cycle for them.

And is it only me who thinks this same set of rules somehow apply to relationships as well? Apart from the Investment quote of course. =P




Now if you don't agree with the previous one, I'm dead sure you will agree with this.

Reminds me of falling in love. Will the rate of return be proportionate to the risk that we took?

I don't think we ever know till everything ends, isn't it?

And that's what makes love so enchanting.

Though I must say the older I get, the harder it is for me to take such risk all over again.

The amount of risk we can take in love is probably somehow equivalent to the age we are. Haha!



Metta,
欣雨 Xinyu

22 October 2011

18/10/2011 1140pm


 三年零九個月。

本來就是一段沒人看好的戀情。

看著你爲了他哭倒在地,

我眼眶都紅了。

年紀越大,越無法承受感情的挫敗。

你曾不顧一切執意地要和他在一起。

你說他就是你一直尋找著的白馬王子。

你為他神昏顛倒﹑茶飯不思,

整個人生的方向都亂了陣腳。

我們幾個好姐妹當中,

就只有你的抱負﹑理想是最大的。

但這幾年,你去了哪裏啊?

你們倆都追求著轟轟烈烈的愛情。

平凡不好嗎?

是業緣也好,是還感情債也罷。

人生不都是一場夢嗎?

現在的哀怨都會過去的。

我走過來,才敢這麽說。


最刻苦銘心的感情又怎樣?

不能和你牽手到老的,再怎麽心不甘情不願,

也唯有放下才有希望。


你曾說愛情不會是你的人生。


你還有很多很多的夢想啊!




活著,需要勇氣。


你說你沒有,不用緊,我們一定會不斷地幫你打氣!




Metta,
欣雨 Xinyu


萍聚

別管以後將如何結束 至少我們曾經相聚過
不必費心地彼此約束 更不需要言語的承諾
只要我們曾經擁有過 對你我來講已經足夠
人的一生有許多回憶 只願你的追憶有個我

18 October 2011

The love they have


I've a whole chunk of entries that I wanted to blog about, but my heart felt so heavy after 
reading the Sunday Times article.


Source: Facebook user Faith Teo

Has it already been a year since Mrs Lee's passing?

The love Mr Lee Kuan Yew and his wife have for each other is legendary.
I'm not talking about what we know from the media.

In my previous job, I've heard many first-hand accounts from my colleagues who witnessed the amazing love and harmony Mr & Mrs Lee shared. 
It was incredible.
After 60 years, you know.

Recently, I have seen so many couples who are already having problems within 5 years into their marriage.
Over dinner yesterday, my housing agent friends were just saying that many of the flats they sold nowadays were those of divorcing couples.
Reason for divorce?
Infidelity, for many.

Maybe it's true.
The love couples from the older generation have are stronger than the love our current generation forges.

"As a young man with an interrupted education at Raffles College, and no steady job or profession, her parents did not look upon me as a desirable son-in-law. But she had faith in me. We had committed ourselves to each other. "
- Mr Lee Kuan Yew

Mr Lee is such a powerful political figure. 
At the risk of sounding silly, I won't be surprised if there are other females 
who might be bowled over by that, especially during his younger days.
Back then, a highly educated English-speaking young man is a rare commodity in Singapore.
Double starred first-class honours in Law from Cambridge is still an 
insurmountable feat by today's standards.

He told her: 'We have been together for most of our lives. You cannot leave me alone now. I will make your life worth living in spite of your physical handicap.'
She replied: 'That is a big promise.'
Papa said: 'Have I ever let you down?'
- Miss Lee Wei Ling

The pressure and stress of being a great man's wife must be tremendous. 
It's one thing to be a rich man's wife and enjoy the tai-tai life
It's another to be a politician's wife and be actively involved in his career.
And it's Mr Lee that we are talking about.
Being a wife of an extremely busy man myself, I can only imagine how much more challenging it must have been for Madam Kwa on so many levels.

I don't know how she did it without going bonkers.
Reading all the euologies made by her family struck me as how intelligent a woman she is.
Even by today's standards, her brillance surely surpassed many of us.
The only girl in Raffles Institution, an all-boys school.
No. 1 in Cambridge Law School, with Mr Lee coming in No. 2.
A co-founder of PAP and one of Singapore's top law firms.
Plus, bringing up and educating 3 children.

Sometime, the idea of waking up to a to-do list that is as long as the Great Wall of China gives me terror chills.
I can just blank out and what takes only 30 minutes to complete ends up taking 2 hours.
Making me feel worse instead.
 Madam Kwa must have had incredulous abilities in managing stress and maintaining peak efficiency.

Given her classical education, supreme command of English and a major in English literature at Raffles College, I wish Madam Kwa had a blog or wrote her memoirs. I don't recall any great woman in Singapore had one. Hers will be a great inspiration to many of us ladies in years to come.
I can suggest some chapters off hand!

# How to ace every exam and beat the boys in your class!
# How to train your kids to read the world & be multi-lingual (by taking away the TV, sweetie)
# How to knit beautiful sweaters for the kids overseas
# How to knit cute booties for the grandchildren
The above 2 must include photos of past works.

# How to find good tailors for that perfect cheongsam
# How to write powerful speeches/letters in Queen's English
(to move the nation and leave your Husband's opponents dumbfounded)
# How to run your household & have a fabulous career too 

and most importantly,
# How to keep your rich & powerful man for 63 years

Sure sell like hotcakes!
I wish I learn of your achievements earlier, Madam Kwa.

Maybe it's the lack of space in our HDB flats that discourages us from keeping a diverse range of books from Birds of Singapore (jeez, someone actually read that??) to The Oxford's Companion to Food, Peter Rabbit to Lord of the Rings, Plato’s Republic to Confucius.
But even if we do, I bet rarely will any one beat that.
Oh boy, I would love to visit Madam Kwa's library.

Babes, this lady drafted the constitution of PAP and the amendment statute to the Separation Agreement from Malaysia.
The latter saves us from having our water supply cut off at whim by the Malaysian leaders.
Has Her World given Madam Kwa a Woman of the Year award yet?

 "I walk two steps behind my husband like a good Asian wife."
- Madam Kwa Geok Choo

Mr Lee Kuan Yew and Madam Kwa Geok Choo at their wedding reception
at the Raffles Hotel in 1950. They were married secretly in Britain in 1947. Source: www.preshigh.edu.sg


"True, she was escorted by her brother-in-law, but in the Singapore of that era, if a girl accepted an invitation to a young man's 21st birthday dinner, it was an event not without significance." 
- Mr Lee Kuan Yew

How much does it take to have a steadfast love that spans over decades?
For your then boyfriend to ask for your commitment on New Year's Eve before he leaves for England.
For him to find ways to get you into Cambridge with him.
For him to get you a platinum ring and whisk you to Stratford-on-Avon for a secret wedding, during the Christmas holidays.
 For your husband to still hold onto your hand for hours on a long flight.
For your husband to soften & have sparkles in his eyes when he speaks of you.
For your husband to say he has never let you down.
For him to always want you by his side when he travels.
For him to dedicate his memoirs to you.
For him to co-own all his assets and bank accounts with you.
For him to talk to you & read you poems every night by your bedside in your last days.
For him to custom-made wetsuits for you, so that you can swim to aid recovery.
For him to constantly encourage you when you are so sick that it hurts.
For you to stay awake, no matter how hard it is, just to hear his voice.
Even after 63 years of marriage.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I have never asked the Husband if he wants to have our ashes together.
Never thought of it till now.
I rather not ask though.
I wish to wait to see if he will ever ask.




"For reasons of sentiment, I would like part of my ashes to be mixed up with Mama's, and both her ashes and mine put side by side in the columbarium. We were joined in life and I would like our ashes to be joined after this life."
 - Mr Lee Kuan Yew, in a note to his 3 children


Metta,
欣雨 Xinyu



The Sunday Times   Published on Oct 2, 2011
Love does indeed spring eternal
Emotional ties don't come to an end with the passing away of a loved one
By Lee Wei Ling


My friend Balaji Sadasivan passed away on Sept 27 last year. In the obituaries section of The Straits Times last Tuesday, exactly one year after his death, there was a sonnet by Balaji himself: 'But even in gloom, one truth is fundamental, from time immemorial, love springs eternal.'

A week after Balaji died, on Oct 2, my mother passed away peacefully at home. 'Love springs eternal' - but what comfort is that to the one who has departed and can no longer reciprocate our love?

This thought slipped randomly in and out of my mind as I was exercising last week. Then my Blackberry buzzed. I read the incoming e-mail. It was from my father - brief, concise, a mere statement of fact, yet what was unsaid but obvious was his love and concern for us, his children.

I suddenly realised that love does spring eternal. Papa, my brothers Hsien Loong and Hsien Yang, and my sisters-in-laws Ho Ching and Suet Fern, and I are still bound by our love for Mama and will continue to be for many more years.

For the first few weeks after her devastating stroke on May 12, 2008, my family and the doctors met often to discuss how best to minimise her suffering and perhaps enable her to recover to some extent.

The physiotherapists, occupational therapists and speech therapists all did their best, but Mama did not improve. The May 12 stroke was more extensive, and involved more brain regions controlling movement than her first stroke on Oct 25, 2003.

But Papa remembered how well she had recovered from that first stroke, which had occurred while my parents were visiting London. By the end of that year, we were celebrating Mama's 83rd birthday on Dec 21 in a private room at Goodwood Hotel in Singapore.

Now, in October 2008, Papa knew that if Mama survived she would never be able to walk independently. But he felt that so long as she knew she was an important part of his life, she would still find life worth living.

He told her: 'We have been together for most of our lives. You cannot leave me alone now. I will make your life worth living in spite of your physical handicap.'

She replied: 'That is a big promise.'

Papa said: 'Have I ever let you down?'

Mama tried her best to cooperate with the therapists. But it seemed a useless struggle. Even swallowing a teaspoon of semi-solid food was a huge effort. Then more bleeds occurred and her condition deteriorated. We, her family, decided that no further active treatment should be sought. We arranged to bring her home and nurse her there.

Before we brought her home for the final time, Papa arranged for her to stop at the Istana, to see her favourite spots in the grounds. We wheeled her to where she had planted sweet-smelling flowers such as the Sukudangan and the Chempaka. Then we wheeled her to the swimming pool, where she had swum daily.

We showed her the colourful little 'windmills' she had arranged around the pool. She also saw the colourful wetsuits that Papa had arranged to be made for her to keep her warm in the water.

He and I had been convinced that she had to exercise to remain fit. So come rain or shine, she would don a wetsuit and swim. Even when travelling, she would swim in the hotel pool.

On one trip, Mama said to Papa: 'Today is a public holiday in Singapore. Can I take a break from swimming.'

Papa replied: 'No, have a swim. You will feel better after that.'

As a neurologist, I knew that after the first bleed in 2003, a second was likely. But I did not want to burden Papa or Mama with this knowledge.

Still, unknown to me, Papa had sensed that she could easily rebleed. He told us later that they had both discussed death. They had concluded that the one who died first would be the lucky one. The one remaining would suffer loneliness and grief.

Mama deteriorated further after she returned home. Finally, she reached a stage when she could not even speak and seemed unaware of her surroundings. But she was always aware of Papa's presence.

When Papa travelled, she would stay awake at night waiting for his phone call. When I began travelling with him, he usually would tell her on the phone: 'Bye dear, I am passing the phone to Ling.' Those were the times when I could hear her actively trying to vocalise.

When Mama passed away, I was at her bedside, watching her fade as her respiration became more shallow and feeble until it finally stopped. I did not try cardiopulmonary resuscitation. It would have been futile to have done so and cruel.

I called to ask my family physician to sign the death certificate, then returned to my room in a daze. Papa waited until the people from the Singapore Casket Company arrived. He showed them the jacket he wished Mama to wear and asked them to do their best to make her look attractive.

The wake lasted for three days. Hsien Loong and Hsien Yang, together with their wives, took turns to stand by the coffin and greet well-wishers.

I was tired and rested at home, only attending the wake on the first evening to greet my friends and colleagues. I hoped that by resting I would recover by the day of the funeral.

Most of the time, my mind was blank. I thought I had my emotions under control. It was only at the funeral, when it was my turn to deliver the eulogy, that the finality of Mama's passing hit me. I managed to control my tears but my voice was strained with emotion.

Three days after the cremation, the urn containing my mother's ashes was delivered to our home. We all stood and bowed as the urn was brought into the dining room.

A few days later, I noticed that Papa had moved from his usual place at the dining table so as to face a wall, on which were placed photographs of Mama and himself in their old age. He tried various arrangements of the photos for a week before he was satisfied.

He also moved back to the bedroom he had shared with Mama for decades before her final illness. At the foot of his bed were another three photographs of Mama and himself.

The health of men often deteriorates after they lose their wives. The security officers and I watched Papa getting more frail every day. His facial features were grim, perhaps to mask his sadness and grief. I took one day at a time and persuaded him not to undertake any arduous trips to America or Europe. China and Japan were near enough and manageable. I was pleased to get him out of the house.

By July this year, Papa's health had stabilised and even begun to improve gradually. I reminded myself of the analogy I used for him - titanium. Titanium is light but strong. It can bend a little, but it will not snap unless it is under overwhelming force.

Physically, we all eventually succumb. Papa is also mortal. But he is psychologically stronger than most people. Life has to carry on, and he will keep going so long as he can contribute to Singapore.

As I was halfway through writing this article, I went out of my room for a drink of water and saw a note from Papa addressed to all three of his children. It read:
'For reasons of sentiment, I would like part of my ashes to be mixed up with Mama's, and both her ashes and mine put side by side in the columbarium. We were joined in life and I would like our ashes to be joined after this life.'

The writer is director of the National Neuroscience Institute. Send your comments to
suntimes@sph.com.sg
Copyright © 2011 Singapore Press Holdings. All rights reserved.


05 October 2011

I can never agree

 With abortion.

Unless the foetus is dead inside or something.
Or else, all the usual excuses are crap to me.

“I feel that the greatest destroyer of peace today is abortion, because it is a war against the child, a direct killing of the innocent child, murder by the mother herself.” – Mother Teresa

Too poor to have the child.
It was unplanned.
Too young.
Will hinder the future plans.
Career first.
Not ready.
Not married.
etc, etc, etc.

Don't do it in the first place then.

Don't be silly and think you have the right to indulge in whatever.
Nothing comes without a consequence.

“And if we can accept that a mother can kill her own child, how can we tell other people not to kill one another?” – Mother Teresa

How does a girl go through all this and still be able to live her life freely?

Don't come & tell me dumb excuses like "It's not properly formed yet!". 
It's growing everyday. It's a living life!
How can you inflict such pain on your child?
Where do you expect the soul of the child to go?
You think your child won't be crying inside?

“It is a poverty to decide that a child must die so that you may live as you wish” – Mother Teresa
A couple of years later, you make it better in life, toting bags that cost at least 2 grand
and driving that swanky BMW.
Even telling me that driving an Audi/Lexus will be considered a downgrade.
Yet never once I hear you say you regret that decision.

I don't know what to think of you.

No religion in the world approve of abortion.
In the Buddhist teachings, killing is the most serious sin one can commit. 
It's a human life that we are talking about.
For all you know, the child might have amazing potential when he/she grows up.
He might be a life-saving doctor.
She might be a great philanthropist.
Even if it doesn't happen, the child's right to live is never to be conferred by anyone.

In the process of running your own life, don't go around ruining others.


You ask me why he keeps putting off marriage.
Gal, your man just asks you to kill his own child

What can you be to him?
You're not even blood related.
How can he be worth your love?

You've already been blinded once. Don't do it a second time.

For goodness sake, please wake up, honey.

“Abortion kills 2 persons. The unborn and the conscience of the mother.” – Mother Teresa

好不容易能得人身,
你卻剝奪了他的希望,
扔下一個支離殘缺的童靈,
連為孩子報名超度﹑安個牌位
讓他有栖身之所,
你也不屑。
你的自私﹑你的無情,
看了心都寒了。

孩子的怨恨能向誰說呢?

因果不壞。
不是不報,只是時辰未到。
朋友,三思啊!



Metta,
欣雨 Xinyu


人生且莫把心欺,
神鬼昭彰放過誰,
善惡到頭終有報,
只爭來早與來遲。
~ 蓮生活佛


03 September 2011

我真係好鍾意廣東話!

 During our dating time, the Husband & I had a random conversation about raising kids after marriage.

I said I would speak to our kids in Cantonese and get my family to do the same too.
Both my parents are Cantonese and so are my relatives.
I like my native dialect a lot (actually, I find all Chinese dialects amazing) with all its quirks & all
and want to pass it on to my children. 
It is a pity that very few children are able to speak beyond English & Mandarin.
Plus, it is always easy to learn a new language when one is a kid.
Not like they need to take exams anyway. =P

The then-boyfriend-now-Husband wasn't keen in the kids learning dialects.
He felt that English & Mandarin would suffice.
Well, coming from a grown man who doesn't know how to speak his Hock Chew or even Hokkien, kinda expected isn't it?
I told him it was snobbish to think that way.
After all, you never know when it might come in useful. No harm learning, right?
It's free teaching, you know!
He snorted at that idea.

Until one day, not long after our wedding, we went to Hong Kong to visit my aunt.
It was the Husband's first time there and he was totally floored by the locals.
At that time, Hong Kongers were not fluent in Mandarin and treated Mandarin-speaking tourists in a not so polite way.
I got better bargaining deals than him, being mistaken as a local because of my accent
(those were the days, sigh).
During the one week we were there, it was misery for the Husband because most of the time, he couldn't understand the conversations going on and needed my help in ordering/buying stuff.

I didn't mean to be mean, but it was really hilarious to see how quickly he changed his stance on learning dialects after the trip.

Not speaking & hearing Cantonese nowadays as often as I do in pre-marriage days, when I stumbled onto this video on Youtube, it was like reliving those TVB drama serial days all over again!

Such sweet happiness!

I like Chow Yun Fatt. He's my favourite actor since my secondary school days.
An actor who is in his own league and irreplacable.



 Cantonese humour is so quirky & funny!
I hope he will do some great comedy movies!
It will be such a blast!




Metta,
欣雨 Xinyu

01 August 2011

This time, this day, we turn 9

 Time flies when you are with your love. 
It never felt like 9 years to me. 

Thank you for giving me so much of your love, even when I don't deserve it.

Happy 9th year anniversary to us, dear.



Metta,
欣雨 Xinyu

17 February 2011

吾的情人節禮物

After a year plus of nagging, the Husband finally got me one. 
My 1st portable hard disk!

Called him the other day and he was at Funan, getting something for his customers. It was my lucky day!
The other time he was at a computer shop and all he could remember was getting a hard case for his IPad. -__-
I had been pestering him to get a portable hard disk for me ever since my previous desktop was on the verge of breaking down. 
I panicked at the thought of losing all my files & pictures for TFL's work. 
He kept forgetting (so did I) and once, when I had to use his hard disk, it has a Trojan! Yikes!

There was only Matte Black, glossy Hot Pink & some other neon colour to choose from.
I like Hot Pink, but a glossy surface will mean scratches.
So Matte Black then!

But gasp! I didn't know portable hard disks are so expensive! I thought it would be less than S$80!
He was trying to tell me how good the brand was, the free (but ugly, imho) pouch, the 5-year warranty. 500 GB of storage (I don't know how to tell if it's a lot) and so on...blah blah blah. 
I nodded my head, but all those technical terms didn't quite register in my brain. =D

When he came home, he gave me the receipt, saying that maybe I might want to file it under TFL's expenses.
But I never pay him back. 
Thou shalt claim it as my V-day present! Because on that day, he only gave me a packet of KFC Cheese Fries. Hmphf!







11 January 2011

黑色幽默 II

I love Chinese New Year goodies, especially rolled-up pineapple tarts (not those open-faced cousins that look like hot cross buns) & kueh bulu.

My mum-in-law knows what my favourites are. Being a sweetheart, she will give me 1-2 tubs of her home-made CNY goodies 2-3 weeks before CNY. Her confections beat all those available outside hands down, anytime. The crumbly pastry, the delicious fillings, the soft-to-bite tarts, ooooh! I've never bought any CNY goodies since she started making them for me.

The goodies usually never make it to the actual day of Chinese New Year.

The other day, Jo brought home a small tub of Mum's kueh bulu. Excited, I opened up and after saying my prayer of thanks, I shoved one into my mouth, all ready to gobble it.

Then I looked at Jo, with a surprised expression, but unable to speak at first, as I was still chewing the kueh bulu.

Me: How come the kueh bulu is so soft?
Jo: Oh, Mum made it soft intentionally. I forgot to tell you.
Me: Aaaaah, I was all set to bite it, then I end up banging my rows of teeth together.

On another occassion, Mum gave us 4 big tubs of pineapple tarts. These were meant for our neighbour & some of the people that had helped TFL.

Jo & I were sitting at the dinner table, debating whether I can take 1 tub for my own consumption. Finally, I succumbed.

Over 2 days, the tub went from brimming full to one third full. The pure joy of biting into the freshly baked rolled up tarts with the pineapple filling brimming out is just so yummy! I was just telling Jo how much I enjoy the pineapple tarts.

Jo: Aaaah, no wonder you look tarty.
Me: Me? Tarty? What?
Jo: Yeah, because you stuff yourself silly with Mum's pineapple tarts. They are tarts. You have eaten so much, so you must be 'tarty'

He then continued to laugh at me, and at his own silly joke. -___-

I'm not sharing the tarts with him.

The kueh bulu? Oh, they arrived at my home in the evening. But erm, they never saw the sunrise.


Metta,
欣雨 Xinyu

05 December 2010

黑色幽默

My husband. Joseph.

The longer we are together, the more I realise his innate potential to be a stand-up comedian.

I am going to make an effort to blog more about his 'dark' side.

Me: Gosh, can you be more cultured when you speak? You're so couth!
Jo: Oh, then I must drink more Yakult
Me: ???
Jo: Because it is a cultured drink.

Me: Don't you think what I'm wearing today is very nice? I think it is very chic.
Jo: Hey, wait, stop! (And he just stood still.)
Me: What are you doing?
Jo: Oh, I thought I saw zebra crossing.
He then erupted into peals of laughter. I was in a nautical b/w striped maxi.

Jo: Did you go to the zoo?
Me: Huh?
Jo: Did you go to the zoo and visit the elephants?
I stopped eating my spaghettini & looked at him, utterly confused.
Jo: Did you go the zoo and brush the teeth of the elephants?
Then, it finally dawned on me.
Jo: What did you do to your toothbrush? Why are the bristles in such a horrible shape?
You used it to brush the teeth of the elephants, so the bristles are totally flattened?
He started to mimic brushing an imaginary elephant's teeth.
Me: What! I brush at least 3 times a day, so it's natural that my toothbrush wears off faster than yours!
Jo: Ya, but why didn't you change to a new toothbrush? Yours is so disgusting!
Me: I don't want. This new series you bought hurts my gums & gives me sores. I rather stick to a flattened toothbrush!
He started ransacking the drawers & shoved me one new 'gentler' toothbrush. 
It was in hot pink.
Me: Okay okay, I will change!

Me: Hey, I'm blogging about your 'dark' side. Can you remind me of the funny things you said before?
Jo: My 'duck' side?

One day, he will be the death of me. -_-



Metta
欣雨 Xinyu

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