Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Thoughts from reading American Hispanic's Quinceañera ...

Came across an interesting article today on the celebration of Quinceañera by the Hispanic community in the USA ...

It is sort of an equivalent of the WASP's Sweet Sixteen birthday for the girl, except that Quinceañera is for the girl when she turns 15.

Yes, many girls just dazzle at the thought of parties with pretty dresses and tiaras ...

Yes, doting daddies would give up their last golf club (I would, if I have one) to make their little princess smile.

And no, not even warning against crass commercialism will be heeded.

I got a girl who's just growing up so fast ...

I mean, where previously, she'll put on her pyjamas after her evening shower, she now insists on wearing a dress, and change to pyjamas just before bed.

I have no sisters, so I know I'm groping in the dark here ...

 

Back to Quinceañera ... a few things about it is worth me taking note.

First, the religious factor in the celebration.  The particular Quinceañera event covered by the article mentioned it included the 15-year old girl taking vows of sexual purity. "Otherwise, the quinceañera "is nothing but a party." quoted the organiser.

Now, I do believe firmly in sex only with person you marry.  But just taking a vow upon the age of 15 (or younger or older) isn't going to be much help.  People need to have values to uphold certain stance, and they need to learn how to live in a world where many other people behave contary to what they are supposed to believe in.

*Telling* my kids that pre-marital sex is wrong is not the way, especially since a number of our family friends and parents of her friends did it.

I don't want the little girl to blab to her friends that what her friends' parents did were wrong. Since her friends' parents have different beliefs, it is not fair.

I want the little girl, as she grows up, to learn what is right, what is better, to be able to think and understand things for herself.  To see why daddy and mummy chose a certain path, and to see how daddy and mummy live their lives is probably the most important lesson for her.

 

Second, during the Quinceañera, they actually had a speaker on financial planning, prudence and all.  Many women present at the party apparently just lacked financial sense, and little girls grew up into womanhood without being taught financial planning, not just for the party, but for their lives.

This is something very important for me as a parent to take note for my children.

With banks in Singapore becoming more liberal in granting credit to youngsters who have not even learned to manage their own money, much less earn it, the debt trap will be the scourge of more and more youngsters.

 

I decided to copy the entire article in this blog entry for future reminders.

 

http://www.salon.com/mwt/feature/2007/07/30/quinceanera/

Ultimate fiesta

The traditional quinceañera coming-of-age ceremony has mutated into an elaborate spectacle -- supported by a multimillion-dollar industry. But who's going to pay?

Editor's note: The following essay is excerpted from "Once Upon a Quinceanera: Coming of Age in the USA" by Julia Alvarez and published by Viking Press, © 2007 by Julia Alvarez. By permission of Susan Bergholz Literary Services. All rights reserved.

By Julia Alvarez

July 30, 2007 | At the Quinceañera Expo at the Airport Convention Center in San Antonio, little girls are walking around with tiaras in their hair, oohing and aahing the fancy dresses, the pink balloons, the wedding-cake-size cakes, the last dolls encased in plastic, the fluffy pillows with straps for securing the heels in case the page trips as he bears them to the altar to be blessed by the priest.

At a cordoned-off area at the rear of the hall, Victoria Acosta, a fourteen-year old local pop sensation, is singing into a microphone as she dances and gestures with her free hand. "Crazy, crazy, crazy, I think the world's gone crazy!" Her next song, "Once Upon A Time," is dedicated to "all of you out there who have had your hearts broken." "All of you out there" is a semi-circle of pudgy pre-teens sitting on the floor, mesmerized by the slender, glamorous Victoria with her long mascara'd lashes, her glittery eye shadow, her slinky black outfit and sparkly silver tie. "You bet I'm going to have a quince," she tells me during a break between songs, although I don't see why. She seems to have already made her passage into womanhood quite successfully.

There isn't a male shopper in sight. In fact, the only men around are manning booths or working the floor: a couple of boy models, one in a white tuxedo with a pale pink vest, the other in a white suit with a yellow vest; a grown man in a military uniform, a popular escort outfit with some girls, he tells me; a dj in a cowboy hat plays loud music while his sidekick, a skinny boy, hands out flyers; Seve, the clown (who come to think of it might be female under all that face paint and bulbous, attached nose); Dale of Awesome Ice Designs (for $350 you can have the "Fire & Ice Sculpture" with the quinceañera's picture embedded in a central medallion of ice); Ronny of VIP Chocolate Fountains whose wife, Joanne, does most of the talking. (Did you know that you can run chili con queso through the fountains for a Mexican theme at your daughter's quinceañera? The young people still prefer chocolate, as you can imagine); and Tony Guerrero, the owner of Balloons Over San Antonio ("We Blow for u").

Add the two photographers at Tilde (Photography, Invitations, Videography), Mr. Acosta (Victoria's manager-dad), the guy with a Starbucks urn strapped to his back, and Manuel Villamil at the Primerica Financial Services booth -- and that makes for just over a dozen men in a crowd of about three hundred women of all ages here to shop for some member of their family's quinceañera. The hall is so girl-packed that the discreetly curtained baby changing/nursing booth seems extraneous. You could breastfeed your baby out in the open and still be within the strict bounds of modesty, like peeing without shutting your stall door in the ladies room because everyone inside except the little toddler in mommy's arms is female.

I feel as if I've wandered into the back room where the femaleness of the next generation of Latinas is being manufactured, displayed, and sold. A throwback vision, to be sure. Lots of pink-lacey-princessy-glittery-glitzy stuff. One little girl wheels a large última muñeca around while her mother follows, carting the baby sister who has ceded her stroller to a doll bigger than she is. "How beautiful!" I bend down to admire the little girl's proud cargo. "Is that for your quince?" The little girl looks pleadingly towards her mom. "It's her cousin's," the mom says, gesturing with her head towards a chunky teenager carting a large shopping bag and lolling at Joanne and Ronny's booth, scooping her toothpick of cake into the chocolate fountain. The little girl looks forlorn. "I'm sure you'll have a last doll, too, when you have your quince," I console her. She gives me a weak smile in return. Why on earth am I encouraging her?

Crazy, crazy, crazy, I think the world's gone crazy.

It's not that. It's that after an hour roaming up and down the aisles, I fall in with the spirit of the expo. There is a contagious, evangelical air to the whole thing that sweeps you up and makes you want to be part of the almost religious fervor that surrounds this celebration. I half expect to see Isabella Martínez Wall, the former Miss Dominican Republic turned so-called "Fairy Godmother of Quinceañeras," addressing a crowd of wide-eyed teens.

In fact, my guide, Priscilla Mora, reminds me of Isabella. Both women share a crusading enthusiasm for a tradition they believe is one of the best things going for Latina womanhood. Plump and pretty with the sunny face of someone perennially in a good mood, Priscilla has organized six of these expos, and even though some have not been as well attended as she would have liked, her faith is undimmed. When not organizing these expos, she is a quinceañera planner, an author of the "Quinceañera Guide and Handbook," and most of all a passionate promoter of the tradition. She actually thought up this business at a workshop where participants had to write down their dreams on little pieces of paper. Then they all put their pieces of paper in a fire and let their dreams go up to God. This isn't just a business, Priscilla explains, it's a calling, part of God's plan for her.

It's from Priscilla that I first hear that when the quinceañera makes her vow in the church, "it's about chastity. You're promising God that you're not going to have sex till you're back at the altar, getting married. That's why it's important that these girls learn all about the meaning," Priscilla insists. Otherwise, the quinceañera "is nothing but a party."

Priscilla's missionary zeal seems to be shared by many of the providers, who tell inspirational stories of why they got involved in quinces. Take Tony Guerrero of Balloons Over San Antonio. Tony grew up real poor in a family of four boys and four girls. ("Are you kidding?" he replies when I ask if the girls had quinceañeras.) A few years ago, Tony gave up his office job to do this because "I just wanted the opportunity to give back something to my community." He loves seeing people having fun, being happy, and hey, if nothing else, "I got myself another entry once I go over to the other side." "Another" because he already has a great aunt over there. "She promised me she was going to have a spot waiting for me." Ruby of Great Expectations (a photography studio) thinks it's "a privilege" to share this special day with a girl. "I love the idea of re-dedicating your life to the Lord." (Echoes of Priscilla.) Curiously, the nuns' booth next to Ruby's is empty. "They told me they were coming." Priscilla looks momentarily nonplussed. But her sunny personality bounces back. "Maybe they'll be by later after mass." This is Sunday, after all. The Sisters, it turns out, are the Missionary Catechists of Divine Providence, the first and only religious order of Mexican-American women founded in the United States. Their focus on the quinceañera is part of their larger mission as "evangelizadoras del barrio and transmitters of a rich Mexican American faith to the universal Church."

The only heavy hitter at the expo is Sunita Trevino, who was born in Bombay but is married to a Hispanic. At her seminar on financing a quinceañera, Sunita gives us the opposite of the hard sell: the-watch-your-financial-back-as-a-minority-woman talk that has me sitting at the edge of my chair. As she talks, Sunita paces up and down the raised platform stage like a lion trapped in a too-small cage.

Sunita works for Primerica Financial Services, but her training is in clinical psychology, which she ends up using a lot as she counsels families about their finances. "I'll tell you," she tells the audience of about a dozen, mostly grandmothers, as this is the only area of the whole hall where there are chairs to sit down, "quinceañeras are high stress times." A lot of couples come to see her for extra sessions. But the majority of Sunita's clients are single women who are in financial trouble. They don't budget. They overspend. They get into debt. She knows women in their seventies still paying off second mortgages they took out for their daughter's quinceañera. She finds this devastating.

"Nobody sits down to talk to us women! We are playing a money game but no one taught us the rules!" Sunita's own mother came from Bombay to America, thinking her husband would always be there to take care of her, and then her parents separated, and her mother was lost. She had no idea how to take care of herself. Sunita doesn't want to see this happen to any woman. We women are sinking into a hole of debt and the quinceañera is often where we get in over our heads.

Her recommendation to all of us sitting in the audience is: pay cash. "If you budget eighteen hundred dollars for flowers, and what you pick amounts to double that, don't do it. DON'T DO IT! Stay within your budget. A lot of women get in trouble at the last minute. They think, oh, I'll go ahead, just this once."

If you end up borrowing money, "please," Sunita pleads with us, "read the terms, read them carefully. What the big print giveth, the small print taketh away. Educate yourselves! Don't think banks and savings accounts are there to do you a favor. Okay, let's see, who can tell me what banks do with your money?" she asks.

None of us grown women in the audience would dare hazard a guess. But a young girl about eleven years old raises her hand and says proudly, "They save it for you."

Sunita smiles, shaking her head fondly. "Out of the mouth of babes." She sighs. Nobody laughs. Nobody seems to get the Biblical reference which Sunita is misusing anyway. Out of the mouth of babes usually the truth comes. But this young girl is headed for that sinkhole of debt unless Sunita can steer her away from the dangers of borrowing. "No honey, that's not what they do. They use your money to make money."

The girl sits back in her chair, a chastened, embarrassed expression on her face. Her tiara glints as Sunita explains to her that what she just said is what most people think. But that's why Sunita is here today. To tell us the truth no one else is going to tell us. To get us thinking about these things. "Two hundred fifty families declare bankruptcy every hour of every day in the USA. I know a seventy-nine-year-old retired guy who is now bagging groceries. People don't plan to fail," Sunita explains. "They fail to plan. So, get mad. Get mad and learn the rules."

The girl squirms in her chair, as do the rest of us. After all, we came here in a party mood, not to feel that at the end of our adult lives, we will end up as bag ladies, wishing we hadn't started down the road of debt with our own or our daughters' quinceañera.

So, how much does a quinceañera cost? You ask any of the party planners and they tell you the same thing -- anything from a hundred bucks for a cookout in the backyard and a stereo booming music for the young lady and her friends to fifty grand and up in a hall with a party planner, a limo, dinner for a hundred or more.

Everyone talks about this range, but after interviewing dozens of quinceañeras and talking to as many party planners, events providers, choreographers, caterers, I have to conclude that the cookout quinceañeras are becoming the exception. In the past, perhaps they were the rule. In the old countries, of course. In small homogenous pockets -- a border town in Texas, a barrio composed solely of Central Americans; in other words, a group still largely out of the mainstream loop, perhaps. But now, as one quinceañera remarked, "If I had to be that cheap I just wouldn't have one. What for?" It is in the nature of the beast to be a splurge, an extravaganza. More than one person describing a recent quinceañera used the Spanish expression for an over the top expense: throwing the house out the window. They threw the house out the window for that girl's quinceañera.

They threw the house out the window. In a country where the rate of poverty is growing (12.7 percent of U.S. citizens were living below the poverty line in 2004, up from 11.3 percent in 2000), with Latinos forming a sizable portion of those impoverished numbers (21.9 percent of the Hispanic population was living below the poverty line in 2004 according to a U.S. census survey). Sunita, it turns out, was not exaggerating. They threw the house they probably didn't own out the window.

One quinceañera I met named Monica estimated that her party cost "maybe three thousand dollars," and if that figure is correct, it was actually quite modest. Why don't I have an exact number? Let me just come right out and say that talking to my people about money is not easy. Maybe if I were an Americana reporter with a stenographic notebook and only a sprinkling of classroom Spanish, I could get away with asking the parents how much they paid for the party. But I'm a Latina. I know the rules. They know I know the rules. To ask my host for the price tag of the fiesta would be una falta de vergüenza. And so, I learned any number of discreet ways to approach the topic. Aproximadamente, how much does a quinceañera cost in your experience? If someone were to throw a party not unlike this one, how much would that quinceañera cost them?

The one person I could openly ask this question turned out to be the quinceañera herself. But though fifteen-year-old girls are really good at knowing how much their dress or makeup session cost, they're not so good at knowing the charges for halls, or what it costs to have beef Wellington instead of Swedish meatballs for a hundred people, or what additional charge was made for the linen napkins and tablecloths or the chairs draped in white covers and tied with satin bows, which seem to be de rigueur for anything but the cheapest quinceañera. Fifteen-year-old girls like to throw out huge numbers to impress their friends, but they are not so good at addition -- that is, if they paid $250 for a dress, and $250 for the limo, and the hall with a catered meal was $2,500 for 100 people, not counting the cake made up of four cakes, which was no less than $300, and let's throw in another $100 to $200 for sessions at the beauty parlor, and at least $300 for the photographer and pictures, and because things always come up at the last minute and Mami definitely needs a new dress herself and Papi will probably have to rent a tux and some family members will need help with travel costs, another $500 to $1,000 more -- anyhow, I've gone way over the low end figure of $3,000 that Monica Ramos with uncharacteristic teenage understatement calculated.

And her father was not working.

They threw the rented apartment out the window. Why not? It's not theirs to keep anyhow, just as this American dream isn't as easy to achieve as it seems, so why not live it up, give your little girl a party she won't forget, enjoy the only thing you really have, tonight's good time, before the bills start rolling in.


Will Cain is president and founder of Quince Girl, a new national magazine targeting the more than four hundred thousand Latinas in the United States who turn fifteen every year. Early in 2006, the magazine sent out a survey asking its readers how much they had spent or were planning to spend on their quinces. The resulting average was $5,000.

I confess to Will that I find that average low given the figures events planners and quinceañeras and their families have been quoting me. I'm thinking of Idalia's quinceañera which cost her affluent Dominican family $80,000, not surprising given a guest list of over five hundred and a fully choreographed performance by her court of twenty-eight couples (double the usual number so as not to leave out any friends or cousins) with special effects to rival a Broadway show and mermaid dresses for the girls designed by Leonel Lirio, renowned for Miss Universe Amelia Vega's gown. Granted that's the top end of the Q-scale, but the low end is rising. In Miami, Sofía's dad apologetically confessed that he was "only" spending about $12,000 on his daughter's quince, though his wife corrected him by appending, "Twelve thousand dollars, not counting all the food and goodies we fed twenty-eight kids for three months of rehearsals."

"You have to remember that $5,000 takes into account the full spectrum," Will Cain reminds me about the Quince Girl average. "It includes the girl who is spending $25,000 with the one who might spend $1,000. The point is that even working class folks who don't have a whole lot of purchasing power are going to devote a significant portion of their resources to this one tradition. It cuts across a wide range of strata."

Will himself did the numbers before he decided to launch his magazine. The Latino population is exploding, and it is mostly a young population. "I don't have to tell you about the demographics," Will tells me. "One out of every five teens is Hispanic. And that population is growing at the rate of 30 percent, while the non-Hispanic population rate is just 8 percent."

I'm trying to follow what Will is saying, but the question that keeps tugging at my curiosity is not about Hispanic demographics, but about Will himself. Will Cain does not sound even close to a Hispanic name. How did "your run-of-the-mill white boy," as he describes himself when I ask him about his background, end up founding a magazine for young Latinas celebrating their quinceañeras?

Will, who is all of thirty-one -- just over twice a quinceañera's age -- grew up in Texas surrounded by Mexican-Americans and has always been interested in the Hispanic culture. He was also interested in media. So, he decided to put the two things together and he came up with the idea of Quince Girl. Though it's a shrewd economic decision, Will believes he's also providing an important service for Hispanics in this country.

"The Hispanic community is this very fractured community," he explains. "You have your Mexican-Americans and your Puerto Ricans and your Cuban-Americans. And the only thing that ties all these separate nationalities together -- no, it's not Spanish," he says, anticipating what I might think, "in fact, many in the second and third generation don't even speak Spanish. What ties them together, the one single tie that binds all these cultures ..."

As he drumrolls towards his conclusion, I'm thinking that Will Cain learned something from growing up surrounded by a Hispanic community: a sense of drama.

" ... is this tradition celebrated across the whole diverse group: the quinceañera. I mean it is big! And the rest of America is starting to pay attention to it."

"Amen," I say. I'm writing a whole book about it.

As if he can hear my mind thinking, Will adds, "We would not be having this conversation right now if this were not so."

What Will realized was that there was no magazine out there that these girls could consult about the tradition and trends and fashions. "Girls were in chat rooms asking each other about the ceremony, what to do. It used to be you could learn these things from your grandmother ... " But with immigration and the amount of mobility in this country, la abuelita is not always a resource. Plus it's a different world than the one she grew up in. A different budget. Five thousand dollars is probably more than the grandparents earned in a year back in their home countries.

Does he think the tradition is becoming more popular here?

"Well," Will hesitates. He is rightly cautious about delivering opinions beyond what the numbers can tell him. "The quince tradition has always been important, but there's this retroculturation going on right now -- "

"Retroculturation?" This is the first I've heard of the term.

"It's a pattern that's been happening with the Hispanic community," Will goes on to explain. "First generation comes to the United States, and they push to assimilate. They adopt the American culture and norms. Second generation, they want to be all-American. Many don't even speak Spanish. They aren't that familiar with the culture. By the third generation, they're born and bred here, but they have this special something that makes them unique, their Hispanic culture. They want to learn Spanish -- many, in fact, speak more Spanish than the second generation. They make a concerted effort to hold on to their traditions, to establish cultural ties with their past."

Will quotes a study on Hispanic teens "just released today," by the Cheskin group, an international consulting and marketing firm that has done a great deal of research on Hispanics. The study confirms Will's point that the up-and-coming generation of Hispanic teens are "predominantly bilingual and bicultural," celebrating their ethnic identity and combining it with mainstream teen culture. "They live on MySpace.com and shop at Abercrombie, but they listen to Spanish radio and embrace diversity," a summary of the study reads. Most importantly for businesses that are considering purchasing the full report with its $5,850 price tag -- the cost of your average quinceañera -- is that Hispanic teens are a bellwether for one of the most important trends shaping the future of the United States -- the growth of the U.S. Hispanic population. Clearly, the future is theirs and they know it.

Meanwhile the present needs to be lived through and paid for.

Thursday, July 26, 2007

To tell or not to tell adults around kids not to smoke ...

A forum letter printed in today's TODAY (27 July, 2007) reminded me of several recent incidents I witnessed - parents/grandparents smoking in the presence of young children.

Would like invite some comments about telling these adults not to expose the kids to the smoke.

On the one hand, they can insist it is their own business.  At the same time, (always trying to play devil's advocate), I can also imagine them pointing out they grew up around adults who smoked (as I did in my younger years) and they are not in any crisis.

On the other hand, I pity the poor kids.  Even if they don't take heed today, it is still a reminder.  Being confrontational is not likely to be fruitful, so yeah, I got to adopt a humble tone. (Which in an extreme case, got a guy in London shot, Boxing champ shot in face for asking men to stub out)

http://www.todayonline.com/articles/202542.asp

Letter from Abdul Shariff Aboo Kassim
 
Recently, I saw a toddler playing beside his parents. His father was smoking, and the cigarette accidentally burnt the child's cheek, barely missing his left eye.

Shocking as that was, even worse is the sustained damage being caused to the child's lungs and heart.

This is not the first time I have witnessed parents smoking next to their children. I have seen some parents carry their children in one hand, holding a cigarette with the other.

The dangers of second-hand smoke are well documented. It is scientifically correlated with a range of illnesses from asthma to cancer to heart disease. Second-hand smoke is reported to be even more damaging to children because their lungs and immune systems are still developing.

Aside from the medical perspective, parents should also consider the financial implications of their smoking habit. They often miscalculate the actual cost of smoking. It does not just involve the amount spent on cigarettes but also increased medical expenses for themselves and their children, who inhale second-hand smoke. Taxes on tobacco products and the cost of medical care are continuing to rise.

Moreover, parents who smoke are like walking advertisements to their children. If their children do pick up the habit, it will probably be at a young age when they are still dependent on the parents.

There is also the opportunity cost of smoking to consider.

For the average family, the costs of smoking have a substantial impact on their savings. This could mean, among other things, losing the chance to invest more money in their children's education and thus curtailing their prospects.

I can empathise with smokers, having quit the habit eight years ago. Quitting is a challenge but many have succeeded in doing so.

An interim measure that parents can undertake is to isolate themselves from their loved ones if they have to smoke. They should quit so as to protect their children's health and help save money in the process as well.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Results of my healthscreening

Finally getting over my inertia, I took advantage of the healthscreening package offered by my company and made an appointment with one of the company-appointed medical group.  As luck would have it, the appointment was on a Friday the 13th.

Not being superstitious, I look forward to having a break from the office, and had chosen the centre because it was near to the National Library Central Branch as well as Bras Basah Complex.  Since I work in the east, I don't get to go to these 2 places as much as I would like to.

Not that I'm trying to skive, but the healthscreening require 8 hours of fasting, so it makes more sense to get a morning appointment, and then zip down to the 2 book havens during the lunch break before I head back to the office.  I think nobody will misunderstand that.

The screening process went well enough.  I was pleasantly surprise to see the centre offering a couple of internet terminals for patients in the waiting area (though only 1 was working).

After subjecting myself to several rounds of necessary indignities, I got to visit Bras Basah.  Unfortunately, it was Friday and close to lunchtime, or more specifically, prayer times, so the Knowledge Book shop closed its doors for a mid-day break.  Darn, what a waste.

Yesterday, I got my results ... which exceed my expectations.  Yours truly is a picture of perfect health ... well ... except for my triglyceride levels ... no thanks to the cravings for fast food in the last couple of years.

The doctor seriously reminded me to cut down on it, and get exercises.  Well, now that I only have to send my kids to one centre instead of two, I might just make use of that time in the morning to get some workout.

I need to lose at least 2 kg to get into the ideal weight range again, I'm a guy so I'm not shy about revealing this.

Yup, I got a lovely wife and 2 great kids (even if they drive me nuts many times), and I plan to be around for them for a long, long, time.

Just reminded myself not to get too cocky ... this is just a health screening, not a fitness test.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

周華健、品冠、李宗盛 - 最近比較煩




"I Don't Fell Good Lately"/"Feeling Troubled Lately"
周華健、品冠、李宗盛 最近比較煩
專輯: 有故事的人 (1999)
Lyrics: http://www.wakin-web.com/Wakin/Lyrics...

周華健 - 其實不想走




"I Don't Intend to Go"
周華健 其實不想走
專輯: 風雨無阻 (1994)

Anyone knows where I can find the version sung by him and his friends Jackie Chan, Jonathan Lee and Ping Guan?

Friday, July 6, 2007

天蠶變 (Reincarnation) opening theme




作詞:盧國沾 作曲:黎小田 [ 歌詞說明 | 什麼是動態歌詞? | 關閉歌詞顯示 ]

天蠶變


獨自在山坡 高處未算高
命運在冷笑 暗示前無路
浮雲遊身邊 發出警告
我高視闊步

雖知此山頭 猛虎滿佈
膽小非英雄 決不願停步
冷眼對血路 寂寞是命途
明月映山崗 倍覺孤高

拋開愛慕 飽遭煎熬 早知代價高
絲方吐盡 繭中天蠶 必須破籠牢


獨自在山坡 高處未算高
命運在冷笑 暗示前無路
浮云游身邊 發出警告
我高視闊步

雖知此山頭 猛虎滿布
膽小非英雄 決不愿停步
冷眼對血路 寂寞是命途
明月映山崗 倍覺孤高

拋開愛慕 飽遭煎熬 早知代價高
絲方吐盡 繭中天蠶 必須破籠牢

一生稱英雄 永不信命數
經得起波濤 更感自傲
抹去了眼淚 背上了憤怒
讓我攀險峰 再與天比高

天蠶變 香港麗的電視 監製 蕭笙 關正傑 苗可秀 徐少強 余安安 馬敏兒 伍衛國 張瑛 梁天 楊澤霖 張瑪莉 羅樂林 柳影虹 蔡瓊輝 劉緯民 顧冠忠

This was one of the first HK wuxia TV serials dubbed into Mandarin for broadcast in Singapore, after a ban was imposed on use of Chinese dialects on TV.

I used to stay up late trying to watch it. To a small kid like me back then, the show rocks!!!

Unlike previous serials as such 陆小凤, this one used a lot of vibrant colours and has many outdoor scenes rather than scenes taken in studio sets.

It also pioneered outlandish hairstyles and outfits for the villains, most notably 風雷雨電, a cool, imaginative and novel concept back then, but taken to the extremes subsequently by other wuxia serials/movies, becoming jaded, repetitive and just an eyesore.

But because the main actor Norman Chu (徐少強) was apparently too much of a prima donna and unprofessional in his attendance during the shooting, his role was substituted halfway by Gu Guanzhong (顧冠忠), and the scriptwriters came up with an explanation that the rare and powerful skill he mastered transformed his physical appearance.

Norman reportedly regretted his conduct, but he was given another chance to reprise his role for the Shaw Brothers' movie versions of the same title in Mandarin 天蠶變 (The Bastard Swordsman in English) and its sequel, Return of the Bastard Swordsman (布衣神相).

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

My primary school is no more ...

I don't know what prompted me to search for my primary school through Yahoo! today, but I discovered

1. My primary school (Serangoon Garden South School) was merged with Zhonghua Primary School as of January 2007.

I guess for schools in estates like Serangoon Garden, declining enrollment is inevitable.  During my primary school days, we were deadly rivals with the other primary school just across a common field, the North School.  Several years after I graduated, the North School ceased to exist.  Now, after more than 20 years, it's the South School's turn.

2. A couple of old schoolmates through alumni.net

Two people I had all but forgotten from the school had signed up in alumni.net.

One is a mixed-blood boy by the name of Irving Chan Johnson who dabbled in Wayang Kulit.  The other is/was a girl (Angeline Tan Mei Mei) who was perpetually ostracised and bullied by just about everyone, for no rhyme nor reason.

I joined the school mid-term in Primary 2 when I first came to Singapore, not knowing any English nor Chinese.  I was bullied mercilessly until I learned to fight back.

That is why remembering Meimei brought back a guilty conscience because once or twice, I also joined in the bullying mindlessly, ignorant of how cruel it was.

I am relieved at least that I could send her an email today to apologize for it.

Actually, I kept in touch with a group of schoolmates after leaving the primary school.  We used to have a BBQ together every year until JC.  But the circle got smaller and smaller until there was only a distant cousin and another girl I used to have a crush on until secondary school, and then several years after I started work ... I lost their contacts.  Last I heard, both had gotten married and had kids ... and couldn't come to my wedding.

From time to time, I used to drive by the area ... and see my old primary school compound from the outside.  The last time was last year.  It was the first primary school in Singapore to introduce personal computer, the Apple II.  It was the first primary school in Singapore to build an aviary.  Both were through funds raised by the school.

We were famous then.

Our angklung band was filmed and screened on TV a few times ... and I was in it.  Man, recording was tough and tedious and long-drawn.

One of the great thing about the school was its location.  Nestled in a corner of the Serangoon Gardens estate, a place full of old world charm, the estate was our oyster, and the pearl in that oyster, to me, was the secondhand bookshop called NIB, from which I indulged myself like crazy.

The estate has changed a lot today.  Like everything else in my life, things have moved on.

Nostalgia ... I guess I'm just a sucker for it ...

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

Snowylad joins his sister in the same childcare at last ...

On June 2, Snowylad finally gets to join his sister in the same childcare.

For the last 12 months, he had to go to an infantcare because the childcare only accepts those from 18 months and above.  And it was very tiring for me to drop them off separately, and pick them up separately.  And I can't pick them up late for them to take their dinner either.

 

Monday, July 2, 2007

A short walk around Chinatown ...

It was one of those rare Sundays when Snowylass and Snowybeagle both fell asleep for their nap at the same time ... at my in-laws' place ...

Which means ...

Snowylady and I finally got to go jalan-jalan, hand-in-hand together ... at least for a couple of hours ... we hope ...

It was extremely fortunate for us that our in-laws' place is at Tiong Bahru, a very short distance away from Chinatown.  A short hop on the bus later and we found ourselves walking along the streets, trying to decide which eatery to attack ...

Even before we got to the place for lunch, just walking with her, talking, telling her how the Chinatown scene was reminiscent to me of my earliest memories when I was in HK ... was fun.

Passing by Temple Street, I just noticed for the first time that the Chinese name for it was not 廟街/庙街 but 邓婆街.  When I did some checks today, apparently it was brought up in Parliament on 18 April, 2005 by Prof. Ivan Png Paak Liang to review all Chinese district and names to make the names consistent and intuitive in the Chinese translation, the Temple Street being one prominent example.  Prof Png directed the question to the PM, and the PM referred him to Street and Building Names Board (SBNB), and cited that :

The existing Chinese street names should generally be retained. Many of the names, including those that the Member had cited, have been in use for a long time and are now widely accepted and familiar to Singaporeans. To change the Chinese names now would confuse the public.

The translation of street names in Chinese is guided by the Report of the Committee on the Standardisation of Street Names in Chinese which was released in 1970. Following a review of all the existing street names in Chinese, the Committee set out these general principles:

- To provide more readable street names in Chinese.

- For the purpose of transliteration, Mandarin pronunciation should generally be taken.

Reference : http://www.comp.nus.edu.sg/~ipng/pol/parl_2005/20050418.pdf

Back to my walk in Chinatown ... we spotted the posters of Yangtze cinema playing their usual fare ... except one seemed rather unusual ... "Bunford's Beach Bunnies" ... a very American title with an actor who looked like Tom Hanks.  Checked IMDB when I got back ... he's Jim Hanks, brother of Tom Hanks ... quite an old show from the early 1990s ... one of those campy comedies with a bit of peek-a-boo ... ha ha ha ... I think the D.O.M. who spent money watching it might be disappointed.

Finally had our lunch ... tried the Sarawak Kolo Noodles ... mmmmmm ... nice ... brings back memories ... my childhood noodles before I came to Singapore was very similar ... without the char-siew and prawns.  The only complaint is the prawns were terribly unfresh, disintegrating into tasteless crumbs when bitten.  But it's practically the same type of noodles, drenched in the same type of pork oil ... with lots of chopped chicken chunks ... aaaah, yummy

Desert was back at Temple Street ... okay, but not great mango pudding+pomelo.

Somehow, we managed to squeeze a quick walk from there to see how Chinatown became more and more commercialised.  When I was a kid, families actually lived in these shophouses.  Still, we wondered why Chinatown in San Francisco just doesn't seem to be as bustling despite the fact that families and people actually do live in the buildings over there.

Our sojourn was all too quickly interrupted by a call from grandma, announcing Snowylad woke up and cried quite angrily when he realised mummy was not around ...

*sigh*