Thursday, July 14, 2011

I used to get good marks in Malay in school, but I haven't been the most diligent student the moment I stepped into Melbourne. But these few paragraphs caught my eye and heart so much that I just had to put it up.

They are by A.Samad Said, one of Malaysia's literary laureate, a 76-year-old man with Dumbledore's beard.

“Murbawan Malaysia tidak senang dengan apa yang sedang berlaku di negara ini. Kita menghantar pesanan yang sangat waras. Demokrasi perlu murni dan terus dimurnikan.

Kenapa kita tidak boleh memperbaik situasi? Kenapa kita harus membiarkan demokrasi diperkuda oleh segelintir kuasawan yang tampaknya bermaharajalela?
Telah lama kita tidak senang dengan aliran demokrasi yang diperkuda ini. Telah lama kita inginkan demokrasi yang bersih, bergerak atas landas yang murni.

Kita sedar bahawa jalan ini tidaklah mudah. Maka itu, kita menjadi lebih berazam. Kita maklum bahawa gergasi media arus perdana kini sedang ikut garang menghempit kita dalam arus peristiwa yang semakin durjana. Kita sedang berlawan dengan keangkuhan yang pejal. Oleh media arus perdana ini, kita sewenangnya digambarkan sebagai kumpulan “siasah” yang sangat bercita-cita buruk. Lebih buruk, kita digambarkan sebagai kelompok yang sengaja ingin menggelorakan masyarakat seburuk hajat.

Kita tidak begitu. Kita ingin memperbaiki jentera demokrasi agar lebih berhati nurani.
Kita tidak menginginkan demokrasi yang kasar dan sombong; kita merindukan demokrasi yang tulus dan betul.

Inilah gerakan kita yang, sayangnya, terpaksa bermula di tengah keangkuhan kerajaan yang merasa segala-galanya sudah betul, malah sudah syurgawi, di tanah air ini. Kita sebenarnya masih dalam derita yang terus dicipta oleh tangan kasar berhati angkuh yang sangat bercita-cita.

Kita merindukan suara kuasa yang waras dan insani; suara pembimbing yang ikhlas dan mengerti. Kita tidak memerlukan suara angkuh dalam era yang sudah terlalu lama sombong ini. Kita mengharapkan tangan kuasa yang berhemah, sedia memimpin dan berdamai, turut bantu mencipta iklim demokrasi yang harum.

Memanglah kita mengkhayalkan dunia indah itu, walaupun kenyataan yang terserlah dan mengembang kini sedang menunjukkan di atas kepala kita sentiasa sedia terapung awan kelam yang menjanjikan tofan.

Jikalau berlaku, kita bukanlah kelompok manusia yang gamam berlari; kita, sebaliknya, adalah manusia yang cekal berdiri. Kita ingin memupuk demokrasi yang lebih berhati nurani.

Dua ratus tahun dulu seorang tokoh kecil Sam Adams, dengan kelompoknya yang kecil juga, telah mencurahkan teh ke dalam laut di pelabuhan Boston, Amerika. Kata Sam Adams: “It does not require a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen to set bushfires in people’s minds.”

Kita nyalakan unggun api itu pada malam ini!”

My dad used to say that words are stronger than a sword. And this just proves it.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

7. bowlful of canned longans + canned sea coconut slices: dessert matchmade in heaven. Must be the boxfuls of canned longans my dad used to feed me when I was young. Always reminded me of the musty little grocery shop we had in the old part of JB town where it was always dark and draughty and forever smelled like salted fish. And I was always so fascinated by the old black thousand-year-old abacus my grandfather had on the counter in the shop. I would watch him click click click away on the beads with a lit cigarette dangling from the corner of his mouth. And I would cringe but stare unblinkingly at the ashtrayful of dirty water and cigarette butts beside him. It's one of those disgusting sights that you know you should look away but you just find yourself morbidly fascinated by it. And there were always a couple of cats around in the old shop to keep the mice away. Grandfather wasn't exactly the 'pops' Enid Blyton described, he was a typical Chinaman: distant in his affections, few in his words. Even though so, I still regret the fact that I've never learnt that bit more Teochew. I've always wanted to experience that grandparent-grandchild relationship, but never had the chance to. And if he was still alive today, and if my Teochew still fails me, I would try and pluck up that bit more courage and sit beside him when he drinks his pot of tea after dinner everyday. We would probably be silent through most of the pot of tea but at the end when the tea tastes bitter and I'm drinking more of the tea dregs and less of the tea itself, I hope the air between us grows that bit more warmer. And then one day eventually, he would start telling me stories about him growing up, meeting grandma, surviving WWII, having a family. And I want him to tell me things that only a grandfather would know after so many years living life. He would probably tell me to study hard so I wouldn't end up like him toiling hard most of his life. He would probably tell me that the business world is one for the fierce and ruthless and one that is not for his granddaughter. He would then tell me how to choose my partner in life, to choose someone of that certain animal zodiac. He would then probably grill me in the duties of being a wife and mother, being traditional as he is.

Yes, I missed out on being someone's granddaughter.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

of wintry foods and minced meat eggy goodness

Because it's uni term break now,
and because I should rightly be home Malaysia home right now with my family and homecooked food,
and because it's wintry cold and I thrive on sunshine,
and because almost everyone has abandoned the winter and me and left for sunny greener pastures,
and because I can,
I shall list my tummylicious comfort food for the winter.

1. porridge: plain ole' starchy mushy Chinese porridge. I can gobble a whole mangkuk down with a teaspoon of Chinese preserved shredded olives in under 5 minutes, and yes, I require no other condiments or side dishes to make it fancy. It's the simple things that make my tummy happy. It must be those potfuls of Sunday lunches made of good ole homemade porridge with the family.

2. cheesy pasta: 'nuff said. The more cheese(es), the happier I'll be. My go-to cheering-up food of all time.

3. steamed egg with minced pork: it's one of those dishes that remind me of my childhood dinners sitting around this small little table built right onto the wall in the old kitchen. The table was so small that all 4 of us was quite a tight squeeze. It's the simplest dish ever, but it's so homey that whenever I miss home, I just whip it up, steam the heck out of it, and every single time, a perfect yummylicious comforting eggy dish. And if I'm feeling a little naughty, I put in a wee bit of Chinese cooking wine.

4. sour/sweet plums: and preferably those that are seedless, thank you very much. I have this little annoyance with those itty bitty seeds. But, omg, what I would do to get a pack of those preserved plums. Must have inherited that rationale-killing unhealthy craving for plums from the mum.

5. tomyam soup: yes, I'm a Malaysian through and through and I need my soups to be spicy. And I'm of the female species so yes, I like my food to have a bit of that sour punch/kick to it. And since I'm a student and don't have the knowledge/time/mortar&pestle/grandmotherly instincts, I use the instant paste one, so sue me. But, it has to be that particular brand with the steamboat picture on the label, so don't say that I have no taste whatsoever. =) and yes, I inherited that particular knowledge from the mum. Again. She said and I quote (to something of this effect), " Never use any tomyam paste except this brand (cue serious unblinking Stare of Knowledge)".

6. yummy sugar-coated pastry: ditto.

shall continue this later on as I have a dishful of eggy mincymeat goodness to tuck into this cold wintry night.
be still, my fluttering heart and rumbling tummy.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Not the right time, ey?
Must get out of this funk right here right now.
But as predicted of me, it's hard to not fall hard.
I've always the sort to turn back and go do something just like that.
Lack of courage aside, I keep telling myself that it's not the right time.
And it's too important, too precious to mess it up with just a spontaneous shout of 'ready, set, go'.
Yes, it's that special.
And I guess that's the reason I always did fall hard.
'Not wanting to crash and burn' is the excuse I'm using now.
So I'm sticking to my guns, thank you very much.


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Thursday, June 23, 2011

Sometimes, I just wanna do the seizing, regardless of the circumstances.
But I'm too mindful of the consequences to do it to it.
Not to mention, the trouble we took to get there.


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Thursday, June 02, 2011

This poem by Sarah Kaye is one of those unforgettable things, together with those precious precious memories.

If I should have a daughter, instead of Mom, she's gonna call me Point B, because that way she knows that no matter what happens, at least she can always find her way to me. And I'm going to paint solar systems on the backs of her hands, so she has to learn the entire universe before she can say, "Oh, I know that like the back of my hand." And she's going to learn that this life will hit you hard in the face, wait for you to get back up just so it can kick you in the stomach. But getting the wind knocked out of you is the only way to remind your lungs how much they like the taste of air. There is hurt here that cannot be fixed by Band-Aids or poetry. So the first time she realizes that Wonder Woman isn't coming, I'll make sure she knows she doesn't have to wear the cape all by herself. Because no matter how wide you stretch your fingers, your hands will always be too small to catch all the pain you want to heal. Believe me, I've tried. "And, baby," I'll tell her, don't keep your nose up in the air like that. I know that trick; I've done it a million times. You're just smelling for smoke so you can follow the trail back to a burning house, so you can find the boy who lost everything in the fire to see if you can save him. Or else find the boy who lit the fire in the first place, to see if you can change him." But I know she will anyway, so instead I'll always keep an extra supply of chocolate and rain boots nearby, because there is no heartbreak that chocolate can't fix. Okay, there's a few heartbreaks that chocolate can't fix. But that's what the rain boots are for. Because rain will wash away everything, if you let it. I want her to look at the world through the underside of a glass-bottom boat, to look through a microscope at the galaxies that exist on the pinpoint of a human mind, because that's the way my mom taught me. That there'll be days like this. ♫ There'll be days like this, my momma said. ♫ When you open your hands to catch and wind up with only blisters and bruises; when you step out of the phone booth and try to fly and the very people you want to save are the ones standing on your cape; when your boots will fill with rain, and you'll be up to your knees in disappointment. And those are the very days you have all the more reason to say thank you. Because there's nothing more beautiful than the way the ocean refuses to stop kissing the shoreline, no matter how many times it's swept away. You will put the wind in winsome, lose some. You will put the star in starting over, and over. And no matter how many land mines erupt in a minute, be sure your mind lands on the beauty of this funny place called life. And yes, on a scale from one to over-trusting, I am pretty damn naive. But I want her to know that this world is made out of sugar. It can crumble so easily, but don't be afraid to stick your tongue out and taste it. "Baby," I'll tell her, "remember, your momma is a worrier, and your poppa is a warrior, and you are the girl with small hands and big eyes who never stops asking for more." Remember that good things come in threes and so do bad things. And always apologize when you've done something wrong. But don't you ever apologize for the way your eyes refuse to stop shining. Your voice is small, but don't ever stop singing. And when they finally hand you heartache, when they slip war and hatred under your door and offer you handouts on street-corners of cynicism and defeat, you tell them that they really ought to meet your mother.

It was one of those great Ted talks.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Guilty secret #17353:
I'm a softie at heart.
Quite a big one.
My eyes get a wee wet from quite a lot of things.
And my heart breaks a little every time I hear a sob story.
So, all I gotta do now is build some sort of filter-barrier around my prefrontal cortex.
Protective covering around prefrontal cortex=better tolerance to stimuli.


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Monday, May 02, 2011

Guilty pleasure #27944:
I'm obsessed with Pocky.
And not just any Pocky.
The strawberry Pocky.
Hint: gimme that and my eyes become stars.

Currently munching on said Pocky makes nephrology a bit bearable now.

And on a less frivolous note, the US of A is rejoicing the death of bin Laden, terrorist mastermind.
One down and lots more to go.
I've never been a fan of the "justice and revenge" thing.
But if he really is the 21st century Adolf Hitler, then when push comes to shove, chuck him down an elevator shaft and be done with it.



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Friday, April 29, 2011

I'm betting that THE wedding dress is a long sleeve white one with a medium-length train and lace or mesh inserts for sleeves.
and for the love of all that is romantic and the stuff of girly childhood dreams, I hope there's not a pouffy sleeve or long veil in sight.
RIP Diana definitely got it bad with the pouffy sleeves and the 35m train.
And I'm putting it out here that I like Diana better than Kate. Hands down. It's a no-brainer. I like a bit of spirit/backbone to my princesses, thank you very much. With a touch of scandal.
And Kate kinda reminds me of a brunette Barbie.


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Thursday, April 28, 2011

Current earworm for the week: Sara Bareilles

Pieces of paper float between, and I could've sworn that something was said,
But my eyes were tightly shut and I can't read between the lines.
I think I'm ready to bleed, but I'm not sure that the elements are in place.
So you and me will always be in between the lines.


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Sunday, April 10, 2011

Guilty pleasure #15384:
I am seriously addicted to the lil ole food store on Lygon near my place.
I am especially addicted to choice no.16 on ciabatta.

I swear whenever I take a bite, my senses go into overdrive.
A little taste of food nirvana.
Every. Single. Time. Without. Fail.
Seriously.

How I wish I had tons of no.16 ciabattas delivered to my doorstep every single day.
Because the sky turns abit brighter and people seem kinder and flowers blooms abit more.
Yes, I'm that dedicated to my little ciabatta.


- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

of cheese omelets and birthdays

Parcels from home are my absolute favourites.
they beat delicious books and yummy bacon omelets and steamy chai hands down.
and let me tell you that bacon omelets are like right up there on my comfort food list aka pretty much unbeatable.
there's just something nice and homey and creative about making an omelet. you can add whatever you fancy, whatever you have in the fridge.
you can never ever go wrong with the comforting feeling of eggs in your tummy.
and add the smokey sizzle of bacon and cheese and it's like food nirvana in your tummy.
and yes, i'm very shameless about my cheeses.
i will add cheese to absolute anything and everything.
i once add parmesan cheese to instant noodles and proceeded to slurp the whole bowl down and patted my rounded warm tummy in a record 10 minutes.
and guilty secret #299720: i once had a blue day and went to the supermarket and bought a chunk of smoked dutch cheese and ate the entire chunk in one sitting while watching Friends and washed it down with water. and i went back to being cheerful ole' me in record time. cheese does that to me. it's magic, people.

but i digress.
so being all grown up and moving to a new continent and setting up house and doing the chores is all pretty fun.
but then, whenever March hits, i just get a little blue for not being back at home.
something cool about our family: dad's and mum's birthdays are just two days apart in March. and it always sucks that we never get to do it together ever since i've been here.
and birthdays are always a fun thing for us because birthdays celebrate us being here, being part of a family.
in a way, i always think of birthdays as the special day that you feel extra thankful and grateful
and yes, while you should feel that way every single day for that person, but more often than not, it's so easy to take advantage of the fact that person is always always always there and sometimes, it takes that one special day to pull you back down to earth and say to yourself, 'if that person was never born, i would never be the awesome person that i am now. i would never have this much fun and love and extra kisses and hugs. and most of all, i would feel a whole heap less loved.'

yes, much of being all grown-up, dad and mum are pretty much the cheese omelets of my life.
and when i've had a blue day, i just fry myself one and rant to mum about it (and she tells dad. she tells him everything.)
and the next minute, I'll be grinning silly to myself and it'll be a perfect day.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Sara Bareilles = best songs for those nights when you're alone trying to get through your work pile
"Send me the moon" is currently on replay now.
Her sophomore album "Kaleidoscope Heart" kicks ass.

When I hear that song, Sandra comes into my mind, unbidden.
Guess that song's yours,babe.

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Sunday, March 13, 2011

Guilty pleasure #19273648:
I'm a sucker for those late-night radio shows with the ubiquitous word "love" in their title.
"Love songs with xxx", "Fall in love with xxx" etc.

Yes, THOSE shows where lonely/broken/happilypairedup hearts call in and ramble a spin and a yarn and where cheesy love songs play endlessly.
It always ends my day perfectly.
Yes, I'm shameless that way.


- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad

Saturday, March 12, 2011

I seriously think my sense of color has been sucked dry to the bone.
I looked at my shoerack today and all I see are black, white, grey and brown.
Omg, depressingly uncolourful much?

Then I opened my wardrobe and all i could see are black, white, grey and beige to match my sensibly-colored shoes.

I've never been a very sensibly-colored-or-patterned person ever since I was born.
But being sensibly-coloured-and-patterned comes with the territory of being professional and reliable and trustworthy.

Damn.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Wednesday, March 09, 2011

Don't think twice.
If you pay the price, she'll let you deep inside.
And it's her secret garden.
And then you'll complete her.

Bruce Springsteen's 'Secret Garden' has been played 32 times on my iTunes thus far.


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Tuesday, March 08, 2011

Just a quick note to self:
Currently on the oncology ward rounds now. End-of-life decisions are being made all the time on the ward by the team, patient and family.
And today I saw this normally-unflappable middle-aged man crying inconsolably after a talk with our consultant. He loved his dying mother so much that I very nearly teared up.
My heart clenched just at that moment.
All I could do was offer him a box of tissues.

But reflecting on it now, that mother must be one heck of a mother/caregiver/companion/human being to bring about such a reaction in her family.
Her life must have been one of selflessness,love,sacrifice,courage and all the good, good, good things in the world.
She means THAT much to people around her.
And with that, my heart unclenched just a wee bit.

And there it is, Sandra. Here's to you.


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Hello sunshine.
Hello research.


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Sunday, February 27, 2011

The BFG of my life.
With the terrifying GuanGong eyebrows and cheekbones I would kill for that he oh-so-fortunately inherited from our mum while I got dad's little-kid-chubby cheeks.


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1. i miss my girls. both my Melbourne and Malaysia ones. clinical school and a male buddy/clinical partner can do that to you.

2. i'm back to being healthy me which i missed.

3. i'm not going back to Malaysia this year. sigh.

4. i have the concentration span of a magpie. ooh, look, a shiny thing!

5. i need to knuckle down!

6. i'm going to UK soon-ish! woohoo.

7. the best part of the UK elective, i get to do it with my travel buddy and i'm going to see my Aunt Mary and my mum gets to see her sister Mary and we're all gonna be one big happy family for CNY. woohoo.

8. i'm dedicating 'Best Laid Plans' to you. everytime i do such a thing, i think the turkey's done but the next minute, i'm falling down the rabbit hole. again. woohoo. do i like being Alice or what?!

Thursday, October 28, 2010

quickies of the month:

1. i'm well into my 1st month of having a car here in Melbourne.
and thankfully, no mishap of sorts. *deep sigh of relief*

2. i'm finally finally finally confirmed for my 2nd med volunteer trip in this year! this time, it's to exotic spicy India! woohoo. and even though it's a 10-day thingy, it'll be tons of fun with the travel buddy slash rommie again! top things to do there: guzzle as much lassi as i can possibly hold without getting 'rotund', eat as much paneer as i can possibly hold without getting 'rotund' and hopefully smuggle both the lassi and paneer to the BFG back home without getting caught. and of course, learning as well, but that's on the backburner? lols.

3. i think i'm getting way too sentimental/empathetic for my own good. more face-to-face physical contact with real-deal patients sometimes does havoc to your carefully-constructed professionalism barrier. but i'm having a long-awaited 5-day break starting tomorrow to gather my thoughts and just breathe and breathe slow.

4. Melbourne is shedding its frost and gearing for a lovely warm balmy summer. which I'm thankful for.

5. i'm feeling my brain slowly, very slowly fill to its brim. a good sign, i hope.

6. finally bought a cheesecake from The Cheesecake Shop near the hospital. dragged the buddy who was complaining the whole way over there to get one but he got a complimentary slice for accompanying me. and now he's blaming me for making him 'rotund'. geez. and i thought girls were hard to please.

7. i do miss the Northern Hospital. =(

8. i love the Austin Hospital. =)

9. i'm hard to please, no? lols.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

of the beeg beeg decision

I'm fast becoming a beeg, beeg girl. (in a beeg, beeg world. It's not such a beeg, beeg thing.)
it was a blardy steep learning curve this weekend. had to wrap my head around those damn new car terms.
but thanks to the parentals, it's worth it.
coz I just managed to make the 1st huge purchase in my 22 years of life.
yes, Mel has gotten herself a shiny new car.
and has been spending waaaay too much time reading up on car insurance and little thingamajids that compose a better-functioning car. oh mannnn, it feels like I'm reading up on a test and will be having a pop quiz anytime soon and might fail miserably at it. but I'm a meddie and stereotypical as this might sound, I'll grit my teeth and go through the whole process and hopefully ace it.

much as I love trains and trams, a car is the way to go, thanks to Northern and bird-early ward rounds.
granted it wasn't the nice bright colour that I wanted, it's still a breeze to drive in and it'll let me sleep in for just another half hour, which to a medical student is like a albeit-small-but-precious gold nugget.
so, hello hook turns and astronomical car park fees.
goodbye trams and trains. *sobs* I'll miss you. truly.



dear Sandra, I wonder what kinda car you would have gotten? I bet it's something yellow or red. you would so totally look at home with a nice sunshiny car.

Friday, September 10, 2010

of bucket lists and gold nuggets

so it's that stage of life where friends around me are pairing and cosying up during the wintry months when I just got out of a relationship.
must be that primal human instinct that requires you to seek body warmth, companionship, aid in the winter blues that come. lols.

and it's not enough of an excuse for people to pair up just because they want someone's hand to hold or someone to call in the wee hours of the morning just to wish goodnight/goodmorning.
so when the buddy kindly beat around the bush repeatedly as to when and who am I going to snare as my next armcandy, I not-so-kindly retorted repeatedly that I'm still 22 and have all the time in the world in settling down with a member of the XY species, preferably sometime after I've done all the things on my 'before-30-bucket-list'.
or if that armcandy is so willing, he can come with me on my trip of bucket-list-ing.
but it's my 'before-30-bucket-list'.
so no nagging, no overprotective macho-ism, no overbearing comments, no patronising smile, thank you very much.
or he could just sky-dive his way out of my life, which he could do pretty soon down the bucket list, seeing as sky-diving is no.1.

the 'before-30-bucket-list' may seem a little overambitious, to the practical eye.
but if it's not meant to be done, then at least I could at least say that I tried.
and you could take that little gold nugget right to the bank.

so to bucket list or not bucket list, there is no question about it.



and yes, I'm talking about you. You who supposedly settled. Please don't come around with a heartbreak expecting a box of tissues and a pat on the back because it ain't happening. You're one of those who just crave human contact, rather than the experience of it. I may sound catty, but that's the truth, honey.

Thursday, September 09, 2010

of diabetes and the drug-addled situation

diabetes tutorials that I've done in 4 days: a grand total of 3.
plus a few hours spent on writing up notes on this bread-and-butter topic.

and whenever I knuckle down and read about diabetes, the face of that young man in Samrong floats in my mind's eye.
he's barely 16 and he suffers from DM 1.
he's already had an episode of diabetic nephropathy and he swells up every so often.
he has this shy smile on his face whenever he sees me in the hallway. he recognises me as one of the few med students tagging along on ward rounds, one of the Asian barangs. first few times he sees me, he ducks around the corner and watches us from afar with that smile of his face.
and he's just younger than me by a few years. and that's the most heartbreaking part.

and the 2nd heartbreaking part is he's on friggin' metformin.
no life-saving/life-sustaining/life-giving insulin for him.
he's on a DM 2 drug which technically doesn't do much for his DM 1 condition.
it's like giving a starving man one measly jelly bean.
all because there are no fridges in the village, no equipment for insulin therapy, no funds for it.
and DM1 has crappy prognosis without insulin. period.

and that's the absolute absolute absolute worst part.
and there's still people who are not squandering away their insulin stash by not adhering to their regime.

Tuesday, September 07, 2010

Mel shall be running on adrenaline this whole week until Friday when she will crash and burn on her bed.
no thanks to her being car-less, the blardy traffic, the peeps that live on the opposite of town, the ruralness of the hospital and damn early ward rounds.

but complaints aside, it has been a wonderful start to the rotation.
something must be said about the stereotypical country hospitality that I've experienced since being here.
people there are just supremely supremely nice and comforting and gentle and just oh-so-kind.

Sunday, September 05, 2010

Things I've done last week:

- finished up my 1st rotation through the deadly 5 specialties: derm, ortho, plastics, rheum & anaes. Have to say it's been fun. Might be due to the various cute, charismatic, swoon-worthy surgeons in attendence.

- found out that I've seriously a weak spot for intelligent, geeky guys, regardless of looks. See above point. 'Nuff said.

- became Medleys' Miss Lighting again for the 2nd time running. And gobbled down the chocs given as a thank-you gift with the BFG before the weekend is out. And butterflies still fly about in the tummy area when I hear Mr Director belt out tunes in his incredibly-knee-buckling voice.

- spent quite some time chatting/gossiping with Miss Stage Manager, Mr Assistant Stage Manager & Miss AV throughout the week. Bonded over our shared abhorrence of the spotlight and intermission lollies.

- am 1/3 my way to Vellore, India for yet another med volunteer trip. 2 trips in just 1 year. Golly, am I climbing the humanitarian ladder hard and fast!

- cleaned out my shared locker with Miss Pocket Rocket at dear ole' Austin and preparing ourselves for our 6 weeks at the almost-painfully-rural Northern Hospital.

- met dear Miss Foodie J at this quaint quirky Jap pottery and cafe for some yummy-tummy Jap food. Made her promise to visit me back home.


Things that I have to do this coming week:
- learn the blardy renal system by heart.

- recite the features of diabetes and its management in my sleep.

- survive my 1st week at Northern and not be late for any classes.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

of opening doors and battlescars

people say 'one door closes and another one opens'.
and even though it's not quite the same door as the last one that slammed shut in my face, i'll still take it with outstretched hands.
because if that's what is meant to be, then so be it.
I'd rather live for myself then pine it away.

and I've always believed that everything happens for a good reason.
not saying that I'll slum around waiting for an opening.
you still got to work your arse off for it.
but i've had many fair share of disappointments in my life which I've had the battlescars to parade around.
and somehow, by believing in that little philosophy, it doesn't sting as much.
and everyone knows that the key to a happy long stress-free life is well... happiness and no stress.
so if that little line is true, then everything falls into place at the right time, right place with the right people in the right circumstances.
it happens for a good good good good reason.

then I guess this tightly-shut door is probably not a good reason.
I was hoping it would be right in all the ways, but it seems not to be the right time or circumstances for quite a long time.
and I thought that just with the right people, it would just become and gel and solidify and create something quite amazing and wonderful.
but still, TFTM.

Monday, August 16, 2010

seen quite a number of aeroplanes these few days, even though I was kept indoors.
and as unoriginal as this sounds, I kinda wish now that they were shooting stars because then I would get a whole bunch of wishes.
and even though I've been pretty much a very lucky kid not wanting of anything thus far and have the most perfect family and friends, there are still things that are on my wish list off the top of my head right now.
lols.
want much?



and I've been wishing for quite a while now but I think this is one shooting star that's destined to crash and burn. Literally.
Officially today.
I'm done. I'm done. I'm done. I'm done. I'm done.
Note to self: repeat mantra 10000000x everyday.

Saturday, August 07, 2010

of preludes

2nd week: DONE!
flew by like the wind.
the group's been awesome and awfully supportive.
I must have had done a thousand and one good deeds in my past life to deserve such nice people.
and it's a whole lot easier now to blend into the hospital setting. the nice officewear mum got me definitely helped ease the transition. lols.
but on a serious note, it's better now. much much better.
and i'm starting to enjoy the various perks that comes with the statement 'I'm a student doctor' and wearing my fuchsia pink (I'm shameless that way. but in my defense, I'm a very visual person. bright bright bright bright colours make my day!) stethoscope around my neck.
i'm learning to sit back and enjoy the ride.
it's tough as nails and not for the faint-hearted but there's a big difference between 'this has been what I've always wanted to do' and 'I have no idea why I'm trying this hard'.
and thankfully, I belong to the former category.
and those 5 pre-clinical semesters were just a long, unavoidable prelude to all this awesomeness.

and eventhough I still feel as small as a squash-able bacteria whenever some consultant grills me on the different types of eczema and I reply with an intelligent "ummmm", I still wake up at 6am with no complaints and take the earlier train so I can get there just in time to put my tote into the locker and walk down the now-familiar hallway with a bound in my step.
because I remember that my ultimate dream job is just a few steps away and I can totally see now that I'm on my way there.

Sunday, August 01, 2010

of onesies and dermatology

have been gorging myself with bloody, pus-ey, gross pictures of thingamajigs that grow on skin all day yesterday, thanks to the damn Derm rotation.
enough was enough.
so headed out for much-needed sunshine and yummy goodness on a bright Sunday morning in the form of warm crusty (no, not that kinda crust with dried serum, blood and cellular debris in the Derm clinics) ricotta hotcakes with blueberries and the company of the BFG.
I'm having this obsession with blueberries right now. Blue naevi, anyone? OMG, need to stop with the Derm glossary items!

and came home with sackful of groceries, salmon pate and baguette (whenever I carry the baguette, I always get transported mentally to Paris) from my beloved French charcuterie and the cutest blanket sleeper/onesie/bunny suit pyjamas in blue for the BFG from Peter Alex. I saw that adorable thing in the shop window just yesterday and have been hankering to get it for the BFG and today, the BFG took one look and wanted one right away and is happily wearing it around the apartment right now with the cutest look of glee.

definition of blanket sleeper: a one-piece of pyjama that consists of long pants and sleeves akin a long playsuit!
defintion of BFG: Big, Friendly Giant (inspired by dear Mr Dahl from one of my fave children's book) aka the brother's latest nickname

now the BFG looks like an overgrown baby in blue!

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