Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Midnight Race

Thanks to basket-weaving Mike, 24 of us had a fantabulous weekend in Bangkok. Most of us did the typical Singaporean thing by quadrupling our luggage weight with clothes, shoes, accessories, snacks, and even cartons of mango. On the way to the airport we had a biggest-shopaholic-poll, and surprise winner Dorothy spent over a thousand Sing-dollars in just 2 days trekking around Bangkok. Shows that one can never beat the true blue bargain-hunting aunties.

Next to shopping, our favourite past time was exploring the spas. Thanks to big sis Na-na, we found an excellent day spa called Spa 1930, housed in a 70-year old home recognised as one of Bangkok's architectural heritage buildings. It was a house built for a prince, and I must say I felt like a queen with the 4-hand massage, so beautifully synchronised that it felt like a slow-motion Thai dance gently rubbing away all your worries. We also checked out Thann's the next day. It was pretty good, but lacked the ambience and personal touch of Spa 1930. We had a great time nonetheless, it was most hilarious to watch Mike frantically gesturing to us when he thought he was getting a male masseur, and then Mike showing up outside the room in a bathrobe.

The best memory of all was tuk-tuk racing down the midnight streets of Bangkok. While the rest of the folks continued their bargain-hunting at Sun Lum, Mike, Will, 3M and myself went to check out Khao San, the backpackers' heaven. A few jugs of Singha beer later (al fresco at Molly's with a nice big tree), we decided to ditch the cab and head back to the hotel in tuk-tuks.

As usual we bargained and got 2 tuk-tuks, each at 100 bahts. And with the usual evil glimmer in his eyes Mike waved a note to the tuk-tuk drivers and said the fastest driver would get an extra 50 bahts. Mike and 3M speeds ahead in the first tuk-tuk, and I congratulated myself for being smart enough to stick with Will and not daredevil Mike. Mike refused to give up and started waving a 100 baht note, egging both tuk-tuks on. Two traffic lights later our tuk-tuk driver finally got the message and revved up so abruptly that it felt as if our tuk-tuk was going to tip over backwards.

Speeding down the almost-empty streets at midnight was simply... glorious. Maybe it was the speed, maybe it was the Singha beer. It was as if we were racing with the streetlights that had suddenly come alive. The cool night breeze sent electrifying chills down our necks.

The colours of Bangkok melted into a wavy blur, curving and twirling in the nightsky like Van Gogh's starry night. Perhaps it was just my eyes flooded with beer. But perhaps it was the waves of our carefree laughter.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Ivy's Wall

Ivy and I have known each other for 10 years. That is quite a big chunk of our lives. Somehow we managed to keep in touch all these years, even though we were classmates for only a few months.

Ivy and I had totally different personalities. She was the quiet, demure snow white, madly pursued by dreamy romeos. One of them burnt a few gallons of midnight oil just to meticulously glue together hundreds of pearly white buttons to make her a cinderella shoe. I think the shoe was actually her size. And of course, the romeos used me as a messenger to send her little notes. The cinderella-shoe romeo used to say that she was cute, sweet and concise -- what the @#$% did concise mean?? Cinderella-shoe romeo looked at me and said, well, she comes in a smaller package. So I guess if she was the angel with the harp, I was simply the tuba. And if she was the more cliché swan, I was the ... turkey.

Ok, I guess not turkey. Cinderella-shoe romeo ended up giving me an owl carved out of soap as graduation gift. That was really nice. I think I would rather be an owl than a swan.

Ivy never fell for any of those romeos though. She chose down-to-earth EP, who probably would never spend nights making a shoe for her, but would take great care of her for the rest of their lives.

Ivy wanted some splashes of colour in her new home. She said orange and pink. I hope she will like this mini-series.


Just for you, Ivy.