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Wee Derek Tee Chong

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After losing purpose, love, and nearly life, Derek journeyed to a remote monastery in Japan. The monks took him in - frostbitten, delirious - and showed him the meaning behind that ringing in his ears.

Dereko-chan

デレ子ちゃん: Geisha boy
10月5日

In the Land of the Blind

 A friend (female, single, solicitor-cum-entrepreneur, mid-30s), asked me over Saturday tea and sandwiches something like,

 Wanted Ad"Would it have been easier to be happy if I'd chosen a normal life?"
We established 'normal' as married, child(ren), suburban subdivision, car potentially larger than said subdivision. i.e. like most other people our age.

Though a fairly simple question, it's loaded with assumptions:

  1. That we have an unchangeable 'true' nature.
    This is a common theme in myth and religion, and evidenced by ourselves not being infinitely flexible. We are not chameleons.
  2. That our unchangeable nature is common across humanity.
    This is a tempting assumption as we share many physical and non-physical needs in common with others.
  3. That happiness and fulfillment come from following our true nature.
  4. Following our true nature comes ... naturally.

At the beginning it looked like my friend's chips were down. Of course it would have been easier. She'd been picky and difficult all through her 20s, and was now single and childless as a result. Image: alternate her holding 2 never-realised children, saying, "Serves you right." As the talk progressed, however, we found ourselves discovering a few other ideas:

  • It is not actually easy to be 'normal'. People are quite driven to fit into the aspirational demographic. Some adopt irrational methods, including getting (others) pregnant to acquire a family, making consumer purchases or investments to seemingly do nothing more than generate suitable conversation stories.
  • If it was easier to do it, she would have done it already. But no, there was something, given her foresight, intelligence, and savvy that barred the suburban path, making it unnatural for her.
  • People with enough smarts and independence of thought make abnormal choices not because we are being ornery, but because we have the ability to follow them through.
  • Our abnormal choices are part of our true natures.

Now apply the previous assumptions to reach a startling conclusion...

The majority is not following their true nature. The happy families with their flatscreens, baby car seats, and their Wiggles DVDs are not being fulfilled at all. But they're too dumb to know, or do anything about it.

Anyways, You go, girl.

8月4日

Middling

The middle life is what I want – a good
Circle of friends, school memories, nice degree,
A stable job, a faithful wife and brood,
Nice home, nice car, good health and decent food;
A life containing everything but me.
by Khor Kuan Min

Attitude is Everything

How reprehensible the man
Who, when death’s crew enters the room,
Stands firmly up before they can
Take hold, and, dignified though wan,
Walks with raised chin towards his doom.

How pitiful the creature who
Gulps frail yet resolute goodbyes
To all and sundry that he knew,
Being so brave as to hide from view
The reddened nose and teary eyes.

How abject he who shifts to faith
All the responsibility,
And smiling palely, waits for death,
With no drive to prolong his breath:
It’s His will – what will be, will be.

The heart that muscled through the years;
The eyes that marked the coloured time;
The mind’s daily-expanding spheres:
Betrayed by wrathless, placid tears
Of vile acceptance of this crime.

No – futile though the battle is,
No one was born to feed the soil;
We all may stand by the abyss,
But though the darkness will not miss,
It cannot force a single smile.

So when the rope loops round the neck,
Embrace it not as destined fate,
Or whisper gently, ‘make it quick’;
But writhe and curse and glare and kick
With all your life, with all your hate.

by Khor Kuan Min


"Rage, rage, against the dying of the light."  Only with more irony and contempt. Dylan Thomas better grow some balls because he's just been served. Love it.

7月19日

Onsens in Japan

It's not gay if you don't make eye contact.

"Sour Grapes"

The idiom refers to the false denial of desire for something sought but not attainable. However, in recent times it is applied to all denials of desire. For example, my decision to remain miserable in my job instead of accept a seemingly better offer attracted an allegation of 'sour grapes' from my family. If I decide that I don't want a flat screen LCD, people form the automatic assumption that I: a) can't afford it, b) deny my desire as a result; sour grapes.
 
Modern applications of 'sour grapes' fail to examine whether the denial of desire is indeed false. I believe that society has been trained to view all desire as basically good. Aspiration and the fulfillment of our ambitions - no matter how pedestrian - is what keeps our economies going. If we think positively, we will attract what we want.
 
Above lies the hidden paradox with new-thought positive attraction theory. If we can not, for whatever reason, attain our desires then it follows that we never really wanted it in the first place, and that therefore denial of the desire is true. Modern 'sour grapes' also fails to account for the circumstance in which the fox, having gotten far closer to the grapes than we have, saw that they were indeed sour. Just because we can, doesn't mean we should.
 
Wikipedia has a very good brief on the idiom and its source fable, 'The Fox and the Grapes'.