Sunday, May 31, 2009

I have a dream ...


I want to build a Disneyland for backpackers ... mmm ... travellers. Okay, let's call them lifetime explorers.

I've had this thought rolling in my head for some time now but recently, it seems to be getting stronger. Time for an enterprising venture? Hmmm ... a venture that I want to not be as much for-profit than for upholding the spirit of backpacking travels, spreading travellers' goodwill, promoting cultural understanding and spearheading community development in some of the host locations. I become even more excited as I realise I'm in a pretty good position (as a researcher and a traveller) to make sense of these places and people for the sake of this venture. Just how can I make good use of my skills and insights to turn up a damn good plan? And I sure need a damn good plan as the sketches in my head become clearer ...


This will be a chain of the warmest and homiest thematic guesthouses, or backpacking hostels if you like, how you call it does not really matter to me. In fact, each of these houses will be so unique that the only thing that identifies them as part of a whole is, well, their distinctness in character. And of course, the background story of how each house came to be built in that particular place and not another ... because each of them will be built in a city that is close to my heart. At this point, there are about a dozen of such locations!

Melaka (Malaysia), Singapore, Chengdu, Hong Kong (China), Wanaka, Queenstown (New Zealand), Boston, San Francisco, New York (the US), Istanbul (Turkey), Takayama (Japan) ... each of them will bear semblance to a feature that is uniquely local to the city / town / village where it is based.


For instance, one in Melaka, my birthplace, the newly-minted UNESCO cultural heritage city where I spent the first 20 years of my life, that which laid the foundation of who I am today, will be built as a Malay kampung stilt house. It will be airy, thanks to the plank walls and atap roof, partially brick for a touch of modernity, maintenance and strength, and the stilts rooted in brick bases instead of straight into the ground.

And the one in Chengdu will most likely house my panda family (!) among other prized paraphernalia from this lovely city and around.

When a guest arrives at any of the houses, it will be like arriving at a Disneyland attraction. The house, although an experience in itself, is above all a gateway to a true travelling experience. He will arrive with a certain expectation and knowledge but as he gets immersed into the story of this guesthouse, his curiosity gets tingled big time! He just cannot wait to head out and explore this beautiful place he just landed in!

Hopping from one house to another will be like hopping the different attractions at Disneyland, or waiting for the Faraway Tree to have a change of clouds that unveils yet another exhilarating experience. And of course, like at Disneyland, the explorer will endeavour to visit every house before he considers this experience complete. However, I hope that this will be a task of impossibility as, like Disneyland again, the house will never be completed as long as there is imagination left in this world, and I have enough zest left in me for travels on the wild side.


Saturday, May 30, 2009

On Bears and Buds!


Oooooh ... just realised that Bears and Buds (a teddy bear webzine) had linked to my page on the Teddy Bear Eco Village in Takayama! No wonder for the unusually high referral traffic from this website :)

Actually I also realise that the person-in-charge had mentioned the link in the Comments section but I didn't notice ... hehe ... anyway, I'm quite thrilled someone took an interest.


(^___^*)

Friday, May 29, 2009

The Curious Incident of an Old Robot


I was cruising the aisles of NTUC at White Sands when I saw him. Just sitting there amongst the sweets and the chocs, with a pack of Koka and a toothbrush. It was just there! When I wasn't looking for it, when I least expected it.

The strange thing is, I must have combed all of NTUC searching for him a few weeks back and I couldn't find him. Yesterday, I looked again. Nope, I still couldn't find a PEZ shelf. Where had he appeared from? Did he even belong to NTUC?

And what does this mean? That there is no point looking too hard; if it would appear, it will appear in due time? Ahh ... so many things in life are like that.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

端午节快乐


This is a nice website graphic on Dict.cn in honour of the annual Dumpling Festival, which is today. Yummy dumplings!


Out-of-the-box Thinker


Haha! My colleague "tested" me on this a while back: "Can you join 9 dots using no more than 4 strokes and without lifting your pen from the paper?" I thought it was so simple - I simply drew a curved line through all the dots. Didn't even need 4 strokes.

As I go through The Idea Book today, it seems the author agrees that this is an out-of-the-box thinking :) And of course, this solution is a rule breaker (Read page 160 - 165). Yes! I'm psyched. I guess more by the rule-breaking than the out-of-the-box thinking :)

The (little black) Idea Book


If you have the chance, do pick up a copy of The Idea Book. It's there at our national library (at least the Tampines one has it :)

It's a pretty stimulating read which includes a collection of ideas and quotes from presidents and inventors and management gurus and geniuses and ...

... WINNIE THE POOH. On page 33.

That's when I knew I had to share this book. In all honesty, I respect the author for including this (^__^*)

Monday, May 25, 2009

I don't care, be happy!


So our cleaning auntie asked if XN had left. I said yeah, she's gone to further her studies. Auntie said why girls have to study so hard ... will soon be married off and leave the bread-earning to the men! I was honestly piqued by that sort of mindset but didn't really want to engage myself in the debate. I kept my mouth shut although inside, I was thinking what outdated thinking is that!

Then, auntie began fiddling with her "cheong" iPod, complaining about its bad navigational design and un-user-friendliness. She's been listening to stories from Buddha's teachings and apparently, the device didn't allow her to choose tracks properly. The Buddha advocates magnanimity and forgiveness as the root of happiness, so auntie told the story of a centenarian in Singapore who is still now healthy and helping even people who are much younger than her.

The key to her longevity: happiness. The key to her happiness: "When you're crossing the road and are surrounded by boisterous chatter, can you hear what they say? No. So that's how we should navigate life. Be true to ourselves and ignore meaningless talk."

Last but not least, she thrives on the joy of others; she does not make much, and because she also does not need much (she's always receiving gifts from well-wishers so her fridge is quite well-stocked), she donates all that she has to the needy. The happiness she brings to people around her in the end puts happiness back in her life.


Thursday, May 21, 2009

<成都我爱你> Chengdu I Love You!


Came to know about this movie today - very happy and excited about it! I'm so glad that it's a film based in Chengdu and not any of the other major Chinese cities which have been featured to death in arthouse films. From the synopsis, it seems like it's going to be a very interesting film in the veins of About Love (which I've watched), Paris Je T'aime (which is highly acclaimed but I've yet to watch) and New York I Love You (which is in production now for a 2010 release).

成都我爱你 is also in production already ... but it will be next year (after making its rounds on the festival circuit) before I can get to watch it. Still, I'm very much looking forward to it! v(^___^*)v

我是个情不自禁的成都爱幕者. 说起来, 我认识成都大概有十三年了. 就从我第一此到新加坡的那一年开始. 我在新加坡的第一个朋友 - 我的社友 - 是土生土长的成都人. 她介绍了这个火辣辣的城市给我认识, 令我大开眼见! 因为在我认识这位成都朋友之前, 根本不知道原来在这世界上还有一个地方的辣椒比马来西亚的辣! 哈哈 ...

2007年首此到达成都. 第一个印象非常的好 ... 这就是中国繁荣的一面吗? 当时还没有去过北京或上海; 但是如果成都也是这种水准了, 那其它城市更不用说啦! 在这里旅游了一个星期, 慢慢的体会这里的生活方式, 也渐渐的爱上了这个美丽城市.

2008年, 我又回到了成都. 灾后的成都和灾前的成都没有什么两样. 这一趟, 我近一步的了解成都人的心态. 这里的人还是那么的乐观, 那么的开朗, 那么的勤奋, 那么的认真. 就和我的朋友郭雪一样. 大地震弄垮了四川旅游业, 使他失业了. 但他还是不断的努力, 很坚强也很认真的去面对眼前的困难. 我很欣赏他对旅游的热爱, 和那鼓永不放弃的精神. 最近四川旅游业恢复的很快, 他也开始大忙起来了. 我真的替他高兴! 有一段时间没有和他好好的聊天了, 希望他过的充实, 一切顺利!


这就是成都(四川)人令我最敬佩的一点 - 可以很快的从废墟中站起来, 勇敢的走下去, 乐观的面对未来. Although they appear to be very laidback, there is great strength underneath it all. And it rubs off on visitors like me. I would "run away" to Chengdu in search of peace of mind, but I know I'd return with greater resilience to fend off any adversity in life.

At the risk of sounding too poetic, I hope the 3 films will be able to capture the essence of the city and the spirit of her people. Where else in China would it be more appropriate to tell 3 different stories of love than in this one where the love of life fuels the spirit of her people and nurtures the beauty of her land.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Mission accomplished! v(^___^*)v


Finally found my WALL-E PEZ at Carrefour Suntec. YIPPIE!!! So Eve will be lonely no more ... WaLL-E's so small next to her though ... hehe ...


Tuesday, May 12, 2009

5.12 One year on ...


Made a quick scan of some more popular websites in China. The most impressive one seems to be Yahoo! China, whose homepage is in black and white today.

My thoughts and prayers are also with the families of the victims and survivors; as we mourn the dead, may the living continue to march on with hope and courage.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

3 Jul: Ponyo (Eng sub) on DVD


Blu-ray in December (>.<*) But better than don't have! (^___^*)

Title says all, really: the Japanese DVD for “Ponyo on the Cliff by the Sea” is scheduled for release on the 3rd of July. And it will feature English subs even though the US theatrical release is quite nearby calendar-wise. Some huuuuuge documentaries (as in: more than 10 hours long) are also on the agenda. For the HD-addicted amongst us the wait will be quite a bit longer: the Blu-ray is scheduled for December

(Whether or not Studio Ghibli this time plans to add an annoying blue tint for correcting televisions which are too red has not been disclosed…)

Wednesday, May 06, 2009

Panda installation at WWF, Rome


Pretty cool and definitely cute! v(^___^*)v
More photos
here.



Saving Sichuan's Pandas


Came across an interesting article on Fiji Times Online of a topic that is close to my heart, especially this month.

There are countless tragedies from the devastating earthquake in China's Sichuan province last year.

Upwards of 80,000 people died in the quake, and hundreds of thousands more continue to battle to put their lives back together.

Then there are the lesser-known victims of the quake -- China's endangered giant pandas.

The quake's epicentre was bang in the middle of the relatively small area of natural habitat China's most famous creatures call home.

Just as its people suffer, Sichuan's famous bamboo-clad mountains still bear the scars of last year's earthquake. Once covered in verdant forests, today the mountains are a stark reminder of the power of one of the world's biggest natural disasters. It's not just the quake's horrific death toll that stands out -- it killed around 100,000 people -- but the sheer size of the area it impacted; towering hillsides crumbled and valley after valley crushed and buried.

"I was on the way to work, when everything started to shake and collapse," said panda keeper Deng Tao.

And panda biologist Huang Yan said: "It was like the mountains were exploding and the land cracked open".

Sanctuary devastated

The earthquake wasn't just a disaster for Sichuan's human habitants.

Close to the epicentre of the quake was China's biggest and most advanced panda research base, at the town of Wolong.

The very mountains that provided sanctuary for Wolong's pandas were suddenly a deadly liability for the animals and the tourists who had come to see them.

The first priority was getting the tourists out of immediate danger and the injured onto military helicopters and evacuated to safety. The quake killed five of the sanctuary's workers and injured several more, but there was little time to grieve, with the centre's 86 pandas trapped in what was left of the reserve.

"When the earthquake happened, I felt so sorry for the poor pandas," Deng Tao said.

"We were so worried and we couldn't get into their enclosures."

At great risk to their own safety, the reserve's workers eventually managed to go back into the destroyed research base to look for the animals.

It was a distressing sight: Dozens of injured and frightened pandas needing medical attention or simple reassurance from their human keepers.

And then saddest of all, one of the animals was discovered dead -- nine-year-old Mao Mao, who'd mothered five of the centre's younger animals.

One of her children was among the 14 babies rescued from the breeding centre.

"All the baby pandas were crouched together when we found them," Deng Tao said. "When we held them, they were all scared. Many of us were crying. They are like our own kids."

It was clear the pandas home had been destroyed and they too would need to be evacuated. Within days a massive operation to send them out of Wolong to other panda reserves began.

New home

Fast forward almost a year, and some of Wolong's baby pandas have grown into toddlers. Since the earthquake they've been kept at Beijing zoo, thousands of kilometres from their mountain homes.

They've been a popular attraction for the zoo, but now a new enclosure's been built for them back in Sichuan, one that's closer to their natural environment.

And a few days later they've arrived in their new home at the Yan'an sanctuary, an hour's drive from Sichuan's capital Chengdu. The Yan'an reserve was second only to Wolong before the earthquake; 70 of the earthquake pandas were brought there, more than doubling the existing population.

Ten new buildings and 20 new enclosures have been built since the earthquake to cope with the extra numbers.

Panda biologist Huang Yan says it's not ideal for the new arrivals, partly because it's almost 1000 metres lower in altitude.

"Our pandas get really hot here in summer," he said.

"We've had to install air-conditioners in the panda enclosures to keep them cool."

Captive breeding

Yan'an is carrying on what was perhaps the Wolong reserve's most important job -- its captive breeding program. And that's never more been important.

It's estimated before the earthquake there were only about 1600 pandas left in the wild, and the earthquake couldn't have come at a worse place for the wild panda population.

No one knows how many were killed during the quake itself, but previous earthquakes seriously disrupted the growing cycle of the bamboo that is their sole source of food. Some Chinese experts have estimated the earthquake could end up claiming the lives up to two thirds of the remaining wild population, seriously threatening an already endangered species.

Most dishearteningly of all, four of Wolong's pandas were just a couple of weeks away from being released into the wild when the quake struck, with more to follow.

Huang Yan says that project is now postponed.

"The impact of the earthquake is quite big," he said. "In about two years the four pandas, or maybe two of them, we can release into the wild."

Adding to that problem, he says the earthquake was a serious setback to the captive breeding program.

"Some pandas had abortions because of the earthquake," he said. "As for any psychological problems we are not clear yet. We need to see if they can breed normally and behave normally this year and do more research on it."

Green shoots

But there are signs of hope Yan'an, with 13 babies in the new reserve were all conceived in Wolong before the earthquake, and born in Yan'an after it.

They're the green shoots of the next generation of Sichuan's pandas, a large part of the key to ensuring the survival of the species.

"It's really not easy to have the baby pandas here, but they gave us a hope," Huang Yan said. "It took a huge effort to transfer them here, but they were delivered smoothly and now they're growing up. I think the future for them will be really beautiful."

As the babies get bigger, they're going to need more room ... and Yan'an is already full up.

Damage and rebuilding

The race is on to rebuild Wolong as quickly as possible so some of the young pandas can be prepared for release into the wild.

But when NewsHour was invited to go up to the destroyed sanctuary and see the rebuilding, we ran into trouble.

While the people who run the centre had invited us to come and see it, we were told we wouldn't get through military checkpoints on the way without clearance from the local government.

When we went to ask for clearance, we got the impression we were not welcome in the region. After more argument and an assurance that we were only in Sichuan to film a story about pandas, we were finally given clearance to go.

On our way up to Wolong, we passed through the earthquake's epicentre and saw why officials could have been nervous about out visit. Though much rebuilding work had been done, the epicentre mostly looked as though the quake happened yesterday.

When we turned off the highway and into the valley leading up Wolong, there was even more devastation.

A three-hour drive before the earthquake now took us seven hours, and when we got there, it was a forlorn, sad sight. Six brothers and sisters of the Beijing zoo pandas, now living in Yan'an, remain and unlike their brethren, they've been in Wolong since the earthquake.

"This was once China's biggest Panda reserves and it's really quite sad to see these pandas who are used to a relative amount of freedom confined to a small cage of just a few square metres," panda keeper Deng Tao said.

"I feel so bad, looking at these pandas. They're like my kids, and it's really sad to see them living in such a tiny place."

The destroyed sanctuary has become an eerie, grim echo of a place that used to bring pleasure to so many people, and so much hope to the pandas as a species.

With human needs still so great, pandas are a second priority. Virtually no rebuilding had taken place and a reopening of the reserve seemed a long way off. But the staff lives in hope and are more determined than ever that their work here helps rescue the species.

"We won't stop working on that," Deng Tao said.

"We hope one day, we can get them all back into nature. It will be good for them.

It would be nice to think that when Sichuan's hills are once again covered in green, lush bamboo forests, there will be a healthy population of pandas living there too.

Tuesday, May 05, 2009

诗的熊猫家族!


很可爱吧? 呵呵 ...

大熊猫你们见过了. 是我今年过生日的时候, 一位同事送给我的.
在滑梯上面的小熊猫是婉淋昨天送给我的.她周末时在玩具店看到它,觉得很可爱便买下来送给我.
看到婉淋给我的熊猫就想起了我去年在日本也有买一个类似的小熊猫! 呵呵 ... 它就是在秋千上的贪吃小熊猫!

突然有一鼓冲动想收集全套, 组成一个熊猫乐园! 但是又怕会买到同样的 ...

唉 ... 好想他们哦. 真的很希望这一波的猪流感会快点过去,好让我9月份可以到成都去走走.

也很开心四川的旅游业最近恢复得很快. 雪也好象是超级的忙,实在为他高兴! (^___^*)

这是不是代表所为的"风暴"即将过去了呢? 我好期待 ...



Monday, May 04, 2009

Which type of Design Researcher am I?


It's the time of evaluation at work again. Of course the question of goals came up. Mulling over the matter on the bus on the way home just now, I suddenly thought of the rush of emotions I had when I was at Xi's birthday party.

Kids in Singapore are so blessed. Their parents have all the means to pamper them - fancy parties, pretty dresses, videos and photos to remember. This time, there was a balloon artist who created impressive cartoon characters out of balloons, much to the delight of all kids present (elder sister Jing had one last December complete with henna artists adorning the guests with pretty flora motifs).

This, in comparison to all the children who are just happy with their simple toys from a land before their time, whom I've met in the poor neighbourhoods of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia and of course, China.

Next week will be the first anniversary of the Great Sichuan Earthquake. While the fortunate kids here are lamenting their "suffering" in school, the children of Sichuan are desperately trying to rebuild their lives, to go to school and be useful persons in future, to prove their worth of being spared from the deadly earthquake that brought school roofs down on their fellow classmates.

I can still vividly remember that afternoon when the earthquake happened. While tremors buried lives across Sichuan, I worried about the boss' tsunami of wrath because I was half an hour late for a meeting. The memory is especially vivid because while people in Sichuan would encounter what could possibly be their lives' greatest suffering and challenge, I was feasting on a sumptuous lunch and worried about the most minuscule things which couldn't even begin compare with the magnitude of destruction that the earthquake would cause to the lives of the people in Sichuan.

What have all these got to do with being a design researcher?

Not to say that we shouldn't be happy when others are sad. But the stark contrast in people's lives gets to me sometimes. And that somehow leads me to question what my role as a researcher is, what it could be and how design research can be an even more enriching field than what it has been conventionally tagged with.

In this regard, and very simply, I see design in 2 very distinct light. One, in the traditional perspective, when one mentions good design or designer's products, it's about exclusivity and extravagance which more often than not, comes at a price the owner can be proud of paying to own this status, or as it is more fashionably known as now, taste symbol.

The other school of design thought, which I subscribe to now, is about solving problems and enhancing lives. Not the lives of MAC fanboys/girls who want to be seen with nothing but a partially bitten Apple, but the lives of children like Sichuan's Lin Hao and those whose fighting spirit to excel in life has not waivered in spite of the lack of money, infrastructure ... or limbs.

This is the type of design researcher I wanna be. One who can channel her knowledge and insights into helping those who need good design the most.

Sunday, May 03, 2009

你们还年轻


为什么
人人都爱说
爱情可以挪后
事业为先
"你们还年轻嘛
以后还是可以在一起的啊
不必坚持现在"
但是
你们知道吗?
有些事情
一旦错过了
就等于永远失去
爱情确实是这样
需要用心的去培养
不然
就会慢慢得被时间
冲淡