This Morning

I was dreaming. In my dream, I was punching a sergeant’s face into a bloody pulp.

I woke up.

And found myself punching the wall beside my bed.

I have raw knuckles now.

Roaches, Lizards and Slow Internet Part 1

My Internet is screwing me up. Since Thursday, it decided to go on strike and slow my connection down to the speed of a dial-up connection. I feel like I’m back in 1998 where I had to dial and patiently listen to the dial tone before getting connected to cyberspace.

This is not good for me as I rely heavily on the Internet for work, entertainment and more mind-wasting entertainment. In fact, the Internet is my sole entertainment outlet at home. I don’t even watch TV. Fuck, I haven’t even switched on my TV for 5 weeks.

Since I was bored, I decided to wash my dirty dishes. While washing the dishes, I realized that beside my weekly laundry, I haven’t done any house-cleaning for more than a month. While my room is still quite neat as I have little possessions with me, layers of grime and dust and other stuffs I don’t even want to think about (food particles, pubes, snorts) have started to build up and collect in places.

Furthermore, winter is about to end (holy crap, its 27 degrees currently!) and this means spring is coming. And when spring is around the corner, it means that the insects are probably waking up from the long hibernation.

So it means that the house pests will be back again.

I’ve been relatively lucky so far. The two months I’ve been staying here, I have not encountered any house pests like cockroaches, geckos or even ants. In Singapore, ants were a common sight everywhere, especially in my grandma’s kitchen. But here, if I leave my honey out on the kitchen counter overnight, no ants will launch a major assault on the honey container.

So while washing the dishes, I made a mathematical formulae:

Dusty, grimy room + end of winter + insects waking up = house pest invasion (x 3)

And out of all the house pests, the ones I really, really hate are cockroaches and lizards.

I remembered when I was young toddler, my grandmother used to babysit my brother and I. At that time, my grandparents were still living in those old shophouses in Beach Road. Of course, a few years later the Singapore government tore it down (and a whole row of other historical shophouses) and now its an empty plot of land facing Bugis Junction Shopping Centre.

The whole neighbourhood is gone.

Apparently this is economic progress that the Singapore government like to talk about.

Anyway, my grandparents had two shophouses. Both were combined together, so just imagine a semi-detached home, but the shophouse version. The neighbourhood where my grandparents stayed was slightly run-downed but it certainly did had the “old, rustic charm” even though it was just 10 minutes away from Singapore’s CBD. Of course, with a very old neighbourhood, you get a lot of cockroaches, geckos (lizards) and rats. Especially when there’s a lot of open drains around.

One of my most distinct memory was playing with a cockroach with my brother and grandmother. I know it sounds downright creepy but its true. I think my brother and I found a large, adult cockroach in the living room and started playing with it. At that time, the concept of cockroaches were not instill in us. Neither was the concept of fear.

So we treated the cockroach like some toy car. Moving it along the floor while making vrooming noises, laughing while its feelers and legs tickled us. Up till now, I’m surprised that neither my brother nor I shoved the roach in our mouth as food. I think we got a lot of common sense at that time, though I can’t say for now.

My grandmother saw us playing with the roach. Now, if I remembered correctly, instead of spanking our bottoms and ‘confiscating’ our insect playmate, she joined us.

Yeah, she actually played with the roach with us. At one point, she took the cockroach and stuff it into her mouth. Both my brother and I were agog with amazement at her daring. And she actually started chewing on the roach, making crunching sounds.

If you think the above was true, then you’ve just been fooled by my grandma.

It was actually a magic trick. A few seconds later, she opened her mouth to show us that the roach disappeared, only to have it ‘appear’ magically in her right palm. Of course, both my brother and I were downright impressed and we made her do it again and again.

I can’t exactly remember what happened next and what happened to the roach. But I think the roach finally managed to escape from us, suffering from severe psychological trauma:

Roach-that-was-toyed-with: “GUYS, DO NOT EVER GO INTO THAT SHOPHOUSE! A WITCH AND HER GRANDCHILDREN LIVE THERE!”

Roach colony: “Are you fucking with us?”

Roach-that-was-toyed-with: “NO! I’m not! THEY WILL FUCK WITH YOU!!!!!!!!!!”

Yeah, it probably went down like that.

So at that point of time, I wasn’t scared of roaches. But then, some time during my life, I became afraid of roaches. I don’t know how or why, but I just became afraid of them. No, I don’t have a phobia of roaches, I just get very, very squeamish around them.

I learned something new during psychology lecture (I do pay attention sometimes) that if a lab monkey, who is not afraid of snakes at all, sees a wild monkey jumping nervously around when it sees a snake, the lab monkey will ‘learn’ from the wild monkey that snake = bad and thereby the lab monkey will ‘learn’ the fear of snake. Something like that.

So I can say that I probably learn the behaviour from someone. Who? I’m not sure.

All I knew was that one incident happened when I was a kid. At that point, my dad was still living overseas so my mom raised three kids with the help of a maid. One night, a cockroach decided to invade our house and my mom, worried that the cockroach might go after my younger sister while she slept, decided to launch a full scale war on the lone roach.

So insecticide in one hand, newspaper and toilet paper in another, my mom, maid and my brother went after the cockroach. With my usual bo-chap attitude (couldn’t give a fuck), I volunteered to ‘protect’ my younger sis and sat at one corner watching the war effort.

I was a bit scared because it was midnight by then and with my mom waging an all-out war, I thought that the cockroach must be one of those ghosts hellbent on destruction. An overactive imagination from watching too many Hong Kong ghost movies.

So at one point, my mom, maid and my brother cornered the roach behind the TV. I was sitting on the stairs with my sister watching the whole process. Just when I thought it was over, my mom/maid/brother said they couldn’t find it. Somehow, the cockroach managed to perform a ninja move and disappear in front of their us. I was still in my bo-chap mode, so I told my mom just to leave the front door open and the cockroach will find its way out.

As soon as I said that, I felt a “thung” on my head, as if something dropped down on me. I reached up and felt some squirreling feelers and legs and then the ugly realization dawned on me.

Mr. Nightcrawler-Cockroach decided to teleport onto my cranium.

The next second, I think I almost screamed the house down. I started jumping like a crazed boy and tried to sweep the roach away from my head. My mom, maid and brother rushed to me and started smacking me on the head with newspapers.

As if that helped.

The roach finally managed to dislodge itself from my hair and fell onto the ground. Knocked senseless by the impact from the ground, it wobbled around, a bit punch-drunk before it was gassed to death by a ton of insecticide, sprayed by my maid.

That incident left me a bit traumatized for a few hours and probably contributed to my squeamishness around roaches.

I thought that as I grew older, I would outgrow the squeamishness. But no, a recent incident proved that I still have the squeamishness.

It happened in Singapore and I was sitting beside my bedroom window using the computer. As it just rained a few hours ago, the night air was quite cooling so I left the window open. One thing I like about the after effects of rain in Singapore is that it can be very cooling. But the other after effects I hate is that it brings out ALL the insects.

Insect 1: “Fuck, my house is completely drenched. I feel so drenched. I hate being drenched.”

Insect 2: “Same here. Hey I got a BRILLIANT idea!”

Insect 1: “What? What is it? What? WHAT?”

Insect 2: “You see that window with the BRIGHT LIGHT on? Let’s fly towards it!!!”

Insect 1: “Great IDEA!”

So with a “THUNK” at the side of my head, a flying cockroach tried to do a kamikaze on me. I think the other couldn’t make it.

The brave, stupid cockroach landed onto my desk, stunned. And me? I stood up and screamed the whole house down and dashed out of my bedroom. My grandma (the same one who played cockroach with us) and my brother were in the living room and looked at me in surprise, wondering what the hell happened.

“Co…cock…cock….cockroachess…” I slowly croaked out to them. After my brother managed to translate my garbled information to my grandma, she went to the kitchen, grabbed a wad of paper towels and calmly strolled to my bedroom while I cautiously followed her from behind.

And there, in all its big, shiny glory, the cockroach crawled around on the wall. My brother offered to do the dirty deed but my grandma just waved him off and went after the roach. She missed on the first try and the cockroach scuttled away. But on the second try, she SCOOPED that thing off the wall and wrapped it up in paper towels.

Having done that, she turned towards me and pointed at me with the hand that was holding onto the cockroach (I was inching away from her). She then proceeded to lecture me about being a man and that I should not be scared of an INSECT and that I was not a kid anymore. With an exasperated sigh, she went off to flush the roach down the sewage via the toilet bowl. All this while, my brother pissed himself laughing.

My brother is not squeamish about roaches. In fact, he’s the one who always goes after the roaches or house pests. Sometimes, if there are no insecticides or papers around, he’ll go after roaches with his bare hands. After he catches the roach, he and I would always have this conversation:

Me: “Quick, flush it down the toilet bowl (I love toilet bowls, they are like my saviour).”

Him: “Dude, its just a roach. Its only an insect. We should not harm it.”

Me: “This is no time to discuss Buddhism or karma. For fuck’s sake, just flush it down now!”

Him: “(Observing roach very closely) I think I just throw it outside the window.”

Me: “Then it’ll just come back.”

Him: “No, it won’t.”

Me: LOOK, roaches have been around for 300 million years. They are hardy survivors. One less of them will not harm their population. This roach can blame its bad luck for being caught. Now, can you please flush it down the toilet bowl?

Him: “Heck, no.” (Proceeds to throw roach out of the window).

Me: “Great, fucking great. Now the roach will come after me when I’m sleeping because I’m the bad guy who wanted to flush it down the toilet bowl.”

This conversation happens frequently during our younger days. But now, my brother will usually catch it with a wad of toilet paper and squeeze the life out of it. And when he squeeze it, he’ll squeeze it really hard because he wants the roach to die a painless and humane death and doesn’t want to flush it down the toilet when its still alive.

Sometimes, I think my brother has more quirks than I have. And my parents says I’m eccentric.

For me, the roach is going to get the toilet, dead or alive.

P.S. I’ll talk about lizards some other time.

Changed the theme

I’ve changed my theme the second time. I kind of like it and will probably stick to this.

The day Daer born and died at the Debates

I’ll never forget this day.

I made myself look like a total and complete idiot.

I’ll take that back.

I probably made George W. Bush looked like a genius.

As per Rajan’s (ex-Pres of SMU Debating Society) recommendation, I joined the Sydney University debating team.

Now, Sydney University’s debating team are one of the top-ranking teams in the world. They even beat Harvard, Oxford and Cambridge at some World Debating Finals.**

Yeah, Sydney U have a lot of argumentative and eloquent people.

Rajan told me to join cause he told me that I’ll have a heck of experience and meet all sort of oddballs. Oddballs in a good way. He asked me to join the debating team so that he could experience it through me. Remember the scene from the movie “The Girl Next Door”? The scene where the protagonist’s friend screamed at him to fuck the girl so that he could ‘experience’ it too? It went something like this:

Friend: “FOR ME, MATT! FOR MEE!! FUCK HER FOR MEE!!!!”

It was like this, except the screaming and fucking.

Anyway, I e-mailed the Pres of Sydney U Debating Society, expressing my interest in joining. I only got a reply from him 3 weeks late, telling me to turn up for the next session at 5:15pm. Which was today. (Technically, yesterday, as its 12am here now).

So on the previous night, I got Rajan on MSN and asked him for some advice and this was what he told me:

Zareth says: (12:14:20 AM)

yo, you there?

rajan says: (12:17:06 AM)

yeap

Zareth says: (12:17:30 AM)

going for the debates tmr

Zareth says: (12:17:34 AM)

got any tips to survive?

rajan says: (12:19:35 AM)

urm, enjoy?

rajan says: (12:19:43 AM)

i dunno. don’t drink too much?

Zareth says: (12:20:24 AM)

wow, thanks for the sage advice, hahaha

rajan says: (12:20:31 AM)

lol

rajan says: (12:20:35 AM)

it’s your first day

Zareth says: (12:20:45 AM)

yep, first day

rajan says: (12:21:47 AM)

don’t break a leg. because debaters aren’t very good at first aid

Zareth says: (12:22:44 AM)

lol

rajan says: (12:22:54 AM)

if your first impression is “omg, so many weird people” you deduced right. if your first impression is “omg, so cool”, you are a true debater. if both, a smart debater.

Zareth says: (12:23:26 AM)

LOL

Zareth says: (12:23:35 AM)

what a weird viewpoint

rajan says: (12:23:47 AM)

lol

I highlighted the advice the Rajan gave me in bold red. One of the reasons I joined the debates was because Rajan told me that they served free beer. WOW! FREE BEER. If there is one ‘poison’ that can get me talking, beer is it. Actually let’s make that any alcoholic drinks. One beer and I probably debate the house down.

Hell, I know cause at the student orientation party, after drinking a beer, I went around getting phone numbers from people that I’ll never see or talk to again. I even got hit on by a gay Irish guy, but that’s another story.

But at the debates, there were pizzas. Rajan was right on this count. The pizzas were great. Really delicious. Unfortunately we only had 15 minutes to gobble it down before we went on to debate.

But.

NO BEER.

Maybe the debaters didn’t want any raging drunktards arguing. But I only argue well when I’m a drunktard. Cause when I’m sober, I’m Too. Damn. Quiet. I don’t really give a shit about what’s going on in an argument. But when I’m high, I give a shit about everything.

To add salt to my injury, the president gave the topic as “Why the government should NOT play a role in healthcare.” Then my partner and I was assigned to defend the position of why the government should just back out of the healthcare industry. Even better, we were both the opening team. So that means we had to go ahead first.

What the fuck man.

I’m all for the government playing a role in healthcare. I believed its something that the government should do. So of course I was lost for words when I had to put myself in an opposite position.

How? Think, Zareth, think? Why should the government fuck off from the healthcare industry and privatize it??

Then I hit on a solution. Why, of course, let’s follow Singapore’s policy.

This is the one time I love Singapore. If there’s any policies that make Singaporeans lives more miserable, trust the Singaporean government to do it.

The Singaporean government’s stance on healthcare is the citizen pay for their own medical care. As the PAP like to say: “Children should provide for their parents’ welfare. Its filial piety. You cannot always depend on the Government. We don’t follow Western ‘models’ of state welfare. We Confucian society.” Something along this line.

Since I was brainstorming with my partner, I shared my ideas with him. I meant everything. Which, in hindsight, was not a very good move.

As the opening government (team), my partner went ahead first to give his opening speech. He was a very impressive sight. It was his first time debating too and he managed to make a very eloquent and fiery speech. Of course, whatever I wanted to say, he said EVERYTHING! Oh crap, what am I going to say?

Next up was the opposing team opening up their side of the debate. Now, these people are real pros. They spoke fast, really rapid fast but you could still understand what they were talking about. And their arguments had real structure, meaning and all the bullocks. After the girl finished her speech (and shot down a few opposing questions from my team) it was my turn.

“All right Daer, it’s your turn,” the adjudicator turned to me.

That’s right, I’m now known as DAER.

How did this happened?

Well, when the President was typing everyone’s name onto a Excel spreadsheet, I got this typical response:

Me: “Zareth”

Pres: “Sorry?”

Me: “It’s Zareth. Z-A-R-E-T-H”

Then to my horror, I saw on the screen as he typed out “DAVER”.

Me: “No, no, no, it starts with a Z”

Pres: “Oh,” and he proceeds to delete the V and hence, “DAER” was born.

I couldn’t be bothered to correct him cause I was in the middle of a lecture hall and I would have to walk down to the front and changed my name to the correct spelling in front of the entire debating team. So Daer it was.

I’m fucking irritated by this. Zareth’s a cool name. But whenever I S-L-O-W-L-Y enunciate my name, the next party will go: “Eh? Jared? Gerad? JEIETH? JEDI?” Even when I spell out my name, I have to do it 3 fucking times before the other party get it.

Hey buddy, pay attention.

_________________________________________________________________________________

I got up to the front and calmly cleared my throat. And then I made a fucking lame introduction: “Guys, this is my first time here. Yeah, so don’t have too high of an expectation of me.”

Meanwhile, my partner was rooting like crazy for me.

I like that guy.

While the other side of the house was ready to pounce and tear the flesh from my bones.

Shit.

With that lame introduction, I make a total fiasco of myself. For the first time, I had stage fright. I actually experience what stage fright was. I couldn’t get the words out. I mumbled and 3 minutes into my speech, I gave up and just went back to my seat.

Our speech were supposed to be 7 minutes.

To describe how bad it was, I’m going to post a clip of George W. Bush debates:

Go to 1.36 of the video. Now imagine that, but 10 times worse.

That’s how I sucked today.

Oh well, they know me as Daer.

And Daer never existed.

** Rajan told me that Sydney Uni Debating Society is THE BEST, not one of the best.

The Beer did it.

I know I said that I won’t update my blog until the weekend. But I’m seriously in no mood to study and just witnessed something quite, quite amusing.

I came back from a rooftop BBQ that ended a few hours ago. It was organized by my hostel management to help us get to know our neighbours and hopefully, make a few friends, even though we (tenants) all know that we’re probably never see each other again after our six months contract end and we move out to better lodgings.

Unless we go to the same school. Even then, we’ll probably not see each other unless we are in the same faculty. Even if we were in the same faculty, we will probably be doing different courses. Even if we were doing the same course, we will probably have different class schedules.

So the chances of maintaining friendships are quite slim. Unless we become very chummy during the next six months. If we even bother to meet up.

During the BBQ in the cold, crisp night air where I enjoyed piping hot Aussie BBQ and music from a live band and generally, just soaking in the atmosphere and enjoying myself, there were quite a few rowdy people. No alcohol was provided and it was strictly BYO (Bring Your Own alcohol, for those uninitiated). So a number of people bought their own beers and liquors.

And it was a lot.

I decided to abstain because frankly, I rarely drink on weekdays and I hate Wednesdays (another topic). So I got myself a Pepsi and just waited in the long line for my hot dogs. A few Australians came up to me and joked with me that about the no alcohol, no hot dogs policy. I joked back that I had one Heineken in my fridge (I do) but didn’t want to lose my place in the line. It was just some bantering around to get to know each other. They were very friendly guys and they offered me beer. Of course I accepted their offer (even though I decided to abstain) but they later forgot about their offer.

I didn’t want to bother them about it because after all, its their beer and they were the ones offering me it. Anyway, after I got my hot dogs and stood in one corner devouring it, two girls from my floor, whom I knew, came up to join the party. They didn’t want any hot dogs so we stood that chatting. To be more accurate, they chatted while I was watching this girl.

This girl had a beer and was talking and giggling with a group of people near us. Let’s call her girl A. Now, Girl A was a little boisterous and was being a social butterfly, flittering here and there with her friends. As I was at the BBQ earlier, I knew she had a Heineken previously and so just assumed that she was high.

Well, I was wrong.

The two girls whom I was with decided to head back to their rooms and so I followed them. But after a few minutes of moping around in my room and acknowledging the fact that I was in no mood to study, I headed back to the BBQ alone to just enjoy the festive mood.

I recognized one of the Indian dudes and started chatting with him. When he remembered I was Singaporean, he started to look around for another Singaporean guy he met as he wanted to introduce us. Thankfully he didn’t (See “Secret Societies and NDP” for reason).

Meanwhile, Girl A was now very boisterous. She was staggering around, laughing and talking loudly to every person she met. One of the guys who was subjected to her constant laughing told us that she just had one beer.

One beer? Really? I thought it was two or three?

Girl A generally made a fool of herself. She grabbed and pawed at this French guy (I assume, because of his angular face) who did not look please and told her to stop it.

The rest of us just grinned and laughed at her antics.

Someone mentioned that she was Malaysian. But I could be wrong. She could be Singaporean, Thai, Filipino or something else. Anyway, her nationality is not of great importance.

Her friend was trying to calm Girl A down and at times, had to drag her away. This farce continued for the the next 10 minutes or so, Girl A talking to people, being very chummy and friendly, laughing and hopping around and her friend following her, desperately trying to calm her down.

Then for some unknown reasons to me, Girl A broke down and cried.

Girl A started shaking her head violently every time her friend tried to talk to her and later, Girl A sat on a bench and continued sobbing.

Oh, has the beer haze lifted?

Girl A’s friend bought her water and after a few minutes, Girl A calmed down sufficiently. I think the reason why Girl A broke down was because she realized she just embarrassed herself  in front of half the hostel tenants, not to mention the staff too. I can’t confirmed this because I was just standing at one side watching the whole drama. So its just an assumption.

That was one reason why I abstained from any alcohol. If you ever want to impress anyone and give a great first impression, the first rule is: DON’T GET DRUNK. DON’T GET DRUNK. Have one beer to loosen up, if you must. But DON’T GET DRUNK.

Especially when you are in front of a group of people who will bump into you in the lobby for the next six months. It’s okay to get drunk with your group at a pub or club. Because it is a pub/club and they’ll be 50-100 other people drinking their heads in. But at a get-together BBQ? Sure, it’ll be fine if there was a group of males (and females) playing beer pong and having a drinking competition.

Unfortunately the rest of us were sober.

Note to Girl A (If she ever reads my blog and identifies herself): Its okay to get drunk. I get drunk. Sometimes really, really shit-faced drunk. And those times are not the times you would want to be around me. Unfortunately, you were the only one drunk/high/tipsy and the rest of us were not. But don’t take it to heart, take it as lesson learned, ok?

P.S. Damn, Aussies can really drink! I saw a lot of empty beer bottles but no one seemed out of control (except Girl A).