November 27, 2006
Chiang Mai: Placeholder
Yeah, as you might have guessed I haven't quite got my act together yet for blogging about our trip to Chiang Mai and Chiang Dao. And with Russ arriving this Saturday and our, er, "happy" threesome trip to Siem Reap the Friday after that (heh, the boys are gonna have soooo much fun!), and the wedding planning hamsterwheel we're constantly on, I'm afraid I can't pretend I'm suddenly going to be the world's best time-manager.
But in the meantime, here's a display of bare flesh to make up for my dearth of content! Don't say I never put it all out there for my readers.
November 16, 2006
Eep
In preparation for next week's trip to Chiang Mai and Chiang Dao, I went to a money-changer in Parkway Parade. I asked for 5000 baht and was quoted about S$215. Since I didn't have that much cash on me, I handed my bank card over to pay and waited to key in my PIN.
I have to admit I don't always bother to check the amount on the screen before keying in my PIN. No reason, just carelessness. For some reason though, tonight I did.
The screen said "$51,386.73".
I'm still wondering what might have happened if I hadn't checked.
November 1, 2006
Halloween
At Ida & David’s rather fabulous Halloween party on Saturday, my favourite costumes included the Statue of Liberty, The Chinese Teacher From Hell (with the most hilariously appropriate spectacles you could imagine), and every man dressed in drag (there were several).
I have a certain bias in what impresses me in Halloween costumes. Much like my disappointment at anyone attending a Bad Taste party who doesn’t make a good-faith attempt to render themselves as outrageously fugly as they can manage, I’m not drawn to Halloween costumes where it’s obvious that the wearer still wants to look hot. As Lindsay Lohan's character so sagely observed in Mean Girls, "In the regular world, Halloween is when children dress up in costumes and beg for candy. In Girl World, Halloween is the one night a year when a girl can dress like a total slut and no other girls can say anything about it."
So my distaste for that general state of affairs is one of the reasons Alec and me went like this.
(For the benefit of non-Singaporean readers, the costumes are loosely based on two particular sorts of characters in Singaporean society that most Singaporeans would quite readily recognize, an "auntie" and "uncle". It's sort of impossible to distill the essence of auntiedom and uncledom into words, but I suppose their defining characteristics would be that they are middle-aged or older, decidedly unhip and unsophisticated, but generally good people who one addresses as "auntie" or "uncle" out of respect that they've had more life experience than you. Having said that, these particular depictions aren't exact archetypes either. My auntie is more dressed up than usual, she's put on her fancy clothes for the party. Alec's uncle, on the other hand, has come straight from the neighbourhood coffeeshops without bothering to change.)
The second reason we chose those costumes was pure laziness. All that was required to put the costumes together was for me to walk downstairs and say “Hi parents, Alec and me are an uncle and auntie for Halloween. Can we borrow some clothes?”
My parents took it pretty well. My mum found some awful jewellery (all gifts, she swears) to wear with the leopard print blouse I pulled jubilantly from her wardrobe. My dad surfaced from the depths of his afternoon nap as I was rummaging through his clothes for a singlet to mumble "You want a torn one? Look deeper inside, sure got" and "Think they might be a bit small for him. But actually, like that will be better."
So anyway, those were our costumes and I'm glad people seemed to like them. Apart from the fun of people wearing costumes, the party also included the fun of people removing their costumes. During the night an epidemic of male stripping somehow took hold and we ended up with almost every male in the place dancing shirtless in the living room, except, of course, some of the ones in drag - since that would clearly have been conduct unbecoming of a lady.
At some point a guy dressed as a French maid burst into the room where I was chatting with some people, pulling Alec along by the hand. "Honey," he gushed to me, "your man is SO HOT! Omigod, and so are you!" Neither Alec nor I get compliments like this very often (assuming you ignore the attention Alec receives from the local prostitutes), and usually when we do the compliments are from people who could most kindly be described as...unfussy. But this guy had great hair and makeup and his dress fit him like a glove, so we were very flattered.
I shall take my leave with an anecdote from which it is hard to continue. At some point during the night I started chatting with a group of people I didn't know, asking about their costumes and so on. One girl was a Raggedy Ann doll, another was The Chinese Teacher From Hell, the third was a cat and the fourth a Roman whore. Last was an Indian guy, wearing what looked like brown sackcloth underneath some white drapey cloth. I asked him what he was; he said to guess.
"Gandhi?" I ventured.
"Caesar," he answered coldly, whereupon I excused myself quickly.

