Sunday 27 November 2005

There and back again.

On the way to the airport we started seeing snow falling, jo got her wish and just before we left. anyhow, plane got delayed 2 hours due to heavy snowfall and we got back to singapore at 1pm plus.

On hindsight, it has been an interesting trip, we met advertising, fine art, photo school, photo exhibition people, and on the very last night before we left, we met a journalist and had a great time talking shop. In short we met people from almost the entire spectrum of photography, so it has been an interesting time.

This has been the longest we have been out of the country, next year will be longer i think, we will leave likely around feb2006. So here we will end the blog for the time being... till we are in paris again. :-)

wes

Monday 21 November 2005

Listen to your heart

In the last few weeks that we have been here, I have noticed that people here embrace a different belief from what we have back home.

I mean, Paris is like Singapore in that we are both small cities filled with people rushing about work and home, buying groceries after work or hanging out at bars and coffee places with friends during weekends. And everyone seems so busy, so much so that with the exception of tourists, every other person has the same spaced out look in the metro/mrt.

But 2 weeks after we arrived, I saw a girl crying in the metro. And she wasn't crying and wiping her tears away like she had a bad day at work. She was crying with her eye make-up running, her face was wet with her tears like she just broke up with the man she was to marry or was told she has 2 days left to live kind of heartbreaking crying.

And no one stared at her. They glance but they don't seem to think it abnormal.

I would have thought that that was because people around did not want to further embarrass her, like how we would turn and pretend the girl did not exist, had this incident been on the mrt in Singapore. But interestingly enough, 2 days later, I saw another girl, crying... no, sobbing her heart out with a friend on the street.

And a week later, another one crying as she walked into the train. And another 2 weeks later, another running across the platform, greeting her friend in sobs and tears.

I think in this part of town, being in emotional need is accepted as a real and necessary part of life. The downs of life are also the highlights. The low points in life are also that which we want to savor. This is all part of life.

For me, at least, this is an eye-opener. I must confess that I am terrible with handling emotions. I don't remember the last time I cried in public. I must have been like 8?

But here, people listen to their hearts. And they let it come out. In the metro. On the street. Or wherever and whenever their hearts need to speak.

Jo

Sunday 20 November 2005

Winter is come

hey hey

it is getting really cold here. after last night's little walk, i have to wear my big winter coat. we have a little meteo card that measures the temperature and most of the time it reads about 4 to 8 degrees or so in the daytime. this morning it got no reading. ha!

have been reading Lord of the Rings trilogy book, solid writing, very nice, almost old english like. been on battlefield2 for last week for my alone-time, have met up some potential contacts, got turned down by some but there are some openings, will followup in Feb when we are back. jo says that this trip has defined my photography path, so if God closes a door and opens a window, i will go see how this works out.

went to a pc-shop area in montgallet near the bastille, and it is awesome, it is seriously happening, it's like sim lim square... except that the shops are spread out over a large area over a few roads and 99% of them are run by chinese folks! cool or what. and guess what, some of the stuff is cheaper than in singapore.

best
wes

Monday 14 November 2005

Start of Week 8 and back to our regular programming

Hello all,

Kat left last night on Air France and is safely back home in Singapore. Was in Terminal 2 of the airport and it looks great. Better than the olde T1 that MAS or Thai use. Anyways, we found out that Air France only allows a STRICT 20 kg limit on check in luggage, anything more than that and they whack a surcharge. ;-p

The riots seemed to have quieted down lots due to the curfew and there are lots and lots of police guys and gals in central Paris looking really really serious. But things are ok!! Just gettting colder and colder. Winds are chilly and we need to wear more stuff.

Best
Wes

Tuesday 8 November 2005

The Riots

The TV has been reporting lots about the riots. Where we live and do stuff is safe. Central Paris is not affected. Seems to be happening in the Paris suburbs and around the country. Due to our limited french and lack of internet connection, we are not too sure about where it's happening except that it's not in central.

Wes

Saturday 5 November 2005

sisters in arms

sisters caught pigging on instant choc cake


kat rolleth her eyes


darth kat and little her red stick

Sister in law arrivez!!




Kat is here! Updated us about stuff at home (nothing much it seems, except the dengue) and generally more happy-busy, we have stopped counting the days. She brought some stuff we needed including great CD from the TBM, a non-flat pillow, my 13-year-old Lord of the Rings trilogy book that I haven't finished, Photoshop CD (that’s why we couldn’t post photos).

She gets up really early (body still on s'pore time) and gets us up and running by 9am. She and Jo bought a battery powered hair cutter thing and Jo tried her barber skills on me last night. I thought worse case I'll just end up with 6mm crew cut, so what can I lose? I'm really really happy, turns out that my head looks great after the cut. Of course it doesn't look as good done by our stylist in s'pore but it's 80% close.

Went out for ice-cream and macaroons at Laduree at Champs Elysées 2 days ago, had rose ice-cream that tasted like bandung (!!) And had the best pistachio macaroons in the world.

Went to Hotel Invalides yesterday, got loads and loads of different types of canons. Got some pix for Dan Koh and Wahj, olde french mortars! They look really cool, close enough to the ones on Last of the Mohicans if I'm not wrong. Btw, this is the place where Napoleon is buried, but we didn't see the tomb coz got to pay for tix.

Btw, about the riots near Paris, they're on the outskirts of Paris in the suburbs, so we're ok. Thanks for calling and sms-ing.