Saturday, November 20, 2010

This Apple nerd has raised the bar...

When 26 year old Vy told her boyfriend and musician Chad that it'd be really sweet if he wrote a song about her, he took and ran it like only an Apple nerd would.

This video right here was played in the local cinema where the couple had their first movie date.

Awwwwwwwwwww...Enjoy!! :)

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

The Gods envy us...

They envy us because we are mortals.
Because any moment might be our last.
Everything is more beautiful because we are doomed.
You will never be lovelier than you are now.
We will never be here again.

-Troy

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Do you recognise them?




It is the Duke and Duchess of Windsor. More famously known as King Edward and Wallis Simpson. Wallis Simpson was a married American woman and Edward was prince-next-in-line-to-be-King. After his father's death, Edward ascended the throne to be King Edward, but the British monarch, conservative as it was, would not accept a once-married-seen-to-be-promiscuous woman to be their Queen. After 11 months as King of England, he abdicated his throne to be with the woman he loved and later married. Their love affair lasted their lifetime and they celebrated it with lavish jewelries from the likes of Cartier and Van Cleef and Arpels.
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Excerpt from his abdication speech way back in 1936:
"I have found it impossible to carry the heavy burden of responsibility and to discharge my duties as King, as I would wish to do, without the help and support of the woman I love."
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It is no wonder they've been touted as the love saga of the century. Who does that?


^8 Cee

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Niat

Developing on from in-vacuo's and AVP's comments on the previous post.

They drew my attention to niat ie intention.

In Islam, the most basic teaching teaches you that everything starts with niat. Niat that everything you do and everything that you are is because of God. I'm not so good at following that part simply because. But I do agree with the practice of niat. I generally believe that I should live life doing good or at the very least to not harm others. Those are, I guess, my general intentions in life. But what if I push it further?

It made me recollect back on my primary-school-agama-classes-days plus all those extracurricular-tuition-imposed-agama-classes where I had to memorise many many doa (prayer) outlining my niat for all things imaginable. It was crazy. There is a doa for when you wake up, before you shower, when you put on clothes, before you eat, before you step out of the house, when you study, at housewarmings and many many more. I resented it! Memory is not exactly the best gift I possess and what more in a foreign language and in meanings that I hardly cherish. Example 1: Doa when you wake up translates to something along the line of 'Thank you God for reawakening me back from my temporary slumber. And to You shall I return.' Geezz, talk about gibberish for a primary school kid right?

But after a degree or so, and a slight tweaking to suit me, it could easily translate to 'I am grateful to be alive today. I may not be tmrw' translation: Carpe Diem my friends ;p

But in all seriousness, I guess what I've discovered and am trying to highlight is that you should continuously be aware of and determine your intentions, in whatever way relevant to you, before setting out on doing something. Intention before action! Imagine what it could mean if I woke up every morning being grateful to be alive and wanting to live the day to the fullest. There will be no Monday-blues or any days blue. I wont get bogged down by the calamities of life and learn to appreciate and be grateful for each day as it comes. I will get things, well the important thing anyway, done much quicker too.

And that is just with practicing 1 intention in the morning. Imagine if I expand further. Leaving the house and embracing the traffic in the morning with the determination to learn more, to achieve more; being grateful for the wonderful food that I intend to enjoy before I eat; a simple housewarming doa with the intention of building a home and not just a house (think of it as wedding vows but for the family); Theres 10,001 niat for 10,001 actions!

You'd think its crazy that so much focus goes into intention and that it'll shave time off action right? Not necessarily so. I think its just a way of re-wiring oneself, to living life and every moment of it with well intentions and to living life purposefully. It will take time to adjust but it is a technique that can be mastered. Haha how would I know. I'll let you know someday soon hopefully. I'm gonna think of 1 simple intention to master first ;) Baby steps :)


^8 Cee

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Superiority

In one form or another, most of us, if not all, are striving or are at the very least subject to projections of superiority.

Types of superiority ranges from religion (thinking that one religion is better than the other), to wealth (associating oneself to a similar elite class), to education (studying hard to prove oneself smarter and capable than others or as a platform to bring oneself further than others) to etiquette (behavior and well manners are closely linked to upbringing) and a whole lot more.

Striving to superiority is, in one's eyes and society's eyes, a determination to be better and to achieve more. This is all good and stuff but at the same time, striving to be better divides people as it inidrectly/directly belittles them. Whether you realise it or not, by telling yourself that you want to be better, you are saying that you are, and many people who are at your similar stage 0, not good enough. And once you've progressed to stage 1, you think that you are better off now than before and others who are at stage 0, are lacking behind.

As you progress more and more in life, the gap may keep on increasing up to a stage where everyone who is not with you becomes part of 'them' and it becomes a separation between 'us' and 'them'. Of course one way of narrowing it is to help others progress. But it is fatal to assume that others view/desire progress the way you do.

I guess my question is, how do you progress without a projection of superiority?How do you not divide it into an Us vs Them thing? And if need be, how do you reduce superiority but at the same time remain relevant?

Respect for all is an answer. Respect will make life a lot more peaceful but it is not the answer to bring us closer. Or am I missing the point? Is division natural and inevitable after all?

^8 Cee


Thursday, October 21, 2010

Newton's Law

I had lunch with an ex-mathematician-physicist turned banker today.

And it went something along the lines of....
'So you know the famous Newton's Law right?'

'Err...yea?'
Crap its basic Physics. Please don't embarrass myself.
'Something along the lines of nothing new gets created nor is destroyed?'

Clearly unconvinced. He iterated all 3 laws.
(i) Object in a state of stillness stays that way unless force acts upon it. Similarly, something in motion remains in motion unless a force acts upon it. If an object is moving, one reason that it slows is because friction is acting upon it. Friction is force in this case.
(ii) Force can be defined as F=ma; where m is mass and a is acceleration.
(iii) For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.

Ah-ha! I think I got point 3 right! right?! Errr....
Anyway, the whole point is that Force, in totality, always remains constant.

So I ate and pondered and a whole slow 5 mins of thinking later, I was like, 'so what you're saying is force always remains the same in the universe? but if thats the case then the universe cannot be destroyed right and would continuously exist indefinitely since the force cannot be destroyed or lost?'

And as if he saw that question coming, he answered with no hesitation and not even to pause to think, 'True, total force remains constant, but mass and acceleration could change. There are many possible speculated ending to the universe - eg the universe continues to expand at an accelerating rate and lose mass or that it could contract and increase mass and lose out on acceleration. See, that way, force is not loss. It may be the end of us and the universe that we know, but not the destruction per say of the universe.'

Interesting.

It makes you think that you know, we, the physical and non-physical self will exist in one form or another for an indefinite period of time. Its like saying that our body is the mass and our thoughts and actions the force or acceleration. If you believe in freewill then perhaps your thoughts and actions are equivalent to the 'individual force' causing change to your static self and to the static things around you. But see, theoretically, every inch of us from the tangible to the intangible are all just part of 1 entity, the total force.


^8 Cee

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Steve Jobs

A very inspiring video discovered through Sha's kick-ass 'Marketing Madness' blog!



Some key points:
"You can't connect the dots looking forward, you can only connect them looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. Believing that the dots will connect down the road will give you the confidence to follow your heart, even if it leads you off the well worn path."

"Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose."



^8 Cee

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Water Love

Not my pictures. Click on image to be redirected to owner's page.
I wanna be as brilliant a photographer/editor...


^8 Cee

Monday, August 16, 2010

Bikini or headscarf: Which offers more freedom

A beautifully written article.
From CNN, By Krista Bremer
-----@
Nine years ago, I danced my newborn daughter around my North Carolina living room to the music of "Free to Be...You and Me", the '70s children's classic whose every lyric about tolerance and gender equality I had memorized as a girl growing up in California.

My Libyan-born husband, Ismail, sat with her for hours on our screened porch, swaying back and forth on a creaky metal rocker and singing old Arabic folk songs, and took her to a Muslim sheikh who chanted a prayer for long life into her tiny, velvety ear.

She had espresso eyes and lush black lashes like her father's, and her milky-brown skin darkened quickly in the summer sun. We named her Aliya, which means "exalted" in Arabic, and agreed we would raise her to choose what she identified with most from our dramatically different backgrounds.

I secretly felt smug about this agreement -- confident that she would favor my comfortable American lifestyle over his modest Muslim upbringing. Ismail's parents live in a squat stone house down a winding dirt alley outside Tripoli. Its walls are bare except for passages from the Quran engraved onto wood, its floors empty but for thin cushions that double as bedding at night.

My parents live in a sprawling home in Santa Fe with a three-car garage, hundreds of channels on the flat-screen TV, organic food in the refrigerator, and a closetful of toys for the grandchildren.

I imagined Aliya embracing shopping trips to Whole Foods and the stack of presents under the Christmas tree, while still fully appreciating the melodic sound of Arabic, the honey-soaked baklava Ismail makes from scratch, the intricate henna tattoos her aunt drew on her feet when we visited Libya. Not once did I imagine her falling for the head covering worn by Muslim girls as an expression of modesty.

Last summer we were celebrating the end of Ramadan with our Muslim community at a festival in the parking lot behind our local mosque. Children bounced in inflatable fun houses while their parents sat beneath a plastic tarp nearby, shooing flies from plates of curried chicken, golden rice, and baklava.

Aliya and I wandered past rows of vendors selling prayer mats, henna tattoos, and Muslim clothing. When we reached a table displaying head coverings, Aliya turned to me and pleaded, "Please, Mom -- can I have one?"

She riffled through neatly folded stacks of headscarves while the vendor, an African-American woman shrouded in black, beamed at her. I had recently seen Aliya cast admiring glances at Muslim girls her age.

I quietly pitied them, covered in floor-length skirts and long sleeves on even the hottest summer days, as my best childhood memories were of my skin laid bare to the sun: feeling the grass between my toes as I ran through the sprinkler on my front lawn; wading into an icy river in Idaho, my shorts hitched up my thighs, to catch my first rainbow trout; surfing a rolling emerald wave off the coast of Hawaii. But Aliya envied these girls and had asked me to buy her clothes like theirs. And now a headscarf.

In the past, my excuse was that they were hard to find at our local mall, but here she was, offering to spend ten dollars from her own allowance to buy the forest green rayon one she clutched in her hand. I started to shake my head emphatically "no," but caught myself, remembering my commitment to Ismail. So I gritted my teeth and bought it, assuming it would soon be forgotten.

That afternoon, as I was leaving for the grocery store, Aliya called out from her room that she wanted to come.

A moment later she appeared at the top of the stairs -- or more accurately, half of her did. From the waist down, she was my daughter: sneakers, bright socks, jeans a little threadbare at the knees. But from the waist up, this girl was a stranger. Her bright, round face was suspended in a tent of dark cloth like a moon in a starless sky.

"Are you going to wear that?" I asked.

"Yeah," she said slowly, in that tone she had recently begun to use with me when I state the obvious.

On the way to the store, I stole glances at her in my rearview mirror. She stared out the window in silence, appearing as aloof and unconcerned as a Muslim dignitary visiting our small Southern town -- I, merely her chauffeur.

I bit my lip. I wanted to ask her to remove her head covering before she got out of the car, but I couldn't think of a single logical reason why, except that the sight of it made my blood pressure rise. I'd always encouraged her to express her individuality and to resist peer pressure, but now I felt as self-conscious and claustrophobic as if I were wearing that headscarf myself.

In the Food Lion parking lot, the heavy summer air smothered my skin. I gathered the damp hair on my neck into a ponytail, but Aliya seemed unfazed by the heat. We must have looked like an odd pair: a tall blonde woman in a tank top and jeans cupping the hand of a four-foot-tall Muslim. I drew my daughter closer and the skin on my bare arms prickled -- as much from protective instinct as from the blast of refrigerated air that hit me as I entered the store.

As we maneuvered our cart down the aisles, shoppers glanced at us like we were a riddle they couldn't quite solve, quickly dropping their gaze when I caught their eye.

In the produce aisle, a woman reaching for an apple fixed me with an overly bright, solicitous smile that said "I embrace diversity and I am perfectly fine with your child." She looked so earnest, so painfully eager to put me at ease, that I suddenly understood how it must feel to have a child with an obvious disability, and all the curiosity or unwelcome sympathies from strangers it evokes.

At the checkout line, an elderly Southern woman clasped her bony hands together and bent slowly down toward Aliya. "My, my," she drawled, wobbling her head in disbelief. "Don't you look absolutely precious!" My daughter smiled politely, then turned to ask me for a pack of gum.

In the following days, Aliya wore her headscarf to the breakfast table over her pajamas, to a Muslim gathering where she was showered with compliments, and to the park, where the moms with whom I chatted on the bench studiously avoided mentioning it altogether.

Later that week, at our local pool, I watched a girl only a few years older than Aliya play Ping-Pong with a boy her age. She was caught in that awkward territory between childhood and adolescence -- narrow hips, skinny legs, the slightest swelling of new breasts -- and she wore a string bikini.

Her opponent wore an oversize T-shirt and baggy trunks that fell below his knees, and when he slammed the ball at her, she lunged for it while trying with one hand to keep the slippery strips of spandex in place. I wanted to offer her a towel to wrap around her hips, so she could lose herself in the contest and feel the exhilaration of making a perfect shot.

It was easy to see why she was getting demolished at this game: Her near-naked body was consuming her focus. And in her pained expression I recognized the familiar mix of shame and excitement I felt when I first wore a bikini.

At 14, I skittered down the halls of high school like a squirrel in traffic: hugging the walls, changing direction in midstream, darting for cover. Then I went to Los Angeles to visit my aunt Mary during winter break. Mary collected mermaids, kept a black-and-white photo of her long-haired Indian guru on her dresser, and shopped at a tiny health food store that smelled of patchouli and peanut butter. She took me to Venice Beach, where I bought a cheap bikini from a street vendor.

Dizzy with the promise of an impossibly bright afternoon, I thought I could be someone else -- glistening and proud like the greased-up bodybuilders on the lawn, relaxed and unself-conscious as the hippies who lounged on the pavement with lit incense tucked behind their ears. In a beachside bathroom with gritty cement floors, I changed into my new two-piece suit.

Goose bumps spread across my chubby white tummy and the downy white hairs on my thighs stood on end -- I felt as raw and exposed as a turtle stripped of its shell. And when I left the bathroom, the stares of men seemed to pin me in one spot even as I walked by.

In spite of a strange and mounting sense of shame, I was riveted by their smirking faces; in their suggestive expressions I thought I glimpsed some vital clue to the mystery of myself. What did these men see in me -- what was this strange power surging between us, this rapidly shifting current that one moment made me feel powerful and the next unspeakably vulnerable?

I imagined Aliya in a string bikini in a few years. Then I imagined her draped in Muslim attire. It was hard to say which image was more unsettling. I thought then of something a Sufi Muslim friend had told me: that Sufis believe our essence radiates beyond our physical bodies -- that we have a sort of energetic second skin, which is extremely sensitive and permeable to everyone we encounter. Muslim men and women wear modest clothing, she said, to protect this charged space between them and the world.

Growing up in the '70s in Southern California, I had learned that freedom for women meant, among other things, fewer clothes, and that women could be anything -- and still look good in a bikini. Exploring my physical freedom had been an important part of my process of self-discovery, but the exposure had come at a price.

Since that day in Venice Beach, I'd spent years learning to swim in the turbulent currents of attraction -- wanting to be desired, resisting others' unwelcome advances, plumbing the mysterious depths of my own longing.

I'd spent countless hours studying my reflection in the mirror -- admiring it, hating it, wondering what others thought of it -- and it sometimes seemed to me that if I had applied the same relentless scrutiny to another subject I could have become enlightened, written a novel, or at least figured out how to grow an organic vegetable garden.

On a recent Saturday morning, in the crowded dressing room of a large department store, I tried on designer jeans alongside college girls in stiletto heels, young mothers with babies fussing in their strollers, and middle-aged women with glossed lips pursed into frowns. One by one we filed into changing rooms, then lined up to take our turn on a brightly lit pedestal surrounded by mirrors, cocking our hips and sucking in our tummies and craning our necks to stare at our rear ends.

When it was my turn, my heart felt as tight in my chest as my legs did in the jeans. My face looked drawn under the fluorescent lights, and suddenly I was exhausted by all the years I'd spent doggedly chasing the carrot of self-improvement, while dragging behind me a heavy cart of self-criticism.

At this stage in her life, Aliya is captivated by the world around her -- not by what she sees in the mirror. Last summer she stood at the edge of the Blue Ridge Parkway, stared at the blue-black outline of the mountains in the distance, their tips swaddled by cottony clouds, and gasped. "This is the most beautiful thing I ever saw," she whispered. Her wide-open eyes were a mirror of all that beauty, and she stood so still that she blended into the lush landscape, until finally we broke her reverie by tugging at her arm and pulling her back to the car.

At school it's different. In her fourth-grade class, girls already draw a connection between clothing and popularity. A few weeks ago, her voice rose in anger as she told me about a classmate who had ranked all the girls in class according to how stylish they were.

I understood then that while physical exposure had liberated me in some ways, Aliya could discover an entirely different type of freedom by choosing to cover herself.

I have no idea how long Aliya's interest in Muslim clothing will last. If she chooses to embrace Islam, I trust the faith will bring her tolerance, humility, and a sense of justice -- the way it has done for her father. And because I have a strong desire to protect her, I will also worry that her choice could make life in her own country difficult. She has recently memorized the fatiha, the opening verse of the Quran, and she is pressing her father to teach her Arabic. She's also becoming an agile mountain biker who rides with me on wooded trails, mud spraying her calves as she navigates the swollen creek.

The other day, when I dropped her off at school, instead of driving away from the curb in a rush as I usually do, I watched her walk into a crowd of kids, bent forward under the weight of her backpack as if she were bracing against a storm. She moved purposefully, in such a solitary way -- so different from the way I was at her age, and I realized once again how mysterious she is to me.

It's not just her head covering that makes her so: It's her lack of concern for what others think about her. It's finding her stash of Halloween candy untouched in her drawer, while I was a child obsessed with sweets. It's the fact that she would rather dive into a book than into the ocean -- that she gets so consumed with her reading that she can't hear me calling her from the next room.

I watched her kneel at the entryway to her school and pull a neatly folded cloth from the front of her pack, where other kids stash bubble gum or lip gloss. Then she slipped it over her head, and her shoulders disappeared beneath it like the cape her younger brother wears when he pretends to be a superhero.

As I pulled away from the curb, I imagined that headscarf having magical powers to protect her boundless imagination, her keen perception, and her unself-conscious goodness. I imagined it shielding her as she journeys through that house of mirrors where so many young women get trapped in adolescence, buffering her from the dissatisfaction that clings in spite of the growing number of choices at our fingertips, providing safe cover as she takes flight into a future I can only imagine.

-----@

To me whats beautiful, is the openness of the heart and mind of the mum.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Salt

Watched Salt! Jolie kicks-ass and I am pretty sure no other female actress tops her in the action department. Storyline is surprisingly not bad either!
Blockbuster aside, underlying the movie is a propaganda against Russia. Actually to think about it, the whole of Hollywood has sort of been running propaganda against Russia. Weird huh to think that there has never been a positive angle on Russia filmed in Hollywood (well, none that I can recall of anyway).

Smells like conspiracy to me...

^8 Cee

Saturday, July 17, 2010

London: Day 8

Last day in London.

1) Walked through Oxford St to do some last minute shopping. The highlight was Primark. Its cheap!! Its crazy. Its cheap like Sg Wang cheap...err likeee flea market cheap.

2) Brunch at Patisserie Valerie. So yummmm :) :) Should try all things salmon there. And the scones....oooohhh

Aaaand thats it! I cant say that I fell in love with London immediately. Its hustle and bustle and cold shoulders and cold weathers were a big turn off. But I did eventually fall in love as I met some friendly ppl along the way, found plenty of things to do, immersed in the history of the past and adjusted to the present cosmo....and as it got sunnier day by day! Cant wait for my next travel but its back to reality for me.


^8 Cee

England: Day 7

London

1) We took the bus to Buckingham Palace and walked through the Buckingham Palace garden. I like parks. It was a lucky coincidence that we went there at the time of change of the palace guards. Its an elaborate event that happens every other day around noon. Touristy, I like ;)
2) Walked all the way from Buckingham Palace to Knightsbridge to pay Harrods a visit. Its hugeeee, like twice the size of Selfridges. Its motto is Omnia, Omnibus Ubique-All things for all people, Everywhere. Yeah right. Its $$$. I didnt really mind coz they had a frgn opera singer on the balcony overlooking the escalators. Kinda crazy, kinda awesome.
Had tea at cafe Laduree
3) I left my family to head towards Grace Kelly's exhibition. The exhibition was in Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) which is in Kensington, a couple of blocks away. V&A is free but exhibitions are not. Bought night-time tickets to the exhibition as all the day tickets were sold-out.

4) Spent the next couple of hours wandering the V&A. V&A is unlike any museums I've visited. V&A is the excessiveness, elaborateness and the beauty of the world's countries amplified. A world of wanders and aesthetics. By far, my favorite museum!

5) Met up with Lalink. We got lost looking for Snogs...well she said she was showing me around Kensington -_-"

6) Headed back to the V&A, this time, for Grace Kelly's exhibition as it was a must-do-together-visit. Lol, I told her so in my first email when I told her I was visiting London.My first love for GK was when I chanced upon a Hitchock film some 4 years ago. I remember watching Dial M for Murder and was intrigued by the actress. Then I chanced upon Rear Window and it was the same actress, strikingly classy. They dont make those kind of films anymore.

7) We dined in Fifteen. We confidently walked in without any reservations and got it! Lol it turns out that it wasnt the Fifteen of Jamie Oliver's. But it was good time spent :)
^8 Cee

Sunday, July 11, 2010

England: Day 6

1) What else do people do in Manchester....visit Manchester United stadium!! A dream come true for my dad and bros. Wished I was a die-hard fan myself.
The Manchester United TrinityHeading towards the old Trafford stadium...wheee!!In the player's changing roomWatching the match from the player's seat! O.M.G.
2) We dropped by my cousin's university, Manchester University to take pictures!3) And took away lunch and ate in the car coz we had 3 hours to drive and a play to catch.

4) Watched the Lion King musical at Lyceum Theatre. It was good :) :) Except the Simba actor had a rather feminine voice. If not, everything else was fantastic!
5) Celebrated my parent's anniversary dinner at Covent Garden. 27 years of marriage is no joke and I've learnt that its not always picture perfect... but whats important is the determination to stick together as a family. Ps I loveee Covent Garden! Its a place I would definitely visit again or maybe stay at when I come visit London again.
^8 Cee

Saturday, July 3, 2010

England: Day 5

1. So I woke up for breakfast and next thing I know was that we were going for a roadtrip. Well the plan was to pick my sister's luggage at her HSBC training centre which was in
Bricketwood..who knows where.
2. We rented a car, got ourselves a Tom Tom and off we went to Bricketwood. Its sooo beautiful! More like a vacation place if you ask. Hehe my company should take note!
3. Had lunch in a lovely little town in
St. Albans.

4. We were told that
Bicester Village is a must visit. So off we went to the designer outlet place. Time was very limited. We only had an hour to shop. Hahah good news for my wallet. I got myself my first Karen Millen dress :)
5. And then guess where we headed to next. Clue: my dad and bros are Manchester lovers.


Yepppp we drove another 3 hours to end up in
Manchester!! Red bricks all over!
My sister and I decided to explore the city in the middle of the night, thanks to our cousin who became out body/tourguide
(he's studying there)...We bought some shakes and drinks from a convenient store and just hung out on the streets in the city. I like Manchester. It feels like dear ol' Melbourne...It feels like home :)

We hung out by the 'Manchester Eye'
6. Our travel route!^8 Cee

Thursday, July 1, 2010

England: Day 4

London

1. Don't really recall what we did today except for the British Museum. Its hugeee. Visited the mummies, the Mesopotamia, the ancient Greece, China prints, Indian sculptures etc. Its impressive....and its freeeee..I like! :) :)

Check out the larger than life sculptures!
2. After the museum we headed to Piccadilly Circus. It was buzzing with video displays and neon signs. That, I like. But the crowded places, not so. Well anyway, no pictures from there as it was raining. Thought I could just come by the next day to take some pictures..it is rather nice.

^8 Cee

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

England: Day 3

London

Its meet my aunties day! Havent seen them in ages. One of em since like 17 yrs ago.

1) Anyway, we went to Maroush on Argyle. Best Moroccon food! The meat was super tender. But no picture of the food coz I keep forgetting to take pictures.
Lalink, who is already like my mum's other daughter, was at lunch too! :) havent got to spend as much time as this with her for a very very long long time.

2) In between meeting the two aunts. We managed to visit the 4-storeys Topshop, H&M and the likes....But it was so crowded (Monday was a public holiday - ie Bank day). It was suffocating. But we managed to find ourselves a set of awesome dress to camwhore in the dressing room.

Ta-daaah
But seriously, even with the depreciation of the pounds, I still think Topshop is overpriced for its clothes.

3) Anyway just wanted to end this post with these pictures here.


Resemblance, no?

^8 Cee

Sunday, June 27, 2010

England: Day 2

London

We took the weekly pass for London's tube and buses. All in about GBP25. Its a fair price to pay considering Hop-on Hop off buses 1-day tour goes for about the same price.

We covered most of the touristy stuff today...

1) We saw big 151 yr ol Ben

2) Westminster Abbey
no pictures coz it was Sunday mass

2) Houses of Parliaments
Its actually a lot more massive than the picture
4) London Eye
5) Thames River Cruise
with a bunch of orange heads6) London BridgeSo not what I imagined it to be...
I guess London Bridge IS Falling Down
You gotta check out the full version of the song...here!

7) Tower Bridge
A lot fancier than London Bridge
8) Tower of London
The tower of London was a royal residence as well as a military stronghold in the Middle Ages. Plenty of things to do (we spent half the day there)...There were reenactment of wars, people walking around in costumes, armories exhibition, the crown jewels, etc etc. Definitely a recommended tour for the family.

9) Lobster Noodles
I really dont remember which restaurant!! But it was Chinese food
10) Met up with Tashie...Good to finally see her in London too :)


^8 Cee

Saturday, June 26, 2010

England: Day 1

London

1) It has been ages since I've stepped foot in England and hence just as an early warning to those seasoned Londoners, my posts would be rather touristy.

2) We arrived early morning in Heathrow Airport and took the cab to Leonard Apartments. The cab driver was a nice chap from Afghanistan who purposely drove us through some famous areas like through the Hyde Park etc even though his services were a fixed rate. Leonard Apartments is on Seymour Street, which is walkable to the busy Oxford shopping street. As expected, the interiors are classic and cozy.3) We spent the day walking along Oxford Street. The weather was crap..Ie raining and not...so we were walking in and out. And well of course we came across the famed Selfridges..its got interesting window display..seriously bold art! Walked into Selfridges and my god, I dont think I've seen designer bags displayed so cheaply. Selfridges looks like any other departmental store except that its all $$$$$. Oh and its 101 years old this year! Apparently it was perhaps Mr Selfridge (founder) who coined the term the 'Customer is Always Right'. 4) Met up with my cousin....
and had yummy waffles at Pure Waffles
5) Did grocery shopping at Marks&Spencer for dinner!

6) Met Mira lalink! She dropped by for dinner in the apartment and we girls caught up after sooo long, painting nails (hehe matching red nails!!) and planning the touristy stuff to do for the rest of the week!

7) Amy arrived later that night having just arrived from Paris. Actually the whole reason us family were in London was because of her. Amy works for HSBC and after a year of their management trainee programme, they'll get sent to Bricketwood, UK for a month of training. So actually the rest of us just took this opportunity to 'visit' her after her programme :p

^8 Cee

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Insane Street Soccer

In line with the upcoming soccer fever, check this insane video on mad soccer skills.



^8 Cee