we were different people all our lives.

There’s always one or two quotes that hang about for a mental game of ping pong after an episode of Doctor Who, just the best TV show in the entire universe. But this one quote strikes a particular bell this Birthday. A juxtaposition of birthdays, end of year and Winter reflections/memories/dreams. Who knows from whence these feelings come from and to where it will go, but let me catch as much of it and pour it on to here.

I have been many different people all my life. Thanks to parents and families who raised me the best they knew how, I was an awkward child who was happier with books than with people. Happier at home with families that I knew well and books that I can take my time to understand, then outside. My usual reaction to people has been aggression when they didn’t behave in ways I wanted them to. But I wanted them, people. I wasn’t happy without them and didn’t know how to be happy with them. Aggression was just hiding the insecure child that wanted so badly to be ‘normal’ and accepted and loved. But instead, all I was was a chubby clumsy little girl who wasn’t pretty, smart nor sporty. I wasn’t even the average girl next door, I was the tomboy loudmouth that the cool kids make fun of. I could count all my friends on one hand. And I was that person until my early 20s.

Then I became a wannabe filmmaker. Maybe because stories has given me solace in my youth that I thought it could also be a way to carve my livelihood. My memories of college years were mostly of the dark editing room which was a sanctuary for all the wannabes, even when we weren’t editing, or running around on someone’s film set carrying strange poles and scattering away when security discovered we were shooting illegally. Although there was one semester where I tried again to ‘fit in’ like the rest of the pretty college girls and played make-up, I quickly took to filmmaker’s wardrobe of more casual comfy clothes that is more suitable for running around with 10 packs of chicken rice and said a gleeful farewell to ‘fitting-in’. Anyway, only people who appeared in front of the camera were expected to use make-up and be pretty. I had started to embrace the fact that I wasn’t normal and pretty (see how I had equated normal with pretty? What a bizarre society we live in.) but that it was fine, I still could find a space behind the camera with the rest of the abnormal creative kids who dreamed to make it to the big screen someday (not as a face to be remembered but as one of the names at the long list in the end credits that noone bothered to look at after the film). I was this person for a few years. My friends had probably increased by another hand.

Then it was as if my rebellious phase just kicked in, and since it had come quite later after my teenage years, it had kicked in big time. I wasn’t fighting with my parents, getting drunk every night or experimented with huge amount of drugs; no, that would’ve been ‘normal’. I got involved with human rights and activism. I went against the government, went to protests, got gassed and arrested. Sometimes with a camera in hand. I had become the activist, who still tried to make films but apparently an activist who makes film was not a filmmaker but rather just an activist with an agenda. I had learnt to anaylze the cause of my anger and frustration, and the idea of ‘normalcy’ as a social construct and found a more productive way to vent it. I had found a cause, my reason for being and I was probably the most passionate person then. I was still scared and insecure about many things, but I had begun to understand where it was coming from. That it wasn’t because I was abnormal, it was the social system that doesn’t permit or embrace differences that had to be changed. I had the most friends (and probably enemies too, can’t have one without the other) at that time, some whom prefered to be addresed as comrades. That few years after college were the biggest learning curve in my life thus far.

Then I became a lost soul. After years of frustrating work and perpetual poverty, justice and change seemed to drift further and further away, leaving me in the desolate darkness, wondering what have I done in my 20s. ‘Normalcy’ was never far away, taunting me, friends from highschool and universities, and families have achieved ‘careers’ and ‘families’ of their own. What have I done? With no savings, no money-making careers, no award-winning films to my name and prospect for marriage; I had done nothing, according to the standard of ‘normalcy’. Change and justice, like other   abstract ideas could not be measured in the same way, I knew that but it was always a hard path, going against the herd. I had become hard and desperate. Some other activists had gone through those phases too, it was called ‘burning out’. I’m not sure whether it was because there was a part of me that still believed in going against the grain, or that the opportunity never really came, but I never did join the corporations fully. There was a few flings with commercials and production houses but never as a full-time worker. I don’t know how I held out those last few years of my 20s, but I remembered crying an ultimatum to the night sky in my rented room in PJ, that if no windows opened in the next month or 2, I’d pack my bags and return to my hometown. From there, I’d accede to ‘normalcy’ and follow my parents’ wishes (sound like a robot doesn’t it?). Then a window opened and a plane ticket to England, flew in.

I had never thought I’d become a student again, after graduating from college. But there I was, in a new country, a new course of study, a new identity. I took it as a new beginning. I’ve always read and watched films about stories of people from different cultures but never knew one personally. I’ve always helped with campaigns for workers but never really worked either. So then, with no burden of social expectations and some remnants of idealogy, I assumed the role of a student, a waitress, a backpacker, a hitch-hiker, a gardener, a care-worker, a coffee-barista, an English teacher, a sustainable living enthusiast and twice, as a translator for some poor Chinese immigrant who was having her first baby in a foreign country that would charge her £4k to give birth if she didn’t have the right papers. I’ve hung out with friends and fellow workers from India, from Palestine, from China, from Japan, from Africa, from Latin America, from Eastern Europe, from working class England (yes they have working class too!) their struggles and their stories now have a face, a name, photos of families from back home and a warm smile that greeted me when we meet. The stuff that I’ve read and the films that I’ve been moved by, has become incredibly real to me. Strangely enough, I didn’t become harder, but quite the contrary, I think I’ve become kinder, more gentle, more patient. Before, I’d be quick to engage in most arguments, now, I’ve learnt to listen more, and would happily choose the path of a pacifist or a quiet observer. Maybe it’s aging, but I’d like to think I’ve grown a little wiser. Neither have I turned into a saint, like anyone else, I still had my limit and was very capable of blowing my top or throwing sarcastic remarks sometimes. But I was definitely not as lost, hard nor as desperate as before.

Now I’m a wanderer that teach English. Discovering the joy of interacting with different stories up close, I’ve decided to do a bit more wandering in a distant land that has always held my fascination since young. Latin America. It is my first time living in a country that I had to learnt the language from scratch and engaging in deep, meaningful conversations are such a rare luxury. But it is thrilling and I’m pleasantly surprised that it is still possible for me to learn a new language and start a new life in my 30s. As fun as new adventures are, there will come a time when the vagabonds have to return home. This is my 4th birthday away from home and I know, that the next one, I want to spend it with my family and close friends.

But what kind of person will I ‘regenerate’ into next? I guess only time will tell. But I hope, it will be someone kind, joyful and still retain some curiosity about stories and the universe we live in.

Adios 2013.

First blog in 2011.

Has to be about 2010. It is still January, I hope it’s not too late for me to reflect. *smile* it’s never too late to reflect. You don’t need the beach, hills or holiday getaway to reflect, actually, in the midst of gun shooting battlefield of our maddening life, it’s even more pertinent to reflect. (pertinent, shit, vocab from essay writing is leaking out in my everyday speech and blog. Resistance to academia is futile. The dominant institution dominates. Stupid pun :P)

*shakes head*reboot*

The highlight of 2010 for me would be the HerStory Films Project, which started in the end of 2009. Like all new projects, we learn to crawl, stumble, walk, stumble and I think we managed a little skip in the end, thanks to the team’s dedication. Will we do it again? We might, if someone out there is keen to fund us. I didn’t see this project to the end, some people said I bailed. I wrote that feeling the pang of guilt. I left to study. For those who knew me, leaving to study was also an escape.  I happen to escape just as the project reaches crunch time, I guess the blame is partly justified and the guilt, deserving. I lost a dear friend doing this project. But why get sentimental eh? Well, sentimentality is what blogs are built on. When we’re old with white hair, we might meet up for a cup of tea and laugh about this, I stashed this thought in my small fantasy closet. When near death, we have no time for petty wars or earth shattering squabbles; at least, that’s what I think. Youth make us arrogant, gives us an illusion of choice, like ingesting hallucinogens, it is addictive. Capitalists and advertisers (redundant word, they are actually the same) know this, would you like the phone with exactly the same function in green, blue, red or chips on the side?

I walk in the street, the sun is shining. I can see the ocean. It is a beautiful day. Gloomy weathers make you appreciate the sun. Being far from home made you realised you have a home. The world is my oyster and I intend to have it raw with a slice of lemon, but home is where (get ready to gag) the heart is (built, broken, mended most). Sentimentality strikes 2. Hey, first blog of the year, be kind.

The land in my heart was nurtured lovingly by a few people in 2010. I’m toying with the idea of listing down the farmers, like the folks at Oscars, listing down names of people they owe the metal piece to. I don’t know what yet will grow from this piece of land, hopefully something sustainable, sweet and filling. Rice. We’re running out of rice in Malaysia. Imagining you and me, my dear friends, in straw hats and muddy boots. We can play water with the water buffaloes, catch cat fish and make tuak. When the sun sets, we’ll smoke leaves and play scrabble.

So why did I escape, when I often think of running back to you now. Life in KL was suffocating, I felt like the horror movies where I’m trap in a room and the water keep rising. The water rises gradually, throughout the years, quitting the full time job was a temporary stopgap, but the water continues to pour in again after a while. The struggle for justice and equality is long and strenuous but I wasn’t at it alone. The struggle for artistic expression is precarious and rare but it has given me much pleasures. Financial ability is the price of the stopgap which I couldn’t afford. Choice is a middle class privilege. And mine was, to move back to my parents’ (an admittance of defeat that tore at my kiasu cina pride, bizarre remnants of diasporas’ values ) or get a grant to study far far away.

2010 sept, I left for the far far away grass. It is very green. It must be because of the cooler climate. It has been getting colder since, there is a chill in the bones that I think is now permanent, I don’t quite recall what warm means. It is hardest to get out of hot shower. First few months were hard, like the stone beach they have here. You can’t sink your feet in the warm sand and feel safe. The stones are cold and hard, you have to wear shoes when walking on it. I called you, whining the hardness, then you say, wear shoes, it’s only a year, you can take them off when you come back to the sandy beaches. You know, we don’t get stony beaches here, how curious, enjoy. A year goes by pretty fast, and you might find that wearing shoes can be as nice as wearing slippers. Anyway, your slippers will always be here, I’ll make sure of that.

I’m sitting on the stone beach, watching the birds doing their dance at sunset, in my shoes that are not so new anymore. I’m enjoying it. I say a little thank you to all of you. I’m bringing back some stones, you’re right, it’s quite adorable once you see it up close.

*cue nina simone’s it’s a new dawn*

Sentimentality strikes 3. I’m off the pitch.

Api.

I haven’t written a blog in a long time. It took a fire of the electric cable to get me to write. This is what happen, a thunderstorm afternoon, then I went out for dinner. I came back to bomba and police crowding round an electric pole near my house. My housemate said she saw fire on the wires and the bomba swiftly put it out, not that it was a big fire, just a small one. Lights were going out slowly in the house, like life was snuffed out from them. we pack our laptops and left for the closet electric oasis. It went dark completely just as we about to step out. Hah, how funny life can be.

At the pseudo middle class coffee place, we plug our extended self to their power point. Turn it on and attempt to continue with our second life, or first, sometimes I don’t know anymore if my life online chatting and working is more real then the one sitting and drinking tea. Unfortunately, or maybe it is fortunate after all, the internet in this modern interpretation of kopitiam doesn’t live up to it’s actual bourgeois counterpart and does not actually work. So here I am, unable to live out my virtual life, doom to observing the steaming smoke coming out of the cooking counter and the annoyingly loud happy people sitting 2 tables away. Then a light bulb appear somewhat hovering over my head and gently raised the question of journaling down what I see.  So that was how I started rattling out this narcissistic piece of ‘my reflection’.

A lot has happen since my last blog, usually it is when a lot is happening that I don’t have time to blog. But what is the most recent disturbing event is a death of a really nice person I know. Not that I know him well but of what I know, he is, or has been, shit, sigh, it is not fair, Ben will not be a ‘has been’, Ben is a really nice guy. Always ready with a hug and muaks muaks, the last time I saw Ben, he offered me a job at the university. Well, I’m not sure if ‘offer’ is the right word since I did sort of asked, pestered and beg for a tutoring job from Ben since last year. And ben, being the sweetheart, know how close-to-moving-back-to-hometown broke I was, always has a positive word or two, ‘don’t worry dear, we’ll work something out k.’ when he has finally figured it out, that there is something that might suit this crazy activist feminist that occasionally makes films and ‘offered’ me a job, I had to turn it down because I’m leaving the country soon. Gosh. I’m thankful tho Ben, very thankful and I hope you know that. You are a darling! Muaks Muaks!! Have a rocking time with Toni! May you both continue to start fire in spirits.

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The above was written a few weeks back but me, being busy and never enough time, didn’t manage to upload it.

In the span of few weeks, many things have happen, funny how things just continue to happen as if death or birth, war or silence have no impact on it whatsoever.

Arrests/ short films/financial crisis/ptptn/car/bail/actor/c-stand/rehearsal/visa/good bye and I’ll see you on the other side.

apa maksudnya 2009 kepada ku?

when it’s year end, folks at gigs (Shanon Shah and Azmyl Yunor at Acoustic Countdown at NBT) and peeps at newsy sites (PopIn.my) like to ask what 2009 was like for you, what strikes out the most, what was your favourite and least likable stuff that happen (the politics that is, not personal stuff). so i thought before someone else ask me this and having to say ‘err wait ah, i need to think about this.’ i should just think of it now and have an answer on standby.

off the top of my sleepy head:

there were some outstanding falls, metaphorically and real, the Perak’s  fall and  Teoh Beng Hock’s fall. i will indulge in laziness and not bother with explanation cos it’s getting late in the year and you can always google.

there were some surprised death, the King of Pop but closer to home and heart, sweet Yasmin Ahmad.

there were whipping and banning and jailing.

to stop people from drinking and loving and living.

the blogger who ‘exiled’ himself from the suppression.

the transgender who was ‘exiled’ because of her expression.

racists, sexists, homophobic remarks at still hurled

like stones at stray dogs in government’s dogpound

from ‘educated’ YBs, MPs,

the ‘elected’ leaders of our country,

yet, we sink our heads in embarassment,

when asked by friends from other nations,

why we have a murderer as the head of the house.

but i like to count my blessings when it is at the end.

without discounting the many struggles still at hand.

i like that sexuality is now discussed more publicly.

from there, new activists has sprung.

heterosexuals, lesbian, gays, bisexuals, transgender, intersex, queer

are now less scary a word to start conversation on.

it used to feel like standing in front of a firing squad.

now, well, you know you’re not standing alone at least.

thanks to Sexualiti Merdeka, Projek Sentuh, PT Foundation

and many more concern groups and people working in different capacities.

this is me, standing in ovation to you,

human rights is still a difficult word for Malaysia,

who’d guess sexuality rights would be mention so soon.

People surprises me sometimes.

most time, the one we grant most powers to, lead us to slaughter.

on rare occasions, the one we never knew was there, light a fire one cannot put off.

———–

Happy Birthday Toni Kassim.