Sunday, March 29, 2009

Sunsets on the South China Sea































Photographs taken from Miri. Miri is in Northern Sarawak, a state within the Malaysian island of Borneo.


I'm starting to feel like an actual photographer! (This is kind of reminiscent of the days when I started to feel like an actual writer!) I know this because I can't seem to put my camera down.

As I was watching the sunset, I thought, "sunsets are the most inspiring of events!" a thought I have had often. Sunsets are a sight that I simply can't resist, especially sunsets on the sea. And here I am in Northern Borneo, watching the sun set on the South China Sea.

I can't help but want to photograph sunsets, because they're such magical moments. And I thought, here is a source of hope in the world, because if sunsets are so incredibly inspiring, and I'm inspired by them often, here's something AMAZING in the world that happens EVERY SINGLE DAY! Every day a sun sets and every day it is beautiful, and inspiring, and magical somewhere in the world.

And I thought about how when I watch the sunset, I cant let go of my camera, and I just keep snapping and snapping and snapping, because that's the amazing thing about a sunset: every moment is a new moment, a new sight. It's like a photo that keeps shifting, and it gets more and more spectacular until it's gone. No two sunsets are the same, and no two moments in any given sunset match another. But a sunset builds in oohs and ahhs, which is perhaps what makes them so inspiring. And I can't help but want to capture and preserve inspiring moments! Because, in a photograph, it's eternal inspiration.

But ah! That brings me to the question I always ask myself. If there is something so incredibly remarkable going on in front of you, shouldn't you be taking it all in? Enjoying it, experiencing it, absorbing it? The real moment. Are you missing a part of the magic by photographing it? I guess for me, part of the joy is photographing it and that's how I absorb it, because I absorb it in a memory which will last longer because I have physical reminders of that memory. But also, I think I am aware enough, that I allow myself to do both, and if there were ever something that I felt as though I had to choose (you can experience this first hand 100% but not have the photo to remember by, or you can experience this 20% and have the photo)...if it were something so incredible/once in a lifetime, I'd probably choose the former. but who knows, I had a hard time putting my camera down for this sunset, and it was pretty darn spectacular.

I sat on the rocks and soaked in the cool breeze, the quiet calm and the diminishing hues of the sunset. I was alone with my thoughts. Just me and my camera.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Mom and Dad's Adventures in Asia

My parents spent a week with me in Singapore, I showed them around town and gave them a glimpse of my daily life here. The following is a pictorial guide to their days in Singapore and Malaysia.









Day Eight:

They took their first trip on the MRT, to Chinatown.
We got off at Pagoda Street and saw the shops.
We saw the Hindu, Thian Hock Keng Temple.
We toured the Buddha Tooth Relic Temple
I took them to the Hawker but it was crazy busy lunch hour
so we ate at a Japanese place on Smith Street, instead.
Later, we had drinks with Matthew O'Brian at the Blu Bar at the Shangri La Hotel, which hosted a grand view of Singapore.
Finally, dinner at Clark Quay, at a Moroccan Restaurant.



































Day Seven:

Lunch at Chjimes (we ate in an Aussie BBQ joint), joined by my friend (and tennis partner) Tai.
Raffles Hotel- We got a Singapore Sling at the Longbar and then toured the hotel grounds.
High Tea at the Ritz Carleton, where we also toured the hotel's modern/contemporary art collection (they have the largest collection of modern/contemporary art in S.E. Asia, quite amazing, actually!), very impressive array of Chihuly, Frank Stellas, and even a Warhol! Mansita, my good friend and writing classmate, joined us for tea!






















Day Six:

Monday is my long day at school. I'm in class from 11am to 10pm practically straight through, so I didn't see much of them. However, they did accompany me to my Film Story Analysis class, where we watched Annie Hall and discussed it afterwards. You'll have to ask them what they did for the rest of their day!






Day Three, Four, and Five were spent in Borneo, I'll put up a separate post for this one!









Day Two:

Botanic Gardens/Orchard Gardens
Lunch at Botanic Gardens with Andrew (my good friend and actor).
Tour of Campus where they met faculty and fellow students.
Dinner at the House of Peranaken.



















Day One:

Little India (via Serengoon Road),
Mustafa Center,
My HDB (Apartment),
Arab Street/ The Sultan's Mosque / Lunch at Blue Jazz Cafe with my roommate, Susie,
Dinner at the Fullterton Hotel / Boat Quay.