Poem: Traveller

I’m the traveller waiting in transit,

whose flight is not yet fixed or known to him,

in a foreign land whose food he now eats, 

whose language he now speaks fluently in. 

The boarding time—that’s still a mystery, 

but the retail offers make up for it, 

and the cheap spa’s soothing soul therapy, 

one would give up checking every minute. 

Crowds or jostling bother not much longer

than the dated movies showing on screen, 

so other travellers ‘round drinks gather,

forget the land they were meant to be in:

the land of ancestors and native tongues,

of healing and soulful songs to be sung.

Poem: Woman in the Kitchen

The womb is filled with echoes from drops of 

warm pregnant tears, warm as the blood boiling 

within the ribs slow braising until soft—

can humans ever be made from cooked things?— 

with enough heat, flesh melts. The small wet space

beneath lit stove is dark as December, 

nothing lies there but a white flag raised;

the sour smell of rain draws the broken near

and cold wind scatters unused seeds afar. 

So, after hope simmers, loss evaporates,

there’s nothing left except a reservoir

of testimonies noone wishes said.

She spends her hours there long, sipping tea,

preparing dinner to set her soul free. 

Poem: Scrub

Encrusted in the corner, thirteen years’

resignation and leftovers nibbled 

on by mites and her son’s muffled demurs—

he lives not on bread alone, but chewed words

unturned, unlike the rounds he makes around

the flat—enchained unto bed frame, his sake.

I squeeze wet sponge with soap and scrub annul 

long layers pent, rust-toned spirit bits break,

resist a cringe at dirt congregating

on kitchen floor doing their liturgy,

they are offerings in exchange for nothing

but every gift rotten and good deceased;

finally, first light—a grey tile like night dissolved to dawn—sore arms lift in delight.

Poem: Trekking

One step further felt a step too far

past destination sign miles behind—

how long did shepherds trudge in winter

between announcement and touching divine,

or did it feel before the unfolding womb,

like flowers blooming into blood-red figs,

emptied out, waiting room or nascent tomb?—

yet, I was nowhere, as if transfixed

in Challenger Deep, but to plunge forward,

stabbing fears like unseen hedges surround, 

though assured I’ve not stumbled on corpses 

and one man has lived to tell what he’s found.

When at last I saw the familiar path, 

every iota of my flesh leapt and laughed. 

Poem: When The Light Broke

The moment the light broke the atmosphere—

a swirling seal of lost hopes, curses and fears—

 

the sky unrolled into a dark canvas, 

earth and dust ripped open as if in thirst:

 

a vulture dropped the dead, its beak agape;

a sea lion stopped its chase of a school of hake;

 

a wolf broke its fang on a trudging bison; 

a shepherd saw his sheep in a speleogen;  

 

the retina of a pilot went aflame; 

a man with dementia recalled his wife’s name; 

 

a chef laid down his knife, staring at the screen;

a pregnant woman’s dress unravelled at its seams; 

 

a cobbler hit a final nail through a sole; 

the jacuzzi of a tycoon ceased to flow; 

 

an artist splashed crimson over her sculpture; 

stones split apart in the Holy Sepulchre; 

 

the moment was not lost on the few who yearned,

not recognised by those who never learned,

 

and not welcomed by those who did but refused, 

but there it was, and none shall be amused. 

TOGI: Chilli, Chili Pepper, Chile

Chilli, Chili Pepper, Chile

Why do people love it even though it’s painful and torturous? What about chilli makes it spicy? Where did chilli originate from? How did it become part of culinary cultures worldwide?

Welcome to The Odd Gratuitous Inquiry (TOGI), a podcast where I investigate unnecessary questions and speculate answers no one asked for.

Listen to this episode on Spotify and other platforms.

The Odd Gratuitous Inquiry (TOGI) podcast
The Odd Gratuitous Inquiry (TOGI) podcast

 

Continue reading “TOGI: Chilli, Chili Pepper, Chile”

TOGI: The Origins of Bak Chang – Dialects, Diaspora, Dragons, Qu Yuan Myths and Glutinous Rice

The Odd Gratuitous Inquiry (TOGI): The Origins of Bak Chang - Dialects, Diaspora, Dragons, Qu Yuan Myths and Glutinous Rice

The Odd Gratuitous Inquiry (TOGI) is a podcast where I’ll investigate unnecessary questions and speculate answers no one asked for.

The Odd Gratuitous Inquiry (TOGI) podcast
The Odd Gratuitous Inquiry (TOGI) podcast

In this inaugural episode (which you may listen to on Anchor, Spotify and other platforms), we dive into the origins of bak chang (also known as zongzi 粽子) and explore the diverse Chinese dialect variations and the diaspora who eat it. Is the Qu Yuan origin story truth or myth? Are there other cultures which have similar food?

Hope you enjoy it as much as I did researching and making it! If you’ve suggestions for topics, or wish to share your thoughts about the podcast, feel free to let me know! Do like and follow, thanks!

Continue reading “TOGI: The Origins of Bak Chang – Dialects, Diaspora, Dragons, Qu Yuan Myths and Glutinous Rice”

Original Song: Kingfisher lyrics

Kingfisher by Ronald JJ Wong

In an uncertain time of lockdowns, social disconnection, virus contagion, and economic troubles, to live at all is a daunting challenge. To give life and raise a child in such times is a frightful responsibility. This song is a love letter from me as a parent to my firstborn child to not only survive, but to thrive, by living courageously on the power of hope, faith, and love. 

Listen to the song at the platforms found here.

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Transplanting BLM into Singapore: Racism and Migrant Workers

Hashtag Trends

My heart ached when I read about George Floyd’s death and the protests in the United States under the #BlackLivesMatter (BLM) movement.

Photo by Life Matters from Pexels

Some people in Singapore joined in the unintentionally detrimental act of posting black squares on social media. Some criticize others’ silence on social media as complicity in racism.

I think it would be philosophically and practically untenable to impose a moral duty on everyone to (i) frequently monitor social media trends and/or current affairs; (ii) read and understand all sides of the issues; and (iii) post things that many people are posting on those issues.

(Imagine all the inane memes and food photos one would have to scroll through each day to get to these posts!)

Take for instance the Yemen civil war (read e.g. Geneva Academy page and war report 2017, ICJ briefing paper) or the Israel-Palestine conflict. These are complex issues that cannot be compressed into a trending hashtag.

That is of course all apart from the question of whether and how such a moral duty would lead to greater virtue in that person, virtuous conduct in relation to others, or improved well being of others.

Moreover, I wonder how much of the reflexive response is from an impulse to ease one’s guilt and virtue signal than to actually understand the situation and be in solidarity with the people who are crying out for justice. What they want is to express their frustration and tell their stories.

To then jump onto the bandwagon and post your own stuff riding on the movement when you are not one of them is to hijack their moment. It’s like you are telling your friend about your family problem and instead of listening, your friend starts to wax lyrical about sociological theories of social structures he learnt from Sociology 101 in school.

If social media platform + silence = complicity in racism (or any other social injustice), then we will not only be morally doomed, mentally exhausted, and emotionally spent. We will also probably be unable to live, whether attempting a virtuous life or not. To be clear, I am not suggesting indifference in the face of injustice. But silence on social media is not indifference. It means just that, silence on, or infrequent use or posting of, social media.

This must be an unprecedented blip in time. And I’m not talking about COVID-19. It must be unprecedented that a person’s virtue is determined by what one posts on a World Wide Web-connected account. There is no equivalence to anything before.

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