Thursday, October 21, 2010

These 10 months here..

It's been a long time since I've posted here, since I've been so occupied blogging at CritiqalChristianity as of late. I started blogging a post there about counting my blessings, and just felt, at the end of it, that I didn't want to publish it on that blog. It was too personal. It belonged here.

So, if you read my other blog regularly and happened to stumble across this one, lucky you :P But this blog talks about my 1 year journey in Stockholm, and tonight I was just thinking back about how blessed I've been. There have been crappy times, but for every crappy period I've been through, I've had double the blessings to make up for it!

So let me count my blessings. I won't name you. If you ever read this, you know who you are ;)

Remember...

... when we talked for hours over the phone, even before we really met face to face? It was the middle of exams, but i enjoyed every single one of those chats. It felt like we connected, in some inexplicable way, and it made me look forward to this journey before it even began.

... when we roamed the streets of London and Edinburgh together? It was a precious 10 days spent with you, laughing over the stupidest things, like falling over while trying to ice skate, or trying to find our way back to our nice comfy beds. I remember standing, freezing, in the snow, waiting for you to get the key to your apartment. It was bone chillingly cold, but all i remember thinking of was whether you were safe.

... when i arrived in Stockholm? I was like a lost puppy not knowing where to go, but you came, showed me the way to the place i now call home, and even carried my bags for me! Remember how we stood waiting for the bus to come, with snow falling lightly all around us? It was beautiful.

... the three of us stumbling back from Gula Villan? Our arms were linked, we were high, it was freezing, but my heart was filled with warmth. I tripped and fell flat on my face in the snow, and even though my cheek was sore, we still laughed happily home.

... talking well past midnight in your cozy room? The carpets, the furniture, the lighting - all these things made your room feel snug, but it was you who generated the warmth in that room. Your heart, full of passion and emotion. You'll be a wonderful designer someday. I know you will.

... meeting for the first time? You just came from the gym, and as we walked to your place, i felt small beside you. i never thought we'd become friends - it was pure luck that we ever met, or perhaps i was just blessed. Our first ride out to your childhood home was exhilarating. You couldn't see my face then, but i was grinning away like a fool, loving every moment as the beautiful countryside whizzed by.

... the two weeks you spent here in Stockholm? I'm sure you were bored to death. I regret not having been able to spend more time out with you. But i loved spending time with you, chatting late into the night, walking all around Stockholm, simply having you around. I still remember the shock and surprise when you asked me to 'go downstairs' in the middle of work - and you brought lunch! Scrambled eggs with mushrooms an sausages. My fav :) I'm so glad you came.

... when you came over to Stockholm in May/June? It was only for a few short days, and i was so tired that i fell asleep during every movie we watched, but you never complained. We went bbq-ing, walking for an hour before we got to the bbq spot because i took the wrong route, but we laughed all the way. We forgot the drinks, forgot the napkins, forget the cutlery. But we improvised (lemon on hotdogs to 'reduce' the salt! :P) and had the best time of our lives anyway. You kept surprising me with stuff, and i kept grinning until it felt like my face was going to split. Those days spent with you, i will treasure.

... riding in the rain, and playing soccer with your friends? It didn't matter that i couldn't kick the ball to save my life - i had fun all the same. i couldn't understand why you were being so nice, even though we barely knew each other then. But it made my weekends, and i kept looking forward to the next time we'd go out.

... when the three of you trouped over to Stockholm for 2 weeks? We took a cruise, had road trips, went to the Ice Hotel. You ordered alcoholic drinks for me - i was surprised. And touched. You tolerated my sneaky smoking, didn't mind when i had to work and couldn't spend time with all of you, understood when i made mistakes, doted on me when i did nothing to deserve it. Strawberry plucking made me remember my childhood days. i noticed the white hairs that have grown - i'm sorry. I must have contributed to most of those. Thank you for always being there. I only wish siao kia had come along too.

... when we talked through the night in your room? We chatted for hours, talking about everything, enjoying the company that we had with each other. I was supposed to get my laundry, but it was so warm in your room and so cold outside, i decided to curl up with you to sleep instead. It felt like I'd been transported back in time - to the overnight camps that I had with my childhood friends.

... when we went for dinner at your mum's? Your family and friends were there, and your friends were trying to fix my bike. It was the second time i met your mum, but it felt like family. Comfortable, down to earth, honest and warm. Thank you. You made me feel like i was home.

... when we spent a weekend at rich man's island? It was then that i discovered your uncanny sense of direction. And learned the difference between sjö and sju. And found Karl the blue beetle. We walked, sat by the beach, went to the sauna, enjoyed life and had good food like the brats that were there. I learnt more about you and got a peek into your past. Thank you for trusting me. Watched tv in the room at night, just enjoying the luxury of it all. It was peaceful. It was goooood. :P

... when we started on SMUS? The team came together in less than a week - a team more than I could ever hope for or dream of. Not knowing whether it would be possible, we all decided to give it a shot in the dark. Within weeks, we started to firm up our plans. I feel so privileged to be able to 'lead' this team, despite my inexperience and incapability. More than just working for this event, you guys have supported me. Not only the SMUS team, but all the people that have heard about this event and have helped to spread it so far. Lennart, Gunilla, Therése, Andreas, Stefan, Brian, Gustav, Olle, Oscar, Jessica... So many people who have heard about it and are trying to support it in whatever way they can! It has made me want to work harder, to pour more energy into this project, to try. I still don't know whether we'll make it, or whether the camp participants will love it, or if anyone will even sign up for it. But what i know for sure - this journey that we've undertaken is already worth it, even before we've run half the race. Because you guys made it worthwhile.

... chatting with each other on the phone for long stretches at a time? Updating each other on what was happening, getting to know each other more in the process. It's amazing how we can be so different yet so similar at the same time. Thank you for listening, for overlooking my faults, for covering my weaknesses. Thank you for treating me as a friend, a colleague, almost an equal, even though I don't deserve such respect. Thank you for being such a vital part of my last 9 months here.

... the night when i sent you home after pizza dinner at my place? It was raining, it was cold, i didn't know the way. So you used hand signals. Hahaha. I was giggling all the way through the ride, having fun all the way. Remember the other time i sent you back after your party? It's these times that i wish i knew how to drive and had a car. Every time you sit behind me, i feel like i'm carrying a precious parcel. I don't want to hurt you. Not even a scratch. But when you sit behind me, you give me the confidence to ride safely. Your strength, your presence - it lifts me. My friend, you're strong. Thank you for teaching me that "you don't need a reason to be happy!"

There's so much more I could write - I've been writing for almost 2 hours already, while fondly recounting my blessings over the year. Thank you, my friends, for being here. Because you, you and you. You're the ones i can truly call 'my friend'.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

It's flooded back home...

So I hear it was flooded back in sunny small Singapore a while ago - Whew! Glad I wasn't there to experience it! But once again, Mr Brown tops the saga off with his new Wave Song, Singaporean style, of course!

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

What made summer so beautiful

Make friends, share lives, leave
Make friends, share lives, leave
The cycle repeats on and on
Each time a friend leaves, they take a piece of me with them
Each time they leave, I feel empty inside

Zen left today - the senior (and person) I got closest to knowing in NCST. I really regret not making the effort to get to know her earlier. The times we spent together were memorable - they made my summer. Firm values, ever compromising, always giving her best. These are qualities that I've been trying to build, qualities that I've found in her. As I spent more time with her, I gradually began to look up to her more, to appreciate her company.

And so I write this to remember so that, as fresh memories curl and fade, these moments will be preserved.

I remember:

An ever willing host - Always offering her place for gatherings, even though we'd end up drunk and messing up her flat


A hardworking senior who put her heart and soul into making sure CAD ran smoothly, never complaining, always tolerant of mistakes, juggling work, school and CAD all at the same time

A beautiful sunset at Aspviksvägen, eating apples, taking photographs, peeing in the bushes

Getting lost every time i went to Sundbyberg :P

Generosity that filled my room and kitchen with tons of good stuff, always making sure that what she gave was quality things that she could offer

A hazy, drizzling day at Mariefred with her and Cai Yan, chicken from ICA in someone else' backyard, homemade ice cream and sweets, mixing up our Swedish, Deutsch and Norwegian - it might have rained, but the company warmed my heart

Cleaning out all the stuff left by her seniors, Norwegian hot wings for supper, talking into the night even though we were tired

Skype chats and smses that were answered 2 days later ^^

Working at her place, being more productive for the first time in a long while, company while riding through the city - a presence that i now miss

A caring friend who never liked to trouble people, yet willing to invest time and effort into catering to the needs of others around her

Relief when overweight baggage made it through without extra charge
A deep sense of loss when she left

I'll miss you girl, but I hope that you'll find you love, luck, success and joy wherever you may go. We'll meet again!

Friends might come, friends might go, yet they'll stay in my heart forever...

Monday, July 19, 2010

All work and no play makes hweehwee a dull girl.. so I play! :P

So... I haven't blogged about Stockholm life for some time, not because nothing's been happening, but because there's too much happening!

IT'S SUMMER! :D I've been traveling more, touring the Swedish countryside (instead of just flying to other countries :P), and it's oh-so-beautiful, especially in the summer!!

So I went to Dalarna (Leksand) and Riga (to visit my corridormate) during midsummer, went to Örebro, Grebbestad, St Petersberg and Tallin with my parents and grandma the following weekend, saw the sunset with Zen on Friday at Aspviksvägen, took a ride down to Nynashamn on Sat, and then went to Linköping, Norrköping and Nyköping (yes I know, WHY are there so many 'köping's??) on Sunday! *whew* That's a mouthful to say in one breath!

So most of the pictures are up on Facebook, but here's some of the trip(s) highlights:

Midsummer: Darlarna (Leksand)Riding up past the beautiful Swedish countryside...

... To meet up with Chrissy (and family), Priya, Hari and Huy!

Look at the HUGE Dalahorse!! (It's some Swedish fetish thing that I never really got, but yeah :P)Then rushing off to Riga to say Happy Birthday to my darling Annie

With the two 'gay' guys from my corridor :P

Grebbestad - we went there for the oysters but it wasn't in season :S

Grebbestad with ma (who's acting cool and trying to look pretty)...

...Papi (who's trying to act cool but fail :P)...

...And darling por por (who doesn't need to act cool - she's so cute! :P)

I've yet to get the beautiful sunset pics from Zen, and I didn't take much of the 'köping's, but I'll upload what I've got when I get them! :D

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Designers VS Programmers - I win, you lose!

So I was asked for ideas on how to best teach designers to work with programmers. I have no authority to teach anything, but here's what I can share.

Designers are proud people. They’re the ones who make the site look pretty, and, come on, design is
unique and it sells. On the other hand, anyone can write a few lines of code.

Or so they think.


I studied Industrial Design for 3 years, and then moved on study Marketing and Technopreneurship. During this time, I took a module with Professor Ben Leong, taking on the role of a ‘designer’ while working with a programmer on a Facebook app, and am now working in two tech companies doing design and marketing.


But let’s get back to the main topic. Ah yes. Those proud designers who think anyone can spew lines of code. Which is partially true. However, like all specializations, there’s a vast difference between quality code and.. well, just lines of crap. And while it can all look pretty much the same from a user’s standpoint, the code can determine whether the user experience is great or frustrating. (Hint: Code can affect user interaction, data presentation and even page loading speeds)


On the other hand, design isn’t just about making the page look pretty. It’s also about user interaction, and how to improve user experience.


So since both programmers and designers are important, who gets to say “I’m right, do it my way”? Let me share three memorable lessons that I’ve learnt over this past year or so.


Lesson number 1: Why should I learn programming?!?! - Ajax vs HTML


While working on my Facebook app with a very talented programmer, we agreed that we wanted to prioritize user experience. That was good – our site needed good user interaction so that people could have a flawless purchase process. One of our lectures about was AJAX, and so we strove to apply that in our app, since we felt that it’d give a good user experience. After almost three weeks, the site still wasn’t up (the initial estimated deadline was a week).

Later, I found out that the site would have taken barely 2 days to complete if it had been done in HTML script, and still provided the same user experience at low traffic levels. What had gone wrong? I had no programming background, and failed to understand the difference in AJAX and HTML scripting. To me, it was all ‘just code’. We were so caught up in ‘providing great user experience’ that we failed to see other options and prioritize according to our deadlines.


Lesson 2: It’s not perfect, it’s iterative


Designers like to get everything right on the first try. I don’t paint half a picture, sell it, then add in the details 6 months later. That doesn’t make any sense to me. The web, however, runs at a completely different pace than your average ‘painting’, and time is seldom a luxury. That’s why you have a buggy Vista launch, and half a dozen updates every month. Designers have to understand that, and learn how to come up with ‘imperfect’ first revisions of their work.


On the other hand, some things
need to be perfect from the start. I know of a company that settled for something ‘quick and dirty’ due to time constraints, and never got back to upgrading that particular feature. It was far too much work – nobody wanted to take time off to attend to this annoying buggy bit of the program. It’s been almost 10 years now, and the amount of frustration caused and man-hours lost in inefficiency has long exceeded the additional week of development time. Some things just have to be done right. The difficulty lies in finding what.

Lesson Three: My development time is more precious than your designing time


“Please design and update the About Us page.”

“Excuse me? You want me to do HTML?”

“Yes – we have no development time to spare.”


And so, I took on the insurmountable challenge of coding a page in HTML. Before I carry on, let me explain – I’m a walking code destroyer. For some reason that I cannot comprehend, I can’t seem to even copy and paste code without messing something up. Everyone knew that. But now that my head was on the line, I braced myself and took up the task.


It took one week. One whole week to get a single page up. And in the process, I continually disturbed three excellent programmers by asking them “why my text had gone completely awry”. Any of these three programmers could have done the job in 30 minutes. I think I disturbed them for more than 2 hours.


Was it worth it?
For me, yes. I learnt something new. I can now safely say that <p> is for a new paragraph, <embed> allows you to embed a Flash object into a page, and <textarea> allows you to display code as text. (Don’t laugh – that’s how horrendous my programming knowledge is.) But for my company, they lost more hours of development time AND a week’s worth of design time for this little lesson. If the point is to let your team learn cross-disciplinary skills, this venture is well worth the time. But if it’s to ‘save development time’, forget it. You’re going to lose out.

So here's what I have to bring to the table based on my limited experience - hope it helps!

Friday, June 25, 2010

LOTR vs World Cup

So, one of my main jobs in Voxbiblia is now, officially, to follow blogs. So fun right? haha. The nice part is that many of these theological Christian bloggers also post fun tidbits. And follow the World Cup.

You know those annoying vuvuzelas?? I hate them. They make the crowd sound like bees buzzing over the field. Don't know what I mean? Watch:



Great video editing btw, but watch the colour contrast man! That's sooo not professional :P

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

counting my blessings

I had a lovely day yest, thanks to noripok! :P

5 days in Stockholm whizzed by so fast. I can't believe you've gone back to Edinburgh (and soon Singapore) already :S
I love the times I got to spend with you. Makes me feel like home. Thanks for being here during the rather trying period, when things seems to be going down.
BBQ day yest! :P We took a nice, lovely (albeit long) stroll down Lappis beach, and set up our bbq at a nice spot overlooking a beautiful clearing. Gosh, we forgot so many things! Plates, wine, tissue paper... hahaha.. oh mannnn..

But we still had so much fun! We ate sausages, burger meat, beef steaks, chips, super shiok sweet potatoes and baked potatoes until we couldn't move! haha.. And because we forgot the wine, it was soooooo salty! Kept adding lemon juice to try to neutralize the taste. haha!
Such fun bbq-ing with great company. The sun began to set behind us, and the lake was cast with a beautiful reddish hue. It was peaceful, and I was content.
Then noripok chased me away, and started messing about with the HUGE bag of 'stuff' that she brought! (I kicked it twice, by accident, on the way there. To her shock and horror. hahahaa)

Turns out she bought 3 cakes and a whole array of presents for me! Super touched lah! I think she gave me more presents than I received in the whole of last year! But more than that, it was the effort and thought that really made me feel super happy inside :) Each item was precious to me - stuff that I'd use/like :) I don't remember the last time I've received such sincere gifts.

Dearest noripok, I'll never forget turning old this year :P Thank you being such a special friend.

The awesome sunset :D

We forgot to bring drinks, so nori started putting lemon on the hotdogs to 'neutralize' the salt.. wahahaha



(more pictures when I get them from nori :D)

And so, this year I'm truly blessed because:
1) Even though some stuff kinda soured the day, I had someone there to cheer me up
2) Even though we forgot so many essential things for the bbq, we still had good food and an excellent time
3) Our tummies were full and warm (even though i think we ate a lot of ash!:P)
4) The weather was beautiful - perfect for bbq! Warm sun, beautiful sky, peaceful scenery
5) I received presents and flowers that I didn't have to have, but that warmed my heart more than the sun's beautiful rays
6) My corridormates were all there, and even sang for me! Clo even came on skype, as did so many of my friends from Singapore
7) I got to turn old in a foreign land, yet I'm surrounded by people who love me.

I'm truly the luckiest girl in the world.