Sunday, December 26, 2010

Meeting the teachers

Compared to the simple, straightforward parent-teacher meetings in India, where you meet one class teacher, dust your hands and go for a movie, the Singapore equivalent is a complex algorithm designed to confound aeronautical engineers. Not knowing this the first time I got invited to one, I responded with foolish enthusiasm.

It was a balmy day in April – or October, but definitely balmy (it’s always balmy in Singapore) – when my son returned from school with an envelope.

“It’s for you,” he announced, “You’re both invited to meet my teachers next month.”

“Wow!” I said, excited, “How come? Did you top the class? Are they giving you a medal?”

“No, no, of course not,” he corrected me (a bit hastily, I thought), “It’s a routine parent-teacher meeting. Here,” – he opened the envelope and showed me a list – “you can select up to seven teachers from this list.”

“Why only seven? I want to meet more.”

Sunday, November 14, 2010

How to buy a tennis racquet

I found playing tennis much easier twenty years ago. If you’re thinking, “This fellow was likely in his twenties twenty years ago; he must’ve found everything – including walking and breathing – easier then,” you’re right. But it’s not just running and hitting the ball that I find more difficult – it’s coping with the advances in technology that have invaded the game.
 
Twenty years ago, I would buy a tennis racquet in ten minutes. The shopkeeper would show me a couple of Dunlop models (in wood); I’d choose one and tell him my grip size. Things are vastly different today. I recently went to a large sporting shop to buy a new tennis racquet. I found at least five major brands, each made of different material, with varying head sizes. They were also different in weight and how this weight was distributed. I had to not only examine light and heavy racquets but also light ones that were head-heavy and heavy ones that were head-light. The salesman, true to form, was not able to offer any help except to suggest that I research the internet.

So I returned home and did this. “Choosing a tennis racquet,” I typed into Google and pursued the first hit. According to tennis-warehouse.com, I needed to consider Head Size, Length, Weight and Balance, Frame Stiffness, String Pattern and Grip/Handle Systems. I didn’t know where to start. Even buying an aeroplane wouldn’t involve as many factors, I thought. 

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Losing hair

There was a time when making polite conversation used to mean talking about innocuous topics, like the weather for example. When I met a friend, he’d remark:

“Hi Paddy. Very hot weather we’re having lately, isn’t it?”

“Yes, Mike,” I’d say (if his name were Mike). And I might comment about the sharp difference in weather between Singapore and Chicago.

Alternatively we would talk about sports. He might ask me if I watched last night’s tennis match between Nadal and Federer and whether I agreed with him that it was awesome. I would answer both questions in the affirmative and go on to compare the match with another one the two gentlemen played last year.

Or it could be movies. Or politics. You get the idea.

While these topics are innocuous, there is a school of thought that says they lack zing, that they are boring, precisely because they are innocuous. Books have been written on the subject, with titles like How to Convert a Conversation into a Friendship. To save you the cost of buying one and then the torture of reading it, let me summarize the wisdom it will impart:

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Magical Orlando

It’s a long way from Singapore to Orlando, but when I fly on the impeccable Singapore Airlines, time flies too. After 19 hours of non-stop pampering, I landed in New York, and by trotting briskly, was lucky to squeeze into a Continental Airlines flight earlier than planned.

My luck did not extend to getting a glorious seat. Squashed between two comfortably-built ladies who had already laid claim to the armrests, I tucked my elbows in and sat upright, but despite the cramped position, fell asleep. When I awoke, I was pleased that we were in the air but dismayed that my neighbours had both been served dinner, which surprisingly looked edible. The two flight attendants – grim arm wrestlers in their fifties – were several feet ahead serving others. There was a call button above my seat to summon service but in America, this is purely ornamental. You never actually press it, unless you’re ready to take on the stewardess in unarmed combat. So I watched in agony as my companions devoured sandwiches, chips and cookies with relish.

In my hotel room at 11 p.m., having reduced a giant sandwich to mere crumbs, I went to bed but couldn’t go to sleep. I tried lying on my back, my side and my stomach (one at a time). I even tried sitting upright with elbows tucked in. But sleep wouldn’t come. My body was still sweltering in the mid-morning heat of Singapore.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Shanghai – a city reaching for the sky

The Shanghai immigration officer briskly stamps my passport, smiles and presses a button. A panel on the counter lights up, inviting me to rate his service. I press “Very Satisfied” like others did before me. Perhaps he smiles and moves fast only for the sake of the rating; perhaps he is intrinsically grumpy and slow; but perhaps that is the point.

Outside, another smiling Chinese drives me to the city. He is keen to share knowledge about Shanghai and I’m keen to imbibe it, but we make little headway.

“Pledges,” he says, nodding and pointing vaguely to the left, “Hangpu pledge, Nanpu pledge… many pledges.” 

I’m thinking pledges are ancient Buddhist teachings by venerable monks. I conjure up an image of a Buddhist temple, with sacred shrines amidst quiet green lawns and shady trees. Closing my eyes, I can almost smell the incense…

“Pledge!” the driver cries. 

I look to where he points. A modern structure looms over the river.

“Bridge!” I say.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Melbourne, a city of cafes

As I exited Melbourne airport, an Asian gentleman in a smart suit holding a placard with my name came forward smiling and helped me with my luggage.

“How are you, Sir? And how was the flight?”

Well, I had flown with the impeccable Singapore Airlines on their new Airbus 380; the flight was on time; the landing was smooth; the morning air was crisp and the sky was blue. There was little to complain about, but I managed.

“Seven hours!” I said, “Too short for an overnight flight – I couldn’t sleep well.”

He nodded sympathetically. “You need coffee,” he said (where a lesser man might have said, “You need a kick in the pants”). He hurried off to get me a steaming latte and refused my offer to pay. His gesture lightened my mood. The excellent coffee boosted it further. And driving to the city listening to this cheerful Pakistan immigrant with an MBA talking in Hindi with Lata Mangeshkar singing on the car music system (also in Hindi), made me positively buoyant. Without a trace of bitterness, he told me how he had switched from a career in sales and marketing to driving a taxi.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Hong Kong - a lively commercial spirit

Hong Kong, vibrant and colourful, with sleek skyscrapers, verdant hills and a pulsating night life, is a dynamic city of commerce. I love going there, which is convenient because I go often. In fact, I’m a “frequent visitor”, which is more convenient: I whisk through Immigration bypassing a serpentine queue every time… whether I arrive by day or night, on a weekday or weekend, during school or holidays. The enormous airport – with myriads of shops, lounges and restaurants – handles 48 million passengers annually. That’s about 90 passengers a minute.

It’s easy to doze off on the half-hour drive to the city on a silky-smooth highway and miss the scenic hills of Lantau Island, the bridge to Kowloon and the tunnel to Hong Kong. The two-stop train journey takes 24 minutes but is equally soporific.

(Arriving at Kai Tak Airport ten years ago used to be more stimulating: descending into mountains with jagged peaks; flying almost in between buildings with clothes fluttering on balconies; catching a glimpse of a short runway; and screeching to halt a few feet before the ocean.)

I usually stay in Pacific Place, in the heart of the city, yet close to sanctuaries of tranquillity, like the Hong Kong Park – with small lakes and quiet pathways among flowers – and Bowen Road on the adjoining hill, with a panoramic view of the city below. 
I like going for a run on Bowen Road but dislike having to climb the hill first. I thought I was saving time by running up the hill till an athletic Chinese, effortlessly overtaking me, asked, “Why don’t you save time by running?”