Monday, June 23, 2008

Down the Rabbit Hole

My usual Saturday routine was in full swing. I slept in. I parked the TV on an AFL game and left it in the background. I ate a late lunch and I surfed a lot, of the internet kind. Then the phone rang and it was M suggesting a dinner and a movie. M's cool. I don't socialise with him very often but it's always a pleasure to chat to an intelligent human being, and sensing something is on his mind, I accept the invitation knowing I have the task of cheering a friend up.

M takes me to Lawry's which is for him comfort food. Inside, the bar has wood-panelling, high ceiling, and a suit of armour stands in front of an ornately framed, floor to ceiling mirror. The dining room was lit by chandeliers. We are shown to a comfortable booth by waiter in gold thread waistcoat who spoke polite, textbook English. Lawry's have been "Celebrating special occasions since 1938".

The salad was prepared on a silver cart that was wheeled to our table. Once all the main salad pieces were placed into a large stainless steel bowl sitting in a larger bowl filled with ice, the waiter spun the steel bowl then poured the dressing from high above his head. Salad was tossed and served with a chilled fork. Showmanship from a by-gone era. For dinner I had a rack of lamb which almost melted like butter, and M had chosen Surf and Turf. We rounded off our meals with coffee and port.

When dinner was over we retire to the bar. M lights up his signature cigar. In the faint haze of smoke and slowly sipped scotch we chat about life, people and of course, love. No matter who we are or where we are in the world, love is the one thing we are all hurt by.

Time came for us to leave the restaurant for the good people at Lawry's had kept the bar open only for us. We let them and the old world go and left in search of a night cap.

Only
a few steps later we find The Queens. Posters at the door indicate this is a place that regularly host live rock bands. A girl in a tight demin skirt, tank top and heels stands near the door chatting loudly on her mobile. No doubt we'd get a drink here. There is only a handful of customers so we get seats and drinks promptly. The band is taking a break so the DJ is at the helm. The floor-lit dance floor is empty but the music plays as if it was full. The mirror ball and swirling spotlights shine like the inside of a school dance hall. When the band returns to the stage they play without hesitation. They have three back up singers who are also dancers. Or more accurately, dancers who also hold mikes and think they are singers. It's mostly R&B, hip hop and pop. Songs that pump up a party of students. Surprisingly the band's energy level is not been deterred by thin crowd. M and I watched the slender, almost pre-pubescent dancers gyrate, whipping their long black hair back and forth and push their flat abdomens out at us, mocking us. The lead singer even jumps onto the bar top telling us to wave our hands in the air, or something closely mimicking that effect. I was impressed. These guys were working hard for their pay checks.

When time came for the band and back up singers/dancers to take another break, DJ takes over and plays the same kind of hip hop tunes and dance floor fillers. Though at no point do any of the 20 people in the audience take preference of the dancer floor over their seats. After a quick break where we all make for the bathroom, the band mixes it up in a strange playlist of Beyonce, Britney Spears, Justin Timberlake followed by Bananarama and Tom Jones.

The girls put on a show. A stripper pole is installed atop the bar and each girl takes her turn with the pole. Minus the stripping. It was hard to take your eyes off. I found one girl to be more of a dancer than stripper, as she had more athletic moves than the other two who simply shook their bodies around the pole. And of course I am qualified to state this as I am both a veteran of dancing and stripping and judgement-laying. I am intrigued by this kind of display in this supposed respectable live band venue. I can't deny the presence of the live band, nor the style of music they played, yet this club is dangerously tipping the scale of acceptable sleaze for a rock joint.


During the next band break, the first lone male dancer of the night begins his routine on the floor. I breathe a small sigh of relief as the issue of Balanced Scales in the 21st Century deserved urgent addressing. He was no doubt well-built, with a washboard for a stomach but he didn't do very much for me personally. It was the attire. Baggy jeans with a black leather waistcoat (?), bare chest and a black arm band. He jumped around for a minute impressing least of all me then suddenly throws his waistcoat by the wayside and suddenly again his jeans were off too! Whipped in a flash the velcro seams of his stripper jeans flew apart and he was down to a pair of god-awful black leather briefs with an arrangement of silver chain links on it that nestled in the middle looking like a giant silver-backed spider was gobbling up his package.

Part of his performance included placing a chair in the middle of the dance floor, having one of the girl dancers in the chair and doing a polite little stripper dance in front of her. He then gets her up on her feet, partners with her in a wiggle before the finale of picking her up, she lying back in his arms, her arms and legs stretched out and he spinning with her in that horizontal position a number of times. It was pretty impressive considering entry to this show/club was free. We had no idea.

Once he and the audience of 20 got their breaths back, sweaty stripper man moves towards the closest girl in the audience. She turns out to be twice his size and completely reaction-less to his outstretched hand. Her companion, a middle aged man in a surfer shirt and happily sozzled since M and I walked in, spiritedly encouraged her. She stands, and is lead like a limp rag to the disco floor, arms half up in a very surrenderous posture.

He begins performing new stripper moves of the night. As she stands either in a drunken daze or wishing the floor would open up and swallow her whole, he crouches to her feet and pretends to run his hands from her legs up to sides of her torso, ending up pressing rather close to the entire length of her body. A few more up and down motion he gets her in the seat that's still on the floor. Instead of lying back and having fun with the moment she sits slightly rigid. He stands astride her and grabs her hands in his and guides them to his back, butt, legs and back again.

M and I are laughing our arses off. But in a brief moment of guilt and reflection, I turn to M and say, "I wonder if it had been me, would I have been brave enough to do it?" M shrugs and I turn back to the show, only to see stripper man climb over sofas and offer his hand to me
in the dark, where I'd been sitting with M. Up close, I notice stripper man is just a smidgen shorter than me. Do I accept?

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Thanks

This is a very personal entry today, not written for any consideration of mass consumption, just simply a need to articulate certain truths I've felt for a very long time. Hope you don't choke on the corn.

Here it is, I offer you today's blog entry:

It's not thanksgiving, not that I celebrate the silly thing anyway, but I just suddenly came to a realisation that I really have to and WANT to give thanks to every single person that's made a contribution to my life, a life made absolutely wonderful because of their inclusion in it, because they've been the happiness and joy I've experienced, they were the lessons that I've learnt, they've made me strong, made me smile, made me angry and just simply made me the person that I am today.


Everyone should do this! Just look back at life and count your blessings. If you are reading this, it means you have access to a computer, the internet, the means and facilities are there at your disposal, that you are not society's forgotten people, that you can reach out and touch someone and have somebody to touch you back, that you have life and that my friend is reason enough to live it and be thankful.

To my longest and dearest friend Mel, who I've known the presence of for 19 years, but known really as a friend for only 15 years (cause we weren't friends before Year 10), though we may be thoroughly different people I love and appreciate you till eternity. Your beauty both inner and out, is just like the endless opal skies at summer's dusk; warm yet unassuming, your colours muted but absolutely mesmorising. And everlasting. Thank you for your friendship.

To my wonderful brother, whom I often regard as my third parent, it is your unwavering care and solemn nurture that I constantly look to and depend upon. You are a true gentleman and a big brother to be proud of. Thank you for your love.

To all of my past relationships, I thank you all for the role you've played at every stage of my life so far. I cringe, I cry, I stir at the moments you've given me. Everything has been bitter sweet yet I wouldn't change a thing because every moment has given me a new page in every chapter. Thank you for the exercise in emotions!

To every person I've met on my travels, those that were also in motion, thank you for making me feel like I belonged. Ours is a community that knows no boundaries, physical, geological, emotional, financial, sociological and any other "cals" you can think of. It is people like you that makes the world great, to carry good and decent stories and share them with your fellow man. Thank you for your intrepid spirits!

To every person I've met on my travels, those that were on home turf, I thank you for your generosity, your kindness, your openess and your benign nature. To receive me into your homes and your hearts, shows your genuine love for others. Could a stranger ask for more? Thank you.

To all my friends, both long and short term acquaintances, I can look at you and see moments in my life where you've made your mark. Those marks are marks of honour in my book of great deeds. You've shaped my existence, by either being there for me or by you needing me. It is the greatest gift of friendship I believe, the gift of trust and each of you have yet to fail me. Instead you grow more and more important to me everyday. Thank you for your soulful being, your intellect and your laughter.

There are only two people in this world that I want give my greatest thanks to. (it's not Mr and Mrs Claus). They are the embodiment of love in my universe. For in every action, every thought and every word, they give themselves to me selflessly and without expectations (well maybe some but nothing too ridiculous). As I grow older it becomes clearer and clearer to me how hard a life a parent's must be. The sacrifices you make, the ridicules you receive. It is a life long task that unquestionably take its toll, by its endless tearing of self-esteem and constant battle with common sense. For almost 40 years this couple has been a stalwart for their children, maintained a good relationship with one another, remained forever strong as people and been a guiding light that I still find hard to do without at times. They are the best people I know, the best parents one could ever have and I am honoured and grateful for them, and most definitely proud of them. I love them above all else. To my mum and dad, both heroes in my eyes, I thank you only as a daughter knows how. I thank you, I thank you, I thank you.

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Some Snippets

A selection of photos from the last two weeks - dinner at Taiwan Beer Brewery 346 Warehouse Restaurant, Naomi's hotpot birthday, dancing at Primo, drinks at 2046. Addresses below.









Some highlights included meeting up with James, a backpacker I'd met two years ago in Sarajevo who'd recently arrived in town to learn Chinese; my best friend Mel visiting; Naomi falling asleep at 2046 after too many drinks, but still managed to smile for a picture; Sharon's sexy outfit that converted from dinner wear to clubbing wear by the removal of pants; the eggs.

VENUES
Taiwan Beer Brewery 346 Warehouse Restaurant
No. 85, Sec. 2, Bade Road, Tapei
(Cnr Bade Road & Jienguo South Road)
台北市八德路二段85號(八德路&建國南路交叉口)
Tel: (02) 2509-8346

Primo
2F, No. 297, Sec. 5, Zhongxiao East Road, Taipei
台北市忠孝東路五段297號2樓
Tel: (02) 2760-5885

2046
No. 24, Lane 205, Sec. 4, Zhongxiao East Road, Taipei
台北市忠孝東路四段205巷24
Tel: (02) 2711-5589

Monday, June 09, 2008

Expanding Horizons

Even though travelling is a great way of expanding your horizons, I dare say it's also how much you are capable of opening yourself to the limitless horizons. I mean, a person who takes the 3 day package tour of Western Europe isn't going to get very much out of that experience. How much off the beaten track do we have to go to have an worthwhile experience?

When I did my 5 week backpacking trip, I thought I had an incredible experience. I walked away feeling like I've witnessed the better part of human nature, that humanity does have a chance to survive the violence, cruelty and ignorance usually shown on that square little box in the living room at home with a window on it. That's a great lesson to learn and generally faith is restored in the good of the world, because we are generally far more affiliated with cynicism. But 5 weeks is only 5 weeks. There was so much more I could've done with those 5 weeks. I know I didn't live each day of those 5 weeks like it was my last. Which by the way, may I ask, is really good advice to give someone? Cause if you truly lived each day like it was your last, wouldn't you end up living irresponsibly and thereby possibly cutting short of your actual existence, or face consequences that exist because there was still always the existence of another day to reap the consequences?

I digress. I suppose to truly expand your horizons, you must not only allow yourself to be open to it but also actively seek it. And that's an important ingredient, to not be lazy and sit around the house like I do on weekends, when in fact I should be going out there finding stuff out. Wikipedia is great for the armchair horizon-expander. But nothing will be of greater reward than doing it yourself. How is it that we often get carried under by that current called apathy? What is it that sparks the self into action? Why is a day on the couch watching reruns more enjoyable than say, hiking?

Anybody with any clue or suggestion most welcomed to respond.