Friday, November 28, 2008

Mummy's girl indeed


Much has been said/discussed/debated within the household in recent days about who Kate resembles.

More specifically, whether or not she looks like Mum, aka, me.

On outings with Kate in the past week alone, at least three complete strangers, drawn by Kate’s ‘cute baby’ bait, approached us offering various questions as ice-breakers.

How old is she? What’s her name? She likes to suck her hand hor?

And invariably, the following comment would follow:

Looks like Mummy.

Now I believe I may have said in a previous blog that I don’t see any resemblance between the two of us. (Not that I don’t want to. I would love to think she got her big gorgeous round eyes and rose-bud mouth from me.)

But to be fair, comparing a barely 8 month old baby to a 30-something year old adult would be like comparing, say, a caterpillar to a butterfly.

So for the sake of argument, I present you with a vintage-limited-edition-one-of-a-kind photo of moi, dating back to the 70’s, taken on my first birthday. (I would've preferred to use an even younger photo of myself except that I don’t have any).


And here’s Kate, in a picture taken today.

I suppose we do kinda look alike, give or take a double eyelid or two, plus or minus several pounds of baby fat and ang moh genes aside.

Monday, November 24, 2008

You could say I’m a Christmas junkie


There is no other occasion on the holiday calendar that gets my festive juices flowing like Christmas does.

I love everything about it - from listening to carols, to josling with crowds in decked-out malls while shopping for presents, right down to the cheesy Christmas movie re-runs on television.

Of course, nothing marks the occasion like having a Big, Fat, Wealthy-looking tree.

Similar to the one Max, Kate and myself put up at the weekend.

Monday, November 17, 2008

I present you a butterfly, dog, lotus flower and puffer fish, made entirely out of paper

To say I've conquered my Origami demons would be a major understatement.

More like I've kicked their butts into oblivion.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

The day I faced my Origami demons


I have a confession.

To all the people in my past whom I may have said, “I HATE ORIGAMI,” to, I like to clarify, that that’s only half the truth.

The whole truth, was that I once sucked at it, and didn’t want to admit it, so it was easier to say I hated it, so I never had to do it, to avoid revealing how much I really sucked at it.

Are you still following? Good.

I know what you are thinking. How can anyone suck at Origami? Right?

In my defence, I was maybe about five, and having butter fingers runs in my family.

So of course my son came up to me today, with colored flint paper in hand, and asked me to make him a paper crane.

I didn’t know he even knew what a crane was, but that’s beside the point. Despite my limited knowledge of Origami, I remember the paper crane (as famous as it is) to be among the hardest animals to make.

I hope he didn’t notice the initial panic on my face, after which I quickly regained my composure, whipped out my laptop, and proceeded to google “Origami crane.”

Ah. The wonders of Cyberspace. Not only did I succeed at crafting three paper cranes, I may have conquered my Origami demons for good.

What’s even better than knowing I don’t suck at Origami?

Knowing my son doesn’t think I suck either.

Friday, November 7, 2008

How many photos have you got, of yourself with your only daughter?


Me?

Five.

I mean it.

I've been so busy playing paparazzo to Kate, I forgot to include myself in the shots.

Here are the rare moments, in reverse chronological order.

7 months
4 months
3 months
2 months
Birth
By the way, it's been seven months, and I still don't see any mother-daughter resemblance.

Do you?

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Holy Moses!


Or should I say, Holo- Moses?

Obviously, I'm not very good at puns, so let's get straight to the point.

I was a little creeped out by CNN's coverage of the US Presidential Election this morning.

And it had nothing to do with Obama's victory (He should have won, and he did. Thank you America).

Rather, it was the fancy pantsy Hologram Interviews that were being conducted.

Yep, picture the famous scene of Princess Leia delivering a hologram message in the movie Star Wars and you get my drift.



News anchor Wolf Blitzer was interviewing "virtual" correspondent Jessica Yellin, who was in Chicago. And no, she wasn't set up at some election site somewhere in the state, but beamed as a 3-D life-sized image into CNN's election centre in New York.

Now I used to work for CNN and know the network prides itself as being at the fore-front of technology as far as news coverage is concerned.

But hologram TV?

One - It's not very relevant, as it takes the reporter away from where the news is happening. How to show and tell?

Two - Isn't it a little 'out there' in the Star-Trekky sort of way to be taken seriously in news?

Three - C'mon, wouldn't you rather someone more enigmatic be beamed as a hologram, like, say, Yoda?