Saturday, 29 October 2016

In time gone by

If Dream had a best friend it'd be the acrid smell that rain leaves - no, hangs - in the air, suspended not by wires and ropes but nagging persistence and a little companion called Hope.

If Dream had a face it'd be nondescript; the kind which gives little away.

If Dream had eyes they would be soulful like dirt, and you could look into them, and at that very moment you look into them you would see into a world of possibilities. They'd just be a vision, in a dark, extensive, elusive experience beneath his eyes.

If Dream had a hobby, it'd be running, so no one could ever catch him (but they'd all keep on chasing).

If Dream had a dream it'd be made up of the things he fears the most, and yet it takes courage to fear.

If Dream had a favourite colour it'd be blue because the sky is the limit - it's just that there's no one to tell us there's nothing up in it.

If Dream had one last day on Earth the planets would all stop spinning and watch with wry smiles on their faces; time will play a fool, and Dream will lend himself to the very air he breathed, slowly carrying him beyond existence.

Monday, 10 October 2016

Fortune's always hiding

No moon is too blue,
and yet no flag too white
You join this late game
of darts and sights.

Gaiety glances are shot
and questions abound
But they're cunningly cerebral
And it's loss that I've found

Words have a curious way
Of reigning themselves in
Absent then, of course, are
The things I truly mean.

To keep another's words
In a time-tested safe,
And to think they keep yours
Takes a measure of faith.

When silence glares at you
with its head in the clouds
You begin to wonder
if thinking's allowed.

(What's worse...)

Happy endings are a problem
We can never mend, for
Whatever happened to
Being happy before we end?

Saturday, 17 September 2016

Untitled



Maybe
if we ignored the darkness
Then
the light would have no excuse
for not showing up.

Saturday, 3 September 2016

Ghosts in city lights

Perhaps words
are people
with bipolar disorder;
now they are dying to be said
when we are all living to die;
the manic meandering
through lost fields of coherence

then, moments later,
not looking too wise
nor frightfully fearless
- they are here to stay

and yet they lie in wait
still they stand in line
to traverse the sky
side by side
on another day

Monday, 8 August 2016

51

The thing about birthdays is, time
- in all its fleetingness - heaves to a halt
and stops to smile; an aesthete pausing
to admire a painting in a museum of
memories we hold onto by the string of
a kite performing pirouettes in the weighty air.

Birthdays are, to too many people,
a lesson in the art of appreciating the ones
we too often fail to appreciate;
celebrating the triumphs
we too often sour with defeats.

But you can't do justice to a cup of ice lemon tea
without a piece of lemon.

.

Your birthday bash will be back at the Kallang this year - I hope
you still remember those times, even if
it's now a dome that we can't really call a
home; an architectural feat to behold, yet
one without a
soul
Is the grass greener there?

Tonight we shall sing for you,
all 5 million of us, and
25 in Brazil will wonder
who will sing for them. They will
run, jump and fight
for you
They may even watch you - yes,
you and your birthday bash, but
you will not watch them.
They may be in Rio
but there is to be no Redeeming.

You're in a mid-life crisis.
An ecosystem of tastes, ebbing
away - you see, it takes more than
six letters to spell 'hawker'.
A heartland wonderland, where
kids come and play - football
and catching into the dark of day.
But it is no more; today you build barriers
yesterday it was the railings
- how long before you stop
voiding the void in our decks?

I'd like to think that when we age
we leave a part of ourselves behind -
a morsel of the birthday cake
left uneaten, a crumb
carried away by the ants
into holes we cannot see,
spaces we cannot enter.

You're still the same, yet not
quite the same; you're a flapping bird
in an endless game. You try to paint
your feathers here and there:
a ferris wheel, a casino,
and the lavish marriage of nature
and the man-made, where trees
can feel more super than they already
are. Lewis Hamilton will tear the streets. Some
even say you've put on a short skirt and bought
a pair of Oakleys you thought you'd look
good in. But what if I told you that
it's okay to grey, that when the tides
come in and the Merlion has had
its laugh, I don't expect to see a
fifteen-minute fireworks display.
What if I told you that it's actually a pity
that people come from all over the world, and
they board the Flyer, as if they can
see the real you from up there. All I'm saying is,
don't try to be something
you are
naught.

And I know I'll grumble, l'll tempt -
no, test
the line your Father drew in the
Changi sand. I'll curse myself for 
knowing you, for writing to you at all. But
I also know that when all is said and done,
that when the bright lights and awe-ful
sights have had their say, you are still
that crescent moon that follows me in the car.

In a chorus of 'lahs' and 'lehs' I find the you
I know - not a hipster hyperbole but a
no-nonsense nanny
not a H&M human Christmas tree but a
discount-preying
4D-praying
parking coupon-strategising
queue-curious
bee hoon loon on
a daily prescription of Yakult.

You are the number one of
number ones
or at least you try to be;
fyi, NUS is top in Asia,
which is, frankly, not surprising, given
their avant-garde orientation camps.
On to the more obscene,
let's see whose neighbourhood can
put up the most flags.

Speaking of flags - you are the
commuter-harassing
tin can-juggling
uniformed student
with the kempt haircut
and "non-striking" shoes - that is,
if there's a good reason it's called "Flag Day"
and shoes could actually go on strike.
(SMRT can help with that)

Like all middle-aged souls
you are desperately trying to find
yours, only,
you don't have to.
You don't have to identify
your identity or define
what defines you
because you just are.

Alpinists never use the word 'conquer'
so please don't climb the mountain to get
to the top
climb it
because it is there.

You may have put on shades.
You may have dyed your hair.
But
You are still that crescent moon that follows me in the car.
Only a slender crescent, yet
ever so
whole.

--
First time writing in free verse on here so please let me know what you think...

P.S. Sorry, the stanza on Team Singapore at the Rio Olympics was written before Mediacorp announced its last-minute deal with rights holders to broadcast the Games 'live'.

Sunday, 24 July 2016

Silent and sure




A congregation in constellation
Faithful and far
The world an endless question
Under a sky full of stars.

--
I grew up on 'Calvin and Hobbes' but it never gets old because Bill Watterson was always presently futuristic.

Wednesday, 6 July 2016

Across the Causeway

I know night and day, and
I also know black and white, heck
I even know of,
"the dying of the light."

But here I am a headscarf,
coming into view,
and covering all the parts,
of the things I thought I knew.

I am visiting my neighbour
(she's fifty-nine this year)
and now that I'm on her turf,
I find her kind of queer.

A world away
Across the Causeway
I know now for sure
This is a world
a way.