Curbside
Dispatches from a strange moment in time, halfway across the world.
Monday Girl
What can I say about death that hasn’t been said before? It stopped time.
What can I say about a book that hasn’t been said before? It was a refuge from time.
On Leaving
Tomorrow night, exactly three years to the day I got my F1 Visa, I will board the longest flight in the world, and spend eighteen hours forty minutes being, let’s face it, extremely emotional, as I cross the 15,000 kilometres of sea that cleaves both versions of me. Cleave: to divide, to adhere. Tomorrow night, I will go home.
As you are
I’m used to disregarding my own wellness in order to meet deadlines, I’ve often chalked this up to having a good work ethic. But it’s not. It’s a recipe for burnout.
Take Off
The minute my first flight gets cancelled, I begin eyeballing seats, rapidly locating them on the axis of comfort vs safety. I make friends; I share face wash and skincare with another straggler who later watches my back while I nap. I do not panic. I’ve been in similar situations before, I know it will not serve me. The panic and anger, I think, can come later.
Split
Singapore is small, to the point of emotional claustrophobia. It’s not just geography. We live in a society where everyone knows everyone’s mother, where behaviour and attitudes are tightly governed by a fog of social pressures. So there is a strong sense of wanting to escape abroad. Wherever “abroad” is. And some people do. They leave for education or work, and the more idealistic ones flee without a concrete plan, cruising simply on unstructured hope.
On Friendship
For most of my life, friendship has been the axis around which my world spins, the secret superpower that fuels my sense of self-regard in low moments when I wonder why anyone bothers with me at all. One of the things that drew me to my partner nine years ago — another long relationship — was the strong, sustained friendships in his life. Over the course of our relationship, we married our friend groups, and when we finally got engaged, it felt very much like a village celebration.
Notes on My Neighborhood
I know some people find the annual leash of a lease to be an opportunity for new experiences and neighborhoods, but I am not one of those people. For as long as I’m here I do not think I will move.
Just Another One of Those
Here, in the land of the free, it’s starting to feel as if conflicting desires cannot coexist. As if one story necessarily overwrites another.
All The Lives We Did Not Lead
Reader, I know. I know. Life is messy, right now, it’s a touch messier than usual. We have tried our best, and it hasn’t been enough.
Flash in the Pan
As long as no one else knew, my writing could be worthy as long as I deemed it so. But once I left everything behind to move across continents for my MFA, the stakes shifted.
Anatomy of a Karaoke Night
There are a lot of clichés about sopranos: how we’re loud, noisy, bitchy, and love attention. We were young girls, and accepted labels as synonymous with being part of something bigger than ourselves, being part of a group.
In Which the Narrator Simply Does Not Know
I generally don’t like waiting. I don’t like unspecified periods of time wherein anything can happen; I don’t like limbo, and I don’t like amorphous anticipation.
The Liar’s Paradox
Because I am a woman and not of America, my fiction is not like other fiction, my fiction is assumed to be autobiographical.
City of Dreams
I was naive and I was an adult, which meant I believed I was past idealism. A dangerous combination.
Take Two
A guy is drunk behind me. He’s gone hard on free airplane wine. He told me, in a slur, that he wanted to make the flight worth it. I envy him, briefly, his throughline from cause to consequence, the neat solution of it all. He’s snoring now, a low, consistent rumble, blissfully soaked in booze. How much wine do you have to drink to make the last year worth it?
Gambles and Games
I don’t care about winning; for me, the fun is in the competition, the same way I scream a lot on roller coasters, though I feel nothing about being flung around upside-down in midair.
Nails at Work
There was a period of time, from ages eighteen to twenty-one, that my nails were perpetually coated with a hard layer of coloured gel. I had just started working as a copywriter in an advertising firm, and was hyper-conscious of my status as the youngest person in the company.