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14 June 2010

Hobbies

We are currently recruiting a few people. This is an excerpt from a CV I was sent today:


Interests
Relaxing, surfing the internet and listening to music.


I think he forgot to mention "eating pizza" but it's clearly implied in the subtext. I mean ... can't you already see him sitting at home?

This honesty was so inspiring that I immediately asked HR to schedule an interview. He has no chance at getting the job but I'm dying to see what he looks like. Srsly.

Last month I had to write my own bio and "hobbies" was once of the sections in the form. Every new employee to Indonesia has to do this - a monthly email is sent to all employees with their photos and descriptions. I tried to wriggle out of it, claiming illness (pigment deficiency syndrome) but HR insisted. Laughed, then insisted. I was really stumped by the "hobbies: section.

I tried and tried to think of something to say.

Then I realised. I have no hobbies. How did it get to this? How could I have no hobbies?

No one knows me here so I decided to make some up.

I picked rowing and swimming. That's right. I submitted my HR form with false claims of swimming and rowing. Srsly.

Actually I prefer relaxing, surfing the internet and spending time with friends but I couldn't put that ...

The real me is much closer to my interview candidate than the HR me. He's my mirror. And I will judge this mirror harshly. And I wlil not give him a job. No matter how good he is. Because who can trust a man with no hobbies? Srsly.

I hope he's fatter than me.

09 June 2010

Indonesian Non Sequitur Number 3

A recorded message last Friday night.

“We’re sorry – due to heavy calling we cannot complete your call at this time.”

Firstly I thought the lines were congested. Then I tried again. Same message. Other people must be getting through on their calls. It must be only me.

I may have gained a few kilos ... but now you're blocking my calls?

It's offensive.

08 June 2010

Confirmation

Tomorrow morning I'm going to KL for a couple of days.

This is the confirmation email my new travel agent sent.



Why why why has she matched this font colour with this background?

And what what what was she thinking?

And how how how did this ever seem like a good idea?

So many questions. So few answers.

This is supposed to confirm my itinerary and help me feel organised. Ironically, I now have no fucking idea what I'm supposed to do tomorrow, or whe

Then I saw who she cc:d. That made up for everything.

01 June 2010

Indonesian Non Sequitur Number 1

This morning I was in a meeting with our country manager - a born and bred Indonesian - and he came out with:

"... well Anthony we either do something now or it's So Long Farewell Auf Wiedersehen Goodbye"

All I could think of was ugly curtains.

28 May 2010

Smoking Gun

This child made me think about how my own childhood was spent.

And his breasts made me think about where my adulthood is heading.



As God is my witness (he has nothing better to do) I'm going to track down this Indonesian toddler to compare notes. I may even try to scab a cigarette off him although he seems kinda greedy. In that mean way.

Thinking about it now, it was very progressive of Cheesel to allow us all to smoke as children ... we may never have maintained the habit without her tacit support. What a visionary. No furtive scampering behind trees for us ... no "smokers' coming out" barbeques at 21 years of age ... just fond memories of family bonding in the backyard.

Geoff must have realised that a basket of laundry doesn't require 1 mother, 3 children and 15 minutes to hang onto the line.

My time out there taught me many things. For example, how to work out what the neighbours were watching on the tellie through the narrowest of openings between fence pailings (fuck all, by the way). And how to blow perfect smoke rimgs. The 4 of us created quite a misty, horror-film-like ambience ... a human fog machine pumping its exhaust onto the backdrop of a cool evening ... plumes of white smoke gently weaving their way through pegs and undies.

Whenever I hear the sound of a washing machine winding down from its final spin cycle still I feel a Pavlovian urge to stand next to a Hills Hoist and light up.



25 May 2010

Traffic

How I could spend 63 minutes travelling from the office to my meeting, and 4½ minutes on the return journey?

I'm the only one who seems to think there's anything unusual about this.

24 May 2010

Less Is Morning

After 2 weeks in Jakarta I haven't learnt very much Indonesian. Just enough to cover basic greetings and cab rides.

I'm in that awkward phase where the few words I have memorised feel the same. I can only rote their meaning, not feel it.

Like most countries, the words for "morning" (pagi) and "more" (lagi) are used very frequently (or in my case, interchangeably).

This morning as I went downstairs there was some guy pulling out weeds. He looked up as I walked past and greeted me with a "Good morning, sir!". I responded immediately by saying "more!". I don't know how it came out wrongly - he had just used the correct word a few seconds before. Maybe the "sir" bit at the end threw me.

By the time I'd walked past the security guards and entered the cab, my morning greetings were back on track and I was throwing "pagi" around with abandon. Gay abandon.

However, not long afterwards I was in the cab approaching work. My cabbie indicated to turn -- too early -- so I pointed ahead and confidently said "Continue Morning! Continue Morning!". The second "Morning" was less clear: I realised I was in trouble as it was leaving my mouth so I muffled the end.

He seemed confused but did as I had asked; or rather, as I had intended.

We arrived at work and I gave him a pretty decent tip. Potato penance.

I remember a similar thing happening when I was learning French. My skills were coming along pretty well but for some reason I kept confusing the word for "heating" with the word for "unemployment" (chauffage vs chomage ... they look different but sound similar).

One summer while I was in Paris there was a protest on the street. I asked someone whether this was about some recent social problems due to France's rise in heating.

On another occasion, this time in Winter, I was working at the youth hostel. I remember asking a group of French backpackers whether they would like me to turn up the unemployment.

Srsly.

Back to this morning.

At about 10:30am I popped downstairs to get a takeaway coffee. As I was being handed my change I looked the girl in the eye, smiled warmly, nodded appreciatively and said "sorry". How could I possibly fuck up thank you? How? Her smile moved very slightly around the corners of her mouth - from friendly to confused pity.

Oh ... what will become of me?

20 May 2010

Inconvenient Truths

Today my dear colleague left the company.

You may remember him from various late night frustrations and misinterpretations, of which this is an example.

His final email was thus:

"Dear All,

"Today is my last day. It has been a good 2.5 years with all the great people around. It has been wonderful and memorable journey.

"I want to take this opportunity to each of every one for giving me a lots of guidance, direction, support & Appreciation.

"Deeply appreciate all the help I have received. Apologize for all the inconvenience caused by me for the past 2.5 years."

Never a truer word. It's also sweet. So how should I respond to this?

How about "Agreed and accepted."?

All is forgiven.

17 May 2010

Watering Cans and Watering Can'ts

Last Sunday marked 11 days since I had moved into the new apartment and 10 since the air conditioning broke down.

The big windows in the living room have joined forces with the morning sun to create a hothouse.

I leave in the morning with a wet shirt and the evenings are spent sitting at my computer, working and sweating into the couch. It's like Victoria Falls.

Luckily, the apartment came with some furniture and various other things (cheap cutlery, a vase of plastic pink roses, 6 nice large drinking glasses and an ugly tea set that only a granny could love). It also came with a lot of low maintenance plants.

I don't know how to water plants, or how frequently, so initially thought I'd wait for signs of yellow or brown to tell me it was time. Some people would call this neglect, but I prefer to call it Autumn.

However, even after 10 days of complete neglect the plants were holding up quite well. I assured myself that 'Plants must love hothouses', as I occasionally reminded myself to water them.

Last Sunday and I finally decided that it was time to act. I loaded up a large glass of water and headed for the tiny little plant on the ledge in my bathroom.

As I stooped down to water it something didn't seem quite right.

Then I realised.

It was plastic.

Just to be sure, I squinted it into a more recognisable form. Yep. Definitely plastic.

The dunny ensures that you don't get too close. Quite convincing from a distance.

I admonished myself slightly before realising what a terrific fake it was (at least from a distance) and gave it a little pat and a "well done nipper". (I really did.)

So I moved on to the plant in my bedroom. Didn't have to look to hard to realise that it, too, was a fake. The stem was good but the flowers were a bit ratty. I mustn't have ever really looked at it properly.

The other bathroom turned out to be housing another small, effective fake. So did the spare bedroom.

I finally turned to the living room to discover that the large palm in the corner was ALSO plastic. And I mean head-to-fucking-toe plastic, from arsehole to breakfast. I couldn't quite believe it and bit into on one of the leaves to be sure. It was a terrific fake, mind, but a fake nonetheless.

I'm ashamed to say that this one is pretty obvious but I still tried to water it.

I should have seen it coming. The vase full of plastic pink roses was a giveaway.

The cheery resilience of these plants under extreme heat conditions with no water was also a sure sign that something wasn't right. They were faking it - and doing a good job but I was eventually going to realise that they're not eating anything. This must be what it feels like to live with an alien. Or an anorexis.

So ... in summary ... for the past 11 days I have been foiled by foilage and surrounded by a hothouse of plastic plants.

On the plus side ... they look adequate from a distance and the palm looks great. They can easily survive in all climates (just like cockroaches). They will neither scatter dirt nor attract insects with Dengue Fever. They require no water or maintenance.

I'm keeping them.


Up close you'd never know. Srsly. The realistic fronds keep your eyes away from the shiny plastic stalk.

And as soon as I find a maid, I'm going to make her dust them.

So there.

[snaps]

10 May 2010

Things That Rhyme With Black

So part of my Indo-ctrinisation is to get a Blackberry, which I achieved last weekend.

Always thought it was "black" as in "berry", which is completely untrue. It's "black" as in the "market" where you buy them. Mine was brand new and in the box. It has a T-Mobile logo on the bottom - an artefact from the life it once led in Canada. It hecho in Mexico, raised in Canada, incarcerated by T-Mobile, smuggled across borders and into Indonesia where it bribed a customs official to look the other way. I was then sent to the Ambasador Mall where it was unlocked from T-Mobile and reboxed for sale.

I bought a Blackberry Onyx from 3 lovely men, each of whom blew cigarette smoke in my face as they smilingly quoted a descendingly good price. I did the rounds of the fine merchants of Ambasador but eventually returned to my smokers. This says 2 things about me - my love of good service and an enduring addiction to cigarettes. Blow smoke in my face and I'll buy anything.

The purchase ended with them frogmarching me to an ATM to get more money. This is not usually a good sign. Also not a good look when I run into one of 2 potatoes I've met here, mid march. "Oh this guy is taking me and my wallet to an atm in this illegal mall - great to see you!"

I've only heard of 2 atm escorts in the last year ... B's $280 cab trip from Hanoi airport and R's tragic strong arm out of an underfunded, under-the-bar-itself blowjob at a patpong bar. 40-love, R to serve.

My experience proved to be pleasant and fair, though.

So I found where to download a dictionary from this horrible toy. I decided to read the user reviews. This one gave it 5 stars:

"Its very helpful!! U cn hve ur dictionary anytime u nid it."

I kid you not. srsly.

I wonder what Berry stands for?

02 May 2010

Sweet Vali High

I went to the chemist near work and asked for something to help me sleep. She offered Melatonin, then Valerian.

"I don't trust herbal medicine," I tell her.

"What about this then?" she asks me.


"Sure," I says.

It would have been impolite to say no.

White Teeth

I'm writing this post from the breakfast area at the Grant Hyatt Jakarta, where I am receiving the most appalling treatment.

Appalling, I tell ya.

It started this morning, before I even got to the restaurant. Exactly 15 metres before, in fact.

I got out of the the lift. As I turned right and around the corner I could see 4 uniformed people in the distance. They were all standing at the counter doing nothing (this is Asia, remember).

Each looked up, and smiled, and shouted at me in non unison "Hello Mr Anthony! Good morning Mr Anthony!". I smiled sheepishly, nodded and looked down as if I'd dropped a hankie.

As I got closer there were repeated, louder greetings from this gaggle. Or at least they seemed more conspicuous. "How are you Mr Anthony?" and "Are you here for breakfast Mr Anthony?", the latter providing a bit of a Der Fred moment.

I walked past them, nodding and bowing, and entered the dining area. 2 people broke from this greeting pack and trailed behind me as I headed to a table. It was more stalking than trailing. I would call it "friendly" stalking, but what stalking isn't?

Once I had picked my preferred table, my stalkers stopped and smiled and pointed at it as if they had selected it. But they didn't do anything. Nevertheless they used waving hand gestures, like this table was an overpriced item on Sale of the Century.

I dumped my laptop onto the table and headed out to forage for food. I was still being followed as the Maitre d' walked past us with a cheery "Good Morning Mr Anthony! How are you this morning pak?! Are you here for breakfast?". I looked him in the eye, smiled back and nodded a friendly "Der Fred" in return.

I headed past the various counters on my way to the egg station. Most counters have people behind them dressed in chef whites. They are there to ensure the potatoes don't have to pour their own juice, or cut their own cheese or whatever. Voices beckoned at me as I glided passed them.

It was one dumpy panini cooks after another skinny juice attendant after yet another bored looking toaster monitor. Each smiled and shouted out to me "Hello Mr Anthony" and "Good morning Mr Anthony!". (This may seem repetitive to you, so just imagine experiencing this horror in person.)

It felt like a mashup of 3 hideous memories:

a) That part in Amadeus where Salieri is being wheeled through the asylum.

b) That part in Silence of the Lambs where Clarice Starling is walking to her first meeting with Hannibal Lector. None of the kitchen staff at the Hyatt flicked cum on my face on the way out (as far as I could tell) I'll bet that at least one person would have called me a cunt, even if it was in Indonesian and under their breath.

c) That evil "It's a Small World" ride at Disneyland, where you sail by sinister miniature dolls in traditional dresses, singing at you. It's a cheery and dark and small and synchronised small world. And you just know it's Stephen King's small world; not yours.

This mash-up was eerie and I wished them all dead; or at least blind and mute.

In the 30 seconds it took me to get from the front counter to the eggs I had been individually greeted - using my title and first name - at least 12 times. I'm not exaggerating.

I am never - EVAH - going to complain at the Hyatt again. Unless it is to request that no one may greet me, or look me in the eye, while on set. Which is kinda Tom Cruise. Pre-couch Cruise.

By the way, Indonesians have very good teeth. I have been flashed by enough of them to be an authority on the matter. White and strong. This is in stark contrast to the rows of lima beans which fill the mouths of most Vietnamese people.

01 May 2010

The Avalanchidence

A little photo montage of the other night.

You can see my balcony here, overlooking the scene.




I think my assumptions about a potential avalanche were reasonable.


Imagine this at 3am, with the old lady and various others from downstairs wandering around the street, calmly supervising the security guard driving it.



I think my fears about the security guard commandeering this earth digger mover thingi in the middle of the night were also quite reasonable.

The fact that this same security guard does his shift in a beautifully tailored grey suit is small comfort. It seems to make him less qualified for the earth moving job, not more.

27 April 2010

That Other Stuart Diver


For the past week there has been a lot of construction next door - including yesterday's noisy extravaganza of digging and earth moving. Dirt mountains are popping up everywhere. There is more equipment than people; quite unusual for a building site in Vietnam.

I woke up at 3am to the sound of an avalanche. I didn't know I could identify the sound of sliding dirt at thirty yardsbut there you go. Dirt was sliding in large quantities, right next to the house, and I knew it.

I started to wonder whether my apartment building would be joining it and - I'm ashamed to admit - wondered whether I could get in a quick nap before escaping. Srsly.

I was very, very tired. And really, really didn't want to get up. But it kept going and going and going. I started to imagine being winched out of the rubble by emergency workers ... wizened men operating on no sleep, rubbing their stubbled chin and looking worried ... coffee being drunk in the background ... spotlights and ropes ... fluoro yellow jackets. Then I realised where I was.

It wasn't fear that made me get up ... it was the realisation that Vietnam has no emergency services and I would have to do all the saving for myself. There was a parallel realisation that no matter how many people in this country seem happy to wear their pyjamas during the daytime, I was not one of them.

I eventually got up - all pre-Thredbo like - and popped my head out of the bedroom window. I could see an earth digger thingo shifting piles of dirt off the street. It seemed to be doing a poor job - pushing dirt along and missing key piles. It was more like rubbing than lifting.

Then I saw him.

The older security guard from downstairs - the one who has to wake up to open the door when I come home late - seemed to be in control of the digger. He was perched behind the wheel in a dangerously proactive show of confidence. It was so odd. The family from downstairs was also wandering up and down the street and around the digger, aimlessly supervising the event. They were quite unconcerned, like hey were watching TV.

Even the old lady was out there on the wander. She wasn't in pyjamas so I figured she had been rostered on. She seemed to think she was in charge though. Old person charge ... much like an old man at a car lot. I almost expected her to kick the tyre of the digger. She noticed me staring out of the window and smiled politely, like we had run into each other at the shops.

Her grandson (20 yo security guard) was also there, wandering around the front of the machine smoking cigaretts, artfully avoiding the arm of the digger as it swung towards him. The little kids weren't there but I spotted a teen - possibly a bored neighbour or a spruiker from one of the brothels up the road.

Then the Canadian guy who lives above me started shouting:

"What the fuck are you doing? This is fucking stupid! You're fucking stupid! How can you be so fucking stupid?!" and so on and so forth.

When he first started yelling everyone stopped for a moment and stared at him.

They were more curious than alarmed, like distracted kittens. The silence lasted about 10 seconds. The minute the Canadian stopped to draw breath, they started it all up again.

I couldn't work out what was happening so I went back to bed. The Canadian guy was still screaming and the digger was going but I was tired. I already had an insurance policy - the little kids were asleep in the house and I figured that if there was any real danger, they wouldn't have been left there. And I actually love my pyjamas ... more than I care to admit.

25 April 2010

Translation of the Year

From a photo exhibition a couple of months ago. How efficient this Vietnamese language must be.

'Ech' means frog. But this is no ordinary frog. Check out the grey translation below the red quote.


There is something else they don't want us to know.

Forget frogs.

I smell a rat.

24 April 2010

A to B

1. Arrivals Wed 14 April 2010 19:30-21:00

What do you do when you're running a country with some of the longest customs queues in the world? Slow them down, of course!

Since 1 April they are taking fingerprints and photos of everyone arriving in Jakarta. This makes each person about 4 times longer to process, with all the requisite confusions and clumsiness that comes with it.

I've been through 3 times this month and it's painful. Childbirth painful. There are no extra counters or staff, so the queues now stretch further than ever.

My last queue stretched back, almost to the plane


This chaotic archipelago of over 17,000 islands has some of the worst border patrols in the world. People can wander in from almost anywhere—sea or land—via large stretches of unprotected borders. Someone got bored with this problem and decided to spend all their pocket money on dragging Jakarta into the 21st century. Lipstick on the pig.

2. Departures Thu 22 April 2010 04:00-05:45

Last Thursday was the first time I have ever (ever) forgotten to set an alarm or wake-up call for an early flight. My flight was the usual 6:15am, meaning that I aim to check out of the hotel by 3:45am.

I fell asleep watching tv and dreamt it was already 8am and I had missed my flight. This woke me up with a startle and a quick check of the watch. It was 4:00am so I tore out of bed.

Once this mini panic was over, I felt tireder than ever as I settled into my queuing routines.

The customs queue was less painful than arrivals - more miscarriage than childbirth - and afterwards I stopped at Starbucks for a coffee.

I smiled as I read this sign, imagining nasty empowered customers with strong throwing arms.

It's a messy promise.


3. Transit Thu 22 April 2010 08:45-09:45

I took this photo at Changi Airport.

It is a gaggle of Singapore Airlines crew members, heading to the T2 shuttle train.

"I'm gonna fuckin' flip if I have to go through another flight without enough napkins."

It's not a good photo but something about it describes how I feel on these mornings ... stumbling around aimlessly in transit after an early flight and a couple of hours sleep.

I stood next to them on the shuttle, listening as they compared volcano stories from European legs.

20 April 2010

Sarah Connor

My email log-in has been playing up ever since I arrived in Jakarta. The email is still working, but I'm not receiving all the mails when I synchronise with the server. I am having to ask colleagues to forward some important ones to me.

In truth, our technology is very patchy in Indonesia ... even in the fancy new offices. I guess they ran out of money for new machines.

I can't connect to any printers.

Last Friday night my wireless log-in program wouldn't work at all. I even couldn't get on to the network.

Then on Sunday my chat log-in stopped working. I expected it was part of some scheduled maintenance which was supposed to happen on Saturday.

Yesterday, right when we were about to finish printing our amending our proposal, I received about 6 automated emails saying my access to this or that had been denied.

No one else seems to be having so many problems.

So why me?

Then I realised.

I've been terminated.

So I tried to locate myself on the intranet and couldn't. No picture, no profile. Just someone called Kevin who shares the same surname. So I attempted many combinations of my name. No result. I asked la Reina and she couldn't find me. She tried to reassure me that this was a machine error, not a personal affront, but I could feel it in my waters.

I tried to find my employees.Success! I clicked on the "reporting line" link on one of them and discovered that they she floating out there alone; head-less.

Then I found another. And another. All floating. Headless. Me-less

Why me indeed!

One machine sent me a note this afternoon to inform me that my "User Id Does Not Exist".

Then another quite coldly stated "Employee Not Found Or Deleted".

This is not supposed to happen in my company, where departure is an highly automated and efficient process. You hand in your key, then a series of switches get flicked in cyberspace and you're out before you hit the elevator button.

In Vietnam, though, it seems to be a little more painful. And slow. And they also ensure it starts early. They want to make sure you get to feel it, just in case you get any ideas about coming back.

Do you think they don't like me?

I am due to return back this Thursday and have so many questions.

Will my key still work? Will there be someone else's name on my desk? Will I find someone at my chair? ... Rigidly, stoically, proprietorially perched?

I'm kind of excited about my desk. Butterflies excited.

I mean ... whatever will become of me????

What will I say?

What will I wear?

How's about a black cape, a pointy hat and a large glass of water ...

"I'm melting! melting! Oh, what a world! What a world! Who would have thought a good little girl like you could destroy my beautiful wickedness?"

You Say Password, I Say Recalcitrant Masseuse

I just got my new password issued for the Indonesian email account.

It's nokumm4u.

Dirty bastards.

Oh. And no comments please ... Cheesel reads this blog and she's getting old. Which means she now wets herself when she laughs or gets offended. Or plays golf. Or goes to the ATM. Or watches tellie. Or coughs. You get the drift.