Wednesday, February 18, 2026

赤馬年 :: 大年初一


We had an unexpected invitation to the dear friends' parents' home for a mee siam lunch on the first day. OH YES PLEASE. How gorgeous. This was a visit that we welcomed very much, and it was no chore to pop over with mandarin oranges and little gifts. 

When the friends' parents were all getting on in the years, and cooking is no longer viable for many, it's a precious thing to taste their food. These are the flavors we'll never be able to recreate, and we'll deeply miss it. While we can, we appreciate the food loads, and give thanks to God's grace. 

This year, the first few days of Lunar New Year saw such low temps. I didn't even perspire much. The rains are back. Day 1 was some sort of mad rain from the morning til the night. At our area, it began at 5.30am, took a break, and returned in earnest at 10am, lasting all the way till 10pm. Luckily it wasn't a monsoon surge, and the flooding all over was controlled. We had an okay drive to lunch and back. The floofs also found pee breaks in between the rains. They've got no issues with going out in a drizzle.  

At lunch, it was nice to see Fawkes too. She's a silly girl, and had fun sniffing all of us. I didn't realize how much she likes toys. I gave her a toy at Christmas and it's become her chou-chou. Hehehe. So I brought her a whole 'seafood platter' this time. She liked the selections — plush and with ropes. Wheeeeee. She was spoilt for choice! 

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

年三十晚 :: 年夜飯

I was really pleased that I heated up my own dinner and stayed in with the floofs. That was my peace. The kiddos were even happier to chill out with me and eat noms. Sent the husband to rep us on his maternal side's reunion dinner. I straight-out declined since I wanted to stay at home with the floofs. Nowadays, I have no issues saying no. I make it very clear that my priority is with floofs, not humans. And the husband absolutely understands that. 

The evening rains are back, and while we've lucked out with no thunder so far, I wouldn't be able to predict when it would roll in. If it rained and thunder came, I would have be really upset that I went to this dinner that I didn't care for instead of being there for the floofs. 

I got the kiddos a small bowl of poon choi (盆菜) from MumMumGourmet. Cooked, not freeze-dried. I have nothing against freeze-dried, but if I have options for freshly cooked items, I'll take that. Fresh is always better, in a way. The bottle of pork broth would be put to good use too, and not be inhaled in one shot. I wasn't intending to heat up the poon choi in the traditional manner. 

This poon choi is the floofs’ little pot of toppers.

By now, I'm well aware of what food intolerances they have, and what might trigger a one-off diarrhea or mushy poop. The ingredients in the poon choi were fine, but I wasn't going to let them eat all of it. These were to be toppers to their raw base. The floofs were so pleased with their dinner and supper. Hahahah. 

I decided not to cook udon or noodles this year. I had gotten a takeout from Kizuna — an osechi box (おせち料理) and a miso-nabe (味噌鍋) with pork loin. Kizuna actually gave pork belly, but they thought that I would prefer the less fatty pork loin, so they gave me that instead. Ahhh, the pork loin was much appreciated. The miso paste was included as well. All I needed was to add some water to dilute it. #ImpieCooks2026

I also had plenty of XO sauce and chilli as dips to accompany the soup. I loved this light and clean meal. Absolutely satisfying. Yes, I'm aware of the irony of having Japanese food for a lunar new year reunion dinner, and considering 15 February was the fall of Singapore in 1942. BUT. Well...... culture versus heritage versus history. You pick one. 

I kept a small portion for the husband who didn't mind some soup when he came home. He had a nibble of the osechi box's prawns, tamago, abalone and clams, and garlic before going out. Dinner was at 8pm, and he needed some food before that. 

These are for humans.

Monday, February 16, 2026

What's Your Light Secret?


I didn't understand the ending of this story, although I get the ongoing picture of the main themes. This is 'Light Secrets' by Joseph O'Neill, published in The New Yorker on January 18, 2026.

The narrator had been hearing about this 'nasty rumor' about his friend P., and invited the latter out to lunch to clear up the air. I thought that was a fine thing to do. We hear rumors and gossip all the time. If I hear something about a friend, I would ask her/him out to have a chat. The friendship is worth that much — some bit of trust, a bit of leeway before I make any judgments. 

In his forties, the narrator is also at a stressful point in his life in which he has gone through a divorce, and is unhappily back in the dating circuit, and also applying for jobs that include a background check, fingerprinting requirements and all. But he made time for P. whom he thought was a funny and thoughtful guy and he owed it to him to have a chat and not just believe in that 'nasty rumor'. 

P. says, “Everybody’s got something to hide. Everybody.” He wears his usual gloomy face. With no lessening of the gloom, he says, “But you know what else is true? Everybody’s done something good that’s hidden—the opposite of a dark secret.”

“A light secret,” I suggest.

“Precisely,” P. says.

“Like an anonymous donation?”

P. shrugs. “It could be a lot more interesting than that.”

“Can you give me an example? One of yours?”

“You want me to tell you a light secret? I can’t do that. It’s a secret.”

I would laugh except that P. isn’t joking. I say, “I’d tell you one of mine, but I can’t think of any.” I’m not joking, either.

“Everybody’s got a light secret. Everybody.”

Three weeks later, in a surprising turn of events, the narrator learnt that P. is dead at forty-seven years old. He was found dead in his apartment, and his family said he died of natural causes. At the funeral that was open to everyone who knew P., apparently only two non-family turned up. That included the narrator. Clearly the nasty rumor resulted in a loss of reputation and turned friends against P., whom the narrator thought to be a fairly decent person overall.

There's this mysterious Simon Morgan, who was the other friend at the funeral. P. had earlier mentioned him, but the narrator couldn't place him. Then Simon Morgan got in touch with the narrator and even mailed him a check. The narrator got the chills — he couldn't remember anything about him, couldn't find out anything online, not even when Simon Morgan said he had helped him out while he was a recovering addict. He refused to cash the two-hundred dollar check either.

It boils down to this: Simon Morgan is a self-described “addict.” As part of his recovery program, he has vowed to make amends for the harm he has caused others. To this end, he wants to remind me of the help I gave him back in the day, help that I offered with a pure heart, help that, until now, he has never acknowledged or thanked me for. Enclosed is a check for two hundred dollars, which is the amount I loaned him all those years ago and never requested repayment for.

I don’t cash the check. How could I? I don’t remember him. When Sejal asks me whatever happened to Simon Morgan, I represent to her that I never heard from him again and that Simon Morgan, if that’s his name, must have got me mixed up with someone else.

The story never reveals what this nasty rumor is, and it's a tad exasperating for me, as a nosy reader. I suppose it's not particularly important to know, but who doesn't love a good piece of gossip? 

The ending was completely befuddling. In an interview with the same journal, the author explained why he chose to withhold this information from the readers. The point about leaving readers "slightly in the dark"....... Well, yeah, me. I mean, what..... There're so many scenarios and possibilities. Is this light secret about P. dealing in drugs? If Simon Morgan and his check is the clue to the secret that P. was keeping, then thanks, it's more confusing than ever. 

The story never reveals the nasty rumor about P., and this is just one of several bits of withheld information in the story. Disclosure, or its lack, both shapes the story and is the subject of this story. Were you worried that too much might be withheld?

I gave some thought to what P. might have done, turning over in my mind the various nasty stories that all of us hear, but, in the end, I worried that to reveal the nature of P.’s misdeed would undermine the logic of the story. It’s more damaging, I think, to provide an overly disclosive or illuminating detail than to leave the reader slightly in the dark, as in life. Speaking for myself, I dislike the feeling that I’ve got to the bottom of a story and fully lit up its depths. A short story, like a poem, should always retain an element of mystery.