Tuesday, March 03, 2026

Fish Head Steamboat + Sliced Pomfret


When the friends wanted to buy me my belated birthday meal, I asked for comfort food — steamboat — specifically a fish steamboat of sorts. I didn't want sushi and the likes. So we went to Nan Hua Chang Fish Steamboat (南華昌海鮮魚頭爐) at 462 Crawford Lane. Opted for a 6.30pm dinner so that we could all digest our food in peace before bedtime. 

I wanted vegetables. So we had two nice plates of sambal sweet potato leaves and dragon chives done with garlic. We were told that the fried pork belly with fermented bean paste (南乳肉) was a must-eat, so we did that. I really liked it. I only eat pork belly done this way, not even very much as siew yoke. Added on clams (la-la), marmite pork ribs, and prawn paste chicken wings.

Since the steamboat was really served with only fish head and its bones without much meat, we added on extra protein of sliced pomfret. Then the table wanted fried yam. You know those that go into hotpot? I always assumed that they were just to flavor the soup. I didn't know that we could add more of it to it as a separate order. I had no idea that the table likes fried yam so much. We were struggling to remember what is yam called in Mandarin. Hahaha.  

That was one happy meal. I'm glad it was nothing extravagant. This meal made my stomach happier than an overpriced sushi omakase set of which I can't control the types of fish served. The friends are really too kind to treat us to such a yummy dinner. As always, it's not about the 'buying of dinner'. It's about us all taking time out to sit down with one another for a chat. That is precious. 

Monday, March 02, 2026

'I Deliver Parcels in Beijing' :: 《我在北京送快递》


We all shop online nowadays, and we have an expectation of when our items would arrive at our doorstep. Many parts of this entire supply and delivery chain are still completed by humans. 

China is the largest parcel distribution hub in the world. Well, most things come from seller, otherwise they re-route the Chinese transit centers and get sent to tiny Singapore. Couriers are plentiful and seen as 'cheap labor'. We read about the experiences of one such worker in the faceless machine of parcel deliveries and platform capitalism. 

This is 'I Deliver Parcels in Beijing' (2023) by Hu Anyan. The original is written in Chinese, titled《我在北京送快递》, 胡安焉作. This book is translated by Jack Hargreaves. The English version is published in October 2025. (Reviews here, herehere, here and here.)

It's a non-fiction memoir. I didn't want to read it in Chinese. But I was curious about the Chinese courier services, efficiency, the 'slavery' of the logistics chain. The English translation is perfect for me to scan through. I honestly think that many things and unspoken emotions are lost in translation. But I'm not about to hunt down the Chinese original.

The work is mundane, repetitive and boring. It's hard labor. The author does it out of necessity, and Beijing was a tough city to navigate. Couriers are forced to pay for missing parcels and such. They meet mean customers and difficult people. It's literally the minutiae of work, life and living. Yet it sustains the author.

I have had lots of employers, and I have left many jobs. My time in Shanghai was, to some extent just a repetition of previous work experiences. Instead of moving forward, I fell, time and again, into the same situations. Most of my bosses really liked me, because of a few qualities in particular. But they all gradually wore me down until I couldn't go on, and I left. 

Money is always tight. The author never could stay in a job for long. It's not exactly on him. It's about burnout, sabotage by colleagues and simply the sheer pain of the type of job that he chose to take on. He moved from Guangzhou to Beijing to work as a courier, a waiter, a gas station attendant, then to Shanghai to work at a bike shop as a cashier, then to Nanning to run a clothing business, and then back home to his parents. 

I was stunned to realize that the Guangzhou-born author is born in 1979. He is 47 this year. That makes manual labor and getting on a trike and delivering parcels more physically demanding. It's a very tough life. Your entire income is based on the number of parcels you deliver — 1.6 yuan a parcel. The author has no ambition for anything bigger in his life. He does fall into an abyss and depression at some point, and is stuck there till he can get himself out of it. 

I had to remind myself that this is the author's point of view and his takeaway of his life, his work and how he chooses to live in China. We can't judge any unfairness of the system or social ills from our other-city lenses. The author does like read and write. But of course. He has stayed home with his parents, holed up in his room and anti-social and simply read and write — for three years. 

It has become one of the two states I have alternated between for years now: working and writing. These states were mutually exclusive because the work alone sapped so much of my time and emotion that I only wanted to relax and decompress afterward, not think about anything. Of course my nature is to blame here: In life and work, I struggle to feel motivated in situations where others receive positive reinforcement; and at the same time, I create psychological barriers where other people see none. This was why, when I wanted to write, I quit work so I could give my whole focus to it. This intermittent cycle of work and writing has been my lifestyle for almost a decade. Perhaps this is also a form of compromised freedom? I live half my life free of work, and the other consumed by it. 

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Global Travel Chaos


Before I know it, it's already the end of February 2026. Where did all this time go. The Lunar Year of the Fire Horse hasn't gotten off to a smooth start by any means. It's meant to be bring chaos, volatility and recklessness. It sure has been. 

I've never been fond of working even vacationing in the Middle East. Once I've gone there once, I never wanted to go again. It simply doesn't hold any attraction. I also didn't want to be stuck in a city that could be caught in the middle of a war any time. But many people are, unfortunately stuck there now, be it as tourists or people on work trips or as expatriates. 

Stocks have taken a giant tumble, and are still rolling. Gold prices remain exorbitant. Nobody wanted to spend extravagantly for the festive season, and we rather be conservative because the economic outlook is damn bleak. This is the bleakest since '97, tbh.   

The incumbent American President has a way of fucking up everybody's new year and everything good. His definition of 'good' and 'wonderful' isn't by any means many people's idea of 'ideal'. America is run by a child-dictator, and he happily instigated a war between US-Israel and Iran. If the seven states of the UAE didn't see it fit to bomb Iran, why should Israel do it? Is there a point in killing the current Ayatollah? What could you hope to achieve when there would be more Ayatollahs stepping in? What are you advocating? Sanctioned killing? wtf.

The Twelve-Day War between Israel and Iran in June 2025 resolved nothing, except whet the leaders appetite for farther warfare. In all these power play, who suffers? The civilians. The people. And all the expatriates stuck in the UAE and Saudi Arabia. Would there ever be peace. Is peace such an alien concept that people can't sit still within a hundred years of the last world war? Has history taught us nothing?

I can't pretend that the global events don't affect me and hide in my little shell. We can't just wallow in transport woes and the demise of Deliveroo, and think about the perilous state of the national TFR. There isn't TFR to be concerned about if we get wars coming to this region, or inflation hitting bad. This little haven in our corner of the way is at the mercy of global economic trends and movements. 

When it comes down to it, we have no way of retaliation. Beyond a carefully worded courtesy statement 'protesting war, showing grave concern and protecting civilians' sent out by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Singapore has been silent about specific stances about it. We call for a return to political dialogue, which has been what has always been done, to no avail, but we stopped short of pointing fingers. With Malaysia and Indonesia being pretty vocal, I think we should just shut up for now.