Saturday 25 February 2006

Change is Inevitable

A couple of weeks ago, I heard about some major drastic changes happening in my company.

Well, the official briefing finally took place about two weeks ago, on a fine Thursday afternoon at a five star hotel not 5 minutes away from the office (whatever the news, they never fail to have it somewhere classy). It started with a very short and quick explanation of a study that was performed at the Group's Corporate Level, and the result was that:
  1. There'll be a new Research & Technology Division, with new units and subsidiaries.
  2. My company will be part of this division
  3. My company will exist only as a legal entity and not a live, breathing organisation. In other words, we're closing down.

That session was quickly followed by a presentation to show what would happen to our staff, and a session for all those 'steaming, burning questions'. This, I suppose, was the most long-awaited part of the briefing.

I had a lot of 'steaming, burning questions' myself. For one, I didn't quite get how they arrived at the conclusion that my company was no longer needed and would have to be scrapped, to be replaced by something that we've always been aspiring to be in the first place. I mean, there didn't seem to be any representative from the company in the study to defend our position. Did they even take into account that we were going through a sort of internal Transformation programme to make ourselves bigger and better? Did they consider other ways of dealing with the situation?

I didn't ask anything about the study because no one else seemed interested to know. At least, not during the Q&A session, although there were a lot of corridor talk later. Hmmm, mindset and behaviour still not changed, I suppose. Besides, it would have been for a purely academic reason. The decision has been made, nothing can change that. We can argue all sorts of angles but it would be just a waste of precious time when everyone seemed more concerned with their own future. If the briefing was held immediately after we all found out when we shouldn't have, it would probably have been a different atmosphere, a more emotional session. I had actually pictured myself ranting and raving with tears down my face, but three weeks on (including a week-long break) had rationalised everyone.

Everyone (including me) asked question centred around one theme, namely "What happens to me now?" As it turned out, even the questions that were asked didn't get a clear enough answer. I suppose there's no concrete plan yet, and having to deal with 900 employees (although almost two-thirds are not permanent staff and could be easily, coldly dismissed) of various situations is no easy feat.

My position seems secure, for now, but the company (or the 'Staff Re-deployment Task Force', to be more appropriate) could decide to just pull everyone out of the project before we complete it in 2009.

We'll just have to wait and see...

Sunday 19 February 2006

Hush Little Baby...

Reading a book always puts me in a certain mood for writing. When I finished reading Vikram Seth's 'A Suitable Boy' three weeks after my third year finals, I was convinced that I should become a writer instead of an engineer. His style made it look so easy. I remember sitting in a train and describing the things happening around me, as if to set the background of the first chapter of my first great novel, but after 5 pages of just droning on about the engine and the passengers I realised my non-existent plot was nowhere near a short story for a school magazine, let alone the next Booker Prize.

I had borrowed Tash Aw's 'Harmony Silk Factory' from my youngest sister about a week ago. The first part of the book didn't particularly strike me as anything special - the narrative was simple, telling the story of Johnny Lim through the somewhat prejudiced viewpoint of his son, despite the fact that most of the events took place before his birth. It took me almost a week to finish it. When I started to read the second part, though, I began to see the brilliance associated with this first-time novelist. It's amazing how he is able to change his writing style, especially when you consider that the second narrative is the journal of Johnny Lim's wife, and you get to see Johnny in a totally different light. I was able to read the second and third parts of the book in less than 2 days (the fact that it's the weekend may have helped). One part of the book affected me deeply in particular - when Peter Wormwood sees Johnny cradling his sleeping two-year-old son at the train station. This was at the end of the book, which I had read about an hour ago, and which is partly why I am still awake at 1 a.m.

Descriptions of young children often get me into a really emotional state. When I read that passage, I pictured Nuaim as Jasper, his long lashes softly caressing his lower eyelids in sleep. Then when Jasper wakes up, I see Nuaim standing there, holding on as he looks around him, his right eye squinting against the bright light as he is wont to do before he groggily lays his head back onto the shoulders of whoever happens to be carrying him at the time. When I went to bed, I found Nuaim asleep, his arm thrown around Hubby's neck as their heads rest on the same pillow. Somehow, tonight I do not want to put him alone in his cot. Let him share the bed with us, his parents - he'd make his way in at some point anyway, like he does every night. As I tuck myself in, rearranging the pillows to make myself comfortable, I find myself engulfed by the strangest feeling, as if I was about to lose something precious and most dear to me. I realise, as the tears started streaming down my face, that it was Nuaim I was crying for.

It's silly really. I mean, he's not going anywhere at the moment, is he? He's just lying there on his stomach, occasionally murmuring something in his sleep as his chubby hands search for the corners of the pillowcase. Maybe it's because of the pregnancy, although I know that it's the same feeling I had when Nuaim was first introduced to the bottle at the age of three weeks, because apparently I couldn't produce enough breastmilk to satiate his hunger. At that time I knew that I had lost exclusive feeding rights to him, that I could no longer claim him all to myself, that he was no longer solely dependent on me for care and comfort. In public I'd jokingly complain about how he never wants to leave my side, always clinging on to my breast like some desperate lover, but secretly I revelled in the closeness, the bond that exists when your child draws succour from your own body. And yet even as I rejoiced at his development, his growth as he found his feet at 11 months and could walk, then run and climb, I dreaded the day when his feet would take him away from me, his newfound independence releasing him from my smothering embrace.

I suppose I am feeling guilty for not paying much attention to him earlier today (yesterday?). Hubby had gone to KL for a whole-day 'Kursus Pengurusan Jenazah', so he dropped us off at Mak's house in the morning. Mak was going for an overnight trip to Johor with her friend for a wedding, and I wanted to go pick up my repaired brooches and buy some toiletries at Jaya Jusco, so we left together. My brother dropped Mak off at her friend's in Subang Jaya, then sent me to One Utama before heading off to Taman Tun to run a few errands. I spent two hours at the shopping centre, alone, before my legs felt tired and my head started to feel heavy. By the time I got home, it was time for lunch and Nuaim was asleep. I spent the rest of the day watching TV and finishing the book, and Nuaim was left in the company of the maids. I know it was selfish of me, but I felt I deserved some 'me' time. Besides, I stil have a whole day tomorrow (or is it today now?) to spend with him, and I do need my rest, which is difficult to get with Nuaim.

And yet here I am, lamenting how my private moments with my firstborn have swiftly gone by, to be replaced soon with the arrival of another baby, with whom I shall be recreating scenes of crying fits and diaper changes throughout sleepless nights. Will I sing the same songs I used to sing to Nuaim in my attempts to cajole him to catch few winks? Will I still whisper the same words of advice, hoping he'll grow up to become a good Muslim, obedient to his parents, the way I did that one night during confinement when Nuaim just would not stop crying and ended up putting both Hubby and me in a terrible mood? Will I count his fingers in the same four languages as I did when Nuaim used to suck contented from my bosom? And what will Nuaim feel when he sees this new baby in my arms?

Or will I keep these memories only for Nuaim and myself, refusing to share them even with his sibling(s), instead creating new memories with different songs, different toys and different tactics (I'm still stuck with the ability to count in only four languages, and only from 1 to 10), even assigning different caregivers?

The tears have not stopped. But for tonight a least, I shall hold him tight in my arms and not let go.

Wednesday 15 February 2006

Temporarily Empty Nest

It had rained yesterday afternoon, and I had had an after-work appointment with an insurance consultant who was going like a bullet train, she gave me such a hard time to interject and ask questions (is this common to all insurance consultants/ sales people in general?). Anyway, by the time we reached Mak's house, it was just in time for Maghrib and dinner.

It was Mak's turn to have a 'Kutu' gathering yesterday, which usually means lots of good stuff to eat. As it turned out, the menu was 'Nasi Dagang Terengganu' (the beras pulut version) with kerutuk ayam, gulai udang and gulai ikan tongkol. There was also pengat pisang for dessert. I would have also sampled the rojak pasembor, but by then it had gone off a bit so I'll have to satisfy my craving for it some other day.

Anyway, after a satisfying meal, Maghrib prayers and generally just lounging about (as anyone is wont to do when they go back to their parents' house), we decided to call it a night and head back home around 9 p.m. Nuaim, however, had other ideas. When I told him we were leaving, instead of heading towards the door as he normally does, he went to Mak instead, pushing me away and saying, "Bye Bye, Ummi!"

I thought he was just joking then, but when I told Hubby and we both called out to him, he just totally ignored us and started getting Mak to play Hide-and-Seek with him instead. Oh well, I thought, if you want to stay the night at your grandma's house it's fine with me. At least I'll be able to get a good night's sleep and my nipples would be spared from mutilation by a 20-month-old toddler's very sharp teeth (yes, at his age and my pregnancy, Nuaim still insists on being breastfed to sleep!).

As we drove into our carpark, Hubby commented, "It's so quiet."

By the time we were back in the condo, it was a relief to be able to totally relax and do the whole wash-tone-moisturise face-cleansing routine without Nuaim crying for attention, but only temporarily. Before long, we found ourselves filling the silence with anecdotes of Nuaim's amusing antics in the past few days.

So this is what it feels like when the children have left. And it was only for one night...

Oh, BTW, it's high time I put a picture of this little adorable monster on the blog. Maybe I'm biased, being his mother and all that, but you tell me, how can you resist such an angel?

Thursday 2 February 2006

A Recipe for Chick & Dill

The long holiday (CNY plus Maal Hijrah plus FT Day) has put me in a culinary mood. I spent a couple of days poring over my recipe books, looking at all the ones I haven't tried yet (and there are loads,I tell you!). Actually I'm itching to buy a new book - they're wonderfully good to read, and even helped me score some points in a quiz back in uni! But I promised hubby that I'll try each recipe at least once before I buy another book, and since I don't cook that often (and when I do I don't always succeed) it's gonna be a long time till a recipe book features in my MPH receipt!

Anyway, one of the books I already own featured Roast Chicken with Rosemary, which I've never tried but looked easy enough to make. So off we went to Tesco to buy the ingredients for the chicken dish (chicken, rosemary, lemon, potatoes) and load up on Bonuslink points in the process (I'm a loyalty card junkie, so kill me!).

Tesco had a selection of fresh herbs in packets. I was a bit disappointed as I was looking forward to the potted variety where I could line them up on my kitchen counter - like I really have all the space in the world for a row of potted kitchen herbs! The herb shelf listed rosemary, dill, tarragon and a few others. What they didn't have was the name of the herb on the packet itself. As if we Malaysians know our Western herbs that well! So I made a guess and picked up a packet, hoping it was the right one.

The next day, I promised Mak to have dinner at her place, since it was Maal Hijrah and she invited us to break fast with her (Hubby fasted, I didn't). I made lasagna (first time too!) and decided to put in some of the fresh herb I bought. I took a sniff at the stuff - didn't seem to have such a strong smell, so picked quite a bunch. When I started chopping it up though, the aroma filled my not-so-big kitchen. It smelt familiar, and since I don't know what rosemary smells like, it's definitely not rosemary. I decided to just chuck everything into the meat sauce and hoped for the best.

No one complained about the lasagna, in fact my sisters actually liked it. But the herb (which I later identified as dill) was too pungent for me in the lasagna, as I prefer it with fish. I'm hoping it will still go well with chicken, because I've got loads of dill and chicken but no fish. So just to remind myself of the two herbs, I got pictures off the internet:


This is DILL.


And this is ROSEMARY.

I need to get a chart with pictures of all the different herbs and spices so I get them right next time. Five more recipe books to go!