Guest blogger Jehan Mohd ponders the old year as the new one approaches.
We’ve come to that time of the year
where we take stock of our lives and make up lists of resolutions
which will inevitably go out the window within the first month or so.
Next year being 2012 brings an interesting twist, though. Looking up
the significance of the year yields hundreds of thousands of results
but one thing that seems to come up in various interpretations is
that 2012 is supposed to be a time of great change.
Despite its significance, I’m
approaching 2012 as any other year as my ‘year of change’ had
crept in slowly this year, the year I turned 32 — and I had never
anticipated anything big happening in my 33rd year of existence.
How does my age come into play? I blame
it on my affinity for numbers.
I have always believed in the power of
numbers — not in the way that makes me good with them or even like
the subject of Mathematics (I failed Maths in primary school,
spurring my parents to cart me off to tuition with my more
numerically-literate teenaged sisters, making me the youngest kid my
tuition teacher accepted).
No, perhaps the best way to describe my
attraction to numbers is through popular culture — the concepts of
sweet 16, being legal at 18, gaining independence at 21, etc. were
implanted in my mind from early on thanks to Hollywood movies and the
popular teenage fiction of my growing up years. As such I always
looked to certain birthdays as markers of great change in my life —
even if they didn’t always turn out the way I thought they would.
At age 16, I still went to the same
secondary school I had been going to my whole teenage life and had no
birthday party out of the ordinary family celebration.
My first home away from home - Methodist Ladies' College (MLC) in Claremont, Perth, Western Australia. It debunked my idea of boarding schools as written in Enid Blyton's Malory Towers series. |
My 17th year, though, brought about the
first major upheaval in my life. It was the first time I left my home
in Singapore for studies in Australia — I did pre-university
studies as a boarder of a well-established boarding school in Perth,
Western Australia. It was the age I realised that the world was much
bigger than my island homeland (there was nary news on Singapore in
the Australian papers and more than one Aussie had asked me if
Singapore was part of China). I also discovered homosexuality,
through media (think movies 'Jeffrey', 'The Birdcage' and 'The
Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert' and Australian writer,
actor, and activist Timothy Conigrave's memoir, 'Holding the Man' -
all of which remain among my favourites films and literature to this
day).
At 18, I was able to watch ‘R’
rated movies (in Australia, not in Singapore, which had set the age
for ‘R’ rated movies at 21) and could legally drink and smoke
(would have been great if I actually did drink and smoke). But aside
from having a boyfriend for the first time (in a mostly long-distance
relationship), this year was again a normal one.
It was at the age of 19 that I left my
homeland for the last time to settle in my new home called Malaysia
when I joined a college here. And it was at this age that I became
good friends with lecturers who treated me as an adult, became better
acquainted with homosexuality (among some good friends) and went
clubbing for the first time (to a gay club, no less!). The innocuous
19th year proved to be a major year of breaking out.
At 21, I was doing my final year of
university in Australia, learning painful lessons of family,
friendships and betrayal while I plotted ways to work and live there
after graduation — it didn’t happen.
It was at the seemingly normal age of
22 that I met the man who would become my best friend and husband.
I thought that 30 would be the year
that my life would be “complete” — I would have been married
for a few years, would have had my first child and would have all the
knowledge that adults seem to possess (I have no idea how I came to
this conclusion for the number 30 but ‘Sex and the City’ keeps
popping up in my head when I think of this number).
I turned 30 two years ago — no “great
revelation” came to me the morning I woke up on my birthday that
year. I had the husband, but no kid and no all-encompassing adult
knowledge of the world — and it was just like any other normal
year. Heck, no bolt of lightning hit me on my birthday the following
couple of years either.
But something suddenly clicked in me
sometime this year, on some mundane, normal day (i.e. not my
birthday, anniversary or any other significant date) and I’ve
started doing things that would normally be tasks people undertake
diligently at the start of the year as part of their New Year’s
resolutions.
I started taking stock of my life and making concrete plans for things I actually want to do with my time.
I started taking stock of my life and making concrete plans for things I actually want to do with my time.
I started hitting the gym —
semi-regularly — and paying for personal training sessions
(something I had never wanted to commit to in the past).
I applied to join a fantastic study
programme that would have taken me away from the bosom of my family
for two months — and got rejected (I’ve never been one to even
try things like this before — my inherited pessimism and the fear
of rejection ensured I never left my comfort zone).
After a bout of self-pity and
dejection, I realised that the rejection was not the end of the
world. And this was something cemented at a recent assignment I had
where I interviewed Shawn Kelly and Carlos Baena, two brilliant
animators from Industrial Light & Magic (think George Lucas and
Star Wars) and Pixar (no introduction needed).
They said that one of the key things an
animator needs is to not be afraid to fail. As Shawn Kelly says:
“Every time you fail, you learn a little bit and make your next
work a little bit better… You have to be willing to go through that
process.”
I reckon this goes for everything in
life — trying, failing, getting up and trying again.
2012, the year I turn 33, will, no doubt, hold lots of opportunities for me to try, fail and succeed… And it’ll bring about some changes, though whether big or small is anyone’s guess.
2012, the year I turn 33, will, no doubt, hold lots of opportunities for me to try, fail and succeed… And it’ll bring about some changes, though whether big or small is anyone’s guess.
I’m starting to realise that these
great changes tend to come at times we least expect it and that ideas
to take action can happen at any age.
It will be interesting to see what next
year has in store for us but I won’t hold my breath expecting great
things to happen (as I would have in the past). I’m going to go
about trying to make those things happen.
~~~~~~~
Top Milestones in the last 10 years
2001 (Age 22) — Graduated from university and got my first job as a lecturer at my old college in Malaysia; this was also where I met the man who would become my best friend and husband. The attack on the World Trade Center in New York and subsequent backlash against Muslims in Western countries affirmed my mom’s belief that I was better of returning to Malaysia to work rather than staying in Australia as I had initially wanted.
2003 (Age 24) — Left teaching to try public relations (although it was a short-lived three months), was unemployed for four months after leaving.
2004 (Age 25) — Joined the New Straits Times as a reporter (this marked the beginning of my longest-lasting job so far).
2005 (Age 26) — Got married.
2011 (Age 32) — Applied for a study programme (where I got rejected), started paying for personal training sessions and hitting the gym semi-regularly, started planning for life rather than letting life come at me.
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