Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Recharging my batteries

My dad just messaged me this today - Your car battery is recharged. It is time to charge your own life battery.

It has been 7 days since my last blog. I do not know what happened in between, but time flies so quickly that I forget sometimes who what where I am. Before I know it, it is October of the year, and another birthday coming up in a months time, and another fasting month has started, and 3 more months to end of the year. It is indeed frightening the speed of time.

I really need to recharge my own battery.

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Fantastic Coverage of Terry Fox Run in Pictures

Outstanding shots from Jeff Ooi and Lensa Malaysia team at Terry Fox run and very interesting write-up on Jeff Ooi's report on the summons....! It would've been impossible to fit 4500 cars in KL near Lake Gardens area (assuming two a car on average), as it turned out the number of people were 9000! Furthermore, the earlier Mizuno race meant that majority of the "good" parking space at Bukit Aman were all taken up!

Luckily we escaped the summons, despite being parked right outside the door on yellow line of the police station near Bukit Aman for the earlier Mizuno race.

Screenshots

Lensa Malaysia (many pages of photos-click back and forth)

Good to see the "photographers" were actively clicking on that day, I noticed everyone pulled out their "big guns"...

Sunday, September 17, 2006

Mizuno Wave Run and Terry Fox Run - Aftermath

Mizuno Wave Run 10km 7:30am
I saw the big shoe again, and it reminded me I have only been competitively running for about 1 year+. Last year, after the Mt KK trip (Aug 31st!), followed by the KL Rat Race 2005, I was motivated to running races, and did a spate of races after that, starting from 10km and finally to the 21km at KLIM.

This year, the Mizuno Wave Run 10km was the same route as last year, and I had put on a little weight since last year, and also not as fit as before, though the passion was still there! I arrived at the drinks (nearly halfway mark) quite pumped up and with good speed, only to be fallen by the "double hill" track following the drinks station. To be honest, I suck so badly at uphill because of stamina, and also the motivation "mind over matter"...! So I walked up the uphills part. The only consolation I had was that I finished the last 2km fairly strongly because of the flat and downhill parts and I was also motivated by the need to do it in 1hr 15min to run over for the Terry Fox run nearby!

On arrival at the finishing line (around 1:12-bad time, position 152 of ladies), to my surprise, my buddies were gone!!! I hung around, looked at the long drinks queue and finally settled for the bottled water in the goodies bag - and still no sight of my fellow running buddies whom I came with! Slightly cursing my slowness, I started moving to the Lake Garden area at around 8:55am, thinking that 5 mins would be sufficient.

Terry Fox Run 2006
The crowd here was shocking - there were too many people !!! It was good for the cancer research foundation, but not good for the race - people generally took off before the flag off, and most people took the wrong route because of following the others - and the beginning one has to walk because there were just too many people. I think there must have been about 3000 people there, because they sold 3000+ shirts.

Nevertheless, I am glad I took the family route with a friend, as my feet were really sore/blister was slightly bothering me after the Mizuno race, and the late start time of this Terry Fox race ensured that the sun was full blast out.

Aftermath : Arrived home and slept for 4 hrs. Feet and body recovered after that!!!

Am thinking - how to consider (yes, I am just considering) to run the Singapore Half Marathon with fitness like that? I've got to lose a few kgs and do about 40-50km a week within the next two months to even consider this.

Saturday, September 16, 2006

My Father Graduates!




It was a very meaningful day for my dad today. He obtained a Certifate for the Certified Business Coach course with the Universiti Malaya Center for Continuous Education (UMCCed). This was the inaugural year for this course and it coincided with my own company's efforts to teach us to be "coaches" rather than managers, so it was a parallel track for my dad, who at the grand age of 60 something, was able to "graduate" for the first time in his life. What a feeling it must be for him! As a daughter, I am proud of my own father's efforts for lifelong learning, especially on his interest in human development, and also coaching to help others.

On a separate thought, it was my first visit, and a rather switch of roles (as the "ibubapa" instead of the "graduan", to the Dewan Tengku Chancelor as it was in this legendary hall, I have heard all of our local UM graduates has emerged.

My observations were rather strange of this occasion - that the diploma and certificate holders (post graduate and for working people to continue their education) were heavily skewed in race. A great 90% of the majority were Malays, whilst other races made up the rest of the graduates, strangely not reflecting our national race distribution profile. It is perhaps food for thought on why this is the case.

Continuous education should be on everyone's mind, and is indeed a reflection of the person's commitment to education, and a great example for our next generation.

Friday, September 15, 2006

Youngest World Golf Champion - My debut as a photographer?


A few weeks ago, I was asked by my friend to participate in an interview of a magazine with the youngest world golf champion from Malaysia. She requested for me to take photos for the cover of the magazine!

Whilst I was ecstatic about the "opportunity", I really had no idea how to take portrait shots. So, lugging my Nikon D70s to the golf course practice green at a local course in Shah Alam early one Saturday morning, I met a small young boy.

His determination amazes me. He is but 6 years old, but each shot was measured and all the pitch shots hit the green within a foot of the pin.

But when asking him more detail questions, his shyness really showed his youth.

Would you train your kid to be a professional golfer? I think this is a very mental sport - you are playing against yourself and is indeed a great character building for a young child.

Postscript - I took really poor shots with my Nikon using the kit lens. In my haste and short notice of this "free" photographer work, I did not have time to analyse how other covers looked like. If I had known, I would have taken the zoom lens or the 50mm for a more larger focus shot, or even (if it was possible), asked the kid to pose. All the adults shown in magazine shots posed!!! So, this was a great lesson learnt. However, I was later told by my friend that she will feature my shot in her cover, so I am waiting and holding my breath. You will know when it is out, as it is indeed my debut amateur work.

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Hostage at The Table

Today my MD passed us a book each. It was called Hostage at The Table. In the Leadership Development Program training I underwent last year, the author actually spoke about his experiences and did say he was going to write a book about it.

I recalled clearly a few key themes of this book. The key message was that we were sometimes taken hostage by our "clients" and also people we deal with. In a hostage situation we tend to react emotionally. And the idea was to come clean with the issues instead of being taken hostage.

In a way, nobody has all the answers to everything. And as leaders we will have to overcome odds to bring our best to the table.

I will read this book and pass it on. I consider this an exception to my non-receipt of books as gifts - the gift of a book is a very non-Chinese thing. But there are always exception. I will put a post-mortem here on the outcome of this book.

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Nearly Famous II

The momentary fame from the rat race has not receded. The key learnings I had from there is that marketing is a great art form - to make yourself stand out and be featured is itself an art, especially if you know you cannot run faster than others!!!

The Edge featured a 16 page spread of the Rat Race 2006 in last weekends edition. It was great publicity for us as it featured our photo with a caption "Accenture in the driver's seat!" and a short commentary from Joan Hoi for being the only female rep in the CEO race.

Furthermore, Pacesetters had kindly featured my longer race report in their homepage - this is indeed the first time I had written a "serious" race report!!! Pls click here for report on Pacesetters homepage.

Meanwhile, this weekend I hope to see you at the Mizuno Wave Run, followed by the Terry Fox Run!

Sunday, September 10, 2006

The Power of the Nikon Zoom Lens at A Ballet Recital

A respite from serious stuff, running and a bit of non-conventional fare ...

I attended my niece's ballet recital a few weeks back, on the 26th August. This was a charity event held at the PJ Civic Center, organised by the various branches of the Lee Lee Lan school of ballet (a very famous dance school which I've heard of even when I was young).

The instructions on the leaflet mentioned to not have cameras with flash and video recorders - so I brought along my Nikon D70s, and comfortably (and lazily) sitting in a good position in the middle about 10 rows from the stage, I had a good position to use my 200mm zoom - without flash - it captured an outstanding set of pictures - the ones pasted here are already sized down to 100k from the full 6MP I set it on.

Most of all - it was a spectacular evening of dances, and I managed to capture my little niece on stage!








Pict 1- Lee Lee Lan on the stage after the concert

Pict 2- A more teenage pair doing a duet

Pict 3- The flexible young ballerina

Pict 4- The girl in the center is my niece! (doing a broadway piece)

Pict 5- What is a ballet without a piroutte (is that how it is spelled?)

Thursday, September 07, 2006

The Edge-Bursa Rat Race



What a RACE!!!

Click here for photos

I had a blast of a time, we ran together, non-stop, in ridiculous looking props and gadgets dreamt up to signify our "solution" specialist (which none of the bystanders understood, but they all cheered us anyway)!!!

We heckled other teams, chatted whilst waiting for the CEO race, took promo pictures, and best of all, ran together as a team - single file, slowed down to take picture with our supporters in KLCC and acknowledged all the people on the road side. And ran the 4.5 km and arrived in a single file!!! Excellent teamwork!

Photo - This was taken just moments before it rained!!! We spent a good one hour last minute to pull together our "props" for this event.

Accenture imagination at work (we had 3 placards - one before race, one during race, and one after race - this was before race):
Boss (looking like going shopping!)

(Marcus) Driver - Relax lah, 1hr before submission
(Me) Sales Rep - How does my make up look? Pretty Right?
(Shahariz) Financial Rep - Should I add another zero
(Kell Jay) Tech Guru - This is the best solution I've done
(Azlan) Intern - So Tired! Spent all night printing proposal

The full set is reproduced below here... copyright protected!!!

See you next year!!!!

Monday, September 04, 2006

Black Friday


I have had a horrible weekend starting from Friday. Everything has not turned out well.

I had a car accident on Friday morning going to work at the LDP. The car in front of me took an emergency break because a taxi in front of him stopped and turned left suddenly. I also took an emergency brake, but I could not stop in time.

I was lucky to escape unhurt. I was calm, but really scared for a good five minutes. They say, this is the 7th month of the chinese calendar, it is the month of the hungry ghost.

I remember a split second that I could see the car's behind coming up and knew I was going to hit it. That split second was quite terrifying because you can see it coming, but cannot do anything.

After a police report in the morning, and back home, I went back to work in the afternoon. I am now grounded without a car, but one nice friend loaned me his car just now, and I am back with transport.

But the episode really scared me. There are many what if's that could have surfaced, and from picture it looks badly smashed, but really, am I appreciating the what if of life? And how precious each moment is? Why I can only think of work?

I am chilled by my own coldness towards my own most priceless asset - my life.

Yesterday I woke up with a severe whip lash on my neck and back, and was reminded of the what-ifs again. What I really need is a break.

Luckily I am recovered from my whip lash, and should still be able to run tomorrow's rat race.

Scold me if you see me. I need a wake up call seriously. For not appreciating life enough.