it's been an eventful few weeks since my last post. haven't had the time, really, to update my blog and that just goes to show how my priorities have changed. but fear not... i'm planning to blog more often.
now, on to the pointless rambling:
army: 7 weeks of it has provided me with plenty of laughter and lessons. the people in my company are fantastic, from the instructors to the recruits to the support personnel. i made lots of friends and i hope to keep most of them.
from the first day itself, when i misread the instructions and went to the SAF ferry terminal in shorts, only to realise then that i had to report wearing trousers or jeans (i then proceeded to swap clothes with my dad in the toilet. amazingly, his shirt and trousers fit me pretty well. it was quite a laugh seeing my dad walk around tekong dressed in my clothes. he really looked out of place. kudos to him. that man never feels embarrassed and i'm proud of him. and very thankful.) to the remaining days, listening to the instructors talk amongst themselves and watching recruits do the stupidest things imaginable.
lots of little interesting/funny things happened too:
- my buddy's name is rahul too. but he's one of the weakest recruits in the company. so he's always getting yelled at and sometimes i don't know who my sergeant is yelling at. gotta watch the eyes.
- turns out that abiel and prashanth used to be in my company.. same platoon, same section. .. and i'm in the same bed that prashanth was in. freaky coincidence. prashanth was company 2nd best and abiel was best physical trainee.
- the lady in charge of the cookhouse came down to give a talk and at the end of it she showed us pictures of what the cookhouse was like before our time, when it hadn't yet been commercialised. one of the recruits asked her which year these photographs were taken. she thought for a long while before proudly answering, "Before commercialise."
- my sectionmate yansheng was asked why we need to work together as a team and he was convinced that it was because "we are sleeping together."
- another one of my sectionmates, samson tan, (he's half dutch, half chinese) is a black man. he really is. he can rap really well, he wears his shorts so low that it'd make an AC boy blush and he does fantastic grafitti work.
- they serve the exact same mutton dish every single day in the muslim cookhouse but they change the name everytime. it's been called "mutton mysore", "mutton madras", "mutton bombay", "mutton semur", "mutton rendang" and "mutton satay." and it's the same thing everytime (with the exception of mutton satay, which gives the mutton dish a whole new, unique twist by having the pieces skewered onto a stick.)
- my platoon sergeant can jump 216cm using only one leg, so my friend bing kun (we call him biscuit because his name sounds like the word for that in chinese) asked him with a wry smile if he can jump 432cm with both legs.
- strangely, it's a nice feeling watching platoons march across and past one another just nicely such that they don't have to slow down or stop to give way. it's especially sweet when they turn just in time.
- my malaysian sectionmate chinyi wanted to borrow my shoes in a hurry so that he could rush downstairs. i asked him for what, and he replied that something of his dropped down. i asked what had dropped down and his reply: "my panties."
- i named the cat that roams around the muslim cookhouse "sergeant major." coincidentally, his lifestyle resembles that of my company's sergeant major (the sergeant in charge of discipline and regimentation.)
- one of the platoon 3 guys has the most jumbled up mind ever. he led one of the warm up exercises and shouted out this instruction: "everyone, on your butts... up!"
- my company's smokers came up with a smoker's pledge that was taken almost wholesale from our country's one, with some choice additions: "so as to achieve equality in protein and nicotine."
- during a match between the instructors from our company (kilo) and alpha, one of the platoon 3 guys yelled a taunt at the shortest alpha player on the pitch: "hey! stand up and play lah!"
- we watched a pirated copy of xmen in the lecture theatre during our free time and samson and i spent the majority of the film laughing at the ridiculous subtitling. examples:
"incredible nightcrawler" ----> "incredible black clown"
"we've got to stop cerebro" ----> "we've got to stop the Vibro"
- during a first aid talk, sergeant redzuan, with the straightest face imaginable (i mean, he was convinced that this was not very obvious and that he had to tell us about this amazing detail or else it might cost someone's life.), informed us that one of the signs of severe bleeding (we're talking really severe here.) is the casualty complaining that he/she feels sick and more crucially, they suffer from (god forbid!) restlessness and thirst.
- i realised that the deeper you go into bmt.. army people slowly stop giving you the benefit of the doubt.