Sunday, January 30, 2005

I'm back. So much to share but so little time right now. For those who are still wondering when I'm flying back to oz, it's tomorrow night. SQ 237, T2, 2320hrs. Will probably be at the airport around 2120hrs. More about the aceh trip when time permits. :)

Tuesday, January 25, 2005

She's been really busy.



Day 2 - "We saw about 416 patients today n I'm so tired now I can hardly move".



On top of that, there've been tremors. They don't seem to be reported much in the main media apart from the one in Sulawesi. Day 3 - " "More earthquakes today. Three in fact. One of them happened in the midst of surgery. We were contemplating whether to run or not."



And as if things aren't bad enough, fires are breaking out.



Well, that aside, we'll be back in our adopted country in a week's time. Looking forward to seeing the furball again. A good chance for shirley to rest after her mission as well. And speaking of melbourne, it's nice to see that even though they're not as near as some countries, the state government has the compassion and ability to send (and pay) volunteers. See Mission for medics

Saturday, January 22, 2005

Yup. She's gone. Flew to medan this morning and she should be halfway through a 12-hour bus journey to aceh. From what I hear, it sounds like this is the most dangerous part of the trip. *shudder*



Thursday, January 20, 2005

Banda Aceh, here I come !



Departure date: 22 Jan

Return date: 30 Jan (hopefully alive) :P



Packing almost completed. Now the question is: TO CUT or NOT TO CUT ?? :P

Tuesday, January 18, 2005

I'm not sure you'll believe me this time but I'm tellling you that I'm flying off to Aceh this Saturday. Will be coming back (hopefully, in one piece) on the 29th. No details of flight yet but will start repacking all that I've unpacked (being the kiasu Singaporean I am). :P

Wednesday, January 12, 2005

Trip to Aceh called off. Apparently, SAF deems the place too risky to enter and is sending an "assessment" team there first instead. But don't take my word for it. Who knows what my next update might be. *shrug*

Tuesday, January 11, 2005

Further evidence for information overload => shorter attention span theory.



Music videos.



While waiting for wife outside HMV today, I realised something. Music videos nowadays involve so many more scenes of the singer, singing the same song, but in different scenarios, with different actors/actresses etc. The original MTVs such as American Bandstand etc, basically had one camera on a long shot of the band, one close up of the lead singer and one on the audience.



I'd imagine at some stage in the future, my kids are gonna watch MTVs with 3 different scenes every second...
Urgh. More changes. Mission to Aceh postponed to Friday and shortened to one week only. On the bright side, I get to go kbox-ing with the girls tomorrow ! ;)

Monday, January 10, 2005

Not Sri Lanka but Aceh. That's how fast plans change. Last I heard - I'll be flying on Wed which leaves me less than 24 hr to pack. Gah.

Sunday, January 9, 2005

If you're not in the mood for rambling, just scroll down to the end.



Over a conversation today with friends, the unavoidable topic of the tsunami came up. However, it took an interesting twist when we started discussing the media coverage of the topic. It helps that one of the parties in the discussion was french, and thus forced us to take an international perspective on the matter. It appears that from a general (non-statistical) content analysis, it would appear that "we" are talking the matter to death.



I'm not sure if it's fair to say this but from what I gather, the information age brings with it an interesting and disturbing phenomenon - the flavour of the minute.



Now this isn't to imply that the tsunami wasn't devastating enough to warrant large-scale coverage on the news, nor that the efforts and contributions of each organisation and party brave enough to volunteer and contribute should go unnoticed. But the speed of information being delivered has increased significantly and concurrently, economic and business cycles have been shown to become shorter and shorter. I think it's apparent that a by-product of this is that the news has moved more towards 'entertainment' in a bid to provide a massive flood of information when it's relevant, and when there appears to be nothing new to report, the media head elsewhere.



Eventually, this only serves to promote a sensationalist media, aiming to focus on the next scandal or 'big story' that comes along. Already, the google news website has relegated the tsunami disaster below Brad and Jen's split.



To further illustrate this I tried a small experiment.



I typed in 'afghanistan' under news.google.com and came up with about 34,800 results. 'Iraq' had 160,000 results. 'Tsunami' had 138,000 results.



This 'test' is based on the assumption that the google news search engine uses the same parameters for these three searches, especially in terms of time frame and ignores inherent biases of geographical distributions (i.e. more news websites tend to be US-focussed)



What I infer from this is that while iraq, which was until recently the 'flavour', has ceded its post to the tsunami, which has almost caught up in numbers of news reports, in just a few days. This should be considered keeping in mind that the tsunami happened only days ago while iraq has been going on since march 2005.



Then again, this could reflect the number of casualties involved, or the increasing media prominence of asian countries. But the situation in darfur which only recently saw 70,000 lives deliberatly extinguished only garnered 6,480 hits, clearly a disproportionate figure.



I'm probably wrong in this, but I can't help but wonder if the outpouring of generosity in this scenario could be better utilised if all resources (i.e. donations) garnered weren't purely spent on the current issue at hand. Imagine how much could be done for the general global population if some of this money went to displaced refugees, or towards reearch towards averting an outbreak of the next big virus.



Back to my original assertion - the speed at which information is being delivered and shaped seems to lead towards a culture of constantly demanding more. And as our lives are lived moving from one 'flavour' to another, to get a regular 'fix' of new fads or gizmos, we are hurtling at breakneck speed towards a culture of unsustainability.



Things get started, but not ended.



I think I'm probably a good example of this. My bad habit has always been to think of ideas and plans, and not carry them out. Guess my new year's resolutions are to be aware of this, and #1, pick and choose plans more carefully, and #2, carry out the ones I really think should be executed - a regular "idea cull" so to speak.



Sorry for rambling. Hope you find out what caused the hives gerry. And for everyone who skipped straight to this bit, please say a prayer for my wife who will soon bravely head to sri lanka (with my blessing). I hope she learns the lesson of realising how fortunate she is - something I'm still trying to learn.

Saturday, January 8, 2005

I'm probably leaving for Sri Lanka on the 16th (Sun). Not confirmed yet but most likely. There's not much info given to me as the focus is really on the first medical relief team who is over there right now. Watch this space for more updates. ;)

Sunday, January 2, 2005

Wife signed up to help in the relief effort for tsunami victims. She might need help in raising funds to pay for her trip. If you're keen to help, please drop me a mail. Apparently they need medical staff over there and she might actually be able to put her nurse training to good use especially in this time of need.

Saturday, January 1, 2005

This morning, the significant other and myself trooped enthusiatically to SPH as volunteers for the tsunami disaster. They needed help to pack all the donations into boxes so that that the supplies could be shipped over to Sri Lanka/Aceh. But imagine our surprise when the security guard turned us away because there were TOO MANY volunteers. "A few hundred inside oredi lah!" he proclaimed. How can one have too many volunteers ?!!!!!!!!!