I woke up a very sick person this morning with a runny nose followed by a fever. The entire morning went by quite horribly until I woke up from an uncomfortable nap in the afternoon to check my Facebook on my phone.
To find out that other Starstruck! writers were squealing about getting the internship.
The first thought that came to mind was, what! when! where! how! and then I proceeded to check my email because that would be the logical thing to do…and found no email. The whole time, I kept on repeating to myself that whatever happens, do not be disappointed, but despite that I still felt disappointed because most people I know from Starstruck! (Amanda, Ju Mei, Ellora) got the internship. And then I told myself, it’s alright, you should’ve seen this coming anyway.
And then for some reason, I had an urge to check my old email inbox, the email address which I first used for my Starstruck! assignments. I didn’t know what I was expecting because the whole time I logged into Yahoo! with my old email address, my head was filled with desperate and contradicting thoughts like “please please please let the email be there” and “don’t be disappointed, don’t expect anything” because that was my constant motto, to never harbour any expectations. And when the Yahoo! mailbox page loaded, guess what I saw…!!!
I AM NOW OFFICIALLY AN INTERN FOR THE STAR NEWSPAPER FOR A MONTH!
So that will mean I will be staying in KL alone (well not really alone as in one-person but alone as in without my parents) for a month from the 21st of November to 20th of December and I will be working at Menara Star as a journalist intern within the heart of the newspaper itself.
Needless to say, I was jumping with joy after that and it was like déjà vu all over again.
However, despite the joy of finally having earned something valuable after months of desperate deadlines and mind-crushing assignments, the idea of going to KL for the internship and living alone is frightening, doubled by my introverted personality. It’s going to be a mad world out there, and I don’t know what it’ll do to my “fragile” sixteen-year-old soul.
Now, barely two months away from the internship in Malaysia’s NYC, I see this as a huge turning point in my life. And I know, despite the scary premonitions and predictions, I wouldn’t miss it for anything.
Before I go, here’s a note to my fellow Starstruck! writers since our Starstruck! journey is finally and actually coming to an end:
Dear all, each and everyone of you,
You are all such amazing people, such amazing writers, to be exact. I know I haven’t been the friendliest one of the bunch, and I also know attributing my unfriendliness to my introversion sounds like a lame excuse, but that is the reason I keep to myself most of the time. It doesn’t mean I don’t want to mix around with you guys (quite the opposite, actually), and I certainly hope you guys don’t pass it off as arrogance or snobbishness because to be honest, I don’t really have much to be arrogant or proud of, since most writers on the Starstruck! programme are definitely more talented than I am. I’m still trying to work on my hermit personality.
You don’t know how thankful I am, though, that I have come to know quite a number of amazing new friends through Starstruck! Those crazy chats and the random thingmajigs that go on on the Starstruck! 40 Facebook group wall. Missing the meet-up at Menara Star in June this year was one of the most regretful decisions I’ve made, but I still cling on to the hope that I get to meet each of my fellow Starstruckers someday in the future. (I guess you can say meeting Amanda is my first step forward to that goal.)
To the masterminds behind Stuff@School, thank you for giving me the opportunity to participate in this eye-opening young journalist programme. As I’d once told Amanda, before Starstruck!, I was safe within the confines of my tiny home in the equally tiny town of Alor Setar, believing that I had what it takes, but after Starstruck!, I realised there was much more to it than I’d thought. I now get a sense of what I might want to be in the future, and I am positive the internship will be an even more helpful guide as I wade through the murky waters of the journalism world.
Before I leave, a very heartfelt congratulations to the other upper secondary writers who also got the internship: Alicia, Eibhlin, Amelia, Ann-Marie, Claire, Ju Mei, Min Hui, Ellora, June, Najihah, Kathy, Vincent, Kyle, Paik Suan and Amanda New York City!
Before this post is photobombed, I reckon a short description shall suffice. Our school held a raya celebration in school this morning, and as expected, it consisted of us goofing around, eating, laughing, running around, and not to mention loads of photo-taking.
Photo (c) Benei. Yours truly with Anum.Photo (c) Benei. Yours truly, Anum, Lut and Ena.Photo (c) Benei. Okay, I know this is blur but I kind of like it. All the prefects plus the headmistress.Photo (c) Benei. Benei and yours truly.Photo (c) Benei. Yours truly and Aifa.Photo (c) Benei. Eah and Benei. (THEY ARE SO CUTE.)Photo (c) Benei. Food!Photo (c) Leea. Aifa, Lut, Anum.Photo (c) Jia Huan. The Chinese kids! (The cross-legged hand-stacked pose was very much intended!)Photo (c) Put. Fatin, yours truly and Aryna.Photo (c) Lela. Benei and yours truly.
And then Lela brought out her Polaroid camera and started a frenzy!
Photo (c) Benei. (Up) Anum, Lela and Leea. (Down) Lut, Leea, Anum, Lela, Ena, Benei and yours truly.Photo (c) Benei.Photo (c) Benei. (Polaroid) Benei, Lela, yours truly and Anum at the top.Photo (c) Benei. (Front) Lela, Ena, Benei and Anum (Back) Yours truly, Lut and Leea
Okay, short post on my orthodontic visit last Friday (because I have a new one coming up).
That Friday, I was particularly excited (and admittedly nervous) about my Penang trip because I would be meeting Amanda Ng, a fellow Starstruck! writer later at Gurney Plaza. She would be the first Starstruck! writer I met in real life, and I was never good with meeting new people so I was pretty frightened, to be honest.
I changed my braces to dark blue and lime green to match my baju kurung’s colour for the upcoming school’s raya celebration.
I met up with Amanda at 12.30PM and well, it was kind of awkward (for me) at first, but I did my best to ‘de-shy’ myself, as I had promised Amanda earlier. We had lunch at Chicago Ribs after a series of “You pick what to eat!” “No, you pick!” and our conversations started off with the main thing we had in common– Starstruck! and we eventually ventured into topics concerning possible paths after graduation. This continued on as we went window shopping at Padini, Nichii and FOS before Amanda had to leave at 2PM. It wasn’t until I got into my Dad’s car before regretting not taking a photo with Amanda. Sigh.
However, it was honestly fun meeting up with Amanda, exchanging ideas and just, as Aifa would say, soksek-ing in general. Hopefully there would be more meet-ups with her in the future.
I know everyone (myself included) knows that I’m not a patriotic person. I don’t hate patriotic people, nor do I hate unpatriotic people. I don’t even know if I am able to label myself as someone who is on the fence, simply because I wouldn’t even have remembered it was Malaysia’s Independence Day today if it weren’t for the tweets on my Twitter timeline.
Namun, ini tidak bermakna aku benci negara saya, aku cuma tidak puas hati dengan pihak kerajaan yang mentadbir Malaysia. Apa gunanya benci negara awak sendiri padahal tanah, pokok, air dan lain-lain komponen ekosistem negara awak tidak pernah memudaratkan keselamatan ataupun kesihatan awak? (Tapi kadang-kala cuaca Malaysia ini memang teruk tahap maksimum lah.) Walaupun negara kita ini dilengkapi dengan banyak slogan seperti ‘Cemerlang, Gemilang, Terbilang’ (maaf kalau susunan tidak tepat) dan satu lagi yang lebih moden dari konsep 1Malaysia ‘Rakyat Didahulukan, Pencapaian Diutamakan’ (Konfesi: Aku terpaksa Google slogan itu bagi betul), tetapi ternyatalah kata kunci yang tertinggal ialah perkataan ‘Bijak’.
不满是不满,可是我还是很庆幸我是住在马来西亚的。虽然说这里的气候是够恐怖的,但是我庆幸这里没严重的天灾。而且,如果要与其他 “威武” 的国家比起,马来西亚可说是世界上最安全的国家(可是我的资料不可靠,你最好Google看)。而且,我也很庆幸能够认识那么多异族朋友,与他们一起平安,和谐地住在同一个屋顶下(how’s that for direct translation!) 。总的来说,我依然记得马来西亚在全世界眼中光荣的时刻,依稀马来西亚的人没那么笨。希望马来西亚还能够看见如此的天。
Don’t laugh. My Malay is the worst, I know, and my Mandarin is rusty from lack of usage. So I guess there you have it, my ‘something’ which is supposedly ‘special’. Oh and I would like to thank Google translate for lending a hand (or a translating software) for most of the Malay/Mandarin words used in this post, maybe he/she will help you in understanding this post too (but I have a feeling the translation’s going to come out all hilarious and funny).
EDIT: On second thought, don’t use Google translate. It makes me sound illiterate blagh. Try grabbing someone nearest to you who understands the language that you don’t?
To start off this post in the most traditional and uncreative way imaginable, I offer you a quote, “Great achievement is usually born of great sacrifice, and is never the result of selfishness.” by Napoleon Hill, a deceased American author.
I tend to imagine these ‘great achievements’ of mine in my head all the time, most of them revolving around a fantastic social life, considering how I slack rather despairingly in that department. I tend to imagine myself placed in the shoes of social butterflies who are constantly surrounded by friends and are easily liked even by strangers. But try as I may to perfect the art of Making Everyone Like You, I always fail, and that’s when I realised the major flaw in my equation, as pointed out by Mr Napoleon Hill.
I’ve been selfish. In fact, I am selfish. I constantly whine about my social life and how no one ever seems to be there when I myself fail terribly as a friend, never being there for my friends. And so that’s where I figured out my lack of the key ingredient which is the supposed ‘great sacrifice’ or even just ‘selflessness’. I expect people to be there when I need a shoulder to cry on but have I ever done the same? No. I expect people to be there to share great news with but have I ever done the same? Yet again, no. And even if I have, I have not done a good job of it.
But you know what? Everything I’ve ever done, I try my best to be selfless. I don’t put myself in any position to be mattered, but still I manage to be selfish. Because one way or another, my incapabilities often land me in sticky situations in which I often manage to escape by taking advantages of my friends.
And so for that, to each and everyone of you reading this, I’m sorry. I really, truly am.
Fun Fact! I spent wholly three minutes trying to come up with interesting titles that would grab readers’ attentions rather than over-the-top bland and hackneyed ones like ‘Trip To Penang’, ’19/8/2011 Penang Trip’ etc.
Post-Fun-Fact! This post will be rather photo-laden.
This is one of the rare moments I actually leave the hermit hole I’ve hidden in for quite some time to be ‘adventurous’ (however ‘adventurous’ I can get anyway). Thus, after much persuading on Pei Fong’s behalf, I agreed to join the one-day Penang trip organised by my school’s Chinese Society on the 19th of August, a Friday.
Admittedly, I felt rather sour that I had to wake up so early on a weekend, not to mention the relatively hollow feeling in my gut caused by much worry over how this trip would turn out. Would I have fun or would it be a waste of time? Worry, worry, worry. So when I got on the bus, I told myself sternly that I wouldn’t be a pessimistic for the day and would try -at the very least, try– to enjoy myself, no matter what happens. It turned out that it wasn’t a waste, after all.
(Back): Pei Fong, Jia Yee, Yu Han; (Front): Jia Huan, yours truly looking ever so royally hippie in that tie-dyed shawl, Chew Jie & Shi Qian
Most participants were Form Four students, followed by Form Two students and only one Form Three student. We stopped for breakfast at Butterworth before we continued to our first destination, the Pinang Peranakan Mansion.
Chew Jie!Yuen Ming & Pei Fong!I like how I've managed to fool everyone by my non-existent 'tallness'.
Before leaving, we visited the souvenir shop and despite knowing it’s a place where prices are set so, so high to kah tourists, I still bought four souvenirs that cost me a total of RM 20 as I realised that I had nothing for my debate team members who would be coming over for a discussion the next day.
After that, we headed for the Kwang Wah Yit Poh newspaper press headquarters, where we had an insight on the multiple gears functioning within the headquarters to produce daily papers for the Chinese folks of our country. I’m not sure if I’m allowed to describe the working scenes in the building as we were prohibited to snap any photos in it due to privacy reasons so I’m just going to say how the whole visit to the headquarters reminded me of the Starstruck! visit to Menara Star in June, which I didn’t get the chance to join. Billions of sighs.
After that, we had lunch at Sushi King at 1st Avenue and not only did we overeat, we also overspent. The ‘perks’ of being in total control of your wallet. Sigh.
Then, we visited the Chinese book exhibition at PISA but predictably, I didn’t buy anything there. The next and last stop was the most anticipated one of all: Queensbay Mall. Well, what do you expect from 38 rowdy teenagers who were ready to break their wallets into half for teenage-ish stuff like books, clothes, accessories, books, shoes, bags and did I mention books?! The first thing I did when we reached the mall was excuse myself from my friends to dash to Borders, and by the time Shi Qian, Pei Fong and Chew Jie were already done with their shopping, I wasn’t done with mine yet, because get this, the Borders outlet in Queensbay Mall Penang lost all of their Murakami books, so in the end I bought Life of Pi by Yann Martel, and that in itself took me a few hours because it was a ‘50% off for second book’ purchase but I couldn’t find any other second book with the same promotion that I wanted, so the 50% discount was considered obsolete in my case.
After that we had dinner at the food court at the topmost floor of the mall, which I’ve never been to before. Sadly, most of us (Vi-ven, Shi Qian, Pei Fong and yours truly) couldn’t finish our food because we were simply too full, and even Chew Jie and Jia Huan who finished theirs were bloated after that.
After dinner, we received an urgent phone call from Jia Yee calling us to meet them at Brands Outlet where we found out they only called us down so we could complete their ‘3 clothes for RM50’ purchase. Nah, just kidding, but that was partially truthful. After much frenzy over these purchases, we gathered at the main entrance and left Penang at around 8.30 PM.
I wouldn’t say this trip was ‘educational’ or ‘eye-opening’ (which I, truth be told, think is the main objective of this trip) but it was certainly very, very fun and it turned out I had nothing to worry about in the first place.
Okay, maybe this post is not really a public service announcement, BUT it is a post to err, promote my friend’s (who is currently returning to the wonderful world of writing and blogging!) blog. She is none other than the Aifa that I constantly mention in my recent posts, and she is, needless to say, awesome. Let’s all give her a warm welcome, shall we?
NOW PLAYING: AUGUST 28TH 3:30AM- AUTOMATIC LOVELETTER
Reveries of helplessness,Have left me all but hoping.
Prelusive warning: If you reckon some of the things I write don’t make sense, kindly ignore. These are the past-midnight ramblings of the restless.
Have you ever wondered if I were a thief? A thief that appeared in your life, and would soon disappear just as suddenly, stealing everything we’ve ever had together. That one day I would be gone from your lives altogether, a fugitive.
No, I’m not a thief, but I’ve wondered if there were any in my life. You’re probably thinking that I’m going crazy and that I don’t make sense at all and if that’s so, don’t worry, I think I kind of agree with you. I don’t know why those thoughts appeared in my mind, they just did. Sometimes I would wonder if (strictly no names at this hour! Who knows whose name I might spill…) A would just pack up and leave without warning, and I would just be left with empty regrets, regrets over what was now gone. Or maybe B would have a sudden change of heart, and whatever relationship we had would be sacrificed; or C would just leave the world, forever, just like that, and all these regretful moments would accumulate in an empty spot in my heart and soon it will grow like a tumour, until I finally succumb to the pain and ache of it all.
That’s it. I’m afraid of people leaving. Sometimes, I think of the future, and I think of the crossroads I would have to take, and also the inevitable, morbid phone calls that announce nothing but bad news, and then I think of…nothing. Of how we eventually fade to nothing. Sometimes you think your heart can’t ache anymore but it can. Sometimes you weep over the mere thought of unfortunate events and then you weep even more over the realisation of the pain that must inflict on you when said events eventually happen in the future. Because there is no way out, no fire exit, no Plan B, no second chance. What will come will come and you would just have to welcome them even if you have your arms folded.
I’m just afraid of people leaving. They always never fail to leave gaping holes in my heart, holes that are impossible to mend. I hope for the day when I focus more on my blessings than on my losses.
Modeled by Hui Ying, yours truly and Ching Ju. Photographed by my mum.
“Society teaches ‘don’t get raped’ rather than ‘don’t rape’.”
-Hilary Beaumont
The scenario in the Teoh’s household this evening: photoshoot first-timers, lots of giggling, awkward photo poses, an impatient photographer, “creative” brainstorms but most importantly, the ability to send our message across to the worldwide society.
Watch out for a future issue of Stuff@School in…the future.
In fact, what a coincidence. I just had a dream last night that Aifa, Alia and I went to some kind of HELP-similar debate competition in Singapore. But it wasn’t a great dream. It was quite horrible in fact, because I was unprepared -literally unprepared- for the competition. Typical nightmare of mine.
But I do miss debating. I told Aifa this sometime ago, and she said I just missed going to debates instead of really debating. Well, she did have a point. Debating gets you everywhere, and the people you meet at these kind of events get you to places as well. I’ve only been to one unofficial “friendly” debate and one official debate competition but I’ve gotten to know some very good friends from both matches. It’s a thrilling experience, oftentimes digging you out of the hermit hole you’ve made in that tiny town of yours.
Going to debates aside, I miss the verb debating itself as well. I miss staying up till late night, draining our brain juices (oh ho what fun times indeed!); I miss researching on brand new issues and topics I’ve never heard of before, and the joy of procuring new knowledge; I miss feeling scared before entering debating grounds; I miss coercing myself to sound loud and confident even though I clearly am scared out of my wits; I miss being able to take a stand and express my opinions about a certain issue; I miss leaving the ‘battlefield’ with a sense of pride that I have done something out of the ordinary, and I have done it well.
There’s just a really enthralling and adrenaline-inducing thrill to the art of debating. Sure, it is really, really stressful and tiring, but walking down reminiscence road, debating has been one of the highlights of this year.
Hence, armed with this newfound passion, we’ve decided to march into the wider field of debating grounds a new army with raw passion and determination next year, hoping for some victory battles, as well as passing on the debating vehemence and zeal to the generations after us.
It took me an abnormally long time to realise that one only matters if he or she is the best. Less than that, and you’re off the radar where people notice and appreciate you.
That’s the way with life. You only have one option to truly stand out: to be the best of the best, the cream of the crop, the pick of the bunch.
I see the truth in Effie’s words when she said being second earns you nothing at all. Nobody cares about who’s second, or third, or fourth best. They are just add-ons that no one cares about. They exist just because they need to.
In a world where materialism is considered a significant aspect of life, one simply cannot afford to be any less than the best. Being so doesn’t mean you’re not good, just that you’re not good enough, not good enough for the world or anyone around you. Sure, people will always be there to say, “You’ve done your best,” but if your best doesn’t make you the best, it’s no use, is it not? You don’t get to obtain a scholarship if you’re only second best; you don’t get selected for the most wanted job in the region if you’re only second best; you don’t get to be President if you’re only second best. You practically get nothing out of being second, which makes you nothing in the world’s eye.
If anything, you only get pitiful stares and words of consolation that aren’t comforting in the bit, and that is worse than anything else in the world.
In other words, perhaps there is no other goal in life other than to be the best. Perhaps that’s what living this life is really all about. Being the best, beating the rest.
“This girl needs to stop beginning every blogpost of hers with her name.”
I concur. But this will be the last one I promise !!!
Returning to the topic, ask any close friend of mine to describe yours truly in one word, and I can guarantee you majority of the answers would be, “Paranoid.” In fact, a pretty lengthy conversation with Chow during MCYDS made me realise how long the list of my paranoia fears was, varying from heights, the dark, ghosts to insects, ladders and stoves. Here’s a couple of chronological scenes where my paranoia rears its ugly head:
#1. Back when I was a little toddler in nursery, my teacher once told me, “Never go near mice and rats, because they are full of kutus. And these kutus will fly from their furs into your hair if you get near them, and once these kutus make nests in your hair, they will suck your blood and you will get old very quickly and die.” Since then, I never went within a ten foot radius of a mouse (not even those caged ones in a pet shop), developing an illogical fear towards those rodents, until I grew older and knew what my teacher told me wasn’t true. Despite the realisation, the fear remains.
#2. When I was in Standard One, I once told a friend, Hui Ying, that I drew some pictures of Powerpuff Girls, and I promised to bring them to school to show her tomorrow. When I got home, I realised I couldn’t find my pictures and started crying, worrying if this was considered as ‘lying’ and whether my tongue would be chopped off. I was alone at home at the time so I cried and cried, wondering if my tongue would fall off at any second (I took that myth very, very seriously). In the end, I called Hui Ying to tell her that I couldn’t find those pictures and promised that “I wasn’t lying! Really I wasn’t!”
#3. Once, when I was around 8 years old, I asked my dad what those protruding green strings on our wrists were, and my dad told me they were veins. So I jokingly asked him what will happen if I ‘cut’ them? And he told me that they can never be broken, because once they are, blood will start to flow out and we will die. A week later, I checked my wrists randomly and saw that my left wrist was reddish so I started crying very hard because I thought my veins broke and that I was going to die. My grandmother was the only person with me at the time and after countless words of reassurance that I wasn’t going to die and that the reddish colour on my wrist would fade away soon, I finally calmed down and believed her, partially reassured by the fact that I wasn’t writhing on the floor, about to die yet. Since then, I check both my wrists every now and then; I still do.
#4. There was a time when I was young and I went to a church session where Aunty Peh Lan spent the whole session talking about Jesus’s resurrection. When I returned home, I couldn’t stop crying because the resurrection was about a dead man coming alive. It was really bad to the degree that my mum had to ring up Aunty Peh Lan to come over and console me, telling me it was alright and that resurrections don’t happen anymore. Only then was I consoled.
#5. I was about 10 when I watched my first alien-related movie, War of the Worlds. I had really bad experiences with scary movies like that (in fact, I still do) so I spent the next couple of days worrying about aliens intruding Earth at any minute. I thought the worst was happening when a blackout occurred in my neighbourhood one night, and I couldn’t stop checking my phone every few seconds, because in the movie, besides the electrical power supply, even mobile phones and cars couldn’t work in the aliens’ presence, so I was very wary, and then all of a sudden a whirring noise resounded throughout the whole house and I thought WE WERE DOOMED!!! but then it turned out it was the electric current coming back on. Horror movies bring out the worst in me, this was one of the worst post-movie experiences.
#6. Number Six isn’t really an experience but more of a routine. It started circa 2006 when I was 11. I had this ‘routines’ around the house such as touching a painting hung just outside my room 3 times on the bottom left corner and 4 times on the bottom right corner before entering the room and blinking my left eye 2 times and my right 3 times before looking away from the mirror etc. If I didn’t follow these ‘rules’, my brains would feed me with ‘if you don’t do this, something bad will happen’ or ‘if you don’t do this, you will see something bad’ and there was a particular case that went on the longest, which was when there was a huge doll in a glass cupboard opposite my bed. Every night before I went to sleep, I forced myself to blink at it either 5, 7, 15 (I always blink super-fast when I reach 13), 17, 25 or 27 times (I used to believe odd numbers, especially 5 and 7 were ‘better’ numbers) before going to sleep, otherwise I wouldn’t feel safe. I don’t do these ‘routines’ anymore, but the ‘commands’ still remain. Exempli gratia, my brain would always give myself commands such as ‘pick up that towel before it drops to the floor otherwise something bad will happen’, ‘reach the second level of stairs before your bedroom door closes otherwise something bad will happen’, ‘don’t let those two things come into contact with each other otherwise something bad will happen’ (that command just appeared while I was writing 3 seconds ago) (in fact, I think this has more to do with my OCD).
#7. Just last year, a doctor came over to my school to give a talk on diabetes, and while I usually wouldn’t pay attention to these kinds of talks, this one in particular attracted my attention because I was experiencing most of the symptoms listed. So when I went home, I started Googling symptoms for diabetes and started crying when most of the symptoms fitted my condition then. I told my parents what I thought and they scoffed at me because no one in my lineage had diabetes but I was still adamant, still convinced that I had diabetes so the next day my mum proposed sending me to Uncle David’s clinic for a check up but in the end I chickened out at the thought of needles.
#8. I think it’s safe to say my paranoia affects me the most where supernatural cases are concerned. There was one night during MCYDS and I was sleeping on the floor in one of the dorms at the school when I heard a sort of creaking noise. I thought it was the door at first and that the noise would stop soon but it persisted, too persistent for a door, in fact, so I froze, not daring to make even a move, afraid that whatever ‘it’ was would realise I wasn’t asleep yet. So I made a casual turn to the left– and found myself staring straight into Sya’s flapping white uniform she’d hung on her bedpost. I averted my eyes quickly only to have them rest on the empty space below my bunk bed. (I wasn’t sleeping on the bed, I was sleeping on the floor next to the bunk bed, for those of you who didn’t read my MCYDS post.) Heart gathering speed, I made another casual right turn and could only stare at the ceiling, refusing to look at the dark corners of the dorm, afraid of what I might see. That was probably the worst night I’ve ever had in my entire life because I was so, so afraid that I started to sweat cold sweat and I had half a mind to wake Aifa or Anum up for company while I calm myself down before returning to sleep. But none of that happened because I was also too scared to move so in the end I shut my eyes tight, ignoring the persistent noises, repeating “It’ll be fine. It’ll be fine.” (which is what I tell myself repeatedly whenever I feel frightened) to keep my paranoia at bay.
EDIT: The next day, the daily summit newsletter we received told the legend of the green ghost that haunts the dormitories. I almost fainted.
Another instance happened just two mornings ago. I was preparing for school and was checking the Twitter timeline when I stumbled upon a Twitter profile with an image of a ghost as its avatar. I switched off my phone immediately and started to dress in a rush, avoiding the mirror at all costs, while my brain convinced myself that the image of the ghost would pop up in the mirror or at the window at any time while I mutter my “It’ll be fine” mantra over and over again. In the end, I left my room in a rush, forgetting to bring along my name tag and a book but refusing to return to my room to retrieve them.
I know what you’re thinking after having read all of those: “Michelle, you’re doing all of this to yourself!” I know, and that’s the worst part, to know that I’m the one scaring myself silly all the time. Whenever people ask me, “Why are you so scared of ghosts? Do you believe in them?” I tell them no, I don’t, but that doesn’t mean I don’t think about it, because that’s what it’s all about; I can’t stop thinking about it. Once my brain acknowledges something, it never fades. It’s all my brain’s fault, always managing to turn something harmless into something lethal. And sometimes my paranoia doesn’t only work in situations where supernatural existences, illnesses and pests are concerned; sometimes it sticks its nose in my relationships with other homo sapiens, which is worse because there are times when I am absolutely convinced, without a doubt, that everyone I have ever known hated me.
In fact, now that I think of it, that conversation during MCYDS made me realise that there’s nothing much that I’m not paranoid of. Some people say it’s better to think the worst of every situation to prepare yourself for the worst possibilities, and I see where they’re coming from but sometimes too much is just…well, too much.
“Finally !!! That twerp finally writes the review !!!”
Before I start, let me just voice out an opinion of mine. When Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 hit the cinemas, the world broke down, because the movie signaled the end of the Harry Potter era.
I don’t quite get it. The end of the HP era should be when JK Rowling released Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows the book. The films were just adaptations of the original stories. We should’ve done our sobbing four years ago when Harry’s time really and truly came to an end.
But sadly, it didn’t seem the case with the other 6,980,778,404 people in the world. (Current world population as of right now- exactly 1.00AM.)
Just kidding. (About the whole world not agreeing with me. I was totally serious about the first part.)
Serious Deathly Hallows Review
I have to admit, when the film started, I wasn’t as excited as I was when I had watched Deathly Hallows Part 1. (Ask Jia Yuan. I was whimpering when the Warner Brothers’ logo appeared on screen.) I am pretty sure the main reason for that is because I have been avoiding trailers, photos, promos and anything at all related to HP DH II, so that meant avoiding Tumblr completely. I did this because I wanted the element of surprise, the one thing HP DH I failed to give me the first time. I didn’t want the same thing to happen again so that’s what I did.
Only to find out it didn’t really make any difference.
HP DH II did a pretty bad job with its opening. Too boring and draggy. Not captivating enough to catch one’s attention when one is so easily distracted by popcorn and drinks and that horrible BO the person next to you is giving off. (No, I’m not describing my situation in the cinema when I watched the movie that was just an exempli gratia !!!) For the first few minutes when the Trio had lengthy conversations with the goblin and Ollivander, I completely zoned out. I couldn’t even bring myself to pay attention to the cinema screen until the Gringotts scene.
Okay, Gringotts scene. As always, Helena Bonham Carter was fabulous, even as Hermione. And then there was the cart ride and at that moment I wished I’d watched the movie in 3D. (Not like we have any chance to do so in Alor Setar but still, a movie buff can wish, right?) And then the suspenseful vault scene, and then Griphook’s trolling scene. And then the dragon! And then everything was moving really fast…until the scene when Rupert and Dan took off their shirts. Also I’m pretty sure what everyone in the cinema was thinking about right then was:
“What about Emma?” *creepy smirk*
Okay, fine, if you didn’t, congratulations, here’s a pebble for you.
After that, they Apparated into Hogsmeade to find themselves being hunted down instantaneously but fortunately Aberforth was there to save the day! I have to admit that I’m pretty sour that David Yates left out Dumbledore’s history. That was one of the highlights of the Deathly Hallows book, in my opinion. Anyway, never mind that, because NEVILLE LONGBOTTOM MAKES HIS APPEARANCE!
*cues celebration and cheers*
What? You don’t think Neville Longbottom deserves a congratulatory welcome for being such a hot bamf who pretty much dominated the whole movie plus save most of the asses in it?
Well, that’s your own problem, you go solve it yourself.
And so Neville led the Trio to Hogwarts secretly and everyone cheered at the sight of their hero and there were hugs and fistpumps and pats on the backs all around!
The scene then changed and Snape appeared, demanding to know where was Harry Potter and so Wild Harry appeared! And then an even Wilder Minerva McGonagall appeared and Imma letcha finish, but Snape-McGonagall’s intense fight scene was the best scene of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part II. Of. All. Time.
Hogwarts was chaos by then, and Harry went to find the ghost of Rowena Ravenclaw’s dead daughter while Ron and Hermione went to the Chamber of Secrets and can I say, Most Unexpected Kissing Scene? (Like I said, I’ve already forgotten most parts in the book already! Plus, I didn’t forget the Ron/Hermione kiss, I just didn’t see it coming.)
But let’s just forget the kissing scene for a while okay because HERE COMES VOLDEMORT WITH HIS 748483759873285943 NUMBER OF DEATH EATERS. (That was a keyboard smash, in case you didn’t know. No, I do not know Voldemort personally nor do I have each and everyone of his Death Eater’s business card.) This was the part that really got my adrenaline pumping because admittedly I was looking forward to the Hogwarts Battle the most.
After that came the Room of Requirement scene where Harry had to find the lost diadem and this was also where Draco Malfoy came in. I have to say, it’s kind of sad that Tom’s screen time in the Potter movies following their sequences shows a negative gradient. But can I also point out that Crabbe…is not Crabbe. I understand that the person who used to play Crabbe was arrested, but…couldn’t they have found someone of closer resemblance to the ‘original’ Crabbe?
The one on the right is Crabbe.Apparently, the one on the right...is also Crabbe?!
After the Fiendfyre scene, Harry realised he needed to find Voldemort to find Nagini, and somewhere in that process he had a random kiss with Ginny. (Whenever these random kissing scenes pop up I imagine David Yates and his entourage sitting behind a computer looking through scenes where Yates occasionally points at a random interval and yells, “There! Insert Kissing Scene Number One there!”)
The trio found Voldemort in the end, but he was with Snape and…and…
The next series of events: ALAN RICKMAN FOR ALL THE AWARDS.
And then came the realisation that Harry himself needed to die and I admit, that was the part that affected me the most in the book. So I took the walk with Harry into the Forbidden Forest and that whole scene was just seriously A+. And then there was the King’s Cross scene with Dumbledore, Harry’s ‘revival’ in the Forbidden Forest, Voldemort and his Death Eaters’ march to Hogwarts, VOLDEMORT’S AWKWARD LAUGH, and then…Neville! He was supposed to kill Nagini with the Gryffindor sword right there and then, but I don’t know what Yates was doing. Would’ve saved a whole lot more of film space (that could potentially be used to retell Dumbledore’s story but instead it’s being used to show more lovey dovey scenes between Ron and Hermione and I don’t really hate them but seriously though is it really necessary?)
(No.)
Harry jumped up suddenly, very much alive and I have to admit (I have admitted a lot of things in this post) that the Voldemort-Harry battle scene wasn’t as brilliant as I had imagined it when I was reading the book. Not enough smarty lines from Harry’s part and there wasn’t any audience, so it was pretty much a lonely battle.
(Oh yeah, and the Elder Wand part has got me really confused because according to the book, Harry’s wand a.k.a. Draco’s old wand already was the Elder Wand so I don’t understand how Voldemort’s wand could be flying towards Harry because Voldemort never possessed the Elder Wand in the first place but I guess it was David Yates’s name who was written under the title ‘Director’ in the credits, not me, so I shall keep quiet now.)
Voldemort then died in a very strange way. Disintegration just doesn’t seem fit for a Dark Lord…but never mind. Although I have to say the aftermath of Voldemort’s death wasn’t as huge as I had expected. I’d expected merrier celebrations and people cheering everywhere but I guess with all the deaths…
…
Ahem, anyway, Harry broke the Elder Wand, much to Ron and Hermione’s horror, but what bothered me was the lack of explanation of all the Deathly Hallows. What happened to the Resurrection Stone and the Invisibility Cloak? It is called Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows after all, not Harry Potter and the Awkward Kisses (subtitled: Lord Voldemort and his Awkward Laugh). But I guess I am just whining incessantly.
“Thank God she finally realises!”
Nineteen years later, we saw old versions of our loveable Old Harry Potter Committee with their children. Draco and Astoria Greengrass with their son Scorpius, Harry and Ginny’s James, Lily and Albus, and Ron and Hermione’s Rose and Hugo. And then it was deja vu all over again with the red Hogwarts Express and waving goodbye and the camera is zoomed into Harry’s made-up moustached and wrinkled face before the screen turned black and the movie ended.
I came out of the cinema, quite unsure about my feelings toward the movie, but it was quite disappointing, despite all I’ve done to prevent any hindrances from getting in the way of procuring my ‘element of surprise’ but I guess there wasn’t really the wow factor. But nevertheless, it wasn’t a bad movie overall, because there were the really awesome scenes that made me want to rename the whole movie as The Neville Longbottom Show or The Minerva McGonagall Show or The Alan-Rickman-Sweeps-All-the-Awards Show.
So, there you go. My Serious Deathly Hallows Review. Well, as serious as it gets, anyway.