Smells like pee .. I’m HOME!

21 12 2007

Yay! Stepped out of the airport to the wonderful cold air and special smell that is New York City. Tired .. yes. Happy .. oh heck yeah.

Conrad’s even planned a little dinner pah-tay to help make sure I stay up and reset the ol’ ticker back to NY time … and he cooked … in the house (how very un-New York of him, I know .. but let’s keep it our secret, I kind of like it)!





The best of …

21 12 2007

I wonder if people notice why you cry in the Traveler’s Lounge. :-)

I was skimming through  The Best of Craig’s list looking for the “Survival of the fittest (M&M)” story (great read if you haven’t seen it before) when I came across …

An Angel in the Post Office

A 4-year old writes, ” Dear God, Will you please take care of my dog? She died yesterday and is with you in heaven…” (full story)

There are some great people in this world. I’m always happy to hear their stories. Happy Christmas to everyone!





… I think I have that in my purse

21 12 2007

I feel like Aunt Mabe today. You know, that distant relative who steals all the mini-soaps from the hotel or restaurant — who’s bathroom is a virtual array of every mini travel sized item known to man? Very classy woman, right. Well, today, I’m her.

As much as I try wearing my little “I belong on business class” outfit, I’m still a little in awe of some parts of this journey… and I’m bringing home the souvenirs to prove it. So if you’re Christmas stocking smells good, it’s because I ripped out the free sample of perfume from the magazine and wrapped it up as your Christmas present. Hey .. there’s still good smells on there!





Time travelling

21 12 2007

I have lost complete sense of time. Very strange feeling. I got on the plane in Singapore around midnight and immediately reset my watch to the time in the stop-over city, Frankfurt. I was pretty tired, so (after dinner of course) I didn’t have too much trouble nodding off on the plane… didn’t wake up until the stewardess asked me what I’d like for breakfast. I checked my watch, but I forgot the time difference from Singapore to Frankfurt and I’m not sure what time I fell asleep, so I have no idea how long I was out for. That was only the beginning.

It was 5:30 or 6am in Frankfurt when we landed .. and it’s still dark here. I booted up the ol’ compy but that was still set to Singapore time — 1am. Reset that to US time so now it says 12:30 am (?), my watch says 6:15 and my body feels as if it’s about 3 in the afternoon.

Get ready Conrad, I have no idea what this time-travel is going to do to my internal clock / jet-lag! :-)





Understanding the Kevins

21 12 2007

I would nod and smile, but I never really understood him when my friend Kevin would tell me of his success or pursuits of the business class upgrade, especially for access to the lounges.

Before today, those doors have remained tinted to me, doors which only opened for others, and over who’s shoulders I could only occasionally catch a glance of the bouncers at the check-in desk.

But today, I feel like Charlie with my “Golden Ticket.” The doors are open to me now, and I have seen the light. Paying $2,000 for a plane ticket is crazy — don’t get me wrong. But every once in a while, it’s fun to put on a costume and step into another world. Today, despite the exhaustion of a 24 hour, 9 minute flight plan, I’m soaking up life like the other guys… and I understand Kevin a bit more.

I mean, after a while, airports all start to look the same. And those duty free shops can only hold your attention for so long (especially now that as Americans we can’t bring in liquid, so perfumes, liquors … and all the good deals we had before are a bit more tricky to navigate). But the lounges … well, first of all, let me assure you — the walls aren’t painted in gold and they do not drip with luxury. But it is a nice, comfortable place to hang out before catching your next flight. And really, if you’re spending 80% of your work time travelling around from airport to airport, it’s the only way to go — keep your sanity, find a quite place to work while traveling, and not having to fight a drooling kid with sticky fingers for one of those hard seats that for some reason are all attached in a row so that when the kid gets the seat at the end of the row and jumps up and down, you can’t think anymore because you’re suddenly sea sick. Yep. I get it a bit more.

So what *are* they like? Well, once you get past the woman at the door who confirms your golden ticket isn’t a fake, you walk in to a room filled with lots of individual chairs — usually small arm chairs. They’re not plush lazy boys, but it’s not entirely dissimilar to a hotel lobby waiting area. Usually on one wall (and in some bigger airports, maybe 2 or 3) is a pantry of sorts where you can help yourself to all kinds of goodies for free… beer, wine, champagne, top shelf bar, soft drinks of every kind; snacks like nuts, pretzels, chips; and some kind of food, of course varying depending on the time of day. Of course, these buffets differ depending on the hosting country — so in Singapore there was duck and fresh mango and wasabi peas. In Frankfurt (where I am writing this now) there are pretzels and hard rolls and 5 different kinds of beer :-)

On the other wall or corner are the bathrooms — always equiped with showers as well in the case of those very long flights or layovers.

And there is also usually a business section with free computers / internet connection. Though here in Frankfurt, that amounts to a single stand-up kiosk computer. As most people travel with laptops now a days, I’m sure the need for the “mobile offices” popular in the 80s is changing. The Singapore business center did have a fax machine … but it too looked a bit dusty. I did have to buy my wireless access here in Frankfurt … I was surprised by that, something for them to improve on :)

Another thing I noticed is that the kid with sticky fingers followed me. I wasn’t surprised by the demographic being about 70% men (or more). But I was surprised by the number of young families — couples on their honeymoon, other couples with the Louis Vuitton matching luggage who look like they learned to walk wearing Prada shoes, and babies — literally with silver spoons in their mouths.

You know what else? I think I miss the life and excitement of the real world walking by on the other side of those tinted glass walls.





How much longer!?!?

20 12 2007

Yay! The hours have seemed to stretch on and on during this rainy Thursday. Yet slowly but slowly the minutes have elapsed…. almost 6 o’clock. I get the taxi at 8! YAY. Get ready honey, here I come :-)

So looking forward to seeing everyone.

Happy holidays!





What is it about Christmas music!?

19 12 2007

I love it. It’s simply not Christmas without the tunes, is it. I know Melissa and I mark the beginning of the season by popping in the required disks … and I’ve finally got some x-mas music playing in Singapore … it’s definitely that time of the year!

Remember, Santa and presents may make it more fun, but you don’t need any of that stuff to celebrate.

Christmas magic is in the air … sparkley and wonderful. I dig it!!





Tommorrow … what a word!

18 12 2007

Popped out of bed this morning and realized …

I leave for home tomorrow!

 

Yay!! Now I just have to finish work, finish christmas shopping, pack, do some more work, repack, clean the apartment, call for a taxi, work some more, try to fit everything in suitcases again, how did I get so much stuff, why is there still so much work to do, yay TOMORROW!

:-) So excited. So ready!! :-)





Herman’s ready too!

17 12 2007

Conrad sent me an e-mail today… apparently he’s been decorating the house. Normally our house-gargoyle (“Herman”) looks quite demure & pensive:

But apparently, even Herman is getting excited for my homecoming and is exhibiting serious signs of a Christmas make-over (or a CCIE-procrastinating, excited husband):

Just cannot wait to see him in person (Conrad too) … 3 days to go!!!





I try to write about the positives, but it’s not all positives

17 12 2007

… it’s 1:30 am and I just finished necessary late-night chats with the US team. Not complaining — it’s partially my own fault it’s so late as I had temporary amnesia when I got home after the work holiday dinner and forgot to log in & do my homework. Thank goodness for that last few minutes when you lay in bed and you let your brain catch up with you and roll back over final thoughts of the day. Shot out like a cork and remembered I’m not done working. Sad part is, I wasn’t done working. I don’t know how people here for a long time cope … I’d be seriously drained having to do this for a few years… but it’s necessary.

A developer here told me an anecdote that they had sent an e-mail to the US team to sign off on something (their tone said something silly that shouldn’t have required sign-off). Only, the recipient in the US sat on the e-mail for a day. So by the time they had approval, it was 3 days later. Their response? “No wonder people in the US think Asians are either slow or pushy. If they’re not pushy, it would take Asia 3 years to accomplish what the US can do in 1.” It’s not a statement of capability — it’s a statement of proximity. Namely, the US team is closer to the decision makers, so even if negotiation or correction is required, it can all be hammered out on a much shorter runway.

So that’s a bit from the work front. Signing off (I’m beat)!








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