The next SG PM

choongyong.koh April 19th, 2008

I want the next SG PM to be a web2.0 junkie! | the(new)mediaslut

As much as I am for the Web2.0 revolution, I don’t think our present PM understands it very well when he said that he needs to know who the audience is to be able to get to them to correct any mis-information.

Interesting idea though, from the blog post linked above:

Policies will be approved Digg style by the people, for the people, with the people.

Doing things Digg style is definitely a lot more efficient and more reflective of the sentiments (amongst the net-savvy citizens).

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Gout strike 2

choongyong.koh April 18th, 2008

This week I was really unfortunate. Gout attack 1 was on Monday, and the pain on my left ankle peaked on Monday night, making me hope for my heart to stop beating. The pain receded on Tuesday evening and was ok on Wednesday. Somehow, on Thursday afternoon, after making a client visit, a bone that I never knew was protruding at my left sole was very sensitive to touch. Luckily I was still about to sleep through last night, but this morning (which happens to be the day of my second son Kang Heng’s first month rituals), the pain in the left sole started to grow and now my mobility is again limited to how far I can walk using an umbrella as a walking stick.

My left foot

I took the pic above in the afternoon today, just to document how swollen my left foot is now.

Was telling my wife maybe I should be getting a stylo-milo walking stick like that used by Dr House.

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Hoping for my heart to stop beating

choongyong.koh April 15th, 2008

Don’t worry, I am not going suicidal. This is just the thought that went through my mind when my gout attack was at its peak last night. Every beat of the pulse was like a 50-pound hammer striking my red-hot swollen left ankle. It is in times like these, I wish that my heart would stop beating, so that my ankle can get a moment of relief.

Gout is the condition in which excess uric acid in the body crystallizes at joint (in a random pattern), resulting in the body immune system to send the white blood cells to “neutralize” the crystals, thereby inflaming the joint, causing extreme pain that is only second to kidney failure (as a disease).

It started on 13 Oct 2000 morning (I remembered the date because it was Friday the 13th) when I had my first attack on my right knee . It began as a slight discomfort in the joint, which I usually dismiss with a quick jerk of the knee to release a “click”, which will do the trick. That day the “click” did not work, and the pain started to grow so intensely that by the end of the day I was not able to straighten my right knee. Being young and ignorant, I dismissed the problem and carried on with work. I forgot how torturous that evening was but I do remember going to the doctor the next day and ending up lying at home for the next 5 days, immobilized.

The doctor did a blood test subsequently and found my uric acid at a very high level. A check with my mother shows that she suffers from high uric acid level, but Internet researches also told me that males are more susceptible to gout attacks than females.

Strict diet follows: no bean products (tau-hu, tau-pok, tau-huay, tau-kua, all my favourites, not to mention peanut, groundnut, cashew nut); no red meat (beef is a big no no); no alcohol (good news for me, valid excuse to tell people I don’t drink - I don’t like to drink); no shell-fish (no loss to me, prawns, crab, mussels, not my liking). However, throughout the years, as I describe my condition to different people, more items that I supposedly cannot touch pops up: strawberry, spinach, mushrooms, salmon. I have to take these with a pinch of salt, because there are really too many suggestions but mostly are anecdotal. More recently, I even hear from someone telling me I cannot be eating potatoes and yams and sweet potatoes!

However, no matter how I watch my diet, the attacks still come at the rate of about 2-3 times a year. Granted that there are certain times of the year when I am a little lax with myself (who can resist the food at Lunar New Years?), but I also eat with moderation.

Some kind hearted friends suggested some traditional remedies: boiled pandan leaf water, detoxicating teas etc….but it was either the remedies did not work on me, or I was not patient enough to see if they are effective. The problem is that these remedies will not relief the pain when the attacks come, they will only prevent the attacks, and probably I did not continue with the remedies long enough to see if they really stopped the attack.

There was once I seeked Traditional Chinese Medicine help. At the onset of an attack, I ask the sinseh to give me acupuncture to relief the pain. The result was that the pain was worst after the acupuncture, but until now I don’t know if it was the original effect of the attack, or it was the after effect of the acupuncture.

So what I am doing about it now? The only thing left is to see my GP every time I get an attack and get the medicine to reduce the inflammation and relief the pain. Both Western medicine and TCM says that this condition is not curable, meaning that I will have to live with it as long as I am alive. My GP tells me I have to start exercising. Every time I get an attack, I promise myself to start exercising after the attack. When the attack is over, I am usually so overwhelmed with other things that exercising slide down the todo list into the section unofficially for tasks that I mean-to-do-but-will-almost-never-get-down-to-it.

However, this time is a little different because it is the first time I blog extensively on this. Let me promise myself that I will pick up some form of exercising (I actually got an exercising machine at home after last year’s gout attack) and sustain it after I recover from this round of attack.

Wish me luck. :) In the mean time, I am still trying to distract myself by doing something (like blogging) instead of thinking about the pain in my ankle (it has subsided to a numb soreness, but still aches when I try to move the ankle)..

选举是一时的,人民是永久的

choongyong.koh March 23rd, 2008

昨天在家里观看台湾2008总统大选的直播。马英九在宣告成功获选为台湾第四届民选总统后向支持者致词,有一段话,令我印象深刻。他说:“选举是一时的,人民是永久的。”虽然马英九得票率是58%,但也有42%的选民没有投他。他说,并不会因为那五百多万人不投票给他,就不会照顾他们,他会照顾全部的台湾人民。

这样的胸襟,是领导者该有的风范。反观岛国却时不时出现领导者以“你们不投票给我,就是不支持我的政策”为理由来说明为什么在某些事上有分先后的做法,的确令人心酸。

Right to know

choongyong.koh March 11th, 2008

The Workers’ Party of Singapore » Escape Of Mas Selamat

The link above points to the latest press release by The Workers’ Party on the escape of Mas Selemat. Interestingly, although everyone knows that a committee of inquiry is convened to find out the details of the escape, it is not widely known that there are different ways to do it.

Let’s hope that at the end of the day, the people of Singapore will be informed of the details of the inquiries, since this is something that affects each and every one of us, and we should have the right to know the truth.

Hyper-inflation : early warning signs

choongyong.koh March 4th, 2008

Hyper-inflation : early warning signs
http://www.post1.net/lowem/entry/hyper_inflation_early_warning_signs

lowen, who wrote this article, has been spending a lot of time on tracking financial signals. This post shows that although the official CPI is high, it is not as high as the actual increases incurred by the man-on-the-street.

Personally for one of my ‘necessity food’ also saw a marked increase over just the last few months. My favourite biscuit is the Kong Guan Lemon Puff, which I will munch during the wee hours when I work. For a long time it was priced at $1.40 - $1.50 (depending on which NTUC FairPrice you go). However, in my grocery shopping visit yesterday to the Hougang Point FairPrice, I saw that it is now selling at $2.20. Taking $1.50 as the original price, I still get a 46.66% price increase!

“You owe it to your country to serve”

choongyong.koh January 4th, 2008

Alan Greenspan, the retired Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, US, published an interesting autobiography, “The Age of Turbulence”, recently. I am halfway through the book, but came across an interesting quote that I feel that I should blog about. In page 63 of the book, he was relating how he was convinced by his mentor Arthur Burns to join government service (as chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors first):

…Referring to the Watergate scandal, he (Arthur Burns) said, “This government is paralyzed. But there’s still an economy out there and we still have to make economic policy. You owe it to your country to serve.”

Alan Greenspan was a successful business-consultant providing economic forecasts to clients at that time, definitely someone belonging to the high-earner group. It was not higher salary that brought him to serve, it was a call of duty, it was because he owe it to his country to serve. He served for more than 20 years, before retiring on 31 January 2006.
Whoever said that only higher salary benchmarked to 77% or 88% of private sector pay will attract and retain talent to serve the country?

I’m supporting Al Gore, please add your voice too

choongyong.koh December 6th, 2007

[Chain letter after signing the petition - heed the call, my friends.]

In nine days Al Gore is going to address the UN Climate Change Conference in Bali, Indonesia. At his urging, I’ve signed an important petition showing I support his important call for a visionary treaty to address the climate crisis. I hope you will too.

http://climateprotect.org/standwithal

The world’s elected leaders must take the steps necessary to solve global warming. It’s not too late. We have the opportunity now to improve the Earth’s future for our children, and their children. If we don’t act, we will only have ourselves to blame.

Join Al Gore in Bali

choongyong.koh December 6th, 2007

Join Al Gore in Bali

Al Gore was catalytic in bringing the message of the consequences of Global Warming to the masses. Scientists gave many warnings before him about the impending crisis, but the general masses usually turn a deaf ear to scientists, as always. His movie An Inconvenient Truth convinced many that the problem is REAL.

Now Al Gore is taking one more step, to push government leaders to further commit themselves to salvaging the situation. Sign the petition, and hope that a treaty with more teeth can be inked at the end of the Bali talks.

Bread Index vs Food Index

choongyong.koh November 28th, 2007

The Department of Statistics replied (clipclip link) to a Straits Time forum post, citing figures that the overall food index has risen 4.6% over that in 2006.  Compare this with the informal “Bread Index” my friend lowen blogged about.

Decide for yourself, which figure is closer to your actual experiences in paying for food over the last few months?

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