Monday, December 17, 2007

G to the C to the GCC!

AIESEC International's Global Communication Crew 2007/2008 had their first ever GCC Physical Meeting in Rotterdam, The Netherlands from the 24th-27th November 2007. One of the best AIESEC Xp for me so far......

It was such an amazing experience, to travel 13 hours from Kuala Lumpur International Airport to Schipol Airport, Amsterdam, all by myself. Well, it's quite a biggie for me as it is my very first time going to such a faraway foreign land all alone. But it felt like a business trip for me though, nothing exciting (as I thought at the beginning...) walking around at the airport, with my laptop bag, passport and a cup of latte, waiting to board, and again, all alone. What I expect throughout the whole trip was having random chats with random people at random places, which only happened once in a while as I was too lazy to even speak.

KLM, best known for its interesting services and gorgeous eh-hem, EH-HEM air stewardess. 13 hours on its plane, without private screen, and we were all served with cold food and cup noodles, yes, you did not read wrongly, cup noodles! Funny to hold a pair of chopsticks slurping noodles from a cup while watching The Simpsons, and I was the only Asian in the radius of 5 meters. Oh, and I didn't speak to anyone for the entire 13 hours journey (except asking for beer, wine and nuts from the crew).

I arrived at Schipol at 4.30am (what a wrong timing), took a train from the airport to Amsterdam Centraal, reached the city centre at about 5.30am. It was freezing for me, 5 deg Celcius, which is not too cold for the locals I believe. Most of the people were wearing black outfit, and the place is dark, and not too clean. Quite freaky at some point and this is how it looked like.........................

Amsterdam Centraal at 5.30am...

Sun rises at 9am every morning, and sets at 4.30pm, rainy and gloomy. It was pretty depressing as I hail from a country where it is hot and sunny! But I managed to "adapt" entirely without suffering from any culture shock (other than seeing almost naked ladies standing in windows waving at you, and going to coffeeshops that sell joints). Amsterdam is an amazing, massive, well-developed, bicycles-friendly and expensive city. Girls are beautiful, and train system is efficient. The city is filled with great architectures and beautiful canals with geese and ducks swimming all over it.

Robin and Guido, the two tall and handsome Dutchmen who came to Malaysia for 2 months under the Dutch Ambassadors Program were my dedicated tour guides. As expected, the first place we went to was the Red Light District, followed by smoking weed and eating raw herrings! Went shopping near Dam Square and had beers at bars. We also went to the Amsterdam market, Rembrant house, Anne Frank House, and many more attractions in Amsterdam. I stayed in Amsterdam for 2 days.

Dam Square...

Guido & Robin

The 1st ever Starbucks in Netherlands, in Schipol Airport

Canal in Amsterdam

Also in Dam Square...


BIG CANALS...

lovely scenery of Amsterdam

this is not what you think it is... and they sell more than what you think they sell hehehe

cycling in Amsterdam is something REALLY common...

Then I took a train from Amsterdam to Rotterdam, an hour trip which costs me about EU10 one way. When I arrived in Rotterdam Centraal, Amy picked me up from the train station and we walked together to AIESEC International office, THE place where all AIESEC members world wide wish to visit, if not work there. I was greeted by some of my GCC Teammates, which was an amazing feeling to finally meet them in person, after working together for a few months virtually! I have a very diverse team, Mike (Canada), Michael (Germany), Rita (France), Mary Anna (Ghana), Saba (Jordan), Divyanshu (India), Geet (Croatia), Cyrus (HK), Lina (Colombia), Petra (Czech Rep), Damjan (Serbia), and myself (Malaysia Truly Asia!!), and not to forget, my BIG BOSS Michelle Gallant (AIESEC International VPC). A very intelligent team and so much fun!

We had a 4 days intensive meeting together, planning, strategizing, conducting classes, and brainstorming. At night we went to bars for lots of beer after the meetings. The awesome part was all of us are caffeine addict! We discussed on Brand Xp, I am an AIESEC'er Campaign, communication plan, brand audit, secondlife, GCC+TMU+XMU strategies, secondlife, and secondlife. hmm...

Rotterdam, surprisingly, is my favourite city in The Netherlands. It has a modern city skyline (yeah, it actually HAS a skyline), very creative architecture, and most importantly, clean! Anisha hosted me in Rotterdam, in her very Christmassy room, she also cooked some Malaysian dinner for me and Amy, for our Malaysians in AI gathering!! But too bad I didn't have time to actually sit down and catch up with her throughout my whole stay as the GCC meeting took most of my time. The Netherlands is quite pricey, compared to Greece. I paid EU1.70 average for a kebab in Athens, but it costs me about EU3-4 in Tulipsland!

intensive GCC meeting...

Rotterdam skyline...

I THINK its the city hall of Rotterdam

me and some of my GCC teammates having coffee break hehe

AIESEC International office!!!

Another great experience for me was being stranded in Schipol Airport on the way back from The Netherlands to Malaysia. All the KLM passengers were waiting for quite some time to board on the plane, then we heard this anonymous voice saying "Dear KLM passengers heading towards Kuala Lumpur, the flight will be canceled and bring forward till tomorrow 12pm as we could not locate the plane at this point of time". WTF! Then we were given a hotel room each at the Schipol Airport hotel, with dinner, breakfast, and beer provided for free, in order to shut us up! Well, I didn't mind, once I heard we will be given free beer hehehe!

One more night in Amsterdam, hung out with random old Dutch guys talking about politics and economy while drinking beer, which was quite interesting. The next day we have to re-checked in, and then the flight was delayed for another hour (typical), but finally we departed to KLIA after that, and the rest is history...

Now I am back in the sunny and beautiful country of Malaysia! Hope to have another trip soon!

Friday, November 16, 2007

It is officially over

13th of November 2007:

The clock was ticking, the place smells sterilized, it was cold as usual, and it was 11.30am. I thought it was a nice sunny day but I had a second thought on that. I was surrounded by hundreds of equally scared (I think they were...) peers, which made me even more anxious.

11.30am: An unfamiliar voice said "Candidates, you may start writing now..." This was the most fearful thing to hear (at least for me) and my heart-stopping moment was when I opened that piece of paper and hopefully seeing what I wanna see. I opened it, speechless and did not move a muscle...

11.34am: I was still looking into space at the paper....

11.40am: I hold my pen tightly, started writing on what I could think of on whatever was on the paper, as requested...

tick, tock, tick, tock....looking here, there, and everywhere....it was freezing as always....

12.30pm: time passed by fast and I was still anxious, and trying to jot things down, of all those vague memories flashing on my mind....

1.15pm: we were officially "quarantined" and not allowed to leave, as we were told by the unfamiliar voice once more....

1.30pm: The speaker played "Please stop writing"....it's done, it's official, and I'm done....this time around, it's REALLY OVER~ I just realized I will not be entering this hall anymore in my life (well, that is if I make it through this one), and I am officially done with my STUDIES....

Best moment of my life, indeed....even though it was not easy to get through this rigorous 3.5 years of my university life. And in fact, 17.5 years of education from preliminary to a BSc. And I did it....

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Loathe

I am pretty sure I am not alone on this! At this period of time of the year, when exams ARE your life for a month, you will be thinking of studying heaps everyday, BUT you just can't do it!!

Instead, I will spend hours on Gmail, Wikipedia (reading random articles OMG...), and now, worse, Facebook!!! I find approving friend requests, checking out people's pics, etc as my sub-conscious priority...

I just loathe burying myself (literally) into the whatever DNA, human physiology or Genomic books!!

Are you facing the same catastrophe? Tell me you are.......please.......

Monday, October 15, 2007

Addiction


well, I don't mind getting addicted to these hehe...

Wake up in the morning...or sometimes noon...

boil water...make coffee...morning shower...go to school...

lunch...buy a cuppa coffee...back to school or work in the office...

then go off for dinner...with another cuppa coffee...back to office...

sometimes (or most of the time)..."bancuh" another cup of coffee in the office...

what am I gonna do? 3-4 cups a day...I am officially an addict to caffeine...

I need rehab...

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

That Isn't Fair...

I was just wondering why people pin point at faults, but never look at the good others have done...

it seems that the metaphor proved to be right; when you have a piece of white paper and a black dot on it, we will only notice that black dot and eventually the entire piece of paper is no longer "perfect"...

people also tend to forget what contributions you've made before, and hoping that you make mistakes so they could feel better about themselves by making you feel terrible...

it is time to grow up people......grow up......

Friday, September 28, 2007

Where Next?

The land of cheese, tulips, clogs, windmills, dikes, red-light districts, brownies, and supertall people! I will be there at the end of November!!! Woohooo~~ I'm gonna be there for a 5 days meeting with my fellow team mates from 11 countries and of course, some traveling around the country, see some interesting places, try interesting stuffs, and many more to do in this "free" country!


Amsterdam canal....


windmills and tulips...


the Dutch people...


Million thanks to Unilever for hosting us and AIESEC International for making it possible for the Global Communications Crew (GCC) to have our meeting in Rotterdam!!

Where East Meets West

Istanbul is one of the most culturally diverse city I've ever been to. It is a fusion of Europe and Asia in one city as this place is where the European and Asian continents meet. Today, Istanbul alone has a population of more than 10 million people, imagine, 5 Kuala Lumpurs combined!

We signed up to join the 2 days Pre-IC Istanbul Tour for EU$30 (which ended up to be EU$50.. damn it!) together with more than 100 other IC delegates from more than 100 countries. It was an amazing trip as Istanbul is really unique! And having so many friends from all over the world hanging out in the same tour group was simply fantastic!


the Basilica... an underground place with lots of pillars and water...


it's Medusa, no kidding...


my favorite place... the Grand Bazaar...


the typical Istanbul city landscape... pretty messy...


me and the Blue Mosque!!


me and other AIESEC members from Germany, NZ, Taiwan, China etc...


Levent, the modern side of Istanbul...


the Blue Mosque...


at the Bosphorus....


i don't remember this one.... :P

Seriously, I don't mind going back to Turkey again as there are so many other places that I have yet to discover! Well, I just have to wait till I have the $ to do so...

Ελλάδα

Well, that's Greece in Greek writings... Ohh I just love this country, fascinated by it's beautiful and friendly people, Acropolis is just spectacular, the girls, Parthenon, Temple of Zeus, the girls, Ouzo, and so much more.......................arghhhh I wanna go back to Greece!!!!

And English language is widely used thanks to tourism industry, compared to Turkey, which people can only say "hi, bye, yes and no"...or maybe a lil' bit more.

Greece left me a deep impression also because the AIESEC Greece National Team's awesome awesome hospitality... thanks to the team for bringing us around and trying some really cool local coffee, gelato and Ouzo!!!

But getting to Athens was a painful experience. Try going to a totally foreign country without proper plans, the AIESEC Malaysia delegations were really daring. We went to the train station only with some simple information provided by AIESEC Greece members, we purchased the Balkan Express train tickets (which were quite cool, just pay EU$50 for a 5 days pass and you can use the train service to any countries in the Balkans, which includes Bulgaria, Greece, Macedonia, Serbia etc). But instead of EU$50, we spent an additional EU$50 for night-sleeper (with Bed) for both ways. It was painful because it was 12 hours from Istanbul to Thessaloniki (2nd largest city in Greece where we transited), and 6 more hours from Thessaloniki to Athens!!!

When we arrived in Athens, we did not have any place to sleep, which means we have to find ourselves beds to rest our backs after 18 hours of tedious journey! We found a pretty decent place, for EU$17 per night, and its located right in the heart of Monasteraki (the place where everything a tourist would like to visit, in an average of 5-10 mins walk!).

We went to the must-visit-places such as Acropolis (doink!), Plaka, Syntagma Square, Olympic 2004 Stadium (but we didn't visit the stadium where the first Olympic Games were held.... cannot find it lah!), and some other places. Shopping in Athens is pretty nice as well, Zara is everywhere, and it's relatively cheaper than Malaysia! My teammate extended her trip in Athens just to shop!

I've taken so many beautiful pictures in this country.... you don't need a good camera or photography skills, this country is just so picturesque you won't need any of those...

following are just some pictures that I took during the trip...

the temple of Zeus...


love arts.... ;P


Plaka near Acropolis...


getting drunk on Ouzo, the Greek alcohol. They drink it with honey...


Pui (ex-MCP AIESEC Thailand), me, and 2 AIESEC Greece National Team members..


worshiping the Greek flag!


he looked like he's in heaven...


only 2 out of the 6 are real, the rest are in museums in London & Greece...


Acropolis from far...


some street in Athens...


trying hard to read, but it's in Greek...


lovely place...


one of the theatre lah... don't remember the name lol...


advice from me, go to Acropolis as early as you could so there'll be no crowd!


everyone's favorite, the Parthenon!! (but too bad it's under renovation)...

For some more pictures, do check it out on my Facebook...

Dubai, United Arab Emirates!!!

Imagine a more advanced, nicer and better designed skyscrapers and super clean Singapore-look'alike in the heart of a desert...

Scorching temperature of 45 deg Celcius...

Probability of seeing expats than local Arabs is 70%...

Lexuses, Benz's, Bentleys, and slick Jap-hybrid cars everywhere...

Let's take a look at the beautiful and sizzling HOT city!!

the rise of a megacity.... massive constructions everywhere...


city centre...

the soon-to-be tallest building in the world, The Burj Dubai (the distant building)...


McD in Arab... LOL...


some buildings.... :P


a piece of art...on a roundabout...


in between the towers...


the Dubai twin towers... The Emirates Jumeirah


i like this pic...hehe...



Gosh.... I just have this thing for skylines.... thank god I live in KL...