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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


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The Malaysian Insider :: Opinion


Souvenirs from France

Posted: 11 Nov 2011 03:56 PM PST

NOV 12 — They live a lifestyle where clichés seem entirely original. 

Even when their arms are full, a baguette can be seen conspicuously tucked under an armpit. It is almost as if that part of the body, often scorned as an object of odour despair, is made for that precise purpose. 

Here, dogs are men's best friends; even for the destitute and homeless. The odds of encountering a homeless man begging for a stick of cigarette are higher than a stray dog begging for food. A man can be homeless but a dog is usually never without a master. I suppose it makes perfect sense to have someone who loves you unconditionally as your best friend. Dogs certainly make great candidates. 

Old and young couples take lingering strolls with their palms locked together, almost always stopping for long embraces and kisses. Evidently, their air is not only filled with the scent of expensive perfume but also of love and desire. It is a home where love is often made, not just babies. 

They live a lifestyle of contradictions that can easily inspire a voluminous collection of great ideas for dinner party conversations. 

For example, some women (of any age) may feel completely at ease lying naked on a public beach, but would never be caught dead strutting along the promenade in a G-string bikini, as you would have seen on American television. They make nudity seem natural and unintentional. Nobody blinks or gapes and it's just another summer of sun and fun. 

Foie gras isn't just a piece of politically incorrect food but something that provokes the question of how well the rest of world are treating their own animals before turning them into American quarter pounders and fried chickens. The cows I've seen on the Pyrenees are probably one of the healthiest and happiest in the world and needless to say, pets are not meant to be chained and confined to the porch. Neither are they to be subjected to the ridicule of being dressed up like human beings. 

Prostitutes are tolerated more than pretty women who prey on wealthy men (and vice versa). Should sexual morality be held more sacred than deceit, dishonesty and greed? 

Among the three virtues upheld by their national motto, liberty is perhaps the one that is most treasured and practised by them. It is often linked to a philosophical way of life, rather than just a literal translation of the word. 

Restrictions and obstacles are to be limited and overcome as much as possible so that one can experience joie de vivre to the fullest. Being obedient to the notion that "I-shouldn't-be-doing-this-because-society-says-so" does not make you decorous, but someone who's absent of mind, spirit and soul. 

They talk about politics, religion and sex more openly than Malaysians talk about food. There are no sensitivities surrounding these issues because one of their greatest thinkers once said that he might disagree with what another person says, but he would defend to his death the right of that person to do so. 

Plus, it would be completely delusional to believe that if you don't talk about sex, it means you don't think about it at all. The same applies to the rest of the other issues. Besides, isn't it true that dissenting views are the ones that make far more interesting and intelligent conversations? A winning view is one that withstands the test of challenge, not one that is won by default. 

I went for a walk on the promenade overlooking the Atlantic Ocean in Biarritz on an early Sunday morning. It was quiet and calm as the whole sea resort was still recovering from the night's partying. I stopped at one point to breathe in the cold morning air and when I looked down, there was a small group of men and women getting undressed together. 

From afar, one would have thought that they were just a bunch of crazy kids attempting to conquer the cold sea water but for their silvery white hair.  Stripped down to their bathing suits, only then was their age revealed. They could easily be at least 70 years old judging from the loose and heavily wrinkled skin all over their tanned bodies 

They ran towards the sea and dived into the freezing water with the courage and capriciousness of teenage adrenaline. Their total abandonment sent a strange shiver down my spine and it wasn't until later when I understood that feeling as freedom and happiness. 

According to French revolutionists, "Liberty consists of being able to do anything that does not harm others: thus, the exercise of the natural rights of every man or woman has no bounds other than those that guarantee other members of society the enjoyment of these same rights." 

I learned from them that freedom applies to all; whether you're a grandfather, a mother of three, blind or a homosexual, as long as you've not done anything to have caused that right to be taken away from you. You're free to live the life you choose and not what society expects of you. Passing judgments should be left in a court of law; not at school, the workplace, supermarket, park or even the street. 

Perhaps that is why women sunbathe naked but not strut around in mini bikinis. It's not about parading their bodies for the whole world to see. It's about feeling free in your own skin. 

Maybe that's what liberty really means.

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

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Like night and day, a Malaysian football story

Posted: 11 Nov 2011 03:49 PM PST

NOV 12 — What a week it has been!  It truly has raised a variety of different emotions in most Malaysian football fans. On Monday evening, I watched a football match in which both teams seemed to just want to kick the ball as far as possible, quite possibly trying to destroy as many footballs as possible in a single game. It certainly ended up being like a competition to see which team triumphed in taking wilder kicks than the other. 

For 90 minutes, both teams presented an excellent example of what can only be called "anti-football." 

Almost all the players on the pitch were playing as if they were taking out some sort of revenge on this otherwise beautiful game and eventually, I felt more tired watching the whole farce than the players in action. 

However, on Wednesday, I saw a very different football match with both teams showing some imagination and creativity as they comfortably played the ball be it at passing or while in possession. Both teams played with a level of ease which belied their age and delighted true football aficionados. 

Though they were just the U-23 squad for the respective countries, but all the players were full of confidence. By now you would have figured out that both the matches I have referred to above, involve the Malaysian representatives in the SEA Games 2011 football tournament held in Jakarta. 

On Monday evening, the young men (or boys, by the looks of it) that coach Ong Kim Swee put out against Singapore played like a team of schoolboys. Then on Wednesday evening, Malaysia took on Thailand, and things changed...  for the better, fortunately. 

Honestly, it does not matter to me — and it should not matter to anyone involved in the sport in Malaysia nor the Malaysian fans — how our opponents performed. What I would like to highlight is that the difference in quality, performance and attitude of our team with respect to those two matches was like night and day. Was the Malaysian team too taken up and followed the Singaporean's style of play, at the expense of our own qualities and abilities? That seems obvious, because when playing against a team of Thailand's more calm and refined style of play, our boys too went up a notch or two as compared with the performance just two days before. 

The excitement of watching the match against Thailand simply escalated upon seeing Malaysian captain Bakhtiar Baddrol's run, a-la Steven Gerrard, into the penalty box to receive a cross with an excellent first touch and then take a shot for our first goal of the night. Then when Izzaq Farris completed a wonderful piece of control at the edge of the penalty box before placing the ball into the net for the winning goal, I felt a great sense of relief and exhilaration in my heart! It just proved our Malaysian footballers are capable of playing much better than we give them credit for. 

But of course, the key is to carry on playing in such a style that the team is more suited to play and feel more comfortable with. If the team continues to follow the pattern of the game as set by our opponents, it is almost certain that we will not succeed because we will not be able to shape the flow and tempo of the game. 

Good players will almost be forced to turn average during the course of such a game. We have to think long and hard about how to shape the identity of this fine young squad we have. This is where the coaching staff and players must distinguish and choose the right playing style for our team, then determine how to ensure our game plan is mastered and becomes an identity for the whole team to follow. More importantly, for this tournament especially, the players must be driven with confidence that they have the ability, not just to compete, but to succeed in the 2011 SEA Games in Indonesia.

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

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