Thursday, 6 August 2015

70th Birthday & Launch of A DOC's LIFE

Today (17 June) is actually my 70th birthday but we had our celebration over the last weekend so that our children could be back with us. On Sat night we had a dinner with the family and relatives. My daughter, Juni's birthday was yesterday so we always celebrate our birthdays together.

Then on Sun, we had the Lunch with about 200 colleagues, church members and friends. My new book "A Doc's Life" was also launched at the function. This is my 3rd book, after Young Emotion (school days) and Cell Wars (experiences with chemotherapy). This new book relates my memories of 50 years in the medical field. I entered Grant Medical College in Bombay in June 1965, then houseman in Penang, medical officer in Perlis, lecturer in UHKL and then O&G consultant  in Ipoh

If you like a copy please let me know. The basic price is RM15 but donations are welcome. ALL proceeds will go to charity. At the Birthday function, we collected about RM15,000 in ang pows and donations for the books. All these will go to charity. Thanks for your best wishes.
Below is the well known song which I have modified the lyrics. We are no longer sexygenarian but entered into the age of septuagenarian.

SIXTY GOING ON SEVENTY
(16 Going 17- Sound of Music)

I am sixty going on seventy
Maybe it’s hard to think
Recall the good years
Laughter and tears
Gone by in just a blink

I am sixty going on seventy
Sometimes I fall on the way
No more the young lad
And no more the strength
To run and to swim and play

Totally unprepared am I
To face this world alone
Clumsy and lost and blur am I
To use this new hand-phone

There may be someone younger and prettier
To tell me what to do
But dear, you are sixty going on seventy
I still depend on you
    

70th Birthday Greetings



BEST WISHES from

Congratulation! May the good Lord bring you joy, peace and health to serve Him Shalom, +Bishop Ng Moon Hing

Congrats on reaching that "magic number." God bless you, your dear family and ministry.
+Bishop Dr. Jason  Selvaraj

Congratulations for the attainment of yet another literary milestone in your life. I am sure your English teachers in PFS (if they are still around) will be pleased. Dato Tan Boon Lin (former HM, PFS)

We wish you a happy birthday and many, many more to come. May God bless you and your family.
Chan Kok Keong & Valerie

Sorry we will miss the Book launch but we look forward to reading it.
Dato Chan Yew Mun & Miki

Praise God for your years on earth and your life that glorifies His name. Dr Su Too Kiat

May you be blessed with more strength after you have reached the length of seventy years so that you can go on until you are 80. Psalm 90 puts it very well.
Tan  Liok Ee and Loke Yew Fai

This must indeed be such a fulfilling moment that at this time of your career you are able to collect your thoughts and put them into words. Such a blessing.
Koon Yew Yin & Kit Pheng

Wow 70 years old! Congrats!
I am not too far behind!
YB Dr Michael Kumar

Old Chinese saying is that it's rare to find someone 70 years old.  Glad to know that we are still able and contributing.
Dr Ooi Lean Eng

We wish you God's richest blessings and many more years of good health! I suppose that there will more books to come now that you have so much free time.
 Siew Woh & Suan Guat

Another feather on your cap. You have indeed achieved a great deal in your life. PFS is indeed very proud of you. Siew Mui Koon

Congratulations on your prolific launching of various books relevant to your Life time experiences. Dr Peng Chin Heong & Dr Tan Saw Khim

All the very best ...won't be the but will be thinking of you and your great spirit in thought and action. Salams.. Dato Anwar Fazal
What a precious way for your children to honor their dad by inviting his friends to share in the celebration.  Elsie Dunn (Wong)
We are glad you are celebrating your 70th birthday with a clean record of good health and we wish you all the very best for many more years to come. Nelly Kwa

My congratulations on the launch of your book! 
Dato Abdul Kadir Deen

CONGRATULATIONS and all best wishes for a good celebration, not only for the life that you've led but also for your untiring writing efforts. Trudy Lim

You have been an exemplary witness for Christ in your life-style and actions. May His grace continue to be showered abundantly upon you and all your loved ones.  David Joseph

Congrats on the 70th Birthday and the second phase of life as a writer. You have been most productive. Aloha! Michael CN Lee

Congratulations on the launch of yet another book that I hope and pray will become a great encouragement and testimony to lead others. Rev Johnson David

Congratulations to you & family, reaching BIG 70 Have a great day with friends & family/relatives.
Dr Jay Thakrar

Congratulations on reaching your big milestone, and to be able to celebrate it in style with a book launch. I am so proud of you!
Dr Michael Khor Kok Seng

Welcome to the 70's Club!! A little in advance of June but I am happy to learn you and family are planning to make it a big and joyous occasion.   Lim Kok Peng

Congrats and a nice pat on the back for achieving another happy milestone in what has been clearly a full, rich and fulfilling Life! Full credit must go to Nancy, your kids  for this amazing journey together. Leong Wai Hoong
Congratulations on reaching 70 soon and what an appropriate time to to launch an autobiography of your medical life. I am sure those must be the most rewarding and meaningful times of your life.
I wish you good health, long life, and be happy always. Congratulations on launching of your book.  Dr Lena Bok

I truly celebrate God’s blessing upon you and upon us for having known you! Datin Rosalina Ooi

Saturday, 23 May 2015

TOILET TALES

TOILET  TALES!
                This is not a pleasant topic! Yet to paraphrase the opening line of a famous song by the Platters “When the toilet is gone”, we will realise how important toilets are when you need them in a hurry.

Toilet Water!
            Toilets should not smell like “toilets”.  My daughter Juni, as a small girl, was fond of entering hotel toilets while on holidays in Europe.  They smelled so clean and fresh. There is the famous perfume water called 4711 Eau d’Toilette, which literally means “Toilet Water”! Actually, the original meaning of “toilet” is to “freshen up”, so the toilet water is a light perfume, not the toilet water which comes first to our mind!

In the West
 However, using public toilets in Europe can be expensive, from 50 cents to 1 Euro, depending on “small” or “big business”! In Greece, they are so environmentally friendly, that the used toilet paper was not thrown inside the toilet bowl but thrown into a bin nearby for recycling! In America, the urinals are usually too high for Asians. I had to use the children urinals or I had to stand on my toes! There, I often faced curious stares from the American children who have seldom seen Asian organs! I was initially embarrassed by the low partitions and low doors of American toilets, where we can hear all the noises of bowel movements. Yet surprisingly, they were not so smelly, probably from the better air circulation.

Asia
            Toilets in Asia however, smell very far from the original meaning. Signs are not needed in Asian toilets, as the odour will lead one to them. Some years ago in China, toilets were the bane of tourism. We heard horror stories of going into communal toilets with several people squatting in a row with no doors. We were advised to bring umbrellas for additional privacy. Much has changed since then, and the public toilets in China are now very advanced. In India, many people still performed their bodily functions in public, even in some cities, where there are many homeless people. As a medical student, I remembered the gate outside our hospital in Bombay, which would reek of ammonia! On the other hand, toilets in Japan are super-modern with so many computerised gadgets to manipulate the different ways of washing.

Malaysian Toilets
Toilets in Malaysia are not much better. Before the sixties, there were many houses in the old town areas where there were no modern sanitation. There would be large rubber buckets below the “jamban” (toilets) which would be collected every morning by men into lorries with 20 doors! How  could these workers handle that type of job? Fortunately, our sense of smell is easily dulled (refractory) by the constant smell, as experienced by ourselves in the toilet.
In the days before the PLUS highways, we dreaded to make toilet stops, especially at petrol stations and in the coffee shops along the way. They were usually overflowing with wastes and old newspapers! In the kampungs, we had to resort to the fields or at best in outhouses, squatting over buckets of wastes and flies! People often forget to flush. Thus in Singapore, fines would be levied on those who forgot to flush. I just wonder whether there were CCTV cameras in the toilets to catch the culprits!

On Missions
For me, going on mission trips to some of the Asian countries was rather a struggle as far as toilets are concerned. I am very adaptable to different kinds of food, but not so used to the native toilets. In Bangladesh, we had to stop over in a school in the countryside, where we had to do our “business” within seconds because of the swarms of flies and mosquitoes! Fortunately, in many of the “mission” villages, the local leaders have prepared modern “pour flush” toilets for visiting missionaries.
Even in the Orang Asli villages, while there are “proper” toilets for visitors, the local residents still prefer the fields and river banks. To them, it would be not proper to return to the same place for the emptying of their wastes. Many of the toilets built by the health departments have been used as store-rooms instead.

Toilets on trains
In the past, toilets on trains consisted of holes in the toilet floor where the wastes would just drop on to the tracks. Of course there is a warning notice, and even a jingle “Don’t use the WC, when the train is standing in the station”!  When I travelled on trains in India forty years ago, the trains would be so crowded that we often could not use the train toilets. Instead I would look at the train schedule and planned my toilet visits when the trains would stop at the bigger stations for at least 10 minutes or more. I have yet to miss a train for that purpose! 
Some people were even fooled when they told that the same situation was found on the planes. Children were warned not to look up when the planes were flying overhead! However for some people habits die hard. When we were on British Airways flight via Madras, the plane toilets were flooded, as the Indian passengers would use lots of water, instead of tissue paper, for cleaning.

No Paper
 Many Indians and Malays still prefer water than paper for cleaning after. I made a faux pas one day when I was in an Indian friend’s home and asked for paper when I entered the toilet! When I first studied in Bombay, I was curious to see metal tankards in the bathroom.  I later realised the containers were not for drinking but for carrying water into the toilets for washing the bottoms. Since then, I have no qualms using water to wash, but usually preceded with tissue paper to clean initially. It is the custom to use the left hand for washing the bottom as most Malays and Indians eat with their right hands. It is also rude to present gifts with the left hand.

Toilet Signs
There are many euphemisms for the toilet, words like powder room, gents or ladies, small room, or simply bathroom. The English term “Water Closet” is hardly used nowadays except as the abbreviation W.C. In Indonesia, the Dutch pronunciation for these letters is “Weh Seh”, a term used for the toilet. However the term “toilet” is universally understood.
Toilets had to be separated into “Men” and “Women” and signs are labelled accordingly. It could be difficult in foreign countries to decipher the local terms for the gender. Often there are symbols indicating the gender, but in some cultures, men wear “skirts” and keep long hair! It was understandable when the men were pictured wearing hats, but I objected when they showed men smoking a pipe or cigarette! Tourists to Malaysia are sometimes confused as near the toilets are also suraus (prayer rooms) with symbols for men and women.

Safari
            My worst experience was during our holidays in South Africa. We joined the safari tour where we sat in a three-wagon vehicle through the wild animal reserve. We were warned not to get out of the vehicle as there were wild animals around. My bladder was getting full and the jerking of the vehicle over the rough road did not help. There was no toilet stop for over two hours. When it finally came to a mid-station shop with rest rooms, I was the first to jump out and ran to the rest room. As I was so full, it took some time for me to empty the bladder and I was the last to return to the vehicle which almost left without me!

Ipoh Authors



INTRODUCING IPOH AUTHORS
May 9th, in Ipoh. Organised by Perak Academy

1. Introducing Ipoh authors: Dr. Teoh Soong Kee (L), Bridget Eu Yoke Lin (m), Alexandra Wong (2nd from right) and Jasemin Sibo (R) with special guest, Datuk Lat. In a simple yet meaningful event organised by the Perak Academy, four Ipoh authors were introduced to the public through a short sharing session. The authors, Dr Teoh Soong Kee (Cell Wars); Jasemin Sibo (Epiphany!); Bridget Eu Yoke Lin (When Footsteps Merge) and Alexandra Wong (Made In Malaysia) respectively spoke about the “story” behind their publication.
3. Dr Teoh Soong Kee shares a few paragraphs from his book, Cell Wars