閒人自語

三月 31, 2009

Ching Ming Festival and Paper Clothing

I heard the excitment in Mom’s voice over the phone the other day when I called to tell her that I would be coming up for lunch.

As soon as I turned up, Mom started to try to make me feel at home by telling me things that she guessed I might be interested, at the same time preparing the meal in the kitchen. My little brother’s injury was recovering for one. She met with a friend couple of mine in a teahouse the other morning for another.  And some more which I failed to percieve because of a little boredom.  However, I did try my best to show my interest by uttering some succint responses.

Mom had apparently finished with her cooking, when she put out a box on a chair.

“Ching Ming Festival is coming soon.  Your father told me to buy something good-looking for him to wear, and the other day I came across these in the market.  I bought them right away.  Do they look OK?” She raised something like packs of man’s wear into the air in an obvious attempt to fetch my attention.

“Oh,  I see.”

I had not. Not until she added on and said,”Look how real they look.  You would never believe they are paper until you touch them.”

“Yes. Yes.”  I accorded. “They are just terrific!” I was stricken to a loss of thoughts by the way she mentioned Dad.

Dad had died more than 2 decades ago.

They were one of those many sad couples in the feudal days when marriages were arbitrarily arranged by parents. Dad was the King at home except that he had to work very hard to maintain the livelihood of the whole family, which boasted of 9 mouths. Mom worked even harder. Her time was fully filled with house chores, in and out.

They have never been intimate to each other since my memory began. Dad would seldom spoke gently to Mom. He seldom spoke to anyone actually. We, the six of us, as children would never dare to show any sign of disobedience under his rule.

Probably–I was never told the truth–because of the enduring stress, Mom and Dad often broke into acute quarrels. Mom tried to reclaim her justice with shouting and Dad would keep his mouth shut as long as he could. And we would just try our best to hide from the curious eyes of the neighbors.

Under such fights went our childhood.

Things changed a bit when Dad was contracted with cancer. Mom eased up her strand very much and served her duty as best as she could as a caring wife of a sick husband. During the decade before my dad finally passed away, the atmosphere of the family took to a calmer turn.

Mom did cry with tears when Dad died, though not totally out of sadness apparently. Life has become easier with her since then, under the care of her grown up children. Dad was not much mentioned whence except on special days such as Ching Ming Festival. Life went on.

Over the past few years, Mom would, now and then, relate to us about her dreams in which Dad appeared and spoke to her. I always took it light and attributed it to her superstition.

However, her uttering just now seemed to enlighten me to a subtle change in her attitude towards Dad. The long borne hatred had somehow been evened out by time and was gradually replaced by affectionate thoughts of a person with whom her life had entwined for so long.

I was so amazed at my enlightened understanding that I just sat there and looked at the paper offerings in a haze.

三月 16, 2009

A glimse of sacredness

Filed under: Life, 生活 — Hahnman @ 2:19 am
Tags: , , ,

church_corner, originally uploaded by 閒人自賞.

I walked into a church this morning. It’s one of those rare events I would ever do in my life. The mood inside was really awesome, with the light beaming through the windows brightening the interior softly. I discovered this corner and was immediately attracted by the composition.

三月 8, 2009

友邦的新衣

【本報消息】一場金融海嘯,不僅令投資者對金融產品有戒心,一度熱爆的金融專業課程亦被打入冷宮,投身金融業成了“不可能之任務”。金管局行政委員會主席丁連星昨在保險業招聘會表示,儘管國際金融及保險市場仍有一些問題待解決,希望澳人要對金融業長遠發展抱有信心。

via 澳門日報電子版.

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雖然這場金融危機的元兇並不是人壽保險產品, 但並不代表人壽保險業的經營現狀毫無敝疚. 其銷售手法所涉及的商業道德標準, 仍然是全球消費權益主義者所注視的問題.

不管這個行業現在賣的東西與以往是否不同, 從業員的稱謂是否跟以往不一樣, 經營者對待客戶利益的態度與角度如果仍然是一如以往, 行業的形象將始終是難以改變.

那些長期利用消費者的信息弱勢, 利用銷售人員的個人信用力及生野的奮鬥心智, 放棄嚴慬的專業道德守則, 在大部份無知的消費者身上攫取金錢, 以遂企業的利潤增長目標的投資者及經營者, 無論是換了一個甚麼名號, 最終亦會被這個信息時代的大潮所淘汰.

這將是他們將要面對的另一場海嘯……

三月 7, 2009

The payoff of ethical investing

Filed under: finance, 理財 — Hahnman @ 1:14 am
Tags: , , ,

NEW YORK (Fortune) — Lowell, Blake & Associates is a small, socially-conscious private investment advisory firm with an uncommon approach that’s paid off well for clients lately.

As part of its ethical guidelines, LBA shuns bank stocks, because it believes banks make money by encouraging consumers to go into debt. As a result, the firm has sidestepped one of the great investing catastrophes of our time – the collapse of the financial sector.

via Investor Daily: The payoff of ethical investing – Mar. 5, 2009.

Is this one of those scarce successful examples?

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