Wednesday, 1 July 2026

Listen: The Cosmos is Talking to You


The universe is not just out there. We are part of it. Learn to talk to the universe, and it will talk to you. 

Usually, we don't bother. We wake up in the morning, look out the window, and what we see simply tells us whether it is about to rain or it is going to be a hot day. We take these and other signs for granted. We treat the cosmos as if it were indifferent to our presence.

But when I was growing up in a remote village in India, there was a livelier conversation with the surroundings. I remember instances when I would see an uncle of mine setting out for the day, only to turn around and march quickly back into the house. "It is a bad day," he would announce with absolute certainty. He had seen a cow urinating outside the house, and that was simply not propitious. The universe had sent him a blunt, rather unglamorous message, and he was smart enough to heed it.

Yet, the universe doesn't only send stop signs. Nor are the signs so fixed that you can’t modify them. When my older sister got married, my mother deliberately took control of the dialogue. She arranged for a cow to be brought right to our front gate, ensuring its face was welcoming the newlyweds. To her, the cow was a sacred symbol of fertility and abundance, a joyful greeting from the cosmos for the newlywed woman. 

In Batang Berjuntai, a small town on the road to Kuala Selangor, businesses don’t start until a white cow with painted horns is brought to their doors.

In our world, a single cow could rewrite your entire day, depending entirely on which end of it you happened to encounter.

Years later, far from the familiar places of my childhood, I met a man from the rainforests of Sarawak who possessed this same cosmic literacy. He read the day’s bird calls and flights as effortlessly as a city-dweller reads the morning newspapers. He was listening to the Beburong, the traditional omen system of the Iban people. To him, the jungle wasn't just a wall of trees and noise; it was a daily gossip column from the gods. If the tiny Ketupong bird gave a sharp, single cry, it was a cosmic warning telling you to stop what you were doing. If the Beragai bird laughed brightly, the universe was giving you its blessing to move forward. Like my mother and my uncle, this man knew that nature was an alphabet, and the world was constantly typing out messages.

For generations, traditional fishermen in Kerala have faced the volatile Arabian Sea without satellite data, relying entirely on the universe to signal the arrival of the massive Southwest Monsoon. They read the subtext of the landscape long before the first raindrop falls. They watch columns of ants marching upward to deposit their eggs on higher ground, and observe low-swarming dragonflies blanket the coastline. To these seasoned mariners, the sea itself changes its scent, and the wind shifts its syntax. They are not just predicting the weather; they are listening to a vast ecosystem of living alarm clocks, coordinating their lives with a highly synchronised cosmic rhythm.

If we elevate our gaze from the sea to the night sky, we find the grandest version of this dialogue: astrology. Long before it was reduced to generalised newspaper horoscopes, true astrology was humanity's original method of decoding the sky. It was built on the understanding that the positions of stars and planets are not distant, meaningless rocks floating in a vacuum. Instead, the macrocosm above is intimately bound to the microcosm below. As above, so below. The cosmic alignment was read as a celestial map of active energy, broadcasting the emotional and physical tides of our collective reality.

If you explain all this to a modern, hyper-rational person, they will smile and call it whimsical superstition. If you explain it to a linguist, they will call it semiotics—the study of how we decode signs and symbols. They would say the cow, the bird, the ants, and the stars are merely "signifiers" onto which we paint our own meanings.

But if you ask Federico Faggin, the legendary physicist who invented the microprocessor, he might tell you that my village elders, the man from Sarawak, and the Kerala fishermen were actually practising advanced quantum mechanics.

For a long time, classical science told us the universe is a cold, dead machine made of separate pieces of matter bumping into each other. In that lonely view, an Iban bird, an Indian cow, or a planet millions of miles away has absolutely nothing to do with human destiny. But Faggin’s revolutionary work in quantum consciousness shatters that illusion. He proposes that consciousness isn't something confined inside our skulls; it is the very fabric of reality. The universe is a single, deeply interconnected whole, and physical matter—the trees, the birds, the cows, and our own bodies—is simply the "user interface" that consciousness uses to show us meaning.

At the deep, quantum level, we are completely entangled with everything around us. There is no "us" and an "external universe." We are parts of the same living organism.

When we realise this, the whimsy of my childhood village becomes a profound truth. My uncle turning back from the cow's posterior, my mother welcoming the bride, the Sarawak elder listening to the canopy, and the astrologers tracing the stars weren't engaging in silly folklore—they were experiencing the literal reality of quantum entanglement. Because we are connected to the whole, our internal paths, doubts, and fears are mirrored perfectly in the behaviour of the world around us.

The universe talks back to us because it is us, continuously writing its daily newspaper to help its parts remember how to stay in touch. So tomorrow morning, when you look out your window, don't just check the weather. Say hello. And pay attention to what clears your path. Or blocks it.

Wednesday, 24 June 2026

Academia-Industry Collaboration: Report on the PR Seminar and a Proposal for a Permanent Forum


The recent seminar, "Bridging Academia and Industry for the Future of Communications," organised by the Public Relations Practitioners Society of Malaysia, marks an important milestone in academia-industry collaboration.

The organisers deserve high praise for their timely initiative in establishing a platform for a dialogue that is critical to higher education in our times. Bringing together regulatory bodies, corporate agencies, and higher educational institutions created a forum for rare and much-needed discourse between the two sectors. However, the dialogue also brought to light deep-seated frustrations and misunderstandings on both sides. It was clear that to bridge the gap between higher education and the modern workplace, there has to be a clear analysis of these friction points and a need to move past mutual blame towards structured, shared solutions.

The Academic Dilemma: Digital Disruption and Structural Rigidities

During the panel discussions and the culminating Roundtable, educators spoke candidly about the shifting dynamics within higher education lecture halls. A primary frustration centred on a perceived decline in student engagement, with educators noting that many students lean toward shortcuts—particularly by utilising generative AI platforms to compile essays and term papers. Over-reliance on AI directly causes cognitive offloading, where students bypass the mental "struggle" necessary to build strong neural pathways for problem-solving and critical thinking. When students use AI to generate immediate answers rather than reasoning through a problem, they transition from active learners to passive consumers.

Furthermore, the seminar highlighted a consensus among academics that the traditional, multi-year university degree structure requires urgent modernisation. The closures of higher educational institutions brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic showed that quality education is no longer confined to physical campuses. To match this environment, many educators advocated for a regulated move towards flexible, career-focused micro-credentials. These short courses allow individuals to master specialised market skills dynamically.

However, academics rightly pointed out that their agility in designing courses is heavily hampered by the prevailing higher education regulatory structure. The rigid quality standards and lengthy approval timelines enforced by the Malaysian Qualifications Agency (MQA) mean that by the time a dynamic communication syllabus is officially accredited, the digital tools and industry realities it covers have already evolved. This regulatory lag forces courses into a uniform template, inadvertently limiting institutional innovation and worsening the challenge of maintaining industry relevance. Durability rather than relevance is the order of play.

The Industry Grievance: The "Discipline" and Work-Life Debate

On the other side of the divide, corporate representatives expressed ongoing frustration regarding the qualities of recent graduate recruits. A common, repeated grievance across the room was a perceived shift in professional commitment, with older executives noting that younger appointees increasingly prioritise a strict "work-life balance" over a total dedication to corporate hours. Within the seminar, this was frequently interpreted as a lack of fundamental workplace discipline—a deficit that many speakers emotionally attributed to changing family dynamics and a decline in traditional, authoritative parental discipline.

While these frustrations are understandable from an employer/management standpoint, the applause from a section of the audience for past authoritarian structures, including the use of the cane, reveals a profound intergenerational misunderstanding. Neither the modern university nor the contemporary corporate workplace fully grasps how the digital landscape has fundamentally altered human life and labour, or how work and the workplace are still rooted in the transitions triggered by the Industrial Revolution. These transitions are tied to physical presence, rigid hierarchy, and unquestioning compliance.

Insisting on a work-life balance is not a sign of laziness; it is a rational, highly adapted response to a hyper-connected economy. Unlike previous generations whose work permanently ended the moment they stepped out of the office, modern digital communication practitioners are tethered to their workplaces 24/7 via smartphones, Slack, and endless algorithmic notification loops. They are expected to monitor live viral feeds and manage reputational risks at any hour. Protecting personal boundaries is an act of cognitive survival, not a lack of discipline. Furthermore, in an era of zero job security and shifting corporate layouts, young professionals view career progression as a flexible network rather than a lifetime contract of blind obedience.

Issues Not Raised: Structural Blind spots and Student Agency

While the seminar dedicated significant time to the behaviour of the younger generation, it was mostly silent on the systemic crises actively reshaping the Malaysian media landscape. These critical matters were only raised briefly by a single participant from the floor, leaving a profound void in the agenda. Specifically, the seminar failed to address how the communications industry should handle volatile, identity-driven crises that have recently held major businesses hostage. The "Allah Socks" controversy, viral geopolitical boycotts targeting established franchises like McDonald's and Starbucks, and highly polarized disputes surrounding the display of the national flag were all accelerated through decentralised social media networks. These are not standard corporate public relations issues; they are explosive intersections of domestic ethnic politics and global sentiments where traditional corporate crisis management handbooks are entirely defenceless. By omitting these live-fire challenges, the seminar paradoxically avoided discussing the exact environments where future graduates will be tested.

The other glaring omission on the agenda was the complete absence of the student voice in resolving the industry-academia alignment gap. Throughout the day, students were talked about, but never talked with. They were treated purely as passive products of a pipeline rather than active stakeholders in their own education. Forward-thinking global institutions, such as the University of Cambridge, have long recognised that student-led governance and participatory curriculum design are essential for institutional resilience. Allowing students a structured, collaborative seat at the table ensures that curriculum updates reflect the lived digital realities of the younger generation. By systematically excluding student agency from the conversation, both academia and industry are ignoring the very insights needed to fix the alignment gap.

The Solution: A Permanent Forum for Industry-Academia Dialogue

If academia continues to blame students for using modern tools, and industry continues to blame families for a lack of corporate submission, both sectors will guarantee their own obsolescence. The solution cannot be resolved through once-a-year seminars or static, bureaucratic Industry Advisory Panels that simply tick an MQA compliance box.

What is needed is the establishment of a Permanent Forum for Industry-Academia Dialogue.

This proposed council, preferably with statutory authority, would function as a formal conduit operating outside rigid bureaucratic hierarchies. Crucially, the framework must allow either sector the autonomous right to call an immediate dialogue whenever a major market disruption occurs.

  • When the Industry Identifies a Capability Gap: If corporate agencies find that graduates lack advanced data analytics skills, legal literacy regarding greenwashing, or real-time crisis management capabilities, they can instantly trigger a forum session to co-design micro-credentials with university deans.
  • When Academia Identifies a Structural Bottleneck: If educators need to test an agile, unapproved course structure within the live-fire sandbox of a corporate agency, they can use the forum to establish credit-bearing, immediate internship pilots without waiting for years of external regulatory paperwork.
  • When Student Agency Drives Innovation: Drawing inspiration from global academic benchmarks, the forum will establish a Student Advisory Council. This allows students to pitch directly to industry heads and university deans, turning the generation that natively understands technology trends from passive consumers into active co-designers of their own courses of study.

By establishing this continuous, balanced feedback loop, the education-to-employment continuum will be structurally enriched. Moving past mutual blame will allow both sectors to deeply comprehend each other's parameters, limitations, and operational realities. Ultimately, this framework challenges us to stop managing higher education as an outdated factory assembly line and start cultivating it as a highly adaptive, shared ecosystem.

The seminar was held on 18 June 2026 at the IACT College.

Tuesday, 12 May 2026

Car Slaves

 


Sitting in the middle of the recent Hari Raya traffic jam, I remember an old cartoon showing a Martian peering into a telescope directed at Earth. He says to his companion, 'The planet Earth is populated by beings that move on wheels. They breed little two-legged creatures to guard, clean and move them. These smaller creatures live their lives around the wheeled beings and are slaves to them.

Staring into a darkness lit with brake lights of different shapes, I started thinking how completely accurate the Martian description was. We have become slaves to the car which dictates our every move.  The car decides when to leave the house, how long to suffer on the road, which toll to avoid, and when to refill our Touch ’n Go cards. If we do not own a four-wheeled being, we summon one with a tap on a phone, as if cars have become a new species of domesticated household pet, obedient, responsive, and always on call.

But how did we get here?

Post-independent prosperity brought two magical facilities of modern life: the housing loan and the car loan. Together, they promised the Malaysian dream of owning a house and a car. The small repayments meant we quietly transferred our financial freedom to the banks for fifteen or more years. We thought we owned these amenities, when in truth, the banks owned us. The car in the porch was not merely a convenience. It was debt on wheels.

But before the banks claimed us, we first claimed the car as something almost sacred. A family’s new car was treated with the reverence reserved for a newborn child. Before it even reached home, it had to be blessed. Hindu owners took it to the temple for a special archanai, where holy water was sprinkled, sandalwood paste applied, and lemons sacrificed beneath the tyres. Catholic and Anglican families drove theirs to church for a prayer and a generous sprinkling of holy water. Malay Muslim families held a doa selamat at home or at the surau. Buddhist monks tied yellow strings to rear-view mirrors. Sikh families offered an ardaas at the gurdwara. Chinese families welcomed their new vehicle with incense, oranges, and auspicious rituals. An idol or symbol was a permanent occupant of the vehicle.

The car emerged spiritually fortified, followed by a ritual every morning, when it was washed and cleaned, if not by the owner, by the maid standing on a stool to reach the roof of the car.

And like any family member, the car had its rites of passage. First came the newborn blessings. Then the wedding years, when it was dressed up with ribbons, flowers, and a “Just Married” sign. After that came the school‑bus years, when the car became a mobile cafeteria, library, counselling centre, and a repository for lost toys and stationery. And finally, the last rite of passage: the funeral convoy, where the car that once carried us everywhere, now accompanies us on our final journey. The car quietly witnesses our entire life cycle, patiently waiting in the porch like a loyal family member who never quite learned to talk but always knew where we needed to go.

Early houses had no porches or garages. So, we invented the makeshift garage: four poles holding a roof of zinc sheets. By the 70s, housing developers surrendered and built proper car porches, even for the smallest terraced houses. These became social spaces that became places to read newspapers, dry clothes, play games, and occasionally park the car.

But today, the car connects us to something far less innocent. The petrol that keeps it alive comes from regions where wars are fought, and civilians live under drones and airstrikes. The quiet sedan sitting in the porch is linked by an invisible pipeline to deserts where people are bombed for the very resource that keeps its engines running. The car that once symbolised our independence now reminds us of our dependence on banks, on oil, on global markets, on conflicts we will never see but cannot escape.

And that is the final irony: in domesticating the car, we have allowed the car to completely colonise us. It rules our schedules, shapes our cities, empties our wallets, and ties us to distant wars.

And yet, as the jam finally begins to move, I realise the car is still our companion; flawed, demanding, and occasionally exasperating, but always ready to carry us home.