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Tuesday opened like a gift — one of those mornings where the sun arrives with real conviction, not the tentative half-light that passes for dawn most days, but proper golden warmth that makes you stand at the window a beat longer than necessary. Kuala Lumpur does this occasionally, reminds you that it has a gear beyond humid and overcast. The whole city seemed to sit a little straighter.
That energy carried into the morning. Ward round moved with a briskness that felt earned rather than rushed — the kind of pace where everything connects, questions get answered on the first attempt, and nobody has to chase a missing file down three corridors. There was a spring in it, quite literally. Some mornings the work simply flows, and you learn not to question it, just ride the current.
Clinic started on time, which is always a minor victory worth noting. The list, however, had other ideas — more patients than originally planned, the schedule quietly expanding like a restaurant that keeps accepting bookings after it's technically full. But the rhythm held. When you've started well, the extras feel manageable rather than overwhelming. You absorb them into the day's architecture without the whole thing threatening to collapse.
Lunch, predictably, arrived late. A discussion with pharma ran longer than expected, the way these things do when someone has slides and genuine enthusiasm. By the time I crossed the road to Jyu Raku, I was running on momentum and appetite in roughly equal measure. There's something grounding about a good bowl of ramen when your morning has been wall-to-wall — the steam, the slowness of it, the forced pause. Even a late lunch counts if you sit down properly.
The afternoon rounds were mercifully quick. A tidy sweep, nothing complicated, everything where it should be. The kind of session that rewards a morning's groundwork.
And then — the balcony. The sun was still making its case by the time I got home, and the balcony caught the last of it beautifully. There's a particular pleasure in sitting outside with nothing pressing, watching the light shift from afternoon gold to something softer. The renovation work Anita's been driving has made this space genuinely worth inhabiting, and evenings like this prove the point.
Between the sunshine and the stillness, I got Irfan's flight sorted for later this month — one of those small administrative tasks that sits on the list for days until you finally just do it, and then wonder why you waited. Ten minutes, done. The satisfaction is disproportionate to the effort, but I'll take it.
The rest of the evening asked nothing of me, and I returned the favour. Just quiet hours, the day's warmth still in the air, the week finding its shape. Two days in, and so far the week is behaving impeccably. Long may it last.