Forty-Five Minutes, and a Different Pace of Time
Saturday, July 4, 2026 at 10:53PM
Haris Abdul Rahman in Day Out, Diary, Hulu Langat, drive, durian, friends, orchard, weekend

Please click the photo above to play the daily videoSome days announce themselves as long before you've even finished breakfast, and this was one of them — in the best possible way. It started with the tail end of Argentina against Cape Verde, watched at a properly leisurely pace over a breakfast that ran considerably longer than usual. Cape Verde lost, in the end, but only in the strictest technical sense — a nation of a few hundred thousand people taking the reigning champions to extra time and very nearly further. They didn't win the match. They won a rather larger prize: the goodwill of everyone watching who wasn't Argentine, and quite a few who were. Football occasionally does that — hands you a result and a moral victory in the same ninety-odd minutes, and lets you decide which one matters more.

All that breakfast television meant rounds started later than planned, which had a way of nudging the whole day gently off its usual rails — no bad thing on a Saturday. Lunch took us to Melawati, and somewhere in the middle of it Anita peeled off to sort out an order of flowers, the sort of small domestic errand that keeps a household ticking along quietly in the background.

Then the real journey of the day began: out to Hulu Langat, to see Malis and Adri, friends going back to my Sheffield days, that particular vintage of friendship that survives decades and time zones with barely any maintenance required. Forty-five minutes by road, and yet it felt like considerably more than distance had been crossed. KL's hum gave way to something slower and greener — rural life proceeding at its own unhurried pace, entirely uninterested in whatever urgency the city thinks it's operating under.

I arrived tired enough to justify a short nap, which is one of the genuine luxuries of visiting people who don't mind you disappearing for twenty minutes. Afterwards, we wandered the orchard — two acres of properly fertile ground, durian, cempedak, rambutan, pulasan, banana, the whole generous catalogue of it. There's something quietly humbling about walking through land that productive, knowing exactly none of it required your effort. Just soil doing what soil does, given time and patience neither city life nor I have much practice with.

Dinner was cooked by Malis' mum, which needs no further commentary beyond saying it was the kind of meal that makes restaurant food look slightly try-hard by comparison.

On the way home we stopped at the Ampang vantage point, and Kuala Lumpur laid itself out below in a way that made the whole return journey worth it on its own — the city looking, from that particular distance, considerably calmer than it ever behaves up close.

Home now, properly tired, the good kind, and ready for bed rather sooner than usual.

Article originally appeared on The Daily Dose of Chemo (http://harisrahman.com/).
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