...simply said...






Auf Weidersehen

Wednesday, December 22, 2004
Deaer Favourite Housemate,

I AM VERY UPSET. YOU CANNOT LEAVE ME.

I cannot believe this day has actually come. I cannot believe that no longer can I knock on the door of the 2nd bedroom on the left for a chat, or hear the sound of you walking down ine corridor in your slippers. No more side by side MSN chats on the couch nor late night talks on either of our beds. No more splashing around in the pool together, no more bread, cheese and jam breakfasts. No more German lessons nor laughing at Helicopter. No more giggling at the boys, no more day trips to wherever.

Now I have no one to be short with me.

The house is empty without you.

This goodbye may seem final, but we will meet again. California? (cauliflower) Germany? Malaysia? Who knows?!

It's more than 8 hrs since our last hug, and the tears continue to flow. It is your fault if I have puffy eyes all the way to Mt Gambier. Wonder how Frank is doing.


I miss you too much.

Come back.


Love, Me.



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p/s
10th May 2005

...still missing youuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu
It's getting cold now and it feels like when we first moved in... only we're not using the heater so much this time!

Reichi's coming to town!

Thursday, December 16, 2004
~Blinkie of the day~



Sorry I've not been updating! Been so busy and tired. Was juggling 3 jobs, working 12 hour days and 52 hr weeks for awhile. Job A was waitressing at functions. I'm employed by an agency that hotels, etc seek when they need extra staff. So that agent calls me up and asks me if I want to work! Perfect job! The pay is nothing to complain about either @ >$20/hour. Job B was delivering tourist booklets, which I have now quit. Pay was also fantastic @ $190/~8hr's work. Was estimated to be 1 1/2 days' / 12 hrs work but I dragged housemate Svenja as my P.A. (almost?) and we were zipping around! And Job C was working in a pharmacy!!! Finally!! Some know I've been dying to work in a pharmacy for eons now, but no one would take me.. sniff sniff. Finally got work experience @ a place 40 mins from home! It wasn't a big pharmacy, but the people working there were SO nice and during quiet times they'll show me how to do things and teach me about stuff like the health system, etc. I really enjoyed working there but there wasn't enough for me to do at times and I got really bored. Today was my last day after 2 weeks of work. Hopefully that's given me enough to get a PAID job somewhere....

Other than that, the count-down to Svenja's leaving has started. She's leaving on the 22nd of December. Everytime I think about it, I want to cry. Living with somebody, sharing your thoughts and feelings and heck... sharing a bathroom has made her almost like a sister to me. (Yeah we totally look alike) But I am dreading this farewell so much because she's going home to Germany, and there is no guarantee we'll ever meet again. And even if we do, we might have grown-up / changed and have so many different circumstances. We'll never have the same housemates, same neighbours, perhaps not even the same house! (noo....) So it's such a different 'experience' to saying goodbye to family and friends in Malaysia. Cause although some may go away to study, they'll come home, we'll chat over much-missed mamak food, bring out that good ol' Malaysian slang and at the end of the day, nothing much would have changed. Everyone who agrees with me say "Ya lor!!"

And to end this entry, Reichi's coming tomorrow!!!

Cock village

Tuesday, December 07, 2004
Hmm.. I just spent the last 2 hours fretting and worrying because there was nothing on my blogger dashboard, i.e. no blog name, no clickable 'new post' .... then i realised i was logged into my 'quinz' acc. (which I didn't know I had) instead of 'quinz_85'. Genius!!

Okie dokes! Sorry for not updating for awhile... been busy + procrastinating.. but hopefully this will satisfy!


Hair Revamp = $31

So.. my trip to the salon finally happened, and after 3 hours of painting dye onto my hair, painstaking folding of foil, questions after every 5 snips, trying not to fall asleep, I'm here with my new hair!


Pls ignore messy room!!


I really like it! Basically, it's a trim with a fringe. And foil highlights! 'Violet red' V. nice!

The best part? 31 bucks! That's nothing! Normal price is $150. Even for RM90 I don't think you could get that. How? Where? Training Academy. Sherman's Hair Academy. By students (...for students?). Well, it's a win-win situation. They get the training, I get to look pretty. I actually think it's better to get your hair cut by a (good) student cause they pay more attention, especially to what you want. Perfecto!


Trip to the Adelaide Hills.

Last Sunday, day trip to the Hills near my house.


Time planned to depart from home: 9.00am

9.55 - Actually leave home




10.30 - Arrive at some market.. lotsa home-made goodies e.g jams, quilts, Christmas goodies. Tried something called a 'bum-burner' which was a very spicy sausage. Bought a 'Port Power ducky' for somebody (can't say who).




11.10 - Arrive at Melba's Chocolate Factory & Woodside Cheese factory!!! *heaven* Bought a 1 kg bag for factory seconds and a small bag of chocolate covered coffee beans. Discover with great disappointment that the cheese place was NO LONGER OPEN FOR TASTING. (at least i got my chocolate fix)




The factory part of it...


12.00 - Visited the 'World's largest rocking-horse'. Whoopeedoo. It IS big, but what can you do with a giganormous rocking horse??




And you wonder why I have a bad sense of direction..........................


12.30 - Arrive at Chain of Ponds winery. Drank too much wine too fast. Woohoo!! I like the name of the winery.


1.15 - Nepenthe winery. This is like my 3rd or 4th time here; it's a great place. Air-con, comfy sofa.. Ah.. nice break from the wine. They actually recognize Mark now, so he got wine at 5 bucks a bottle! Ori price: $17 i think... Least they know how to treat their regulars. hehe.. I almost fell asleep quite a few times. The coolness was a nice break from the hot day.


This is just outside the cellar door. Like the tree?


2.00 - Last winery, Shaw and Smith. Wine tasting here was a little different - had to pay! But i finally got my cheese and there was a chardonnay i really liked. The place was very simply yet well decorated, glass panels instead of walls overlooking rolling hills of vines. Gorgeous!!


Too bad you can't see the inside deco....



hehe...


3.00 - LUNCH!!!!! At Grumpy's. They have the humongoustest pizzas you've ever seen.. Too bad no photos. Was more focussed on digging in. Not just quantity, quality too! There was this old goat.. the funniest thing ever! It would wag its tail like a dog when you came near and wagged it even faster when you came with some delicious leaves.


That is Frank's car. He was told to move it because apparently Yiros, the goat, would try to jump on the car to reach the leaves on the tree. Smart!



It was head-butting / nuzzling my boobs!!! Me thinks it needs a lady goat....


4.30 - Hahndorf!! Hahndorf is a little town built by the Germans ages ago. Very quaint, very pretty, and has my favourite fudge shop (and i wonder why i cannot lose weight). According to German housemate, Hahndorf means 'cock village'. Hmm.


Sorry, Svenja not in for translation services...



Already!


5.20 - Home!!!!!


Hey it's been a long day...




Tommy

Monday, December 06, 2004

John Powell, a professor at Loyola University in Chicago writes about a student in his Theology of Faith class named Tommy:

Some twelve years ago, I stood watching my university students file into the classroom for our first session in the Theology of Faith. That was the day I first saw Tommy. My eyes and my mind both blinked. He was combing his long flaxen hair, which hung six inches below his shoulders. It was the first time I had ever seen a boy with hair that long. I guess it was just coming into fashion then. I know in my mind that it isn't what's on your head but what's in it that counts; but on that day I was unprepared and my emotions flipped. I immediately filed Tommy under "S" for strange... very strange.

Tommy turned out to be the "atheist in residence" in my Theology of Faith course. He constantly objected to, smirked at, or whined about the possibility of an unconditionally loving Father/God. We lived with each other in relative peace for one semester, although I admit he was for me at times a serious pain in the back pew. When he came up at the end of the course to turn in his final exam, he asked in a cynical tone "Do you think I'll ever find God?" I decided instantly on a little shock therapy. "No!" I said very emphatically. "Why not" he responded "I thought that was the product you were pushing." I let him get five steps from the classroom door and then called out "Tommy! I don't think you'll ever find Him, but I am absolutely certain that He will find you!" He shrugged a little and left my class and my life. I felt slightly disappointed at the thought that he had missed my clever line He will find you! At least I thought it was clever.

Later I heard that Tommy had graduated and I was duly grateful. Then a sad report came. I heard that Tommy had terminal cancer. Before I could search him out, he came to see me. When he walked into my office, his body was very badly wasted and the long hair had all fallen out as a result of chemotherapy. But his eyes were bright and his voice was firm, for the first time, I believe. "Tommy, I've thought about you so often.. I hear you are sick" I blurted out.

"Oh, yes, very sick. I have cancer in both lungs. It's a matter of weeks."

"Can you talk about it, Tom?" I asked.

"Sure, what would you like to know?" he replied.

"What's it like to be only twenty-four and dying?"

"Well, it could be worse."

"Like what?"

"Well, like being fifty and having no values or ideals, like being fifty and thinking that booze, seducing women, and making money are the real 'biggies' in life."

I began to look through my mental file cabinet under 'S'where I had filed Tommy as strange. (It seems as though everybody I try to reject by classification, God sends back into my life to educate me.)

"But what I really came to see you about" Tom said "is something you said to me on the last day of class." (He remembered!) He continued "I asked you if you thought I would ever find God and you said 'No!' which surprised me. Then you said 'But He will find you.' I thought about that a lot, even though my search for God was hardly intense at that time. (My clever line. He thought about that a lot!) "But when the doctors removed a lump from my groin and told me that it was malignant, that's when I got serious about locating God. And when the malignancy spread into my vital organs, I really began banging bloody fists against the bronze doors of heaven. But God did not come out.. In fact, nothing happened. Did you ever try anything for a long time with great effort and with no success? You get psychologically glutted, fed up with trying. And then you quit."

"Well, one day I woke up, and instead of throwing a few more futile appeals over that high brick wall to a God who may be or may not be there, I just quit. I decided that I didn't really care about God, about an after life, or anything like that. I decided to spend what time I had left doing something more profitable. I thought about you and your class and I remembered something else you had said: 'The essential sadness is to go through life withou tloving. But it would be almost equally sad to go through life and leave this world without ever telling those you loved that you had loved them.'"

"So, I began with the hardest one, my Dad. He was reading the newspaper when I approached him. "Dad."

"Yes, what?" he asked without lowering the newspaper.

"Dad, I would like to talk with you."

"Well, talk."

"I mean it's really important." The newspaper came down three slow inches.

"What is it?"

"Dad, I love you. I just wanted you to know that."

Tom smiled at me and said it with obvious satisfaction, as though he felt a warm and secret joy flowing inside of him."

The newspaper fluttered to the floor. Then my father did two things I could never remember him ever doing before. He cried and he hugged me. We talked all night, even though he had to go to work the next morning. It felt so good to be close to my father, to see his tears, to feel his hug, to hear him say that he loved me."

"It was easier with my mother and little brother. They cried with me, too, and we hugged each other, and started saying real nice things to each other. We shared the things we had been keeping secret for so many years. I was only sorry about one thing --- that I had waited so long. Here I was, just beginning to open up to all the people I had actually been close to."

"Then, one day I turned around and God was there. Hedidn't come to me when I pleaded with Him. I guess I was like an animal trainer holding out a hoop, 'C'mon, jump through. C'mon, I'll give You three days, three weeks.' Apparently God does things in His own way and at His own hour. But the important thing is that He was there. He found me! You were right. He found me even after I stopped looking for Him."

"Tommy" I practically gasped "I think you are saying something very important and much more universal than you realize. To me, at least, you are saying that the surest way to find God is not to make Him a private possession, a problem solver, or an instant consolation in time of need, but rather by opening to love. You know, the Apostle John said that. He said: 'God is love, and anyone who lives in love is living with God and God is living in him.'"

"Tom, could I ask you a favor? You know, when I had you in class you were a real pain. But (laughingly) you can make it all up to me now. Would you come into my present Theology of Faith course and tell them what you have just told me? If I told them the same thing it wouldn't be half as effective as if you were to tell them."

"Ooh .... I was ready for you, but I don't know if I'm ready for your class."

"Tom, think about it. If and when you are ready, give me a call."

In a few days Tom called, said he was ready for the class, that he wanted to do that for God and for me. So we scheduled a date. However, he never made it. He had another appointment, far more important than the one with me and my class. Of course, his life was not really ended by his death, only changed. He made the great step from faith into vision. He found a life far more beautiful than the eye of man has ever seen or the ear of man has ever heard or the mind of man has ever imagined. Before he died, we talked one last time.

"I'm not going to make it to your class" he said.

"I know,Tom."

"Will you tell them for me? Will you tell the whole world for me?"

"I will, Tom. I'll tell them. I'll do my best."

So, to all of you who have been kind enough to read thissimple story about God's love, thank you for listening. And to you, Tommy, somewhere in the sunlit, verdant hills of heaven --- I told them, Tommy, as best I could.


Thanks again, Chris....


Bahasa Teknik

Why does our Government insist on using English for maths and science?
This is because globally, people use English as the main IT language at this moment.
How dangerous it is if we were to try using Bahasa for out IT education, especially in school.

See examples below:
*hardware = barang keras
*software = barang lembut
*joystick = batang gembira
*plug and play = cucuk dan main
*port = lubang
*server = pelayan
*client = pelanggan

Try translating this:

ENGLISH:
"That server gives a plug and play service to the clients using either hardware or software joystick. The joystick goes into the port of the client."

BAHASA:
"Pelayan itu memberi pelanggannya layanan cucuk dan main dengan menggunakan batang gembira jenis keras atau lembut. Batang gembira itudimasukkan ke dalam lubang pelanggan."

Thanks Chris, this got me in fits...

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