Thursday, June 30, 2011

Farewell Dinner

After going through a few farewell gatherings, it's finally mine. I guess it's time to say goodbye to my 7 months year old office boy job.

We had dinner at this place called Poco Homemade.




The original picture is not like this, but just so happened that this color makes the picture looks nicer. :)

After the dinner, one the ride home, I only realized that I have always been blessed with great friends around me. Crazy bunch that always laugh.
I'm really grateful for that.








WithMs Kasse

Waiting for other pictures to be posted.



Love life.

:NFTB:



- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
I've tried to post something from my ipod like a few times and it's not posting. ish.


Oh well, today's the last day of work.

Below's my farewell letter.


Dear all,

I want to bid farewell to you all and inform you that I'm leaving my position at Double A. Today's my last day of work.

I have enjoyed working for this company and I appreciate having had this wonderful opportunity to work with all of you. I want to thank you all for the guidance and support that you all have provided me.

Even though I will miss you all here yet I'm looking forward to start a new phase in life.

They do say that good things have to come to an end in order for the better things to kick in.


Lastly, do wish you all all the best in life.




I think it's ok la. haha



"NFTB"
It feels like graduation day all over again.


Friday, June 24, 2011

Remembered that I saw a post on either twitter or tumblr.


You own a blog, doesn't mean you're a writer.
You own a camera, doesn't mean you're a photographer.
You own a paint brush, doesn't mean you're a painter.
The thing you have is only the internet.


I think it's something like that, I'm unable to find that post. eks.


Oh well.


:NFTB:
Kinda think of it, I actually practiced from 9 to 11:30 yesterday night, and I felt it wasn't enough.

I did some tone exercise, then fingering ( failed, badly ), scales, chromatic scales.

About the chromatic scales. really wtf la.
I can't believe I can't do it nicely.

The problem is from upper E to C.
I was on repeat for like 15 mins on that thing. =.=

Anyway, but the plus side of the whole practice was my Die Flerdemaus insane double tongue extravaganza.
I'm improved! And I did that for like 15-20 mins, I can't recall, but in the end I stopped because my tongue was tired and I can't double tongue that fast anymore. LOL!


I was able to do a lot of stuff because of my new buddy. :D



"NFTB"

Wednesday, June 22, 2011


It's actually really early for me to get a birthday gift, but since it happened, who cares? Hehe.






My new 5 in 1 tuner.
My best friend on the road to a better music player. :)


"NFTB"

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
I'm actually feeling quite delighted although I'm paying for my own birthday gift.
Well, it's something I should have got a long long time ago, and yet I'm getting it today.
Oh well, at least I'm making the effort to become a better music player.
RM 190, bye bye.



Was having dinner with my relatives yesterday night, it was actually pretty random, cause I was actually waiting for my sister at her school which her exam was until 8:45 pm, after she's done, we went to Mum's place at Damansara Perdana to meet with them.
After dinner we went to my uncle's house, which two of my little cousins pops onto our car.
And this 14 years old cousin told us ( me and my sis ) about his school stuff.

He said: There's this guy in class, I think he has a crush on me. The word around is that people saying that's he gay and he's like stalking me around.
Me: Well, you don't really know he's gay what, maybe he really like your acquittance?
He: But people said that he went and ask another whether he's straight or not.
Me: Just because he asked that so it makes him gay?




I'm actually quite surprised that my 14 years old cousin is such a homophobe.
I guess when you're studying in a school like Garden's international, your reputation is everything.

I think I was expecting too much I guess, after all he's only 14.


Stereotype, is not a good thing.



"NFTB"

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Been meaning to blog and yet nothing comes out.
Oh gosh.

The only thing that I feel right now is my tiredness.
I feel like my shoulders weight a ton and everything just seems so tiring.
Oh gosh.

I guess that happens when reaching the end of something.

I'm actually quite looking forward in my uni life.

Being an adventurous person that I am, I can't wait for school to start.
Well, this doesn't have anything to do with being adventurous, but anyway la. :p


major xianness now, got technically nothing to do but to wait for emails and calls.


"NFTB"
I love my blue rubber duckie. :D



p.s: Was watching ugly betty yesterday night, and it was the episode that she went for the writing class, the tutor said that if you have nothing to write, try killing yourself. hmm.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

So the whole "A facebook page that cost RM1.8 mil" is making it's way up to the top.
Well, normally I don't really give a shit about what's going on, but this I have to.
It's mainly because that Facebook is being included so that's making all the teenagers going mad about this shit.

\


So I did a lil digging from Wiki.



"Dr. Ng then graduated from Universiti Malaya in 1972 with a Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS). She was also awarded a Diploma of Reproductive Medicine from the Johns Hopkins University, USA."


I am stunned actually. Do you notice the way she talks?
Not to mention the fact that she speaks in a very auntyish way, and yet she's speaking like a gangster! That's the thing I can't accept.
First and fore most, you're a medical graduate, you were to become a doctor and yet you speak like that?
Second, you're the MINISTER of Malaysia's Ministry of Tourism and you speak like that.

After reading stuff in wiki, I really doubt her ability of being the Minister.

According to this article.

“Is Ng carrying out her duties to promote Malaysian tourism or is she promoting foreign tourism instead? Is she now qualified to be called a tourist or the tourism minister?” Chua Tian Chang asked.

tsk tsk tsk.
Malaysia is a big country, and Ng Yen Yen is the best among the other candidates for the Minister position?

Simply stunning.




"NFTB"


Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Alain de Botton: A kinder, gentler philosophy of success

For me they normally happen, these career crises, often, actually, on a Sunday evening, just as the sun is starting to set, and the gap between my hopes for myself, and the reality of my life, start to diverge so painfully that I normally end up weeping into a pillow. I'm mentioning all this, I'm mentioning all this because I think this is not merely a personal problem. You may think I'm wrong in this. But I think that we live in an age when our lives are regularly punctuated by career crises, by moments when what we thought we knew, about our lives, about our careers, comes into contact with a threatening sort of reality.

It's perhaps easier now, than ever before, to make a good living. It's perhaps harder than ever before, to stay calm, to be free of career anxiety. I want to look now, if I may, at some of the reasons why we might be feeling anxiety about our careers. Why we might be victims of these career crises, as we're weeping softly into our pillows. One of the reasons why we might be suffering is that we are surrounded by snobs.

Now, in a way, I've got some bad news, particularly to anybody who's come to Oxford from abroad. There is a real problem with snobbery. Because sometimes people from outside the U.K. imagine imagine that snobbery is a distinctively U.K. phenomenon fixated on country houses and titles. The bad news is that's not true. Snobbery is a global phenomenon. We are a global organization. This is a global phenomenon. It exists. What is a snob? A snob is anybody who takes a small part of you and uses that to come to a complete vision of who you are. That is snobbery.

And the dominant kind of snobbery that exists nowadays is job snobbery. You encounter it within minutes at a party, when you get asked that famous iconic question of the early 21st century, "What do you do?" And according to how you answer that question, people are either incredibly delighted to see you, or look at their watch and make their excuses. (Laughter)

Now, to opposite of a snob is your mother. (Laughter) Not necessarily your mother, or indeed mine. But, as it were, the ideal mother. Somebody who doesn't care about your achievements. But unfortunately, most people are not our mothers. Most people make a strict correlation between how much time, and if you like, love, not romantic love, though that may be something, but love in general, respect, they are willing to accord us, that will be strictly defined by our position in the social hierarchy.

And that's a lot of the reason why we care so much about our careers. And indeed start caring so much about material goods. You know, we're often told that we live in very materialistic times, that we're all greedy people. I don't think we are particularly materialistic. I think we live in a society which has simply pegged certain emotional rewards to the acquisition of material goods. It's not the material goods we want. It's the rewards we want. And that's a new way of looking at luxury goods. The next time you see somebody driving a Ferrari don't think, "This is somebody who is greedy." Think, "This is somebody who is incredibly vulnerable and in need of love." In other words -- (Laughter) feel sympathy, rather than contempt.

There are other reasons -- (Laughter) There are other reasons why it's perhaps harder now to feel calm than ever before. One of these, and it's paradoxical because it's linked to something that's rather nice, is the hope we all have for our careers. Never before have expectations been so high about what human beings can achieve with their lifespan. We're told, from many sources, that anyone can achieve anything. We've done away with the caste system. We are now in a system where anyone can rise to any position they please. And it's a beautiful idea. Along with that is a kind of spirit of equality. We're all basically equal. There are no strictly defined kind of hierarchies.

There is one really big problem with this. And that problem is envy. Envy, it's a real taboo to mention envy, but if there is one dominant emotion in modern society, that is envy. And it's linked to the spirit of equality. Let me explain. I think it would be very unusual for anyone here, or anyone watching, to be envious of the Queen of England. Even though she is much richer than any of you are. And she's got a very large house. The reason why we don't envy her is because she's too weird. She's simply too strange. We can't relate to her. She speaks in a funny way. She comes from an odd place. So we can't relate to her. And when you can't relate to somebody, you don't envy them.

The closer two people are, in age, in background, in the process of identification, the more there is a danger of envy. Which is incidentally why none of you should ever go to a school reunion. Because there is no stronger reference point than people one was at school with. But the problem, generally, of modern society, is that it turns the whole world into a school. Everybody is wearing jeans, everybody is the same. And yet, they're not. So there is a spirit of equality, combined with deep inequalities. Which makes for a very -- can make for a very stressful situation.

It's probably as unlikely that you would nowadays become as rich and famous as Bill Gates, as it was unlikely in the 17th century that you would accede to the ranks of the French aristocracy. But the point is, it doesn't feel that way. It's made to feel, by magazines and other media outlets, that if you've got energy, a few bright ideas about technology, a garage, you too could start a major thing. (Laughter) And the consequences of this problem make themselves felt in bookshops. When you go to a large bookshop and look at the self-help sections, as I sometimes do, if you analyze self-help books that are produced in the world today, there are basically two kinds. The first kind tells you, "You can do it! You can make it! Anything is possible!" And the other kind tell you how to cope with what we politely call "low self-esteem," or impolitely call "feeling very bad about yourself."

There is a real correlationship, a real correlation between a society that tells people that they can do anything, and the existence of low self-esteem. So that's another way in which something that is quite positive can have a nasty kickback. There is another reason why we might be feeling more anxious, about our careers, about our status in the world today, than ever before. And it is again, linked to something nice. And that nice thing is called meritocracy.

Now everybody, all politicians on left and right, agree that meritocracy is a great thing, and we should all be trying to make our societies really really meritocratic. In other words, what is a meritocratic society? A meritocratic society is one in which if you've got talent and energy and skill, you will get to the top. Nothing should hold you back. It's a beautiful idea. The problem is if you really believe in a society where those who merit to get to the top, get to the top, you'll also, by implication, and in a far more nasty way, believe in a society where those who deserve to get to the bottom also get to the bottom and stay there. In other words, your position in life comes to seem not accidental, but merited and deserved. And that makes failure seem much more crushing.

You know, in the middle ages, in England, when you met a very poor person, that person would be described as an "unfortunate." Literally, somebody who had not been blessed by fortune, an unfortunate. Nowadays, particularly in the United States, if you meet someone at the bottom of society, they may, unkindly, be described as a "loser." There is a real difference between an unfortunate and a loser. And that shows 400 years of evolution in society, and our belief in who is responsible for our lives. It's no longer the gods, it's us. We're in the driving seat.

That's exhilarating if you're doing well, and very crushing if you're not. It leads, in the worst cases, in the analysis of a sociologist like Emil Durkheim, it leads to increased rates of suicide. There are more suicides in developed individualistic countries than in any other part of the world. And some of the reason for that is that people take what happens to them extremely personally. The own their success. But they also own their failure.

Is there any relief from some of these pressures that I've just been outlining? I think there is. I just want to turn to a few of them. Let's take meritocracy. This idea that everybody deserves to get where they get to. I think it's a crazy idea, completely crazy. I will support any politician of left and right, with any halfway decent meritocratic idea. I am a meritocrat in that sense. But I think it's insane to believe that we will ever make a society that is genuinely meritocratic. It's an impossible dream.

The idea that we will make a society where literally everybody is graded, the good at the top, and the bad at the bottom, and it's exactly done as it should be, is impossible. There are simply too many random factors. Accidents, accidents of birth, accidents of things dropping on people's heads, illnesses, etc. We will never get to grade them. Never get to grade people as they should.

I'm drawn to a lovely quote by St. Augustine in "The City of God," where he says, "It's a sin to judge any man by his post." In modern English that would mean, it's a sin to come to any view of who you should talk to dependent on their business card. It's not the post that should count. And according to St. Augustine, it's only God who can really put everybody in their place. And he's going to do that on the Day of Judgement with angels and trumpets, and the skies will open. Insane idea, if you're a secularist person, like me. But something very valuable in that idea, nevertheless.

In other words, hold your horses when you're coming to judge people. You don't necessarily know what someone's true value is. That is an unknown part of them. And we shouldn't behave as though it is known. There is another source of solace and comfort for all this. When we think about failing in life, when we think about failure, one of the reasons why we fear failing is not just a loss of income, a loss of status. What we fear is the judgement and ridicule of others. And it exists.

You know, the number one organ of ridicule nowadays, is the newspaper. And if you open the newspaper any day of the week, it's full of people who've messed up their lives. They've slept with the wrong person. They've taken the wrong substance. They've passed the wrong legislation. Whatever it is. And then are fit for ridicule. In other words, they have failed. And they are described as "losers." Now is there any alternative to this? I think the Western tradition shows us one glorious alternative. And that is tragedy.

Tragic art, as it developed in the theaters of ancient Greece, in the Fifth Century B.C., was essentially an art form devoted to tracing how people fail. And also according them a level of sympathy. Which ordinary life would not necessarily accord them. I remember a few years ago, I was thinking about all this. And I went to see "The Sunday Sport," a tabloid newspaper that I don't recommend you to start reading, if you're not familiar with it already. And I went to talk to them about certain of the great tragedies of Western art. And I wanted to see how they would seize the bare bones of certain stories if they came in as a news item at the news desk on a Saturday afternoon.

So I told them about Othello. They had not heard of it but were fascinated by it. (Laughter) And I asked them to write the headline for the story of Othello. They came up with "Love-Crazed Immigrant Kills Senators Daughter" splashed across the headline. I gave them the plotline of Madame Bovary. Again, a book they were enchanted to discover. And they wrote "Shopaholic Adulteress Swallows Arsenic After Credit Fraud" (Laughter) And then my favorite. They really do have a kind of genius all of their own, these guys. My favorite is Sophocles' "Oedipus the King." "Sex With Mum Was Blinding" (Laughter) (Applause)

In a way, if you like, at one end of the spectrum of sympathy, you've got the tabloid newspaper. At the other end of the spectrum you've got tragedy and tragic art. And I suppose I'm arguing that we should learn a little bit about what's happening in tragic art. It would be insane to call Hamlet a loser. He is not a loser, though he has lost. And I think that is the message of tragedy to us, and why it's so very very important, I think.

The other thing about modern society, and why it causes this anxiety, is that we have nothing at its center that is non-human. We are the first society to be living in a world where we don't worship anything other than ourselves. We think very highly of ourselves. And so we should. We've put people on the moon. We've done all sorts of extraordinary things. And so we tend to worship ourselves.

Our heros are human heros. That's a very new situation. Most other societies have had, right at their center, the worship of something transcendent. A god, a spirit, a natural force, the universe. Whatever it is, something else that is being worshiped. We've slightly lost the habit of doing that. Which is, I think, why we're particularly drawn to nature. Not for the sake of our health, though it's often presented that way. But because it's an escape from the human anthill. It's an escape from our own competition, and our own dramas. And that's why we enjoy looking at glaciers and oceans, and contemplating the Earth from outside its perimeters, etc. We like to feel in contact with something that is non-human. And that is so deeply important to us.

What I think I've been talking about really is success and failure. And one of the interesting things about success is that we think we know what it means. If I said to you that there is somebody behind the screen who is very very successful, certain ideas would immediately come to mind. You would think that person might have made a lot of money, achieved renown in some field. My own theory of success, and I'm somebody who is very interested in success. I really want to be successful. I'm always thinking, "How could I be more successful?" But as I get older, I'm also very nuanced about what that word "success" might mean.

Here's an insight that I've had about success. You can't be successful at everything. We hear a lot of talk about work-life balance. Nonsense. You can't have it all. You can't. So any vision of success has to admit what it's losing out on, where the element of loss is. And I think any wise life will accept as I say, that there is going to be an element where we are not succeeding.

And the thing about a successful life, is a lot of the time, our ideas of what it would mean to live successfully, are not our own. They are sucked in from other people. Chiefly, if you're a man, your father. And if you're a woman, your mother. Psychoanalysis has been drumming home this message for about 80 years. No one is quite listening hard enough. But I very much believe that that's true.

And we also suck in messages from everything from the television, to advertising, to marketing, etc. These are hugely powerful forces That define what we want, and how we view ourselves. When we're told that banking is a very respectable profession a lot of us want to go into banking. When banking is no longer so respectable, we lose interest in banking. We are highly open to suggestion.

So what I want to argue for, is not that we should give up on our ideas of success. But we should make sure that they are our own. We should focus in on our ideas. And make sure that we own them, that we are truly the authors of our own ambitions. Because it's bad enough, not getting what you want. But it's even worse to have an idea of what it is you want, and find out at the end of a journey, that it isn't, in fact, what you wanted all along.

So I'm going to end it there. But what I really want to stress is by all means, success, yes. But let's accept the strangeness of some of our ideas. Let's probe away at our notions of success. Let's make sure our ideas of success are truly our own. Thank you very much. (Applause)

Chris Anderson: That was fascinating. How do you reconcile this idea of someone being -- it being bad to think of someone as a loser, with the idea that a lot of people like, of seizing control of your life. And that a society that encourages that perhaps has to have some winners and losers.

Alain de Botton: Yes. I think it's merely the randomness of the winning and losing process that I wanted to stress. Because the emphasis nowadays is so much on the justice of everything. And politicians always talk about justice. Now I am a firm believer in justice. I just think that it is impossible. So we should do everything we can, we should do everything we can to pursue it. But at the end of the day we should always remember that whoever is facing us, whatever has happened in their lives, there will be a strong element of the haphazard. And it's that that that I'm trying to leave room for. Because otherwise it can get quite claustrophobic.

Chris Anderson: I mean, do you believe that you can combine your kind of kinder, gentler philosophy of work with a successful economy? Or do you think that you can't? But it doesn't matter too much that we're putting too much emphasis on that?

Alain de Botton: The nightmare thought is that frightening people is the best way to get work out of them. And that somehow the crueler the environment the more people will rise to the challenge. You want to think, who would you like as your ideal dad? And your ideal dad is somebody who is tough but gentle. And it's a very hard line to make. We need fathers, as it were, the exemplary father figures in society, avoiding the two extremes. Which is the authoritarian, disciplinarian, on the one hand. And on the other, the lax, no rules option.

Chris Anderson: Alain de Botton.

Alain de Botton: Thank you very much. (Applause)





"NFTB"

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

6:03 pm

Conversation between me and my uncle.


U: I think it's best you talk to your father first before doing anything.
Me: yeah, I think? I'll try to communicate with him and see how it goes.
U: well, don't worry. If you wanna study, just study.
Me: oh. Ok ok.


Sometimes I wonder why my aunts and uncle cares more than my own father.
I wonder if ther's a theory like because you're indirect related to someone so you tend to care more? Or you're just a better person.

I'm touched by my uncle's words.
I called him yesterday but he didn't pick up and he called by just now.
My agenda was to loan the remaining 40k from him and when he called just now just don't know what to say.

P.s: my singapore aunt called me this afternoon and advices me to talk to my dad first.


Oh well. I don't have any other options do I?



"NFTB"



- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone



Some confident boost.



"NFTB"


Tuesday, June 7, 2011

For all that happened, I never realized it.

I have a father who thinks I'm incapable of completing a degree.
By so means I've got no money to go uni which I'm not really afraid off.

But the other thing is that I would wish that my father, Lee Chin Guan will go to hell.

He failed to raise his kids and refuses to pay for their college fee. What the hell is that?

Oh well.

People changes
Life changes

I guess I'll be having a whole different kind of life now.


May all go well.


"NFTB"
Pray hard for me to find the remaining RM40k.

The thing about passion is something like what he said.

"I'm not a good singer, but I just enjoy it."



That's what passion is all about.


You don't need to be the greatest athlete in the world to be on top on mount everest.
You just gotta have the right mindset to be on top of the hill. :)



"NFTB"
I can't help to feel like the past could be better if I've had did this this that that. I know there's no use doing so and the thing about living the present is that I don't know where is the line of enough? I kept on looking back yet I'm not focusing on the present.


Things can be changed if people believes in themselves.

Even in the darkest dark, there's a pit of light.


Never let yourself down.


"NFTB"



- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Monday, June 6, 2011

So, there's this birthday party coming and I'm actually looking forward to it, but I'm having problems with what to wear, cause it's a birthday party, and I just wanna look good. :D

I've been searching, and this is what I wanna wear, I think?

It's totally me. :D
I mean, it's a nerdy look with bright color accessories, which is my totally thing.
I've already got the shoe, the watch, and now I need a bow tie and a belt, which I know where I'm getting the belt, so it's the bow tie that's killing me.

For this little piece of beauty. It cost like 35 dollars with 13 dollars shipping fee which cost around RM 150 for a bowtie! Faints.




So, I've searched around, and this is what I can consider buying.
It's not really expensive, each of it cost around RM40.






So, just comment and tell me which do you prefer.

Thanks in advance. :D


"NFTB"

Friday, June 3, 2011

Thinking back the times where I thought of ending my life.

I wanted to change the current situation, but nothing can be done, and so, it occurred to me that maybe by ending my life I can no longer need to change.

Oh well, that's the past.
There's so much things in the world that I wish to change, and yet, I'm impossible to do so.

As I get older, I tend to accept the fact that there's nothing I can do to change what I wanna change, so I just gotta suck it up and move.

I wonder, what happen to the raging fire of wanting things to change.
Hmmm.



"NFTB"
I guess immunity is the answer.

Thursday, June 2, 2011






It's been a time I cam whored. This is what I call Model Wannabe. :)


NFTB

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone


I actually watched the video. LOL. I mean, it's like 46 mins long, anyway, I'm watching it at work so who cares.


I'm actually grateful that I didn't exactly get bullied when I was in secondary school, most of my bullying was in primary, but somehow I have a loving mother and sister where they always helped me get through the hard time.
During secondary, my friends are accepting. They didn't turn their heads on me because of what I am, and I'm grateful for that. Or maybe I'm in a decent school where bullying wasn't a major issue, gossiping was.
Anyway, I wanna thanks JL for being there for me when I needed he the most that time. :D


"NFTB"

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Darren Criss by Kai Z Feng for GQ




Sports jacket, $595 by Gant by Michael Bastia
The jacket is awesome!


Tie, $46 by Club Monaco
I love the tie! :D





Personally, I love tuxes yet they're freaking expensive and not exactly practical.



"NFTB"


source: GQ