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I'm bored. I'm bored out of my mind. I'm bloody bored. I'm honestly bloody bored. And I summarize everything as "karulann is bored nearly to death"

As this is a totally irrevalent and empty posting. I felt that at the very least I should share something that might interest you guys. :) Kesian ba you guys have to read a totally "wasting your time post", so I'm sharing some videos which I was stucked on watching.

First check out this youtube post of a very freaky incident in England. There are 4 parts of it, so go and look for the others on your own la...



And a song from Reba Mcentire which I kept on repeating again and again to the chagrin of my roomates.. :) Sorry ah geng... Korang ndak bagitau awal yang korang bosan mau dengar tu lagu ba, sampai terpaksa dengar lagu yg sama sampai 2 jam lebih....


Somehow she always knew she had the strength inside
And even if she fell she'd survive
In spite of all the tears she may cry
This is how she has to live her life
As hard as it may be, she has to find out for herself

ps: I miss my big teddybear....

Statement of the day for 20.10.2010

Happy Wednesday and it is such a beatiful date today is "20.10.2010". And the statement of day is
Sin Chew Daily reported that Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Nazri Abdul Aziz said Wee would be charged, but police were still determining under which act.

LOL... This is bloody funny and at the same time worrying.. The police are still determining under which act to charge Namawee? They can't even decide how to charge him.. By goodness gracious.. Also dear minister do please charged the bloody idiots of the principal instead and you won't have a hard time to decide under which act to charge them, thank you in advance if you do so... They are the ones that need to be taught a lesson instead of Namawee, cause if he did not post the youtube thingy then everyone will close one eyes (yes as usual) to the racist of a principals...

Rambling of a sleepy duck

Terus terang, saya katakan... Saya teramat-amatla mengantuk... Blame it on me sleeping for only 2hours and have to wake up at 8.30 for work. And now I'm going to rush to another client office for some bloody testing. And as I said it earlier in Bahasa.. I'm bloody sleepy and are losing my concentration now. And even now I could not even concentrate on the work I'm doing...

I am bloody confident that if I just close my eyes and lay my head back, I would sleep in a second without doubts.

Macam hint-hint minta kena urut ni.. LOL Cis, saja mau cari alasan to just feel that wasting money on massage is worthwhile..

PS: I'm so sleepy that I care less that my post is so mixed with Bahasa and english...

Tired?

This bloody new template that I just install is a bit better than the recent one although when I added some of the link and etc... The design lari ckit, but at least it's without the spanish words. And I'm so bloody lazy to make the modification. Blame it on my motivation... well, this past few days I've been thinking of something actually. Wanted to write is for so long, but can't seem to find the exact correct word to say it.

I guess this is the time eh. Here I am, could not sleep and couldn't even start to finish some pending work that I need to present in the meeting I'll be having at 10am.

Somehow, it just felt like I'm so tired. Why is it that I felt, that I have to change a lot. That being me, as "myself" is not enough. That I have to stop me from being "myself". I'm trying so hard to please, but it seem like it's never enough to the point of I'm so tired. That I started to think of
"let it go, i'm so tired and there's no point"
Maybe being me as myself is tiring to someone. I just simply want someone who can accept for who I am, with the good and the bad trait I have. Someone who even after seeing I'm acting like an asshole, won't be affected so much cause he knows that I didn't meant to be an asshole it's just "her", and it would be fine in a while.

Maybe I'm just too bloody demanding. Maybe I'm not suited for anyone. Maybe I'm have to pretend to be someone else for the rest of mylife to make everything easier?

But just maybe, I need to stop expecting so much and also accept someone else as he is as I wanted to be accepted as myself too.

At this time, it is so tempting to think that being single is so bloody nice. But as succintly as the song below says.. Why? After what happen last year I have already told myself that i need to start from the very begining of getting to know someone again. And that my dearest is bloody hard work.

Well enjoy the bloody mushy song by Reba

When the mom in me start nagging

If you guy notice right now my blog is in a total disaster.. Ya, it might look "nice" but what the heck is postres... Bloody tarnation.. I don't care anymore, cause I woke up suddenly after a mere an hour of sleep. I blame it on the nagging internal mom in me.
Wash your clothes!!!!! When are you going to wash your clothes, you know that you will be complaining later when looking for cloth to wear. What have you been doing the whole bloody day. So lazy, wake up go wash your clothes
Geh! I bloody hate it when it happen. Can't even sleep in peace. So ya, I woke up at 3am in the bloody morning to just wash my clothes, and ya while I'm waiting for my clothes to wash in the washing machine (hey, if you have it use it la!), I went and ruin my prev blog template layout. Well why doesn't that surprise me...

Gah! Nvm i'll just make the appropriate changes later. So let me just torture you readers with a mixed spanish + english blog...

ps: What the hell is postres anyway.. a fortress? A post under stress? mistress? even google translator gave me the definition as "Dessert"... maximum bloody tarnation!

It was a bigger Ipod Touch

What the president of Nintendo, Satoru Iwata says about Apple Ipad totally bowled me over.. I was laughing histerically at the office. And I share his sentiment :) Although my other half, really do like it. I don't fancy typing on a flat screen, my back hate it especially after 30mins of typing. And you can't even bloody multitask.... Thats' the major turn off for me about Ipad. How can I be using some "tech" that don't allow me to multi-task. That's really bloody screwed...

Well as the president of Nintendo say it succintly;
It was a bigger Ipod Touch

Rabbit... They are?

I really cannot tahan (stand) anymore... I need to say it out load...
Rabbit are bloody tasty
Yup that sums it all. They are tasty, simple as that... I could hear the "ewww"ing sound already... yada yada yada I know "they are pet!" "They are so cute!, How could you eat them" "You're insensitive!"

Bah!!! Rabbit are food for me and yes they look cute but they are food. Since the first time I ate them, I fell in love with the taste of the meat... So sweet and so bloody awesome good. I have to admit, I never like rabbit. For me, whenever I see the big eye I could see the bloody manipulator in it. It will shiver as if they are bloody shy and sweet, but the instance you let your eyes of it. The bloody animal would either be kicking and scratching you, poop everywhere and hopping(running) away from you.

So yes Rabbit are not just bloody cute they are bloody tasty!!!!!



ps: I'm bored and this is a "total bloody wasting anyone time to read it" blog post... Anyway Happy Weekend!!!!!!

Should have taken the chance boy

Sometimes there are those times where I really want to say out loud what I really feel, that I spent minutes and hours just to write a word, sentence and even a paragraph just to delete it all and rewrite again and again...

And this is the time, after wasting too many hours, finally I decided not to cause what good is it now. The person won't be reading it and also what's the point.

I am practically happy now with my life, found someone that I want to spend my life together, getting cozy with my girlfriends and having kinda a nice job (well minus the late salary la).

After the hell I have been through by him, I wish him good luck and happiness for him and his wife and the incoming baby. Hope you are really happy with your life finally. Cheers to a good old friend of mine which I shared really wonderful moments with, but too many tears and hurtful moments too. I guess it's time to say that I'm finally free of your shadow as I have found someone that deserve to be love by me and oh boy, you really miss a good deal man, should have taken the chance when it was in front of you. And if you're reading this, you know it's true...

The last farewall

One of the best eulogy i've ever read.... Especially at the near end...
I have precious memories of our 63 years together. Without her, I would be a different man, with a different life. She devoted herself to me and our children.

She was always there when I needed her. She has lived a life full of warmth and meaning.
I was actually fill with envy... To be loved like that. And to be praised like that when it's our time to go.

I bloody wish that I will have a marriage just like what they had. The statement "till death do us part" is not 100% correct, it should be "till death do us part physically and emotionally". Cause I have seen so many lover, that was so "in love" before marriage became strangers to each other after marriage and some even after the first baby.

And for Lim Kuan Yew, it is so true that "Behind every great Man, there is a great Women".. And the late Madame Kwa Geok Choo is the great women for Lim Kuan Yew.

Here's the complete eulogy to be shared, hope you guys enjoyed it as I have enjoyed it. I actually read it from another blog and thought that I should be shared to the others as well....

Taken from Malaysian Insider

Oct 6 — Ancient peoples developed and ritualised mourning practices to express the shared grief of family and friends, and together show not fear or distaste for death, but respect for the dead one; and to give comfort to the living who will miss the deceased.

I recall the ritual mourning when my maternal grandmother died some 75 years ago. For five nights the family would gather to sing her praises and wail and mourn at her departure, led by a practiced professional mourner.

Such rituals are no longer observed. My family’s sorrow is to be expressed in personal tributes to the matriarch of our family.

In October 2003 when she had her first stroke, we had a strong intimation of our mortality.

My wife and I have been together since 1947 for more than three quarters of our lives. My grief at her passing cannot be expressed in words. But today, when recounting our lives together, I would like to celebrate her life.

In our quiet moments, we would revisit our lives and times together. We had been most fortunate. At critical turning points in our lives, fortune favoured us.

As a young man with an interrupted education at Raffles College, and no steady job or profession, her parents did not look upon me as a desirable son-in-law. But she had faith in me.

We had committed ourselves to each other. I decided to leave for England in September 1946 to read law, leaving her to return to Raffles College to try to win one of the two Queen’s Scholarships awarded yearly. We knew that only one Singaporean would be awarded. I had the resources, and sailed for England, and hoped that she would join me after winning the Queen’s Scholarship.

If she did not win it, she would have to wait for me for three years.

In June the next year, 1947, she did win it. But the British colonial office could not get her a place in Cambridge.

Through Chief Clerk of Fitzwilliam, I discovered that my Censor at Fitzwilliam, W S Thatcher, was a good friend of the Mistress of Girton, Miss Butler.

He gave me a letter of introduction to the Mistress. She received me and I assured her that Choo would most likely take a “First”, because she was the better student when we both were at Raffles College.

I had come up late by one

term to Cambridge, yet passed my first year qualifying examination with a class 1. She studied Choo’s academic record and decided to admit her in October that same year, 1947.

We have kept each other company ever since. We married privately in December 1947 at Stratford-upon-Avon. At Cambridge, we both put in our best efforts. She took a first in two years in Law Tripos II. I took a double first, and a starred first for the finals, but in three years.

We did not disappoint our tutors. Our Cambridge Firsts gave us a good start in life. Returning to Singapore, we both were taken on as legal assistants in Laycock & Ong, a

thriving law firm in Malacca Street. Then we married officially a second time that September 1950 to please our parents and friends. She practised conveyancing and draftsmanship, I did litigation.

In February 1952, our first son Hsien Loong was born. She took maternity leave for a year.

That February, I was asked by John Laycock, the Senior Partner, to take up the case of the Postal and Telecommunications Uniformed Staff Union, the postmen’s union.

They were negotiating with the government for better terms and conditions of service. Negotiations were deadlocked and they decided to go on strike. It was a battle for public support. I was able to put across the reasonableness of their case through the press and radio. After a fortnight, they won concessions from the government. Choo, who was at home on maternity leave, pencilled through my draft statements, making them simple and clear.

Over the years, she influenced my writing style. Now I write in short sentences, in the active voice. We gradually influenced each other’s ways and habits as we adjusted and accommodated each other.

We knew that we could not stay starry-eyed lovers all our lives; that life was an on-going challenge with new problems to resolve and manage.

We had two more children, Wei Ling in 1955 and Hsien Yang in 1957. She brought them up to be well-behaved, polite, considerate and never to throw their weight as the prime minister’s children.

As a lawyer, she earned enough, to free me from worries about the future of our children.

She saw the price I paid for not having mastered Mandarin when I was young. We decided to send all three children to Chinese kindergarten and schools.

She made sure they learned English and Malay well at home. Her nurturing has equipped them for life in a multi-lingual region.

We never argued over the upbringing of our children, nor over financial matters. Our earnings and assets were jointly held. We were each other’s confidant.

She had simple pleasures. We would walk around the Istana gardens in the evening, and I hit golf balls to relax.

Later, when we had grandchildren, she would take them to feed the fish and the swans in the Istana ponds. Then we would swim. She was interested in her surroundings, for instance, that many bird varieties were pushed out by mynahs and crows eating

up the insects and vegetation.

She discovered the curator of the gardens had cleared wild grasses and swing fogged for mosquitoes, killing off insects they fed on. She stopped this and the bird varieties returned. She surrounded the swimming pool with free flowering scented flowers and derived great pleasure smelling them as she swam.

She knew each flower by its popular and botanical names. She had an enormous capacity for words.

She had majored in English literature at Raffles College and was a voracious reader, from Jane Austen to JRR Tolkien, from Thucydides’ The Peloponnesian Wars to Virgil’s Aeneid, to The Oxford Companion to Food, and Seafood of Southeast Asia, to Roadside Trees of Malaya, and Birds of Singapore.

She helped me draft the Constitution of the PAP. For the inaugural meeting at Victoria Memorial Hall on 4 November 1954, she gathered the wives of the founder members to sew rosettes for those who were going on stage.

In my first election for Tanjong Pagar, our home in Oxley Road, became the HQ to assign cars provided by my supporters to ferry voters to the polling booth.

She warned me that I could not trust my new found associates, the leftwing trade unionists led by Lim Chin Siong. She was furious that he never sent their high school student helpers to canvass for me in Tanjong Pagar, yet demanded the use of cars provided by my supporters to ferry my Tanjong Pagar voters.

She had an uncanny ability to read the character of a person. She would sometimes warn me to be careful of certain persons; often, she turned out to be right.

When we were about to join Malaysia, she told me that we would not succeed because the UMNO Malay leaders had such different lifestyles and because their politics were communally-based, on race and religion.

I replied that we had to make it work as there was no better choice. But she was right.

We were asked to leave Malaysia before two years.

When separation was imminent, Eddie Barker, as Law Minister, drew up the draft legislation for the separation. But he did not include an undertaking by the Federation Government to guarantee the observance of the two water agreements between the PUB and the Johor state government. I asked Choo to include this. She drafted the undertaking as part of the constitutional amendment of the Federation of Malaysia Constitution itself.

She was precise and meticulous in her choice of words. The amendment statute was annexed to the Separation Agreement, which we then registered with the United Nations.

The then Commonwealth Secretary Arthur Bottomley said that if other federations were to separate, he hoped they would do it as professionally as Singapore and Malaysia.

It was a compliment to Eddie’s and Choo’s professional skills. Each time Malaysian Malay leaders threatened to cut off our water supply, I was reassured that this clear and solemn international undertaking by the Malaysian government in its Constitution will get us a ruling by the UNSC (United Nations Security Council).

After her first stroke, she lost her left field of vision. This slowed down her reading. She learned to cope, reading with the help of a ruler. She swam every evening and kept fit. She continued to travel with me, and stayed active despite the stroke. She stayed in touch with her family and old friends.

She listened to her collection of CDs, mostly classical, plus some golden oldies. She jocularly divided her life into “before stroke” and “after stroke”, like BC and AD.

She was friendly and considerate to all associated with her. She would banter with her WSOs (woman security officers) and correct their English grammar and pronunciation in a friendly and cheerful way. Her former WSOs visited her when she was at NNI. I thank them all.

Her second stroke on 12 May 2008 was more disabling. I encouraged and cheered her on, helped by a magnificent team of doctors, surgeons, therapists and nurses.

Her nurses, WSOs and maids all grew fond of her because she was warm and considerate. When she coughed, she would take her small pillow to cover her mouth because she worried for them and did not want to infect them.

Her mind remained clear but her voice became weaker. When I kissed her on her cheek, she told me not to come too close to her in case I caught her pneumonia.

I assured her that the doctors did not think that was likely because I was active.

When given some peaches in hospital, she asked the maid to take one home for my lunch. I was at the centre of her life.

On 24 June 2008, a CT scan revealed another bleed again on the right side of her brain. There was not much more that medicine or surgery could do except to keep her comfortable.

I brought her home on 3 July 2008. The doctors expected her to last a few weeks. She lived till 2nd October, 2 years and 3 months.

She remained lucid. They gave time for me and my children to come to terms with the inevitable. In the final few months, her faculties declined. She could not speak but her cognition remained.

She looked forward to have me talk to her every evening.

Her last wish she shared with me was to enjoin our children to have our ashes placed together, as we were in life.

The last two years of her life were the most difficult. She was bedridden after small successive strokes; she could not speak but she was still cognisant.

Every night she would wait for me to sit by her to tell her of my day’s activities and to read her favourite poems. Then she would sleep.

I have precious memories of our 63 years together. Without her, I would be a different man, with a different life. She devoted herself to me and our children.

She was always there when I needed her. She has lived a life full of warmth and meaning.

I should find solace at her 89 years of her life well lived. But at this moment of the final parting, my heart is heavy with sorrow and grief.

* This eulogy by Singapore’s Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew was delivered at the funeral service of his wife, Madam Kwa Geok Choo at a private ceremony at Mandai Cremetorium today.

* This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication. The Malaysian Insider does not endorse the view unless specified.