Friday, December 21, 2012

21.12.12

is the day the ancient Mayans once predicted that earth will come to an end.

This is not the first time mankind got alarmed over such issue.

As a 90s baby, I had the chance to live through Y2K, which was also deemed as the apocalyptic year, and now this.

It is interesting how mankind always live in fear, wondering when will the world come to the end. As we strive through this rat race of life each day, to own bounties materially and emotionally, in the end, we will still leave the world empty handed when we return to the Lord, that is where we will have our eternal life not to mention all the blessings and happiness that come along at the same time. As for now, we still need to live each day to the fullest, as we do not know and will not know when will the world come to an end.

In the bible it was written, 

"No one knows about that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father"
Mark 13:32

I should say that besides wandering what will ACTUALLY happen today, it had been a really good day for me. I had some decent alone time, which is a good breather for this whole hectic week, all in all, my weekend started well and who knows maybe it will get even better.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

19.20s


2012 is coming to an end, most of us will be analyzing the resolutions we made for year 2012, and coming up with new ones for 2013.
Came across this in tumblr and found it rather applicable to me, personally, in many ways.
Hope that this would impact you in some way or another.

19 Things To Stop Doing In Your 20s
1. Stop placing all the blame on other people for how they interact with you. 
To an extent, people treat you the way you want to be treated. A lot of social behavior is cause and effect. Take responsibility for (accept) the fact that you are the only constant variable in your equation.
2. Stop being lazy by being constantly “busy.” 
It’s easy to be busy. It justifies never having enough time to clean, cook for yourself, go out with friends, meet new people. Realize that every time you give in to your ‘busyness,’ it’s you who’s making the decision, not the demands of your job.
3. Stop seeking out distractions. 
You will always be able to find them.
4. Stop trying to get away with work that’s “good enough.” 
People notice when “good enough” is how you approach your job. Usually these people will be the same who have the power to promote you, offer you a health insurance plan, and give you more money. They will take your approach into consideration when thinking about you for a raise.
5. Stop allowing yourself to be so comfortable all the time. 
Coming up with a list of reasons to procrastinate risky, innovative decisions offers more short-term gratification than not procrastinating. But when you stop procrastinating to make a drastic change, your list of reasons to procrastinate becomes a list of ideas about how to better navigate the risk you’re taking.
6. Stop identifying yourself as a cliche and start treating yourself as an individual. 
Constantly checking your life against a prewritten narrative or story of how things “should” be is a bought-into way of life. It’s sort of like renting your identity. It isn’t you. You are more nuanced than the narrative you try to fit yourself into, more complex than the story that “should” be happening.
7. Stop expecting people to be better than they were in high school — learn how to deal with it instead. 
Just because you’re out of high school doesn’t mean you’re out of high school. There will always be people in your life who want what you have, are threatened by who you are, and will ridicule you for doing something that threatens how they see their position in the world.
8. Stop being stingy. 
If you really care about something, spend your money on it. There is often a notion that you are saving for something. Either clarify what that thing is or start spending your money on things that are important to you. Spend money on road trips. Spend money on healthy food. Spend money on opportunities. Spend money on things you’ll keep.
9. Stop treating errands as burdens. 
Instead, use them as time to focus on doing one thing, and doing it right. Errands and chores are essentially rote tasks that allow you time to think. They function to get you away from your phone, the internet, and other distractions. Focus and attention span are difficult things to maintain when you’re focused and attentive on X amount of things at any given moment.
10. Stop blaming yourself for being human. 
You’re fine. Having a little anxiety is fine. Being scared is fine. Your secrets are fine. You’re well-meaning. You’re intelligent. You’re blowing it out of proportion. You’re fine.
11. Stop ignoring the fact that other people have unique perspectives and positions. 
Start approaching people more thoughtfully. People will appreciate you for deliberately trying to conceive their own perspective and position in the world. It not only creates a basis for empathy and respect, it also primes people to be more open and generous with you.
12. Stop seeking approval so hard. 
Approach people with the belief that you’re a good person. It’s normal to want the people around you to like you. But it becomes a self-imposed burden when almost all your behavior toward certain people is designed to constantly reassure you of their approval.
13. Stop considering the same things you’ve always done as the only options there are. 
It’s unlikely that one of the things you’ll regret when you’re older is not having consumed enough beer in your 20s, or not having bought enough $5 lattes, or not having gone out to brunch enough times, or not having spent enough time on the internet. Fear of missing out is a real, toxic thing. You’ve figured out drinking and going out. You’ve experimented enough. You’ve gotten your fill of internet memes. Figure something else out.
14. Stop rejecting the potential to feel pain. 
Suffering is a universal constant for sentient beings. It is not unnatural to suffer. Being in a constant state of suffering is bad. But it is often hard to appreciate happiness when there’s nothing to compare it to. Rejecting the potential to suffer is unsustainable and unrealistic.
15. Stop approaching adverse situations with anger and frustration. 
You will always deal with people who want things that seem counter to your interests. There will always be people who threaten to prevent you from getting what you want by trying to get what they want. This is naturally frustrating. Realize that the person you’re dealing with is in the same position as you — by seeking out your own interests, you threaten to thwart theirs. It isn’t personal — you’re both just focused on getting different things that happen to seem mutually exclusive. Approach situations like these with reason. Be calm. Don’t start off mad, it’ll only make things more tense.
16. Stop meeting anger with anger. 
People will make you mad. Your reaction to this might be to try and make them mad. This is something of a first-order reaction. That is, it isn’t very thoughtful — it may be the first thing you’re inclined to do. Try to suppress this reaction. Be thoughtful. Imagine your response said aloud before you say it. If you don’t have to respond immediately, don’t.
17. Stop agreeing to do things that you know you’ll never actually do. 
It doesn’t help anyone. To a certain extent, it’s a social norm to be granted a ‘free pass’ when you don’t do something for someone that you said you were going to do. People notice when you don’t follow through, though, especially if it’s above 50% of the time.
18. Stop ‘buying’ things you know you’ll throw away. 
Invest in friendships that aren’t parasitic. Spend your time on things that aren’t distractions. Put your stock in fleeting opportunity. Focus on the important.
19. Stop being afraid.

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

As we converse daily,

more often than not, we always take the context of our daily conversation for granted. 

Research shows that words have emotional, physical and spiritual impact. The words we speak can lift an individual up or send him into a downward spiral. They can cause physical changes in one's body and change the spiritual atmosphere.

Words have the power to build bridges. They have the capacity to close the gap between one and other. They can also demolish bridges and make it impossible to heal a rift.

God spoke words in the spiritual realm to make things happen in the physical world. 
When God wants something to happen in the natural realm - He speaks. God spoke our physical world into existence.

Words, the basis of communication, are more powerful than we realize. They have the power to wound or to heal; discourage or encourage; tear down or build up an individual, just by words. 

Once again, today I am reminded that words could be hurtful. The logic behind this is because mankind feel words with their hearts, they will be hurt when they received words their heart would forbade them from saying to certain people.


As our days pass by, how many of us actually think about the words we said and the power they carry? 


“Remember not only to say the right thing in the right place, but far more difficult still, to leave unsaid the wrong thing at the tempting moment.” 
― Benjamin Franklin

Saturday, December 1, 2012

1st of December 2012 marks a historical day

because after 134 years Thomas Edisson first invented the light bulb, for the FIRST time in my life, I learned how to change a fluorescent lamp(and also the starter). This sounds rather bimbotic ridiculous of me to say this but but but IT IS INDEED HARDWORK WITH A LOT OF SWEAT AND TEARS SHED AT THE SAME TIME BESIDES SUMMONING ALL THE STRENGTH WITHIN ME I DID ALSO GATHER MY WARRIOR SPIRIT this is indeed another stepping stone into adulthood. 

Seeing how one need to consider all these external factors of besides a substantial amount of physics knowledge, height, strength, weight in tasks as such, no doubt all these repair work always fall to men's responsibility. Hence, we have foreMAN, not foreWOMAN; repairMAN, not repairWOMAN; stupidMAN, not stupidWOMAN; pacMAN, not pacWOMAN oh wth, so yup there is my point. 

Ahhhhhh the sense of fulfillment and joy when the lamp lit up, THOMAS EDDISON I FEEL YOU GAAAAH December began well for me