Friday, 29 November 2013

See No Evil


I had an 'eye-catching' experience Dining in the Dark. It's a relatively new dining concept in town and I went for it. And for a moment there in total darkness, I 'caught a glimpse' of how the blind lives. What a great reminder on how important it is to always put yourself in another person's shoes, to 'see what they see', so to speak.

And Faith is...

...not to lose the most important faith in life - the faith in yourself. You are the creator of your own destiny.  The choices you make today shape the future. Don't let anyone else tell you or make you feel otherwise, much less yourself.

And the Truth is...

...can you really handle it?

And the Reality is...

...what you make of 'em, most often shrouded by your beliefs, prejudices, and experiences.

What I Don't Know...Can Kill


Uncertainty or the unknown IS an integral part of life. No matter how much you want to run away from it, protect yourself from it or fight it - uncertainty generates fear...fear generates discontentment (not living life to the full), the nature of autocracy itself (over the subservient, timid, and dependent), and worst of all, hatred (destroying and demolishing the people, things that you fear).

If only we can accept the unknown as a fact of life...and with empathy and understanding, be free.


To all Worry Warts...Me Including!

If there's a solution, why worry?  If there're no solutions, why worry?

Friday, 30 August 2013

Of Legoland...




My little nephew pouted and complained that his friends have all gone to Legoland and he hasn’t.

Have you ever wondered why we’re always unhappy, dissatisfied with life?  

Like my nephew, we compare.  We compare and we desire what we don’t have and not see what we already have, not love what we have and naturally, not love ourselves. 

If you don’t already know, the truth to happiness is right in front of you...yet we are too blind to see.  The truth is we are all different.  We possess different strengths, abilities, the material and the non-material.  We are different, but the same.  No one is better than the other or should be judged to be better than others because…in which case, there’s really no point in comparing.

You know, seeing what we don’t have, force us to live in the past and future, while appreciating what we have, is being in the present and well, simply living life. 

Now, back to my nephew, so, how do I explain to a little kid “to appreciate what he has”? I guess…in the simplest way possible. I told him he has hundreds of Transformers while others may have few or none.  He has a wall-full of car stickers which others may not have.  The shirt he’s wearing.  His cartoon DVDs.  His favorite home-made char siew. But more importantly, he has me, his parents, and his grandma that he can be assured no one will ever have.  He then looked at me and said, “I know” and never brought up Legoland ever again.

Saturday, 30 March 2013

What Are You Worth?


I haven’t been blogging for some time now.  Too busy.  No time to think. Been living like on auto pilot for the past few weeks.  Get out of bed.  Go to work.  Meetings, meetings, meetings, calls, calls, work, work, and more work.  Traffic jams.  Come back late.  Take shower.  Take some zzzzzzzzssss.  And start the same thing all over again. 
LUCKY! I snapped out of it…before I sunk deeper into the monotony.  Then, I met some new folks, one of whom is the CEO of a company…she made me feel uncomfortable.  She liked to refer to employees as “my girls” or “my boys”.  I suppose there a lot of people out there who don’t see that as a problem, but it sounded downright condescending…I guess it was the way she said it.  I suppose there are two types of what I call the “my-girl, my-boy” people.  There are the protective, motherly, don’t-hurt-her-or-I-will-kill-you-and-feed-you-the-dogs ones and the look-I-am-the-greatest-and-I-have-all-these-minions-working-for-me, self-indulgent ones.  And my apologies, I digress.
The point I was trying to make is this – there are many, many people who like to distinguish themselves and value themselves based on how much material things they own, people who judge or value others too based on the same things they judge themselves by - looks, wealth, status, connections, and some even by the skin color, culture, race, religion. Look, we are brought up and/or influenced by society to have prejudices and social expectations.  It’s a “very human” thing.  Most of us, I think, most of us do it unknowingly. 
I do it too.  Just the other day, an unshaven, disheveled-looking guy with old, stained clothes entered the office and the first thought that came to me was “is he a thief, should he be here?!” (…until I was told he was the office part-time cleaner); someone across the table in a restaurant who shouted at the waiter who brought salt instead of the pepper he asked for, for his boss at the table (he then turned and faced his boss smiling away in an instant); a friend who always sound so irritated and impatient with sales people on the line (not realizing how she herself is someone who needs to do a lot of pitching and “selling” over the phone as well – and she’s been fortunate that she has nice enough clients who don’t do the same to her); people who don’t acknowledge courteous security guards who greet us…ah well, the list goes on and on…and on.
Here’s the thing: having prejudices is normal, but it really is how much you’re aware of it and how much you’re willing to respond differently is what matters.
# # #
The trick is to really know how much YOU are worth first, then, the rest will come.  Here’s how: (YOU + all material stuff you own + your friends + your family + anything else that can be taken away from you) MINUS (all material stuff you own + your friends + your family + anything else that can be taken away from you) = YOU.  The only thing that can never ever be taken away from you is YOU.  The kind of car you drive should not define who you are or be part of the calculation, your wardrobe, your job shouldn't define you, even the friends you have (and yes, your family too!) shouldn’t define who you are (and be responsible for your life).
So…now you are left with YOU…how do you like yourself, how much do YOU think YOU are worth now? 
You know what?  I’m guessing a lot of people will answer me this way, “I am nothing then”.  BUT you don’t have to be nothing because you are everything.  You will know what I mean when you start ADD-ing all the enriching “things” that CANNOT be taken away from you to YOU, to your Life.
Now, that's worth a lot!

Saturday, 5 January 2013

Life’s Like a Box of Chocolates?!

tube of toothpaste
Forrest Gump: My momma always said, "Life was like a box of chocolates…you never know what you're gonna get".
 
This blogger: “Life’s like a tube of toothpaste…there will always be that little bit left, even when you think you’ve squeezed your last.”